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.

.

.

T H E N E W S first—all of it, and
both aidos of it—ia Tha Saratoglan's
ooal.

1

•ll '«"••• "

-

"^^ltJ •

" J "

V

Senate Adopts Cloture o n
ML

'•«"

/

Prohibition

THE SARATOGIAN

SPRING buy«&lt;"» ff% watching tha
advertising column* of Tha Saratogian for •Happing hints.

And the Saratoga Sua, News, Balktoa Sp» Daily News and Hudson Valley Times.
SARATOGA SPRINGS. N. Y., MONDAY. FEBRUARY 28. 1927.

THREE CENTS

Fourteen Pages

NEW SERIES. VOL. 6S. NO. 41

«S&amp;K&gt;

GOVERNMENT WINS DOHENY OIL CASE
SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS FRAUD CHARGE,
ORDERS SURRENDER OF NAVAL LEASES

LOUIS H. CRAMER,
&amp;MEDLEY BUTLER Cooper in "Lost Letter"
BUSINESS EXPERT,
ORDERED TO CHINA
Sought Trap for Bootlegs;
FINANCIER. DEAD
TO HEAD MARINES
Impeachment Hearing Closed Was President of The G. F.
Brigadier General Will Com-

mand Forces in Asiatic
SENATE ADOPTS Britain Accepts Coolidge
Waters.
AGREEMENTS WERE
A T SHANGHAI
CLOTURE RULE ON
TAINTED BY FRAUD ACTIVEPreparations Continue Federal Judge Frank Cooper of New York to R. O. Merrick, a
Invitation to Parley on
Defense
Army
PROHIBITION BILL
DECLARES COURT —NorthernStand to Make
Limitation of Armaments
Votes to Shut Off Debate, and
Fall Leasing Policy Held Hie*
AMERICAN FORCES
Prevent Filibustergal—Corruption Charge
WASHINGTON, Feb. 28. (/P)—Great Britain's response
ing/
i
Upheld.
to the American overture for further naval limitation, received
___
IN NICARAGUA TO
*
^ . ^
- ^
WILL FORCE A VOTE at the State Department today accepted President Coolidge. |

W A S H I N G T O N . F e b . 2 8 . ( e P ) — A certified c o p y of a letter d a t e d N o v . 17, 1 9 2 6 , purporting to h a v e b e e n sent
by
p r o h i b i t i o n agent, in w h i c h w a s o u t l i n e d a p l a n to entrap b o o t l e g g e r s , w a s read t o d a y b e f o r e the H o u s e judiciary c o m m i t t e e
i n v e s t i g a t i n g i m p e a c h m e n t c h a r g e s against the j u d g e .
&lt;v
u

Action Favored by Andrews
and Anti-Saloon
League.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 28 OP) —
The cloture rule limiting debate
was Invoked by the Senate today to
force action on the prohibition and
customs reorganization bill put forward by the administration.
Assistant
Secretary
Andrews
backed the measure which also
has the support of dry organizations.
Some of the west in the Senate
also favored it while others threatened a filibuster against it.
Tne vote was 53 for cloturo and
27 against, or one more than the
required two-thirds majority. Senator Copeland, Democrat, New York,
voted for cloture, while Senator
„Wadsworth, Republican, New York
•opposed it.
Today's action marked tha fourth
time: tha^Benate has &amp;a*Te*&amp; t 0 r e "
Strict Its debate and only on one
previous occasion has a domestic
question been involved.
That was in the discussion of the
McFadden branch banking bill.
, The Senate declined to limit debate on the $125,000,000 public
building bill defeating a motion to
apply the cloture rule to the measure.
*
The refusal to adopt cloture, even
If it prevents passage of the bill
at this session will not affect the
first year's program for / public
buildings. Treasury officials have
taken into consideration possibility
(Continued on Page Two)

Flashes of Life
BY T H E A S S O C I A T E D PRESS

Through a loan of $2 from a
bank a peachy dog hguse Is to
be provided for the best dog in
the world. Toward buying the
house Otto Szant, 12, of West
Orange, N. J., had saved
up
$3.29 and he requested a loan of
$2 on a note for three months
with six per cent Interest to be
repaid from earnings after SQhool
hours. He did business right
with the bank's president. Giving the orders for the deal President Van Ripper said: "Security is initiative, confidence and
personality."
Crime costs the U. S. at least
sixteen billion dollars a year, It
Is estimated by Mark O. Prentiss In the Manufacturers' Record.
The estimate Includes
commercial
frauds,
loss of
property, cost of law enforcement and economic waste without attempt at graft figures.
WDEBS Is to be a voice on
the air 'of criticism and warning, of peace and progress, if
alms of Socialists are realized.
They are planning a fund
of
$250,000 to erect a broadcasting
station as a memorial to Eugene V. Debs.
Of several
score of lake
freighters blockaded last
December In the lower channel of
tha Straits which connect Lake.
Superior and Lake Huron, It
• till await the coming of spring,
although they have been safely
tied up for the winter.
British charge d'affaires
in
Nicaragua announces If necessary. "Great Britain will recognize the Diaz regime already
recognized by the TTnlted States."
Premier Ibanez of Chile announces all judges who fall to
mete out justice will be deported.
Blue laws In South Carolina
drive aoft drink thlr?ty across
border Into Georgia; golfers arrested In
Greenttll* go to
Georgia.
Paris Matin asserts Coolidge
has accepted French propose!
for provisional payments; Wash.
Ington says no formal offer by
France to pny has been received.

Harvey Company and Former City Engineer.
SUCCESS

AS
-

Had

I

Numerous

PUBLISHER
£
Benefaction:

t of Which Was Sara.
toga Hospital.

The copy waa aworn to as a duWASHINGTON. Feb. 58. (/*&gt;)Loula H. Cramer, SI, one of tha
•Mgadler General Smedley D. But- plicate of the original letter bjf
best known flnancers and philanJer was ordered to China today to I Leo A. ReRan of the Buffalo prohl-|
thropists in northern New York*
president nud manager of The O.
•eouimand the marine force of moro! bition office. The original has dlsF. Harvey company and president
than 2,500 In Asiatic waters. Ho appeared.
Doh
wa
Nof
• • • — • • m. .#. ah « M A ,«.m*' ° ' t n o Board of Managers of taw
m
Will proceed by the first steamer
Representative I A Guard!* toda
T A T A I { I I I M l v i l f l N Saratoga hospital, died at his reslinvitation to discuss the subject and said that the British dele- ' Money Spent in Developclosed hia case against Cooper and
Iron) San Diego.
l v I i l L J U v U J U U l l
denca. 72 Clinton s t r e e t Saturthe committee took It under adgates would "do their best to further the success of the proposed
ing Property.
I day evening at 6:30 o'clock. Mr.
SHANGHAI. Feb. 28. OP)—Con- vlaement.
conversation."
1 Cramer's death was attributed to
In the copy of the letter read tofidence having been restored to the
—^
WASHINGTON. Feb. 21. 0 » — shaken force of Marshal
r „k«—~ ll.~A .A
M . , ; „ . Al a » h o c k sustained nine weeks u^g
ago,
Sun- day, after advising Merrick that It E i g h t e e n H u nrd r e d Marines, A l a n J1|ne8fl n f 8 U c h a B f i v e r l t y
Together with the Japanese ac- Edward L. Doheny must give up Chuan-Fang by the arrival of ex- had been Impossible to get the
ready Landed; More On | It confined him to his bed until
ceptance, the reply waa regarded the naval oil leases and contracts tensive relnforcementa from Shan- "master minds" of the bootlegging
awarded him when Albert B. Fall
I the hour of hia death.
the Way.
as probably opening the way for a
tung province, defense preparations! same In Northern New York, the
Mr. Cramer's business and flnanthree-power consideration of smal- was secretary of the Interior.
to prevent Shanghai, richest mill- i Judge said that some unusual pro,aJ wa o n p of
Nor will he receive back tho
ler classes of war craft in line with
GUARDING R A I L R O A D f
"
marked individualtsry prize of the Orient, from fall- cedure must be adopted
the principles applied to first line money he spent in attempting la ing into Nationalist hands pro' lam and was unusual In that his
"If you have a couple of truat- !
carry the agreements into effect.
best loved field of work was found
ships at the Washington conferworthy, keen and resourceful young Britain Will Act in Harmony in one other than that In which
In an opinion amounting to a c e s s e d on a large scale today.
ence.
Principal actlvitlea centered at men In your service," the letter
With United Stale.
he received his early education.
The text of the British not*- fol- complete victory for the govern- Bunking, strategic point 28 miles said, "you would get a number of
ment the Supreme Court held toCommencing a successful career M
Policy.
lows:
Preparations in- these fellowa If they go about It In
day that the agreements not only south of here.
a civil engineer In'his early youth,
"His majestys government rej M A N A O L ' A . Feb. 21 O — Fur- Mr. Cramer later became interestW
Woolsey and-Benton Die As ceived with cordial sympathy the were tainted by fraud, but that the eluded the construction of battery the right way.
Indicating
that
the
Fall leasing policy under which positions
ed tn the publishing business and
' There are aeveral things which , U ) f r m $ u d . U p h n w n l . ot
Unll,j
Planes Crash in Air at
invitation of the government of the they were made was illegal.
Northerners, once reported on the they can do to get Into the current | ,
then later became manager
United States of America to take
H ate- ^ ^
h a v , h^n
1(Lnd#d , t
Buenos Aires.
It was under this same policy Verge of losing Sunklang, had the
part in a conversation at Geneva
of the bootlegging activities. They C p r t o U f r o m t h a destroyer tenders • evenluaHy president and manager
that the Teapot Dome leas* was situation In hand there and were could come to Albany and by hang
TWO MEN MISS DEATH on the further limitation of naval given to Harry F. Sinclair, al- prepared to make a definite stand lng around the Hampton Hotel, or Aluire and Melville, The total o f ; of Thq O. F Harvey rornpany. OM
of the nation's leading firms of
American forcea on tho west coast
though tha suit to cancel that leas* Nagalnat the Nationalist advance.
the Schleits hotel, they could get in of Nicaragua now la about 1,800. j manufacturing chemists.
"The view of his majesty's govEscape by Jump From Ma- ernment upon the special geo- was not directly Involved in toMarshal Sun and General Chang touch with local peopJs who want With the arrival of the transport] Since he became connected wttfc
day's finding.
the Harvey company, Mr. Cramer
Chang, commander of the northern somebody to go to the North counchines—One Parachute
graphical position of the British
Henderson scheduled to f
t^mmSagTwW»TS» a comThe opinion of tho court was relnforcementa
returned
today try, to get the ale and beer, etc., rlnto In a week the total P t f r O a .
Empire, the length of the imperial
Fails to Open.
probably) munity, hln dearest friend, aad
announced by Justice Butler, and from the battle front While there and bringing It to Albany, and the
communications and the necessity
will be awellcd to three thousand! was one of the leaders la adthere was no dissent It completely
SUBNOS AIRES, Feb. 28 UP) — tor tho protection of It* food sup- • awfleuted tho finding! of the court Bi. . addressed four thousands of Albany people would tell them men.
vancing and carrying out ideas
Argentina had made extensive pre- plies are weft knowh a*nd together of appeals, holding that tha Doheny Tits troops, "lefllhg them that they where to go In Cltnton county to
In addition to the American war- uj^t served not only to better the
parations to fete the United States with the special conditions and re- leases and contracts are Invalid and were now united with the Shan- get the stuff.
ships the British cruiser Colombo I d t y but the conditions of its in*
"I have no doubt the local people is now snehored off Corlnto ready habitants.
army good will filers when they ar- quirements of the other countries that Doheny Is entitled to no com- tingese to fight Bolshevism.
Work of a hospital
provide the automobile. to take aboard British Nationals if nature, homes for aged and cbllrived here but now a sorrowing na- invited to participate in the con- pensation.
Supplementing the land prepara- would
versation must be taken Into acThey could go to Clinton county their lives are placed in Jeopardy dren as well as educational Instition is paying homage In a different
The highest tribunal based It*, tions and aa a precaution agslnat
way to two of the aviators who count.
decision on evidence deduced in the a Nationalistic attack on Shanghai and go where these local people by the fighting between the Liberal tutions were a hobby with Mr,
"His majestys government Is
were killed in Saturday's crash beby water, defense Commissioner Ll send them and get in touch with
Cram'-r and he was one of ths cmfe
nevertheless prepared to consider trial court and previously brought PIo Chang yesterday ordered the the proprietors of these places and and Conservative factions.
tween the planes New York and
to light in the Senate oil inquiry.
With the object of guarding the standing figures in the develop*
to what extent the principles
Detroit.
The final finding waa taken Wooaung entrance of the Whang- make them buy and come away.
railway line from Managua to Gra- ment of the Saratoga hospital, tha
carried forward either a» regards
"If they could be arreated It nada and to discourage the Lib- Saratoga Springs Y. M. C. A^ the
The bodies of Captain Clinton F. adopted at Washington can be without regard for the verdict rf poo River which Is the only apWoolsey of Michigan and Lieut. the ration in different classes of Jury In a local court which ac- proach to the city from the Yan- would not hurt anything but per- erals from making sn attack on Home of the Good Shepherd. SkidJohn E. Benton of California were ships between tho various Powers quitted Fall and Doheny of a crim- tese Delta, closed from 6 p.m. to haps would make lt better for their Granada, 350 marines were ordered more College and the Hawley
future activities.
taken to the military club Saturday or in other important ways. They inal conspiracy charge based on 6 sum.
to Granada yesterday. It is ex- Home for Children.
"They could alao go directly* to pected that naval forces will soon
Of a retiring nature and seldom
night, a few hours after the acci- therefore accept the invitation of the $100,000 transaction.
The consular body Immediately
The court found that the inter- protested the regulation, pointing Plattaburgh and vicinity and hang be orderrd to the Matalpt region, seen by residents of the city other
dent, to lie in state.
the government of the United
Before the bodies are taken States and will do their best to fur- est and influence of Fall, as well out that a vast amount, of ship- around and easily get In touch as It la In line with the advance of than during business hours of tha
later years of his life, Mr. Cramer
aboard the steamer Vauben this af- ther success of the proposed con- as his official action, were cor- ping enters and leaves the harbor with the dealers. I am told you the Liberal generals.
spent his evening hours at horns
ruptly secured by Doheny for the aa the tide dictates and cannot be ean go Into certain lunch rooms In
ternoon for the Journey to the U. S. versation.
where he was constantly In touch
Pittsburgh, Cbsmplain and Rouses
making of the contracts and interfered with.
all parts of the country will be rep"They would, however, observe
Week-end developments tn the with the several Institutions that
Point, end. If you come up with an
resented at religious services at the that tho relationship of such a con- leases.
A thousand more British marines
received his time and consideraFall, the court said, had stated j arrived today on the troop ship automobile you will be solicited to Nicarsgusn situation were;
Cathedral.
versation to tho proceedings of the
Harold Patteson. British Charge tion for the past 20 years.
that in conducting the leasing nebuy a load to take back. It might
President De Alvear, who on Fri- preparatory commission at Geneva
Minnesota. The general labor union
Gave Much to Hospital
d'affaires at Corlnto, declared that
day had greeted the members of would require careful adjustment" gotiations he would act himself, filled a one-hour strike aa a pro- be well for them to drive up In sn his country If necessary would recOne nf the principal ideals of
and that the Doheny company actApproved in Commons
the good will squadron at Mar Del
test against the landing of the automobile rather than to go up ognize the regime of the Conserva- Mr. Cramer, the development of
LONDON, Feb. 28. 04*)—Great ed upon belief that Fall controlled forces but the walkout failed to without the automobile."
Plata, the summer capital, returntive president, Diaz. He aald that the Saratoga hospital, reached Its
the situation. The opinion reviewThe letter explained that If the Captain Lackle of the British cruis- climax but a few years ago when
ed to Buenos^ Aires last night to Britain's reply to President Cool- ed In detail the secret negotiations materialize.
agents were arrested they would be er Colombo would do nothing with- he constructed and presented tsj
ldge's proposal for further naval
attend the religious service.
and stated that the facts leading
released on Judge Cooper's order.
Major Herbert. A. Dargue, In limitations accepting the Presi- up to the leases showed that the
out first consulting with Admiral the hospital the Nurse's Home, deeRep. La Guardla s h e seek the Latimer, commanding tha Ameri- tlned aa a memorial to himself
command of tha squadron, and dent's invitation was read in the Doheny company Yiad preferential
Judge's
Impeachment, contended can naval forces.
and Mrs. Cramer, and the subsa*
Lieut. Whitehead, reserve .pilot of House of Commons today dy Sec treatment. It was well established
that this letter Implicated Judge
quent construction of the large
the New York had a narrow es- retary Chamberlain and was greet
the court found, that the conThe Liberal envoy s t Mexico and beautiful wing on the eastern
Cooper In sn Illegal plan to trap
cape from death. Lieut. White- ed with general approval.
tracts and leases were made withCity, Pedro Zepeda, charged that section of the original building;
liquor law violators.
head Injured his left ankle when
out competition.
many wounded Liberals In ths The Installation of a modern operPASTOR ACCEPTS C A L L
One of the first of the new withe touched the ground with his
Furthermore, the opinion continfighting zones of Nlcarsgua v.ere ating room, an efficient and ads*
BUFFALO, N. Y„ Feb. 28. (An—
nesses called was Leo W, Breed,
parachute and walks with difficulued, th* leasing act fo 1320, Lnder
dying because of lack of food or quale laboratory nnd many other
The Rev. Charles A- Briggs, pastor
aJMlstant U. 8. district attorney at
ty.
*
medical attention, which waa pre- details which placed the local inof the Park Side Baptist church which the leases and contracts
Syracuse, whose offlcs Is InvestiTha Detroit Burns.
were made did not authorize the
vented from reaching them by the stitution among the first class hosgating
the disappearance from
The crash came as the planes since 1910,. has resigned to accept wholesale removal of the oil from
American forcea. He was ending pitals of the state, were largely
a call to Deposit, N. Y. Mr. Briggs the ground, but was Intended only
w«re coming down for a landing on
WASHINGTON, Feb. 21. 0 * 1 - Judge Cooper's files of lettera said an appeal to the Red Cross to re- the result of bis study and carethe Palomar flying field. They will take up his new duties April to aid In the conservation of the The right of Senator Gould, Re- to have a bearing on the impeach- lieve the plight of the Liberals.
fully outlined plans of progress.
oil In the ground as a reaervo, and publican, Maine, to a place In the ment case.
were In close formation and In the first.
The Liberal president, John B.
Mr. Cramer was a liberal supChairman Graham aaJd the comgranted tho Secretary of the Navy Senate was upheld today In the
act of making a turn the wing of
Saeasa, In a statement Issued by his
the New York crashed Into the left and Captain Woolsey, of the De- full discretion in the sale, exchange report of the Senete elections sub mittee had decided to permit La representatives at Washington, de- porter Of the Hawley Horns for
Children, the Y. M. C. A., the Horns
wing of the Detroit. The planes troit, succeeded In making the leap, or storage of It,
committee that Inveattgsted charges Guardla to go more broadly Into clared he was still ready to relin- of the Good Shepherd and Skidhia chargea with the understanding
Among other things, t h / court agslnat him.
became entangled and Instantly l a - but Woolsey's parachute failed to
quish hia claims to the Presidency more College. Just a few days began to fall.
open and he was killed by the fall. declared it was not necessary to
The sub committee recommended that the hearing would b« conclud- of Nicaragua on condition
t fore his death Mr. Cramer contriDargue and Whitehead came down decide whether the payment of •hat the charges which
Pilots Sean Struggling.
revolved ed when his latest witnesses bad I Diaz withdraw.
buted in a generous manner to ths
$100,000 by Doheny to Fall waa a about the payment of 1100.000 to fe been heard.
The two pilots could be seen by safely and were not injured.
Skldmore College endowment fond.
Papers Ransacked.
the watchers attempting to restore
The Detroit was completely burn- bribe, constituting a conspiracy to
median official be dropped.
Among his benefactions was a
UNEARTH RADICAL PLOT,
SYRACUSE. Feb. 21—Oliver D.
the equilibrium of their falling ed while the New York was wreck- defraud the government
The Investigation of Gould's
BUDAPEST, Feb. 21. &lt;M— A ( fouryear scholarship in R. P. I,
Since the leasing act of 1920 did qualifications was made at the ln- Burden, United Stales attorney, anmachines, but to no avail. Within ed.
widespread BoUbcvikt
plot has' several years sgo, which was
not authorize the awarding of
a moment the Detroit was afire.
The Pan-American flight will be leasee, said the opinion, the Elk "tasc* of Senator Walsh, who baaed nounced today an Intensive federal been unearthed by the police. The |
(Continued on Page Two)
investigation would be atarted ImThe four men aboard the planes, continued eventually with four
Hllla lease was Invalid whether or is demands on charges that the mediately to trace the peraon or author!!lea MH- It was centered In
which were coming down rapidly, planes. Major Richardson, U. S.
.-enator had turned over |100,000 to
persons who Saturday afternoon Budapest and bad ramifications In
were observed adjusting their para- military attache here, said today. not a bribe was passed.
Nevertheless, tho court declared f &gt;rmer Premier Fleming of New ransacked a private file of F«&gt;der»! the principal cities of Hungary.
chutes and making ready to Jump. The St. Louli and Ran Francl&amp;co,
nrunswlck. In connection with M
WHEN A GIR\- \S
Judge Frank Cooper In his office In
Lieutenant Benton for some reason he said, would resume the f.lght In passing that Fall's domination ontrsct for a railroad.
AN/\OUS,TQ KEEP A
was unable to get loose and was from the Buenoa Aires basin on In the naval reserves were brought
"The premises conaldered, your the Albany federal building and to lunch made the dlaeovery upon
made away with correspondence.
burned to death. His body was Tuesday, and the San Antonio, now about by "calculation and constireturning to make a telephone call
&gt;mmlttee recommends that, furthtuted a conspiracy between F."!l
KEEP
taken from the debris of the De- In Chile, would Join them at the and Doheny.
Judge Cooper's office was enter- to his father in Troy.
er action In the ease be not taken
troit.
ed between 1 and 2 o'clock Saturnearest point possibly Montevideo.
The floor wss littered with papers
and that the right of the Honorable
Arthur R. Gould to a aest in the dsy afternoon. Mr. Taylor, his sec- and the telephone removed from
Commander Dargue and Lieuten- A fourth plane will Join the squadretary, who had left the office to go Its hook.
nate be confirmed."
ant Whitehead, of the New York, ron In Venezuela,
at

[TWO GOOD WILL
AVIATORS KILLED;
FLIGHT TO GO ON

SENATOR GOULD
OF MAINE GIVEN
SEAT IN SENATE

3E.CRET-

HER Anxious

ADAM WINS DEFENDERS

Sunday Golfers Arrested in Bine
* Law Campaign in South Carolina
COLUMBIA, S, C , Feb. 28 C4»&gt;—f and state senator and W. G. Perry,
Golf bugs, many of whom have to Jr., John Cushman and David Ferwait six days between whacks at guson, Greenville business men.
When
the balls, May «*pect no discrimi- were the golfers arrested.
nation in their favor in Governor released they began to play anyRichards*
esmpaign to enforce way, but were warned that It Would
re*uK in their being placed In the
South Carolina's century-old Sun"lockup." They heeded the warnday closing law.
ing, but finished their game at
This waa clearly indicated when Hlltmore, N, C, where th *y drov*
four players, enrouto to the link* by automobile and later announced
in Greenville, were arretted yester- they would carry the case to court.
day, the state's Second "blue" SunGasoline ulationi, garages, noda
day.
fountains, cigar stores and restauThese were th* only, arrest* '. s i rants generally were closed In the
the lid was generally reported as larger cities, while drug store, that
clamped down tight in all prinei- remained open catered only to
pal otlea, far more at least than a medicine purchasers.
week before when first attempts
irette bootleg**-™ were rewere made to enforce the law.
ported operating In Greenville, settProctor Boas, a former solicitor i ing them for 10 ccnt§_ a package.
'"&lt;%

CAMBRIDGE. England. Feb. !*
(An—An organization called "the
Hlppolltua club" has been formed
at Cambridge university "to reassert the supremacy of the male."
A ttatement of policy aays:
"Convinced that feminine Influence la eating like a cancer Into
modern civilisation, the Hlppo)ltu«
club will blaze' the trail towards
an era of uncompromising masculinity. It will shatter the domlnnton of Bee and restore the Initiative of Adam.**
Greek legend Is responsible for
the club's name.

OR. FQSDICK'S FATHER DEAD

Hilles Sees Republican Victory in '28;
Butler Continues Attacks on President

NEW YORK, Feb. It, (M—SotiH«d of the death of hia father. Dr.
i rank Sheldon Fosdlck, too late to
1'eore a aifbstltute at the. Psrk
• venue Baptist church, the Rev.
Dfc
riarry
Emeraon
Foadlck
preaehed yesterday to s conarregaNKW YORK, Feb. 21 —Conflict«.oa that was unaware of his b*&gt;ing analyses of National senti; eayement.
ment of the I s , * presidential elecDr. Foadlck'a only reference to
j tion were voiced today by Chirlea
:tie feelings was s single sentence
D. Hilles, vice chairman of the Re'teaming de«th in his prayer.
publican National CSsSfBtttee, sad
The congregation learned of the
l*re*l,lent Nicholas Murray Butler
«ath after the services.
of Columbia university.
Dy, Foadick. " , tsseh'er In BufMr. Hilles la on a four e»f QM
'•lo for more than fifty years, died
•fly yesterday at ?b« heme of his West Studying the p.ilit! al fttWa*
100 P f R CENT STOCK DIVIDEND -an, Raymond B Fosdlefc, in Mont- tion. T&gt;r. Butler returned u«i.-r&gt;
day from a rp*»kln* t e w *-f Ohlei,
ATLANTA, Q a . Feb 2*.
&amp;hair, *f. J .
Indiana, lllln«i#. Witconsin end
Dlreetors of the Cees Cola company h«re today declared a atoeW
Minnesota,
dividend of I f f per cent at
t',Mr Hilles* prediction of **a iweepclose of a etoekho'ders' meeting St! —Ml«« Dorothy Ksden r-.t Bos- Ing victory for ths Republican psrty
which It was voted to Increase thel ' a, Mass.. is a guest of Mr end tn New York Hale snd the nation
capital stock from *aef©ae t 0 on&lt;»j Mra, Morris Abrahsma of Broad- In ItfiV* on the basis of the prosmillion shares. Ths stock d i u «»?. Mi*, Ksden ia a law student perity of lb* last sis year*, was
dend will be paid April 25 to stock .it the Nortn Eastern University met by Dr. But (era autemeta that
holders of retord March U,
\ .n l e s i o n , Mass.
it farmers of Ike Jliddie West art

PERSONAL MENTION

Untitled Document

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

www.fultonhistory.com

preparing to vote the Democratic
ticket "to punish President Coolidge
for vetoing the MeNary-Hsugcn
14 • Dr. Butler sees In the Middle
Weft a tremendous sentiment for
repent ef the prohibition amendment.
"Those whom I saw and addressed indicated as atrong a hostility
to % third presidential term as (,.-%•
did to the fe,icr*I prohibition law,"
Dr. Butler asserted. He aald people of the Middle West feel their
local and federal governments coat
too much.
Governor Smith of New York,
Dr. Butler declared, "seems to be
not only the •troagest but pretty
near the only possibility in the

Forecast.

Cloudy tonight snd Tuesday, probably followed by snow Tuesday;
not much chanee In temperature;
freah north shifting to northeast
winds.
The Sua.
jtisee

Today
Tomorrow

,,,,.,.,.

Temperature.
High* . . . . .

BSfp^

i:SS
« 34

l;It
j^H

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                    <text>1

THE SARATOCIAN, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 28. 1927.

