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                    <text>Public Servlc~

..-t;SATORDA'?; ~

As We See it- What~ Your Reaction?

I

'--

Aid for Our Seniors
\

GOVERNOR HARRIMAN'S order creating an interdepartmental committee and his appointment of a special
assistant are a couple of steps in the direction of an orderly approach to the problems of our state's aging citizens. The assistant, a former assistant U. S. Secretary
of Labor, is directed to formulate programs.
The committee appears to be the kind of group the
State Joint Legislative Committee had in mind. In its
1953 report of a five-year exhaustive study of elderly
citizens' problems, the first made by any state, the legislative group recommended an interdepartmental advisory
committee to achieve "a team approach among ~he various
departments dealing with problems of the aged." Also
recommended then was a statewide citizens' committee
on the aged to be a "watchdog on· state programs for the
elderly."
. Now, speakiag in the same vein, the Governor says
lt is necessary that various departments and agencies coordinate their activities. To that end his new assistant
wilt head up a committee to include state officials.
And so the Desmond committee can take satisfaction
in early evidences that the Harriman administration intends to carry out a program for strengthening the selfrespect and dignity of 1,400,000 elderly citizens of the
state. Here is a field in which both parties can work side
by side,
Speaking for themselves are the economic needs of
our senior citizens: 30 percent of the state's families whose
heads are 65 or over have incomes of less than $1,000 a
year; 77 percent of the people 65 or over who live outside
family circles have less than $1,000 in income. Crying out
as clearly for a constructive program are the breaking
spirits and damaged morale of our neighbors in the sunset years. These are needs to which society cannot close
its eyes. This is a problem in which politics can have no
part.

I

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              <text>I Aid for Our Seniors I \&#13;
GOVERNOR HARRIMAN'S order creating an interdepartmental&#13;
committee and his appointment of a special&#13;
assistant are a couple of steps in the direction of an orderly&#13;
approach to the problems of our state's aging citizens.&#13;
The assistant, a former assistant U. S. Secretary&#13;
of Labor, is directed to formulate programs.&#13;
The committee appears to be the kind of group the&#13;
State Joint Legislative Committee had in mind. In its&#13;
1953 report of a five-year exhaustive study of elderly&#13;
citizens' problems, the first made by any state, the legislative&#13;
group recommended an interdepartmental advisory&#13;
committee to achieve "a team approach among ~he various&#13;
departments dealing with problems of the aged." Also&#13;
'-- recommended then was a statewide citizens' committee&#13;
on the aged to be a "watchdog on· state programs for the&#13;
elderly."&#13;
. Now, speakiag in the same vein, the Governor says&#13;
lt is necessary that various departments and agencies coordinate&#13;
their activities. To that end his new assistant&#13;
wilt head up a committee to include state officials.&#13;
And so the Desmond committee can take satisfaction&#13;
in early evidences that the Harriman administration intends&#13;
to carry out a program for strengthening the selfrespect&#13;
and dignity of 1,400,000 elderly citizens of the&#13;
state. Here is a field in which both parties can work side&#13;
by side,&#13;
Speaking for themselves are the economic needs of&#13;
our senior citizens: 30 percent of the state's families whose&#13;
heads are 65 or over have incomes of less than $1,000 a&#13;
year; 77 percent of the people 65 or over who live outside&#13;
family circles have less than $1,000 in income. Crying out&#13;
as clearly for a constructive program are the breaking&#13;
spirits and damaged morale of our neighbors in the sunset&#13;
years. These are needs to which society cannot close&#13;
its eyes. This is a problem in which politics can have no part.</text>
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This is the place to introduce keywords and proper names that might be of interest to researchers, but do not warrant a separate subject heading of their own. Inset maps should also be described here, with their full titles given.&#13;
&#13;
Whenever historical or explanatory information is available, it should be included here as well. This includes information about items or events that are larger than just the map itself; for example, information about cartographers, a description of the map's historical significance (for example, "This is the first printed map of Saratoga Springs"), notes on the laws leading to a map's creation, descriptions of changes in state or county lines, information about the organization that created the map, how often maps were updated, and information about the map's creation and publication. Many State Archives maps have historical information in the catalog record -- that should be captured in this field.</description>
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              <text>This map depicts the Union Hotel in approximately 1870, providing the names and usage of certain buildings and rooms, such as the Grand Hotel stables and piazzas. The map also includes nearby streets such as Broadway, Congress Street, and Federal Street.</text>
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&#13;
For maps:  (or layers) included on the map itself. This field might denote that the map includes information about, for example, Mountains, Railroads, Soundings, Elevation, or Population. These are controlled-vocabulary terms developed locally. The cataloger should be generous in assigning these terms -- even if only one canal is visible on the map, it should receive a "Canals" subject in this layer. &#13;
&#13;
Some of these terms are less specific than others and may warrant expansion in the Abstract field. For example, the "Businesses" term might be included here while the Abstract notes that the map shows mills and stores. Multiple terms can be used in this field.</description>
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Congress Park (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Union Hotel (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Grand Union Hotel (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)</text>
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              <text>R (Zach) Mooring &#13;
Allie Smith </text>
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          <description>Date that the information on the item depicts. In many cases, this will be the same date as that in the date field, but there will be exceptions. For example, a historical map drawnin 1890 might show Saratoga Springs as it was in 1820. Or, the information on the map itself might include detailed information that enables us to extrapolate a date, for example, "based on a survey done in 1841." Many State Archives map catalog records refer to this as the "situation date."</description>
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              <text>1870</text>
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              <text>ca. 1870</text>
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          <description>Tiered geographical location (for example: United States, New York State, Saratoga County, Saratoga Springs, Congress Park).  This field is here for two reasons: first, to present, at its narrowest level, the scope of the entire item (in other words, not every place name has to be listed here). Second, this field will allow for accurate and helpful narrowing and broadening of geographic searches.</description>
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          <description>For Maps: This subject field describes the purpose of the map. This is a controlled-vocabulary field using terms developed for this project. It is important to note that Map Theme and Map Type are not hierarchical, thus it is possible to have the two fields overlap or even duplicate each other. In determining the purpose of the map, the cataloger should consider the publisher, and, (if known) original use of the map. For example, a map that shows a wide variety of information might be a candidate for General in the map_type field, however, if it was prepared by the state geologist and contains, in addition to everything else, substantial information about the geology and topography of the state, it would be classified as a Geological map. Multiple terms can be used in this field.</description>
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              <text>Site plans</text>
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          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
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          <description>For browsing purposes, we are borrowing and adapting themes from the Library of Congress's American Memory project.</description>
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              <text>Property and Development</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="3261">
              <text>Travel and Tourism</text>
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        <element elementId="53">
          <name>Place of Publication</name>
          <description>The city (and if necessary) state or country of publication.</description>
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&#13;
For maps: for major geographic locations depicted on the map, followed, in nearly every case, by the "Maps" genre subheading. (For example, "Saratoga Springs (N.Y.) -- Maps.") This field will be especially important when the records from this collection are incorporated into larger databases and catalogs.</description>
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3/23/2014</text>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>Still Image</name>
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          <description>Text version of the date field -- can handle non-numeric characters (ca. 1850s, [1844]). This is the content date field that will display.</description>
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&#13;
This is the place to introduce keywords and proper names that might be of interest to researchers, but do not warrant a separate subject heading of their own. Inset maps should also be described here, with their full titles given.&#13;
&#13;
Whenever historical or explanatory information is available, it should be included here as well. This includes information about items or events that are larger than just the map itself; for example, information about cartographers, a description of the map's historical significance (for example, "This is the first printed map of Saratoga Springs"), notes on the laws leading to a map's creation, descriptions of changes in state or county lines, information about the organization that created the map, how often maps were updated, and information about the map's creation and publication. Many State Archives maps have historical information in the catalog record -- that should be captured in this field.</description>
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            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>This is an example of the numerous posters displayed throughout Saratoga Springs to encourage people to wear masks in order to prevent the spread of the Coronavirus. The wearing of masks and social distancing was part of the Saratoga's initiative to reduce covid cases. </text>
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br«acb«a »-jd
S l i t h race, r - ^ » }SO0; a a a a ccaU.'-^ai tian
• t o t ta Cht ft-ict of ttltrr. afcorfflaa to tkt
• taddiBg in aemi-drde, eoclot*d a Ipaca
aj fiita race. e : i fzrkicffi.
eaMta, iraa repaoaafbU tot tbt exrrt (DBAJ". J. V a l t a t l a e ' j cb h Wcrtb. B, try Lnkt
of (rv«o ac-i rc^rfviofl (Teat, aud i n
Braa toct abroad, and It »aa »»M that 5
Mr*. Laaaia Owttct. vtft at Banraet . . pau waa betaj oostldered ta Lomtoti rttk
Blackbaro-reytoDa Barrj, ST, (Doaael 1 aucii a ibeattr ai LO art caa txcal or dar»
W. B. Joae»"» b f B&lt;4J«ood. a, IM, (Ta/Brova e&lt; tftt ftrta of Saooa, Btlekitf h tha Vtoa of porrjoaj np t t t brtca of&lt;tbt
Trutura k&gt; uni'Jit*. La lbs tnidat of tb*
Jort* 1 S*««_ »j&gt;ac»^M»M*L f of B&gt;»4 * * « • * » « a a g»&gt; jNLbaJMBLitrwa-: BIBBW* iltaiai j t
• &lt; * = )

on- t b » - p r ? * ^ a m m f , - - t a d - a l t n c ' C f n :
Beids weTt t « i t they rHIJ made op In
w h t l thty laikrd l a cambtr*. TUt
follow:
BADGE BT A LENGTH,
rae*, p o n e ITuo, of which |1 M to
,
tau-aac* 110. d i r . i W betweta • « Bad third. (&gt;&lt; 4-yrer-olda aad apwarea
lat v o n a race of t h t valu* ol
to. 18S1 or 18OT, b*altn and maldea
no**, on* tall* and a a eighth.
MaUtai't b B Btdge, a, by Th« 111
TJB»t-B«rooe*a, 118 tDoctete)
f . Marph/'a b C Aba*, 4. »7 (A. Corlng'

« 3 5

Ve'ie Gtt Too l*flj of TTrtml
BOWS GOES THE PIICEJ
^j—

All our fj.oo, $2.50 afld f i i j
now

put on « t e

#1.7457
They cost jrou now much lew than they
cost us.
SAUL, 51 &amp; 53 N. Pearl St
• . » - . . — .-'•V-"

-—-!•• oJ^faaiat»-^at«»U~»{^taii«ea»4 "•
w W e " i b o u t tS e «tdey_ were fowjToT'P5H&gt;^th
, j . . _ u —.
—- :
&lt;Baa a) ^ - Alloo waoi- r-e. w. om*ri;-njirtwBKiV3utj r w u i ••a BurUa^too,. v i a
aTrit-prw
wltidj "•erTwl~t&amp;r~pur- |-r*»&gt;&lt;i*a»a hart—tare*- rear*--aaa--w$ea~ KM
•Ubiai b ^» 7 ^
XUJUS.-XJC. tKoat); M . J . t&gt;«iy". e MeriT T*P*ew uf jAmueaiumii f g r "tfag « x j
IWMJLPWJMBJB-jaai
f*alkteVa."-*2i-?Hr&gt;'rrtrK«7»W0»"TObl*"*"b tnUatK**.TWre"
,
,
1:5TI-1
• a T _ B O « « _ W a a i * — rapidly
n
c l * a g o o , a^J^J^il^lcbJ. .aiil_lL_ilr*ill*f-#_. n a r - a n r - l l i e * ot-inrigt
?_f,?_my1li"™-_nnr
j ^ .
«-ttr8 mad aatrBaeeay- &lt; l t 4 t - l * * r « * « W 3 ^ g r . - j g - J o n e i ^ f e g l T J a r
aad^daarae -a-Xaryt etwt* aa^m»ffji; r»
- g a g t B H l l U t f l f l Hi-rTJ5cfrBa&gt; w t l irltJK fb4 «|&lt;en AIT, WH&amp;BVl'alif
.The fnaaral a t r n c w o f th* 4 a » Aaaa 3 t
d r a w s - "-^—:
"'
or lilatioa*.
: — —
- -TJaa wUbdrawal of Barlinfjoo. vboae'finf
Th* weather la tb* Wttt waa clear tad
Time, 1:15 1-1
PCfcB A»D WHOLSfdlQI OJtTAtfff
The atuhesce, whlcJi waa Tery Urge, Uthrep, Wtfb ef I&gt;arid Hewei, wfie tMed
DC« la ortr a year vaa eagerlr looked
la San rraaetaro, c - l . Auguat t, wffi&gt;B« want &lt;«** moral a* tad fa-rcrib!* to tht
Bfttlng: O.
to 5 «ad
to I;
l ba* • qaartattt to ootnpeLe. At tht Worth. 3 to 1 V&gt;". lC .ev l .a :11Belirc»l. S4 to X waa *-\ue\l In tfeonaasls o f chairi ar- held at tht Rural rrr-.&gt;tery ehapat to-tsor- crop*. Bot* wbea» aod eera at Chicago wart ComxDeadt to wabHe aaararal 90 43a*.
aa
te
riDgtil In amphllhe*t*r aetnl-tircl* form
Tenia IkroJd ltautttw rftM*"
Bad«« waa tbt farorlu at 6 to 5, and erek; rarar&gt;a. 1 to 1 i t 1 S M 2; Ver(nw aftcrBaaa t t I " o'clock.
W
areak.
Ftgt. I t U aleaatnk to fjM
im
a n t * aaoaar wanl la oa Klmberly tatlle. 8 to 1 a n l S to IT Merry t&gt;oie a a l a:«t oo^jicandiDg a food Tie* of vfi*
euatoga: fhabert trria. aced 68, of No. 4}
B*at*ow»ri .btpmttau of toad trtlgM «fre. actlnc gently oa taa Udaaya,
• # • waa errt from S to 5 ta 6 to S, vbilt L*aren«ka. earb SI to 1 and 8 to 1; Dtft al- ptage.
Ail th" acton and aotretat* are artfata TTeat rorrtetk btreet. New York, tied afttt the tnaak llaea from CSilcago laa* wt&lt;J wert bowel* to a e t a t a tht aytteaa
waaa back two pcinta.
Tht U«ht- ter. • SO t o 1 aad 10 u 1.
ar.d tbc:r tranalaticMt and e*pre**Hjn nt a tery brtaf blaew. at fhe Wladtor hotel 47J«8 tooa K*Ia*t 47.876 toot la tne ,cor- it protaote* th* health aad aot
aa* waa tlaw weU-backtO. her
tho parts were of a high nrder of An- 5rtarday. HU r t i w s i wert tea* to New rewnoodaaf week of 1«-'L
ThJi Wit another tri«k betting erent, O.
_ ,
who oa* It and with anUUoaa H ta
babag eat frarn T to 1 to 4 to L
Land a apleudid lirasd York. Mr. b a i n . Joha Boyd aad Aadraw
ISO a. at.—Daring tb* a*cood oonr vnioa beat t a d only remedy.
. waa oaly • brief delay al tbt pott, W. O K * . "Wort ft l-!(4»cit«l and T a n run traao merit.
ear* cajTjdnr&gt; losda of moaey. l a t w t e d free- Inion orcfaewtra faruiabed i t a InaLrumen- t i l l * wrr* rafalar Sjratcra tirmajer rtahtort Facta*
beeam* moderttely attire tad
. tbty wera tent away on »rtn term*
tal mtiiic.
f:r c a n y yaart. Tb-y wert all rich aad rt- ttroas oa th* report of th« road'1 net earn|L50 FXA F A U L
wadeb laAjor Corl&amp;ctoa (em A s c i CQ&gt; ly apoa «beci by th;Jr frlea U arnong the
ITi.- Saturday arrirala nuabcred 2.500 tJred
boataaaa
=-:.
ooDg*nlal
eoa- l o t a f a r Jaaa, which mad* the phenomenal
#p*colatora. Venirl!« n t tacked by tbt
Bar tb* rtc*. With Rico i t attecdAnt the
Th* Alhaty Dry Oood* Co. will aal} tail
po-^le, aad lb* Buod*/ Iraia from ihe p.::Joaa, and apptf'.l'.I^e of each, other. thowltg of a. |Hb of »5S5.00O. Th* atock
wn
BA t 5 * waot paak iht ttaod aad roonl the Canadian «mtfo)re = t. Ten mlatjlet
week ore case* Cacetal Crty 1 1-4 par*
north bruugbi a large contingent. I h e T^er were laaepa.-ih'.*. La*t wtater Mr.
tara fctto tb* backitrHrb, wb*r« Blra o n a i i m e d la fil»» brenk«. l a d fraiMi_ when hotels are njt full, b i : kher hare a great PTTI dred. Kcw Mr. L-rla It dead, tad Aa- opened-an eighth per etat h'gher tad ad- w«ot fwllag bUaktta, wWtcBlae tsx patadt,
^ ^ 1M^
•a. At tk* lowar far tnra Kimbw- the Hag drcv&gt;r«&gt;J Laarenjki wai la fitat t n d msny guewU. Tn^rt are WO at th* Uni- 0 : . T Uttl* ht l*ft«!cDt. Mr. Irwla wat 08- Tinced to 88 3-4.
•JMt abawid la frook at Attn, but cat- Harry Jonei t e o t h l a oat tot the race. Oat Unl State*, l.UUU at the Urand Union. r 11 • I ' • 1 Jatnnal' Tl I'*I AfrKknaey of Mr* Tht Atehltoa't report of t flla of |T9,*fl8 that were mad* to *«Q fer ta par pair, bat
k B bartt of *p«ed Atna took command on t b t mala traok aad to the lower tars be 875 at Ibe^ C&lt;««Tet».. 40U i t th* Clarvn- York died at hi* ho:el here hut Satarday, la grot, earnings during th* nr*t w . e i of wert aot properly Hearted la BV* Baitajtaf.
Itadtag let* tb* ftrttek br a neck carried the field, wltb 'Worth aecood and ii^, mon&gt; at t i e Kanjington, and all •*•&gt;! 88 r**r*~ 4 e w*4 oamarrlad.
Hit Aarut ttartod np that stock, which, tn big Wt madt a d a t a and now offer Cat** t l
•mbtrt/, Badge third a length awiy. Belwood third. Btoacll^a' ths tarn lato t b t t i e smaller haute* tad BTMJ ax* full.
cj-xi-r and titter Were Mfb bhn at bat dtath. traaaactk**, alawly g a l s t d V s pef^cent to tht ridtcatoo* arte* of fl-fa) per attf.
. wan •ttalghtvoed out Dairett cat atretch O c a a e tent Wortb In.ho lh» ran t a t
The ittewlanco at the churchea ye*ter- Tt&gt; remaia* war* a^at to 5ew Tort tor
The other rtn»*M ***********
**1
wttk Ba.df* aad eomtoc twaj bt won l o a r e i i A a . flallig the part too ho*, fpU day* tettiJSixl to the *:ltirg rapacity of b^f.al la Trttaty era-tery.
flaeac* of Atchltoa aad Vnloa PidSt, Bnr.,
QrfjmOll
br a leagtb from Ana*, who t**.t bao%, battea. la a paa!«Mi)f drir* Worth all of them, l'ecple ftrm other plieet
ltBFtfla which had toll down from 1013-11
"*" M I * &gt; I W . - I
won by a l e n t l b from Pelrood, who beat lave to hear th* v&lt;.&gt;:ce* of their own patDaaa*»m*: Haary K I I T , T year* of tg*,
O
a half lengtb for tbt plte*. v
MT xai'B-8, r*ay»« to vu.
waUa Kock.1 i , M k * d aa *r»ry day: ' B o » caa yoa atfl
AalBKNS
IX TAB TRTNTON Vtrtatllt i t fkr for t b t f l i c * .
tort, and aa moat of the | u l p i u were oc- it&gt;i her* Bahtrwty. Mr. EAlty wa* a taa*- Iilind, wbJeh had racetred ttetdy wpport
m % M ^ , ^ for » a tbac w* aar* always
cu|&lt;ed by dittinfuiAed chtine* from th* ter ateoaaaU ta wool work aad toe taa at 10
eTEAKJB.
1
t i l t see. tmf
Becaaa* w* ar* aa aha
bli
armt ciaea, the poople from theia home year* kerB Cat Xfeowrilli hotel U tkd* Tll- at srvtiTtneed to " l - - f , u |
•d race—TfCDton atakra; haadleap fbr
Readme .which » * ~ A
»'f
H t T , oeaa , 8 t b . eaaawraettrla,
raMt; kao **cb| botwea not declared THE CANOEISTS^ MEETING. ctvigreratioot went lib hfar Ihem preach. IJV. {!• wa* A Be»rjt*loaa in poUttat, tad bee a forced down from .08 « ^tod 58T-8, r . 1 ' , ^
1-3
wat
The Iter. Dr. John flill of New York •pent the laat f*w year* of bit lift oa bit
|X3 additional', the a w n i v O i r i v traaiae** tad know wbtr* to gtt them.
the lattar flwore*.
i atak* to b* 11,150, of wblca ISA lAlX BSADT FOB T i l l R.UTE* TO TAK1 and the Rer. Dr. Herrk* Johnaoa- of f i m etar bar*. Be leare* a wlf* aad atx aupported t t to noot war* 84.000 tharea.
The tale*
children.
COB'1 fan to aw* ottr |L50 blaakrt*. Ta*
Cblcajro both pjvached here /eaterday.
PLAGB OO-OAT.
•B aaaaaad. |T5 to tkird; Crre fnrtooga.
A "month'* mind" mtM waa celebratWest Troy: hfra. Fhoeb* Hirt 4!*d *ariy -Wettern TJntoa beoaat* o*t of th* acttr* Albany Vrr Good* Oa»
y . ^ f c ThikBPflVj e Tbja*i^Ahran*. try "
Bpedal to The Jonraaled ia 8 1 Beter'a Catholic churcb l i t t th!t moratag at t't hofi* oa Tfalrte«ati featvr* of tht trtdlnx. tilling up to DOS'!
r«*» Wtad, 108 Otaaoa) ^ r
\Alll»boroug4i Point, Aag. lS.-'ETwr- Baturdty for the H*r. John McMrnomy, ttreot. Eb* wa*. aVrat T5 yaart old, tnd —fhalf per cent abor* Batnrday'i doting
Tht pobtie t r * bayltad,
CL rkannoM* b « One, L d (Tan
X
thlnc waa • * quiet here yetterdny at gnn- the lite pastor. Thirty prieeti attended. wat the mothtfU-tiw of Allen a. Aadrrwa,
Northern Pactfle prtferrtd *old ap a half along the Deltwtr* tnraatk*, a) call at
JhwenX
. . .
1
K. D. ilttiulre and r i T. Terry of Al- tb* wtlf-knows earpeater.
dax !a town,. Serricek wer* held In t i e bany were jpreKeat. Th* terovob wa* deper ceat to 55 5-8.
Cfcarle* Smith't Hottt at NorranJtrille,
•f. * \ • a l i t o r b &lt; aomWaabiagtoo'.'lil
Now Torki.Mgdr Antfila Batten, wife cf
S p. tn.—Th* strength of tht nark el darU . Oanaatati)
. » . . a me** aarUion. So f i r the weather h»» Ur*rt&lt;d by P. V. Wlatel Df fit. Oernent"*
r.ecrge T. Smit% formerly of Albany, dlH lrg the evly afternoon coatlaael during tat where theywf!16nd oa* of ta*aiaatt plteo
1. V. Papaaia ek t d l l r a n 1U (Bttf); uol been rerr arreeaM*; II "Kit ralocd eoilrge,
along the road; a genial hott aad good
The new rooma of the Yoa&amp;q Men'a h*rt yetterday. Uf. boar, tad wat attended by Insetted
Baat* Aaft* atabita bay fdly by Bmronrr rTery day. Bat the" ca nx i i U caa alwtyi
tcrommodation* for a a a t a d beatt) jtul
acUr'.ry.
of Xorfrik^Taoaa, 07 (Let**), and R. Brad keep dry aad comfortablei T t * boya are Christian Association were "cxupicd yearaolrcca htAJuarr.
Ooraage prrferred wat tht specialty, td- two mllet from Albany.
Ufa bay colt by Ptalijo*—Ida B , 60 (H. going abemt clad in brigtrt yellow oil akin*, terday for the firtt lim* for a. SandAT terrice. Tho Iter. Dr. F. A. Notle-cl ChiH e * T c r l . A a * l*.-rt- "r, itetdy. Bfelnia, Tinciar, from 11T 8-8 to 1*01-1
Tbt eotaJBMB) aiao ran.
bigb rubber boota and aou'weiten. Tb* cago pr'.aWc-J, and the Iter. Dr. Herrick M,Ht bl«K talat, tfiM bLla. t l lat foUowlag tnoa alra=ced to X38— th* higher* prle* at
BL.WCKBT R4LB
' w . H. LaMo^Bsan'* rti c Wahiot and T.
uoUil-'ni:
• . fltoYeaa'i e a e rrtact Daeetrer were with- tenta. La apite of tb* hard rain, ara retf J'lhnaon of Chicago deiirered an add re**,
which It ever aoM.
Cobtlaned for oa* week loafer. Pried* art
ow txau
t l ftctl II
c&gt;mforUWe.
Tb&gt;-y are built on imall Harry Burleigh, colored, of Erie, f a . . V\7 MiUI
aawwa, « t b KeotMtaty Lada- wa* added.''
Toledo Aaa Arbor and North bCchLgan telllaf tnd ear rarpltaf it ttf.H1 m«Klt|
4 SO*) 111
Time. l &lt; 8 l l
4 t t a t » adraaced X X-4 per cent to 26 3-4.
plitfonaa a foot.or mora abort" tb* a n l r u - t heft 1 waiUr at the Grand Union, uiy n u t ipat-iui
asng "I'm the
Jd of a Kliijr"
VTiter T»i,«ati'3W gr-*»tl
1 I l l s II
IVettiDg: One, rres and 1 to 3; FW»e Ah- KTourui. The fool Ji excellent. Oa the
Th* irthcera contlaned their adraace. »wi/. i i r a S3 to 83 per eeil by bnyttf
The aacrv-l orct-rt in CotijrreM Park Winter VThetl t»Jr toltu't • • &lt; . . . . t i : A 4 » Bock W i a l telllBg up to 80 T-S aDd Atchltoa now. Wt oaly aak req *» look « b* tar*
« • , t to 1 asd er*o; Bote WaablnfTcm, 5
t tct&lt; K
11 tod 3 to 1; Mirer*. Ida B c»H aad X»a- brow of tb* hill back ol tha camp a la it eieuing waa attended by a JP*'*t Wlottr Wheat pikltw)
I c t t l M to S8 5-8 i t the dote. Wester* Union aJao of your bnylag- Tbt Art)*ay Dry Oood* Oa.
OarUtcd't Tenth Minnesota !&lt;-Vi.|
Latky, each 12 w 1 and 6 to 1; Paola large tlgnal pole bat boon placed, and a c ucenrao of pe-ople.
kt:rn*»oU (Itrvgfatl)
I U*)l 11 becamt actlte and told repeatedly i t 60 T-8.
«
red flag Is run t p when xneaJi are ready- Rf-gimeT.t baLi L constantly growiag la
BBf, 15 tn 1 M l t to t
Mfer wt* strong, aeillng n? to 88 8 4
food Then erery man ukp* hi* tppetite and favor.D 0 Mrs- \Y. S. Henry of Saratoga,
B t t Floar-? eady t l t i e * # 1 1 .
T W troop of W T M fumlahrt
cents,—or 15-S eeata tbor* the low qaota- With Joy w* hall Ckmbrlaat oM,
rl
w1!™.^ for tlia ereni-f, was
\«'b*at-Stea'T. BA-aipu.til.koO; u : e t , n i D o t
Wbaanw for ttxautrdoa, eapcdaUr for the foe* c e r t &gt; t i e meat patiUon. a large » j r
tloa of laat week.
"
Who left t gift more ilea, thaa fold,
ataaa. aa 0a* aria coooeded to b* tht beat Cullding- ibat will s e t t QDO. Mr. Otia mc*t fperaiateu:!/ encored, and rctpoiwled hu. e . ,An»-.,«*t,»'ept„»«»e&gt;MHe;Ott,M.&lt;(-44He:
1
Tbt aitrket doted atrotg.
Bat Hlnckeii mad* t b t gift to«r* dear,
wiih 'Home, Sweet Home," tnd fcAnn!e D * t f ' , t ) f : V i J U y , M i i » » J H e .
of (we tat oa tb* fxro aireada- tnowa by
Tbt total aalet wtr* 127.000 thires.
a^e^it«dT;we«aar»,*t»?t*.
Mca&gt; *«kt» Abreoa, «b* itiMe oorapanloo ol Ktl up a tery g ' » i table. He charge* I^uri*." T o i l e t SiMkretta Jonef, th*
Following .rt th. doting oaotttioaa at thij Wiea 0&gt;«y prodacad ««i» 0M i n * laatr,
BarVey-Nox L i t
poerlcsa
B'ji'i
I'arJ, from
Mldlaon
Oa*. a*aa texwd choice anaiag larentori and only a dollar a day, and generally get*
Corn-riraxT. Btfitlptt, lll.tf* btt. 8ilet,M.. Btock Ezchaagt, foralshej by J. 8- Btche A
Siusrc Girder, nrier the mtnigrmetit tMba. N a l ^ p t , J * V e t t X c ! K 4 . » , M ' » « t r .
T U B A L B A N T DUX GOODS 0 0 .
BbJM WaaUoatea third cbolce. Of coarte. i t
of Major J. B. Btcd, will be the toloftt
Oats—rina. Beoapaa, lO^tt b*&gt; tattt t , t n Oo, No. :« stit* street, Btmael Sessberi
Ma* taltat ware oa Oaa wblla It wa* ewlde«1
Blanket *alt o o t U a a t d t h k wtwk. Nrret
la. 8i*te,14ie«*«;wMtara,Uv(t}it«.
-...•...attaigeri
Th* weather li pir»**nt to-day, and ia t i e park c"t^rt.
a. - - - - - - - • - - - y
(rata tb* revolt that tb* owner of Oat and
Beet-Dull. krtralaeat, ai^MTAi
X
rtrt. A «
B ' t A l t . It U t history of Ahbaay b a r * M Bkuy
little "yearo'.-i Marirerit« Hart of AJr
. U a frleodt wert on hit ataWe cc-33pu;!oa. the race* will b» calkd. Stoat of tha
fork-Ea»i NewM*tt,tlA:»#it.itV /
n;«n
l«
A tab 1 see
f«S »H / • a r t f l . 4 4
blanket* been aaid I t « * • eaeft a t b f a t
ffaja* Ahrtoa. lit t*ve&gt; aecood aaklDg ihty raring we a a were cat aajllnjt rettrrday, biny *•*% tiren * rrvttr pink Hrthdiy
Urd-We.H-rat4l.rH.
pretty tight to tee their cl- party at Wa»h&gt;it'^n hall laat Barnrdaw,
A B . I n r a r . . . r ? 1W* Mich Can
•taw aeo* away with, fto»» Waatdcftca ta and it
b . u t r - S f . l T . Baa*tts, i a u rkga Ha It,
tb* paat aa*. t a r * av&gt;a«y by bayd&gt;f *»*•
«0 tTtf.i K W l ' 1
t l t t t &gt; t . . . UK 1«
airy, It^rr, cieatttry.lltMl'.s.
A B BaWL On* aecend aad Fake Abreha noe* with their apotlea* whit* aailt aklm- aad rte ifceired n,aay aoutentra tod conBur.s.B r. n it U t H l « A O . . M 17
grarulatlor.a.
Ut.ttt*-iu,'.r.
Baatttta,taai &gt;kga, l*tw. I « rjdo prefil e t &lt; M
1
•BBB. Tb*** poaVtton* «-«r« «ro«haoged at taiXL/ aboat lJt&lt;&gt; iwallow*.
5.T.AK. ». HH Mlf
The tl?w fr.Hij the camp la m r tlnf. t Tho«e wh^ rame hr*e frew Albany laat
lc;f*nc/ »vtr.*H+*He.
- '
'
l a a w sk atobtar
l o t * wffl ba
rtn.B Atton 111 H I
WorthWett...llT 1H«&lt;
•ra lat* tk* tD*l* track. Ootof to tht
f n * - r i m e r . Batetpia, IJ*t pkgt, I
C o . Pari J - . M
fu&lt;
da p r t r d l U w Ml
j aaro Boa* Waoatoa^on wwa aUQ la tht ACTOM the like c b e cJlea la Burlurton, | Batunlay atd to a; end Buoday wrr* J.
t o o l (ttOort). Tbalr taatk. ht
with tbi (Jrrcn-Meantaiaa ia the back- H. BJ?ekwt.-l. H i « M. E. Turner. J.
t a a Southern f ) \ M
"
« T C B H B . . 1 I I 11«H
%7_ * aera: tram t»&gt;* Ma B oott. Oat
k- r
1-tttts - l t t i
ind.
PirfcTlr north OBo l«aJi ortr i H. Gordon. Mr. a: d Mr*. I t C BlaekalL w• T T^W^a 4 -lI T liri*a .il iI fUOrtabtrt, • Iki 1B Btl I «} gt Btfaaaf* |1atw- Ce». Paolo':. :t
:»H V.t. 0 » * . . . l U t 1*4
a
l JBaUl awajajajjaj^BBav A *
l a l a 1 traTaB
*
' ! * &gt;
17 Ikwod « • n r a koto tb* atteteh Oj« J
B
i » tar " I T f
J ' • • *Kent Ft-.:, f S «
t c t c H t a
of mi&lt;r. Ju»t wttt ncroii the jW. Maxwell. rSuTeTritn, i r t t e ^
""""
enmanand from Bet* Waetdowton, ' bar ruEett^e AiV.rjnd.trk foothCli.
Ialow-t-.dT*l4k-iMOta
•lo Pref.I. WM UK
do prtTd. . . .
It
\ greu: D. BhoeUn. B. W. Wootter. Mr.
r
aa* raat war* botxtaol bebiml ail
Cbe*.AOh!o U V J l " Jtorf-B W...11V? II
t.
few
'
t»**«-ri.E. xa.f. ita. --+-r'-^^-~
ft* a r t f l . O K 44
m a tht whip, tn tb* ftaal drtrt TaUe Ah. &lt;• The ttcrta cf rMdar d*M«red * rifbt I -and k r t C. A. Hovck. L. M. Stewtrt,
6* pref 4 . . .
».&gt;me-nh*t, but they
J. W. Burdck, V . H. Pitkin, at tha
l«
«olii_pr»f. «1V ss''t « . T. l . 8 t U 11
Bops—Fra itttt&gt;t»a.
aaaa waw kr m half l*n««b Irom hit at*Mt catoc« Taul Batler't b-.-*t are all
w&amp;t one of
«* » r * r d . t 7 S 44
•I*
frofl-ato, Aug! U ~ W h t - t t - y o . I hard, f l U e ; C U A I M M
aaaaaaaJon Oae, Aoae Waahlaftoo tbiH. Tbe aaaln. injircl. lt;t at he carrio* hit wcrk- ! Grand Vui:a: J. W. &gt;fc&lt;HrriV. D . H,
d* l»tortl Tl
uTo»e
»
i Bmith, 1^. \Mr.i»m«. Mrs."MI. Gtnlgtn, Ko. I aorti rn, UMA, Wkaktr, doU; « &amp; t rid,
do prtfJ . »^ -i
Oa* **w3d b»T» taaUy laUhrJ firtt.
C*l. C o a t . . . li
A1S H.T. f . « W. ll&lt;&lt;
ihop with him, h» tooa repaired It, tnd I H. La Dne, B. J. Hclt. Jt. Otnlftn, t t l i t ; K a . H ' j f . i J i a i i .
A* ttwfd. M
at
On—atesd/. a * , t ytlWw, tt^e • jro. 1 eora, C b k a / a o u . i : u M«f
will eater th* taiUng rttTt t^-d.»r.
the Flazlfr; J. 8. C. Out*. Sir*. / . E.
OLWK mrBxre A GOOD FIELD
C b t l t a O. Nik! K1H K i n b A n t r . US' MS
too.
The Mohicant hare rcry fine r.'urtrrt Crai*. Mr«. W l i r i (Vat/, at the United
Cct.OllTr... V\ IT
Kiih.tCulM
K
oa»-8»-t.r. Ha I whlk, MH«i X*. I aaUtd,
B a c * — Handicap; intra* t ' u o , cf directly on th* ah or* of tht lake soar ! Bustet: Mr. ar.d Mrs. M. A. Shepiro',
do p t l . . . *i\ MS K a t C o r U t * .ir.HlsTtJ
ate
•aaMB'&amp;lOO to a t c o s i ; e r t r a a ^ | V \ | 1 0 &gt;1- be4dquart*n.
&gt; .
* . . : H liTH
! MIM Lanra 5&lt;her&gt;rvl, Mrv 1'. &gt;'. Fort,
it » r t f 4 . m t 111
Caaal Fr jhti-yTattt, let oat*, l ^ l | oora, tD taUO t* . W. .l l ii l s 137V
e m o a a l for bortet aot declared, ta b e dl»MU
* i l U T r M t n s *»w
Thot* who ar» hert t t pre* en I tr« ' J. H. Orihtm, t t the- HareMon; # . B. iSciaeed,: ,r.
_
aecoad t a d t t L - 1 8&lt;TCD far- Commodore Cbarle* V, Winae General Brewlow, W. C. Bnrrell, 1. Hunter. J.
Dft-ABJOOH
11
do p - e f d . WJI, a'44
do p r t f d . II
U\ n.ry.t
». 111 l i t
Robert Sb»w O'.irer, IV. A. AVte-&gt;!»r, W. Minrlua, Mr. \*i Mr*. T. «Jil'lr. D . MeHTB BtOCZ MAjtSSr.
D i s u n « - t . . . . u s '"H Ob&lt;o* Miss
.
aa'a b m i f abet Olean, *, b «
O Titua, Bert Titua, G*iTf C. Haloc.t, Creedr, J. Thicker/.. W. J. Stoop*. V.
BoFala, A*t ItgCalB* Beoelpn 1H toadi D H - t T l D IK H i OrtroaHtr
n
' t '
-ffharfoo-Calabwrgha, K» (tenOn) . . . . 1 E. T. fcoplt. I&gt;ra \ e i l'i • . flrwt rjrgeoo A. Benton. W. H. O n e r / . H. Gallieo. throiirby r.i aal*. Ta* taarkM it about ataady - d o p i d . . . «
It
.
fr**o*a.L.. »'&lt; MH
rred G.. Math
RK M«
k*d*k*tr. ttoeke
ttoekart B d i t w * ' . . . I I H IMS Umaha
Ru««e|l J oh neon. &gt;Vill J. A. BecVer, O. U Ibomat. 1 B. Lock t&lt; gvodgrt'b-t '
A o a a u R x . l M IM
co vewfd. 111 i n

^«usr^mx?}iP¥T-*stisr^s

FOB OTXB Firrr YBABS,
Mas. W m a x c w t BowtarxM trawy haaHlaa)
ated lor ehDdraa tsethlBa. It t**ta*t ia« eJaaA
tofstat tbt gait*, tliaya all pala, curat wovl eono,
«e*aaKk5&amp;r^
a* w^W»«al*ttd kowtthtll abetdd hawltkoat
Mb. Aak lor tbt gratia* arwaat, aa*a*xact*r*d
by br. T. *. B&gt; BM«*rt iBoav
BOKM I

DOW-la Albany, BaaaMy, Ang, 14, H»S. a attl
o Bat. Mr. aad Mrs. ?. LVRrwT^
cbl-HOBTHBOF-Jmx a. 18*1, W. M. Oax,
}r, aad Mata Ln*H* Sartarop, both of this cJty.
DIl

BBOWw—SBterad lato r*&lt;t, Meoday a s s t a i f .
...
d lat . .
A s f a t l U. lttJ, Bhsabefa B. Owstoh, wttt t l
14, l t t t , BAsabetk 8.
Sanratl, W . Brow*«- .
W. B r o w *
jiSSfJ&amp;TX
r a a t a t ^ a a a a a l a . *at
tare* o'clock.
It
HBWES-Aarast 8, lttt. tt ftaa Frtacttoa,
Cat, Aaaa aLLathroa. wtS tf D*TM H t w a a ^
Faaartl ttntott win M held it toe faral Cambtptaeac

r

ward Steinet, O OdeU i t

THE OFT-TOLD TALE

l l j

m

Ita*ay at

l*Cd toTts'. M T*t&gt;t*! f

nitArTT WTN« Trni rRivjrom
Bte*—tt^arat Ptakes f«r three.
1; »1&lt;X&gt; e i ' h . IV) f. | j t if declared,
fl,0l)r&gt; t d t e d . tbt aeooad to reeelr*
Bt t f t t * t e a h ' i i t V « e t&gt;«t h n i n «
t t-tft*)4lik*t fiw thee*-y**r*M) alB i t pffqt^i; c i ' d e e t 10 pened*. MB*
rteea'k
t e f Brow* F » * V T . by BefVwWi
P * J ' i r f c - - t - | r , a r 7 . 117 fTw^ftrtt) . 1
b t t f a a ' t rk r B « e t l 4 , i l l (Tor1

h i * r*"ir«

dflw*

**tfl

b*

f»Torl!«. whllt tk» H»**ty w e t l
ef pot"'•
r*i*ha*41t t * d
tha. %-*« hf*M
r*14w*ri
f a t l l t e i t I M T K lb« I m fttwftf.
ewt* rat t&gt;&gt;l la f r m t Vat
by H * e t M . wtM tbrwtd t k t
iht t f i M t a d roaa-l tht *TT*»
the b*e*terr*r% &gt;y twn teat***.
k t * t r f h t t th.y t r * *
to tk* |*w*e tiro.
a Bettty

f mi*i Fl.a l . l IH
.8. fci-...
WtlH
B
t

e*wA'*r'^*r,»

ef lat* yetr* had a i r&gt;pdar ansa*, T b *
l t t t * r * i r f b i n w u Tr'tiy, w%*a a * held
tow* ea t h t dark ef a n o i l aaat aad V a a l
ta titer n * wat tV-ot 50 faar* %t aaa
tad t hard drtaktw.