FAOH T W O

USH LEAVES
CITY STREETS IN
BAD CONDITION

Weddings
A very pretty w e d d i n g w a a solemnized at the Bethesda rectory
Saturday by t h e R e v . Irving G.
Rouillard w h e n M i s s Ethel M a e
Handy, d a u g h t e r of Mrs. E. M.
Handy, b e c a m e t h e bride of Clare n c e E. Crawford, s o n of Mr. a n d
Mrs.
Charles Crawford, out Maple
avenue.
T h e bride w a s prettily
g o w n e d In light blue chiffon o v e r
blue satin w i t h h a t to m a t c h . H e r
c o r s a g e b o u q u e t w a s of bridal
roses.
T h e b r i d e s m a i d w a s Miss E v e l y n
Mullimun of S c h e n e c t a d y , a c o u s i n
of t h e bridegroom, w h o wore l i g h t
pink chiffon o v e r pink satin, w i t h
hat t o m a t c h .
H e r c o r s a g e bouquet w a s pink c a r n a t i o n s .
The
bridegroom's a t t e n d a n t w a a Gust a v e L l s h e n of S c h e n e c t a d y . Mr. and Mrs. Crawferd left Imm e d i a t e l y after t h e c e r e m o n y for
S c h e n e c t a d y w h e r e a w e d d i n g dinner w a s s e r v e d In t h e Asia r e s t a u rant.
T h e y w i l l be a t h o m e t o
their m a n y f r i e n d s a t t h e i r n e w l y
furnished h o m e a t 146 E a s t a v e nue.
I

LOUIS H. CRAMER,
BUSINESS EXPERT,
FINANCIER, DEAD

The Right Thing in the W r o n g Place

"-"S*

MARKET NEWS
Markets At a Glance

Dairy Market

New York
N E W YORK, Feb. 18 &lt;/P&gt;—
Stock*—Strong;
Houston
Oil
Jumps o v e r 16 p o i n t s .
B U T T E R — Steady; receipts 6.(Continued from P a g e One)
Tractor and Steel Plow Out
c r e a m e r y higher than extra*
B o n d s — F i r m ; foreign I s s u e s ac- 380;
awarded t o S c h u y l e r P e c k , a Sara51 l - 2 c &lt;o&gt; 62c; creamery extras (98
tive.
Today in Lone Battle
toga H i g h School g r a d u a t e .
Foreign
e x c h a n g e s — Mixed; score) 51c; creamery firsts (88 t*&gt;
With Element*.
1
Savad Frank Leslie Estate.
S p a n i s h a n d N o r w e g i a n r a t e s ad- 91 s c o r e ) 49c &amp; 50 l - 2 c ; packing
W h i l e a later day generation of
stock, current make, No. 2, 26c.
vance.
W h i l e all of the i t a t e a n d c o u n t y
Saratogiana had forgotten
his
EGGS — S t e a d y t o firm; receipt*
C o t t o n — F i r m ; foreign buying.
h i g h w a y s In Saratoga c o u n t y a r e la
career a s a publisher, h i s oldtlme
15,510. F r e s h gathered, e x t r a f i r s t s .
S u g a r — E a s y ; Cuban selling.
irood condition for travel t h e s t r e e t s
friends w e r e familiar
with
his
25 l - 2 c © 26 l - 2 c ; firsts 23 3-4o
Coffee—Easy; trade s e l l i n g .
of S a r a t o g a Springs a r e In the
s u c c e s s a s b u s i n e s s manager
of
Chicago
&lt;if 24 l - 2 c ; seconds and poorer
w o r s t condition they h a v e been in
Wheat—Barely
steady;
larger 22 l - 2 c &amp; 23 l - 2 c ; storage prim*
the Frank Leslie c o m p a n y of N e w
r e c e n t years. The five Inches of
Southwestern receipts.
York city, p u b l i s h e r s of Leslie's
21c &lt;&gt; 22c; fair to good 18o 0 20c;
g
f f e t s n o w w h i c h fell the latter part
Corn—Firm;
increased
v i s i b l e n e a r b y h e n n e r y whites, closely s e Weekly. Mr. Cramer left his chosen
of l a s t week left t h e s t r e e t s deep
supply.
profession a s civil engineer In the
lected e x t r a s 33c @ 84c; nearby
i n s l u s h and nearly every street
Cattle—Steady.
early nineties t o t a k e
over the
and
nearby
Western
hennery
w a s d e e p l y rutted m a k i n g travel
Hogs—Firm.
m a n a g e m e n t of t h e Leslie business
w h i t e s , firsts t o average e x t r a * 28o
difficult and dangerous.
U r g e n t b u y i n g of s h a r e s w h i c h © 32c; n e a r b y pullets 26c; n e a r b y
and guided it through a stormy
D e p u t y Commissioner of P u b l i c
h a v e r e c e n t l y m a d e r e m a r k a b l e hennery browns, extra* 29c &amp; 8lc;l
career into one of financial soundW o r k s , H e n r y F. Ryall. said today
advances
c o n t i n u e d during t h e
ness. H e w a s credited with being
Pacific c o a s t whites, extras, freight
t h a t efforts t o plow a w a y t h e anow
early hours.
H o u s t o n Oil and
personally responsible for the s u c 33c @ 34c; firsts to extra firsts 28fl|
S a t u r d a y were abandoned because
Commercial Solvents, B extended
cess of t h i s g r e a t business.
It w a s t h o u g h t better t o w a i t until
to o v e r 10 p o i n t s . C a s h Thresh- ® 32 l - 2 c .
Courtesy, National Safety Council
C H E E S E — Steady; receipts 6 7 , Mr. Cramer, s o n of James
L.
It h a d softened up some. H e s a i d
i n g M a c h i n e j u m p e d 1 1-2 B a l d w i n
S t a t e , whole milk, flats, fresh
and L o i s W. ( C h e n e y ) Cramer, w a s
t h a t t h e conditldn of t h e s n o w w a s
a n d I n t e r n a t i o n a l H a r v e s t e r w e r e 470.
Here's an example of a driver who Is doing the right thing in one wrong place. He stopped In the mid- u p 4 p o i n t s .
fancy s p e c i a l 24c; average r u n 22o
s u c h t h a t u s e of t h e p l o w s o n the
born In Schuylervllle. A u g u s t 3,
dle of the road to put on chains, Instead of getting out of the way or tending to this task before leaving the
t r u c k s w a s not practicable and that
flat*,
T h e r e n e w a l r a t e o n call l o a n s @ 23c; s t a t e , whole milk,
T h e funeral of Mrs. Margaret 1846. In 1853 he moved to W a s h garage. The car on the right approached at a fast rate of speed and being without chains also skidded, al- w a s a d v a n c e d t o 4 1-2 p e r cent held, f a n c y t o fancy special 25c 9
t h e s t e e l plow on the tractor w a s
ington,
D. C , w i t h his parents
Gurtler w a s held t h i s morning a t
most striking the man who was so busily engaged at his task that he did not notice the approach of the w h i c h c o m p a r e d w i t h F r i d a y ' s re- 28c; a v e r a g e run 26c.
t h e o n l y o n e being u s e d but t h a t
130 Circular s t r e e t at 8 o'clock a n d where h e received h i s early and
other vehicle.
work w a s progressing and he hoped
preparatory education. H e entern e w a l r a t e of 4 a n d t h e h i g h
at 9:30 a t St. Peter's
Catholic
t o h a v e t h e streets in fairly goon
figure of 5 for t h a t d a y .
ed Rensselaer Polytechnic
Instichurch. The R e v . Father Michael
condition by tomorrow night.
The c l o s i n g w a s strong. A broad
tute, Troy, 1863, a n d in 1865 a c Mahoney celebrated t h e m a s s .
v a r i e t y o f railroads a n d Industrials
cepted a position o n the preliminA u t o m o b i l e traffic w a s m a i n t a i n e d
T h e bearers w e r e Joel E. Mast in,
reflected a c c u m u l a t i o n in t h e late
y e s t e r d a y w i t h difficulty, It
fre- T h o m a s Leonard, Dr. Arthur S w a n - ary survey of the N e w York and
trading.
H o u s t o n o i l - g o t u p to
Canadian branch of t h e Delaware
quently being n e c e s s a r y for driv- lck and D o m l n l c k Blffer.
N E W YORK, F e b . 28. t4»)—The
120 a n e x t r e m e r i s e of 16 1-2
and Hudson railroad.
e r s to g o several blocks o u t of their
\e
T h e body w a s placed
In the
N e w York Central's g r o s s r e v e points.
w a y t o turn a corner w h i l e m a n y Greenrldge r e c e i v i n g vault.
Mr. Cramer, b e t w e e n 1878 and
nues for January were $31,003,299,
D. and H. R e m i n g t o n Typewriter,
w e r e forced to back up a n entire
1882,
w a s associated with Jesse S, ,
m
—an increase of $626,641 over J a n u Union
Carbide
and
Stromber.?
block to m e e t cars, b e i n g u n a o l e to
Mott, father of S a m u e l J. Mott,
ary last year, but net o p e r a t i n g InCarbuter a d v a n c e d b e t w e e n 4 and
g e t their cars o u t of ruts.
present city engineer, In the g e n W A S H I N G T O N , Feb. 28. MP) —
come declined $314,616 to $3,957,935.
5 points. Total s a l e s approximateral practice of s u r v e y i n g and e n BALLSTON
S P A . F e b . 28. — ed 2,400,000 s h a r e s .
B A L L S T O N S P A F e b . 28. — The month's passenger
T h a t part of t h e N e w York s t a t e
0 » » of th» m o s t Interesting m e e t revenues
(Special)—Officers w e r e elected a n d
presi- were the largest in its history.
i n g of t h e Y o u n g People's S o c i e t y gineering in t h i s place. The t w o (Sptc'.al)—Ensign Johnson,
(Quotations furnished hy Foster law w h i c h prohibits licensed b r o k Installed a t the o r g a n i z a t i o n m e e t of t h e P r e s b y t e r i a n church
w a s handled virtually all the engineer- dent of the Merchants' B u r e a u of
6 A d a m s . 127 W a l l street. S c h e n - ers from charging more than 50
ing of the Ladies' Auxiliary
of
apheld last nigOt. It took the form of ing business for t h e village of Sar- the Chamber of Commerce,
Crown W i l l a m e t t e P a p e r
c o m - Henry Cornell P o s t , American Le-, ectady, m e m b e r s of t h e N e w York c e n t s a b o v e theatre prices on t h e
a debate w i t h Miss Bertha B u r - atoga Springs a n d virtually all In peared before the Rotary club at
r e - s a l e of tickets w a s declared u n P h o n e 8461.
pany and wholly owned s u b s i d i a r - gion, Saturday night, a t t h e h o m e Stock E x c h a n g e .
pee and M i s s Elizabeth Swick u p - this section of the state. In 1876 its regular noon day l u n c h e o n t o Open Close c o n s t i t u t i o n a l today by the S u ies report net profit of $3,641,39/1 of Mrs. T h o m a s J. Doyle, In MHholding t h e affirmative a n d M i s s Mr. Cramer w i t h t h e late F. W. day w i t h figures obtained b y the
Allls Chalmers
94V4 94V4 preme Court.
W i l l i a m R. Tolmie, 45, a
well Audrey B u s s i n g and Miss Florence Beers of N e w York city, prepared c o m m i t t e e appointed by t h e R o - for 192C.
ton avenue.
T h e officers elected,
Justice
Sutherland,
delivering
Amer B e e t S u g a r . . . . . 24% 24%
k n o w n resident of S a r a t o g a Springs K e t c h u m t h e n e g a t i v e . T h e R e v . a map of the v i l l a g e s of Ballston tary club, Chamber of Commerce
and later Installed, by County P r e s A m e r Can c o m
49% 50% the opinion, said that theatres w e r e
tor 40 y e a r s , former hotel m a n and Mr. Claxon a n d Mr. Brenton T a y - Spa and Saratoga Springs which and Merchants* Bureau of the
J a m e s L. McQuarrle h a s
been ident Mrs. T. B e e c h e r Corcoran,
not in t h e class of public i n s t i t u a t o n e time t h e o w n e r of trotting lor served a s j u d g e s and decided is used to this d a y In fixing bound- Chamber of Commerce to look Into elected v i c e president and
chief of South Glens Falls, assisted by A m e r Car a n d F d y . . 106 106%
tions w h o s e interests warrant s u c h
A m e r Ice S e c y s
129% 129
a n d running horses, died a t the t h a t t h e debate w a s a tie a s both aries of property
Sarah W i c k s
of
Saratoga
and highways tho cost of the building of t h e r e - engineer of t h e International T e l e - Mrs.
Amer L o c o
Ill
112% protection.
S a r a t o g a H o s p i t a l a t 12:45 o'clock s i d e s had presented
their
a r g u - and streets In both places.
and three-quarter phone and Telegraph Corporation. Springs, w e r e :
Many maining two
H e declared also that the N e w
A m e r S m e l t e r s c o m . . 149% 149%
t h i s noon, following a n i l l n e s s of m e n t s equally well.
miles of road between B a l l s t o n Spa He w a s / f o r m e r l y w i t h the
Bell
other old m a p s bear his name.
Mrs. J. S y l v e s t e r Schaeffer, p r e s - Amer S u g a r Ref
85% 85% York l a w w a s the first attempt a t
t w o y e a r s . Mr. Tolmie had been in
and R o c k City Falls. Mr. E n s i g n Telephone s y s t e m .
T h e B o y S c o u t s will m e e t this
ident; Mrs. B e s s i e Cornick,
vice
For nearly 25 y e a r s h e w a s city
legislature to&gt;
A m e r T e l a n d Tel . . 159% 1 5 8 ^ price fixing by a
t h e S a r a t o g a H o s p i t a l for m a n y e v e n i n g a t 7 o'clock in the S u n d a y
had figures to show t h a t t h e cost
president; Mrs. R o b e r t Talbot, s e c engineer. In 1895 h e retired from
c o m e before the court, and t h a t
A n a c o n d a Copper . . . . 48
48
m o n t h s , c o n s c i o u s of the fact that School rooms.
of building that part of t h e road
Mrs. Maurice F. Dower,
Marland Is making rapid s t r i d e s retary;
his profession to become secretary
170% 170% such price fixing by a legislature
h e oould never recover from t h e efT h i s e v e n i n g a t 6:45 there will be Of The G. F. H a r v e y Company. In which h a s been completed a s about in m a s t e r i n g the fire risk, s a y s a treasurer; Miss Catherine O'Neil, A t c h i s o n c o m
f e c t s of s u g a r diabetes, which e v e n - a rehearsal for the Young P e o 193% 199% could n o t be sustained. If i t w e r e ,
$13,364.83 per mile;
a n d a t this report of building engineers of the chaplain; Mrs. J o s e p h DeLafayett, B a l d w i n L o c o
1903 he w a s elected president and rate, t h e cost for the remaining
t u a l l y developed into tuberculosis.
Baltimore a n d Ohio . . 113% 114% he said, it would be difficult t o
ple's Society play, which i s to be
Manufacturers sergeant a t a r m s ; Mrs. T h o m a s J. Barnsdall A
treasurer of the c o m p a n y and w a s two a n d three-quarter m i l e s would National Lumber
Born in Westville, near t h e C a n - g i v e n on March 17.
35% 35% see w h e r e price fixing by l a w
filling t h a t dual position
a t the be $41,250. H e also said t h a t they Association, w h o have been s t u d y - Doyle, historian; c o u n t y c o m m i t - B e e c h n u t
might end.
adian border, o n D e c e m b e r 19, 1881,
58
58
Tomorrow e v e n i n g a t 6:15, t h e
Mrs. J. S. Schaeffer,
Mrs.
ing t h e nation's flrefl loss s t a t i s - tee:
time of his recent illness.
Mr. Tolmie
came
to
Saratoga
T h e decision w a s rendered in a
Beth Steel com
49% 50%
had received information? from tho
Y o u n g P e o p l e will cooperate in the
Joseph D e L a f a y e t t . Mrs. R. Herbert
tics.
Bank Director.
S p r i n g e a t t h e a g e of five,
h i s Young People's Institute a t the
Canadian Pacific . . . . . 188% 190% c a s e i n v o l v i n g Tyson and Brothers
county
highway
commissioner,
Massey.
H e w a s for several years a di- H a r t m a n , that the cost t o comfather, t h e late J o h n Tolmie, b e - First Methodist church in w h i c h
and
the United theatre
ticket
Cast Iron P i p e
224 225
Membership Drive.
rector of the old First National plete this road this s e a s o n woulu
The rate of fire l o s s on the
ing e n g a g e d in the hotel b u s i n e s s five of t h e c h u r c h e s in the city are
Cen L e a t h e r w c o m . . .
9% 9% offices. J u s t i c e s Holmes, Brandeis,
Bank of Saratoga Springs and de- be, in a rough estimate, $55,000 for entire property valuation is
h e r e for m a n y years. F r o m t i m e t o uniting.
only
P l a n a were m a d e
for
another Cerro d e P a s c o
61% 61% S t o n e a n d Sanford dissented.
t i m e W i l l i a m R. T o l m i e e n g a g e d in
•.
»
157% 156%
The mid-week
service
of i n - clined t h e presidency of that In- the remaining two and t h r e e - q u a r - $1.97 a thousand dollars e x c e p t i o n - meeting, T h u r s d a y e v e n i n g , a t t h e Ches a n d Ohio
isimilar b u s i n e s s but h e w a s best struction and prayer will be c o n - stitution a s well a s the presidency ter miles.
o t h e r home of Mrs. H e r b e r t M a s s e y l a C M a n d S t P a u l com 14% 14%
Mr. Ensign s a i d
this ally low compared w i t h
k n o w n a s a turfman, a m o n g t h e ducted by t h e pastor on W e d n e s - of the Adirondack Trust Company. cost s e e m s high. It w a s said t h a t It states.
Milton avenue, a t w h i c h time f u - C R I a n d P
81
82
• w a n i n g h o r s e s owned by h i m b e - day e v e n i n g a t 7:45 o'clock,
From 1878 until 1882 he waa r e - will not be necessary t o p u t m
ture activities of t h e auxiliary will Col F u e l a n d Iron . . . 69
58%
i n g t h e s t a k e horse Captain H c r s h The L a d i e s A i d Society will m e e t ceiver of taxes for the town and an e x p e n s i v e sub-base for the rest
January net operating Income o f b e discussed, a n d plans probably Cons G a s
99% 100
Jer, w h i c h for several y e a r s w a s in t h e church parlors on T h u r s d a y village of Saratoga Springs having of t h e road, but to be on t h o ' s a f e the Baltimore and Ohio declined to formulated
for
a
membership Corn P r o d s c o m
51% 51%
s u c c e s s f u l on the race tracks of the afternoc-n a t 2:30 o'clock. Mrs. also served a s a member and pres- Hide Mr. Hartman has given these $2,917,429 from $3,081,625 in J a n - drive.
Crucile Steel
86% 89%
!
country.
Others of h i s running J a m e s W. L e s t e r will be the h o s - ident of the city board of health. figurs.
The post n o w h a s a membership D and H
uary, 1926, but gross r e v e n u e s w e r e
178% 181
h o r s e s w e r e Aunt
Doeda,
Sugar tess.
Ho w a s a«Democrat In politics and
slightly larger, $19,097,445 egainVc of sixteen w o m e n , t h e s e being: Mrs. x E a s t m a n K o d a k c o m 132% 131%
H i n t , S t e p Son, Glen Well, and
Mr. J o h n s o n said "We are in- $19,501,694.
T h u r s d a y e v e n i n g at 7 o'clock w a s a t one t i m e , y e a r s ago, his
B e s s i e Cornick, Mrs. Joseph D e - Erie c o m
46% 46%
Nolawn.
the S u n d a y School orchestra will party's candidate for assemblyman formed by the former t o w n rbad
Lafayett, Mrs. Robert Talbot, M M . E r i e 1st pfd . . . . . . . . . . 67
56%
(Continued from P a g e O n e ) P
c o m m i s s i o n e r that the road put in
h a v e its wockly rehearsal, a t the and later for sheriff.
Prairie Oil and Gas h a s net pro- Herbert Massey, Mrs. T h o m a s J. F a m o u s P l a y s L F . , 112%
111%
V fie a l s o w a s Interested In trot- church.
that t h e measure, which
would
last y e a r w a s by far the h a r d e s t fit of $15,9C2,368 for 1926 a g a i n s t Doyle, Mrs. J. Si. Schaeffer, Mrs.
54%
54%
General Cigars
For many y e a r s Mr. Cramer w a s and m o s t e x p e n s i v e portion of the
t i n g h o r s e s of w h i c h h e o w n e d s e v double t h e funds on hand, w o u l d
A rehearsal for t h e Y o u n g P e o John H. Burke, Mrs, Maurice F . General E l e c t r i c . . . . . 86%
85%
eral, t h e best k n o w n of w h i c h be- ple's play will b e held In t h e S u n - prominent In financial matters as w h o l e road to build. Eight or nine $14,181,533 the year before.
fail a t t h i s session h u t they hold
Dower, Mrs. Charles .1. H e n n e s s y , Geenral Motors
164
168%
ing Daley Due which
he raced day School r o o m s
an Investor for t r u s t funds and c u l v e r t s w e r e - p u t in and a hill cut
that its e n a c t m e n t by the n e x t C o n on T h u r s d a y
Mrs.
Charles J. H i g l e y , Mrs. E d - Gt Northern pfd
The reduction of one cent a g a l 88%
89
w i t h s u c c e s s In this vicinity.
as executor and trustee for several d o w n . It will not be n e c e s s a r y to
g r e s s will be in plenty of time t o
e v e n i n g a t 7 o'clock.
ward A. "Rood, Mrs. Wiliard
J. Gt Northern Ore
21%
21%
W h i l e Mr. T o l m i e prospered he
large estatesPrevious
to the put In a sub-base for t h e best of lon In gasoline which the S t a n d a s s u r e their five, year program. .
The Girl R e s e r v e s will m e e t on
ard OH company of N e w York put Skillie, Mrs. F r a n k M. Noonan, Inspiration Copper . . . 22
»
{
w a s g e n e r o u s and o p e n - h e a r t e d t o Friday afternoon after school In death of Mrs. Cramer a few years the road."
21%
B e n j a m i n T. Hall, Mrs. E d - Int P a p e r
#
Into effect in N e w England today Mrs.
56
56
a fault, his friends recalling that the Sunday School rooms. P l e a s e ago he and Mrs. Cramer, accomMr. J o h n s o n gave
figures
to has been extended to N e w YorK ward Frock and Miss Catherine
h a n e v e r refused to g i v e financial note the c h a n g e in time and place panied by friends, traveled extenK e n n e c o t t Copper . . . . 63%
63%
s h o w w h a t it would c o s t the tax- state.
O'Neil.
*
aid to a friend or o n e In need. H e at meeting.
Lehigh Valley . . . . . . . . 117%
118%
sively in Europe.
payers if the coat were spread over
The Saratoga a u x i l i a r y w a a well L i g g e t t a n d M y e r s A . 92%
met minanclal reverses
several
92%'
CHICAGO, F e b . 28—
On Friday e v e n i n g a t 8 o'clock
a period of 15 years.
T h e payFuneral Tomorrow.
represented a t t h e m e e t i n g , t h e fol- Mack Truck
years a g o and his health b e g a n to the Loyal Workers* Class will hold
104% 105% W H E A T — May $1.38 7-8; J u l y
m e n t would be $41,250 spread over
Tha G. F. H a r v e y
Company's
lowing w o m e n a c c o m p a n y i n g
t h e Miami Copper
fall soon after.
16% 16% $1.32 7-8.
their regular m e e t i n g In t h e church plant in this city and t h e branch a period of 15 years, $2,750 plus
county president to Ballston S p a : Mo Pacific
Survivors
include a daughter, parlors.
50% 52%
C O R N — May 75 7-8c;
July
i n t e r e s t of $1,650 the first year
in Peoria, 111., will be closed until
Mrs.
T h o m a s H. L y e t t , Mrs. W i l - Moon MotorsJean E . Tolmie, S a r a t o g a S p r i n g s ;
10
10
80 3-8C.
On F r i d a y afternoon at 3 o'clock after the funeral which will take w h i c h would amount to $4,400. H e
liam Stieglltz,
Mrs. George F. N a t i o n a l L e a d . . . .
his mother, Mrs. Georgtanna T o l - the Interdenominational
177%
176
O A T S — May 45 l - 8 c ;
July
Missione s t i m a t e d the work would add an
Armb, Mrs. Charles E . Grooms, N e v a d a COn Copper
mie, Jacksonville, Fla.; five s i s - ary meeting will be held a t t h e Y. place tomorrow afternoon a t 2:30 extra t a x of e i g h t e e n and one-half
14%
14% •45 l - 2 c .
o'clock, at the residence
of his
Mrs. Alfred F. P e p p e r , Mrs. Henry N e w York Central .
term, Mrs. S a d i e Campbell and Mrs. M. C. A. a n d all the women of the
144% 143%
•
The Young People's
I n s t i t u t e M. Carr, Mrs. S t e p h e n
close friends, Dr. and Mrs. F. J. c e n t s o n a hundred valuation.
Buckley,
Ball* Comstock, Jacksonville, F l o . ; congregation a r e urged to attend.
64%
56%
N Y N H and H .
GIGLI UNDER GUARD
Resseguie, 60D Broadway.
The
T h e people represented by t h e s e will open tomorrow evening a t the Mrs.
Byron Stanford, Mrs. S a r a h
Mrs,
John Merrill, Roxbury, V t ;
T h e B l u e B i r d s will m e e t
on
xNorfolk a n d W e s t
169
168
N E W YORK, F e b . 28 OP)—PresMrs. J o h n P . Roohan, A m s t e r d a m S a t u r d a y m o r n i n g a t 10 o'clock In Rev. A. H. Boutwell, pastor of the three organizations t h e Rotary First Methodist Episcopal church Wicks and M i s s N o r a Buckley,
e n c e of police in and about t h e
Northern Pacific
88% 88%
club, Chamber of Commerce and with a Fellowship supper In t h e
Baptist church, will officiate.
a n d Mrs. John G. Slattery, S a r a - the Sunday School rooms.
Mr. and Mrs. William Crocker Ont and W e s t
Century theatre last n i g h t w h e r e
30% 30%
t o g a Springs, o n e brother S m i t h
The body will be placed In the M e r c h a n t s ' Bureau of t h e Chamber church parlors, and followed later of Albany and Mrs. Edith W e a v e r
Beniamlno
Gigli,
Metropolitan
P a n A m e r A . . . . . . . . 62% 62%
of C o m m e r c e wanted i'. understood by a program of particular interest
W . Tolmie, S a r a t o g a S p r i n g s and
family mausoleum
at Greenrldge
of Troy spent y e s t e r d a y with Mr. P e n n R R
t e n o r w a s g i v i n g a concert, c a u s e d
that t h e m o n e y received from the for young people.
59% 59
s e v e r a l n i e c e s and n e p h e w s .
cemetery.
and Mrs. George E l l s w o r t h of Front P h i l l i p s P e t
r u m o r s t h a t t h e singer's life, h a d
s t a t e a n d county e a c h year can57 % 58
All local Protestant churches of street.
A r r a n g e m e n t s for t h e
funeral
Mr. Cramer is survived by one not be u s e d to reduce t h e s e bonds.
a g a i n b e e n threatened, but it w a s
Postum
99% 98%
N E W YORK, F e b . 28 ( S t a t e D e h a r e not been completed.
niece, Mrs, K a t h a r i n e S. Drake of T h e y m u s t be paid for in t h e the city will participate. T h e i n Miss E m m a V a n y o h a s returned
said t o d a y that the guard had b e e n
53%
partment Agriculture and M a r k e t s this city, a grand niece, Mrs. Guy regular t a x budget, It i s pointed stitute has been devised especially to Schenectady after spending the P r e s s Steel Car com . . 54%
a s s i g n e d t o protect h i m from h i s
173
— W e s t e r n N e w York apple receipts
175
H. Sturges of Schenectady and a out, but t h e m o n e y received from for the young 'people of the city week end with h e r parents, Mr. and P S U
admirers.
49%
w e r e moderate. Trading w a s faircousin. Charles C. Ormsby of W a - the s t a t e and county can be used to devote one night a week to fel- Mrs. John V a n y o of Middle s t r e e t Rapid T r a n s secur . . . 51
T h e British
novelist,
F r a n c i s ly a c t i v e a n d t h e market
15%
ruled
15%
Miss Catherine Cassrtdy of S a r a - R a y Con Copper
e a c h y e a r for other roads in the lowship, instruction, and i n s p i r a B r e t t T o u n g . will lecture a t S k i d - sllghly s t r o n g e r with v a l u e s a v e r - ts rford.
108% 109%
tion.
toga Springs w a s t h e g u e s t of Miss Reading com
The Cramer family w a s of Ger- town.
m o r e College T h u r s d a y e v e n i n g a t a g i n g higher. Grade A 2 1-2 Inch
The places for the institute and A g n e s English of Ballston avenue, Repub Iron and Steel 69% 72%
being
Jt o'clock. H i s topic w i l l b e "The Rhode Island g r e e n i n g s wholesaled man descent, the founder
P r e s i d e n t J a m e s B e v e r l y ap- the dates for each meeting follow: yesterday.
Sinclair Oil
21% 21
Conrad Cramer, w h o settled upon
P h y s i c i a n in Literature."
within t h e price range of $3.76 to
pointed t h e following c o m m i t t e e
.. 108% 110
E m m e t t Collins
of Van Buren Southern Pacific
March 1, First Methodist.
a farm in S a r a t o g a county, about
Mr. T o u n g c o m p l e t e d h i s c o u r s e $4.50 per barrel depending u p o n the
chairmen:
Bnsineo method comstreet spent y e s t e r d a y on a fish- Southern R y com . . . . 125% 125
March 8. First Presbyterian.
i n m e d i c i n e a n d had s o m e e x p e r - quality and condition. A 2 3-4 Inch three miles s o u t h w e s t of Schuyler- m i t t e e , E d w i n Welch, chairman;
Studebakor
62% 53
ing trip to W h i t e h a l l .
March r5, Bethesda Episcopal.
vllle, prior to the Revolution.
i e n c e * a s a ship's s u r g e o n . I t w a s realized $4.50 t o $5.50; occasionally
s p e a k e r s ' committee,
March 7,
12% 12%
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Godette of x T e n n Copper
March 22, N. E. Congregational.
his hard y e a r s a s a doctor t o t h e $6,«t&gt;.
Conrad, the s o n of t h e pioneer John Tracy, chairman; March 14,
66% 57
this place s p e n t the w e e k end with T e x a s Co
March 29, First Baptist.
ooal m i n e r s around
Birmingham
M c l n t o s h e s A 2 1-3 Inch
stock Conrad w a s a farmer In the town E d w i n W e l c h , chairman; serving
T e x a s P C and O . . . . 15
15%
t h a t Inspired h i m t o w r i t e "The
Tha program for each
m e e t i n g friends in Glens F a l l s .
of Northumberland and w a s a s u - c o m m i t t e e for next w e e k , Edwin
brought $5 t o $10 m a i n l y $7 t o $8
169% 169%
Friends of F l o y d McMullen will U n i o n Paciflo
T o u n g P h y s i c i a n , " and "The Black
will be:
B a l d w i n s A 2 1-2 inch fair quality pervisor In 1857. H e died about W e l c h , John Tracy and Wendell
66
be sorry to learn t h a t he is c o n - U S Rubber c o m . . . . 66
Diamond."
8:15, Fellowship supper.
1857, J a m e s L. Cramer, his ton, T o w n l e y ,
sold chiefly around I7.G0.
fined to h i s h o m e In Milton a v e n u e x U . S. Steel c o m • • • • 169% 159%
T h * lecture Is open *e t h e p u b 7 to 7:40—Bible
study,
"Five
and father of L o u i s H. Cramer,
The following visitors were InT h e o n i o n m a r k e t w a a about
U S Steel pfd
129 129
W h a t a disappointment to e a t a
lic a t a nominal c h a r g e .
Minor P r o - by illness.
w a s born In Northumberland In troduced: B. K. Walbridg«, II. B. E v e n i n g s with the
t t e a d y on good atock but continued
Mr. and Mrs. B e r t Clapper, Miss W e s t l n g h o u s e
73% 73% light lunch and y e t suffer
for
phets," the Rev. R. II. C l a x o n ;
1820 s n d died in 1881.
Little, T h o m a s F. Luther, Charles
dull o n off g r a d e offerings.
HunHelen and Miss L e n a Clapper of W i l l y s Overland
VOTXOB O r t a l l
23% 24
hours with indigestion. N o w o n "The Parables 0t Jesus," the R e v .
Espey, Saratoga
Springs
RotarS U P R E M E COURT—Saratoga County dred pound s a c k s of yellow onion*
Middlebrook a v e n u e and Mrs. S o - Woolworth Co
128% 128
der s o m a n y people are frightened
Ansbern B. Deuel, Plaintiff, a g a i n s t f r o c t h e Mlddlo W e s t e r n s t a t e s at
lans; Captain Mugford of the S a l - A. H. Boutwell.
phia Vorce
a n d daughter,
Miss
at the thought of gastric ulcer or
7:45, Recreation,
Miss
Alice Florence, w e r e recent visitors In
J o h n If. Merton, Aldah
Merton, t h e B a r c l a y s t r e e t pier sold a s high
avtlon Army,
a Rotarlan
from
x Ex-divldend.
catarrh of the stomach, when a l l
B e t h e l Merton and Ca«slus Hoff.
Mifflin In charge.
Troy; Captain Huntington of the
Saratoga Springs.
a s $3. W e s t e r n N e w York offerthey needed w a s a little Diapepsin
Defendants
Arthur H o y t Seott.
8 to 8:40, Mission Study. H o m e :
Army
of
Saratoga
Robert M a c W i l l i a m s of McLean
In pursuance of a Judgement of i n g s w e r e v e r y poor and rarely e x - , Miss R m m a H o y t of Phlla street Salvation
to neutralize acids and aid in t h a
"Our Templed Hills," Miss Edith street has received word that his
Springs and Mr. Small, N e w York
foreclosure and sale duly mads and ceeded $1.60.
d i g e s t i o n of meats,
eggs, cream,
yesterday received word
of the city.
entered In the office of the Clerk
B.
Harbaugh;
Foreign:
"Young sister w a s struck by an a u t o m o S u p p l i e s of u p s t a t e c u t carrots
seasoned
dishes,
cheese,
baked
of Saratoga County In the above ensudden death a t Philadelphia, Pa.,
E . bile In Utlca and sustained severe
The following members, of the. Islam on Trek," Miss Ruth
titled action and bearing date the w e r e limited. D u e t o the irregular of her nephew, Arthur Hoyt Scott,
beans and all euch foods that s o
Wells.
Injuries.
town board of the town of Milton
first day of December 1926, I, the condition saleg ranged w i d e l y . T h e
often c a u s e acid dyspepsia,
62, horticulturist and manufactur- w e r e also Invited g u e s t s of the
undersign" 1 - the referee In said
8:45 to 9:10, Inspirational t a l k s
Edward P. B o u s q u e t w a s a busiJudgment named will sell a t Public very best arrivals Jobbed o u t at er, w h o died S a t u r d a y in the UniDiapepsin
makes
the s o u r e s t
by different pastorsness caller in T r o y Saturday.
town
Auction on the 26th day of Febru- $1.80 per 100 pound «ack w h i l e t h e versity Hospital following a stroke club: William Van Buren,
WASHINGTON,
F e b . 28. OP)— ntomach s w e e t almost in a t w i n k l 8:15, evening watch and closing.
Francis M. K e l l e y of W e s t street
clerk; Walter Estes, Justice of the
ary, 1037, a t four o'clock In the af- poorest sold d o w n t o $1.
Texas
ternoon of that day a t the front bunched carrota brought $1.60 to of apoplexy. Mr. Soott w a s widely peace e n d William Mundell, superThe temporary
officers
a r e : la spending a f e w d a y s with hla T h e S e n a t e w a s asked today by its ing. It reduced the feeling of b l o a t
door of the Law office of W y l l y s
known a s one of t h e founders of intendent of the h l f h w a y s .
Dean, the Rev. Paul
Morrison; mother, Mrs, D o h i g of Olens Falls c a m p a i g n f u n d s c o m m i t t e e to hold or fullness right away, stops b e l c h A. Dunham, In the Village of Cor- $3.26 p e r b u s h e l basket.
the American P e o n y Society, and
Welden,
and w h o is confined t o h e r h o m e by in c o n t e m p t S a m u e l Instill, Chi- ing on t h e Instant, your m e a l i d i inth, N. Y., the premises directed by
One n e w member, Frank Loeff- manager, Germain
stomach la
he w a g Treasurer of the American
•aid Judgment to be sold, and therecago public utilities operator; h i s g e s t o n time, your
Illness.
registrar. Miss Bertha Burpee.
ler, w a s welcomed to the Rotary
NOTICE TO CONTKACTOmt
la described a s follows:
for the n e x t
Iris Society. F o l l o w i n g his graduHenry Rooks of W e a t H i g h street personal attorney, D a n i e l J. S c h u y - e m p t y and ready
club by Past President
William
William Street Sewer
All that Tract or Parcel of Land,
ation from S w a r t h m o r e College he
la confined to h i s h o m e by illness.
ler, a n d Thomaa W . Cunningham, meal.
Andrews.
Sealed Proposals for the furnishing
situate in the Town and Village of
Get a 60 cent package today of
Mrs.
J a m e s Carroll of Saratoga of P h i l a d e l p h i a ; treaaurer of the
Corinth, County of Saratoga and [ of all material and performing the became associated with his father
L a w r e n c e Sickafus
is confined
S t a t e of N e w York, bounded and de-1 necessary labor for the construction In business a n d a t his death waa
at any
drug
Republican
state Pape's Diapepsin
T h e calendar a t Katrine Trask Springs waa t h e S u n d a y g u e s t of P e n n s y l v a n i a
t o h i s home in Maple avenue with
M
scribed a s follows, viz: Beginning at of a six inch vitrified pipe sanitary president of t h e Scott Paper ComMrs.
Robert H. M a s s e y of Milton c o m m i t t e e .
•tore.
'
H o u s e for the week f o l l o w s :
pneumonia
the intersection of Hill Avenue and | sewer, with
all
tha
necessary
Today—At
1:30
p.m.,
china avenue.
eath s t r e e t on the south side of | laterals and manholes on William pany a t Chaster, P a .
111 Avenue, and running
thence
painting; a t 4, Junior A l l i a n c e ; a t
Mr. Scott w a s a member of the
Westerly along the south side of Hill Street from Hamilton . Street west,
*
7:80 p.m., bridge; and Y. C. O. I.
A v e n u e 40 feet to the northeast cor- will be received by the Commissioner Union L e a g u e a n d the University
ner of Lot 2; t h e m e southerly a t of Accounts at his office in th# City c l u b of Philadelphia, t h e Borough
R i g h t Worshipful Jurlan Miller a t 8 p.m.
r i g h t a n g l e s to Hill Avenue U 0 feet Hall, on or before noon of the 7th Council of R o s e Valley and w a s a district deputy grand master of tho
N E W YORK, F e b . 28 — XJ. 8.
Tuesday—At
2:80
governing
t* lands now or formerly owned by day of March, 1S27.
dUrtric'.
will board meeting; at 3:30, g e n e r a l government b o n d s a t 2:55 p. m , :
director of t h e R o s e Valley Build- Sara toga-Warren
George Hall, thenr-e easterly
along
All proposals must be on forms at- ing and Loan Association. H e leaves make h i s thirteenth official v i s i t a - Alliance meeting, t e a at 4 p.m.; Liberty 3 l-2"s $101.18; do first 4 s
1 Hall's north line 10S.7 feet to
Ikth Street, thence northerly along tached to the specifications and all his father, B. Irvln Scott, h i s wife tion In the district tonight when and bridge a t 7:30 p.m.
$100.25 bid;- d o eecond 4's $100.6
tth Street 147.1 feet to the point proposals must ba accompanied by a
Thursday—Folk
dancing
at f; bid; do first 4 l-4*a $103.11; do s e c place of beginning. Being Lot certified check for ten (10) per cent and a daughter, Mrs. Bxton Guckes, he w i n b e greeted by Master M a ond 4 l-4*a $100.20; do third 4 1-4'a
No. 1 ae laid out on a map of prop- of the contract price.
of Devon, P a . Funeral services will e o n s In Olens Falls, members of t h e a t t p.m. and at 4 p.m., Frencherty of tha HiJl heirs at Palmer,
Plans, specifications and forms of be held at 2 p. m., this afternoon, Olens Falls Lodge 121, F. and A
Friday, supper at 6:45, Skldmore $101.11; do fourth 4 1-4'a *10S.2«;
A T THE CASINO
Saratoga. County. New York, made proposals can ba obtained a t the
U. 8. T r e a s u r y
I S-4's $104.14;
fey W. S. Winchester In 1308, and office of the Commissioner of Public at Todmoren Farm, Rose Valley, his M. of t h a t eKy. Master Masons In A l u m n a e ; French at 7:80.
S a r a t o g a Springs, Mechanicvllle,
S o w on file in the Saratoga County
Treasury 4*s $107.4;
Treasury
late home.
Clerk's office, to which map refer- Works between the hours of • A M.
4 1-4'a $111.14.
Mr. Scott will be remembered by Ballston Spa, Corinth and other
ettee i s hereby made for a mors and 5 P. M. except Saturdays, on
the well known organist, pianist and composer broadc***which days the office will be open many Seratoglans. Ha frequently plaoea within tha Jurisdiction a r e
eomplete description.
planning to attend tonight's funcfrom * A. M. to 13 M.
Dated, January 3, 1137,
ing through aUtion WGY. Schenectady. N. Y., will perThe P a r e n t Teacher Association
visited hla grand-father, the late
8. M. RICHARDS,
Contractors must visit tha site e l Rev. O s r a Hoyt. pastor of the Con- tion.
will m e e t on Friday afternoon a t
sonally appear with hb 10-piece Band of BAY STATE
Referee,
the work and ascertain for thsmselyea gregational Church at South GreenWhat
might be termed the S o'clock In School S. There will
The Saratoga Springs branch of
.WYLLYS A DUNHAM,
the exact character of the work reACES.
••Home-coming** of D e p u t y Miller be an interesting
Plaintiff's Attorney,
program, w i t h the W. C, T. U. will meet with Mrs.
quired. Wont on said sewer is not to field. Mr. Scott's mother and Miss will occur in S a r a t o g a
Sprint's, addresses and musical
Corinth, N. Y.
Boxes are b o n g arranged and can be reserved by callnumbers, B. T. Bloom field. Van Dam street,
Hoyt were s i s t e r s .
be started until spring.
NOTICE OF ADJOURNMENT
at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow afterMarch 7 when he will make hla and a social hour.
The City Council reserves the right
Tha foregoing sale Is postponed
ing Saratoga 1197.
noon. Tha program will be In
official visitation
to Rising Sun
to tha 8th day of March, 1*27, a t to reject any and all bids If they
charge'of the flower and fruit deREFRESHMENTS
Irfxlge, 10$, the fourteenth and lutt
IS o'clock In the forenoon, to be deem it to be the best Interest of the
held a t the same place designated city so to do.
partment of the Union and will
official visitation
In the district
ADMISSION—Admitting One, $1.50
in the aforesaid notice.
T h e usual w e e k l y drill of Co. L, tola year. Master M a s o n s
By the Council.
from
A regular meeting of S a r a t o g a be conducted by Mra. George D,
Tkim a a a a a l bell is g i v e s by the Local Council to form tbe r a s a
Dated, February 2S-, 1937.
106th Inf„«wlll b e suspended to- m a n y lodges in this section of t h e
HIRAM J. FKKKMAN
eeatrtbate* s e e * gear to tbe X. of C. TabercaioeU BealUrlam a*
Chapter. 4 1 1 , Order of t h e E a s t e r n Carr. Fine musical numbers and
S. M. RICHARDS,
COMMISSIONER OF ACCOUNTS, night because jpf the Knight* of ***** **"* ? t a D j " a f to attend the Btpr will be held tomorrow even- readings arey«h*lng arranged. Ail |
Referee.
rslsaVhiss hsll
~_^bhs*i

Funerals

Wall Street Briefs

ROTARY CLUB GETS
REPORT ON ROCK
CITY FALLS ROAD

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH NOTES

LEGION WOMEN
ORGANIZE UNIT;
E L E a OFFICERS

THEATRE TICKET V
PRICE FIXING
UPSET BY COURT

W. R. TOLMIE, ILL |
TWO YEARS DEAD

\

•

SENATE ADOPTS
CLOTURE RULE ON
PROHIBITION BILL

Grain Market

Y. P. INSTITUTE
OPENS TOMORROW

Farmers' Produce

BRITISH NOVELIST SPEAKER

AGED STOMACHS
(HWpffUL
A Little Diapepsin Put* Life
Into Worn Out Stomach

Deaths

WANT INSULL
HELD BY SENATE

K. T. ALLIANCE NOTES

S

MILLER AT 'FALLS TONIGHT

Government Bonds

K of C Ball
TONIGHT

STEPHEN E. BOISCLAIR

P, T. A, MEETING

W, C. T, U. MEETING TOMORROW

NO CO, L DRILL TONIGHT

LOCAL BRIEFS

Untitled Document

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

www.fultonhistory.com

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                    <text>Detail, Louis H. Cramer obituary, covering his partnershipwith Jesse Mott and work as Saratoga Springs surveyor.</text>
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                    <text>Estate sale, Louis H. Cramer Estate, advertisement, The Saratogian, January 30, 1928.</text>
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                    <text>PAGE TWEI.VTs

THE SARATOG1AN, MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1928.
7*VT"TT

CORINTH NEWS
PLAINTIFF FAILS TO ODD FELOWS END
P R B S ACTION TO SUCCESSFUL FAIR;
RECOVER ON DOG CROWDS ATTENDED

Corinth school faculty, were shoppers in Schenectady Saturday.
Miss Florence Allen returned yesterday to Stony Creek, where she
is engaged in teaching school is
that town.
Lowell Atwell, Koland Cheney
ami Miss Eva Butties were visitors
| yesterday in Stony Creek.
Mis. Charles Milligan is ill at
her home in Maple street.
Percy J., infant son of Mr. and
Mrs. P. A. Bordeau, is ill with
pneumonia at the home of his parents In Oak street.

METHODIST CHURCH NOTES
.Mens League Dinner at 1:30
o'clock this evening at the Flret
Methodist Episcopal church. S u p .
erintendent Harris 'Crandair will be
the speaker. ^
The second session of the Young
People's Institute will be held on
Tuesday evening at the Preabyterian church, beginning with
the
Fellowship Supper at 6:15. All
Methodist young people are urged
to attend.
The mtd-we«k service on Wednesday evening.
Following the service there will
be a meeting of the congregation
for Hie purpose of electing a lay
delegate and one alternate delegate
to the Troy Conference I^ay Electoral conference to bo held in this
city April 13. All" members of the
church over twenty-one years of
age are entitled to vote.
,T!ic official board will hoid Its
monthly meeting following the election.
The Ladies' Union will conduct
a series of pyramid parties in the
homes of various members on
Thursday afternoon at 2:45. The
women of the parish will participate.
The Odds and Ends Society will
meet Thursday evening a t 7:30 at
the home of Mrs. Grace Edson, 134
Circular street. Miss Victoria Baker will be the assisting hostess.
The Pioneer League |or Intermediates will meet for their -monthly social, and get-together supper
at 5 o'clock on Friday.
Troop 1, Boy Scouts will meet at
*.
-.
Weekly choir rehearsal.,at 7:30,
•

UAm

PV

T f T717D1M17

1ST ANNUAL BALL FT. ANN DEFEATS
ANDCARDPARTY OF LUZERNE VARSITY
FIRE DEPT. FRIDAY

HAOLEY -LUZERNE, Jan. 30
(Special) — Fort Ann High school
conquered Luzerne High School at
Luzerne at the week-end 29 to 23
in an Adirondack league encounter. Th-; Luzerne giiis downed
Fort Ann 13 to 11. The Fort Ann
Juniors defeated the local Junior*
19-8.
*,
,
.
Summaries:
Fort Ann H. S. (29)
FG FP T P
4
2
Allen, rf
1
3
1
Harrington, If
1
1
1
Wright, c
0
1 11
Page, rg
5
0 10
Ross, lg
5

the outiet of the lake a distance
of about IS feet, two lengths of
hose were stretched and the pumper was given a thorough work-out
for a period of three hours. At a
pressure of 120 pounds, 647 gallons
of water per minute were thrown
which Is more than the specifications called for. A very enthusiastic group of, townspeople watched j
the demonstration and were very I
much pleased. Fire Chief Walter
Andrews appointed three pumper j
men. William P.rown, G. Lewis
Greene and Smith Harpp. These
men are very apt students, according to the American La France
representative, so much so that a
demonstration is called for Sunday
afternoon at which time the entire
fire -company will be called upon
to operate the apparatus. The enthusiasm displayed by the townspeople Is very evident judging from
the number of tickets - that.. have
been sold for the first annual ball
and card party of the Volunteer
Fira company to be held - in Taylor's, Luzerne, next Friday evening.
*

CORINTH, Jaa. 30V-(Special) —
COH1KTH. Jan. 30 ( S y r i a n CARD OF THANKS
HADLEV-LUZERNE,
Jan. 30
Thf&gt; action of Harry Pike of Main The 1928 Odd Fellows' fair and
We wish to express our deep
&lt;.-|iccial)—Announcement has been
#tit'ct. against Alfred- Newton of carnival came to a close Satur- appreciation and sincere, thanks to
made by Chief Walter Andrews of
Walnut street, to recover for the day evening in the lodge hall In' our fiifiidi and neighbors for the
th* first annual ball and card party
.©ss of a dos killed In Main street Maple street, after a large crowd kindnesses shown us and the messgivep by the Van R. Rhodes Fire
several weeks ago, came to a close! had. throughout the evening, en-1 ages of sympathy extended us
company in Taylor's hall next FriSaturday evening, when, due to! joyed the , sixth consecutive night during the illness, death and funday evening.
fpfi non-appearance of the plain-[ of pleasure afforded by the affair.1 eral o£ our friend, John H. Wealiif In the action before Justice of Upwards of !50 were in attendance ver. To the Rev. Mr. Andrews,
Music will be furnished by the
tho l»*-aco Marcelius in the town Saturday evening, swelling the at- to those who sent flowers and
well known Saratoga Lake Enter•ml village hall, the action was dis- tendance for the week* to nearly acted as bearers and to those who
tainers from 9 until 1 o'clock'. There
missed by the JusMi-e.
will be both round and square
1,000. The largest single evening's' donate a the use of cars for the
dancing. Lee Sandora will be the
Newton, according to the com- attendance was on Friday, when j funeral, we are especially gratejiriiiouncer for square dances. At
'
*
Ulaint in the action was the owner the annual ball of the lodge was j ful.
the same time dancing is being enMr. and Mrs. Byron Mallery.
«f the car which struck the dog, given.
joyed on main floor, tho balconies
owned by Pike, MI Main street sevAithur Hathaway of Palmer j
will be devoted to card playing. The
29
Totals
12
eral weeks ago.
The
plaintiff avenue was the lucky holder of
winning women and gentlemen.will
Luzerne H. s. (23.
brought the action to recover $100, the number which took the door
receive prizes. Refreshments will H. Traver, rf
6
0
3
the stipulated value of the dog. prize, on* quarter ton of coal dobo served during the evening.
9
Crannell, If
* ' 1
Attorney Daniel Finn, of the law Bated by a .local coal dealer.
7
1
3
The committee in charge of th« Ramsey, c
jdbn of Chamber and Finn of CJlens
The Woman's Home Missionary j
1
1
C. Traver, rg
0
.-iffair is: advisory. Walter Andrews,
Jlans. represented Newton before society 6t the First Methodist Epis0
0
0
tickets, andGeo'rge Cranston; music, Visscher, lg
^he Justice and requested the di*- copal church will meet in
the
Kenneth White and Richard Black;
ewissal of the action when Pike church parlors tomorrow afternoon
3 23
Totals ..
10
refreshments, G. L. Greene. George
felled to pot in an appearance.
to tie quilts.
Half time—Fort Ann 13-7.
Holder, Guy Wright, and Mortimer
ti
F,oeaIs.
Referee—Taylor.
Pulver; floor, Gordon Harris and
• The Misses Virginia Eddington LeRoy Folta Made Yardmaster.
LeRoy Folta of
Center street,
The Fort Ann High School girls'
William Brown.
and Carita VanAuken, students of
CORINTH, Jan. 30 (Special) —
This affair is the first of it's kind lineup was:
Jtjie Oneonta State Normal School employed at the Corinth D. and H. A large number of tickets have
station for the past six years, was
Field goals, Shelden, rf; 2; Goodever held in Luzerne or Hadley. It
Were over-Sunday % isitors at their
promoted Saturday to the position already been sold by members of
Is th© first social affair of the fire man, If, 3; Smith, c; field basS o m e s here.
,
the Senior class of the Corinth
Sheldon;
Bradway,
rg;
company ever organized in
the kets,
»&gt;Miss Ethel Brennan is ill with of yardmaster, recently vacated by High School for the Tubbs' EnAndrew Calconi. Mr. Catconi will
two towns. It is expected that the Camp, rg; Wright, lg.
tansilitis at the home of her parsemble program to be given tolargest crowd of the year will atLuzerne High School girls: Field
| $ t s t Mr. and Mrs. Martin Bren- take up his new duties as assist- morrow evening in the First Bapant yardmaster in Glens Falls on
The Saratoga County Livestock tend this dance, and all indications goals, Wood, rf; Visscher, If; Rednan, Oak street.
tist phurch this village.
point to a large out of town attend- lin, and Howe, lg; field baskets;
Wednesday.
(
Howard Cornell and Percy EgMembers of the Ensemble who Tuberculosis Committee will meet ance. Everyone interested in fire Redlin, 2; Wood! and Howe, 2;
gleston of Saratoga Springs were
contribute to the program are: t* the Farm Bureau office In the protection should help make this
xecent callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. York, Palmer ave- Ruth Marguerite Tubbs, soprano, Saratoga National Bank building annual ball and card party a suc- Visscher; Thompson, rf; Gilroy, rg*-.
TUbbs, lg.
nue.
organ soloist and accompanist; tomorrow afternoon at 1:30 o'clock. cess, those in charge urge.
Fort Ann Juniors — Field goals,
D. W. Carpenter, chairman, will
' Mrs. William Nelson, who has j Gertrude Lois Tubbs, contralto;
Miss Helen Wright while playing White, rf; Churchill, rf; Manning,
preside at the meeting. The work
• •-1921 Special Studebaker touring been caring for her aunt,
Good condition. Josephine Higgins, for the Mrs.! Belle Tubbs Hay, mezzo-soprano; of the past three months will be basketball Friday night cracked c, 2; Rathbun, If; field baskets.
gSr for
sale
past! and Robert Burdett Tubbs, bari- reviewed and a discussion will take her collar bone. Dr. G. R. Thomp- Churchill, rf; 2; Rathbun, If, 3;
priced very reasonable. Phone
several, weeks, returned yesterday tone.
place relative to activities for the son was called.
Wright rf; Graham, rg; Welsh, rg;
130-2t
jf$orintr 69-F-3. - A d v
to her home in New Yor^k city.
next three months. Routine busiWebster, fg. .
Mrs. James Kendall was enter- j
ness will also be transacted.
r£
Luzerne
Juniors, Held goals,
tained Saturday at her home in
Smith, rf, 2; Roider, If, 1; field basMain street. In honor of her 66th'
kets, Smith, and Stowell, c; Stone,
Lake was the week end guest at
birthday. Her sister, Mrs. William j
rg; Gillies, lg.
the home of her nephew, Eugene
Wendell, and several of her chil-J
Satisfactory Test of Pumper.
Hanlin, Center street.
dren And grandchildren,
wereI
The new combination chemical
Jr. O. IJ. A. M. Meetings.
among those present to enjoy the |
and »pumper purchased from the
The regular meeting of the Adi*
evening with Mrs. Kendall.
American La France company,
I
The Misses Margaret Rudeer and
CORINTH, Jan. 30.—(Special)— rondack Council, Jr. O. U. A. M.,
stood a very satisfactory test Friwill be held tomorrow evening at
Rosabel Parker, members of the The lowest temperature of the
day afternoon under the direction
SOLD BY D R U G G I S T S
season was recorded in the village 8 o'clock in the Odd Fellows* hail,
of Mr. Farr with th© assistance of
Maple street. Councilor H.
P.
this morning, when reports coming
A very successful program was several members of the Van R.
to the office of The Saratogian Fenton of the council urgently re- given at Shackelford Hall, Saint Rhodes Volunteer Fire company.
from various sections of the vil- quests that all members of the Faith's School on Saturday even- The suction hose was lowered Into
lage showed thermometers register- installation staff, who plan to par- ing at another in the chain of
ing from 14 degrees below zero to ticipate in the installation of offi- parties being given for the benefit
cers of the Col. Roosevelt Council of Katrina Trask Alliance.
22 below.
in Saratoga Springs on next J'onTO SETTLE ESTATE OF LOUIS H. CRAMER,
A very clever play in one act,
Upper Main street, considered I day evening, be present at the
DECEASED.
"The Maker of Dreams" was preone of the coldest sections of the j meeting for rehearsal.
Automobiles
driven by Peter
sented by Jane Lehman as Pierrot; Fleming, chauffeur for County
The undersigned, executors of the estate of Louis H.
village, showed 22 below at 7 a. m ,
District Deputy Torrence Swift Janet Babcock a s Pierrette; and Judge Lawrence B. McKelvey, and
while at the Commercial hotel in
Cramer, deceased, will sell at public auction at the front
Maple* street at the same hour, 19 | of this village will be In charge Dream Maker, Ruth Chegnay.
William Foley, 23 Leonard street,
door of the Tov«n Hall in the City of Saratoga Springs,
There was an Italian Folk Dance, Glens Falls, were in collision at
below was registered. In lower of the installation. According to
| N. Y., on Tuesday, January 31st, at 2 o'clock P. M.. the
Pine street the lowest tempera- I the present plans ofjthe officials of by the Freshman physical educa- Caroline street and Broadway at
sufficient tion class that attracted much in- 8:55 o'clock this morning. The Mcfollowing described real property:
ture reported was 17 below
be- | the local council, if a
tween 6 and 7 a. m. At 8 o'clock j number of members signify their terest. The chorus, See the Harvest Kelvey car was damaged.
Parcel Number One. vacant lot 50 feet x 150 feet
the large thermometer in front of I desire to witness the installation Moon is Shining, was well renderon the west side of Broadway, adjoining the premises of
the Odd Fellows' building in Main of officers in Saratoga Springs, a ed; and Miss Eleanor Corey was
local auto bus will be engaged to heard in a piano number which
Lewis H. Hays on the northerly side thereof.
street, showed 12 degrees below.
showed possession of real talent.
convey to members to that city.
Parcel Number Two, premises at northeast corner of
Personals.
—
- . , . , . , , • • • » • • .„-„-i
,
Miss Jeanne Gregory and Miss Jay
Saratoga Chapter, 131, Order of
Church and Clinton Streets, containing stores and living
Walter Priester of Pine street
HalUck, danced gracefully an ath- the Eastern star will give the first
underwent an operation in the
letic dance; and the Senior class public card party to be given in the
j apartments; lot 100 feet x 150 feet.
Saratoga hospital this morning.
staged a Marionette show.
The newly repaired Masonic Temple toTERMS OF SALE
dance of the jumpir/j jacks was morrow evening. Mrs. Cline Z. Miy*
Kenneth Beck of Oak street un10% of the purchase price will be required at the
admirably presented by the Soph- amoto, the chairman, requests
derwent an operation in the Saraomore-Junior Physical Education those making up tables to bring
toga hospital on Saturday morntime of sale/ the balance to be paid on delivery of Deed
class; while Miss Katherine Hoppe their own cards.
ing.
ten days from the date of sale.
played a piano number with exMrs. M. Flynn and Mrs. GerThere will be prizes and refreshDated. January 2 3, 1928.
cellent skill and the senior physical ments.
trude Sweeney and daughter, Cleta
/.
education class danced the HighFREDERIC J. RESS£GUIE,
May, are visiting for a few days
with relatives in Schenectady.
CORINTH, Jan. 30.—(Special)— land Fling with perfect rhythm.
HELEN H. RESSEGU1E.
CJp£n§
Mrs. Nellie Sweeney has return- The annual masquerade dance of Tho closing chorus was Tales of
Checks the BoWs
Executors of the Last Will and Testament of Louis H.
ed to her home in Palmer avenue the Employes* Mutual Benefit As- Hoffman by Offenbach.
thtrewr r*\ Tone*
The program was given as Mrs.
following a two weeks visit with sociation of the I. P. company will
Cramer, Deceased.
Stops r'CV M nthr
relatives in Schenectady.
be held next Friday evening m the Charier H. L. Ford's party in the
the Cold \ ' W L7-rSy««"»
Mrs. Eugene Murphy of Friends Community hall, Pine street, ac- chain for Katrina Trask House.
cording to an announcement made
-!
Saturday by Russell Shippee, chairman of the social committee of tne
v
—Fred A. Storrs, secretary of
association.
'
Both round and square dancing the local Chamber of Commerce,
g^g\W n # 2 * Pour things
from Rochester,
win be enjoyed, according to the hrs returned
l / U l i V O you most do
where he attended the New York
announcement, to music which wid
to end a cold quickly. HILL'S CaaState Secretary's Conference.
be furnished-'by the Queen Lake
cara-Bromide-Qninine does all four
M. Thompson,
Entertainers of Lake George, aug- .—Dr. William
county veterinarian, has returned
at one time. Stops a cold in one day.
mented for the occasion by "Chief
from Syracuse, where he attended
Red box, 30 cents. All druggists.
White Cloud," who will play the the wedding of his sister.
saxaphone.'
Prizes of $5.00, $3.00 and $2.00 respectively will be awarded for the
VISIT OUR MOD^L R 6 6 M &amp; g
individual wearing the first, second and third best costumes that
evening. Luncheon will be served
At this time of year, the finest of
during the course of the evening.

LARGE ADVANCE
SEAT SALE FOR
SENIOR CONCERT

22 BELOW ZERO
AT CORINTH TODAY

ATI V E
AND L I V E R
TABLETS

AUCTION

r

Uxath/9

\Bromo
Quininei
Grip, Influenza and many Pneumonias begin as a common
ct-lj. Price 30c.
The box bears this signature

*--Proven Merit sine* 1889—*

Frankly, The Victory has left current practice so £u
behissd that comparisons are impossible.
CoaaarratiTe drivers will never really discover the
car'e astonishing resources.
They will delight In its pick-up and low gas needsIts comfort and streamline beauty;
But the magnificent, all-day speed of the car—its
faultless smoothness over clods and cobbles—are
thrills that await the adventurer!
Six powerful cylinders are six powerful reasons for
this; A seventh vital reason is the basic Victory ideal

-\

For the first time in motor car history, chassis and
body axe a unit. Floor and seats are built in the
chassis^ The wide Victory chassis frame replaces
die customary body sill—and eliminates the customary body overhang. The body itself has only 8
major parts!

SAINT FAITH'S
PUPILS PRESENT
CLEVER PROGRAM

SALE

1UrV

So ORIGINAL AND DIFFERENT
that Comparisons are Impossible

LIVESTOCK T. B. MEETING

B00TH-0VERT0N

When You
Feel a Gold
Coming
On

The result is 173 less pounds, 330 less parts;
standard road and head clearance, yet a car that is
extremely low, steady and safe—with a power plant
stripped for instant and brilliant action!
And the smartest car at the price ever created!

.(•••'

AUTOMOBILE COLLISION

•1095

4-DOOft SEDAN, O. B, DETROIT
Tunc la for Dodge Brothers Radio f.Program every Thursday Night,
8 to 8:30 (Eastern Standard Time) NBC Red Network.

Ford
PKOHB 242
38 DIVISION ST., SARATOGA SPBINOS, N. T.
Main Office: Oleni Palls.
K. W. Prindle, Inc., SchnylerTille.
Bruno's Oarage, Mechanicville
Thompson St. Garage, Ballston Spa, N. T.
Corinth Garage Co.

0, E. S, CARD PARTY

ICTOKY

EMPLOYE'S ASSOC.
MASQUERADE TO
TAKE PLACE FRIDAY

G E ' B K O T H E H S .

Six

INC.

TUl SENlOa SIX AND AMUUCA'S FASTEST SOUS ALSO ON DISPLAY

.'N'MIW.UU—1—,II ''.' ...

' , m

PALACE

I —
TONIGHT
7.15 and 9
25c

He's an absolute
nut with a pocketof peanuts and
lanj-h In every
peanut!

PERSONAL MENTION

oaern

SUNN TRVON AXO ^
WITH MIUEA **}

RADIO SOCKET POWER

programs are being broadcast by a
hundred radio stations. If run-down
batteries are preventing you from
listening to these musical tresis* get
a Philco and enjoy them.

W-A-I-T

i

i

'

WHOLE TOWN'S
:- TALKING A

FEBRUARY FURNITURE |

S-A-L-E

JOE GREEN'S
Special 5 6 2
SUITS

" * " * ' ,

The snap of a switch brings you
Jight when you want it. This same
dependable service is made available
in your radio set by the installation
of a Philco.