IIMIICII.. n \

lw)tS/

V T M t'»Xl*3"'w,I*&gt;»Jk

oa
|aMB.Bv-4«k]a,

r*t»:
tWft.
**pt.
BiW:

i&lt;*

I t * * Cwatral It
II
dt p . e f d . U
UH
Kit.-. A few I t
11
U n i t A!»tsh «»S «&gt;&lt;
Ltkt.tbori.Ui
1H1
U U U R U
U t
do t r t r d 71 1*K
UK. I . A C M \ 1»H
U t M t S M 141* UK
A* artr-l. II
M
HaaCoD . . . : U i i t u t

1 ' t W l t l i l I I 11
i o i » i titu t-2
it
l'»ll»tnl*.C.ll8 1*7
C.U.A W

B . a yf.r.i.

is

04 k n f a . I » H
keilisf.
to
fc-r* It'SOtf. t-%1
t t T t u l . . . . rtH

•««
44
Mf
ttX
HK

&lt;» pfkrd.ii'n n i t
s

«i 1'&lt;«IAU
sLF. A D . . . . I I
U
Mtt t r U r t f l lfti S IM
T p f..
n
•IK
1 ' l f M l l t . . It] t «
l l U . U k I . A t * 84 J4
T.A A. A.
rt* n
l n o » r « e . . I7H M
v.r. A J«.o. i7w
w. .V.Tel.n t . . t o * t e n
H at.k .
l*H II
M ra&lt;s». .. MS a j "'| o p r . r . . . 7 l
&amp;
•)
- - " T, l » 4 II
11 W»fc.at . . . . II
B-vK.A 11H
t l K l ^ ' o prtf*.
Ho prtf 1. si
I t I Wo. t t n l n l .
Mltf. B l k L I I

ill

BtrrTBB AJO&gt; OBTSHB K A B X T l
»tw Ttrt. Atf II — BtttT T - * aatrhst t a
8*tBrday kad k Sbfwkly Irster MdafTtwA B t M
k«4
btstatt* was dot* ttd tartauoas i w t B t a * .
eAaagwi. ttatt dalrttt ted crtai
*f* »wry
taMH. Tb* w**tb»r r»p"r»i
- r**&gt;T

wtatkar, tad sbo*U t u t (».l-w »t*t I M latrtttily
hot w t a t i a i i btoeiftt • thi t g U tat aatt, It a
kto ttatlaktat el tht trtdt tbatbattsr haatstaa tad
ator* akortwies! ol Intwr * u reaaM.
8uM trtasaery, t«11t t i tra, at 1 • &lt;(11 toto t s -

paM,
do r*r&lt;d, I x t l t t l f i k tab^bttt. II e t l K«l dp
., "
8r*«», isttttc 1 do tacoadtriTiilMi do ttArdt, ltt|

^.-.-.^ B 63 T*
3K
s!
•J
3 5 c- a*

FOariCD OTXTt A TAM.
a p e d U to Th* Joaraa).
F a l K A t * 1 8 . - W h o * Cartorlt* M*tR
TVataVrt aad Chsui** Cart, aB Dwaaa.
**Q.
ptxyrfflf. i^ Trm trvwiv
ta a bnat oa t a * tlttatrB He** *%***
•&gt;r«s-t»l t i T. - J u-a»|.
th* hig% dart atrardty whybt w t e t ****&gt; tkt
W e t l Trey, AT*/ 1^-Tb» body ef
•am T h * tnw* wee* atf** I pad*)* t a d bad
Mtttorkt w»« f - a * l r &gt; . a M | kl I
t « ear*. Th*y a|iai*atb«d | a r rliw* to t a t
*a*r tbt arte**! j « • » - • « ? aftoewai
Mat d**a T h t Cart b e ^ b f l ttjeatsJiA ta raarbtorkt wa* a rtttraa tf t h * tafc* *sjt, aad !•*? th* tVvr*. hat Wttaat w a t d * r r t « C The

•a

1«T
Bn4
tTS i ' \
00 p r t f d . M
t*t
4* f V l . IM«&lt; 1»«
t.i. T . O . . . «H »
do p r e f j . 1*4 1&gt;
a* t r t r d . at
w
R o r k l s i T l ; M t MS

a w t a e ; tr.%1. t » H w
ftvitVtru. t"r L t-4rTt««,nht kadpails,t«i s•*; i* »MtM aetryt jhart1
arts**, t t t t
aad

IttSSi

'drt«'a h r Ct»e B - r . TIT f*M-.-rl I
B a i r h e W a br I Pabhaiflle, 1\T
tl«a t i n .
TTT*. I f *
tatl^rt by btta* W * m rf trvtMr*.
Ft,
aVaiald, • t t » tad I to I ;
trbva wert *.Vr*r&lt;&gt;4r *-&gt;-\ wMvyt ew Mia*
w&gt;r. &gt; to t t e 1 T t^ 10 F a t - Vat rVua»r rf AT^t-r i M Mia* AUc* M.
I to 1 tad t r e t ; O M hnj, 4 to 1 TXT** of * * w T r e k
1

*e*e»d i t Iht fanrfee,
hot « hear/ exai^WH-wi

fairly fatltbctt l»*t,

pha.rd
_, _. ..__
den; Mr. and Mrt. H. JI. Grlrrold. Mra
A. \V. McOrmiek, *» th* IVanklin) to*
Ket- J, H. Moteecger. i t Dr. Skro&amp;tT't;
J, White, \V. A . H-ilDaekrtDL t t l h e D n , K w 4 l t * i J t * &gt; r R M anird awtthrrt,
Ken«lcron: Mr. and Mr«. D M, Becker. •MM lttt r i ; i » , B t l t t j t l * i etwt.eowraoa t* fair,
J. R. Tbctjptoo, &lt;K-A. Thttc*er. T. I I J « » tIK . .&lt; Jo r ^ * Att» BXJra cor* fed. »&lt; t M i U;
*-'
"
K il orW* t
Oirritan. W. A. Cooate. Mr- tnd Mr*. hullitorA t i t &lt;*YU i t l p o r t l l i t * l V s j Usingt a,
«ittli
t t Vtdtarttllk, t t f t t l . ^ ; re*',,
MeDontH. T Uarnor, Ml** H Becker. | l ! 9 « l M . r a l» V. V«t
c
to U if,,p t a ) t J I ;
eowtreoa tots, |).Mt)471
H. t/tdell. Y»'. Miller. Mr. tad Mra J. f a r u b«*»., p ctca)iM:a»kaad wwwri oerataoa to
81
J7 Miner. B Cobb. t. V. MAr»htll. a l hTleAt*M u. to 88 *
bft,
tfce Cnmrnereiil: Mra Htrriaxioa. Mr. - Hr*»-8*rw&gt;rt»i *» tt»A» theeotja, m « k
ttv^ Mr*T r . Kff'r. •* a * tflebht; f\ * lleady Irr rwd aW**»l rowow1* aid graneeri I
U-rnahiV Mrt. 8. LUieothAL t t Dtrdea ihAdtVt r. HrtWifMti, e»rar&gt;&gt;ri-Vi«&lt;t.ir;
View; Mr. i M Mrt. J I. B. Or!tw&gt;ld. ptrlrrt 1-1 rwdluBh aiftsU.ll- yorkert grW] to
a*lbrhi tt
Mr« A. W. MrC&lt;wmick. t t the F&gt;aakllts. fi.1. «nr« M. mnii.r; food, t t t t t ffairrt%**•
Bridal to Th» 7&gt;araal.
l i t : good
• ucdty afleroooa t ll^f r»*H It tbt t 7 t ; artaVTi
BowM U k » . An*. IV - T b e *t*r&lt;-%t* t t Wrrd»n lott h»r porkftbook eoattltlBg foar htary f*M, *v
to bttt tort f*d,
. to fair. H l 0 t ) 4 : i :
ta.*tx*AM; to
the and'-rr!--! on 8»'rM«y and jr&lt;tert?&lt;«y 8100 Wis. Calet* fo*3l h*r »l»lt to f*an- aatorted root
eosity^ irvagh^ai i»
wtr* well a'tr-.drd with &lt;-^»tat** from t h t t o n wm be tbortesed. A ronr* la aVm- B t J t u t u t ,
Ibrtt l t d
»! totdt tar****,
rirtont sr.-'.«t.!»* of / r a t i peoplt t t t h t wovl Hi'l wat robbed last light tf t rait- 44 M&lt;* .
aradrt of Mora.
•bit witch aad rhaJt
t . t f I J I i tew ta
rhan-bri. »yrh a i tbt K^w-rth Lr**nt* t e d
Viflkg* Clerk DtiUa w.1 itart for rTliftri th***, chnrt to
• a * * , tat***.**;
tbt eWaiotk U *
rhrlrtlia Ked»*Ti-r. A Tfry t t e ^ f o t *d- 1 rail* toalght to repreteat
lvr^*» l
TVem*n'i Besteoltwt Ajaeolatiaa ta tkt t «»UJ a M : ctikt fb
, 4«
dr*** of welectur v i a deMrered by htinltttr
ttatt tremta'a conreetloo,
rta*. Tk* retpore* by ih» ft*y. Vr. Cwa
A r i l l wtl mtdt 01 tkt Las dry boa** tt
ChcAfn. Aaf,
of CaKbti&lt;Ut W M t i * c . - A g y*lr. Baaayt Orirrl Kin latt Ratarday. t t d Mr*. Ttt try. ft**, T-taaa a
otfetrt steady
Ite hjb*r. Botwh
Iht pr^pri'triw*, tad 11 other wotaat *rH'W&gt;-«io».
wert re*4 by Mi«« Wird cf Albatr, Mr. W.
r
«l,8ltlgtlM;prlw*
rettM and tthra to ttt V»-h tp. Mrs. I A * ••chert, tv» "
O. R«wt and etb':« o - . of t h j most la- dry It held la tarn b*U to t,~?*ar btfor* U t h*aiy I at
ftbM
:r»reti!ig of th» tpee bet sy**' aiade by rrta-1 Jary. Th* glrlt wert if''* tb* tfiim
Mr*. C. W. J^oet of Al'aay, w4&gt;» hat rharwa rt le«»:-t to-ra or f f y B a g trlaL Taa of tattp
tkem t&gt;rk tdTtofi** of tht *tTre aad 4*&gt;
aad has had fir tcrtrtl j e t r t t f tkt ttaalltr p&lt;rt*d for AlMay. Tbt ether, ytaalt Bmr••t: Cy«wiat&gt; » a * ! f &gt; l^wttt. CV*&gt;a*&gt;
riaat-t rf tbt fbrdrea of th* N n d a y teaaal rt.1. «w* tield t t t euuertal wktaea* la t UK*'
A
a3Wd*rcai a«*&lt;e4&gt; rwd* It tbt Lardiy
u w n N f . r&gt;a fVtarlay t f r l r n g V l t t Bchite
Dte
ta^'b»f r»»* ker •tT*r« N^HCO* lectwr* 00 h%«« lt*t Frld\» atrh* by Iknbtrt Oar** of
Tt*
IM
»«
ttx
I
" O W R a a l a t d " (V* rf t&gt; » mr«t latortwSlag. Xi^i'aeky tpra lt»»ry WaKte *f Krw »«•%. I N « V . . .
An*
how»T«r. rf »11 t' » e; &lt;rtal««»*U of t h t Wlth^st knewa peanii'aatu* 0*t«* aaaaattwd
5
n n a e f w a t oc» rt-t or. tbt p m * n t n m * . It Walter with a half*, rati** bra ****** 1/
Jl" '
•«
Oct..
wat t l f r o In tr» t»rt^« of t h t B a m h a m la tbt fart a*&lt;f tWvtl tht ana. Tbtt atbtr O l ' i .
a«»t pre*«ea jntnpet tpe* o*i*t aad BIT*
MK
bew*t by a rnmb»t cf i--« raeatt t t t a «1A»twr.
eteat t m r r r « r ( « rite, f .- tbt boaedt of Bh* him a rremeadcvi tkrtaMta, All tb* parOr! .
Tr«y Fre*b Air T u - 1 . i - 1 II Included rtct- tJ*a tr* »od*r arrest.
f

r»ry pretty. tljrht
IfoayirAttrra bka
American m l rlub fl«n Brinf a'l along
tie ahcr* &lt;-f the l«k». la frwet cf the
different ti!&lt;w ir» »»jlr-oolorej JLMM,
Ttme, 1 M i l
** f B bfdrtr.g the tot»:n of Ka fllviK Ttcro
LowUader 1 to I and 4 to S; are rtram tr.1 aai!i-.g r*&gt;-ht« a-&gt;&lt;-h.or*d
leaa and laferoo. *4ch T to J *«1 ? J r o n t / ' : f h ^ v u r f f s and t&gt;,j bay It
bfabtl OHna, » to 1 aod » to 1; O^T «i:h »v.!r.g «-d paddllrg cano*l.
&lt;u a Terr open " r * . *t etch cnt I " ^ • " ? • ••••*• Soo-iVl th-r* not &gt;-» wind
- t ' r a . i ^ a a d T f a J T a b a a c k V wlnalag n i r miVl!M!d . , - " ^ i L W - V ^ n * *ffl.ba.f*Utd
! l
|ti coat*-\"i*nee l «
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Untitled Document

Thomas M. Tryniski
309 South 4th Street
Fulton New York 13069

www.fultonhistory.com

i t a i f 4«fWf it&gt;tti
f»U *ajtk*,H*tiV

ftoattoaaliowtra.

S M I T H - I a Kew Tork d r y , Aofnat 14. Itrt,
M a r / A i a a l l * J * 4 * t B , wll* of e*xxaw F. lauth,
eT • 1 N I L — T a r i s t 14, Xfln, Goorg* fMtraaL
aged M years aod 4 axmiht.

L

tasjt

it

ObrtUary Notes,

T i : i J ~ u ^ r r TI r
• U p r i - w e i J J M m , »• l M ' l [ « t i &gt;

*at*l&gt;

^r»ti« af«

Powder

Of reductions to clear out stock
now comes from our Horse Goods
Dep»rtfy»etit.
It's aa odd lot of summer goods
we offer.
We have 3$ all-wool checked Lap
Robes, the $3.^0 quality, now selliftgtrt *!.08«ach.
There's a cheerfully cheap choice
t o b e h a d from 23 fine cloth Lap
Robes in light and dark color*, If
you want a big bargain don't wait
till these are ail gone.
About three dozen of the Hi.50
Class checked Horse Sheets, dark
Colors, wool finish, will be run off
at 08c each.
Pi.it) w r . K t . - c k Hottt Sheet!
are now only ^J'c f/acTi.
We have everything you want in
Horse Clothing.
Store ope* Friday twening.

JOHN G. MYERa
Ali o f

.-.•••••.,

0t»f Hifh.atl6«ci
h»«kwMr rwdwoed

a*tjw**araBaa*tja*ai*a*t*»

JtRW ADYBatTltlBtliBraTI
OUBlNllvajB
• fW

gB#ff|t*y B / M s t t a r t t a i

' ' * •

To 40 eta. steh.
Look In our blf
Window and »*t)
the dltfrtiy,

Aht^ttaty TJM Baaf&gt;

It la made of pure cream
of tartar and soda, no ammonia, no alum.
A like
3uantity goes farther and
oes better work.
It ia
therefore cheaper.
Cleveland's is the *&gt;aking
baklnj
er used iri the U. S.
Army and by teacher* of
cookery.
It never varies,
and always gives perfect
satisfaction. Try a can,
ry a

^

RILLIP &amp; HINMAN,
•a Mtyflts t^ttti

tt.

r THOMAS.
TV* WASBBCB* MAKDOL1X8 tad
L ^ i 1 ^ ' ^ " a t o - ? VaX^toZidt
Mtji.

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tmm

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W a W , ^ JB&gt;qt|&lt;»1 I

I; iVw5^1&amp;SySkt5^

tad att fttad t a t : tHrtasa,rosta, ton,
watte*f latkraatiat eat**, ttA, twx, baad. Week a o w BdViirwTtrfc

ta# M t a y * * M m Vfsa^VTtBBaTBt aaMMlaTatf

1 tatw**/ «rTa*aa, AaftsM tfck, t t t i , i F |
efeat, M taeat awaAaaarjArL
ST.

Bcattrf A-' WAttXet, I

D. R STEWART,
BaOVMB PAfTCTataTt,
orrtOB am» BMOY, IBS MAstaost AVS
Mgai Fatathaa, S u s i t i g t f W t a d t t a d M t M M a ,
OOtUag, O t t t a a f , l a t a &gt;

15 rillTMftEET.