Our LOW PRICES that we will feature
during this SALE on our entire stock
will startle this community.

AT A SACRIFICE

$14.50 and $17.50
Every Suit worth $24.50 to
$34.50. tveiy suit all woo!
end well tailored.
When in Schenectady give
us a call I
At the Old Established place
—412 State St.. Schenectady.

This modern convenience is priced
rery low. Moreover, if you desire a
small down payment and the balance
monthly will install the Philco.

491 Broadway
Saratoga Springs
Phone 62

TOMORROW AND WEDNESDAY

- F O R OUR —

The Philco AB Radio Socket
Power operates any radio set, irrespective of the number of tubes,
from your lighting circuit. It eliminates all A and B dry batteries, as well
as the ordinary A storage battery.
Plugged into the nearest convenience
outlet, it provides unfailing 'AC '
operation.
•

Laurel-Hardy Comedy "PUTTING THE PANTS ON
PHILLIP*'
Serial "MAN WITHOUT A FACE" Chapter 1.

64 Milton Ave.
Ballston Spa
Phone 89

B SALE STARTS WITH A CRASH ON

Joe Green's
Clothes Shop

fir

g Thursday Morning |
WATCH PAPERS

Upstairs

412 STATE ST.
Remember the Number, 412.
Opposite the Wallace Co.
Same Block as Carl Co.
Untitled Document

MBSSHSSJI

|

t

Stores at Gleas Falls, Saratoga, Herkkner, Schenectady.
Glens
Herkl
P^sss1la^^SIIS?^a4aWSP^Lai

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

www.fultonhistory.com

METRO—^iOLDWYN—MAYER NEWS TPF
JACK DUFFY COMEDY—"SCARED PINKH

I I

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                    <text>THE SARATOG1AN, 'WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1926.*

P A Q 9 '-'WO

CRAMER PROPERTY
IN CHURCH STREET
SOLD FOR $17,900

EVENTS T0HI8HT
Preparation Service at Preaby
terian church at 7:45 o'clock.
Election of lay delegate follow
lag mid week service at Metho
diaf Episcopal church at 7:45. Official board meeting following election.

NO DECISION AS TO
CAUSE OF CRASH
TAKING TWO LIVES

Deaths

PINCHOT CHARGES
STATE EMPLOYES
ATTACK STRIKERS

DIED—Suddenly at 5:30 p, no,
January 31, 1928. Grace
Newton
Smith, daughter of the late George
W. Smith and Mrs. Mary Brlckett.
Funeral from the late residence,
23 Greenfield avenue, Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
The Rev.
Irving G. Rouillard
officiating.
Burial in Greenridge cemetery.
»

Commonwealth Employed to
Break Strike He Alleges in
Johnson Letter.

Markets At a Glance
BY T H E ASSOCIATED FBKSS
New York
Stocks—Irregular; rail shares
sold on poor December earnings.
Bonds—Steady; New York Traction liens In demand.
Foreign exchanges—Mixed; Sterling lower; Spanish pesetas rise 12
points.
Cotton—Lower;
easier foreign
cables.
Sugar—Easy; disappointing spot
market.
Coffee—Higher; European buying.
Chicago
Wheat—Firm; unfavorable winter wheat reports.
Corn—Higher; smaller receipts.
Cattle—Steady to weak.
Hogs—Dower.. •
NEW YORK, Feb. 1.—&lt;A»)—Renewal of selling pressure against
the railroad shares, presumably
in reflection o t the disappointing
December railroad statements now
being published turned the course
of prices reactionary today after
an early period of quiet strength.
Trading, which had been dull on
the rally, quickened perceptibly
when large selling orders appear-

CONTINUE WOOD CHANGE IN ORDER
CUTTING CASE IN OF ROAD BUILDING
OBJECT OF BILL
SUPREME COURT

(Continued from page one.)
BALLSTON SPA, Feb, 1. (Special)—Trial of the $1,200 damage tlon of highways in these countlea
suit brought by Seymour Buggies shall proceed equitably with the
against Royal B. Dyer to recover other counties ot the State, a s far
for wood alleged to have been cut as practicable, a s provided in secWASHINGTON. Feb. 1. O -»
W
FUSCO — In Saratoga Springs,
No decision as to the cause of
on Ruggles* property by Dyer, was tion 121, chapter 30, laws of 1909.
Two parcels of land from the esRegular meeting,
Alice
Lee
resumed at the opening of Supreme The bill is awaiting consideration
tate of Louis H. Cramer, deceased, Roosevelt Council, D. of A., in Odd the accident wheih took the Uvea January 18, 1928, to Mr. and Mrs. Charges that the authority of the
of J. Arthur Dumont, taxi driver: Anthony Fusco, 11 Oak street, a commonwealth of Pennsylvania "1J
Court here this morning and indi- in committee.
were sold at public auction yester- Fellows hall at 8 o'clock.
being now, and has been for a
and Mrs. Grace E. Brown, 55, of j .
cations at noon were the case
Richard Fusco.
day afternoon in front of the town
important to County.
year, employed to break the pre*
South Pearl street, Albany, early
would go to the jury during tho
hall by the executors, Frederic J.
The bill Is of particular interest
Regular meeting. Women's Bene- yesterday morning waa given by
COLEMAN
—
In Saratoga ent bituminous strike" were made
early afternoon.
Resseguie and Helen H. Ressegule, fit Association, American Legion
in Saratoga County because, if
Dr. William C. Treder, Scotia cor- Springs, January 28, 1828; to Mr. today by Gifford Pinchot, former
Dyer claims he did not know he mad© a law, it will give f e Board
to settle the estate.
Home, a*. 8 o'clock.
and Mrs. James P. Coleman, 18 governor of Pennsylvania.
i oner, who Investigated the acclwas on Ruggles' property and has of Supervisors power, by a twoWilliam McNeary paid
$17,900
i dent. At his home it was said that Russell street, a son, Ronald Porintroduced evidence that the wood thirds vote, to change the ore1' r of
Pinch#t's statement waa confor the premtsea at the northeast
Re/tgular conclave, Washington he would not be ready to mak his ter.
cut is not as valuable a s Ruggles construction of county highways,
tained in a letter to Senator Johncorner of Church and
Clinton Commandery. 33, Knights Templar,
decision for another day or two, a s
claims. Ruggles fixed the value of over which the board now has no
who
LA GALLES — In
Saratoga gun, Republican, California,
street, containing stores and liv- Masonic Temple, at 8 o'clock.
thete were angles of the situation Springs, N. Y., at the Saratoga is asking the senate to investigate
the wood at $400 while the defense jurisdiction, having once fixed the
ing apartments on a lot of 100 feet
which he wished to further inves- Hospital, January 29, 1928, to Mr. conditions In the "bituminous fields
claims it was not worth over $50. order from the old Hewitt n a p .
by 150 feet. Morris Feller, proRehearsal of play, "Civil Serv- tigate.
Bent Case Ready
and Mrs. Joseph LaGalles of Mid* of Pennsylvania and West
Virprietor of the Summer Rest Cot- ice" by Pioneer Players following
According to Saratoga &lt; 'nty ofThe action brought by Samuel
Dumont and Mrs. Brown were die Grove, a son, Joseph J.
ginia.
tages was the other Interested bid- mid week service at New England killed when the taxi which the man
Krauss against Theresa J. Hulett ficials the present bill had its orig"Many gunmen and other bad
der.
Congregational church. Supper at was driving for Ronald Swartfigand William Hulett, to recover for ination Jn the State Bureau of
characters," Pinchot wrote, "have
The lot 50x150 on North Broad- 6:30 o'clock.
rent due on a store at 76 Henry Highways, the purpose being to
ure, thia city, crashed into a northre-appeared in the strike regions
• •&gt;'
way, adjoining the property of I*
street, Saratoga Springs, and a give preference to certain Important
bound B. and M. freight train at
bearing the commissions of the
H. Hays, on the north waa bid in
barn at the rear of the store, was highways on the Green map which,
2:55 o'clock yesterd'ty morning.
state and exercising its power as
under the present law, cannot be
by Carleton J. King, representing
Mrs. Brown was killed instantly
coal and iron police; and numer- ed in some of the* popular, issues. ready to go on trial this afternoon started until after the roads on the
A regular convocation of Rising and Dumont died an hour and a
unnamed parties. The price anA five point , break. In western as soon as the wood cutting case Hewitt map, given preference, have
ous assaults upon men, women and
Sun chapter, R. and A. M. will be halt later in the Ellis hospital.
aounced was $1,025.
waa out of the way,
children have been committed by Maryland common started the sellHarold R. Espey, president of held in the Masonic Temple nt Schenectady. A third occupant of
Krauss claims that on May 6, been constructed.
men especially commissioned to ing movement.
In Saratoga County there still are
the Van Voast and Leonard Real 7:30 o'clock tomorrow night. All th* taxi, Miss Cleary, 32, who lived
1926,
Publication of the unfavorably store he leased the Henry street two highways on the Hnvitt map
keep the peace and enforce
the
to the defendants for one
Estate agency, waa the other bid- officers are requested to be present with Mrs. Brown, suffered a cut.
quarterly report of the United year, the'rent being fixed at $15 remaining unconstructed, first on
for rehearaal after the meeting.
over the right eye, and slight head
der.
J. Bernard Marauth, automobile law."
States Steel corporation apparently a month, payable in advance. The the list being the Lapes CornersSaratoga Council, 246, Knights and body bruises.
salesman of Brooklyn, and a World
had been fairly well discounted, l e a s e w a s t o b e c o m e effective June Ballston Lake Highway. The other
Edmund L. Brown, Jr., 36 Gar- War veteran, told City Judge F.
of Columbus, will entertain the
and traders appeared more inter 1, 1926, and the defendants took is the Saratoga Springs end of the
broken
participants in "Flashes of 1928" field place, a son of the dead wo- Andrew Hall a tale of
ested in the further increase in possession of the store on that date Saratoga Springs-Gansevoo. 5, high"
with a banquet at the New Wor- man and a trainman for the same l health, due to a touch of gas In
TROY* N. Y„ Feb. 1. OP)—Five
I
den hotel Tuesday evening, Febru- railroad on* whose tracks Mrs. the World War, cthia morning, and jurors had been secured at noon the mill operations of the corpor- but vacated on January 1, 1927. He way, the so-called Gick road.
Favor Round Lake Road.
Brown was killed, claimed hia was discharged on a charge of Jn« in the trial of Bert Amond for.the ation to around 89 per cent of asks for $105 for rent due from
ary V, at 7 o'clock.
•
June 1 to January 1.
mother's body. Brown said Miss toxication to which he at
Provided the Bartholomew bill is J
first murder of his wife in a department capacity.
For a second cause of action, the made law, it will be possible for
Cleary and his mother had gone pleaded not guilty, and then chang- store last July.
Steel common opened s point
to Saratoga Monday morning by ed his plea.
Attorney John P. Judge,, defense lower but had recovered the loss plaintiff charges he rented a barn the board of supervisors to glvo •
at the rear of the store to the de- preference to the Clifton. ParkSaratoga county veterana of the trolley, but evidently had missed
counsel, announced that Amond by raid-day.
When he waa arrested in the
last car returning, so decided
fendants from month to month at a Round Lake highway.
*
world war who attended the leg- thecome by taxi.
A question of astronomy came
Mac Finn Drug company store in would take the witness stand in his
The closing was irregular. The
to
This highway long hao been lookown behalC Mr. Judge asserted list was I olstered up to Some ex- rental of $5 monthly and the barn
up today when Dr. G. Scott Towne, islative dinner given by th« State
was used by the defendants from
Ronald Swartfigure, proprietor Broadway last night, he had Just
who spoke yesterday to the Friend- American Legion organization for of the Swartfigure Taxi Service dropped a bottle of beef, wine and the defendant would testify that tent in the final hour- when new June 1, 1926 to July 1, 1927. On this ed upon by th© State Bureau of .
Highways a s the most important
members of the legislature who
because of the condition of his buying began to appear In various
ship Lurcheon Club at the T, M.
whom Du- iron to the floor, breaking it. A,t
saw world war aervice, in Albany company, Saratoga, by driver and police headquarters search dis- mind on the day of the tragedy, he specialties. Wright Aer6nautical, rentage, however, tho defendants proposed construction in Saratoga
C. A. railed The Saratogian's atmont was a careful
are entitled to $60 credit, $50 for county from a general standpoint -.
tention to a technical error mak- last night Included the Rev. "never drank." He said he himself closed that he was carrying amall did not realize what he was doing. Internrti nal
Match
preferred,
Charles H. L. Ford, commander had returned yeaterday morning bottles of peppermint, 85.5 per- Expert witnesses will be called to Transue Williams and International paints and $10 cash. The plaintiff*^,, l t w i u c o n s i j e r a b l y sh, i„en the
ing a mixup in figures that would
asks for $115 all told.
driving distance between Albany
probably leave the world in total of th« Saratoga County Depart- to find a note from Dumont saying cent alcohol; spirits of ammonia, substantiate his claims, it was Business * Machine made material
The defendants do not deny they and Saratoga Springs.
said.
ment; Jesse M. Cavanaugh. chair- he had got a fare.
darkness for at least 4'i years
65.5 percent alcohol, and a broadvances, the last named reaching signed a lease for the stoi-e but
That the Saratoga County Board
man of the Fourta Judicial Dis•--if it were true.
130, a new peak. Diamond Match charge the store in January 1927 of Supervisors also considers it a
There are neither gates nor sig- mide. He told the judge that his
The time elapsed between a sun trict; Edward Howland, all of nal lights nor bells at the cross- health was broken in Brooklyn,
sold a s high as 160 on odd lot pur r was damaged by fire and the most important rout© i j shown by
and John Shryer, ing, and the few accidents which and that Saratoga Springs was
ray's departure frcm the sun it- Saratoga;
chases and Peoples Gas, after- plaintiff' refused to make necessary the fact that the board recently
self, and its reception here is but Thomas F. Reilley, and James have occurred there have been recommended to him as a place
breaking to 180, rebounded to 186 repairs whereupon they vacated. placed it first on the order of con8 minutes and 20 seconds, and not Conway of Meehanicville.
minor. Authorities said they be- where he could come and recuper1-j; another new maximum. Total The defendants, under the terms struction on the Green map.
t
lieved this was the first fatal ac- ate. He said that he intended to
4"-i yeara as . t a U d in The Sarasales approximated 2,000,000 shares. of the lease, were permitted to reIt is believed that Saratoga
cident to occur at Freeman's cross- spend a few days in the Saratoga
togian yesterday.
&lt;Quotations furnished by Fo?t*rc lease the store ,for ,. another year 1 county was included in the Barthol.
,
A .
ing.
hospital, and then begin drinking
The 4H years is the distance be\Se Adams, 127 Wall Street, Schenpurpose of en
b m f f
h
tween this planet and its nearest
Mrs. .Brown had lived at the the waters. The medicine, was
joctady. members of tho New York at the end of the first year and couraging the Board of Supervisors
with in repairs according expended
this In mind they to their
purchased for an ulcerated tooth,
star neighbor, mea«ur2d in light
South Pearl street address sixteen
$300
j Stock Exchange. Phone 846t&gt;
of Saratoga County to has.en proyears. Her son, her husband, Ed- he said.
years, and the stai1 _ln
Sltiat.
"Northern New York and the j
Open Close allegations. They, also sold the ceedings for the construction « " V i
mund L. Brown, Sr., a sister, Mrs.
There sre 3 stars within a d'.o'ance
plaintiff paints and
varnishes Clifton Tark-Round Lake route.
Valley possess more | Allls Chalmers
116% 116
"I'll take a chance on you," the Mohawk
Martin Wadaworth, and a brother,
l
of 10 light years.
Clothing for
three
children, Joseph P. Wagner, both of Rens- judge said, and sent the veteran charm, beauty and natural advan- American Beet Sugar 16 /4 18 % amounting to $96 in value arid In a
to see Henry Schrade, in charge tages and hav© greater industrial American Can com . . ' 75% 75% J counterclaim ask for a judgement
worthy and deserving; is sought by selaer, survive.
of veteran relief. T h e man w a s potential opportunities than any American Car and Fdy 110% 109% of $296 against the plaintiff,
William A. Hennessey. *up rlnThe funeral of Mr. Dumont will well dressed, and spoke with evi- other region in the United States," American Ice Secys . . 33% 33%
Anothony J. LaBelle is attorney
tendent of the Saratoga branch of be conducted tomorrow morning at
declared George A. Lawyer, for- American Loco
114 113% for the plaintiff and Henry S,
NEW YORK, Feb. 1 MP)—U. S. the-. Mohawk and Hudson River 9 o'clock at the home of Mr. and dence of careful training.
mer Chief United States Game American Smelters com 175% 176% Baehler is attorney for the defendjvernment Bonds at 2:55 p. m.:
Humane Society, who today Issued Mrs. Nelson B. Bootter. 277 Nelson
auts.
Warden and now second vice-pres- American Sugar Ref . 1t%, 73
Liberty 3 1 -is.101.23; Do first fs, an appeal to those persons having avenue where he boarded and at
THe ' day calendar for • tomorrow
101.10. bid: Do first 4 l-4s, 103.1; suitable clothing to communicate 9:80 o'clock at S t Clement's Cathident and, managing director of American Tel and Tel 179% 179%
includes: Samuel Krauss against
Do third 4 l-4s, 100.13: Do fourth So him at once.
the New York Development Asso- American Tobacco . . . 168% 168
olic church. The body will be placed
A l-4s. 103.25; Treasury 4 l-4s, 115
ciation, Inc., of Watertown, speak- Anaconda Copper . . . . 56% 56% Theresa J. Hullett and ant'.he:-,
He seeks clothes ana shoes for in the Greenridge receiving vault.
rent; Certrude Dickenj a " Charles
bid; Do, 4s, 110; jPo 3 3-4s, 107.5; two girls, seven and eight years
ing before a meeting of the Board Athieon com
187% 186% Dickens against Edward Adams
»
The fifth annual banquet of tho
Do 3-1-8*. 102.171
of Directors and reforestation com- Baldwin Loco
243% 250
old, and a boy, five years old. They
ana another, negligence; Bartolo- employes and members of the firm
*m
• i
•
mittee of the Chamber of Com- Baltimore and Ohio . . . 113% 113%
are living in a rural section of th»
company
meo Gosso against Joseph Cham- of E. D. Starbuck and
merce, held yesterday afternoon. Ba^risdsji A . . . . . . . . . 24
24
county, n * said, and the mother is
bers and others, negligence; Eliza- was a recent most enjoyable event
Air. Lawyer is here tp explain to Beechnut
. r . . . . . . . 81'
80% beth Alden, Annie -' Bewvray, and * t Tfae Ejnawood. A most appjetlz;,
ili. SEe/o weather has caused much
Miss Grace
Newton Smithy a
business men of, Saratoga Springs Butte Superior
10 { 10% Charles Ben way agalns ( t Elme* C. t n g menu was served.
suffering In the little home, due to well-known young woman of this
C1\ICAQ6, Feb. * Otfr-liA
LONDON, Feb. 1. OP)—Wrthlff aridj .vicinity the objects' arid pur- Bethlehem Steel com . 57% 57
WlfEAT—March 130 3-8; May lack ^ t warm clothing.
community, died suddenly
last
Alden, negllgeftce; George L. JohnThe program waa one of unusual
Persons having clothing which evening at 5i30 o'clock of heart the brick walls of St. Columba's1 poses, o'f the "Association, of which Canadian Pacific
131. •
.206
205% son against Elmer E. Taylo-, negli- interest, with W.Rowland-Carr actChurch, Belgravia, into whlctr the he is, managing director. "The Cas* Iron Pipe . . . . . . 211 210
v
cdHN—March 89 1-4; Msy 91 the'y will g' « to the rucering 'hild- trouble at her home, with Mrs.
gence; Armand Wilbr.- against ing as toaatmaster. Short
talks
came Association," he stated, "was con3-4.
ren,
are asked to telephone JCf. William Hay Bockes, 23 Greenfield whirl of London's traffic,
Cerro do Pacco .
. 65%* 65% George Blessing
and
another, were given by Loyal A. Norton,
only as a faint hum, the body of ceived by prominent business men
OATS—March 54 7-t; May C3 Hennessey at 169-J a* soon as pos- avenue. Miss Smith had b*cn a Earl Haig, leader of Britain's ard i e s ' and Ohio ......
196 195% money damages;
Catherine ' iro Sr., 'Miss Kathryn H. £tarbuck,
3-4.
sible.
member of the Bockes household mies in the world war, lay in of Northern New York who awak- C M and St Paul com 16% 16
and Frank Gero against Laura Do- George D. Carr, Edgar D. Starbuck,
ened to the necessity of immedi- C R I and P
, . 110 109
practically all her life, and ws»s solemn state today.
lan, negligence; Fred C. Weir. Eliz- Jr., and J-. A. Mctlreath. A very
ate action to stimulate business, Con Cigars
beloved by a larga clrccle of real
83
83
abeth Weir, infant, and Mcbel Weir cleverly presented
sketch, AdAll day thousands of his coun- to aid our industries, and to bring Col Fuel and Iron . . . 83% 81% against Roulier Chamberlain comfriends, with whom she had coma
Dressing Down, was presented with
trymen and women filed reverent- in new industries natural to our Cons Gas
into contact.
126% 126% pany, Inc., negligence; Paul Ser: the following participants as tho
ly by the bier with quiet footsteps region.
Corn Prods com
68% 69% ard against Anson* i&gt;. Collins and able amateurs: Miss Eleanor M.
She was possessed of a delight- In silent tribute to their dead.
Made by the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors of Saratoga
"The most important Item on Crucible Steel . . . . » . , 86% 87% another, negligence; James Peacock Durfee, Miss Frances V. Daly, Abful personality, kindly and pltaslng
A motionless figure in the uniCounty, Pursuant to Section 51 of the "County Law"
to all, and In spite of a sorions form of the Royal Horse Guards our program is reforestation and Dodge A . . . . . , ' . - . , . . . . 20% 19% against Caruso, Rlnelli, Battaglla ram Millward, Loyal A. Norton, Jr.,
Company, Inc., negligence; William and Miss Alice McCabe.
174 173
heart trouble, was a cheerful as stood with head bent over sword contemplates tho planting of a bil- D and H
slstant in many activities in which at* each corner of the coffin as the lion trees within th© next fifteen Eastman Kodak com 164% 166% Segal against Solomon SchonbergThose present were:
she took an interest and was al- line of mourners made its way years and the planting of one hun- Erie com . . . . . . . . . . . . 59% 57% e&lt;r, goods sold and delivered; James
Edgar D. Starb.ick, Jr.,
Miss
ways a loyal, devoted worker. Sh* past tho body of the field marshal. dred million trees annually there- Erie 1st pf&lt;^
66
59% J. Connelly, administrator, and Kathryn H. Starbuck, Mr. and Mrs.
was especially beloved by many or In the sorrowful procession were after until oUr four million acres of Fr mous. Players L F 112% 113% George t). Slingerland against Lov- Loyal A. Norton, Sr,, Mr. and Mrs.
. .{Continued)
the household at the Home cf the former service men, some of whom idle waste lands are reforested," General Cigars
72% 78% illa Safford and others, negligence; George D. Carr, J. A. Mcllreath,
Good Shepherd, where she was fre- limped painfully, women who wept Mr. Lawyer said, "Our region was General Electric
130% 130% Jennie Lake and, Harry O. Lake Mrs. E. D. Starbuck, Morgan LarDAY
quently a visitor in years past.
silently and others who sobbed built up and prospered on its lum- General Motors . . . . . . 133% 333% Against Fred F. , Dye Fireproof sen.Mr. and Mrs. M. Malsonneuve,
Allowed
Claimant
Nature of Claim
Claimed
She waa the daughter of the late audibly, men who came almost au- ber resources, but with the re- Gt Northern pfd . . . . . . 94% 94% Warehouse, Inc., negligence; Lewis Mr. and Mrs. T. Andrews, Mr. and
iro oo
110 Q
O George W. Smith, and Mrs. Mary tomatically to the gesture of salute moval of our forests many of our Gt Northern Ore . . . . 23% 23% Hudson against Mary "'. Tryon, Mrs. Abram Millward, Mr. and
Dti Thompson, medical services
,
202 66
IT. B. 8, Kailian, health otflcer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
S&amp;3 65
Brickett Her survivors Include and others who bowed their heads Industries were compelled to close Inspiration Copper . . . 19% 19% negligence; Adaline Sweet against Mrs. Lewis Avery, Mr. and Mrs.
11 84
The Saratugian, print iBf . . . . . . . . . .',.*&gt;. * *.*••»..»,
down or to move to other states xlnt Paper
70% Clarence Snow, negligence; Luigi John Carr, the Misses Alice Mc72
twin brothers, Howard Smith and as if in prayer.
'ir u
SO 00
Edgar Stone* expense of ear, . . . . . . . . . . * . . . . , . •
or to Canada to be nearer the
Margaret Lucas, Helen
Arthur Smith; and a cousin. Ar12 00
M M
Orange Kathkn, Justice
«,.,,,.,„,,»,
At the head of the coffin lav source of raw materials. New Kennecott Copper . . . . 82% 82% Polozsl against P. J. Fortl, Inc., and Cabe,
90% 89% another, negligence; and John J, Shaughnessey, Elizabeth O'Connor,
121 75
William George, assessor . . . . . , . , , , , , , . , , , . . , , ,
II M
thur Wilder, of Woodstock, Vt.
the field marshal's baton and hrl- York now imports annually about Lehigh Valley
r, oo
Ijtna Aldrlch, copying assess, roll },.,,".»».».*
151 TS
11T
Liggett and Myers A . 117
Parile against Marshall Cochrane Janet Ingram,
Eleanor Durfee,
Funeral services will be held at m *t and from Its side hung hia
eighty million dollars worth of Mack Truck
7 00
Charles White, conveying assessors *..
r.......,
103 103% and others negligence.
Katherane Monahan. Gerene Faln ss
53 n her late home at 23 Greenfield ave- jeweled and embroidered sword lumber, on which it pays an an- xMiami Copper
Jennie Johnson, registrar . . . . , , . . « . , , , . . , , I , .
The case of Jean Gorman, Infant, kenbury, Mae Ostrander, Mr. and
18% 18%
nue, on Friday
afternoon at 3 belt
7 00
28 00
William Oeorge, truant officer . , . , . , . , 1 . , . . • # .
nual toll of about fifty million dol48% 46% against Henry Dlenhart and an- Mrs. L. A. Norton, Jr., Mr. and
o'clock. The Rev. Irving G. RouilW »
Atop the bier were two massive lars in freight—a tremendous drain Mo Pacific
24 00
Kdmund Murto, justice bill
other, negligence, was moved over Mrs. Karl Voskanyan, Mrs. ft, H.
Moon Motor*
6% «
25 00
14S 00
lard will officiate, i-nd burial will wreaths of Flanders popples. They
Carrie V, Bloss. town el«rk , , . . . , r . . , . . . % . . , , ,
on our industries. We should have Motor Meter
44 00
20% 20% the term. Settlements today in- Moseman, the Misses Mary Fa^,
78 70
Dr. Thompson, medical services
, , . . , . . , . ,4
were laid there just before the
be In Greenridge «-emetery.
145 00
cluded the cases -nt Sarah Hickey Nellie Crowley, Alice King. Orace
8 00
Charles Van Avery, classifying records , , , , * . , ,
134% 132
doors of St. Columba's were open this lumber at our very doors and National Lead
71 70
10 00
Cher lea Van Avery, ballot clerk . , , , . , . . » * , * , , ,
18% 18% against Patrick H. Pender aj I an- Paul, Elizabeth Saxton, Dorothy
we should have started years ago&gt;Nevada (Ton.Copper
ed to the public and the hands
8 00
214 18
Hollln U Johnson, supervisor
159% 158% other, negligence, and George Stev- Cummings, Elizabeth McCabe. Edthat placed them were those of on a big scale to grow trees on New York Central
10 00
54 00
Joel M. Aldrlch. assessor
,
.•,..
Lidy Haig who brought them to lands unfitted for agriculture. New N Y N H and H . . . . 65% 64% ens against the Delaware and Hud- ith Mlckle, Agnes Rowland, MilMembers of St. Monica's Circle
264 1*
William George, Justice's bill
,
&lt;........
i t oo
great Norfolk and Western 185% 185% son company, negligence.
dred Halpin, Frances V. Daly tn&lt;[
84 00
will hold a card party and social the church In her arms and then York already has made
William George, expense of horse as assessor . .
11 00
21 00
remained along witb him for a strides in reforestation, but at the Northern Pacific . . . . 94% 94
T. J. Durkee, Harry Monroe, W.
tomorrow at their rooms on Regent
.lost M. Aldrlch. use of car for assessor* . . . . . . .
49 00
11 00
present rate of planting it would Ont and West
few moments in silent grief.
Cfras, Van Avery, inspector of election
*
27% 25
Rowland Carr, C. A. Brooks, Ralph
street at 3 o'clock.
14 90
40 00
&lt; has. Van Aver&gt;*. assessor's bill
be physically impossible to com- Pennsylvania
Chamberlain, Frank Woodworth,
—Franklin R. Croxion left for
121 71
P H . . 64% 64%
14 00
ALBANY, N. Y., Feb. 1. &lt;*&gt;) — Rex Eddy.
l&gt;r, Johnson, med. services rendered » T &gt; . . . . . . . .
Rejected
plete the task of reforesting all Phillips Pet
41
40%
*
Syracuse today where he will re121 n
Frank Katnan, justice's bill
,..,...,,,
24 00
of our idle waste lands. We must Postum
sume his studies in the College of
126% 126% a child marriage bill characterized
00 00
Chaa IT. Edwards, overseer of the poor
«8 00
Increase our activities at least Pressed Steel Car com 24% 24% as a part of the Republican welBusiness Adminlstra'lon at Syra24 00
lienj. Denton, Inspector , » . , , ,
10 00
cuse University.
threefold and this will
require P S U
38
37% fare legislation program and en92 60
Addle Snow, poll clerk*
19 99
dorsed by the New York league of
more tree nurseries and greatly Rapid Trans securities 36% 36
10 00
France* Abellng, Inspector of election
24 00
Women voters was Introduced in
10 00
incceased appropriations to enable Reading com . . . . . . . . 100% 99
Frances Abellng. delivering returns
10 00
NEW, YORK, Feb. 1 X«—Cotton
ths legislature today by Senator
24 00
FrSd Abellng, town halt
21 00
the State to reforest State owned Remington-Rand
. 30% 80% Henry D. Williams and Assembly- futures,chjsld easy; 29 to 41 points
10 00
Fralley M.ircellus. inspector of election . . . . . . . . . . .
34 99
•i Walter A. Fullerton was the lands in the Adirondack Park and Repub Iron and Steel 62% 62%
N I T ' YORK, Feb. 1 &amp;•*)—
21 00
man Phelps Phelps, Republican.. lower:
1 * idley Mareellus, delivering returns . . . . . . . . . .
10 09
19% 19
M*rch 17.25ffll7.28; May J7.3l|fj
BUTTER — Steady;
Recelpti speaker at a meeting of Trooy 4, to stimulate greater activity by Sinclair Oil
24 00
Marlon Mareellus, Inspector of elections . . . . . . .
24 00
The measure would fix the mini10 00
9,048, Creamery, higher than extras. the Boy Scouts of America of the counties, municipalities and large Southern Pacific . . . . 120 119
J'red Abellng, supplies a* collector
3 00
mum age for marriage of girls at 17.87: July 17.37^17.89; Oct. 17.1$
24 S
]&gt;be»" 15. Stone, supt. of highways
43S 00 Paid 436 S»
O
l-2e®49e; Creamery, extras, (921 Episcopal thurch last evening tak- individual and corporate land own- Southern R y com . . . 143% 148% 16, as It la at present provided for 017.18; Dec, 17.15.
3 00
Saratoga county is one of Studebaker
59% 60% boys, except under certain strict
score), 4Sc; Creamery, firsts (88 to j ing as his subject, "The Scout ers.
Spdt cotton quiet; Middlings
$1171 IS
Emphasizing the
law, the pioneers In this commendable Tenn Copper
10% 10% regulations.
91 score), 43c@47 l-2c;
Packing Laws,"
jj^l which invites each scout "to do a work and la to be congratulated Texas Co
58% 53%
EDINBURG
stock, current make, No. 1
j good, turn daily," Mr. Fullerton on Its vision and foresight."
No. 2 33 l-"c.
Countv of Saratoga:
Texas P C and O . . . . 14% 14%
•Mm
189 187%
"The New York
Development Union Pacific
BGG«—Steady—Receipts
18,583. ' spoke inapirlngly to the full asWe, the undersigned, the Board of Town Auditors of said town, do
Association, Inc., haa Its -principal U S Rubber com . . . . 59% 59%
heVeby certify: That the following Is an abstract of the names of all parFresh ga* ?red, extra firsts. 3t l-2c sembly of the scouts.
145% 145
wins who have presented to said Board, accounts to be audited, the amounts
®40c; Firsts, 3 1-2c®39c; Seconds, M rAs a souvenir of his recent trip office and place of business at Wa- U S Steel com
nr-rtV • - Fulletton displayed a card, tertown, New York, and Is organclaimed by each of *ald persons, and the amounti finally audited to them,
140% 141
37
l-:c®3Se.
Storage.
U S Steel pfd
anri personally autographed for him by ising Units In all important localrespectively. tO-wit:—
95% 95%
31
1-2C0 3T. .
Seconds
Westlnghouse
Claimed
Allowed
Claimant
Nature of Claim
19% 19%
Already eighteen
Units Willys Overland
poorer, 33c03»c; Nearby hennery Dan Rcaic*. a prominent figure In ities.
115* 25
flSS *:•
H. M. Torrey, supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
184 188%
many Woolworth Co
whites, closely selected fxtrat, 42c the Boy Scout organisation, and have been organized and
10 00
SO 0o
('. L. Brooks, town clerk
#43c; Nearby and nearby western told *&gt;« gathering of his InterxEx-dlv.
St #9
(Continued on Page eleven)
n oo
Herbert Besley. justice . .
isnnery whites, firsts to average view with Mr. Beard.
30 00
S« 00
Kr»ttk Rock well. Justice
Some new games were explained
30 00
30 00
extras, 3Sc©41c; Nearby hennery
H. P. Morris, Justice ..
Pacific to the *cO'tt» by Mr. Fullerton.
t 00
t 00
browns, extras, 42c©43c;
Oeorge B., Allen, lustlce . . . . . * * * • &lt; » * &lt;
110 00
Preparations were made for t h e
no oo coast whites. extras, 4lcC42c:
H. B. Bllithorpe, assessor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The original shareholders of the Common Stock of
110 00
110 00
firsts to extra firsts, 18 l-2c©40 Court of Honor to be held next
David Wilbur. asMMer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
110 00
110 00
3-4c.
Akeena Products Company will please take notice that the
week at th# anniversary meeting.
Percy Olmstead, assessor
4$ 09
41 00
George Rockwell, Inspector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
rights and privileges granted under a resolution duly au31 09
31 00
&lt;arl P. Fraker. Inspector
31 00
3$ 00
thorized and passed by the Board of Directors of the ComWm. B. Fraster. inspector
4» 09
49 O
O
&lt;:«orge 13 Myers, Inspector
..,.,.,....,.,,
pany, January 5, 1928, fgiving the said shareholders of
11 99
IS 00
Sam Darling, poll clerk
,*
IS 00
IS #0
record the right to purchase additional shares as per allot*
Ftay Rockwell, poll clerk
,........,
SO Oft
so oe
Fred Gilbert, attd. officer
ment according to their present holdings at $ 1 1.00 p e r
4*0 00
410 09
*&lt; Distributor for conservative New York Investment banking
Myron Bdwurd*. towo aunt
...#...
10 §0
SO 99
•hare, will expire at the close of business on February 6th,
house wanU district representatives who are capabt* of buildH. M. Torr*y. supervliior, highway allowance . .
Si Of
§3 00
ing a local clientele In addition to handling Inquiries received
Fred 0, Hay, undertaker, Joseph Bawdlah ».
1928.
Therefore, it is deemed advisable for shareholders
1 00
• no
(', U Brooks, copy assessment roll
from thair territory.
31 i'0
in the above named company to subscribe for or release
,i% so
D. O. Orlnn««l, snop rent . . . . . . , . . . . , . , . , . . . ,
The men who meet our requirements wit.* have the oppor.
I IT
i tr
&lt;!Ka* B. Hougblallng, (own supt, . , . , .
said shares without delay otherwise, said allotments and
7 19
tunlty to make real money the first year, and* to build them7 10
Williamson Law Book Co.. supr'a, cash book
privileges will be cancelled and the Company will have the
11 19
IS no
•elvae a. business assuring a permanent and satisfactory in».'. I* Brooks, T. C. highway allowance . . . . . . .
14 04
14 94
coma thereafter.
The Seratoglen, pub'g. highway report . . . . . .
right to dispose of such allotments and privileges in it*,
31 99
SI no
i', L. Brooks. regk*rar ••
..........
Exrperlefiea not necessarily in atlon and experience, felling u l f
10 00
19 99
discretion.
Myron Edwards, town supt. expense
,
perlence of some kind is essentia].
97 90
17 M
r , E. Eddy, {assigned by W. J. DeLeng) . . . .
199 99
ion 00
WrtW us full etalls of education and experience, telling j *
,r Edward grant, H. O. Fewi
,
By Order of the Board of Directors,
4 50
4 B0
Kmtr Shepard. overseer of poor
*.
what territory you believe you can handle tiuecehsfuUy.
80 90
60 Of
.1 Edward Grant, H, O. Fees ,
AKEENA PRODUCTS CO., Inc.
Address Distributer, P. O. Box 109.. Wall ttrte* Station, New
tl«9S OS
| 1 I » S 09
Yerk, N, Y.
Totals
February 1, 1928.