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              <text>Organized July 26, 1887. Free reading room and par­lor , 18 and 20 Pbila street; also gymnasium for n1embers. Regular meetings second -Tuesday of each month. Gospel service Sunday a.t 4 p. in. Rooms open from 9 a. m. to 10 p. m. D. F. Ritchie, P.res.; C. L. Haskins,. vice pres.'; Syd ey A. Rickard; treas.; L. A. James, rec. sec.; A. E .. Atwater, gen. sec.; A. F. Wolf, physical director.&#13;
Junior Department-Meets ·every Wednesday afternoon a 4.30. · · Marion Sanford, pres.; Chauncey W1lliams, vice-pres. Eddie Clark, sec. . ·&#13;
Woman's Auxiliary, Y. M. C. .A..--Meets ¥· M. C. A.&#13;
· rooms, first Thursday of each month at 8 p. m. Sarah&#13;
Wood, pres.; Mrs. S .. A. Rickard, vice-pres.; Agnes&#13;
Ritchie, sec. and treas. . .&#13;
YMC. A. Wheelmen-Regular meetings 1st Thursday&#13;
of each month at Y. M. C. A. rooms. Ralph A. Stewart,&#13;
pres.; Harry F. Thomas, ·Vice-pres.; Wm. H. Waterbury,&#13;
ec. and treas.; A. F. Wolf, capt.; J. Crawford Eddy,&#13;
lieut .</text>
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&#13;
Whenever historical or explanatory information is available, it should be included here as well. This includes information about items or events that are larger than just the map itself; for example, information about cartographers, a description of the map's historical significance (for example, "This is the first printed map of Saratoga Springs"), notes on the laws leading to a map's creation, descriptions of changes in state or county lines, information about the organization that created the map, how often maps were updated, and information about the map's creation and publication. Many State Archives maps have historical information in the catalog record -- that should be captured in this field.</description>
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              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4248">
                  <text>Adult and Senior Center of Saratoga</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="6">
      <name>Still Image</name>
      <description>A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6489">
              <text>photograph</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="119">
          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6490">
              <text>J. Dym</text>
            </elementText>
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        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6491">
              <text>27/05/2017</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="101">
          <name>Date Depicted (Display)</name>
          <description>Text version of the date field -- can handle non-numeric characters (ca. 1850s, [1844]). This is the content date field that will display.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6492">
              <text>1980s&#13;
2000s</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="100">
          <name>Date Depicted (Numeric)</name>
          <description>Date that the information on the item depicts. In many cases, this will be the same date as that in the date field, but there will be exceptions. For example, a historical map drawnin 1890 might show Saratoga Springs as it was in 1820. Or, the information on the map itself might include detailed information that enables us to extrapolate a date, for example, "based on a survey done in 1841." Many State Archives map catalog records refer to this as the "situation date."</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6493">
              <text>1980 &#13;
2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6485">
                <text>[Intergenerational support for seniors]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6486">
                <text>1980&#13;
2000</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6487">
                <text>Two photographs from the Saratoga senior center's collection which showcase young adults providing technical advice to seniors.  In the first image, a young map engages with an image.  In the second, seniors and helpers are seated at computers.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6488">
                <text>english</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="671" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
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          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4248">
                  <text>Adult and Senior Center of Saratoga</text>
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              </elementTextContainer>
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          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6459">
                <text>[INVITATION, Dedication, 162 Williams Street]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6460">
                <text>April 1, 1979</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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  </item>
  <item itemId="354" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
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          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4262">
                  <text>Harry T. Burleigh 150th Commemoration</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4263">
                  <text>2016</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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          </elementContainer>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="6">
      <name>Still Image</name>
      <description>A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="119">
          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4384">
              <text>J. Dym</text>
            </elementText>
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        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4385">
              <text>28/11/2016</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="4379">
                <text>[Jack's Harlem Club Cabaret, 72 Congress Street]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="4380">
                <text>1941</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="73">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="4381">
                <text>George S. Bolster Collection</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="93">
            <name>Provenance</name>
            <description>A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="4382">
                <text>Saratoga Springs History Museum.  </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="94">
            <name>Rights Holder</name>
            <description>A person or organization owning or managing rights over the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="4383">
                <text>Saratoga Springs History Museum.  Please do not copy, print, republish or use without permission from the Saratoga Springs History Museum.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="118" public="1" featured="0">
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    <collection collectionId="34">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5030">
                  <text>Mapping Saratoga Springs</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5031">
                  <text>1700-</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Map</name>
      <description>Cartographic document</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Creator - Individual</name>
          <description>Name of the person or people responsible for creating the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1956">
              <text>[Taintor, Charles]</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="101">
          <name>Date Depicted (Display)</name>
          <description>Text version of the date field -- can handle non-numeric characters (ca. 1850s, [1844]). This is the content date field that will display.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1957">
              <text>1880</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="100">
          <name>Date Depicted (Numeric)</name>
          <description>Date that the information on the item depicts. In many cases, this will be the same date as that in the date field, but there will be exceptions. For example, a historical map drawnin 1890 might show Saratoga Springs as it was in 1820. Or, the information on the map itself might include detailed information that enables us to extrapolate a date, for example, "based on a survey done in 1841." Many State Archives map catalog records refer to this as the "situation date."</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1958">
              <text>1880</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="99">
          <name>Date Published (Display)</name>
          <description>Text version of the date field -- can handle non-numeric characters (ca. 1850s, [1844]). This is the date field that will display.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1959">
              <text>1880</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="98">
          <name>Date Published (Numeric)</name>
          <description>Date the item was printed. This will be set as a date field, accommodating only numbers. The field will be able to handle single dates or date ranges. This will not display, but will be indexed and searchable.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1960">
              <text>1880</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1961">
              <text>Saratoga Room, Saratoga Springs Public Library</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="117">
          <name>Scope</name>
          <description>Tiered geographical location (for example: United States, New York State, Saratoga County, Saratoga Springs, Congress Park).  This field is here for two reasons: first, to present, at its narrowest level, the scope of the entire item (in other words, not every place name has to be listed here). Second, this field will allow for accurate and helpful narrowing and broadening of geographic searches.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1962">
              <text>Neighborhood/District</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="110">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>For Maps: This subject field describes the purpose of the map. This is a controlled-vocabulary field using terms developed for this project. It is important to note that Map Theme and Map Type are not hierarchical, thus it is possible to have the two fields overlap or even duplicate each other. In determining the purpose of the map, the cataloger should consider the publisher, and, (if known) original use of the map. For example, a map that shows a wide variety of information might be a candidate for General in the map_type field, however, if it was prepared by the state geologist and contains, in addition to everything else, substantial information about the geology and topography of the state, it would be classified as a Geological map. Multiple terms can be used in this field.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1963">
              <text>Thematic maps</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="109">
          <name>Theme</name>
          <description>For browsing purposes, we are borrowing and adapting themes from the Library of Congress's American Memory project.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1964">
              <text>Recreation</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1965">
              <text>Travel and Tourism</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1966">
              <text>Education</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="112">
          <name>Subject - Geographic</name>
          <description>Library of Congress subject headings.&#13;
&#13;
For maps: for major geographic locations depicted on the map, followed, in nearly every case, by the "Maps" genre subheading. (For example, "Saratoga Springs (N.Y.) -- Maps.") This field will be especially important when the records from this collection are incorporated into larger databases and catalogs.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1967">
              <text>Saratoga Lake (N.Y. : Lake)</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1953">
                <text>[Lake Saratoga. College Regatta Course]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1954">
                <text>1880</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="73">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1955">
                <text>Charles Taintor, &lt;em&gt;Saratoga Illustrated: The Visitor's Guide to Saratoga Springs&lt;/em&gt; (Taintor Bros., 1880).</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="342">
        <name>college athletics</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="158">
        <name>exercise</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="131">
        <name>health</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>recreation</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="156">
        <name>regatta</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="349" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
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        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4262">
                  <text>Harry T. Burleigh 150th Commemoration</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4263">
                  <text>2016</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="6">
      <name>Still Image</name>
      <description>A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4339">
              <text>1 negative : glass ; </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="10">
          <name>Physical Dimensions</name>
          <description>The actual physical size of the original image</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4340">
              <text>8 x 10 in. </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="119">
          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4341">
              <text>J. Dym</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4342">
              <text>28/11/2016</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="101">
          <name>Date Depicted (Display)</name>
          <description>Text version of the date field -- can handle non-numeric characters (ca. 1850s, [1844]). This is the content date field that will display.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4343">
              <text>ca. 1900-1915</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="99">
          <name>Date Published (Display)</name>
          <description>Text version of the date field -- can handle non-numeric characters (ca. 1850s, [1844]). This is the date field that will display.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4344">
              <text>1900</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="109">
          <name>Theme</name>
          <description>For browsing purposes, we are borrowing and adapting themes from the Library of Congress's American Memory project.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4345">
              <text>Transportation</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="4346">
              <text>Infrastructure and Communication</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="28">
          <name>URL</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4347">
              <text>&lt;a title="North Broadway, LOC" href="https://www.loc.gov/resource/det.4a19686/"&gt;https://www.loc.gov/resource/det.4a19686/&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4348">
              <text>Prints and Photograph Division, Library of Congress</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="4336">
                <text>Detroit Publishing Co., publisher </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="4337">
                <text>Saratoga Springs, NY -- Streets. &#13;
United States--New York (State)--Saratoga Springs. &#13;
New York (State)--Saratoga Springs &#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="4338">
                <text>photograph</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="4349">
                <text>[North Broadway]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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    </elementSetContainer>
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  <item itemId="682" public="1" featured="0">
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      <file fileId="1475">
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          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Adult and Senior Center of Saratoga</text>
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          </elementContainer>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="6">
      <name>Still Image</name>
      <description>A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6534">
              <text>photograph&#13;
still image</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="119">
          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="6535">
              <text>J. Dym</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6536">
              <text>16/06/2017</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6532">
                <text>[Photo with Minne Vokes]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6533">
                <text>1950s</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="670" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1446">
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    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="28">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4248">
                  <text>Adult and Senior Center of Saratoga</text>
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              </elementTextContainer>
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          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6457">
                <text>[Program, dedication ceremony]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6458">
                <text>April 1, 1979</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="92" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="191">
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    <collection collectionId="34">
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        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5030">
                  <text>Mapping Saratoga Springs</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5031">
                  <text>1700-</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Map</name>
      <description>Cartographic document</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="100">
          <name>Date Depicted (Numeric)</name>
          <description>Date that the information on the item depicts. In many cases, this will be the same date as that in the date field, but there will be exceptions. For example, a historical map drawnin 1890 might show Saratoga Springs as it was in 1820. Or, the information on the map itself might include detailed information that enables us to extrapolate a date, for example, "based on a survey done in 1841." Many State Archives map catalog records refer to this as the "situation date."</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1476">
              <text>1950 ca.</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1477">
              <text>The City Archives (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="117">
          <name>Scope</name>
          <description>Tiered geographical location (for example: United States, New York State, Saratoga County, Saratoga Springs, Congress Park).  This field is here for two reasons: first, to present, at its narrowest level, the scope of the entire item (in other words, not every place name has to be listed here). Second, this field will allow for accurate and helpful narrowing and broadening of geographic searches.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1478">
              <text>City</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="110">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>For Maps: This subject field describes the purpose of the map. This is a controlled-vocabulary field using terms developed for this project. It is important to note that Map Theme and Map Type are not hierarchical, thus it is possible to have the two fields overlap or even duplicate each other. In determining the purpose of the map, the cataloger should consider the publisher, and, (if known) original use of the map. For example, a map that shows a wide variety of information might be a candidate for General in the map_type field, however, if it was prepared by the state geologist and contains, in addition to everything else, substantial information about the geology and topography of the state, it would be classified as a Geological map. Multiple terms can be used in this field.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1479">
              <text>Manuscript maps</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1480">
              <text>Road maps</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1484">
              <text>Color maps</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="109">
          <name>Theme</name>
          <description>For browsing purposes, we are borrowing and adapting themes from the Library of Congress's American Memory project.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1481">
              <text>Transportation</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="102">
          <name>Caption</name>
          <description>This field will include transcriptions of text that appears on or around the item, at the discretion of the cataloger. It should include relevant bibliographic information that is not given in the title, for example, "Top of map: 'EXAMPLE NEEDED' Publisher and printer information might also be included in this field: "EXAMPLE NEEDED.'" Note that the location of the printed text is given in the field itself and that the caption information is always included in quotes.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1482">
              <text>Item 37 (in a series)</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="121">
          <name>Abstract (&amp; Historical Note)</name>
          <description>Natural language description of the map itself, providing a general summary of the map and noting significant features. &#13;
&#13;
This is the place to introduce keywords and proper names that might be of interest to researchers, but do not warrant a separate subject heading of their own. Inset maps should also be described here, with their full titles given.&#13;
&#13;
Whenever historical or explanatory information is available, it should be included here as well. This includes information about items or events that are larger than just the map itself; for example, information about cartographers, a description of the map's historical significance (for example, "This is the first printed map of Saratoga Springs"), notes on the laws leading to a map's creation, descriptions of changes in state or county lines, information about the organization that created the map, how often maps were updated, and information about the map's creation and publication. Many State Archives maps have historical information in the catalog record -- that should be captured in this field.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1483">
              <text>A manuscript maps showing the main roads into and out of Saratoga Springs.  The city streets and downtown area are notable by their absence (blank except for a point indicating center of town), highlighting the map's focus on the main roads connecting the city to nearby towns of Malta, Saratoga and Wilton.  Saratoga Lake and Glen Mitchell are the only features on the map.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="111">
          <name>Subject - Details</name>
          <description>This subject field describes the amount of detail in a map.&#13;
&#13;
For maps:  (or layers) included on the map itself. This field might denote that the map includes information about, for example, Mountains, Railroads, Soundings, Elevation, or Population. These are controlled-vocabulary terms developed locally. The cataloger should be generous in assigning these terms -- even if only one canal is visible on the map, it should receive a "Canals" subject in this layer. &#13;
&#13;
Some of these terms are less specific than others and may warrant expansion in the Abstract field. For example, the "Businesses" term might be included here while the Abstract notes that the map shows mills and stores. Multiple terms can be used in this field.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1485">
              <text>Glen Mitchell (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
roads&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="112">
          <name>Subject - Geographic</name>
          <description>Library of Congress subject headings.&#13;
&#13;
For maps: for major geographic locations depicted on the map, followed, in nearly every case, by the "Maps" genre subheading. (For example, "Saratoga Springs (N.Y.) -- Maps.") This field will be especially important when the records from this collection are incorporated into larger databases and catalogs.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1486">
              <text>Lake Saratoga (N.Y.: Lake)</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="119">
          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1487">
              <text>Jordana Dym</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1488">
              <text>6/23/2014</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1474">
                <text>[Roads to and from Saratoga Springs]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1475">
                <text>ca. 1950?</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="206" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="454">
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        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5030">
                  <text>Mapping Saratoga Springs</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5031">
                  <text>1700-</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Map</name>
      <description>Cartographic document</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Creator - Organization</name>
          <description>Company, government agency, or other organization responsible for creating the item (the publisher should not be listed again here unless the same organization had a role other than that of publisher in sponsoring or creating the map).</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3117">
              <text>Skidmore College</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="121">
          <name>Abstract (&amp; Historical Note)</name>
          <description>Natural language description of the map itself, providing a general summary of the map and noting significant features. &#13;
&#13;
This is the place to introduce keywords and proper names that might be of interest to researchers, but do not warrant a separate subject heading of their own. Inset maps should also be described here, with their full titles given.&#13;
&#13;
Whenever historical or explanatory information is available, it should be included here as well. This includes information about items or events that are larger than just the map itself; for example, information about cartographers, a description of the map's historical significance (for example, "This is the first printed map of Saratoga Springs"), notes on the laws leading to a map's creation, descriptions of changes in state or county lines, information about the organization that created the map, how often maps were updated, and information about the map's creation and publication. Many State Archives maps have historical information in the catalog record -- that should be captured in this field.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3118">
              <text>This hand-drawn campus map of Skidmore Colleg’s Scribner Campus (behind today’s Congress Park) drawn by a Skidmore student offers a sense of college life in the 1940s. Details highlight dormitories, administration and academic buildings plus everything from a tea shop and tennis courts to smoking areas.  The map points the way to schools where Skiddies might find dates, Union College, Dartmouth and Cornell among them.  Saratoga Springs’ Public School No. 4 and Canfield Casino are two city buildings that draw the attention of the cartographer. </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3119">
              <text>Special Collections and Archives, Lucy Scribner Library, Skidmore College (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="117">
          <name>Scope</name>
          <description>Tiered geographical location (for example: United States, New York State, Saratoga County, Saratoga Springs, Congress Park).  This field is here for two reasons: first, to present, at its narrowest level, the scope of the entire item (in other words, not every place name has to be listed here). Second, this field will allow for accurate and helpful narrowing and broadening of geographic searches.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3120">
              <text>Neighborhood/District</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="110">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>For Maps: This subject field describes the purpose of the map. This is a controlled-vocabulary field using terms developed for this project. It is important to note that Map Theme and Map Type are not hierarchical, thus it is possible to have the two fields overlap or even duplicate each other. In determining the purpose of the map, the cataloger should consider the publisher, and, (if known) original use of the map. For example, a map that shows a wide variety of information might be a candidate for General in the map_type field, however, if it was prepared by the state geologist and contains, in addition to everything else, substantial information about the geology and topography of the state, it would be classified as a Geological map. Multiple terms can be used in this field.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3121">
              <text>City Plan</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="3122">
              <text>Pictorial maps</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="109">
          <name>Theme</name>
          <description>For browsing purposes, we are borrowing and adapting themes from the Library of Congress's American Memory project.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3123">
              <text>Education</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="3124">
              <text>Civic Life</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>Publisher of the item, or of the book or atlas in which it appears.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3125">
              <text>Skidmore College</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="53">
          <name>Place of Publication</name>
          <description>The city (and if necessary) state or country of publication.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3126">
              <text>[Saratoga Springs, N.Y.]</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="10">
          <name>Physical Dimensions</name>
          <description>The actual physical size of the original image</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3127">
              <text>22 x 28 cm.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="119">
          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3128">
              <text>J.Dym</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3129">
              <text>3/29/2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="28">
          <name>URL</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3130">
              <text>Skidmore College, Digital Collections, Scribner Library, &lt;a title="1944, Campus Map" href="http://cdm15968.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15968coll2/id/35/rec/16"&gt;http://cdm15968.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15968coll2/id/35/rec/16&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3111">
                <text>[Scribner Campus Map, 1943-44]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3112">
                <text>1944</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="73">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3113">
                <text>Skidmore Alumnae Quarterly. Vol. 22, no. 2, Winter 1944 (January). </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3114">
                <text>Skidmore College</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3115">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3116">
                <text>Gerish, Phyllis Olga, '44 </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="644" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1428">
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          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>A photo with caption depicting the fifth anniversary of the Senior Center&#13;
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                <text>Caption reads: The Saratoga Springs Senior Citizens Center, Inc., was the scene of an anniversary celebration Tuesday night when members observed the founding of the Center five years ago. Lighting candles on the anniversary cake, left to right are: Robert B. HOrsfield, whose interest in the Center has developed from the Golden Age Club which preceded it; Mrs. Arthur m. Vokes, executive director of the Center, and William L. Owen, another member of the original Golden Age Club, who is vicepresident of the board of directors of the Center. The Musicians Union provided music through the transcription fund. Birthdays of several members were also recognized.</text>
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                    <text>November 8,

1999

~1artl1a

StoneqLiis t
Cit~· Historian
...,oe Not1sia11en
Local Histor:1'" Librarian
='ol.-is Lamont
Historical Society Archivist
Dr.

Enclosed is a map and a cover letter from the New York State
Archives.
They were prepared locally in 1829 and submitted to
Alban~· to be used in the preparation of Burr's Atlas.
While it is very small, it is apparently the earliest complete

map of the road system in the town.

The citation is New York State Archives, A4016 Land Papers , 2nd

Series,

Book 13,

4a and 4b.

Sincerely,

Field Horne
Curator of Collections

J91 UNION AVENUE, AR.ATOGA

~PHIN

~.NEW

Y IlK 12866- 566

(518) 584-0400

F

" (SIH ';84

c;7

��.

l1

l "' Jnd u in los d a v ry accurate
111 p
th t ' n f ratoga prings agr eable
, ur r JU st - Th n1ap is corr ct d by
I ru ' \ It n ~ q[ .] \Vho has th best knowledge
Hl t h ..;ubj ' t f 'tt1 , n1an in the town - You
\Viii l bs r t h r ar se~veral in1portant
rr _ tion., as w II as additions n1ade to the
t n
vhi h you s .nt n1e all of which are for
th ""arat ga lak which is n1uch the best on your
n1ap nd I \vould let that rernain as it is - Mr.
Walton intended n1erely to sketch it as the
boundary of the town -yours tnost sincerely
John M. Steel Supervisor
of Saratoga Springs

G. De Witt Surveyor
G ,neral of the State of
Nev; York

���</text>
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                  <text>1700-</text>
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          <description>Natural language description of the map itself, providing a general summary of the map and noting significant features. &#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Whenever historical or explanatory information is available, it should be included here as well. This includes information about items or events that are larger than just the map itself; for example, information about cartographers, a description of the map's historical significance (for example, "This is the first printed map of Saratoga Springs"), notes on the laws leading to a map's creation, descriptions of changes in state or county lines, information about the organization that created the map, how often maps were updated, and information about the map's creation and publication. Many State Archives maps have historical information in the catalog record -- that should be captured in this field.</description>
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              <text>This sketch map was prepared by John Steel, surveyor, with the help of Henry Walton, at the request of Simeon De Witt, and corrects De Witt's state map.  &#13;
&#13;
In the margins, the mapmaker indicates the location of 4 churches in the village (urban center) of Saratoga Springs, as well as locations of mills.  Also noted are the correct southern boundary at the Kayaderosseras Creek (not 15th allotment of the Kayaderosseras Patent) and redrawing of stream routes based on surveys.&#13;
&#13;
The original of this sketch map is held by the New York State Archives.  Historian Field Horne found this map while doing research there.   Horne's letter to the City Historian (this copy is from the SSPL) includes John Steel's January 12, 1829 letter to De Witt.&#13;
&#13;
I send you inclosed a very accurate&#13;
map of the town of Saratoga Springs agreeable&#13;
to your request - The map is corrected by&#13;
Henry Walto[n] Esq who has the best knowledge&#13;
of the subject of any man in the town - You&#13;
will observe there are several important&#13;
corrections as well as additions made to the&#13;
one which you sent me all of which are far&#13;
more correct on the improved one except&#13;
the Saratoga Lake which is much the best on your&#13;
map and I would let that rernain as it is - Mr.&#13;
Walton intended merely to sketch it as the&#13;
boundary of the town --&#13;
yours most sincerely&#13;
John M. Steel Supervisor&#13;
of Saratoga Springs&#13;
S. De Witt Surveyor&#13;
General of the State of&#13;
Nev; York&#13;
&#13;
DETAIL, 1829 hand-drawn correction to 1804 Simeon De Witt map by Henry Walton sent by Saratoga supervisor John M. Steell.&#13;
&#13;
 NY State Archives reference: A4016 Land Papers, 2nd series, Book 13 4 a and 4 b. </text>
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          <name>Scope</name>
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        <element elementId="110">
          <name>Type</name>
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              <text>City Plan</text>
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        <element elementId="109">
          <name>Theme</name>
          <description>For browsing purposes, we are borrowing and adapting themes from the Library of Congress's American Memory project.</description>
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              <text>Cities and Towns</text>
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          <name>Record Contributor</name>
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              <text>J. Dym</text>
            </elementText>
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          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
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              <text>3/29/2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="111">
          <name>Subject - Details</name>
          <description>This subject field describes the amount of detail in a map.&#13;
&#13;
For maps:  (or layers) included on the map itself. This field might denote that the map includes information about, for example, Mountains, Railroads, Soundings, Elevation, or Population. These are controlled-vocabulary terms developed locally. The cataloger should be generous in assigning these terms -- even if only one canal is visible on the map, it should receive a "Canals" subject in this layer. &#13;
&#13;
Some of these terms are less specific than others and may warrant expansion in the Abstract field. For example, the "Businesses" term might be included here while the Abstract notes that the map shows mills and stores. Multiple terms can be used in this field.</description>
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              <text>Church-- Presbyterian&#13;
Church-- Methodist&#13;
Church-- Baptist&#13;
Church-- Universalist&#13;
Kayaderosseras Patent</text>
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          <name>Caption</name>
          <description>This field will include transcriptions of text that appears on or around the item, at the discretion of the cataloger. It should include relevant bibliographic information that is not given in the title, for example, "Top of map: 'EXAMPLE NEEDED' Publisher and printer information might also be included in this field: "EXAMPLE NEEDED.'" Note that the location of the printed text is given in the field itself and that the caption information is always included in quotes.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="3217">
              <text>"A The Village of Saratoga Springs&#13;
a. Babpist (sic) Church&#13;
b. Presbyterian Church    } all in the village&#13;
c. Methodist Church&#13;
d. Universalist Church &#13;
&#13;
[symbol] mill sites"&#13;
&#13;
"The bounds of Saratoga Springs on the south are the Kayaderosseras Creek and not the South Bounds of the 15th Gen.l Allot."&#13;
"The alteration in the streams are made from surveys."</text>
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        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="3167">
                <text>[Sketch map, Saratoga Springs]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1829</text>
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                <text>This sketch map was prepared by John Steel, surveyor, with the help of Henry Walton, at the request of Simeon De Witt, and corrects De Witt's state map. </text>
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        <name>churches</name>
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        <name>De Witt</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4">
        <name>manuscript</name>
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      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
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        <name>Steel</name>
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                    <text>THE SARATOGTAN. SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1923.
JL

*M^™t' i m W P W — ^ - f

Map and Description of Proposed New Zoning Plan for City
Public Invited to Attend
Meeting of Council for
Discussion Moday Night
Th» City Council, to enabl* Beratogiaaa to obtain * elea r idea. Of the
propped ordinance to son* tha city
of Saratoga Sprinf s has prepared the
map plated on this page of The Saratogian.

RwWwU o' tho city i r t requested
hi tie apuajli *Bd members ©r tho
SSepinj aotsiniUee to ear#mUy study
till m%» and to ho present At tho
couaell posting Monday night when

are concerned. None of these buildings, however, shall be more than
three stories in height.
Zoo* C include* hotels, boarding
house*, fraternal home*, e t c , in addition to ton buildings allowed under
the two previous mentioned sones.
Zone D is unrestricted. It include*
the outside tax district, the principal
business section of Broadway and
virtually all that section of the city
between tho Delaware «c Hudson ratif
road on the west and Henry street
on tho east.
Section 6 of the proposed ordinance provides for the continuation
of any business regardles* of its location which may be in existence at the
time the ordinance is passed.
"A nonconforming use existing, or
authorised by a !***« in writing duly
executed," the ordinance states, "at
the time of the passage of this ordinance, may be continued. But such
non-conforming use shall not ho extended, nor shall a structure designed, arranged or intended for nonconforming use, In whole or in part,
be enlarged, except for a conforming
use."
A penalty of a fine not exceeding
$100 and in case of non-payment of
the fine a jai) sentence of ten days
is fixed by section 8 of the ordinance.

the m*tt#* will »*« dUjeuseod.
Tho *eqia.g OFdinanoe, oa« of tho
ntempera of tho committee said today,
i!j Jar the purpose of regulating and
Fdltrjetiag tho lpesMan at trades nod
industries, ao4 ths lQCftUOB Of bttlW'
lags designed tor special uses.
The city under the proposed ordinance is divided into four zones
4Ho«m OQ the tpap ann" shaded to
[co.FreiBoa.d. v'th the table PflBtod holow.
Jfone A. Indicated In light shading;
'Zone B. indicated in heavy shading;
[ l M # S» i d e a t e d in Wack; Zone D,
(indicated, in vh»to.
Zona A-^J-TD Zone A no building or
premises. sk&amp;U be used and »0 build*
iag shall be eFeeted, whieh Is *?•
fASff4. iptJiadOd 6P designed to he
used except for one or pore of the
following uses.
(a) Ope family dwellings not exceeding tferep atopici in height, inProposals Explained
chidin?: tho office of a physician, surExplaining the proposals, the zongeon, dontiit, lB*yeH, civil engineer
ing commission made the following
or architect residing; therein.
statement" todayfW t!fcutrehe*.
•The Zoning O w a i i i l W l tried to
(8) Callages, libraries Qr publiv
make the plan submitted to the counmuseums.
(d) Private garage or stable for cil meet the special needs of our city.
*&gt;9t more than five vehicles, or five The plan calls lor four zones. FIRST,
a one-family residential district, the
horses for prjvato pr family use.
iooation of which is but a small part
Zone B—TQ IRooe S PO building or of onr city and in which only onepremises shall be used, and HO build family residential houses are permit
Jpj5 Shall b n erected, "which is arrange ted. The district roughly being both
od, intended or designed to'be used. sides of North Broadway and over
accept for one or more of the uses to D. &amp; H. railroad track and north
permitted in Zpne A. except for pri- of the p. &amp; H. railroad track and
vate dwellings for one or more fam* north of Van J&gt;am street, also from
•lies apt fiicodiug three stories in Union Avenue to Lake Avenua out to
jPeight^ Including apartment bouses the city limit*. 8BCOND, a two family apartment house, residential disjlOjr private families.
,
trict, the location of which is on th*
Zone C-^-In Zona C no building or east sida of B. &amp; V, railroad track,
iptemises shall be used and no build- soQtk to Crescent rtreet and south o(
4mg ehall be exacted which i l arrang- Van Dam stret and west of the D. &amp;
ed, intended pr designed to bo uaed H. railroad track with a few excep.
jeiscept for on* ei&gt; more of tho uses tions along the Adirondack railroad
f por»itted in Zones A and B. and ox* track which is reserved for business.
f&amp;pt for hotels, boarding houses, sani- THIRD, the section adjacent to the
tarium*, phtianthropie. fraternal or Reservation and south of Congress
oleomosynary uses, or institutions street, which is a one-or two-family
residential district with apartment
Other than correctional.
and hotels and
disZone D—Zone D js unrestricted, ex. houses reserved running a larsesouth
trict is
to the
oept for any business that may be- corporation line. FOURTH, business
tome a nuisance.
diatrtct or unrestricted district which
Business, generally, under pro- is roughly between the rt. &amp;
vision* of *ho proposed city ordinance M. railroad and the D. £ H.
to zone the city of ^Saratoga Springs railroad including land south of ConWill be confined to its present loca- gress street and west of the D. &amp; H.
tions and to future development in This district permits all business, except slaughter houses and occupa
the ootside tax district of tho city.
Tho mala business section of the tions prohibited by law, can be mainCity, under the proposed zoning ordi- tained and also any kind of houses a*
nance will be confined to that section loDg as they comply with the fire law.
"In following
four divisions,
Bounded on the east by Henry street you will- notice these the residential
that
and on the west by tho Delaware «c district will be protected by restricf
Hudson railroad track*. It will ex- tions which increases their value and
tend north in Broadway as far as does not interfere vdth the value of
*o* railroad tracks and south to any property therein.
(Washington street, when it will take
"The hotel district is taken care
*a south and west* direction to Oak of, and the race track is protected
street and than south west again to by leaving the land south of Crescent
street adjacent to the track open open
Use outside district.
so that the race track can maintain
Business already located In tho
oity will be unmolested by tho pro- all the stables there. The business
section is left with room on each side
posed Ordinance.
so that the natural growth will be
Hotels, bearding houses, sanitar- taken care of for quite a few years.
wns. fraternal building* and other inThe committee has tried to protect
stitutions, unless already erected the special interests of ail the propwill be confined to those sections of erty owners and zoned according to
the city south of the City Park, west the needs of the city* and in a simple
of Circular street ahd east of the manner and submit the plan for apIt. &amp; H. tracks. That section of the proval or such suggestions as the
city east of Bryan street, north of council and the people may deem
SStst avenue and west of Maplo ave- wise."
The zoning commisailon consists of
nue Is plso open for the construction
Walter P. Butler, chairman, E. D.
Of buildings of this nature.
StarbUCk, Harry W. Leonard, W.
Under provisions of the rules gov- Frink Ingham and Benjamin Wallemln*? Zone A, North Broadway, bridge.
Union avenue, that section of the
'
I
III I H I
tlQ I
city east of Circular street snd between Lake and Union avenue and a
largo section of the city referred to
on the map as Zone A is restricted
to one family dwellings, and other
buildings of a setni-business character
Zone B which in nearly everv Jnce adjoins Zone A in addition to
St. f^ouls, April 21.—Despite his
the buildings allowed in Zone A is noble last minute effort which veterunrestricted insofar as dwellings for an billiard enthusiasts declared wae
on* of more private families ana the most remark able performance
apaxtsrwnt nouses for private families they evar had Been under the condiI
tion*. Albert CntJw of New Tort rnliaauiahed hie short eto» 18.3 balk
line billiard championship to Charles
C. Peterson of St. Lonis here last
night. At the end of their last 400
point block, the local wizard was on
the long end ef an 80A to 784 score.
It took Peterson twenty-three innings
to complete his 400.
•' ssp* m
m

CUTLER LOSES GAME
m FIGHT WITH CUE

I0THER OF
URGE FAMILY
•

•

mmtendft Lydia £ . Pinkft Vegetable Compound
to Other Mothers
Minn.—"I wax so run-down
good for nothing. I wax to
become the mother
of my ninth child, and
1 thought I did oot
have the strength
to go through with
IL I took Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetabie (^wpoTOtl, and
it has surely done all
1 could ask it to do
nod I am tatting all
ray frtenda about it.
I haven nice big baby
_Jgirl and am feeling
may use this letter to help
bther Idefc mothers. ** — Mi*. C aV.
if osom, Bos 634, Window, Minn.