Coroner Investigating Accident
William McNeary Buys Block
Covenant
meeting,
Baptist
in Which J. Arthur Dumont
at Church and Clinton
church, 7:30; teacher* training
Died.
Streets.
elass, 8:30.

Births

VETERANWITH
"TOUCH OF GAS"
FREED IN COURT

LOCAL BRIEFS

1

STARS IN THEIR
PLACES AS NEWS
STORY IS ALTERED

&gt;

i

•

i

i

i

FIVE TROY MURDER JURORS

VETERANS ATTEND DINNER

CHAMBER BOARD
HEARS TALK BY
STATE ORGANIZER

SEEK CLOTHES FOR
THREE CHILDREN

L D. STARfeUCK CO.
ENJOYS BANQUET
AND SEE PLAY

Government Bonds

Grain Market

Deaths

BODYOFHAIG
AT ST. COLUMBA^
CHURCH, LONDOK

STATEMENT

M

M

I

TOWN ABSTRACTS

LOCAL BRIEFS

CHILD MARRIAGE BILL

Dairy Market

FULLERTON TALKS
TO SCOUT TROOP

Cotton Market

NOTICE

To the Shareholders of
AKEENA PRODUCTS COMPANY, INC.

r

SEE FRIDAY'S PAPER FOR FULL
DETAILS OF OUR ORDERED SOLD
SALE

District Representatives

HARLAN PAGE MUSIC CO.
Everything Musical

460 Broadway

Untitled Document

(To Be Continued)

IL

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

www.fultonhistory.com

Saratoga Springs, N. Y.

H

f

1

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      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="28">
          <name>URL</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2479">
              <text>Old Fulton NY, Newspapaers: &lt;a title="Cramer Obituary 1927, p1" href="http://www.fultonhistory.com/Newspapers%2021/Saratoga%20Springs%20NY%20Saratogian/Saratoga%20Springs%20NY%20Saratogian%201927/Saratoga%20Springs%20NY%20Saratogian%201927%20-%200602.pdf"&gt;p. 1&lt;/a&gt; and &lt;a title="Cramer Obituary, 1927, p. 2" href="http://www.fultonhistory.com/Newspapers%2021/Saratoga%20Springs%20NY%20Saratogian/Saratoga%20Springs%20NY%20Saratogian%201927/Saratoga%20Springs%20NY%20Saratogian%201927%20-%200603.pdf"&gt;p 2&lt;/a&gt;, February 28, 1927</text>
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          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
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              <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>
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              <text>2/7/2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="2474">
                <text>Louis H. Cramer, Businessman, Dead</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="2475">
                <text>February 28, 1927</text>
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          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2476">
                <text>The Saratogian</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="2477">
                <text>The Saratogian</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2478">
                <text>An obituary of Louis H. Cramer, engineer, surveyor, businessman and philanthropist.  He spent most of his adult life in Saratoga Springs, NY, starting as a surveyor and receiver of taxes, and eventually becoming president of the G. F. Harvey Co.  He was a benefactor of the Saratoga Hospital, YMCA and Skidmore College.  </text>
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              <name>Title</name>
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                  <text>Mapping Saratoga Springs</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                  <text>1700-</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Map</name>
      <description>Cartographic document</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <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="2485">
              <text>ca. 1947</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2486">
              <text>The City Archives (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)</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>
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              <text>City Plan</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="2488">
              <text>Infrastructure and Communication</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2489">
              <text>Recreation</text>
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        <element elementId="119">
          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
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              <text>Jordana Dym&#13;
Emily Sloan</text>
            </elementText>
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          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
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              <text>2/7/2015</text>
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          <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>
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              <text>1947</text>
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          <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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              <text>Represents 1 family - 3.6 persons</text>
            </elementText>
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        <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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="3222">
              <text>Likely prepared in the mid-1940s, and possibly in preparation for the &lt;em&gt;Saratoga Springs Looks to the Future &lt;/em&gt;report prepared by a City commission, this version of &lt;a title="Mott, 1939, Saratoga Springs" href="http://ssmp.skidmore.edu/items/show/86"&gt;Samuel J. Mott's 1939 city planning map &lt;/a&gt;shows the population density of the city center.&amp;nbsp; Red dots indicate family units calculated at 3.6 persons/family.</text>
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        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Map of the City of Saratoga Springs</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2483">
                <text>1939</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Language</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>English</text>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2516">
                <text>Mott, Samuel J.</text>
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            <description>A summary of the resource.</description>
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                <text>This map created by Mott shows a detailed representation of Saratoga Springs and was used for multiple purposes. Mott's role as civil engineer shows the importance of city planning in 20th-century Saratoga Springs.</text>
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                <text>Mott, Samuel J., “Map of the City of Saratoga Springs,” Skidmore Saratoga Memory Project, accessed March 23, 2015, http://ssmp.skidmore.edu/items/show/165.</text>
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      <name>Map</name>
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          <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>
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          <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>
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              <text>Manuscript maps</text>
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          <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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          <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>
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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;
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>In 1708 Queen Anne of England granted a large land patent to thirteen loyal subjects covering nearly 500,000 acres, including the majority of land located in present day Saratoga County. This patent, the Kayaderosseras, used the Mohawk Indians’ name for this area. Surveying, partition, and settlement of the land granted in 1708 was slow. The Mohawks argued that settlers claimed more land than that sold in the deed, slowing down British settlement until 1768, when Sir William Johnson worked out an agreement with the Patentees. The French and Indian War also delayed settlement until 1763, when Britain’s control of the area was assured. Charles Webb ‘s 1769 survey allowed original patentees or their heirs to partition the land. Two sections, often referred to as “The Five Mile Square” and “The 2000 Acre Tract” set aside to pay the surveyors. &#13;
&#13;
This map, commissioned by wealthy Albany merchant Nanning Hermanse (Vischer) and drawn in 1772 by an unknown surveyor, shows the partition of the patent belonging to his heirs, son Nicholas Vischer (yellow) and grandson Nanning Hermanse Vischer (blue). The parcels stained in green had already been sold.&#13;
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          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
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              <text>Saratoga County Historian's Office (Saratoga County, N.Y.)</text>
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          <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>
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          <description>The actual physical size of the original image</description>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>A Map of the Survey and Partition of all that Tract of Land situate, lying and being in the county of Albany known by the name of KAYADEROSSERAS alias QUEENSBOROUGH for the partition whereof...</text>
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                <text>This 1772 manuscript representation of the Kayaderosseras Patent (issued by Queen Anne of Great Britain in 1708) show property inherited from an original patentee.</text>
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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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            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
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                    <text>1F
2111
ro

The Municipal Council of the City of Saratoga Springs

duly elected in pursuance of Chapter 229 of the Laws of 1915
entitled An act to incorporate the City of Saratoga Springs

met on the second Tuesday after thetfirst general municipal
election in the yeair 1915 viz upon the 22nd ay of June in
said year at nine o in the forenoon of that day at the
clock

office of the Mayor in the City of Saratoga Springs N Y
The said council proceeded to orgaafse the municipal govern
meat of said city and the following proceedings tore had

The following Commissioners were p
present Mayor Walter
2 Butler Commissioner of Accounts Michael J Mnlqueen C om
missioner of Finance Wm H Waterbury Commissioner of Public
Works N R Thpmpeon Commissioner of Publics Safety Wm B Mil

yy
1

x

liman City Attorney Harold H Corbin and City Judge Chas B
Aidrus

Meeting called to order by Mayor Butler
The Mayor and Commissioners took the oath of office
i

before Rarold H Corbin as Notary Public

Oaths were taken

in duplicate one to be filed with the Commissioner of Accounts
and one with the County Clerk of Saratoga County

Mayor Butler announced the appointment of Harold H
Corbin as City Attorney and with the ooi cent and approval of the
t

other members of the City Council Mr Corbin was duly apps
and filed his oath of office

On motion of Commissioner Millimaa the General Ordin

anoes of the City the rules and regulations of the Police

Department and the Fire Department together with the general
health rules and regulations
Thomas R

Me

were adopted

Haman L

Waterbury and Thomas P f

4

ern ware named as Civil service iemmis by the Cow
ionertl

oil for the term of two four and six years respectively

Meeting adjourned for organisation of the Civil Ser
vice Commissioner
n

Meeting re convened

Commissioner Thompson presented the name of
Mott for City Enginaer carnelian

red see

r

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474

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On mot i on by 6Ommi s Over
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and Benjamin Wilson were duly appointed City Merahalls
On motion of Commissioner Milliman Dr A

7

Leonard

was appointed City Physician

On motion of Commissioner Mulqueen Dr A L Churohill

was duly appointed Receiver of Taxes and Michael S Cummings City
Record Clerk

On motion of Commissioner Waterbury Geroge R O
Brian

was duly appointed Deputy Commissioner of Finance
On motion of Commissioner Thompson Albert E Kay was
duly appointed Deputy Commissioner of Public Works

On motion of Commissioner Milliman Thomas H Gorman
was duly appointed Deputy Commi of Public Safety

On motion of City Judge Andrus Samuel

Smith was

appointed City Court Clerk

The Council approved unanimously of the above appoint
meats

The oath of office of Charles B Andrus City Judge
was filed

The oath of office of Haman L Waterbury as Civil Ser

vice Commis toner was filed
The oath of office of Thomas F Magovern as Civil Ser
v4toe Commissioner was filed
The oath of of fio e of

k

Thomas H Gorman Deputy Commis

stoner of Public Safety was filed

The oath of office of Albert B Kay Deputy Commissioner
of Public Works was filed

The oath off of fio e of Michael S Cummings City Record
Clerk was filed
g
The oath of office of George R O De qty emote
Brian

stoner of Finance was filed
Soh

motion of Ooissioner Mulqueeu the Commissioner of

xr

Finance was authorized to turn over to the Comptssto

km

of Ao

counts a sum not exceeding 200 to be used by the Receiver of
00

fir

Taxes in making change
The meeting 8 io

til 2 P M

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4

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Iii I

STATE OF NEW YORK

S3

CITY OF SARLTOGA SOINGS
4

I hereby certify that the foregoing is a true and
accurate record of all the proceedings of the City Council

of of of Council held on transacted regular
L the City saidSartoga Springs the 22nd day atofa June 1915
meeting

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                    <text>G

At an adjourned regular meeting of the City Council of

the City of Saratoga Springs N Y held in the office of the

ayor
l Walter P Butler in the City Hall of the City of Saratoga
Springs N Y June 22 1915

The following Commissioners were present Butler Mules
queen Waterbury and Milliman

The meeting was called to order by Mayor Butler at
2 P

M

The Council appoited John Mahar to the position of

I

r

Sexton of Greenridge Cemetery
Matter of appointment of Truant Officer was laid on
the table

On motion of Commissioner lulqueen seconded by Com

missioner Waterbury the following resolution was adopted
Be it

ordained by the City Council of the City of

Saratoga Springs N Y that for the purpose of assessment the

assessment map of Saratoga Springs N Y made by Cramer and
Eldridge dated 1894 represented by one large volum called
9

the Assessment Map of Saratoga Springs N Y upon the adoption
of the Commissioner of Accounts or Assessor of the City the
said map as the tax map shall be the assessment map of the City

of Saratoga Springs N Y so far as it is applicable and same
be filed in the office of the Commissioner of Accounts

Meeting adjourned subject to call of the Chair
Absent from Meeting

Commissioner Thompson

STATE OF NEW YORK

SS
CITY OF SARATOGA SPRINGS

I hereby certify that the foregoing is a true and
accurate record of all the proceedings of the City Council

of the City of Saratoga Springs transaoted at an adjourned

regular meeting of said Council held au the 22nd day of June
1915

4
t

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&#13;
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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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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2563">
                <text>Burleigh Map over Card Catalog, L. Deijnoska</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3231">
                <text>Dejnozka, Ladislaw (Round Lake, N.Y.)&#13;
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              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
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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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              <element elementId="50">
                <name>Title</name>
                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="3084">
                    <text>Index Map, Assessment Map of the Outside District of the City of Saratoga Springs, N.Y. </text>
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                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
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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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              <element elementId="50">
                <name>Title</name>
                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="3083">
                    <text>Title Page, Assessment Map of the Outside District of the City of Saratoga Springs, N.Y. </text>
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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>
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          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
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    <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="2575">
              <text>Mott, Samuel J.</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="2576">
              <text>1916</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="108">
          <name>Related Maps</name>
          <description>There will be many cases where multiple maps are in effect only slight variations on a single original. If we are certain, or even pretty sure, that one map is just a slightly altered version of another,the related versions should be listed here.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2578">
              <text>Outside Plat Maps</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2579">
              <text>Assessor's Office, Saratoga Springs City Hall</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="2580">
              <text>City</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2581">
              <text>Property</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="2582">
              <text>Cities and Towns</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2583">
              <text>Civic Life</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2584">
              <text>Property and Development</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2585">
              <text>Infrastructure and Communication</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Scale</name>
          <description>The scale of the item (if known)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2586">
              <text>400 ft: 1 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="2587">
              <text>Allie Smith &#13;
Deirdre Schiff </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="2894">
              <text>State Tax Commission</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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="2895">
              <text>1916</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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="2896">
              <text>This map details the outside districts of the city of Saratoga Springs, including the outlined area of the inside district. This map was created by city engineer Samuel J. Mott at the request of the new City Council in 1916.  The State Tax Commission approved the map in 1917.</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>
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              <text>Zoning maps</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>Delaware and Hudson Railroad Corporation (D &amp;H, R.R.)</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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="2899">
              <text>Fish Creek (N.Y.: Creek)&#13;
Kayaderosseras Creek (Saratoga County, N.Y.)&#13;
Lake Lonely (N.Y. : Lake)&#13;
Saratoga Lake (N.Y. : Lake)</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="2900">
              <text>Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</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="3085">
              <text>Scale 400 feet to 1 inch.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="7285">
              <text>2/9/2015&#13;
3/9/2015</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="2574">
                <text>Map Showing Sections of the Map of the Assessment Map of  Outside District of the City of Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</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="2892">
                <text>1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2893">
                <text>Mott, Samuel J.</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="2901">
                <text>Assessment Map of the Outside District of the City of Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3438">
                <text>Samuel J. Mott's map of the newly-promoted City of Saratoga Springs highlights the two principal tax assessment areas, the inside and outside districts.  These districts echoe the dividing line between the village and town of Saratoga Springs, established in 1826.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3439">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
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        <name>city plan</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="190">
        <name>inside district</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="12">
        <name>Mott</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="191">
        <name>outside district</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="189">
        <name>tax map</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
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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="5012">
                  <text>Saratoga Springs History</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="5015">
                  <text>1706-</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
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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="2597">
              <text>Engraving</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="2598">
              <text>Allie Smith </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="2599">
              <text>1834</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="2600">
              <text>Travel and Tourism</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2601">
              <text>Recreation</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2602">
              <text>Private Collection</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="2605">
              <text>The 1830's were the first time the railroad came into Saratoga. This image depicts leisurely people in Victorian era dress on the Piazza of Congress Hall in Saratoga. </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="7284">
              <text>2/27/2015</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="2596">
                <text>Piazza of Congress Hall, Saratoga Springs</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2603">
                <text>Drawn by C. Burton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2604">
                <text>Enraved by T. Illman</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="61">
        <name>19th century</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="523">
        <name>hotel</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="544">
        <name>illustration</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="236">
        <name>Leisure</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="529">
        <name>mineral springs</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="543">
        <name>print</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="77">
        <name>Saratoga Springs</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>tourism</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="182" 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="5012">
                  <text>Saratoga Springs History</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="5015">
                  <text>1706-</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="2607">
              <text>Postcard</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="2608">
              <text>Allie Smith </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
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          <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="2644">
              <text>Ca. 1908</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="2645">
              <text>Civic Life</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2646">
              <text>Travel and Tourism</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2647">
              <text>Private Collection</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="7280">
              <text>2/27/2015</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="2640">
                <text>2648 Convention Hall and Soldiers Monument, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="540">
        <name>conference</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="68">
        <name>Congress Park</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="10">
        <name>downtown</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="541">
        <name>economic history</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="43">
        <name>postcard</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>tourism</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="187" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
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          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5012">
                  <text>Saratoga Springs History</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="5015">
                  <text>1706-</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="2649">
              <text>postcard</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="2650">
              <text>Allie Smith </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="2651">
              <text>June 11, 1922</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="2652">
              <text>ca. 1922</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="2653">
              <text>The Albertype, Co.</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="2654">
              <text>Brooklyn, N.Y.</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="2655">
              <text>Religion and Spirituality</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2656">
              <text>Private Collection</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="7279">
              <text>2/27/2015</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="2648">
                <text>Sanatorium. Mt. McGregor, N.Y.- Interior view of Chapel [Metropolitan Life Insurance, CO.  ]</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="5018">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="5019">
                <text>Mount McGregor--Saratoga Springs (N.Y.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="5020">
                <text>Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.  </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="56">
            <name>Abstract</name>
            <description>A summary of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="5021">
                <text>Postcard of Mt McGregor Sanatorium.  The building began as a hotel in the late nineteenth century, and was converted to a prison which closed in the early 21st century.  In between, it served as a sanatorium.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="536">
        <name>hospital</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="523">
        <name>hotel</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="524">
        <name>lodging</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="43">
        <name>postcard</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="538">
        <name>prison</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="537">
        <name>public health</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="77">
        <name>Saratoga Springs</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>tourism</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="539">
        <name>transformation</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="53">
        <name>travel</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="189" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="424">
        <src>https://www.ssmp.mdocs.skidmore.edu/files/original/f70181748cf6b2a512d7fbc7f7b52ad6.jpg</src>
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      <file fileId="476">
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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="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="2725">
              <text>1840</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="2726">
              <text>1840</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="2727">
              <text>1840</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="2728">
              <text>1840</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="2729">
              <text>"Published by the Surveyor General, pursuant to an Act of the Legislature. Stone &amp; Clark, republishers, Ithaca, N.Y. 1840." Note 2.) Prime meridian: Washington, D.C. Note 3.) Shows flouring mills, factories, forges, saw mills, churches, parcels, and landowners. Note 4.) "Entered according to Act of Congress Jany 5th. 1829 by David H. Burr of the state of New York." Note 5.) "Entered according to Act of Congress Jany 5th. 1829 by David H. Burr of the state of New York." Note 6.) "Entered according to Act of Congress Jany 5th. 1829 by David H. Burr of the state of New York." Note 7.) "Entered according to Act of Congress Jany 5th. 1829 by David H. Burr of the state of New York." </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2730">
              <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="2731">
              <text>County</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="2732">
              <text>County maps</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2733">
              <text>Cadastral 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="2734">
              <text>Property and Development</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="2735">
              <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="2736">
              <text>2/28/2015</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="2739">
              <text> "Published by the Surveyor General, pursuant to an Act of the Legislature. Stone &amp; Clark, republishers, Ithaca, N.Y. 1840." Note 2.) Prime meridian: Washington, D.C. Note 3.) Shows flouring mills, factories, forges, saw mills, churches, parcels, and landowners. Note 4.) "Entered according to Act of Congress Jany 5th. 1829 by David H. Burr of the state of New York." Note 5.) "Entered according to Act of Congress Jany 5th. 1829 by David H. Burr of the state of New York." Note 6.) "Entered according to Act of Congress Jany 5th. 1829 by David H. Burr of the state of New York." Note 7.) "Entered according to Act of Congress Jany 5th. 1829 by David H. Burr of the state of New York."&#13;
&#13;
Source&#13;
: Atlases of the United States / New York / An atlas of the state of New York : containing a map of the state and of the several counties / by David H. Burr.&#13;
</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="2741">
              <text>New York (State). Surveyor General -- Publisher</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="10">
          <name>Physical Dimensions</name>
          <description>The actual physical size of the original image</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2742">
              <text> 1 atlas (40, [51] leaves : col. maps (some folded) ; 58 cm. &#13;
SSPL framed map: 22.5 ''x 28''  1 map : hand col. ; 45 x 30 cm.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="28">
          <name>URL</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2743">
              <text>Bibliographic detail from Stephen A. Schwarzman Building / The Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, &lt;a title="1840 Clark, Saratoga County" href="http://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47da-f281-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99"&gt;Digital Library&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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          </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="2719">
                <text>Map of the county of Saratoga / by David H. Burr ; engd. by Rawdon, Clark &amp; Co., Albany, &amp; Rawdon, Wright &amp; Co., N. York.</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="2720">
                <text>1840</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="2721">
                <text> Atlases of the United States / New York / An atlas of the state of New York : containing a map of the state and of the several counties / by David H. Burr.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2722">
                <text>Stone &amp; Clark Republishers -- Publisher&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2723">
                <text>A map of Saratoga County published in an atlas of New York State counties.  This map shows the Kayaderosseras Patent plots as well as contemporary administrative districts.  The newly separate towns of Saratoga and Saratoga Springs are clearly marked.sizesize</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2724">
                <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="2737">
                <text>Burr, David H., 1803-1875  -- Cartographer&#13;
Rawdon, Clark &amp; Co. -- Engraver&#13;
Rawdon, Wright &amp; Co. -- Engraver</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
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    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="30">
        <name>county</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="187">
        <name>Kayaderosseras Patent</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="70">
        <name>roads</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="186">
        <name>Saratoga</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="77">
        <name>Saratoga Springs</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
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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="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="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="2747">
              <text>Deirdre Schiff</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2748">
              <text>3/2/2015</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="2749">
              <text>1969</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="2750">
              <text>1969</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="2751">
              <text>August 29, 1969</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="2752">
              <text>1969</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="2753">
              <text>Photo of construction of the arterial route in the Northeast section of Saratoga Springs</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="2754">
              <text>The Saratogian</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="2755">
              <text>Saratoga Springs, NY</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="2756">
              <text>Transportation</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2757">
              <text>Infrastructure and Communication</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2758">
              <text>The City Archives (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)</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="2744">
                <text>Northeast Saratoga Springs</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2745">
                <text>The Saratogian Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2746">
                <text>Mayette, Bob</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="192" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="427">
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      <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="2775">
              <text>Newspaper article</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="2776">
              <text>Deirdre Schiff </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="2777">
              <text>3/2/2015</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="2778">
              <text>February 23, 1965</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="2779">
              <text>1965</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="2780">
              <text>This newspaper article includes maps/images of the proposed arterial route through Saratoga Springs. Verso has a number of advertisements and article about the silicone plant.</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="2781">
              <text>The Saratogian</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="2782">
              <text>Saratoga Springs, NY</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="2783">
              <text>Transportation</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2784">
              <text>Infrastructure and Communication</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2869">
              <text>Property and Development</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2785">
              <text>The City Archives (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="2902">
              <text>[ 11in. X 17in.]</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="2772">
                <text>Maps of Proposed Saratoga Springs Arterial Route</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="2773">
                <text>1965</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2774">
                <text>The Saratogian Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="193" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="429">
        <src>https://www.ssmp.mdocs.skidmore.edu/files/original/c4d5143c3c094473c8448b5ab0a4b958.jpg</src>
        <authentication>7743fee029e62814980ef7d8c43510df</authentication>
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    </fileContainer>
    <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="2789">
              <text>Mott, Samuel J.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <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="2790">
              <text>State Tax Commission</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="2791">
              <text>1916</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="2792">
              <text>January 6, 1916</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="2793">
              <text>1916</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="2794">
              <text>This map details the districts of the city of Saratoga Springs after it was incorporated. This map focuses on the Broadway/downtown area.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2795">
              <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="2796">
              <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="2797">
              <text>City Plan</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2798">
              <text>Zoning 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="2799">
              <text>Cities and Towns</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="2800">
              <text>Compass rose&#13;
Greenridge Cemetery (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Saratoga Springs (N.Y.)--Corporation Line&#13;
Woodlawn Oval (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Woodlawn Park (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)</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="2801">
              <text>Geyser Lake (N.Y. : Lake)&#13;
Loughberry Lake (N.Y. : Lake)&#13;
</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="2802">
              <text>Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</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="2803">
              <text>Deirdre Schiff</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2804">
              <text>3/9/2015</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="2786">
                <text>Map Showing Territory Covered by Sections of Assessment Map of 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="2787">
                <text>1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2788">
                <text>Mott, Samuel J.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="195" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="431">
        <src>https://www.ssmp.mdocs.skidmore.edu/files/original/f7e0070ca85e9366f39b15f56b9e87fa.jpg</src>
        <authentication>039256cfce743162383615bfc247ce24</authentication>
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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="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="2828">
              <text>Anthony, Charles</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <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="2829">
              <text>State Reservation Commission</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="2830">
              <text>Dec. 1914</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="2831">
              <text>1914</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="2832">
              <text>January 1915</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="2833">
              <text>1915</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="2834">
              <text>This map is part of a three map series that the State Reservation Commission included in their 6th Annual Report to communicate what lands they had acquired for planning future park development and springs conservation. This map focuses on the downtown Broadway area of Saratoga Springs.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2835">
              <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="2836">
              <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="2837">
              <text>Color maps</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2838">
              <text>Property 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="2839">
              <text>Environment and Conservation</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2840">
              <text>Property and Development</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="2841">
              <text>Boston and Maine Railroad (B&amp;M Railroad)&#13;
Compass rose&#13;
Delaware and Hudson Railroad Corporation  (D &amp;H, R.R.)&#13;
Hudson Valley R.R. (N.Y.)</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="2842">
              <text>Columbian Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Congress Park (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Congress Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Emperor Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Hathorn Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
High Rock Park (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
High Rock Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Patterson Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Peerless Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Putnam Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Red Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Royal Spring (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)</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="2843">
              <text>Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Scale</name>
          <description>The scale of the item (if known)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2844">
              <text>200'= 1"</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="2845">
              <text>Deirdre Schiff</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2846">
              <text>3/9/2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="10">
          <name>Physical Dimensions</name>
          <description>The actual physical size of the original image</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3213">
              <text>37 x 67 cm.</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="2824">
                <text>Map of a part of Saratoga Springs made by the State Reservation Commission under the direction of the Consulting Engineer</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="2825">
                <text>1914</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="2826">
                <text>6th Annual State Reservation Commission Report</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2827">
                <text>Anthony, Charles&#13;
Ziegler, J.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="3212">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="196" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="432">
        <src>https://www.ssmp.mdocs.skidmore.edu/files/original/edee9102eb2a10690fc53e3cffcb505e.jpg</src>
        <authentication>f0b4d8158935ce34a506d36a4bfd7aeb</authentication>
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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="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="2851">
              <text>Anthony, Charles</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <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="2852">
              <text>State Reservation Commission</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="2853">
              <text>1915</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="2854">
              <text>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="2855">
              <text>January 1915</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="2856">
              <text>1915</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="2857">
              <text>This map is part of a three map series that the State Reservation Commission included in their 6th Annual Report to communicate what lands they had acquired for planning future park development and springs conservation. This map focuses on connection between the State Park and downtown.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2858">
              <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="2859">
              <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="2860">
              <text>Color maps</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="2861">
              <text>Railroad map</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="2862">
              <text>Environment and Conservation</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="2863">
              <text>Boston and Maine Railroad (B&amp;M Railroad)&#13;
Compass rose&#13;
Delaware and Hudson Railroad Corporation  (D &amp;H, R.R.)&#13;
Hudson Valley R.R. (N.Y.)&#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="2864">
              <text>Congress Park (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
High Rock Park (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Geyser Park (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)</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="2865">
              <text>Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Scale</name>
          <description>The scale of the item (if known)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2866">
              <text>1600'= 1"</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="2867">
              <text>Deirdre Schiff</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2868">
              <text>3/9/2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="10">
          <name>Physical Dimensions</name>
          <description>The actual physical size of the original image</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3211">
              <text>21 x 42 cm.</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="2847">
                <text>Map of a part of Saratoga Springs made by the State Reservation Commission under the direction of the Consulting Engineer</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="2848">
                <text>January 1915</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="2849">
                <text>6th Annual State Reservation Commission Report</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2850">
                <text>Anthony, Charles&#13;
Ziegler, J.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="197" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="433">
        <src>https://www.ssmp.mdocs.skidmore.edu/files/original/a8af1600f1e8966fd246ec8f1530a7a3.jpg</src>
        <authentication>8a5cfee6b16986599eb8bbd3524b8ecd</authentication>
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              <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>
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                <elementText elementTextId="5031">
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                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
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      <name>Map</name>
      <description>Cartographic document</description>
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          <name>Creator - Individual</name>
          <description>Name of the person or people responsible for creating the item.</description>
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              <text>Anthony, Charles</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <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="2875">
              <text>State Reservation Commission</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="2876">
              <text>1915</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="2877">
              <text>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="2878">
              <text>January 1915</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="2879">
              <text>1915</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="2880">
              <text>Bottom left: "Drawn by Ziegler, traced by Ziegler"</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="2881">
              <text>This map is part of a three map series that the State Reservation Commission included in their 6th Annual Report to communicate what lands they had acquired for planning future park development and springs conservation. This map focuses on the areas to become the State Park: Geyser and Lincoln Parks.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2882">
              <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="2883">
              <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="2884">
              <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="2885">
              <text>Environment and Conservation</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="2886">
              <text>Compass rose&#13;
Delaware and Hudson Railroad Corporation  (D &amp;H, R.R.)&#13;
Hudson Valley R.R. (N.Y.)</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="2887">
              <text>Geyser Lake (N.Y. : Lake)&#13;
Geyser Park (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Geyser Creek (Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)&#13;
Saratoga Springs (N.Y.)--Corporation Line</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="2888">
              <text>Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Scale</name>
          <description>The scale of the item (if known)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2889">
              <text>200'= 1"</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="2890">
              <text>Deirdre Schiff</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2891">
              <text>3/9/2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="10">
          <name>Physical Dimensions</name>
          <description>The actual physical size of the original image</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3214">
              <text>81 x 44 cm.</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="2870">
                <text>Map of Geyser and Lincoln Parks with Pine Promenades connecting made by the State Reservation Commission under the direction of the Consulting Engineer</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="2871">
                <text>January 1915</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="2872">
                <text>6th Annual State Reservation Commission Report</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2873">
                <text>Anthony, Charles&#13;
Ziegler, J.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="198" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="435">
        <src>https://www.ssmp.mdocs.skidmore.edu/files/original/9b74e0387c19896bcebae4625225da5d.jpg</src>
        <authentication>cd105cbe4017cb74e58f26480e347666</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <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="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="2916">
              <text>April 16, 1923</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="2917">
              <text>4/16/1923</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2918">
              <text>Saratoga County Historian's Office (Saratoga County, 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="2919">
              <text>Property</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="2920">
              <text>Plat 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="2921">
              <text>Property and Development</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="113">
          <name>Subject - Name</name>
          <description>Names of individuals associated with the item.  Last name first.&#13;
&#13;
For Maps: People represented on the map itself. In nearly every case, this field will be used when people are pictured on the map (several maps in this project are decorated with photographs or engravings in the margins). Use authorized versions of the name from the Library of Congress Name Authority File where possible.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2922">
              <text>Mott, Samuel J.&#13;
Ritchie</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Scale</name>
          <description>The scale of the item (if known)</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="2923">
              <text>1 inch to 50 feet</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="2924">
              <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="2925">
              <text>3/12/2015</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="2912">
                <text>Map of the Property of James Ritchie, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</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="2913">
                <text>1923</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2914">
                <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="2915">
                <text>Mott, Samuel J.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="199" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="436">
        <src>https://www.ssmp.mdocs.skidmore.edu/files/original/53722f8de31945ec7a7d5b51b537e2fb.jpg</src>
        <authentication>be8a4634f8c9850e18fad260f1fa1bdb</authentication>
      </file>
      <file fileId="505">
        <src>https://www.ssmp.mdocs.skidmore.edu/files/original/2d03b7704ed76d05f5c80c9774729559.jpg</src>
        <authentication>8fd04f63efe8af1a85e55cd7f961a7ea</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <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="3013">
              <text>Burrit, A. B., des.&#13;
Weber, N. M., del.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <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="3014">
              <text>National Recreation Association, New York</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="3015">
              <text>1945</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="3016">
              <text>August 1945</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="3017">
              <text>1945</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="3018">
              <text>This map depicts the proposed development of the West Side Neighborhood playground outside School No. 1. A range of sports and activities are included in the plans among them a wading pool, picnic area, and various sports fields and courts. Anticipated sports include tennis, croquet, sotfball, ice skating, badminton, shuffleboard,and football or soccer.  Other activities include handcrafts, tetherball, horseshoes and a sandbox.&#13;
&#13;
The legend best indicates the plans for the terrain. A note in the bottom left hand corner goes into greater detail for what should be included in recreation areas.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3019">
              <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="3020">
              <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="3021">
              <text>City Plan</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>
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&#13;
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                    <text>——
-

N W

YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1874.-REGATTA

tae excellent London correspondent of tbe New friend* stooa manrailv by them. Tb* weather was
aoreelf, fawtor taaa ever l
York Tribune, bad an ear ia either her or her com- again clear and warm; there was no wind aad
•f fast again at certain
paoion, the Undine. Tbe Harvard boat, tbe famous tbe lake was calm aad qaiet. Tb* banks were humaa could wen be, Tb* yaar
old Oneida, managed then, as ever sine*, to draw •live withspeetatoTs, and the irtend* of Yale mas- aa* bad seeded itav s x a . to oarer
liberally oa Bostoo's oldest families, for there were tered in notably greater numbers by far than were dwtane*, whu* bar rival, aa above.
a Curtis, a Paine, a D wight, a Li verm ore, a Wii- ever known before. For the first minute after tb* It la i s m 12**. it wa* now Admitted tast Taa
lard aad a Miles, ail Beaton mea or from tbe im- word the two boat* stayed well together, bat when had la privat* justified ta* benef thai Bar*,^
mediate vicinity. Little Idea had tbey then of tbe off the grand stand, some too feet ap tb* *hore, mast better that time, very fast a* it was. or TAMI
race we see to-day. The race was, as to-day, Yale sported aad drew away from ber antagonist, wooid win. Bat to* dtuen* of Woreestar bat
PLACE PBTJfCBTOW LAST.
Her light appearance, her brief experience, the straightaway, but not three mil**, only two, aad until shortly she was clear. No time was wasted tnrown open a set or races oa ttredaatday, tw* da*
numerous faults la her work, sad. more than all, Harvard won It by two lengths. Three years by either in getting to tbe stake, Yale r onded preeeaing tbe day of the C Diversity race, and lata*
tbe joao or more saeaeededor aeeraed toyes- •lapsed, and then, 00 the Connecticut at Spring- well ahead ana somewhat increased her lead oa* mr six oar* bad offered a tempting para*, *A]
down tbe homestretch, coming in an easy winner, person* from ta* Hudson, ail calhng thetaaattai
terdsy to cover tbe dlstaace, snd this wnen tbe field, came
beating her opponent by over loo yard*. Worces- Ward, though oa* was named really RayBsaa*.
THl BAtiB or 1858.
condition of the watar could not, at tbe outside,
bare made over sixty secoada difference, all point This time Yale challenged Harvard, and bad two ter has seen many a wild night, but few. and thought they would come over aad tab* i U , M
to this, for her, unwelcome, though not altogetn*r six-oars, the Nereid and the Nautilus, each longer especially of tbe wearers of the blue, will quickly that prise. Now was Yale's opportunity, for Bar.
unlooked-ior result. Then, a* to
than the eights already mentioned, each being just forget tae roar and dta that far Into that Friday— vard bad entered this rae* aad so would stow bar
forty feet aad nine inches. Ohio, and Tennessee, for this Thursday business ts an innovation of very hand. Well, so she did; for, with a bright, caa*
TBINTTT,
she is rough at best, and has been an along, aad Canada and the Bermuda Islands, hsd each a man recent date—made tbe old town howl while oat day and water calm aa a mirror, abe made waa
——
now this change of men so dangerously near tbe there. Harvard sent two rivals—an eight-oar, of sight and mind, in farmer Prentiss' house, the champion crew of the world a terrific rat* *a
crisis, added to her loss of part of tbe headway of forty feet long, and a four-oar, thirty-eight—tae away off by the lake, sat six sad morula, gloomy the way to tbe stake, at oa* time reemmg to ka**
Tbe Hapes, Hie Fears and the Prospect
every stroke by tbe scraping of her oar* oa the former called the Iris, tae latter the Y. Y. The and dejected.
actually gained a perceptible lead. Ta* War**,
THB TIDE TTTBNBD.
water on the recovery, a* I mentioned yesterday, race was from Springfield down river a mile aad a
turning jast ahead, came down with "irran
at the Last MomentTwice now bad the proud old red flag of Harvard alaiost on their stem ail tb* way, aad aaa
and her general lack of uniformity, make It likely half and back, and tn twenty-two minutes—excelthat, although her men are among the heaviest lent time, considering tbe ark tbey rowed in— to come down. Twice in a series of college re- in a winner ia 17m, totts* tbe fastest thai*
PBOFBSSIOSAI, TBAIKEBH
—
and probably strongest on the lake, they will Harvard came home the winner, beating the gattas which had helped maoh to keep ber name mil* time ia a turning race on reosrd,
are not allowed aay more. Well, an he goes ap
along with his old pupila and ooe of them bails turn hardly be better than eight in the counting off at Nereid two minutes, tbe Nautilus three, and her favorably before tbe public bad she come to know whila Harvard wa* but twelve aad * aav
own four-oar, the Y. 1L tbree seconds, after de- defeat—a new and palniul knowledge, one she be- secoada later. Whatever Yale might do waa
as "Fred.." it aomehow looks as 11 be gueased he tbe finish; and then
ducting the allowance of eleven seconds to tbe lieved in in tbe abstract; bat whea race day came 18m. 12X8., 17m. 53*. wa* clearly beyond her, •**
woald not count thl&lt;* one, Tbey have gone up to
•iiimaii
Snake Bill to the starting line, meaning to come Sympathy she has abundant—more widespread, oar. Harvard here, too, had some men worthy of around—well, sne woald like to wal* a year. faat a* tb* n o * of Friday promised to at a*
down on time; but it was getting into the even- perhaps, than any othter; for if a man Is going to note—Benjamin Crowngnshield and John Humans, However, something must he done. A crew waa there is little doubt that on that day tbe fa
ing, aad as tn*y eid not come I took the last stage do much rowing it ia hard to bare to prepare of Boston, and an Elliott and a Parkman, both got together and set at work, though there crews bota Harvard and Tale ever hsd turned i
for Saratoga Springs. But meanwhile there waa without any water to do it on, and then with a from savannah—while in the fonr Baltimore and was no terrible eagerness to join it. New rowing unless unforeseen accident occurred tbe for
abundant other interesting work going on ajl stroke oar so unquestionably strong and good, and Charleston each had au Erving, men whose boat* were built and used somewhat. A few of must win. The day drew on, cloudy and threatenaround. Dartmouth did not show, nor Cornell nor men who plainly cannot back him up, bat who all prowess is not yet forgotten, and in the bow sat the men did a fair winter's work and when they ing again, but just when the race was called it fan
Columbia; hot a little wnlle before the Wesleyan* seem to have done the best tbey could, why, yoa Alexander Agassis. This year, too, Mr. Smalley got their boat down in the spring managed to get dead calm Harvard drew the inside, aad
beaded for 8a**fea Hill a six had tcft the raft cannot help liking them and wishing tbey may stood judge for Yale. Yale's stroke is described as a fair pace on her. They worked along, learning got away at the Word. Tbey want op tb* Is
above them and preceded them up the lake. Half whip every crew save yoor own. Dartmouth and "convulsive and quick, W while Harvard «&gt;showed what they could of tbe enemy, doing whatever a prodigious rat*, but Harvard bad won tbe I
an hoar before these another stx-oared crew bad Cornell look too strong for her, and Dartmouth mnch more skill and coolness in handling the they thought woald help them make a good race, aad meant never to l*t It go. In 8m its, she
gone up and were waiUng lor the latter. The first has been going too fast with her short old fash- oars," A pair of silver-mounted black walnut though to win—so long was it since they hsd at the stake, and forty seconds later came her rival,
—»was tbe Presliman crew of Brown and the latter ioned forty-five stroke! and occasional fortyt-etght, scull*—rather an humble affair they would make' known what that word meant—seemed impos- Yale made the better tarn and gained a little,
nowadays—were the prise in 185a, and this year sible. The time drew near. The men of Yato Harvard mad* It up promptly
the
were going
Only One Fatal Accident and overHarvard University. Theyother words, to pail to make her defeat likely by either of the three it was a set or silk colors from the citizens of were coming up hilarious and triumphant tbe lake at forty -lour to the and swinging taa
minute gained
the coarse together; ta
to race already described. Still, if Williams succeeds la
over the whole three miles. Brown bad stripped putting any other boat behind tier's, save those of Springfield. The windi was light, the water and in unprecedented numbers to see their favor- seconds more, fin lab tag fifty secoada ahead, la fire
H o w It Occurred.
smooth and it rained some—a habit not ites score a third victory. Why? Well, she had won seconds better than Wednesday—namely, la lTm,
for it and their backs well upheld their name. Trinity and Princeton, it looks as if it wooid be
entirely forgotten on race days. In tbe evening the last two years ana of course woald this. Hav- 48*s. This was a great advance over the old
Harvard, perhaps, to drop a spare pound of beef,
DABTMOUTH'S.
—
kept on their "sweatera" or heavy flannel shirts. Her men hardly see tbe Importance of straight after the race three or the Y. Y. men and tbree of ing a different crew, that made no difference; she of 1855, and even the time of the fast crew* i
As they came along down in easy lead the cheery backs, and, though built broad and bony, like the those from the Iris rowed over the course in the was sore to win. Betting was all her way. in- tbe war wa* tar behind it. And it
call of their captain of "Now!" "now l" "nowI" Wards, they have yet to learn how to barely cover Yale boat, the Nereid, In 2lm. 458., or in 15 deed, to find a man anywhere aboat wearing a red marked improvement more than any other aa*
at the commencement of the stroke, mean- their blades and then haul like a locomotive. The seconds less than the winning boat, thus demon- ribbon was a task. Tbey had all stayed at home. cause that encouraged tb*
8EN0UI0 A CBBW TO EWOLAJTB
ing that was tbe time in which he wanted ague, too, gives one or two of them a shake, or did strating that the Yale men could not complain of Again rale bad the heavier crew and the lighter
boat, and as she shot out from nnder the little the following year. Aa accarate oompartsoa *r
the weight thrown on, could be beard almost a when up at home, and I hope be will courteously their boat.
causeway and drew up to the line it seemed as if the best time made by the fastest Oxford aad
Tki Gradoal tttiogn aod improTfiufnti in mile. The Brown boys were pulling with plenty of
O THE 28TH 0E MAT, 1858,
H
watt this time till after the race is over.
at Harvard's invitation, Yale, Brown and Trinity every male in Worcester connty was a Yale man, Cambridge crews with those of the oars mea at
pluck and energy. Por vicious jerkins try No. 4
Uiioi, Beats and Time.
CORNSLL
of tbia Brown crew, bat No. ft was doing some- is said to claim to be thirty per cent better than met Harvard at New Haven (Dartmouth and Co- so tumultuous was the welcome. Six almost sul. this country was, owing to the difference ia ear.
thing wrong, his left arm being crooked outward last year; bnt though If true this would have made lumbia, though invited, sot appearing), and fixed len looking fellows from Harvard soon showed rents, in number of men, In tbeir carrying a coxaa if he was afraid to use it, white the stroke oar her formidable for the front boats to-day, on a three mile race, allowing any kind of boats to alongside, and as the two boats took their posi- swain and oars not, a thing very difficult to mas*.
enter, giving twelve seconds per oar to tbe smaller tions the rain, which had been waiting for them,
much the fluster, tbe
T h e Rowing Association of was whittling off both ends of his stroke as it they &gt;et I neither think it is nor that there ones. Friday, July 23, was the time set for the race began to rail. They swung steadily away, Har- The English seemedbetween Putney and tour mile*
and three furlongs
Mortlake,
were not worth anything.
is much doubt that Columbia has im- and Springfield the place, bnt on the Saturday even- vard, perhaps, having a little tbe best or It
on the Thames, for instance, having been oae*
a .saw BOAT roa HARVARD.
American Colleges.
proved enough morti yet to keep her surely
at the send-off. At the grand stand it
Tbe new man of the Harvard crew is behaving ahead of her. King, [the stroke, ts a good man, tng previous, while the crew were practising on | was apparently an even thing, and ail the done in lam. 60s., while here three miles in ltav
better, and the old boat slid along quite well. audao is Ohtrom, bow; but the others are all new, the river, their boat was ran down by another craft betting was one way— $3,000 to $700 on Yale 40s. was the minimum, at which rate, if tbe pace
Speaking or tbe boat, a great surprise lias come and although large a«d strong and well off for I and overturned and the stroke oarsman, George finding no takers. So they swung off op the lake, couid be maintained, It would require 25m. at**.
E. Dunham, was drowaed. This melancholy
The discrepancy between their time aad oars
SARATOGA—SPRINGFiaD -WORCESTER. to-night. Tbe twist of whicn I told you in the Har- legs, there is a lack of tbe ease and dash which event—the only ratal accident, we believe, away beyond the point and out of sight. Ten min- great, aad though the swift tide* of the Tbi wa*
vard boat could do nothing bat barm in a race; so evidence long experience, and are usually, indeed, |
record—combined with the utes of suspense, and something is coming down. and the additional number of rowers in
on Friday last Biaikie, tbe English boat bail.ler to nearly always found with good work. They are in the whole
non-arrival or American college racing crews It is a crew ahead easily of another; bat which there—they having eight to our sir—w*r*
Harvard University, was telegraphed at Cambridge
T h e i r
GJoocl
and
I t a d inquiring, "Could he build a new boat and deliver training up rather thjau down, I hear, and will, if from Brown and friniiy, broke up the was which ? Somebody called oat Harvard, aad considered, yet the Harvard crew had done m
not No. 5 at the finish,ibe better rather than worse. race. No arrangement was made for another then the way one Ellhu Yale was Invoked lor tbe
well that it was concluded to try. So both
PoiutM
C'onipar«Ml.
her here oy to-night*" He said "Yes," and sis I
COLUMBIA
meeting
until Pebruary 23, 1859, when next few minutes waa a caution; but, like Mr. Oxford and Cambridge were challenged, and tb*
rode back from the lake this evening the has been as difficult to see tkis year as Yale waa
Baai of old, he did not respond worth a cent. His
passed me going dowu. bo outriggers were on last. Prom all accounts she has improved more delegates from Harvard, Yale, Trinity and Brown children came gradually home, the gap betweeo former, then the winning English crew oi that*
met at Providence, R. f., and decided to adopt
days—though Cambridge baa beaten her ever
her, but
looked like
within
Saratoga Likely to Pro?e the Anier- is tickhsa sherk, this relyingaougood one. Still it crews. twelve months than any other of all these substantially the plana of the preceding year. The them and the front boat being about 400 feet, since—accepted, oat Cambridge declined for a*
w
a new boat which
The three of hjr old men she keeps were
and the flags went back to Cambridge to an alcove
can be so little t,ned, and a boat, too, built in two probably the strongest three, and the new ones do place above was changed, and ou the afternoon of or old Harvard—about fit, by the way, to stow good alleged reason, a wholesome respect for tb*
lean I'utiioy to Mortlake.
the
American crew having seemingly a good deal too*
days, 1 should feel uneasy about to-morrow morn- their work so well thai no group here to-day talks
brooms in.
with it. Meanwhile some changes in tbe Harvard
2STH OF J0*T, 1859,
.
ing on this score, but they hope to try her and a»out the winners without mentioning Columbia
crew forced them to go without two of tbeir best
THE STBCGGI.B OF 188T.
will settle wuetber she will do, yet it is a comfott in pretty close connexion. Averaging heavier at Lake Quinslgamond, near Worcester, took place
Now it was Yal-j's turn to work, and, looking a men, thus weakening their chances materially.
to know that in a emergency a boat caa, if neces- than Yale, palling a stroke she learned not from the first college race oa that water, which has
since become so well known to all yonnger Ameri- whole year ahead, she went at it right manfully. But, nothing daun ted, tney pushed on, made ap *
sary, be turned out tn two days.
one of her own men, who went to England on pur.
THB GRAND dTAND BKADr.
pose, but from an English rowing man who was cans. This . year also ' marked a new era By greatly superior strength, with a wretched foar-oared crew, broke in a coxswain, set taetr
boat fully at work, and sailed for Europe. Reachin college boat racing, for now lor the I stroke, she bad beaten in 1805, bat tbe next year,
this
and
bold to show
The water
line for
I h e i r Colleges, Records, Weights, rowers. Busywas quiet to-day and ail about the over inthey countryseen took the muscular them first time were actual bona Me shell boats used when in size and weight her rivals were about a ing Putney on tbe 2lst of July they went at one* to
have
to
part
preparation goes on
tbe how,
shore. The grand stand has been erected on a of their work until tbey have got into in one of these contests, aad a great sensation they match, the detects of tbe stroke stood out glar- work learning tbe many treacherous eddies aad
Ages and Classes.
basis of earth underlaid with thick trees, and is fix. and, with the imported stroke, make i made among the oarsmen. Harvard had one, a &gt; ingly. And yet, in all the work of preparing for currents of the Thames. When Oxford arrived her
Very last
and keep ' slx-oar, built by McKay, of pine, 40 feet long and ! the conflict of 1867, when. If possible, she mnst win men seemed soft and less wiry than the Harvard,
held firm against tbe force of the water of the their boat travel
Jake by a strong bulkhead, lor the lower seat is just her going, too. Whether she can get out of the j about 26 inches wide, whit* nowadays they add 10 \ back the lost colors, she seemed to see no need of but tbey were bulky and hardy, and fitter to carry
above tbe beach aud 6,000 people will be there second trio into the first—lor no one has had tbe I feet to tbe length and reduce the width to 20 | any change of stroke. Relying on the fact that ail weight, whlie tbey bad ao new climate to increaa*
RULES OF
temerity to place her lower down—that seems tbe inches and even less, pretty narrow craft, one j but one or the winning Harvard crew of 1866 bad tneir risks. Hazard went to tb* score tn indifwhen the whole l&lt; tuti.
problem, though more than one man can be easily ! would think, in which to intrust six men. Yale ; graduated, instead of working, a« many men would ferent condition, and Oxford looking uncommonly
TBS COU.EGIAN'S 0iTHJgBTTTff'
It \% as bustling and fall of hurly burly here to- found who believes the first colors across the line • also had one 45 feet 5 inch** long, and from the I have done in like case, and leaving no stone on- weU.
THE FHf,
\AL PREPARATIONS.
THB ENGLISH- AMEBICAJf BACB.
night as I remember it ever being on the eve of to-morrow evening will! be blue and white inter- same builder. Harvard also entered a six-oared turned she took things moderateir, and when the
Soon after four o'clock on the afternoon of A*.
mingled, one thing is sure, that Columbia, Yale crew in the lapstreak Avon, and Brown made iter year's work waa done and the last practice pull
the great race and not two nights before at
SARATOGA Sraiwaa, Jul* 14, 1874
i maiden effort in another lapstreak, the Atalanta. finished, aud the crew In racing costume came out gust 27. in the presence or a vast mints lade of
Worcester or Springfield. \ale Is here tn great aud Harvard pull a stroke ia
To-nlgiu the Sniedung touches of the crewe are
! It is too bad that one of tbe pioneer colleges iu ; and took their position, two light men spectators, estimated by some at l.ooo.oooaat
force, and Harvard, notwithstanding the broken
1
M S RESPECT* QUITE SIMILAR;
OT
g*mg on, and Trinity has finished one of her
bow, almost
too light for upwards, they took tbe starting word promptly
bridge on the Albany road, is almost if not quite in other words, their various versions or that * these races has not of late years developed suffl. sat in the
men—her starboard stroke. Hooper—effectually.
** universally represented. The President looks stroke called *'the English,'' while Wesleyan does cient boating spirit to come and take ber chances I the wear and tear of three long, hot aud went away, Harvard fast and Oxiord slower.
What aUed him is easy to understand, lie did not
fat and comfortable and would make tough work Dot and does not pretend to. But then neither do again. The race was over the regular three ! miles, ana the enemy were rour ponnds heavier Tbe former was soon leading by a quarter of a
know oow to row. t*o ha captain sent him home
or the Kugii«h s-roke or it wontd with him In a the Wards, neither did IlenfortlCa crew or the mile track, or rather mile and a half out and re- ' per man. Still, weight is not the only element of length, then half, then drew clear and at one taa*
aad put ID tm place Mr. C. G. Bulkier, 1 believe, of
very few minu'es. Hall street and Broadway Thames men, and yet London, Cambridge turn. Harvard made the then best time or 19m, 18a, i victory. So Harvard thought, too, and she seemed in the first mile was actually a length and a half
L***a*n» N. U . oi the clan afUfn, and who weigh*
races are almost ai pientilul as at home. Old or Ox ord would hardly keep even with, beating Yale over 800 leet aad by exactly 60 seconds, i to think it so long be tore that she deemed it es- ahead. Instead oi, after the English fashion, going
aboat 140 pooud*. If the real ground 0 f excomoarsmen are here—Lyman, of the Harvard inter- much less beat either., ¥ale approached nearest the Avon by lm. 55s. and the Brown boat • sentia) to take that weight and work it, and she directly in front and sending back oa to tb* Oxmunicating Hooper waa (hat be did not know how
national four; Wilbur Bacon, or Yaie, and many the Oxford stroke I saw, in high and dignified pre- • by 5m. 22s. Tbe day was cloudy, and the gusty ! did it falthiully and sensibly, and now when she iord's bow the wash from forty strokes a minate,
to row, and there is tittle doubt of it, it would, if
lesser lights. The interest in the loot races Is cision ; but they do say that before they reach the , east wind blew the light Brown boat over toward j comes alongside unsparing praise awaits her, she drew sharply off to ber side sod from that moloailce were done all round, be risky for
beyond ait expectation, ana they are ireely and home mile they and this precision part company; the west bank, which accounts for ber having where the year before no man knew or cared for ment her antagonist began to overtake her aad
aotae other of Trinity'a men. They bare a very
) her-till the race was over. Robert M. Clark, of never after did she regain the opportunity at taat
kuiuly spoken of on all si&lt;ie-«.
but, for the matter of that, one man, for instance, been so far behind at the close.
bad aebtt of scraping the lower edge of the oar
ON TUESDAY, JffLT 24, 1860,
; Boston, perhaps the fastest gentleman sculler moment thrown away. At Hammersmith Bridg*.
Jl DiiKS FOB T K F O BACKS.
H OT
of the Harvards ia said to row better during the
along the water aa they reach out to recover. It'
At the meeting held this morning at the Grand first two miles than in the last one. In the matter at not far from five o'clock in the afternoon, Har- j America ever saw, stood on as referee. The day a mile and three-quarter* out, Harvard was
ran do no possible good, and really does mucci
i vard, Yale and Brown again met on the same ! broke squally, and fitful dashes of rain made good still leading, but not by much, and la Ma*
harm, for the friction alowa the progress very Union, P. i handler in the chair, H. W, Webb, Sec- 01 dash there is a deal of ease in Harvard's work,
retary, |he following judges were elected to while, thougn Cook, C Yale, has quite as much, his course. The preceding year both Yale and Brown water dubious. But suddenly, just iu tbe nick of than another minute tbey were aide by ltd*,
noticeably, apiaabea water and looks badly, A
I. tue more care in feathering high would soon re- officiate | t the loot races:—A. L. Devin, Harvard; men are, perhaps, a little behind him. The Wes- : carried coxswains, while Harvard did without, and time, the wind lulled, the waves dropped and the and the next minute Oxford showed in frost.
move the delect, but it la too lata now to hope tor 8.H, Oln e, Wesleyan; u. II. Speir, Coiumuia. and lerans look to me more litne and active I the same was true this year also. The boat of tbe two crews got away, both going fast. Harvard This was off Chiswick Eyot, or Island, tbe spot
Delancej Mcoii, Princeton. A tilth judge is to be than either the men or Yale or Harvard, I latter was 40 feet long and 27 inches wide, wmie already began to have the best of it. in ber stern where many a crew first in the first half were last
any change.
elected OIB Cornell at the next meeting, ihe the latter being something new lor her—a trifle Yale's was eight feet longer and four inches nar- sat one of the most remarkable oarsmen that Har- in the last. In less than two minutes the Bhgiat
TBI LAST IX THE BACB,
for men interested in that end of the race entries ic the loot races to the present time are heavy this year—and their 17m. 24s., tneir fast rower. Brown, eager to beat a light boat, suc- vard ever knew. Never a powerful man, boat drew clear and passed Barnes' Bridge, half s
there M much lively talk as to whether taese:—Ohe mile running race—8. A. Reed, Colum- private time, is saiu to need an addition of twenty- ceeded, but she weighed only 120 pounds, and when in his best condition be could go mile or more from the end, three lengths aae**.
Trinity or Prmeetoa will snateh away irom bia; K. Copeiaud, Cornell; David Paton, Princeton; flve or more seconds in order to make it correct, shipped so much water as to throw her out of the like a greyhound. Bat be was capricious, At Hammersmith Bridge the strongest man at
Williams the honor wruca abe right fully J. U. Vandcventer, Princeton; E. T. Hernck, Har- as ta*ff stopped a little short of the finish line. If race. Harvard went away hard at the start, took and this would, to the dismay of his Mends, eitner boat, number threa of the Harvard, gar*
a decided lead over Yaat, while the latter crop out at just tbe ugliest of all moments- out, and the stroke, then overstrained and ex• a n e w last
year
of
coming
in last. vard; A. B. Ellis, Harvard; K. B. Curtis, Harvard; tins be true, then, m private practice
was
equally polite
to Brown. In this those right before a race—and his poor crew hausted, did bis au and did lT gamely, bat to at'
J'nuoeton works more smoothly than Trinity C. M. Marsh, Wesleyan. The 100 yards running
TALB HAS GofciE THK FA3TBST,
order they
went
away to
the
stake,- would have to lug him where often be, in other good end. Far a* Oxiord was ahead at Barnes', si
race—A. L. Rieves, Harvard; H. C. Beach, Princebat aaa not the power, though. 1 think, unless
but not much, for Harvard was within ten seconds
Trinity eaa go much faster than she looked to this ton; David Paton, Princeton; R. w. Van of her. 11 not five; but again, Harvard had up to rounded, and Harvard now lor a fourth time came moods, would have been doing more than his sixth. j the actual finish at Mortlake she led by bnt half a
home the wiuner in the good time of ism. 53s., One of the first freshmen, if not tbe very first, that three quarters of a length clear, thongs
Colombia; E. H. Hemes, Harafternoon, Princeton will probably beat her. and Boskerck,
last nixht a marvel of aquatic handiwork—a new Yale taking 19m. 5s. and Brown 2lm. 15s. Both Harvard ever let sit in a university crew, and that ! a boat with a man aad woman ta M
vard; H. C. Leeds, Harvard; J. Martinez,
Wuuam* neat them bot«. Princeton, by the way,
boat, bunt between Prulay night of last week and this year and the one before Harvard's stroke in i860, now he was rowing stroke, and so be was | had gotten across Oxiord's track, caasiaf
went apparently over the course and her time waa Columbia; G. C. Webb, Yale; J. W. Whituey,
Monday night of this. These craft are oarsman was tue lamoos Caspar Crowninsbield; the next year, and in 1869 went out to Europe I her to fail off. It was a race that did oota
'taxen aa about Situ. 10*.. allowing say a minute lor Wesleyan. Three uuie running race—r. J. Good
t h e rlppie on the water Her performance has win, Columbia; E. L. Phillips, Cornell; A lien Mar- 60 frail that it usually takes about a while, a singular coincidence, on the day following stroke and captain of the most famous amateur | sides mnch credit, and tbe vanquished especllBry
to
get
fuite
at
home
in there rowed in the single scull race the man who fouroared crew this country, if not any other, ever : had it most generously awarded them for tbe bard
bardly filled with consternation the hearts of the quand, Princeton; A. B. N'evm, Yale; J. W. Whit- week
them, but if Harvard's caen can before bedtime to- was afterwards to becom* Yale's most distin- saw. This time he was all right, and all the way np | fight they had made against long odds, their owa
asucy Waatoyans or the afi*h Creek boating men of ney, Wesleyan; E. H, Herrick, Harvard. Seven
night get tbe hang or her to their liking, and she guished, and most deservedly distinguished, oars- that lake, nnder the welcome shade of oid Wigwam, lack of condition being the longest or alL If their
;x*Ja It wa* »ery
mile walking match—J. H. southard, Cornell; &amp;
is all right, I should say that their chance or win- man, the man who taught her after incessant and and on, ou to the stake, he and bis crew walked 1 rivals would come over here, go through ta* Best
H. Unbbeii, Williams; P. T. Thompson, Columbia;
LITELT ON TBI LAIk,
ning was good, lor a new boat has not yet had
and whlie moat of the speculators were off at the J. B. Eustis, Wesleyan; H. C. Heermans, Wesleyan; time to soak up the fifteen or twenty pounds of disheartening deieat how at last to win. During away from their antagonists, already tired and j of an American summer snd try conclusions tobail match the crews were ou;, as they oogh; to O. C. Griswold. Colombia; C. Eager, Dartmouth; water which all shells manage to absorb after a the next three years the terrible civil war en- faint, straggling along with a stroke lacking reaeb, morrow with the winner or to-day's race it wouMl
"a*, rr tae* ton, as w* have said, pulled T. u. Lee, Princeton. If the day is fine it will be a very little while, and they float somehow very grossed all tnoughrs, and these friendly naval bat- lacking length, lacking vim through the water, ! help them to a fairer conclusion a* to the difficulindeed almost everything that ia sure to be found ties Harvard had to encounter. Coming so elo**
down from su*xe 11 kit on time. Tale was beautiful sight to witness an these fresh, bale lightly. For a sharp dash at the send off 1 rather tles were deferred until towards Its close.
in the stroke which knows bow to win. Harvard to winning and under such odds told among ta*
AFTER THB WAR,
dodging about here and there, now pulling young fellows stripped and hard at it; and nothing expect to
else this week, *ave the University boat race, bein response to a challenge from Yale, Harvard is around aud off before her rivals even get to the I rowing men ail over this land and boat
• tttu* ptaoo, than stopping and a few
BEAR PROlt WESLBYAX,
W. u.
woraw trots Cook wooid Skip along over the water, gins to promise to equal it in interest.
again came forward, and on the afternoon of Pri- stake, and so she goes away down the lake, ' sprung up In many a place which had never I
while Harvard, who go{ the best of the lead last day, July 29, 1864, on the same Worcester course, i widening the gap every second. She pulls every : seen a wherry. In practical boating knowledge
and then off they would go aaaio. They certainty
year at Springfield, may again be at her old tricks. met a fair and complete defeat at the stroke; she palls until, swinging in across the 1 Harvard learned many a valuable point, not tb*
are getting their head* back better every day aad
I heard Curtis, the famohs amateur single sculler,
THE EVE OF BATTLE.
row tag note as uxlord used to. One of their namhands of her plucky rivaj, the latter covet- I line, she completes tbe distance in 18m. i2^s., the least among which, for instance, being the faat
say that he had, I think this season, practised over
0
that some one outside of the crew should do ta*
nor (So. *) encases bis head In a white handkering the distance in 19m. is. to Harvard's 19m. 43s. j
FASTEST AMATKIB TIMS
1,000 starts. There he has the secret or avoidance of
SARATOGA SPBINGS, July 15, 1874.
eiuoi. aad aa the others do not wear one you ran
Harvard had the larger and really a very power- then on record. And where is her rival r A whole ; poaching, not the busy bow oarsman. Indeed,
Ever at*** day broke there has been a hum and flurry in the beginning ofa boat race, and of almost fa] crew, and lor this unwelcome result had no ' ruinu.e and eleven seconds behind, a matter of her old time rival, Yale, thought she had gotten •»
auagle him out from afar. Cook pulla his oar
Bneiy throogh the water, and has much dasn In his butx of voices almost all over Saratoga that tells everything eL*e lor that matter. I rather incline one to blame but herself. Proper coaching and twenty-five boat lengths, or 1,000 feet, more or much good that she too most needs ssad
work. There i* ao man in the boat whose work is ef aome unwonted excitement now close at band. to the notion that part of Sinzer's errand up the training might not have made her win; but they ! less. Now at last both crews had emits worthy of a man to England, and, as Is well known, tin*
were fanlty. Little bad points are acmttered here The enormous bote:* are packed to overflowing course last evening with the Wesleyans was to could have narrowed the gap between her and ber the name of raceboats. Hickey had built Yale's same Mr. Cook, who to-day sets her stroke,
«ad there, but taken aa a whole they row undeni- and transferring guest* by the hundred to tbe practise them on a few starts, bnt It is rather late conqueror, and they should have. One of tbe ! 49 feet long and 22 inches wide, while Harvard's, ' picked up many a wrinkle from that paaaloaat*
man? and unusually roomy and couiiortabir board- m the day to begin now,"though they are uearty all defeated crew was without mncn doubt the j
ably well aad the boat just spins along over the
irom Elliott, was 53 feet by 20 inches. Her '66 . devotee to amateur rowing—Captain Colston, at
water. A* they never rise above thirty -four ing booses with which this respectable old water- at it.
! the London Rowing Club. Meanwhile, while Barstrongest man who ever rowed in a Harvard boat.
it there U a great surpfise in 9tor* tor us to-mor- Tue boats had now lengthened out to 48 crew had the narrowest boat of her length ever j vard'a chosen sons were striving for laurels aero**
strokes a minute the boat has more time to travel ing place abounds. Tbe crowd exceeds all expectl
seen on our waters, being 57 feet long—longer
between strokes, so that the mataace between the tkuous, the local press saying that yesterdays row tu the matter of bril |antly improving her rank and 49 leet and bad narrowed "to 21 Indies. '
the seas, the men she left behind were not idle.
1
a win* thrown off from the ears is greater than it botel registers ihow the longest list of arrivals on as placed above 1 should think it would come from McKay still built for Yale, but Harvard now than many English eights, such as Oxford and • Now that the best of the enemy were out of taa
a*ed to be la the old days of lorty-oda to the mln- record for one day in Saratoga, and estimate places Columbia. My other two* enigmas are Dartmouth tried Elliott. As in i860 the weather was bright Cambridge use between Putney and Mortlake— way Yale could afford to be magnanimous In
at*. f a s time she takes to pass yon aad got away the number of strangers here at i;&gt;,000. Over at Con- snd Cornell. Should either crowd up into the front and tbe water smooth, so that it will be seen that and but 19 inches wide. But she was heavy and
THB HOME BACB O* 1860.
down to Moon's seem* hardly a annate, and yet gress Hall half an hour ago. the Yale men, packing ranks it would be more remarkable than ii Colum- the time of the winning crew was not so good aa unwieldy, and the '67 men used her to practise
in, disrespectfully calling her the '-old elephant.' I It had been tbe custom to confine the crew* to ta*
l b * dutance would make a bole in bail a aiile. tae great ptaasa aad the broad sidewalk in front, bia did. The bolter irotfi the rear guard, if there that of the lormer year. Thai victory wrought up j
THE CNrVERSITT CBEWS O 1868.
R
; undergraduate department*, In other words, I*
looked Uke an army, and blue ribbon was there be one, will, I judge, be Williams; but, aside fiom
A«&lt;n*lly taa
[ \ \
an interest among the Yale men in boating the
And now Yale, saving twice sofl'ered defeat, ' tbe colleges only, thus barring oat, for tantaaea,
by the mile. Every train brings large reinforce- touls and accidents, 1 should think her getting
TAL* ntlTBgSITT CBBW
like of which was never before known. Her vic- seemed fast getting back into her own ways. ; the students of divinity, law, meiicin* sad
do sat look aa largo aa tieir own Freshmen, bat ments, snd the despatches say that Albany is Into the first three a simple impossibility.
torious crew changed but oae man, and all the [ What would she do in tbe coming season, tbe sum- | science, aad so actually making tbe term 'univerAt all events, if the weather to-morrow is nearly coming winter and soring worked with tireless '
then ta* Presamen are a noticeably burly set aad coming ap several thousand strong. Every item
sity" in tbeir case a misnomer. But now Hirvar**
star* taa plumpness on* may have at nineteen, about tae crews is snatched up as if it were a dia- as tavorvble as it is to-day there will be, thanks to energy. In the whole annals of American aquatics. ! mer of 1868r Let it be noted here to her credit asked the trifling favor that she b« permttt**, a*
that in all her dark days—first waen she knew not
mond. The ball matches are well enoata, aad yoa the gathering of several pugn crews and thanks
but witaoat ta* tougaaeas; that you must wait
probably, no other crew ever improved in phy* I
her strong men were away, to take one mm from
you are twenty-tare*, ir Yale caa row may see those any day; oat a great boat race comes almost eqosiiy to the suaerb enterprise aad liber- siqae faster, if as fast, as this same '64 crew what victory was, and afterwards, when it seemed the law school, "Certainly," said Yale, tbiakaaf
to have wholly deserted her snd gone forever,
bat once a j ear.
ality of the people of Saratoga, as represented by or Yale. They bad an exacting captain, who had !
back aad legstroke an oiw the
that now, at least, she wooid be even, aad
their association, a magaiflcent race, and one, ia led them to ooe victory, and who worked with all when she was pot to a test more severe even than one man could do no barm.
• wu: stand a good chance oi winning,
aaaMM AT THE LAST HOIR.
She
tbe nine long gloomy years between I860 and 1870
bat la bosd one"* self up so high aad sua* most be no
Sudden changes are making to the crews. As 1 many ways, far outstripping any that has gone be- tae might of a resolute, determined man to bring when Cambridge every time had to succumb to moreover, four or ber best mea from tb*
t u a y a a a a o t afternoon, after yoa have done it wrote tou jesterday, Hooper, No. 4 oi Trinity.
them to another. Rowing weights had gradually Oxford, for then Cambridge had from bygone year* year's crew and two tough new one**
s rer two whole mile*. faatr boat seemed to bold give* way to Bulkley. and now WiiiiauH is uni rept into the gymnasium, training was not con- i a record bat part of the time, Yale could not boast two of the four had been oa two university
ts*ai aa eaauy aad to rid* ©v*r t i e water rather easy and unseating Norton or the bow—a very
fined to four weeks of the year, but spread over this—let it be noted that she never said "back and one had beea oa three, this making!
THE F1KSI COLLEGE RACE.
tsaa taronga n. Tb* man ta tae boat whom yoa hazardous experiment at ibis tat* boar, and
tmy-two, aud the men at last were fitted out with down." Faults she might have, did have, but giving by tbe way, probably tb* only
wui aetata oo?**taaauy a M a i ©at of awiag ta So. j , shutiBf WasBtmrne ironi Ka. 4 to bow. aod ia No.
On a clear, warm August afternoon ia 1852, two boats and oars which were good lor something. ! up in despair, as three colleges seem to have done rowed tour years running in aa American aa*and it ta net asaea. jooa Elgin told aae 4's place putting Hubbeil.
Bines below ihe little village of Centre Harbor, oa They knew, too, that the enemy was weak, or at | this year, was certainly not one of them. She went versify crew. So she could afford to be geoero**.
t at h* did not Oke tbeir rowag, o a t tb*n he pats
Ta* latter u said to be six feet sad an in -h ta perhaps the prettiest Utile lake in New England, least light, for the last Harvard crew—the heaviest j home, kept three of tbe best of ner old crew, and Mr. Hay cam* into tae Harvard boat, a*a a*
i • btade ta sun ta be OM way. aad has noae of height, weighing IH pounds, aad tae improved
Harvard ever bad—was broken up. So, when oa added tbe famous '-Maine lumberman" and did his work so well that at oae*, after tb* r***»
tat* "extra
J«ow ever on tae west speed of ta* boat shows that the change is sp- • certainly in New Hampshire, there lay tbree boats the afternoon of the 28th day of
two others, and again gamely buckled dowu be went to England, reaching there in tta* ' * row
a utue
Meeaa. ahoou oat from a raft parently a wise oae, making all Williams hopeful. in ;ine. Barges they were called then, and unJCXT, 1864,
to it, if possible, to wipe out the unpleasant rec- bow in the international fonr against uxiora. fapretty well aader water a raaae aix- Bobbeli is also eatered for the sevea-mlle walking doubtedly would be now, being each some three
feet oeam, tbe shortest thirty ana the longest less both crews backed ap to tb* line, ready for tbe ollection* of the last two years. Dennis Leary, j deed, there were other well knowa name* i s tat*
eared oatrtggtr, •very ataa la it browa as
same stay-at-home six—Orinnell Willi*, a aaaaf
match of Friday, aad is doabtieas ia good condiTatre are ta* two teuow* I *aw yemrday swing tion. 1 think Williams believe* Uat abe is going than lorty test ia iengta.t Two haded from Yale start, it needed no great discernment, barring one of the famous professional crew of the Big- tne author, aad an excelleat oar: Fraaci* a
a oaf tae road tn tbeir oeaaeia, bareheaded aad to make sare wore of Princeton, aaa almost College, one from Harvard, and each was manned loots and accidents, to fix opoa the victors. Yale has, was called in as trainer. The work was gone Lyman, who also weat to gflgtaad. pulhat l a a
wiib tbeir atoeves roiled UJL Among thest a one equally sure of Triattj, while she is aching to show by a crew of eight and a coxswain. At the helm of was heavier by sixteen pound* a man, yet rowed at now in a way that began to look dangerous for ! over there, and Toeopaiios Parsons, a near rela©. tb* teat beat » e « oa tbai lake shore, and a* that either Dartmouth or Cornea may also have to tbe Yale barge, Halcyoaj sat Richard Waite, of in the lighter boat. Both crews were in good con- ber elated rival, snd when she came up to the race tive sad uameaake ot a maa to whom all i*»y«*s,
Toledo, * son, we aoppose, of the Captaio of the dition, save that one Harvard man was slightly tnere was a confidence so wideapread that many a at least, need no introduction, and a man. a •**/
auadf at tae boat a* yoa woald wtab to see *
give way; tor, as tbe feeling goes here, the
eigtn who now sits, not oa eight benches, bat one, indisposed, snd among the iaends of both party blue nbooa which bad not been seen at Worcester be added in passing. w*o took a keen int*re*»
M JT taa beat
CLCSTBBS Ot TBS MOBfcOW
and that tb* supreme beach of the Halted States, leeliog was intense. The Harvard crew looked, since 'OS waa aired again. Bat two days before la an tbt* boating aad aspeoiaUy ia taa
w&gt; r a t
villba tbree-the first buneb boldtag Wesleraa, It has been rumored too, though the records are and really were, overmatched, but tbey had as a tbe race tnere came a damper that ia tbe mind* of j4a«iis* raoe, Voir 0 last X**t
aYM. taat ts Eu.ua. tbeir cisrery strobe, Be is bat Yale iad Harvard; tbe second CeiauAbia, Cora-u exceedingly imperfect, 1 kai Geotge w. Saaauejj ciaa* crew beea fast tbe year uefore, and tneir au calm a e a - r e r y fajt a* rate iiaa »practice, j
L
*