My First Child
Glen Aflem, Alabama^-"! ^ j J ^
Ma's Vegetable Compound for
bearing-down feelings and pain*. I was
trouMM in this way for nearly tour
rears following the birth of my first
M,and at times could hardly Stand en
^ H H f c A neighbor recommended the
beoeftt ft has nlisvsd my pates and
give* wje strength. I WKsosniaand it and,

PINK' GARDNER
INJURED IN BOUT

MIDDLE GROVE

COLLEGE BASEBALL

April 20.—The Ladies' Aid Society
— — - -* i
met with Mrs. Grover Dake at ltock
Yesterday's Results.
At State College, Pa.—Backnell, 4;
City Falls Thursday of this week.
Fenn State. I,
It was an all-day meeting.
At Washington—Harvard, I; Uni*
The Rev. Elw/a Baker 6f Sloahs- verslty of Maryland, 0.
Pete Gardner of Schenectady won vllle is expected to occupy the pulpit
At Springfield, Mass.—Dartmouth,
THE ARCTIC OCEAN
the first fall and was forced to with- as a candidate at the "Baptist ehuroh S; Spriugtield college, ».
The Arctic ocean is aatd by Scien- draw from the match after three
Today's Games.
tists to be getting appreciably Warmer. more minutes of wrestling.
next Sunday.
At Albany—Uuion vs. State Teach*
"Pink" Gardner of Schenectady lost
A doraiuo social will be held at the ers' College.
to Joe Turner of Washington, in the home of A, J. Deyoe Saturday eve
At. Troy—Stevens Institute
VI.
feature wrestling match staged last ding of this week baginQlng at %:'3Q Rensselaer Poly.
night in the Schenectady ftrirtOry. o'clock. All are invited.
At New York—Wesleyan vs. New
Gardner was injured when he lost
Tho music PlaSS Is practising ft play York University.
both from Joe Bausch of Albany in to he given in a lew weeks,
At New Haven —Yale vs. Dart*
the semi-finals.
Dake Brothers have purchased a mouth.
At WllUamatown—Williams
vs.
new truck to carry milk from their
farm to the ice c e a m plant at Kings. Norwich.
At Boston—Boston College vs. VerMiss Gladys Blowers and Miss
All Over Face, Hands and
mont.
Carolyn Kyctechymer of Ballston Spa
At Annftpolts—N.lvy vs. William
' were home the first parr of the week
Armsi Cutlcura Heated.
and Mary.
| and attended the music cits*.
At Priuceton—Princeton vs. Penn"I Suffered badly with pimples all
Mrs. Flora Rhoadea nnri Mrs. Wilmy fact, hands and arms. The
liam IMowers were Ball^tou Spa visi- sylvania.
yknpks festered and
Art New York—Tufts vs. Ford ham.
tors SattirflAv.
itched and burned, causAt Easton,
Pa.—Lafayette
vs.
Baltimore, April 21.—Outfielder J.
ing me t6do much scratchSR'arihmore.
J. Jones and Pitcher Matt lCirley of
Irif. My face was disfigAt West Point—Army vs. Catholic
UNION ATHLETES RETIRE.
the Syracuse International league
ured and ! could not put
Sehegectady, April lt.~«ftoxei Paw University.
club, have been sold to the Binghammy hand* In water or do
At Ithaca-*Cnrnvll vs. Columbia.
ton, N, Y., olub. Manager SUaugh- terson of New York, captain !&lt;nd
my regular work. I lost
Crack quarter miler man or tit^ UnAt Washington—Georgetown VS.
nessey of the Syracus* team, anSteep every night because
ion College track team, has been Johns Hopkins.
nounced hero today,
they bothered aae eo.
forced to give up his arses woik oa
At Wllllamstown—Williams
va,
— •
TTI- - I X Q J t
I, ,|
"I save Cudcure Soap and OintI
account or illness and will not be Connecticut Aggies.
ment advertised so purchased some,
able to corape*e In the opening meet
TRIAL ADJOURNED.
Al New Brunswick—Rutgers vs.
and after using three cakes of OutiSt. Joseph, Mich., April 21.—(Bj with Trinity here, May S. Kirk wood Ursinufi.
cura Beao and two boxes of Cutieura
.••"mi-Hi
i n
The Associated Press.)—The trial of Persouius of Klmira, another last
Ointment I wee completely heeled."
Charles E. RuLhenburg of Cleveland, man in the quarter, is out for th«
(Signed) Miss Congetta Oaetaoo.
TO MEET IN GQUVBRNtU*.
charged with criminal syndicalism remainder of the season a* a result
511 Eagle St., Utice, N. Y.
Oswego. N. Y., April 21.—The
Elinef Q. Northern Methodist Episcopal conferwas In recess today to eootene again Of a nervous breakdown.
Use Coneure for afl t©fl*t purposes.
Monday when, the state has anaounc- Oliphant, director ef physical educa- ence in session here today roteo to
ed, Francis Morrow, department of tion and coach at rhi trae* team, is hold the 1924 confertnea la the
Justice operative K-17, Will tAke the endeavoring to develop new material First Methodlat Episcopal chunh, of
I for thf tostttr mil*
stand.
I Gouvaiaeuf, N. Y.

WITH PIMPLES
i'

Wl—I

»

•

.

* &gt; • ! • • • II

•

I

SYRACUSE PLAYERS
GO TO BINGHAMTON

Ii

FRUIT A TIVES' SAVED
HER LIFE

Medicine Made from Fruit Juices and Tonics
Relieved Serious Stomach Trouble
8H07 Sncto Ave., Sacramento, Cal.
1 had Stomach Trouble for about
ten years; at last, it was so bad 1 got
Stomach Cramps two and three times
aweek. I trirdall kinds of expensive
medicines without rcsulU. After a
year of Stomach ('mm ps, I read about
•'Fruit-s-lives" and sent for a hot,
writing yonr firm that if MFruit-a
tires" did not help me, I would hava
to die. After the trial box* I felt
relieved so I kept on using "Fruit-at i v e s " for Several years and am
thankful to say that "Fruit-a-tives"
saved my life, Mrs. F. S. STOLZ.
"Fruit-a-tives" gives suchexoeileat
results in all cases of StomachTrouble
rmeauso this medicine is made from
the juices of apples, oranges, tigs and
prunes combined with tonics. It tones up and I n s t a t e s the.sternach
rauHTlM, increase* the supply of gastrlojuirn: and, at the same I tme, relieves
theConstipation and Bilious Headaches, from which so many Dysnephc* suffer.
60c a b o i T e for $3.50, trial sise 2.5c. At ail dealers or sent postpaid on
receipt of price by
11

FRtrrr-AynvKS LIMITED,
Ottawa, Can

SOOOEVPB!

London, Eng.

OGDENSBTIRG, N.Y.
Cnristchurch, tf.Z.

HAVE YOU READ THE GLASSKIIO k W

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                    <text>THE SARATOGIAN
nnd 1 he Saratoga Sun, Newt and BalUton Spa Daily News.

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y., MONDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1923.

THREE CENTS

NEW

S E R I E S , VOL. 64, NO. 288

Twelve

ZONING LAW ENACTED AGAIN FOR PROTECTION OF CI
Commissioners Favor Completion of Casino—Two Hurt in Acciden
COUNCIL MOVED
BY MENACE TO
LOCAL PROPERTY
Prominent Re.id.nt, Threaten
to Leave City if Not
Protected.

FOUND DEAD ON ROAD
Corning, N. Y., Dec. 24—Considerable
mystery
surrounds
the
death of William M. Cornell, 68, of
Tioga, Pa., near here, who
was
found dead along the Tioga highway after being s t r u c k supposedly
by a car last night. E r n e s t Miller,
of Corning, who w a s found in his
a witness
^ f S . " £ &amp; I"Tioga

TO TEACH NATIVES TRADES

INSPECTION OF
BUILDING BRINGS
DECISION TO ACT
Knapp, Leonard and Sherman
Make Visit to Structure.
TO COMPLETE CONTRACT

New Measure Will Permit the
Erection of Two Family
Houses.

PROTECTED AGAIN
EDITORIAL
T h e City Council ..cted wisely today in r e e n a c t i n g t h e zoning
o r d i n a n c e for t h e p r o t e c t i o n of p r o p e r t y in S a r a t o g a I p r i n g s .
D u r i n g t h e brief i n t e r v a l since t h e law w a s r e p e a l e d by t h e council
t h e r e h a v e been d e v e l o p m e n t s h e r e which m e n a c e d e v e r y p r o p e r t y
holder.
T h e r e h a s been evidence in s e v e r a l d i r e c t i o n s t h a t w i t h t h e prot e c t i o n a s s u r e d by t h e zoning l a w removed, p r i v a t e i n t e r e s t s i n t e n t
only on t h e i r own selfish e n d s , — a n d c a r i n g n o t h i n g for t h e city,—
w e r e m a k i n g moves f r a u g h t w i t h d a n g e r to e v e r y p r o p e r t y o w n e r .
^That t h t s m a l l e r p r o p e r t y o w n e r a s well a s t h o s e m o r e h e a v i l y
i n t e r e s t e d financially w a s e n d a n g e r e d is e v i d e n t from a d e v e l o p m e n t
on S p r i n g S t r e e t , opposite t h e City P a r k , w h e r e w o r k on a s h a c k
h a s b e e n s t a r t e d t h a t c a n n o t fail t o be a d e t r i m e n t to t h e city.
E l s e w h e r e t h e r e w e r e a c t i v i t i e s i n d i c a t i n g t h a t c e r t a i n i n t e r e s t s int e n d e d to t a k e speedy a d v a n t a g e of t h e o p p o r t u n i t y offered by t h e
r e p e a l of t h e law to build a n y k i n d of a building in any locality.
A s t h e city existed u n t i l n o o n t o d a y t h e r e w a s n o t h i n g to prev e n t a n y p e r s o n from building a g a r a g e or a g a r b a g e s t a t i o n in any
s e c t i o n of t h e city adjoining t h e m o s t a t t r a c t i v e r e s i d e n c e s .
T h e Council is to be c o n g r a t u l a t e d t h a t i t h a s a c t e d t h u s speedily
in t h e public i n t e r e s t .

CAROLS TO BE
SUNG TONIGHT
AT WHITE HOUSE
Grounds Will Be Thrown Open
For Participation by
Public
MAKE