The Great Contest at
Saratoga To-Day.
•

WHO WILL BE VICTORS?

• netgut, yet a* ha*
tae sassadJd round maseie* of tbe geaUeraea yoa
oftea see la autoary gaUertas, very ttgtitly clad,
aad ail poised to threw ta* euaett*. A* tbey tare
their ship aboat aad auks off past my host and
ap tn* lake Eosua aods pleaaantly, aad a* be **w
I waa stadylag hi* stroke, remarks, "How I* this
for ftfcgasbr" w**U. I bar* see* Engiuhmea do
aeverai kiad* of row*ag. bat I aaonid aa/ 11 was
more like Reaforth's than Colston's, aad more tike
tae old Barvaro «roke of ta* past few years thsa
either. l*de*d, tax* probably auggeaU where he
learned it,
"Boys, going ap, BOW, dip light: keep ner right
OB nor keei," be cried oat, as abe passed Ramsmil's Point and made off up the lake. Bat what
Is tbia a little way off on the right? A stagle acall
eheli. It has shot oat, almost unobserved, as I was
looking at the others. It goes along with.the
crew, keeping at an easy distance. The dark,
tough, wiry man, neatly clad in white boating eostnnie and swinging her ligbtly along is Fred
Sinxer, Wesleyan*' trainer last y*ar. Bat what is
a* doing here aowf lor

aad Dartmouth, sod tbe last winiaaia. Trinity aad
Princeton. Guesswork merely, 1 am aware: but
tae gaeares of those who bare been 03 tbe ground
for days, aad wstcblng, many of them, with a
pocket earnestness, at worts more than those at a
distance, unable tojadge at alL tbe order la tbe
grouping, sapposlag; tbe division l* correct, is
some what ton*:—

PIETIOLS HTERC OLLEGIATE RACES

Comprehensive Review of Fast
Straggles and Triumphs.

THE FIBST BARGE AND SHELL.

FAMOUS STROKE OARSMEN.

THE

C R E W S OF

'74.

,r

I

I

EDITION.

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t a t A e etuaeae ef Worcester ha*

tarewa open a set of races oa Wsdasadar, twe -Tajm
preewotag the day a .'the Uolveraitr race, e a d t a t a *
»dered a temptiag i
odeon, ail ea
ward. taoagt oaef v a t tamed ready
thought they "oasf ooaser over and
siem
test arise Kow v i a tale's opporteaity tor Bar.
•anl aad entered tela race aad aa would
head. Veil, so at* did, for. Vila a bright,
day aad water c a u s a e a mirror.
tbe eeaatpioo erewi tae world a teniae
the way to tew stag at on* time •eeming to
reepttbie lead. Tae
actually gained a
turning jest abaaa caste dowa with
um Mt' oa tbetr a ra all tae way, aad
ta a wiaaer la lie L «f'!«a&gt;. t&amp;e mates*
trtlte time la a turning, raee aw
wnde harvard wag bat twelve aad
seconds later. whatever Tale mlcbt da
tf aarai
Ha*. uj%a. iTse, taaTwas etearty beyond her,
r**t as tae race o f rriday proaueed ta
there i* little doabajtaat on taat day tae
&lt; re wa bota Harvard |jnd Tale ever had turned &lt;
ur.iew uaforeaeea afcideat occurred the fortear
ruuit wta. THe day drew on, cloudy aad tareeteev
iof again, bat just A a a tae raae was called it M i
dead calm. Harvard]drew the inside, aad
got away at the woti. Thar went op tae n
a prodigious rata, t # t Harvard had woa tae lead
aad meant never tof * it go. ta tat. Ua» she wan
at the stake, and fondl aaoonda later came her rivet
Taie made tbe battel torn aad galaed a little, nan
Harvard made It ap$romptir and swinging anwm
the take at forty-iu£ ta the minute galaed tan
seconds mora, flniaajag t/ty aaeoede ahead, la t e a
eeooade better than "Wednesday—namely, la ITm.
m . a This was a grist advance over the old
ot is&amp;\ and even the* time of the fast crews i
tae war was tar LyMud iw And it waa .
marked improvemedf mora than any ether ana
oaaae taat encouraged tae
HXMDtMa i j a s v ro twoxAjrn
the following year. U s aecuxata oompaneea a t
tbe beat time nvadethy the fastest oxiord aad
Cambridge crews with those of tae earsmea of
this onotry was. owfng to the difference ta earrente, m number of (.en, la their carrying a coxswain and oars not. (thing very difficult ta i
I Tbe English seemed (!ich the mater, the four _
and three furlongs bdFween Putney and Mortiake,
oa the Thames, for .instance, having bees nana
• done In lam. ton., wf He here three mllee la list.
•o* waa the mittimtwn, at which rate, if tbe paoa
j could oa maintained^ it would require Aim. t i n e .
; The discrepancy be; ween tueir time aad ours waa
i greet, aad though t^e swift tides of the Thankee
and the additional nam ber of ruwers in a beak
tbere-taey h a v . n g j eight to oar six—warn
I considered, yet the "dlarvard crew had done aa
t well that it waa danciuded ta try. So botit
Oxford aad i'ambridee were challenged, aad the
former, trtea the wtfmng English erew ot
dara-thougti Cataoftdge ti ta beatea bar
am ©e--accepted, out AainsrHge declined for aa
good alleged reason, f wholesome raspeet lor taa
" American crew bavtag »eemingty a good desi t a d *
HWH
Meanwhile afiiie changes la the Harvard
• TCW forced them to w&gt; without two of their beak
mea, thus weakening their caanoea matertany.
But, nothing daonted^taer poshed oa, made ap a
lour-oared crew, b n ^ e in a coxswala, set taetr
buat fully at wort, and aailed for Kuropa. Reaoalag futney on the llstaf July they Went at once aa
wurt learning tbe many treacherous eddies aad
currents of the Thamea. When Oxford arrived her
men seemed soft and leas wiry thaa the Harvard.
out ibey were hulty and nard.r, aad f tter to carry
weight, wnue toey had ao new climate to increase
taetr rtaha. Havard went to the score ta tadtfrerent toudtuon, and Oxford luotlag aooommoaly
well.

THE titOLisii-iMaatcajf a*ca
sxofc.ver lour o'cUx-k oa the aftern t&gt;n of A.aghn n, ra tbe poV*4boe of a vast rnuiutadeef
s,&gt; cutura, estiinataif by tome at l. »oo,ooa aad
upwards, they it&gt;t&gt;t 'the t u n i n g word promptly
an I wenl away. Ilaraard fast and Uxiord alowar."
Toe furmer was SOOF leading by a quarter of a
length, men half, then drew clear and at one tana
loinf iir»t tune wee Actually a length and a half
ahead. Instead oi, aftf r the Kngiiah fashion, going
direct f in Hunt tindReading back oa to the Oxlurd'* bow the wash mm forty strokes a mlnwta,
aha drew •harpiy off to her aide aad from that memeut her aiitegfinist pagan to overtake her aad
never after di»l she regain the opportunity at that
mumeut thrown away^ at Hammersmith Bridge,
a mile and three Hjulrters out. Harvard
•till leading. Out nof by much, and In
than another in mute s they were side by
i
I
and tbe next minute "Oxford showed la front.
ihia «*« o f CamwesMKyot, M Island, tbe
where many a crew flr|t in the first half were 1
la the i**t. la leas thai two minutes the EngUai
boat drew clear and parted games' Bridge, half a
mile or m&lt;&gt;re from the wad, three lengths ahead,
at Hammersmith Bridge the strongest man in
eitner boat, n urn tier fires of the Harvard, gave
out, and tbe stroke, then overstrained aad ens
haaated. d.d his all and|iid it gamely, bat (e ne*
goad end. I'nr aa Oxioen waa ahead at Baraee', at
tbe actual drnan at XiotUnte she led by bat half ta
turee qu.tt t e n of | length clear, ihoagh
a boat with a nidu aad woman M If
»
had anttea across j»x ord's track, cawHaa
her M M off. It "€)• a race that did ooti
aides much credit, a a l ihe vanquished especially
bad it iu* *t geaeroualyswarded them TOT the hard
fight they bad made t d i n i i long odds, their owa
tact of condition betngAhe longest or all. If taetr
rivals would come overnere. go through tea i
of an .\ men tan •ummlr and trr conclusions
morrow with the wmna|©t to-day's race it
help them to a fa.rer conclusion as to the dliBoatti.« Harvard aad wenjoaater. Coming socle
to wtuutng and unJer ancn odds told among
rowing mea ail over ?ma laud and boat clans
sprung up in many a p ^ e which bad awvwf eve*
seen a wherry, la practical uniting kaowled#»
Harvard .earned many'a valuable point, not
least a!uong which, fbi instance, being the
f s t wnw oae outside if' the rrew should dot
fs. aching, not the bus) oow oarsman.
her otd Jme rival, Yale,poeght she had gvttea aa
much good that she y a must needs a and
a man to Kng:aad. aodT as u well known,
M.nt .Mr. Cook, who .today sets her
atcked upr* many a wnalje from that
devotee 10 amateur roWOng—Oeptata Qalstoa, m
the London Rowing Cla^jj Meanwhile, while Harvard's chosen aoas were Striving for laurels i
the seaa, ibe-meu she lew behind were net
\ w thai :h«? i»est of ihe-gaemy wart' oat ef
way u . c could afford to be magaaeinvoea la
rax aoas agca or 1MB.
i: had r»eeu tbe custom ta eonnne tae crewete i
undergraduate d.»p»rtmai»ta, in other words, B»
tae coirfges only, thus n r n a g oat. for taataaee*
BM atudeaia of divmnj. law. me ticlae
science, and ao actually oylking the term
»iij" in tuetr case a misnomer. But now Harvard
a-ked the trtfliag favor thill she be permitt
her strong mea were away, to take one I
tae law school. "Certainly," said Tale,
that now, at least, sue wan&gt;J be evee, aad
one man cou.d -do e o harm.
SJie
uonoTtr. lour or ner ieat mea froea tae
vear's crew aad two pouga aew ooea,
t*o of toe four ha*i beea da two aaiversity ere*
and oae had oeea oa three, this making an
by the way, grobaoiy tkV only
sawed tour years raaataj ta aa
verity crew. i*o she couaf afford to Be
and Mr. May came into Lhe Harvard boat, and aa
JMf at* work so wed that at once, after the raee,
he went to Kagaud. reaclfiag there ta u c
&gt; raw
bow in tae international *t &lt;ar against uxiord. Indeed, taere were otaer w « j known aaaaea ta tank
same »iay-ai-aome «x—spinnetl WdMsv a awned
the author, aad aa exjLJ*»«* bar : rrnacaa ta,
L'yman. wao alao went •efkngtaad. g u u a * Ha. B
over there, aad Teeoanuat raraoaa, a aear retauve aad aameaake ef a a d * to whom all tawyewaV
u
at least, aeed ae latroducpon. and a
be added ta naearag. wf» took
in ail taat aenttag a^d aapeoaUi la
Kagiken race, Now M W&lt; l a w

f

V

B 1W YORK HfSRALl), THURSDAT, /UET 16^ 1874-REGATTA SDITIOV.
T5

rsr loo?' SH^A-^^^5i?fcSe^?

take place aear a city, wnere friends can be cared
for, prortatoBB Bad and t i e many namerona wanfM
of uumerooe people need to comiortame living
rightly looked after. Tae six contending coliegea
were Amherst, Harvard, tae Agricultural*, Bowdoin, Williams aad Tate—for It waa hard work
staying away; while in the Preahman Race another
stranger—Wesieyan— put In her maiaen appear*
aooe. Brown, too, and Tale aad Amherst keeping
her company. And now yet another surprise wag
in store for all people interested in good rowing.
For not oaly waa tbe very fast time or the last
year—raster than will be made to-day—fairly
beaten, but tae crew that did the beating paid
no allegiance to Eiiha Yale or John Harvard, nor waa It yet Agricultural, bat front
an institution in the tame • town ta toe
winch
has given
latter, and one, too,
oa one of tbe moat renowned of American
divines—Henry Waru Beecher—old Amherst. SiXteen mtnutes and thirty-two seoonds, fourteen and
a half seconds better than the rapid work of 18T1,
waa the official time announced at the close, while
Harvard made a fair seaond In 18m. 6?a; th«
Aggies were third in ITm. lfla, Bowdoin fourth in
17m. 31a, Wilbams next in ITm. 69a., and Yale,
evidently rusty after her long pouting spell, aixta
in 18m. ska.
r m mmtrxa ow 1873.
Now these races were beginning to assume If no*
unwieldy at least lonnidabte proportions, and
many thought that In point of nombers the climax
was already reached. But they were wrong again,
for, many as there seemed in 1872, when tbe entries
of 1873 were closed and counted over there were,
instead of six, almost twice six. New Hampshire
had contributed her sturdy Dartmouth; Connecticut added Wesleyan; the Empire State her young
giant of rapid growth, Cornell, and thinking she
might need some city boys, too, had adaed
Columbia, while the home of the wooden nutmegs
subscribed little Trinity. Eleven six-oared crewa
all to row abreast, and yet to have no crowding,
no fouling. This was a good deal to look for, but
suit it waa undoubtedly to be tried, for one after
another the crews dropped down to Springfield
and took op their quarters along the river. Boatbuilders and oarmakers bad been, working almost
night and day, and lor weeks together. The active
boating interest or the country was centred in
Springfield. Meanwhile, aa bas been too often the
case where students had the management,

JOAT 2», law.—dame course.