PLANS

ABROAD

Seattle. Dec. 24—Equipped a s a
model floating school, the auxiliary
Preliminary Observance at the
power schooner, Boxer, will
sail Ritchie Brothers Will Go On
Vatican—Anglo-Saxon
from Seattle W e d n e s d a y on a novel
With Work, If Auexpedition for S o u t h e a s t e r n Alaska,
Day in Paris.
thorized.
At a special meeting called for where her officers will u n d e r t a k e
t h a t p u r p o s e a t noon today a t t h e to teach the n a t i v e s various t r a d e s
W a s h i n g t o n , Dec. 24—All
gates
Three m e m b e r s of the city counhome of Commissioner of A c c o u n t s including wireless telegraphy a n d
of the W h i t e H o u s e grounds will
Michael J. Mulqueen, t h e City navigation, ! t is announced by J. cil which will a s s u m e office J a n be t h r o w n
open tonight
while
they
Council r e - e n a c t e d a zoning o r d - H. W a g n e r , supervisor here of the u a r y 1, 1924, today stated
C h r i s t m a s c a r o l s a r e sung a t the
were in favor of completing
the
inance, which, according to A c t i n g U. S. b u r e a u of education.
north end of t h e mansion.
repairs and a l t e r a t i o n s to the CaMayor R i c h a r d J. S h e r m a n , e x —
«j a
sino building.
Mrs.
Coolidge, wife of the P r e s i p r e s s i n g the sentiment of the C o u n dent w a s the m o v i n g spirit In h a v Mayor-elect C. H . Knapp, Dr. A.
cill, will protect the property o w n ing the old c u s t o m revived a n d t h e
J. Leonard, commissioner of p u b e r s of the city "until such time a s
public will t a k e p a r t in the c e r e lic safety
and
R. J.
Sherman,
t h e Council can a p p o i n t a new
commissioner of finance, during an
monies.
c o m m i t t e e on zoning to go over t h e
inspection of the building
this
local s i t u a t i o n and frame a
new
The vested choir of the
First
morning, s t a t e d they were in faordinance."
Congregational church, where t h e
vor of a bond issue to complete
President a n d M r s . Coolidge w o r W i t h its publication today,
the
the Ritchie B r o t h e r s contract and
ship will lead t h e singing.
Muo r d i n a n c e will be offective i m m e d i an additional a p p r o p r i a t i o n of $13.sicians from t h e m a r i n e b a n d will
a t e l y . I t will be similar to
the
000 next y e a r to complete
the
assist.
ordianco w h i c h w a s repealed s e v r
work.
C h r i s t m a s in Vatican.
e r a l weeks ago, w i t h the exception
Public W o r k s Commissioner H e n Rome, Dec. 24—There were p r e t h a t it opens the w a y for t h e e r e c - Claim Capture of Cuernavaca,
ry M. Carr a n d Commissioner M.
liminary
Christmas
observances
tion of two-family houses in p r a c Forty Miles South of
J.. Mulqueen were a b s e n t .
Henry
tically a n y section of the city.
within t h e V a t i c a n today.
Capitol.
E. Ryall, who h a s been named a s
The g a r d e n e r s of the V a t i c a n
T o d a y ' s m e e t i n g w a s called
at
deputy commissioner by Mr. Carr,
gardens p r e s e n t e d the Pontiff w i t h
t h e r e q u e s t of President J a m e s B .
HEAVY
FIGHTING was present a t t h e inspection, but
W h i t e of the C h a m b e r of
C o m - NO
a t r i b u t e of flowers a n d fruit. L a t e r
stated he w a s u n a b l e to make any
m e r c e w h o w a s present, a d d r e s s P a r i s , Dec, 24«—(By T h e AssociP a r i s , Dee. 24.—Avalanches were all the m e m b e r s of the Sacred Coling the board on the zoning q u e s - Deny Evacuation of Puebla— s t a t e m e n t for the commissioner.
ated P r e s s ) — H e n r y M. Robinson, reported t o d a y from m a n y points lege w e r e received a n d tendered
The a l t e r n a t i v e c o n t r a c t with the l a w y e r a n d b a n k e r of Los Angeles, In Switzerland a n d in t h e P y r e n e e s . t h e i r good w i s h e s , t h e Dean of t h e
tion.
Federals Lay Claim
Ritchie B r o t h e r s provides for r e - h a s been selected a s the t h i r d A m "There h a v e been p e r s i s t e n t r e T h r e e snow slides o c c u r r i n g in college, C a r d i n a l Vanuetelli, delivto City.
decorating the i n t e r i o r of the din- e r i c a n to serve on the e x p e r t com- quick succession did considerable ering a n a p p r o p r i a t e address.
p o r t s , " Mr. W h i t e said, " t h a t since
ning room, r e n e w i n g the plaster m i t t e e s which are to I n v e s t i g a t e d a m a g e a r o u n d the hotel in Leisyn,
t o n i n g restrictions were lifted, c e r Pope P i u s responded with
ImV e r a Cruz, Dec. 24.—(By
The ceiling and sidewalls,
refinishing the .condition of Germany's finances Switzerland.
t a i n real e s t a t e dealers h a v e been
p r o m p t u r e m a r k s , ending by
exforce? and polishing
the
floor
a n d u n d e r the auspices of the r e p a r a m a k i n g a n effort to sell
s e v e r a l Associated Press}.—Rebel
Several of the open a i r clinics tending t h e C h r i s t m a s hope
that
properties in North B r o a d w a y a n d m a d e their n e a r e s t a p p r o a c h to strengthening the b a y windows. A tion commission.
for lung p a t i e n t s w e r e d a m a g e d God m i g h t b e glorified and p e a c e
board a n d
certain
o t h e r residential sections of
t h e Mexico City so far w i t h t h e c a p - new switch
T h e other two A m e r i c a n m e m - and some of t h e S i s t e r s of Mercy and good will prevail on
earth.
of
Cuernavaca, changes in the lighting system a r e b e r s previously selected a r e Charles were injured. S e v e r a l c h a l e t s w e r e
city, to p e r s o n s who intend to u s e t u r e y e s t e r d a y
C h r i s t m a s g r e e t i n g s in g r e a t v o l t h e m a s boarding houses, a n d t h a t forty miles s o u t h of t h e capital, also included in t h e Ritchie a l t e r - G. D a w e s a n d Owen D. Young.
carried off.
u m e a r e r e a c h i n g the Pope from
eome of these deals, including t n a t it w a s s t a t e d in a revolutionary native c o n t r a c t w h i c h totals a p Mr. Robinson, who is president
An a v a l a n c h e n e a r
C h a m b e r y all over t h e w o r l d .
of t h e E n o property, N o r t h B r o a d - communique issued here. T h e a d - proximately $12,000.
of t h e F i r s t National B a n k of L o s buried a m a n whose body h a s n o t
A n g l e - S a x o n Day in P a r i s .
vance, it w a s
said, w a s m a d e
way, have been practically closed.
The r e m a i n d e r of the w o r k in- Angeles and prominently identified been recovered.
Paris. D e c
24—The
Christmas
u n d e r t h e c o m m a n d of General F l - cluding t h e h e a t i n g p l a n t a n d a l - w i t h o t h e r financial
Institutions,
T h e s n o w which
covered
t h e celebration in P a r i s this y e a r will
"A n u m b e r of N o r t h B r o a d w a y
terations in the k i t c h e n building w a s a m e m b e r of the s u p r e m e econ- -Paris district h a d dropped today
r e s i d e n t s , " M r . W h i t e ealjSf "live In gueroa:
The forces a d v a n c e d from their which will fit it for a public libra- omic council a t the P a r i s peace In* t h e w a k e of d a m p woathel* With have a s t r o n g Anglo-Saxon flavor
S a r a t o g a S p r i n g s only b e c a u s e t h e y
Judging from indications today.
like tte city. It would be m o r e position in the s t a t e of Giuerrero r y will total a p p r o x i m a t e l y $13,000. conference in 1919. H e also r e p r e - a drizzling rain still falling.
Owing t 0 t h e favorable e x c h a n g e
m |&gt; *
mentoned sented the United S t a t e s a t t h e
convenient for t h e m to live e l s e - into Morelos of which C u e r n a v a c a The three councilmen
r a t e fully 75 per cent of the t a b l e j
conferw h e r e for their business in
n o t is t h e capital. N o h e a v y fighting above stated they w e r e in favor of first International J a b o r
reserved a t t h e city's leading r e s here, a n d they s t a t e t h a t t h e y will w a s repprted. T h e general s i t u a - a bond issue to cover the cost of ence.
taurants and brightest
Christmas
tion is u n c h a n g e d except for the the proposed work.
H e w a s created a Chevalier of
c h a n g e t h e i r place of residence if
resorts h a v e
been reserved
by
nearer a p p r o a c h
to the national
t h e y a r e not given protection."
Ritchie B r o t h e r s
today
stated the Legion of Honor in 1920. Mr.
English s p e a k i n g visitors, a m o n g
capital.
they would c a r r y out their origin- Robinson will be named a m e m b e r
In discussing the question m e m whom A m r i c a n s predominate.
Puebla has
not been evacuated al figures regardless of the t w e n t y - of t h e commission to e s t i m a t e t h e
b e r s cf t h e Council s t a t e d
that
For all of t h e m the supply of
they h a d noticed t h a t the chief a n d according to t h e rebel s t a t e m e n t five per cent increase in masons, a m o u n t of German capital abroad.
traditionally s u i t a b l e food promises
which a d d s t h a t the i n s u r g e n t s are bricklayers' a n d p l a s t e r e r s ' fcvages
All t h e delegates of the P o w e r s
p r a c t i c a l l y only objection to t h e
to be a m p l e . Owing to the glut in
%
f r e p r e s e n t e d on the r e p a r a t i o n comold zoning ordinance w a s the r e - engaged in h e a v y Jfighting w i t h fed- effective here J a n u a r y 1.
turkeys
N o Information p e r t a i n i n g to the t h e Lo'ndon m a r k e t for
mission have notified Colonel J a m e s
s t r i c t i o n it placed on the erection eral forces in the s u b u r b s .
identity of the m a n who called a t m a n y h e a v y consignments destined
An official g o v e r n m e n t bulletin
A. Logan, the American r e p r e s e n of two-family houses on the e a s t
issued from
Mexico City s t a t e s
t a t i v e t h a t they will a t t e n d a plen- t h e off ice. ef Dr. M. E . V a r n e y F r i - for E n g l a n d n e v e r go further t h a n
Bide of t h e city
that Puebla was captured Satura r y session of the commission to d a y n i g h t for t r e a t m e n t t o a g u n - Boulogne or C a l a i s a n d w e r e r e " T h i s , " said Commissioner
of
inexhaustible
be held shortly a n d Join In e x - s h o t w o u n d in his j a w h a s been turned i n s u r i n g a n
P u b l i c Safety A r t h u r J. L e o n a r d , day and t h a t one t h o u s a n d prisoners were t a k e n by federal forces
t e n d i n g the invitation to Mr. R o b - obtained, according to police r e - supply of food.
" w a s w h a t defeated the o r d i n a n c e
p o r t s . M r s . Varney,
who
was
———~~—m*m •»
" '•«
inson. v
w h e n the recent referendum
w a s in the e n g a g e m e n t .
alone in the office, informed the
The a t t a c k on the rebel s t r o n g taken."
police of the m a n ' s visit. T h e pohold w a s begun by t h r e e a i r p l a n e s
This w a s the general opinion of
lice s t a t e d they h a d been u n a b l e
which dropped b o m b s on the fort h e Council m e m b e r s a n d after t h e
to find a n y t r a c e of the m a n at
tresses of LOreto, S a n J u a n and
r e m o v a l of this restriction
had
Dublin, Dec. 24—(By T h e A s s o - either of the hospitals In t h e city
Guadalupe, a c c o r d i n g to Secretary
been a g r e e d upon, the a d o p t i o n of
ciated P r e s s ) — T h e F r e e S t a t e g o v - or in a n y physician's office.
of W a r S e r r a n o .
a new ordinance w a s moved
by
Erection of the new St. P e t e r ' s e r n m e n t today announced the r e "Immeditaely forces belonging to
Commissioner Leonard,
seconded
Gun Battle.
Marthe column c o m m a n d e d by Gen- parochlal school a n d parish house lease of Countess Georgina
by Commissioner George .W. A i n s is assured, the Rev. F a t h e r P a t r i c k | kievicz, one of the leading w o m a n
W a s h i n g t o n , Dec. 24.—The DelaA n o t h e r b a t t l e between men s u p w o r t h , being unanimously c a r r i e d . eral Martinez a d v a n c e d u p o n the
town a n d a t 11 o'clock advices r e - F. Scully a n n o u n c e d on Sunday at Republicans, who w a s a r r e s t e d here posed to be bootleggers a n d hi- w a r e &amp; H u d s o n railroad asked t h e
S a r a t o g a Springs h a s h a d only ported occupation of the city" the all of the m a s s e s in t h a t church. N o v e m b e r 27.
commission
j a c k e r s occurred n e a r the Lincoln i n t e r e s t a t e commerce
Blight experience with a
zoning General s t a t e d .
T h e government also announced
"The e n e m y w a s He stated t h a t t h e drive for funds
ordinance.
After consulting
a n defeated after fierce battling, gov- of the school h a d been completed t h a t between December 1 a n d Dec. b a t h o u s e out B r o a d w a y e a r l y F r i - today for permission to a b a n d o n a
d a y night. According to residents 13-mile b r a n c h line in N e w York
expert, a committee a p p o i n t e d by e r n m e n t forces t a k i n g
n u m e r o u s a n d announced final donations of: 22 political prisoners to the num. In the vicinity, the supposed liquor extending from C a n a d a
Junction
t h e council formed a zoning o r d i n - prisoners w i t h c a v a l r y sent in pur$500 from J a m e s A. Leary; and ber of 3,841 had been liberated.
Grand
car, escaped by u s i n g t h e roads to a connection with the
a n c e t h a t w a s adopted l a s t s p r i n g . spit of the forces c a p t u r i n g m a n y .
$100 each from Mrs. Mary Graul,
Canadian
winding
over
the
Reservation Trunk R a i l w a y on the
At this time Mayor J a m e s D. M c - The importance of t h e rebels deand William O'Erien.
border.
property.
N u l t y suggested, a n d the Council feat will be k n o w n w h e n t h e comF a t h e r Scully expressed his g r a t i Several shots were fired b y men
agreed, t h a t the question be s u b - m a n d e r sends detailed report."
tude to the m e m b e r s of the parish
In both c a r s . T h e
pistol battle
m i t t e d to the t a x p a y e r s l a t e r . C o n who had contributed so generously
s t a r t e d when the t w o c a r s were
forming to this promise to the t a x to the school and parish house.
d r i v i n g west over Cresent street.
p a y e r s , a referendum w a s
taken
Biddeford, Me., Dec. 24.—Wladek
When t h e
drive
was
begun.
T h e leading car drove
across
r e c e n t l y a n d the zoning o r d i n a n c e
Zbysko, the w r e s t l e r in a s k i n g for
F a t h e r Scully, instead of having an
B r o a d w a y a n d a r o u n d in r e a r of
w a s defeated.
outside director come in and take
the Lincoln bath house. T h e sec- a divorce, c h a r g e s t h a t his wife,
The defeat of the ordinance w a s
charge, conducted t h e drive perond c a r evidently lost the "scent" Amelia, h a s subjected him to cruel
flue, It w a s shown by the p e r s o n s
F r e n c h dirigible DIxmude
late sonally and m a d e a house to house
a s it r e t u r n e d north a few m i n u t e s and a b u s i v e t r e a t m e n t .
who voted, to the lack of a c t i v e l a s t n i g h t w a s hovering o u t
of canvass of his parish. This meant
The case is on trial list for t h e
later.
i n t e r e s t on the p a r t of persons w h o control over Foura
T a t a h o u l n e , a great deal of labor and
Chicago,
Dec.
24.—Christmas
J a n u a r y t e r m of the York county
hard
should h a v e been most i n t e r e s t e d , t h i r t y miles
south
of
Medinln,
this y e a r is unique in t h a t for the
Supreme C o u r t . Mrs. Zbysko Is a
a n d the activity of those w i t h a Tunis with fifty officers a n d men work on his part, a n d w a s a great first time in 300 years a l m o s t all
little over five feet high a n d of
saving for the P a r i s h .
personal interest in its r e p e a l w h o aboard, P a r i s a d v i c e s s t a t e .
slight build.
F a t h e r Scully s t a t e d yesterday It of Christendom in theory will celsucceeded in rounding u p a suffl&lt; a&gt; •
e b r a t e the day on Dec. 25.
would be possible t o ' build
both
ient n u m b e r of t a x p a y e r s to d e Chicago, Dec. 24—
This, m e a n s t h a t 125,000,000 conMystery s u r r o u n d s w h e r e a b o u t s school and parish house, now, w i t h feat the m e a s u r e .
W H E A T — May $1.06 1-8;
July
of alleged list of prominent persons out burdening the church for years nected with the E a s t e r n Orthodox
national church of which t h e Greek $1.04 7-8.
conected w i t h bootlegging a n d 200 to come. A complete a n n o u n c e Casper, W y o . , Dec. 24.—Late
CORN — May 72 l - 2 c ;
and Russian are chief, will Join In
July
persons reported to
be listed, ment will be m a d e later,
last n i g h t v o l u n t e e r firemen had
the occasion with the o t h e r s of 73 5-8c.
b r e a t h e more freely, W a s h i n g t o n
the Christian world.
O A T S — May 44 l - 2 c ;
July b r o u g h t u n d e r control a fire t h a t
dispatch s a y s .
t h r e a t e n e d to destroy the entire
U n t i l this year, m e m b e r s of those 42 l - 8 c .
tqwn of L a v o i e in the oil fields
c h u r c h e s h a v e followed the J u l i a n
Mrs.
Margaret
aver, a r r e s t e d
forty-seven miles north of h e r e .
c a l e n d a r which caused a g a p of
in B i r m i n g h a r
S a t u r d a y on
BANK OPEN T O N I G H T .
The loss is e s t i m a t e d at $114,000.
fourteen d a y s between C h r i s t m a s
an indictment
.jring her with
as observed in E a s t e r n a n d W e s The Saratoga
National
Bank
being an accc
before the fact
tern c h u r c h e s .
will remain open between 9 a n d 10
In the slaying t»» William S. CoNow the Gregorian calendar of o'clock tonight to receive deposits
J o h n Uveges, 39 C h u r c h street, burn, Ku Klux Klan a t t o r n e y deW e s t e r n church h a s been adopted. only.
New York, Dec. 24.—Benjamin
c h a r g e d w i t h operating a n a u t o m o - cides not to fight extradition and
Adler,
a
shoe
manufacturer,
bile w i t h o u t a license, waived e x - goes to A t l a n t a where s h e is deJumped to d e a t h today from the
a m i n a t i o n in City Court t h i s m o r n - tained.
fifth floor of his small Sixth a v e ing a n d w a s released in $200 bail
Through the
quick
work
of
nue factory. M e m b e r s of his f a m to a w a i t the action of t h e g r a n d
N e w York clergymen in Sunday George R. W r i g h t , aged ten years,
ily said he h a d been worried about
Jury. Uveges, according to police sermons conform
to a p p e a l In
his business.
of 108 Jefferson street, Tony Penreports, w a s driving an automobile Bishop M a n n i n g ' s diocesan letter
• «•»
which collided w ' t h ono driven by for a " C h r i s t m a s truce," in
the nell, aged six, of 284 Jefferson
T O R E - S U B M I T NAMES
W. Frlnk Ingham at
B r o a d w a y controversy between modern and street, w a s saved from drowning
W a s h i n g t o n , Dec. 24.—Resubmisa n d W a s h i n g t o n street, S u n d a y af- conservative factions.
sion by P r e s i d e n t Coolidge of the
In Lake Lonely S a t u r d a y
afterternoon.
The Ingham a u t o m o b i l e
A r t h u r H a s k n s , fifteen, 40 V a n degree a s s a u l t . He w a s paroled In nomination of Frederick I. T h o m p noon. According to young W r i g h t
„ w a s badly damaged. N o one w a s
Zev a n d G r e y L a g h a v e
been
D a m s t r e e t was accidently s h o t in the custody of Ritchie B r o t h e r s , his son of Mobile, Ala., and B e r t E.
Injured.
Oregon
as
nominated by their owner, H a r r y F. he and the Pennell boy a n d two
employers, until T h u r s d a y morning Haney, of P o r t l a n d ,
Uveges* chauffeur's license
w a * Cinclair, to r u n In Ascot gold cup others were walking out the trolley the neck yesterday afternoon by a a t 10 o'clock.
members of the shipping board, w a s
j bullet fired from a .32 calibre rifle
revoked by City Judge M. E. M e - race in E n g l a n d next J u n e b u t it
Cooper, F r e e m a n a n d Gailor, a c - Indicated today after Senator Mctracks to the lake and when they
I held by William Cooper, a 1 6 - y e i r - cording to police r e p o r t s , were ex- Nary and S e n a t o r Rtanfleld, R e T y g u e last August. He w a s w a r n e d Is probable Grey L a g will be the
at t h a t time by the c o u r t to r e - only one to compete due to Zev's arrlved at L a k e Lonely, Tony, when old companion. The accident oc- a m i n i n g the rifle which they be- publicans, Oregon, had conferred
s t r a i n from opt r a t i n g a u t o m o b i l e s m a t c h e s . with
E p i n a r d , F r e n c h trylng to kick a hole In t h e thin | c u r r e d in the home of A r t h u r F r e e - lieved to be empty when one of the with the executive on the shipping
until after J a n u a r y 1, 1924.
horse, in this c o u n t r y later In the coating of Ice on the lake fell into m a n » 4 1 V a n D a m s l r c e t shells exploded. The bullet struck board question.
•
I I I
-m
summer.
Dr. David C. Nolan, the a t t e n d i n g the H a s k i n s boy a s he walked
the water. Upon seeing his comTO R E N E W C O N T R O V E R S Y
panion s t r u g g l i n g for life in the physician, today said X - r a y p i c - t h r o u g h the doorway leading Into
MULDOON W I L L RETIR4S
u
N e w York, Dec. 24.—Indications
New York, D e c
24.—William
Cost of living Increases 2.1 per water the W r i g h t boy dove Into the ' tto r e s would be taken this afternoon the living room.
I
locate the bullet which is b e were today that after t h e " C h r i s t - cent between J u l y 15 and Nov. IS lake and rescued him.
R e p o r t s in a morning newspaper, Muldoon, c h a i r m a n of the New
The boys lay on the shore until | l i e v e d ' to be lodged in the fleshy to the effect t h a t Cooper fired at York s t a t e a t h l e t i c commission will
m a s t r u c e " in the P r o t e s t a n t E p i s - a n d dollar is now worth 60.5 cents
H a s k i n s , who ^ w a s playing burglar, retire from office with the expircopal church the controversy b e - a s compared w i t h July, 1914 value. they regained s t r e n g t h enough to j r a r t of young Haskins* neck.
industrial
conference j return home. They contracted no [ Cooper w a s arrested late yester- were denied by the local police to- ation of his t e r m on a n u a r y 1, he
tween modernists and c o n s e r v a t i v e s National
was quoted a s saying t o d a y .
*
board states.
i serious illness from their m i s h a p . | d a y afternoon charged w i t h second day.
would r a g e with renewed vigor.

REVOLUTIONISTS
APPROACH NEARER
TO MEXICO CITY

LOS ANGELES MAN AVALANCHES IN
THIRD AMERICAN ALPS RESULT IN
ON COMMITTEE GREAT DAMAGE

UNABLE TO FIND
WOUNDED MAN

NEW SCHOOL AND
PARISH HOUSE
IS NOW CERTAIN

D. &amp; H. ASKS TO
ABANDON LINE

COUNTESS' SET FREE

ALL CHRISTENDOM
WILL CREBRATE
DAY TOMORROW

ZBYSKO SEEKS DIVORCE

GRAIN MARKET

TOWN SAVED FROM FIRE

DRIVER WITH NO
LICENSE IS HELD
FOR GRAND JURY

BOY, TEN, SAVES
COMPANION, SIX,
FROM DROWNING

JUMPS TO VlS DEATH

« • - * • • • -

•'

' -

•

-

•

i

,.

,

Boy Shot in Neck by
Accidental Ballet

MADE RAID IN ULSTER
Belfast, Dee. 24—Members of the
Ulster c o n s t a b u l a r y yesterday r a i d ed a m e e t i n g in Londonderry a n d
a r r e s t e d eight p e r s o n s present, including a
Nationalist
election
agent.
F o u r of the prisoners had r e t u r n ed n o r t h recently from Imprisonm e n t in the F r e e S t a t e . The homes
of the c a p t i v e s were subsequently
searched.
The r a i d is said t 0 have been a
sequel to r e c e n t a r r e s t s a n d the
c a p t u r e of d o c u m e n t s and it is intimated t h a t s t a r t l i n g developments
a r e expected.

HOWARD LEON;
IN HOSPITAL,
BADLY INJUR]
i Adee Escapes With
Hurts as Automobile
Tree.

BRIGHT SUN FOILS
WHITE CPSTMAS
IN THIS VICINITY
Light

Snowfall Last Night
Fades Away Under
Heat.

CHILLY

DAY

FORECAST

Bite in the Christmas Morning
Air Predicted by Weather
Bureau.
T h e r e w e r e p r o s p e c t s of a W h i t e
C h r i s t m a s in S a r a t o g a
county
w h e n snow b e g a n falling last n i g h t
following a drizzle of rain. U n d e r
the w a r m s u n today, however, t h e
slight covering
of snow rapidly
disappeared a n d b y nightfall t h e r e
r e m a i n e d only a s c a n t t r a c e .
Bite in Air Forecast.
W a s h i n g t o n , Dec. 24.—No "white
C h r i s t m a s ' is In prospect, b u t t h e r e
will be a bite In t h e air C h r i s t m a s
m o r n i n g in m a r k e d c o n t r a s t to t h e
conditions of t h e l a s t few
days
when summer-like weather prevailed over a w i d e area.
L i g h t frost i s predicted b y t h e
w e a t h e r b u r e a u for tonight a s f a r
south a s extreme Northern Flori d a . , I n d i c a t i o n s a r e for generally
faff w e a t h e r t o n i g h t and t o m o r r o w
in t h e Middle Atlantic, South A t lantic, E a s t Gulf s t a t e s , Tennessee,
the Ohio Valley a n d
the lower
L a k e region.
T h e only snowfall
probable Is
predicted for portions of N o r t h e r n
New E n g l a n d a n d N o r t h e r n
New
York a n d t h i s m a y t u r n to local
rains.
T o n i g h t t h e t e m p e r a t u r e s will be
slightly lower in the Middle A t l a n tic s t a t e s b u t they will rise slowly
in the N o r t h Atlantic states d u r i n g
C h r i s t m a s day.
Slight Fall in West.
Buffalo. N. Y., Dec. 24.—Transportation a n d communication lines
in the vicinity of Buffalo were only
slightly affected by the first snow
of t h e season w h i c h lay in a fourinch m a n t l e over the city
this
morning.
Trolley senvice w a s slowed u p
slightly today b u t no
schedules
w e r e curtailed.
Railroad officers
reported practically all t r a i n s east
and
west
bound,
through
on
schedule.
F e w w i r e s w e r e down although
the fall in outlying districts w a s
Some
heavier t h a n in the city.
wires e a s t a n d w e s t of the city
were carried down by weight of
snow hich encrusted t h e m a s it
fell, b u t lack of wind a c c o m p a n y ing the s t o r m w a s said to have
minimized t h e d a m a g e .
s m »
—

ARREST FATHER
OF DEMPSEY
Salt L a k e City, Utah, Dec. 24.—
H i r a m ' Dempsey, father of
Jack
Dempsey,
world's
heavyweight
boxing c h a m p i o n is free on bond
of $300 after a r r e s t on a charge
of violating t h e prohibition laws.
The elder Dempsey was a r r e s t e d
in a local cafe S a t u r d a y night by
a policeman who confiscated a
flask from which Dempsey is said
to h a v e been pouring liquor for
highballs.
A y o u n g woman also w a s t a k e n
Into custody b u t she was released
and police declined
to give her
name.
The police said t h a t It had not
been decided w h a t to fio in the
Dempsey case b u t t h a t it w a s p o s sible federal officials would p r o s e cute.

SKIDDED

"FROM

Automobile Turns Over!
Foot of Milligan's
Hill.
H o w a r d M. Leonard, l i s
street, a former member of
S a r a t o g a Springs police
del
m e n t , is in the S a r a t o g a he
in a serious condition w i t h
ies sustained yesterday after
a t 3 o'clock when the autoz
he w a s driving turned over a t
foot of Milligan's Hill on the
toga-Schuylerville highway.
J e s s e F . Adee, a n automobile
chanic, who w a s riding w i t h
ard, sustained minor injuries,
er t r e a t m e n t a t the S a r a t o g a
pital, Adee was allowed to
to his home.
Dr. A. J. Leonard, t h e a t t
physician, said H o w a r d M. .
a r d ' s injuries ar^KJnostly lata
H e said he did not believe
juries would prove fatal. T l
j u r i e s , the physician said, see
b e centered around Leonard's
a n d in his stomach.
T h e accident, according t o ;
formation obtained today, o«
w h e n the car, owned by
skidded from the r o a d w a y
s t r u c k a tree.
T h e two injured men were!
covered by Joseph B. Viele,
carried t h e m into a nearby
house
They were t a k e n teK
S a r a t o g a hospital in a n a m b i
T h e automobile w a s badly
aged.^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^B

BEIEVE CRISIS
PASSED IN CI
Canton, Deo. 24—(By h V
elated Press)—he critical situl
which has prevailed here for n |
t w 0 weeks a s a result of-tB§
m a u d of Dr. Sun Yet Sen,
China leader for s u r p l u s CUI
revenues, is believed to h a v | |
passed and it is hoped in i
circles that the s t a g e will
reached a t which t h e vigil
t h e foreign Powers r e p r e s e n t
nearly a score of g u n b o a t s
ed off Shameen. the foreign
of the city, where the a d m i n !
tive officers of other n a t i o n s
cated, may be relaxed a n d the*
eign warships w i t h d r a w n .

TO CHOOSF." ENTRANTS
Minneapolis,
Dec.
24.skiers and a bob sled t e a m
r e s e n t America in t h e OlJ
g a m e s In F r a n c e next month,,)
! b e selected here December '
J a n u a r y 1.
The four winners a u t o m a t
will become the United S t a t t
t r a n t s in the bob sled compe
•,.„.,-

,

,-i

i

.,'„, •

...,„

i

In observance of Christmas'.
The Saratogian will not be put
ed tomorrow.

THE WEATHER

SAKT"f \
Do YOUR STOW

¥

&amp;'

PARIS SUPPERS EXPENSIVE
P a r i s . Dec. 24.—-It will t a k e a fat
purse to p a r t a k e of one of the t r a ditional C h r i s t m a s eve suppers at
a n y of the t h o u s a n d and ono r e s t a u r a n t s in P a r i s tonight.
The h u m b l e s t
cafe
is asking
twenty-five francs for meagre feast
with wine e x t r a . Those establishm e n t s t h a t advertise Jazz music
are a s k i n g 200 francs for repast.
t h e chief f e a t u r e of which is a
portion of t u r k e y , unaccompanied
by c r a n b e r r y o r a n y other sauce.

fdttk

Forecast.
F a i r in south a n d clc
north portions tonight a n d '
d a y ; possibly local snows « •
in extreme north portion, tfj
w a r m e r in north portion t&lt;
a n d in south portion Tna
diminishing northwest winds,
coming west Tuesday,
— —
"
*-• &lt; i &gt;
The S u n .
C H R I S T M A S PARDONS
27
W a s h i n g t o n . Dec. 24.—Christmas Sun today . . . . . . . . . . . .
pardons and
commutations
for Sun tomorrow
3*
eleven men serving terms In fedTemtersture
1 eral p e n i t e n t i a r i e s were announced High
| today by P r e s i d e n t Coolidge.
| Low
|

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*

i
iTHE SARATOGIAN, TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1924.
ass

Seek Stolen Booze
FOUR TROOPERS EIGHTH WONDER OF
WATCH HIGHWAY WORLD SUBJECT
DURING NIGHT OF ROTARY TALK

are now
lost to posterity.
The
world would be just t h e s a m e a s it
is today if it, together with the
other six, had never come Into being.
"Coming down to m o r e modern
times the progress a n d t h e a d v a n c e
of the h u m a n race is m o r e noticeable for it is no longer t h e custom
to count as wonders of the world
things material.
"Although Mr. Knoeppel said he
never heard them so classified, he
presumed one might s p e a k of the
seven virtues a s e n u m e r a t e d
by
Saint Augustine as the seven wonders of the m a t e r i a l i s t s of the old
world, namely Faith, Charity, P r u dence, Temperance, C h a s t i t y and
Fortitude.
"If you ever sat down to e n u m erate what, to your own m i n d would
be the seven wonders of the world,
from ancient times to
modern, I
presume that no two m e n would
agree," Mr. Knoepple said.
"The
materialist of today would probably say that the seven wonders
of the modern time a r e the s t e a m boat, steam engine, electricity, the
phonograph (the telephone, telegraph and radio), t h e s u b m a r i n e
and the aeroplane. B u t no
one
seems to have e n u m e r a t e d them.
"The seven wonders of the old
world are a mystical a n d symbolic
number and SD over all t h e ages the
seven wonders have been permitted, mystically and
symbolically,
to stand until today w h e n a young
man makes bold to look you in
the eye and to tell you t h a t
the
eighth wonder has come into the
world, not made of m a t e r i a l s u b stance, but everlasting fiber, born
in understanding, developed In love
and enriched with t h e
spiritual
growth t h a t has come in our time.
'I hardly need to s a y t h a t the
eighth wonder of the world is the
spirit of service as applied by a
R o t a r y club, t h a t t h e e i g h t h wonder in its application is a Rotary
club
told h o w he asked Ballston
He

SUPPER AND SOCIAL

in
122 CONTRIBUTE TO CARS DAMAGED
COMMUNITY HOUSE IN COLLISION ON
HARRISON HILL

Charlton, May 13—The Ladles Aid
Society of t h e P r e s b y t e r i a n church
will hold a social and s u p p e r at the
academy hail T h u r s d a y
evening,
May 15, Supper will be served from
5 to 9 o'clock, new time.
George Casebone w a s elected
sohool t r u s t e e in district 1 and h a s
engaged the services of Miss Florence Dropper for teacher. Albert
Chalmers, trustee in district 2,^ajid
J a m e s H. Arnold h a s been chosen
trustee in district 8. H e h a s a p pointed
Miss Edith Annibal
of
Galway, teacher. Miss J e a n Teller
la expected to teach in district 6
this coming year. F r a n c i s Baker is
trustee in the village district.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Suits of Schenectady spent Sunday a t the home
of J a m e s Suits.
George Lee recently p u r c h a s e d a
work horse of H a r r y Cavert of Scotia.
Owing to t h e rainy, cold weather
very few have sowed their oata.
H e n r y Conde expects to work on
the country road this week.

^ S p e c i a l to The S a r a t o g l a n )
Ballston Spa, May 12.—The list
Ba!l»ton Spa.,
May 13.— Last
of individuals, 122 in d u m b e r , w h o evening about 8.80 o'clock a Ford
have contributed to the s u p p o r t of touring car owned a n d driven by
(Special to The Saratoglan)
(Special t o The Saratoglan)
the Community House in P l e a s a n t Loren Downing of G a r r e t t Road
Ballston Spa, May 13.—At a most
Ballaton
Spa, May
18.—Four
street for the year April 1, 1924 to while coming n o r t h on the Ball• t a t * t r o o p e r s were
stationed a t enthusiastic and well attended meet
April 1, 1925, was announced t h i s ston Spa-Schenectady state highRotary
the Ballaton Spa Knitting Com- ing of the Ballston Spa
way, collided with a Chevrolet coupe
morning a s follows:
Club at the Community House in
pany's mill in Saratoga avenue last
Clarence Glatt, Winslow Llllie, owned and driven by Garry Jordon
night w a t c h i n g for a fleet of five Pleasant street yesterday, District
B u r t Gardner, J. B. W h i t e Motor of A'. Corners, j u s t south of the
hooch
laden
automobile
trucks Governor Raymond J. Knoeppel, of
Corp., M. Sterghi, Louis Holden, bridge at the foot of Harrison's
the twenty ninth Rotary district,
whloh h a d been stolen in ElizaH. E. McKnight, J o h n L. T r a c y . Hill.
made his official visit and gave a
b a t h t o w n earlier in the day. The
According to the story as told by
most impressive speech on "The
Hiro Settle, Sidney Buchdahl, Mrs.
c a r s , confiscated by federal agents,
Eighth Wonder of the World."
W a r r e n Streever, Fred S. S t r e e v - Mr. Jordon, he w a s driving toward
were being held a t Elizabethtown
er, Walter Diamond, Nelson A n d e r - Schenectady at t h e r a t e of about
After the routine business of the
when a g a n g of alleged bootlegs
son, Mrs. E r w l n Frey, Roy A b e r - twenty miles an hour, when, sudheld u p t h e federal officers
and elb was taken care of by President
«».»
.
, •-&gt;
t h e Downing car
nathy, Morgan E. Welsh, R o b e r t denly he s a w
William A. Andrews and the lunchmade off w i t h the trucks and their
coming down H a r r i s o n ' s Hill and
L. Carter, George I. Yost, A. C.
valuable cargoes of wet goods. So eon completed, Mr. Knoeppel was
Wheeler,
Miss T.
C u n n i n g h a m , before he realized w h a t had h a p far a s could be learned the trucks in troduced as a man with a w a r m
heart and good, strong, and effiDr. W. E. Wells, Irving W . W i s - pened the Downing car struck his
did not p a s s through here.
car on the left side, tearing off
Middle Grove, May 18.—All voters
cient character by the president.
wall, C. H .
Brownell
a n d Co., the front and rear fenders, the r u n To Confer Degree.
H a r r y Castle, J o h n J. Tracy, Est., ning hoard, bending t h e front axle, of school district 17, town of GreenDescribing briefly
his
official
T h e Royal Purple degree will be
M. E. Raymond, Inc., C. M. S m i t h , breaking t h e wishbone and causing field are requested to a t t e n d a specconferred on a class of candidates visits to the Glens Falls, Saratoga
•4a&gt; meeting to be held in t h e school
Charles Grose, Lenge Clapp, E l e a - other minor damage.
Springs, Mechanicville and Grana t t h e meeting of Milton E n c a m p TEDDY KICKS ABOUT GUNS
building S a t u r d a y evening, May 17,
nor Grose, William Rooney, C. H .
ment, I. O. O. F., tomorrow eve- ville Rotary Clubs Mr. Knoeppel
Mr. Downing's car w a s also b a d Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt
told of his speech before the Rotary
Grose, Jr.,
Feeney Bros., Slade ly damaged ,the Impa'-'t tearing one at 7 o'clock, s t a n d a r d time, to t a k e
ning In dd Fellows' hall. All m e m Brothers, E. C. Welch, Miss Ma,ry front wheel off and bending tho action on propositions, t h e first the (right) is discussing questions of battleship gun elevation with
bers a r e requested to be present. Club in New York City on August
2, 1923 which was the first time
Murphy, C. P .
Haskins,
J a m e s wish bone. No one w a s hurt, for- leasing of land from t h e cemetery
Repairing Store Building.
Representative Thomas S. Butler of Pennsylvania, chairman
he ever spoke on "The Eighth W o n Gilligan, S. C. Schaeffer, E d w a r d tunately, and w h e n t h e two men association for a sohool play ground
The building in Milton avenue, der of the World," the Spirit of
and the second, t h e proposed erec- of the House Committee on Naval Affairs.
British guns out*
S. Coons, Dr. Thomas G. D u n n .
reported to Traffic Officer J a m e s tion of a shed In the r e a r of t h e
formerly occupied by Nelson A n - Service as applied by the Rotary
J. W. Tyler, Mrs. Frederick V a n Connor this morning h s told them school building. •
shoot ours at least three miles and Japan's maybe still farther.
derson's Jewelry repair
shop, is Club," this speech being based on
—
Troy, E d w a r d Grose, Harold "Van to settle the m a t t e r between thembeing renovated and within a short the seven wonders of tho old world.
* ma
•—
Arnem, L o u i s Schwarz, The S a r a - selves. The two cars were taken
time will be
occupied
by
t h e H e told of receiving the invitation
westerly to a point one hundred of Greenridge Cemetery and Greentogian, George A. Betor, George G. to OelWge Kemp's garage in Church
Oneida Creamery Company
of to speak before the New York city
twenty-five feet easterly from Jackson ridge Cemetery Annex* to the north
MIDDLE GROVE
Wilson, J a m e s J. O'Brien, Clarence avenue this morning.
bounds of
Cemetery
Malta avenue.
May 13.—Mrs. Boucher and two Street; thence southerly parallel to nex ; thenceGreenridge alley west AnRotary Club in honor of the fourJackson Street to Wright Street;
to an
of
McElwain. Oscar Fillmore,
Miss
After the collision, the Ford t u r n - children and
Mrs. L. T a b o r
of thence easterly along Wright Street Greenridge Place and running northHad Mishap.
teenth anniversary of the founding
Marjorie Bates, W. H. Lillie, W i l - ed completely around in the road Mechanicville were recently g u e s t s to Nelson Avenue; thence southerly erly along to Lincoln Avenue; thence
A Chevrolet touring car owned of Rotary in New York State and
liam Lawrence, M. A. Schwinler, and landed in the ditch on the left of Mrs. O. W . Barney.
along Nelson Avenue to Crescent along Lincoln Avenue to Whitney
a n d driven by Walter Mcintosh wondering what he would speak on,
thence westerly
Crescent
thence north along Whitney
B. D. Esmond, Slayman H a n n a h , side of the road, headed northward.
Mrs. Alice Gailor a n d Charles Street; to a point which along continua- Place; to an alley leading west of
collided
with a Crevrolet
coupe gazed out of his window a t one of
Street
is
Place
Mr. Downing had his Avife and Gailor visited relatives In Glens tion of the east side of the aGreetirldge Whitney Place; thence west along
Merberry Hotel, Charles Butcher,
driven b y a Saratoga Springs man the large hotels in Chicago, partly
W. L. Lord, Dr. a n d Mrs. R. B . three children with him while Mr. Falls Sunday.
Cemetery; thence north along said said alley to where it turns; thence
his
In Church avenue Saturday eve- overhanging Lake Michigan,
lots
Post, E. H. H a y w a r d , Donald S t e w - Jordon was accompanied by three
ning. N e i t h e r car w a s damaged. mind steadily becoming concenThe Ladies Aid will meet w t i h line and the easterly line of Green north along said alley to said of J.0
ridge
to
lands
art, Rivett and Donohue, Dr. R. B . persons whose names could not be Mrs. Royal B a u g h T h u r s d a y after- thence Cemetery alongLincoln Avenue; Gaffney and west along
trated on the seven wonders of the
A Cadillac coupe driven
by a
westerly
Lincoln Avenue of Gaffney to Circular Street; thence
learned.
Castree, Mr. E. H a n n a h , Wendell
to the west line of Greenridge Ceme- along Circular Street to the lands of
noon at 1:30 o'clock.
w o m a n left the road
near
the old world. After thinking for some
tery; thence southerly
along
Townley, E d w a r d Rood,
Myron
decided he would
Mrs. Elizabeth M c N u t t
la t h e of said Cemetery to the along the line tho old Congress Park and northBroadScotch c h u r c h Sunday afternoon time he finally
north bounds the lands of Congress Park to
Strobeck, George Raykway, E m a n guest of Mrs. J. Chase a t North Mil- of Greenridge Cemetery Annex ; thence way ; thence north along Broadway to
a n d landed In a swampy field a t use these wonders as an example
westerly ahMtg the north bounds- t&gt;t the place of beginning.
uel Adler, C. S. Fonesteel, J o s e p h
ton.
t h e roadside. She claimed she w a s of his own wonder which he called
Cemetery
Annex
past
Sweeney, R a y Vrooman,
Howard
crowded off t h e road by a passing the eighth wonder of the world. K J
J o h n Chatfield of I t h a c a le v i s - Greenridge Place to an alley west of
Zone D Indicated in WHITE, and
Greenridge
motorist.
iting friends in this place.
Greenridge Place; thence northerly described as follows:
"The first wonder of the world tepa to make plans for a n executive Armer, Dr. C. J. Higley, H a r r y J .
Being all tho land in the Inside and
Mr. a n d Mrs. H o m e r D e s h a w a n d aloag said alley to Lincoln A^vemie;
Gaffney, A. J. Clayslean, J o h n C.
Surprise Party.
was the Pyramids of Egypt, seventy meeting and how he expected
to
tho City of Sarachildren of C a n a d a
are
s t a y i n g thence easterly along Lincoln Avenue outside District inplaced in Zones A.
Glass, Mrs. A g n e s - B u n y a n , M. W .
A very pleasant surprise p a r t y of them, all different sizes,
the receive a negative a n s w e r ,
toga Springs, not
but
with Mr. and Mrs. R o b e r t Morris. to Regent Street;thethence north on B. or C.
Rood, George Wilson, Jr., H a r r y
w a s given for Richard
Tallman tombs of the monarchs of Egypt when he received a t e l e g r a m s a y Regent Street to
place of beginBurnt Hills-Ballstc • Lake, May
&gt;
Henry Menshausen is moving his ning.
Section 2—Zone A. In Zone A, no
.last evening a t his home, 51 South who flourished from the fourth to ing they would do so he w a s over- Cull, W. M. Eagen, Dr. T i b b e t t s , 13.—Those who
renumber
"Mr. family from the Chatfield flats to
Also, starting at what would be the building or premises shall be used,
M. O'Neil, Louis J. Benton, C a l l
street. T h e young m a n was a g r e e - the twelfth dynasty. The Pyramids, joyed with the e n t h u s i a s m
which
and^/no building shall be erected
Bob" will smile over the recollecpo'int between
a b l y surprised, when nineteen of solid mounds of great skill and a r - Ballston had shown.
Wooley, William Morrissey, J . S. tions and be s u r e to wish to see a p a r t of his b r o t h e r ' s house In Intersection Wells Street and the con- which is arranged, intended or detinuation of
the conlower Main street.
h i s y o u n g friends visited him, • it tisanry, were made by men who for
Wooley.
tinuation of Vermont Street; running signed to be used except for one or
the annual play, " T h e Time of His
H e told of the need of practice
Lew Rhodes is driving a new five easterly along said continuation of more of the following uses:
being t h e event of his
fifteenth many years toiled to complete this
E d w a r d , Morley, Mrs. S t e a r n s , Life,'' directed by
Miss
Gladys passenger car.
(a) One family dwelling not exVermont Street to Woodlawn Avenue ;
b i r t h d a y . Music and dancing were great feat of the ages. Yet, today of one of t h e R o t a r y " slogans "He Mrs. A r t h u r Norse, Mr. a n d M r s .
ceeding three stories in height, Inthence
Mr. a n d Mrs. O. W. Barey a n d Avenue southerly along Woodlawn cluding the office of a physicianv s u r enjoyed a n d refreshments
were practically nothing is left of them Profits Most W h o Serves Best" and William J. Hayes, Mr. a n d M r s . Teahan and presented by the senior
to an alley running
east;
class of Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Mr. and Mrs. F. W. McAuley v i s the strength a n d foundation which
served.
thence along said alley to where it geon, dentist, lawyer, civil engineer
to show they permanently advanced is necessary for t h e building of a Alfred Simmons, Mrs. F . J. S c h u t t s , High school in the
High school ited friends in Argyle Sunday.
t u r n s ; thence south to the D. &amp; H. or architect residing therein.
Mrs. T a l l m a n and Mrs. A r t h u r or influenced the ages which were strong race a m o n g m e n and the Louis P a s t o r e , Mrs. R. Mac W i l - auditorium, T h u r s d a y and Friday
(b) Churches.
Miss R u t h Callenius w a s out of Railroad Company land ; thence along
Denn served the refreshments.
to follow," according to the speaker. betterment
(c)
Colleges, libraries or public
16 a t 8 school l a s t week with a severe cold. said D. &amp; H. R.ulroad Company to
of
conditions.
He liams, Mrs. H . C. Fuller, Dr. F . J . 'evenings, May 15 a n d
Walton Street; thence westerly along museums.
6
Those present were the Misses
"The seeond wonder of the world recommended the book, "Mind a n d Sherman, J o h n Scarce, P . L i s t e r , o'clock, daylight saving time.
G. H. Myers of E a s t Orange, N . Walton Street to the west bounds of
(d) Private garage or stable for
Kathryn
Seeley, Louise Rendo, were t h e P h a r o a s of Egypt which the Making" by Robinson, which Van R a a l t e Co., A. C. A c k e r m a n ,
the Saratoga Coal Company's land; not more than live vehicles, or five
In the words of Shakespeare, "If J. is at his home here.
M a r y , Maroszky,
Marion Glass, Alexander the Great had connect- should be read by all R o t a r i a n s . J a m e s Connor. D. M. Lockwood,
thence southerly along
Saratoga
Mrs. D. O. Hulse h a s r e t u r n e d Coal Company's lands to the alley be- horses, for private or famiily use.
an
M a r g a r e t "Waring, Dorothy Sher- ed with Alexandria by the H a p t a - He also said the co-ordination of Floyd S c h u t t s , J. M- Beverley, you have tears, prepare to shed
Section 3—Zone B. In Zone B no
the i now." Not t e a r s of grief but from a visit a t Yonkers.
tween Church Street and
Walton building or premiseg shall be used,
man, Dorothy
Denn,
Burdella stadium, or Seven Furlong Mole.
head and h e a r t which, if well de- George Cull, J. E d w a r d Bush, J o s - tears of l a u g h t e r
for those in
Mrs.
Helen Viele a n d
g r a n d Street; thence west along said alley and no building shall be erected,
Mitchell, Dorothy Tallman
and This it is believed w a s about 400
eph W. King, Mrs. J o h n T h o m a s , charge of the play say it promises daughter and Miss Hazel Boutelle to Lawrence Street; thence southerly which is arranged, intended or deMessrs. J o h n Glass, Jr., Karl Sher- feet high and lasted 1,600 years. veloped, give better service.
along Lawrence Street to Church
everyone from of S a r a t o g a Springs recently v i s - Street; thence westerly along Church signed to be used, except for one or
"Sweet things should be handed E d w a r d Tracy, P . H. McDonough, a good time for
man, Douglas
Saunders,
Nelson A fire was constantly kept lighted
of the uses permitted in Zone A
Serotta F u r n i t u r e Co., Mrs. D u n s - Start to finish.
ited at t h e home of I. Lewis.
Street to West Harrison
Street; more except for private dwellings for
and
joy and
Forbes, Charles Wyman,
Alfred a t it's summit and w a s believed to your fellow men
thence southerly along West Harrison and or more families, not exceeding
more, John H . Hennessy, Mrs. P o s t ,
The cast follows:
W y m a n , J a m e s Albertine,
L a w - be visible for forty miles but h i s - p r o s p e r i t y ' of the world should be
Street to Thomas Street; thence east one
including
Mr. Bob Grey,
a model h u s - hundred twenty-five feet easterly from to Clinton Street; thence north to the three stories In height,
rence Denn and Richard Tallman. tory tells t h a t after the time of taken care of by each a n d every Mrs. H. Massey, Mrs. R. jWakefleld.
apartment houses for private famiband, R a y Clagston.
one with love, s t r e n g t h , faith in
the east side of Jackson Street; thence southerly line of G. F . Blackmor &amp; lies.
S u n s h i n e Circle to Meet
Caesar it relapsed again into it's
Son's lands; thence east to the D. &amp;
Mrs. Bob Grey, his model wife, northerly parallel to the east line of H. Railroad Company's lands; thence
Ensign J o h n s o n of Church a v e Section 4—Zone C. In Zone C no
T h e May meeting of the Sun- original condition as an old fish- life, honor and a smile which when
Jackson Street to Lincoln Avenue;
thence easterly along Lincoln Avenue southerly to Division Street; tnonce building or premises shall be used,
shine circle will take place a t the ing station. This, as is seen, had used will be like a m i r r o r In life nue h a s r e t u r n e d from Springfield, Rosemary Meyer.
Tom Carter, M r s . Grey's flippant to Nelson Avenue; thence northerly wer*erly along Division Street to 'ark and no building shall be erected
"RoWe of Mrs. William Merrill, 45 nothing to do with the future of reflecting back to g r e e t you," the Mass., w h e r e he attended a c o n or
along Nelson Avenue to an alley Street; thence northerly along Park which is .arranged, intended,
speaker said.
vention of Methodist
Episcopal brother, K e n n e t h Walker.
Grove street, Thursday afternoon a t t h e world and left little t h a t h a s
of Union
west- Street to
Mrs. P e t e r Wycombe, a real per- south along said Avenue; thence Union erly alongChurch Street; thence west- | designed, to^ be used, except for^ one
Mr. Knoeppel concluded his talk men, having been the
2:30 o'clock. Mny are expected to permanently advanced or influenced
delegate
erly
alley south of
Church Street to the Adl- or more of the uses permited in
sonage, Helen Swatling.
Avenue to Regent Street;
thence rondack Railroad ; thence south to an Zones A and B, and except for hotels,
b e present. The scripture word for the generations which were t o come. by saying every m a n who h a s a from this district.
Mr. Peter Wycombe, Prince of southerly along Regent Street to Lin- alley; thence west to Beekman Street; boarding houses, sanitariums, philt h e meeting will be "power."
"The Hanging Gardens of Baby- good, sound constitution a n d lives
P a t r i c k Miller of Malta .was a
westerly along
Pessimists with a digestion, WI1- coln Avenue; thence Whitney Place; thence southerly along Beekman street anthropic, fraternal or eleemosynary
up to his ideals of life will always local business caller today.
Obituary
lon
possibly constructed by Queen
Lincoln Avenue to
to Cherry Street; thence east to Wal- uses, or institutions other than corthence northerly along Whitney Place worth
Charles H e n r y Askew, five-year- Semiramis or seven centuries lat- prosper and. one good law to abide
street;
thence
southerly rectional.
Miss KatherJne Gaffney a n d Mrs. « | » D ^ n t y .
Dorothy Landon, a regular flap- to an alley going westward from to
Section 5—Zone D. Zone D Is unreOak
street;
t h e n c e
old s e n of Mr. and Mrs. Charles er by Nebuchadnezzar, who is said by in life is "The Golden Rule."
J a y Baker visited friends and r e l a Whitney Place ; thence westerly along
stricted, except for any business,
per, Helen Ketchum.
After much a p p l a u s e President tives in Mechanicville S u n d a y .
westerly along Oak Street to Birch trade or use that may become a nuisto h a v e made them for the g r a t i Aakew of Main Road, died a t his
said alley to its t u r n ; thence northMr. J a m e s Landon, temper per- erly along said alley to the south Street; thence southerly along Birch ance, provided, however, that nd one
h o m e y e s t e r d a y about 10.30 o'clock. fication of his Median Queen, a r e Andrews called on J a m e s BeverGeorge E a t o n of West Galway sonified, John Davey.
bounds of the John E. Gaffney lot; Street to Ash Street; thence westerly of the following businesses, trades
T h e child h a d not been sick long the third wonder. The gardens a r e ley and P a s t P r e s i d e n t Robert L. was in town a few hours yesterday
along Ash Street to tho west lnie of
Carter, committee appointed
by
Uncle Tom, a real black negro thence along the westerlyto bounds of the inside District of the City ; thence or uses shall be established in said
a n d death c a m e as a shock to his said to have formed a square covthe J. E. Gaffney lot
Circular
on business. 1 ,
Zone, except upon the consent in
butler, Henry H e a t o n .
Street; thence north along Circular southerly along the west line of the writing of the Commissioner of Pubering an area of about four acres him to select a gift for the district
parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Hodsoll
Street to Caroline Street; thence west- inside District of the City to West lic Safety, and provided, further,
governor and Mr. C a r t e r presented
Officer Hogan, the Irish policeCharles is survived by his p a r e n t s rising in terraces curiously conerly on Caroline Street to Hodgman Circular Street; thence west along that whenever an application is made
of H a r t f o r d a r e visiting Mr. H o d - man, George Ogden.
$ a n d several sisters and brothers. structed with stone pillars, s u p - Governor Knoeppel w i t h a made
Street; thence north on Hodgman West Circular Street to West Avenue ;
Commissioner of Public Safety
In addition to the play
Miss Street to Lake Avenue; thence east thence north along West Avenue to to tho consent, to establish any of the
fountains, to measure sweater m a d e a t the soil's brother, H e n r y Hodsoll, and
l"he funeral will t a k e place a t plied with numerous
Church Street; thence,
along for a
Catherine Schauber will give vocal on Lake Avenue to the place of begin- Church Street to the west east of the said businesses, trades or uses or In
t h e A s k e w h o m e Thursday after- groves and avenues of t r e e s and Ballston S p a S w e a t e r shop in family! of N o r t h High street.
line
ning.
Miss M a r y Quinnlin and
Jack solos between a c t s . £
The gift w a s not
duty
noon a t 3 o'clock. The Rev. E r n e s t parterres of flowers. W h a t has this Ralph street.
of George Ostrander and run- the said Zone D, it
Also, bounded on the east by Frank- lands along the west line of the lands of the Commissioner shall be theSafety
of Public
F C ' - T r i p p , pastor of the Methodist left t h a t has permanently advanced only an apreciation of his visit Butler of S a r a t o g a Springs have
lin Street, south by Cherry Street; ning
hearing
Richardson, A. to
west by an alley; north by Division of George Ostrander, and L. C. Put- saidhold a publicupon such upon the
Episcopal church of Ballston Spa, or influenced the oncoming ages. but a token by which he could a l - returned h o m e after a short visit
application
notice as
Harris Ide, Carleton
ways remember Ballston Spa and with Mrs. F r a n k P l u m m e r of West a n n o u n c e m e n t made by the Rev. Street and Franklin Square.
will officiate burial will be in t h e
"The Temple of Diana at Ephesus
properties
CorporaExcepting however, the following: nam line thence to the north north cor- ho shall deem proper, and to dispose
Charles McCaffrey. This will mark
east on the
of such application within 30 days
Ballston S p a cemetery.
w a s the fourth wonder of the old remember t h a t the Ballston Spa High street.
Commencing at the northeast corner tion
the lands of AdironMr. and M r s . Albert W a t s o n and the second time t h e Sanctuary boys of George Street and. Court Street, poration line to thence southerly along after the same is made .
Church Meeting
world. The temple a t Ephesus w a s club will always r e m e m b e r him a s
dack Railroad;
1
1. Livery or boarding stable.
T h e Chancel Guild
of
Christ a magnificent structure, 220 y e a r s the one who p u t t h e m on the map, family of Church avenue visited have sang the entire mass in running easterly along George Street the lands of the Adirondack Railroad
to Nelson Avenue; thence southerly Company to the soith hounds of the
2. Grease, fat or tallow rendering
Latin.
c h u r c h will have it's annual meet- being necessary for the completion Mr. Carter said. T h i s , Mr. Carter friends in Corinth Sunday.
to an alley between George Street and land belonging to the G. F . Harvey or refining.
P l s n t y of Rain.
i n g t o n i g h t a t 8:30 a t the P a r i s h of this great masterpiece. I t w a s added, w a s just a m e r e rememUnion Avenue; thence easterly along
William
Springer of
Galway
3. Storage or curing of raw hides,
thence easterly
F a r m e r s in this section of the said alley to the west bounds of lands Company; land belonging to alongG. the or skins.
h o u s e In H i g h street. Election of 425 by 225 feet, covering more than brance and t h a t w o r d s could never called in t o w n this morning.
bounds of
the
F.
now owned by J. C. Harris on East
their
appreciation
and
officers will take place and all two acres, supported by 127 col- express
4. Merry-go-founds, ferris wheel
Mrs.
Donald
McPherson
and county are greatly handicapped by Avenue; thence along the west bounds Harvey Company to "Wells Street;
m e m b e r s a r e asked to be present. u m n s of white marble 60 feet high, t h a n k s .
the continual rainfall. The fields of said Harris lots to Mitchell Street; thenee easterly along Wells Street and or similar amusement device.
daughter,
Catherine, of
Amster5.
Garage for more than five
continuing on Wells Street to the
Miss Miller to Wed
which weighed 150 tons and were
Mr. Knoeppel then briefly t h a n k - dam, called on friends here yester- in most cases a r e wet and soggy thence westerly along Mitchell Street place of beginning.
motor vehicles.
1
thence along Case
Mr. a n d Mrs. Robert G. Miller kings.
a n d spring plowing and planting to Case Street; Street; thence east
6.
ed the R o t a r i a n s for t h e gift say- day.
Street to George
Also, commencing at the northeast yard. Coal, coke, lumber or wood
of Brookline announce t h e marriage presented
by a s many different ing it was altogether unnecessary
Street to George Street; thence east- corner of George Street and Court
Thomas B e t t s has resumed his is two weeks behind time.
7. Carpet or rug cleaning estabof their daughter Alina to F r e d erly on George street to East Ave Street, running easterly along George lishment.
"On the night of the birth of to give him the p r e s e n t a s he had
nue;
thence northerly along East Street to Nelson Avenue; thence
e r i c k Morris Savage of New York Alexandria it was fired by an o b - already taken a liking to Ballston studies a t R. P . I., after spending I
K. Slaughtering of animals.
the week-end with his parents, Mr
Avenue to an alley between George southerly to an alley between George
ORDINANCE NO. LXXXI
City. After a short wedding trip scure person for the main purpose Spa and called it his "pet hobby
9. Any -ether business, trade or
Street and Madison Avenue; thence^ Street and Union Avenue, thence
and Mrs. C. W . Betts, of E a s t High
Mr. a n d Mrs. Savage will reside a t of securing immortality
Be it ordained that Ordinance No. westerly along said alley to Nelson* easterly along said alley to*" west use t h a t Is or may be noxious or
for his After
complimenting
the
Past'street.
W e e h a w k e n , N. J.
LXXTX be and the same is hereby Avenue; thence northerly along Nel- bounds of lands now owned by J. C. offensive by reason of the emission
name a youth who believed t h a t presidents, I. W. Wiswall, and R o b son Avenue to Spring Street; thence Harris on East Avenue: ther.c» along of odor, dust, smoke, gas or noise.
Slayman H a n n a h of Milton ave- repealed.
Personals
by an act of vandalism he would ert L. Carter and
Section 6. Amendments, Alterawesterly along Spring Street to Court the west bounds of said H a r r i s lots
1
the
present nue was a Schenectady
By the Council,
business
B u r t o n T h o r n of Round Lake call- outlive in fame the pious who built
Street; thence southerly along Court to Mitchell Street; thence " westerly tions and Changes. The City Council
MICHAEL, J. MULQUEEN,
president, William A. Andrews, he caller this morning.
tod In t o w n today on m a t t r e s of it. It was later rebuilt but again
Commissioner of Accounts. Street to the place of beginning, along Mitchell Street to Case Street; may from time to time, on petition,
opened his gift.
hearing,
thence along Case Street to George after public notice and
which property is in Zone "B.
business.
Miss Eleanore Grose of Church
destroyed by the Goths. The p a s Second Exception. Esceptlng also Street; thence easterly along George amend or change the regulations and
Those present from o t h e r clubs avenue w a s the Sunday guest of
ORDINANCE NO. LXXXII
Charles Bishop of H a n n a m street sion of men today are the same as
the property commencing on the west Street to East Avenue; thence north- zones herein established. Whenever
were E. K. Thomas, a n d Robert Miss Dorothy Emmel of Albany.
Zoning Ordinance of the City of
celled o n friends in Glens Falls those olden days.
side of East Avenue a t the north- erly along East Avenue to an alley the owners of 50 percent or more of
Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
Fisher, Mechanicville; H e n r y Peck,
S u n d a y evening.
west corner of an alley between Union between George Street and Madison the frontage on any block front and
J a m e s S h a w of Galway w a s i s Be it Ordained :
"The fifth wonder
of the old of Schenectady; George E . Adee,
Avenuo; tfcerce westerly along said
It. shall
Avenue
Mitchell
Mr. a n d Mrs. Thomas C. L u t h e r world was the statue of Zeus built
Section 1. For the purpose of reg- j west on and west line Street running alley to Nels -n Avenue ; "thence north- the block front facing signed, to pretown on business yesterday.
the
of
the
ulating and restricting the location of Harris property; thence the J. C. erly along Nelson Avenue to Spring sent a petition duly
a n d d a u g h t e r , Margaret, of White by Phidias which marked the g r e a t - A. J. Pierce, N. R. Thompson and
north
to
A. C. Tyler of S a r a t o g a Springs trade! and industries, and the location !
City Council requesting an amendRulph«r S p r i n g s called on friends est sculptor of ancient Greece. This President Benjamin K. Walbridge called on local trade yesterday.
along
Mitchell Street; thence westerly to Street; thence
of buildings designed for special uses. Case Street; thence northerly on Case Street to Court westerly thence Spring ment, alteration or repeal of the
of the S a r a t o g a R o t a r y Club. The
i n t o w n recently. '
the City of Saratoga Springs is hereby i Street to George Street to East Ave- erly along CourtStreet; to the south- regulations prescribed for such block
was a collossal statue for the OlymMiss M a r g a r e t Connely of East divided into four zones shown on the I
Street
place front, it shall be the d-ty of the
E d w a r d Whalen of H a n n a m street pium of Ivory and gold. Surely, Mr. serving committee for next week
Council to vote upon y- 1 petition
accompanying map, which Is a part nue ; thence south to the place of be- of beginning.
,*ra* a social visitor in Glens Falls Knoeppel said, "the fifth wonder as appointed by P r e s i d e n t Andrews High s t r e e t had Miss Lois Sawyer of this ordinance, and thereon indi- ! ginning, which property is In Zone
Also, starting at the northeast cor- within 00 days after tl, filing of
of SkRlmore College as her week"D."
ner of Henfy Street and Caroline tho same by the petit i&lt;
S u n d a y evening.
Frederick
J.
rs, with
cated as follows:
of the old world has left little if is Edward Welch,
Third exception.
Excepting alio
• Oeorge G r a b e of Galway n u m b e r - a n y means t h a t h a s advanced or Wheeler, and I. W. W i s w a l l . The end guest.
Zone A indicated In Diagonal | lots facing the south side of the all«y Street and running thence easterly to tho Council. If, however, i protest
Circular Street and thence south to against such amendment, alteration
Squares, and described as follows:
I. O. O. F . Lodge Meets.
ed a m o n g those from out of town, influenced the ages following.
speaker committee
for
the r e Henry
leading
Starting at the northwest corner of I Harrisonfrom Circular Street tobeEast Spring Street; thence west toCaroline or repeal is presented signed by the
w h o t r a n s a c t e d business here y e s Except for the a p p o i n t m e n t of a Broadway and Fourth Street and go- |
Street, which shall
In Street; thence north to
owners of 20 percent or more of the
"The sixth wonder, or the tomb maining p a r t of May and all of
Street.
terday.
frontage in the rear or directly opC. ing westerly on the north Corporation Zone B.
of Mausolus at Halicarnassus, one J u n e a r e Thomas Kerley a n d Ralph committee headed by Vernon
Also, the frontage of the block on posite
Fourth exception. Excepting also
H. Davison. During t h e luncheon Bremer to m a k e plans for Mem- Line to the easterly side on the Adi-I ..---'«,:." rnTTV.Wt nf T^t "**&gt; "Taction the west side of Broadway extending altered, the. frontage proposed to be
ings Tonight.
of the most magnificent monuments
such amendment, alteration
rondack Division of the Delaware and I ]«2 • reas i o feet of Lot Z5, pecuon
T h e following meetings are sche- in the world, probably many years Robert L. Carter read a telegram orial day service *bn J u n e 0, only Hudson Railroad Company. thence ! ' Block C, being the lot on the from Church Street to Walton Street. or repeal shall not. be passed except
Excepting, however, the following: by the four-fifths vote of the Council.
Jumel Place and
duled for this evening.
later was destroyed by an e a r t h - from Edward Rusemore, secretary r o u t i n e . b u s i n e s s was transacted at southerly along the easterly side of northeast corner of lot being 60 feet That property in the. rear of the State
East Avenue, said
Section 7. Set Back Line.
No
Kayaderossera* the D. &amp; H. Railroad Company to a front on East Avenue and 163 feet Armory bounded on the west by the
W o m e n ' s Relief Corps, card party quake, as all t h a t Is left are the of the New York city R o t a r y club, the m e e t i n g , of
point which Is the north line of the
Boston and Maine Railroad, on the building shall be erected and no
t o follow meeting.
old marble steps recovered by ex- expressing his t h a n k s for the In- Lodge, 270, I. O. O. F., last even- continuation
of
Vermont
Street; deep on Jumel Place.
building shall
he constructed
or
Zone B indicated
In
Vertical south by the Armory, on tho east by- altered so R3 to project in any wise
thence easterly to the intersection of
P r o t e a n s' regular meeting in their Vavation. This, the sixth wonder vitation extended him a n d his r e - ing.
lots facing on Circular Street: and on
Squares and described a s follows:
Woodlawn
Avenue:
thence south
Bible Class Meets.
r o o m s in the Balmuth building In of the world, so far as known, h a s gret t h a t he could not be present.
Starting at the northeast corner of the north by an alley which is a con- beyond the average set hack line
along Woodlawn Avenue to the bounds
observed by the hulldings on the
Catherine Street and the Delaware tinuation of York Avenue.
Personals.
had no influence on the generation
Front street.
Mrs. R. L. DeLong of Maple ave- of an alley running easterly from and Hudson Railroad Company, runZone C indicated in Diagonal Lines samo side of the street, within the
John Newman of Milton avenue nue was hostess to the Fidelis Bi- Woodlawn Avenue; thence easterly ning north on Catherine Street to and described as follows:
W o m e n ' s club banquet a t H a r - which were to come.
block front, at the time ** the passaid alley to
and
"The seventh and last wonder of made a trip to Schenectady early ble Class a t the regular monthly along the along said alley its turn north First Street; thence westerly on First
m o n y hall, c a r s to leave CommunBounded on the north by the north sage of this ordinance. Where there
southerly
to the
are existing buildings at the time of
Street to Bryan Street; thence north
west by
i t y H o u s e in Pleasant street
a t the old world was the Colossus of this morning.
meeting a t her
home last night, bounds of Van Dam Street; thence on Bryan Stree f to East Avenue; corporation line ; East Avenue;Bryan the passage of this ordinance on only
Street; south by
east
easterly along the north hounds of
Rhodes representing Phoebus, the
William Weinberg
of
Galway the meeting having been postpone.! Van Dam Street to Broadway; thence thenee east on East Avenue to Maple by Maple Avenue.
6: tO o'clock s h a r p .
one side of the street, then the set
B a i t L i n e Social club meets with national delay of the Rhodlans, transacted business in town yester- from F r i d a y night until last even- northerly along the west bounds of Avenue; thence northerly on Maple
Bounded north by Cherry Street; I hack line on th e vacant side shall be
Avenue to the City limits; thence east west by an alley south by Washingthe D. &amp;
ttwrfe
Y o u n g to rehearse the two formed of metal over a period of day.
ing,
Only r e g u l a r routine busi- Catherine H. Railroad Company to on the north line of the City limits to ton Street and east by Franklin the same as the a v e r s e set back line
Street; thence northerly
twelve years. It was probably 90
of the, improved aide of tha atreet
Mrs. Carl S, Wooley of Milton
Marlon Avenue: thence southerly on Street.
p l a y s t h e club will give In
the
feet high and was destroyed by an a v e n o t !• visitiftf friends in New ness was conducted and the next along Catherine Street to first Street; Marlon Avenue to the D. A H. RailBounded west by Franklin Street; within the block.
near future.
meeting will be with Mrs. Acker- thence westerly on First Street, to road Company: thence westerly on north by Franklin Square; east bySection 8. An non-conformlnf use
earthquake quite a few years later. York city.
Street;
man a t 35 Chapman street. Mrs, Bryan Street tothence northerly along the D. &amp; H. Railroad company's land Delaware and Hudson Railroad Com- existing, or authorized by a lease in
This, together with the other six
Bryan
the north Corporation
to the place of beginning.
Mrs. Joseph LeGallis of West DeLong treated her guests to depany ; south by Washington Street. writing duly executed, at the time of
O r e r l a n d Sped $598 and u p dellv- wonders,of the old world, built by
Bounded north by Lake Avenue: tho passage of this ordinance, may
Also, starting at the comer of
Milton shopped in town yesterday. licious refreshments consisting of
Vlao, starting at the northeast cor.
tored a t t h e Milton Avenue Garage men, fired with enthusiasm of their
But such non-consouth by Caroline Street; west by he continued.
Mrs,
John Corning of
Blood sandwiches, salad, cake and cof- ner of Circular Street and Lake Ave- ; Henry Street and Lake Avenue, run- Henry Street; east by Hodgman forming use shall not he extended,
B a t t e t o n Spa.—adv.
I t . undertaking of temporary heauty.
nue running along Circular Street to ) ning easterly along Lake Avenue to Street.
street has returned home after a fee.
nor shall a structure designed, arthence
northerly
the alley north of Lake Avenue: (Mrcular Street;
Starting at
bounds of
visit with her daughter. Miss K a t h thence along said alley to East Harri- along Circular Street to an alley be- Broadway and the west Street; run- ranged or Intended for a non-conAppointed Deputy Sheriff.
Congress
forming use, in whole or in a part,
son Street: thence easterly parallel to tween Circular Street and York Aveerine Corning, of Troy.
Sheriff Snell has appointed Har- the North line of Lake Avenue and nue : thence easterly along said alley ning along Congress Street west to be enlarged except for a conforming
Hamilton Street; south along Hamil- use.
to East Harrison Street; thence eastold Van Aernem a special deputy one hundred feet therefrom, to the in- erly parallel to the northerly line of ton Street to William Street ; west
Section
Tha Ina road running from the
sheriff and has assigned him to the tersection of Maine Railroad to Union T.ake Avenue and one hundred feet along William Street to Union Street; validity of 9. Invalidity. provision
any section, or
Boston and
running south along Union Street to of this ordinance shall not Invalidate
duty of cashier at the terms of Avenue, connecting with the end of therefrom to the road leading to
the Boston and West Circular Street; wast along any other section or provision therecourt.
This position was
fllle I the Speedway; thence southerly along Union Avenue andCompany;
thence West Circular Street In Aletta Street,
said road to Union Avenue; thence Maine Railroad
many y e a r s by the late
Wlllar'l westerly along Union Avenue to the north along said road to the north south along Aletta Street to South of.Section ffl. Penalties and Enforcewest along
northwest corner of Spencer Trask's line of the City; thence southerly Street or llincoln Avenue ; Avenue to ment . The violation of any proWagner.
TON1GHT—.715-9.00
fj
or Lincoln
place on Union Avenue : thence south- along the, said line to the eaat line of South Street the L&gt;elaware and Hud- vision of this building zone ordinanr*.
C. D. of A. to Mwt.
erly along the west line of Spencer the Inside District of the City of Sara- the lands of
shall Subject the offender to a fine of
ft, Mary's Court, 826, Catholic Trask's place ; thence westerly to tb,e toga Springs; thence northerly to son Rlalroad Company to the Geyser not exceeding one hundred dollars,'
—AT—.
TOMORROW—2.45, 7.15, 9 0 0
—
Excelsior Avenue; thence westerly to Crossing on Ballston Avenue ; north and. In case of nen-payment to a
Daughters
of America, will have east line of the Saratoga Racing As- Marlon Avenue; thence southerly to along Ballston Avenue to th« south
not exceeding ten
line;
northerly along
the
the City; term
MAPLE HALL, West Milton ft regular meeting this iVtHing at soeiatton line ofthence Saratoga Racing , the Boston and Maine Railroad line of east inside District of line of the days, fn Jail of day on which such
the aast
the
and each
along
CORINNE GRIFFITH in
8 o'clock in the K n i g h t s of Colum Association to Union Avenue; thence ; thence southerly along th* Boston and t&amp;enc*, District of the south to a point violation continues shall constitute
Inside
City
easterly along Union Avenue to the | Maine Railroad to the place of be- which Is in a line the the continuation a separate offense,
»
bus rooms in F r o n t street.
of
Music by
east line, of the Inside District of the i ginning.
violation mm- n!so
of the east line of
To Sing Mats.
City of Saratoga Springs; thence
Also, starting on Regent Street at Cemeterv continued the Greenridge at Any suit of th« City. he enjoined
Dennis Murphy's Orchestra
south: thence
the
The seventy-four s a n c t u a r y boy* southeiiv along the east Tine of the a point where an alley In the rear of north to the iViuth line of Greenridae
Section II, Thin ordinance shall
Inside District to Nelson Avenue: m t o n Avenue runs easterly
Mary's
th«
effect
Nelson Ave south line thence west
The public is invited. A good of St. of Saint church will sing late thence, northerly along Nelson Avenue ; along th* said alley to along Neisnn Cemeterv ; of Greenridge along the t&amp;keBy the immediately.
along the
Cemetery
Council.
mass
Dominic at the
nue ; 4hen&lt; afj southerly
MICHAEL J. MULQUEEN.
to Writht
westerly' nue; t to Lincoln Avenue; thence and following tha south and weat line
time is assured.
mass next Sunday, according to an iJong WrightStreet; thenc*point one- Avenueh e n c f southerly along rseison
Street to a
••"•s-2*. Commissioner of Aooouata,

SPECIAL SCHOOL MEETING

SENIOR CLASS TO
GIVE ANNUAL PLAY

Capitol Theatre. Ballston 9 SOCIAL DANCE

Every Saturday Night

"BLACK OXEN"

Untitled Document

Thomas M. Tryniski
309 South 4th Street
Fulton New York
13069

www.fultonhistory.com

�</text>
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&#13;
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