. ~&gt;«»'
of the year has a great aceeaacoa ef vtaltors, aad
haa places tor them, while nearer ell taa teat ef
the time many or those places arwracanA In July,
for instance, this holds partly good, and ta July
these meetings are held. Moreover, Ahe majority
of their frequenters are need to a large degree of
home conn or A aad do not like to be stowed away
of a hot summer night, aa they had to be at sprtagfieid or Worcester, in a room with a number of
total strangers, and as many of them have often
been here purposely for relaxation aad know that
thev will be well taken care of, Saratoga's chaaeee
of keeping these races seems very good. But the
principal element In rendenng them so is tbe
great and prompt care taken by her in all things
pertaining to the races themselves, down even to
the minutest detail. The people here nearly all
ahow that they are used to meeting persona wellto-do and influential, and that knowledge stands
them aow in admirable stead. The income It may
bring their town may be a motive, hot it is likely
that the added reputation is a much stronger one.
and then again, this late is certainly a moat desirable place for rowing. The fastest oarsmen
this country ever turned out—the Ward Brothers
and their rivals, the Biglms—both speak in glowing praise of it, pronouncing it without exception
the finest course they ever saw. England, a
greater racing country by far, has probably
nothing like it, tne fitful gusts that tn almost a
moment lash Windermere and her northern sisters
Into white caps rendering them dangerous
places in which to hazard shell rowing.

iii •

• oa»i
*J*
the apar it baa given to
tee aaearance or tne Rawing
f S S L - i ^ H * * * l » * reaalt am
i Hartfawd
C^!?* 1 *.?* 4 .**-* to • » redoaataate .

s**n« **«••»,,»•.«. • • # , . . , , , , ^ , „ M.-OttK.
tarongB
Harvard
19:20*
look
JULT ry, I M C - s a m e course.
•at of war rival's fictories aad take
L. a Beeewa, asirstsry ef T. P. B. CI
Harvard, Scientific JOnon . . . 1 * * 8 *
day.
at tea team, i a e was destined to have a
Oawaaraea. March J, 1*71.
19 d l
A attla knee aad the leagtaealag elidewi toot the Mr. J. a aeeav Pn-avieBt T. Tj. B. a &gt;- ^ T •,. „ .
/ P I T M, lfgy.—same course.
am-We aave heea directed to aefty «*• W?J£•£
Yale Minors
aad the eld lake, waleh
19 :.•*«*
w r a t y Boat d a b mat their ehaHeac* ha* bswa iweeived
r~,- «. , . H a r v a r d Minora
20:08
fought battles aad was indebted aadrtuttaeOoasrlBbf take* a a e a l t fas to"-?****The following extract from that
Tour* v«ry trpy,
BOBKBT k. UViAMU PrewdeBt
JITAY a , lSeV.—same coarse.
tame reww* meetings than to anySpringaeld awjNtMtoaa of the race day
19:30
Wtwimaar Muaaa, Deeretary.
_
_ _J, ,__
,
Harvard Freshmen
„...
esse far taa natives! reputation it had obJuly IT, will show the shape aad groaaae ef taa
Ca«maiB««. Mareh xT, 1WL
wssaw *ai i - , 1 * ! * Freshmen
OawvuBrBB—Alie BMettag oi the Kaecntlv* frmmittee
tataed. bore iieaif ae if tse - U d y ef the Lake" had ef the H P. B. O" beW »o eoadder the ehaUeBge « f the
opposition, as made ay a paper off a place wtta a
JUKB 22, ISTB,—Same course.
&gt;
20:10
rival coarse, and its spirit aad motives can roadirj
many greeneacks staked upon the result. AM the t V, B. c . t t w a i e e c i d s d t n a t t b e C r . B. C iawSiUBrto
/
, Yale Minors
23:33*
th« T. V. B.C
raee la which all bsrttteasre
T « , » a* . H a r v a r d Minora
be observed se one reads t l I quote it, ID
year before. Harvard again drew Iae teeede. Aa i»*atof mxi play In in say taerefore, to WOMB tbl*[daa»«
•ure
order,
JUI.T S2, 1870.—same coorse.
19:46
innuendoes aad all, as about «aa meat
taa two orewe lay at the startlag Mae watttag lor am« ead yosi are reoeaJtsxi to M D 4 two d*iag«t««ito »
Yale Freshmen
roBTaatkm to b«&gt;eld at ta« na^^ajjolt Houje. ^or^fdeia.
20:00
and vigorous summing up or tae eppoatuoa aa
iae disparity betweea them waa quite Haas., oa aatarday. April 15, Uffl. fbv the paraeaw of
, _ _ Harvard Freshmen
having this contest here to-day:—
Tale sat the teller aad larger eatabfishing a aatoB refaUa of kinerlcaB eolle*si«. An
J F I T zi, 18T1.—Connecticut River, SpringSARATOOA oa sraiaorTxta,
esrljr notlBcarton ot row Intention f atleiidtog the
field, three miles down
eatwatgeed
aeij oppooeata over ten contention woa.4 greatly favor tbe \anderaigned., Toars
ft Is a fact within the knowledge of many of mm
at ream,
20:18
_ 0, B. C.
a
maa, ebue
tae
diminutive , e r y ^ e e c t f B l » , c ^ ^ ^
D| „
readers-taougb It will undoubtedly be neweas)
20:46
Barvard Freshmen
H. C. Msaea, Secretary tt U. B. C.
more—that a strong posh was made to captors Baa
tae Harvard bow oarsman made
r
Trrr. aa , « ° w n Freshmen
regatta this year aad earry it Into dhtgraeefal ear*
A moat volurolnoua correepondence followed, the
17:01
aa&gt; erew look even smaller yet. Both were in
tivtty at aeratoga. sir. John Morns-*/ gave taa
JUAT 24, 1872—Same course.
details of whlco need not be given now, but Yale
17:29
noott beets of almost exactly the same dlmenstudents to understand taat he stood reedy ta
18:39
Wesleyan Freahmen..
would row no more at Worcester and would never
assume all the expenses, to provide prises. Ae*
atoaa, and wnile each nadj ooae Its nest the result
18*8
Ya:e scientific Freshmen
and to foot Me bills for the support of tbe crewa,
waa in most minds aiiooit of necessity a foregone meet Harvard again la any bat a straightaway
If they would leave that Puritanical Hprmgfletd ha
Brown Freshmen
race. So she sent no delegate to the above Conthe lurch and come to tbe Springs. It was a terrv
coocjojuoo in favor of a vietory for the larger men.
16:59
T ^ » i» , „ « A m f t e r , t Freshmen
ble temptation. To the boys oi tbe little ap-ooamAt tbe word "Go!" Harvard Brat got tbe water, vention, and, most remarkable or all, actually
17:09
iVUf 17, 1878.—Course a little lower down
try coliegea especially these regatta expenses are
aad sprung away with the lead at the actually un- stayed out of the race of 1S71. Yet It waa not at
stream.
a very serious matter. But It was resisted. Thai
Worcester and waa straightaway, so that shje could
Yale
boys were pruoX Mr. Morrtseev waa civilly given
paralleled stroke of fifty to the minute, a he passed
BACE
Wesleyan RULES,
„
to understand that tne regatta was not tor aale.
tbe grand stand well abend, hut many a bont had apparently have aaved her feeiinga any very
—-*
m
He ia not the maa to be discouraged by a tingle
severe enoca\
done that and need herself ap la the effort, Tbia
rebuff, however, and It u already evident that anThe rules which governed last year's race are,
THB aaaociATiol* or Ananicait COLLKGKS WJBMKD.
other and more determined attempt is to be 1
-oald never taat, aU *ald„ over three whole miles.
with the additional ones following them, correct
Tbe Convention met at the time and place apupoa the undergraduate virtue. The mata
All the way to the stake the v were at It, every maa
lor thia and run as follows:—
nets of a number of the visiting newspaper
pointed, repreaieatauvea being present from Bowrowing aa If It were the one dnty of his life. Harrespondents, metropolitan anu other, now ia
TL ^ « ? ! r e i 8 l J a l ! !&gt;e s , s » e o »n * « following manner : Springfield, Is to write down tbe Coauecttead
The starter shall ask the question, "Are you ready?" and,
vard waa ahead, but not] much, and her friends doln College, Brunswick, Me.; Harvard University,
tt
C
otl! l),
,lw alti,l
Cambridge, Mass.; Amherst college, Amherst,
River course and the citr. tn the Saratoga tntereat.
K ,iH\
, )'
*
» st least five seconds,
from Connecticut were sucking to her with
shall give the signal to start, which shall be the word
They are doing Mr. Morriasev's work: wbetaaff
A BBAUnrUL LAKB
a devotron
truly praiseworthy.
She ' got Mass, and Brown University, Providence, R. 1.
tbey have seen tbe color of Mr. Morriaaey's money
„ 2 -JL th .?ii^ art t r considers the start unfair he shall at
are working gratuitous!r
around tbe stake first, hot mat was the Tbeae proceeded to organixe "The Rowing Assoonce recall the boats to then- stations, and any boats re- from Ave to six miles long, is surrounded by pretty, ormatter between them and we can't say. That M
their employer*. We
lusing to start again shall oe ruled out oi the race.
though not grand or striking scenery. The a
moat yon eouid any,] for Tale was right ciation of American Colleges," to frame and! adopt
may add that the innkeepers of Saratoga are very
3. A atari shall be considered unfair 11. during tbe first
a constitution and bjiawa and to appolfit the
sborea, while neither abrupt nor very huh, still nearly or quite as earnest in this eosiaees as taear
at her heels and pushing her all the way. So they
ten strokes, any of the competing boats shall be disabled
I
by iae breaking ol an oar or any other accident.
afford good shelter from the winds, although, distinguished townsman. Tae regatta weald taeasi
aped aioag, on* working With the glow of winning necessary officers.
A J&gt;o fouling whatever shall be allowed.
a It is the province of the reieree when appealed ro, fortunately, these races came at a time of year guests in theirarooms and greenbacks in tLW tttts.
wnere see had not dreamed of it, the other goaded * These were—President, 0. a Luther, of Brown;
but not betore, to decide a foul, and the boat decided by when tbe wind seldom blows loag or fiercely. Aa It would add good lurtnigbt or three weeks ta
to deeawrailon at the thought that s victory she Flee President, R. 8, Mussel, of Harvard; Secre-the season.'1 Tbey cnnld well afford to go saaeta
him to have fouled shall be ruled out ot the race.
tary. E. P. Mltcbell, of Bowdoin; Treaanrer, A. B.
&amp; In case ot a loul, the referee, If appealed to during eye to tbe future ts manifest In all the doings of ta Mr. Morrtssey's brl &gt;e: it would be a shrewd
oeiieeed sore was slipping oat of ber hsnda. On
the race, shall direct the nou-touling boat to row on,
Mooaey, or Amherst; Regatta Committee, O. F.
business investment—sure to pay, and pay bead*
they came, aad. passing the grand stand, slid in
which shall, in every case, row over the remainder of these people in connection with to-day's contest, somely.
Roberts, of Harvard; H. Cornelt, of Brown;
the coarse in order to claim the race.
the substantial nature of tbe numerous boatBut we fancy that Mr. Morrlssey aad the Saraacross tae line only mae seconds apart. Tale
: 7. It shali be considered a foul when, after a race
Leverett Bradley, ol Amherst; F. A. Rlcker, of
has commenced, any competitor by his oar, boat or per- houses erected and the thorough and hearty toga Boailaces are doomed to disappointment!
having made the distance in the shortest time
Bowdoin. And from that time until now these
that it is a rather pronounced case or sour grapes.
son comes in contact with the oar, boat or person of an- way of
ever made by a Yale crew, ISm. IU., while her yearly meetings have been under the sole control
There are a few things, thank God, still left in this
other competitor; and uoUiing else shall be considered a
louL
country that money can'i buy, and we believe that
woRKiiro or THB TABIDUS covMrrrBBS
conqueror took bat ltm. is.
and management of the said association. The fol8. Any competitor who comes Into contact with an- abundantly
evincing thia
There has in regatta to be of the number. At the last meeting
eonmoiUL asruuNTa roa aqraTic HONORS.
otner comnetitor. as defined in rule 7, by crossing into
lowing is
of fieir association, the young fellowa, Its present
his competitor's water, c itauit* a foul: but when a boat past years
been talk
enough of com- owners, formally voted that it ahould not be
go ended the last racej these two oft-matched IRE (XHtsnTCTiow or ran ooixnoa ASSociAirioN.
bas once fairly taken auothcr boat's water by a clear mittees of the citizens to aid, and often dragged down by tbe gamblers to tbe level 01 the)
antagonists ever rowed by themselves—that is,
asriCLa I.
lead it has a right to keep the water so taken.
Sacnoif L— The name
9. A boat shall be decided to have a clear lead of an- at Worcester they did considerable to help, ordinary '-sporting event" If tbey could help tti
where no other was by to snatch If possible the 'Bowing Association ot of thta aaaociatkm shali he the
American iiollegea."
that they would do all In their power to save It
other boat wben its stern U clearly past the bow of the
A—The object of thia aaeoCiation shall be the probut tbe oarsmen could not avoid feeling that from such a fate and keep it what it was orlgiaafljs
prise irom both, and op tbe next year, 1S70,
other boat
Sac.
motion or Uie art ot rowing among the members erf our
la It shall be held that a boat's own water is the they were causing them trouble, a fear which the designed to be—a friendly contest among gentlecame the taat race that they or other of respective colleges, by ineetiag* friendly contests and
straight or true course from the station assigned to it at
men
for
Tbey
THB MANAGKMK.Vr
starting; but ii two boats are racing, and one fairly universal good nature and prompt and rigorous shownfor honor and not yet monev.back oa have
our colleges ever rowed at [Worcester. The time set otherwise, and tne Kindling of that irieodly aplrit and
no 'disposition aa
to go
that
college feeling which ousht alwaya to exist between col- was very poor. The city had appointed a commit- takes the other's water by a clear lead, it shall be enaction here throughout this year nas entirely dis- declaration, ir tbetr effort to get rid of the gambwaa. aa usual, tbe last Friday but one oi July, the leges and geudenten,
titled to keep the water so taken to tbe end of the course,
AXTICIM 11.
tee to help the students, but both seem to have and if the two boats afterward.-, come into contact while pelled. Indeed, the many committees work so lers was met rather coldiy and in harmoniously a t
Harvard vacation not generally commencing till
Sacnoic L—This association shall be represented by
the lead.ng boat remains In the water so takeu the boat
aaoot that time of year. Vale kept two of ber '&lt;» conventions consisting of two delegates from each oi the been shamefully inefficient or neglectful, and as whose water has been so taken shall be deemed to have well together that tbetr work does not seem hard first by our local and State authorities the practically complete auporeasion of pool selling vester,
so vera I college boat t Tubs which may have been ad- the' time drew near, and the crowd began to committed the foul; but if they come into contact by the at all This ts a place of rest and play, far more day waa aa earnest that tbey were aot
men, Ooonley and Bone, while Harvard retained
leading boat departing from the water so taken the leadmrtu-d to a representation in the manner hereafter progather, much was undone that should have been ing boat shall be deemed to have committed a foul.
so than either busy New England city named, or, to be left alone in the effort to keep tbe spate
Xyman and Willis Jones and Read, warned! still vided for.
clean, fhev must see, they must be oonscioaa.
.sac. A—Any
clab desiring
11. the reteree shaU be sole judge of a boat's straight in fact, any other save Newport.
built Tale's boats, but Harvard, for the first time, this associationcollegepresent to the to be represented In all arranged and attended to. At the starting
Mat that effort is seconded and supplemented be
shad
secretary, at least
or true course during every part ot the race.
tried a stranger. John tfflaker, i n Englishman ten day* previous to tne annual meeting ot the associa- time the boats were crowded BO closely together as
a controlling public sentiment, a senumentpow*
ADVANTAGES OP .SARATOGA.
12. If in any race In which more than two boats start
written official notice to that eflect,
I
enui enough
make
feel uncoav
adjudged by tbe referee
from Newcesue-on-Tyne, who had come and settled tion, aA—AU applications shall be Toted upon at the an- to almost touch oars,Harvard and Tale, for instance, a foul takes place, ana tbe boat winning poet first, the
Then, again, for the more distant univer- fortable and ill to ease inthe gamblersand long for
s#c
to have been fouled reaches the
at
Springfield
nual aieeun,' of the association, where, if a majority of being but° forty-four feet apart. The river had race shall be decided as tbe boats come in; but if the sities and colleges—Harvard and Dartmouth a more congenial climate. It is the same puolia
BJ Cambridge and located Ins shops by tbe Har- j
Uie members
favor
buat fouled does not
unvard boathouses. Indeed, to-day, be baa tbe en- ciabs shall Le present vote inentitledthereof, sucfi clao or fallen very low, the course was crooked, and a sand able to decide which come in first, or tl the referee is the on the east, Princeton south, and Cornell sentiment that bas enabled Springneld to keep ltd
admitted and
to representation in
boat nas committed the foul,
bar with scarce a foot and a halt of water and near race shall be rowed over again, unless the referee shall wesu-it is about central, while an hour, trotting course deader, morally speaking, than
tire charge of those boathouses, and, by tne way, j the association.
any otber in the countrr. Tbe people or Spring,
aancLs m.
decide that the boat which came in Urst had a sufficient
has built all Harvard's boats since 18S9. { Sacnon L—The officers of this association shall be a half a mile long lay right in the track of some of .lead at the moment of the foul to warrant its having the more or less, of car riding is not a matter field are with tbe undergraduates in this UUag
President, Vice
Again
Tale
brought
tne heavier crew, shall hold office Freddenr, Secretary and Treasurer, who the crews, only to be avoided by a detour evidently race assigned to i t
to stand loua over. Build one more railroad track, heartilv and thoroughly.
for the period of one year, and shall be
13. A
by
To remove the regatta from this New England
taaa time
by
nine
pounds
a man. elected by a majority vole of all delegates present at the unjust. At the finish the line was so drawn that captain claim ot fonl (which must be tendered notthe and, unless some unthought-or fault comes up toof tbe crew considering itself tooled, and
Dy
meeunxol the
I
As mentioned above Harvard was stronger in aaiioal£.—All t tec turnsassociation. ballot, unless other- even to this day there is mxicn honest difference any ouc on ni? behalf must be made to the referee pre day, Saratoga Lake will become what for over river and this New Kngiand community will be te)
Mic.
aUall be by
Viously to the crew fouled getting out ot the boat
expose it to needless danger. To sell it ont to Mr.
as to just where it did run. Instead of the race
alder men, and naturally eii &gt;ugh from the rapid wise provided lor.
1A Bvery boat shall stand by its own accidents occur- twenty years we have been seeking—the perma- John Morrissey, ol the Saratoga club bouse, would
amicis rv.
the race.
be to cut its throat outright. There would be oa
work oi th.e previous year was easily the favorite.
faction i.—It shall be the duty of tbe President, and being started promptly at four—a matter of vital ring during event of a dead beat taking place the same nent battle ground of the American universities.
15. In the
misunderstanding that transaction.
College)
ot tbe Vice President, to prealde at all
Matters looked ripe for a good race but the Im- In his absence to call special meetings whenever he may Importance where many thousands are inter- ere ws sliall contend again, or the crew or crews refusing
The rumor has gone about that should Harvard faculties, parents, the press, the public generally,
meeting* and
be
the race
pression was widespread that Harvard would deem it necessary, or whenever requested to do m i&gt;y ested—there waa no one who seemed to have the shall Mo adjudged to have lost to accompany a competing win this year she will retire from the association, would all see It in one light. We shall not believe
16.
snail be
tbe presidents of three college clubs entitled to repre- power or spirit to order the crews oat and send •oat for boat purpose allowed
the
of directing its course or affording
Is the possibility of such a folly—to cell it by ad
a*ain win. But be ore the race waa through sentattoa in this associauon.
'
other assistance; and the referee shall be at liberty to but by excellent authority this statement is con- harsher uame—until we see It committed.
Bsc 1—it shall be ;he duty of the Secretary to keen. In them off. No proper accommodations were pro- declare any competing boat out ol the race that may tradicted, and as three of this year's crew do not
stairs took a turn as unexpected as unwelcome,
% book kept for this purpose, an accurate record oi all
joe which resulted in the abandonment of Wor- the proceedings of tbe association: to issue all notices of vided for the referee, and he bad to do the best he have derived an untair advantage thereby.
Trie S p r l n g f l e l d C o a r s e ,
17. No race shall be awarded to any competitor or graduate there Is probably nothing to be feared in
meetings, and to keep,
for this purteater. perhaps forever, as a place of these inter- aoea a true account ofin another book kept ot this asso- could towards finding means to see the race, when ere w unless be or they shall have rowed over the whole this direction. There is appparently equally little made so familiar to all by the great race there 1
the annual regatta
of the course.
hie say was so final. Four o'clock, as to-day, was
ooilegiate meetings. One wtiter thus summarizes ciation.
la The decision ot the referee shall In all cases be rear that
summer, commenced where the Connecticut
Sac.
It
the dnty of the
to take
the story, and be has at least tned to do it tatrly:— chargeX—allshall be the association. Treasurer keen an tbe time fixed. It came, and quarter past, and • r i a l .
THAT GREAT BUGBEAR.
of
funds or
He shall
rows below tbe city, as shown at tbe point
The new ones being
"Ibis race waa decided by the referee in favor of aioounu in a book kept for that purpose, oi all monfeya half and five o'clock, and not one crew had shown,
Morrissev. will corrupt the youth, as he Is reported X in the diagram, to soo or 900 feet, aad
BLLKS FOB TUB RECUTTA.
out by him, and his accounts
July 15. Single Scutl Race, half-past three P. J*.
fhe Harvard* upon a lout at the stake claimed by received and |,&gt;aidto the inspection of any ot the snail at and no one seemed trying to collect them. Hair
to be determined that no student shaU oe ad- stretches away three miles down stream, widen*
all times be open
ofhoers
Freshman ttace immediately thereafter.
that crew. All tbe accounts of tbe race agree that of ths association. He sbsil pay out money belonging to past five passed, and then six struck. Now they
mitted to tits club house. Of tne three crews
July 18, University Race, lour f. H,
the association t&gt;nly upon the wrtttea order ot the Chair- began to crawl out, and by fifteen minutes later it
Forty minutes before each race a gun will oe fired to which contended last year at Springfield, and ing gradually. It too, like the others, lies north
tae boats started exactly at the same man ot the Regatta Committee or of the President of
and south, but, unlike them, bas some current.
preparemomeat -, that although
Harvard
veered tbe association.vacancies in the list of officers occurring began to look
1 turtv minutes later a second gun will be fired to draw which are all absent now—Amherst, tbe Anv I Unfortunately the race or last year fell at a none
.-•ac. A—Any
into line.
MkE A BACB.
from the direct course up the lake, and, as during the y*M troni resignation, death or otherwise,
her-it Agricultural and the Bowdoin—the wben tbe good people of Springfield claim mat taa
Ten tninu'es later the signal to start wiU be given.
.shall
At 6h. aom. on Thursday afternoon, July 17, Franc
Tale claims, crowded their boat out of the course, dtiCt. Be temporarily Oiled By appointment ot the I'rssiMo delav will be encouraged or allowed, and the Amberst made Morrtssey's presence and tbe tempt- j water waa unusually tow, lower than It had beea)
in line
G. Brown, Captain or the Nassau Boat Club, of crewsraces will be positively started at the time named. tations be offered a prominent one of their reasons, '
the beets did uot come in contact, and that the
aancLK v.
All
in the
—
ror many seasons. However this may oe, there
HVcTio* L—There shall be one annual regatta held at New Tork city, cautioned the crew, and then gave The starteraha't be startei question,following maimer: f"
shall ask tbe
"Are you ready
Jarvards reached tbe stake at least half a length sucn time and place as the association mar decide at its
ir not their chief one, for not coming to Saratoga, i certainly were long shallows here and there over
and receiving no reply, after waiting at least five
the word "Go I" Harvard at once showed well to seconds shali give the signal to start by the firing of a This objection was promptly met by Rev. L. &amp;
ahead. At tats point tbe controversy commences annual meeting ot that year.
tbe course, in some places the water being scarcely
Skc. A—The regatta shaU
ea to w he titer it was the Harvard boat which Regatta Committee, hereafterbe nnder the control of the the front, and it was not many minutes before she pi»iol.
Rowland (an Amherst graduate, I think, and pas- a loot and a ball deep. Tbe crew that had for bad
provided tor
Crews
Sac, A—All college cubs, members ul this association, and her old rival Yale had again paired off, each near tbewill rendezvous on the east shore of the lake,
looted the &gt;take, losing its rudder by making a
starting line, iu ample time to prevent any de- tor or the Congregational church here), In writing ! a mile or more, as had Cornell, to pull over such a
deslrious oi entering for the annual regatta, dial I so
seeming bound to make up for 187*0. They swept ' f e
•hort, square turn, or the Yale boat which ran notify tbe secretary of the association at or betore its
'ersons designated to hold the boats at the starting last winter to Professor Hitchcock, of Amberst coorse, with their oars almost or altogether touchana no
c t e the Harvard boat and disabled its steering ap- annual meeting, member club shall t iter this association on down streutrf Harvard a trifle ahead and the line to report on board the steamer at Moon's dock at College, and will be appropriate here in reply to ing tbe bottom, might well complain that beside
regatta unless a
of the association.
paratus. The testimony o( the newspaper correMr. A—The Regatta Committee shall offer each year others trailing along in a bunch not far behind. one o'clock on the day of each race.
tbe charges of tbe Springfield paper Just quoted.
H. B.—in
flag:) which shall be held by the college winning them as It was coming otf dusk as they got down towards finish shallpractising, t rewsrowing from the start to the After asserting that he does not write in me in- those in mid-channel, feeble though the correal
have right of way, and crews rowing in
eaeaeents on this point is very conflictine. but tbe emblems for tbe championship of that year.
was, they could do themselves ao justice, ft is
Bac, A—All college Clubs uking part in this regatta tbe grand stand. The referee's boat was some other directions must keep clear of the course.
leieree decided that Yale was the party ta error,
terest of the Saratoga Rowing Association or pretty hard to get yourself ready for a whole yeai
•hail strictly observe all rules and regulations which distance behind, and as they crossed the line some
tad gave Harvard the race."
or John MorriS3ey, he continues:—
; together for a struggle with your fellows, and aftel
shad be adopted b«* the associat.on, ana shall abide bv
AM we have said, Intense di-satisfaction was felt the decision ot the reteree. wh ae decision shall be nn»l on one aide or the river and some on the other, it
"Allow me, therefore, to «ay, with all the em- practising long self denial, bodily labor, severe*
in all cases. Any clulb failiug to cotnidv witn the proamong the Yale crew and their mends at this de- I visions ol this section shall be liable to expulsiou iroui was anything but a light task ror him or any one
panes) 01 italics, that I regard the objections urged and more pro'racted than you ever knew before,
the .. a-.vinti.tn.
else to say
ciston, which finally culminated in tbe members of ,1&gt;M hssoclatiou.
—
against Saratoga on tbe score of the immorality of and sacrificing much time and not a UtUe money,
cia VT.
WHO WAS THB WIKNBB.
the crew pledging each otter to never again
the place as without jotmOation in fact. Tne to find your efforts worse than thrown away by
1S1SI J0I
b'ate
belonging tiie associatiub,
To people on one side oi the river it seemed to
eater a contest on Lake Qoinaigamond, and shall be iroui eacn cubthe annualtomeeting ol the
Influence of Mr. John Morrlssey here la exagger- I your being In the honr of trial pushed over on to a
appointed at
aad this action was endorsed
by
the as-oclatiou, and shall sold office lor one year irom that be Harvard, to those on the other Yale, with Wesated a thousand fold. He does not rule Saratoga' ! p a r t ot tD~e track unfit for yon or any one else l
be appointed.
Tale University Boat Clab in voting "that date, or until their successors of this committee to make leyan second and Harvard third, and so at last,
5aa A—it shall be the duty
and. as
aware, he does nouS^oiitend on equal terms with your antagonist, It
no crew irom that college ever should row there and carry out aid arrangements which they may deem after much discussion and doubt, tne referee
We are happily able to lay before our readers care
to
rule it.
His operations here ts more than likely 11 such hasards were to be roa
neeeasarv for the combleie success of the regalia. All concluded that Yale bad first crossed a line which,
again." How much control the action of that boat expensed which the committee may incur for the above
to-day not only a diagram of the course which, if
pnrpose shall be divided equally among all the clubs bad it been correctly drawn, would have been it has not already, before nightfall will become are limited to two institutions—the races and tne by you again tnat you would have nothing to da
clab can nave on the doings of its members years participating in t!ie regatta.
club bouse. As regards toe former. I am not aware with tbe race. And yet, in addition to this formidlater, snouid that course be considered again, it la
MC. 3.—Itshall be the duty of this committee to ap- reached first by Harvard. Indeed the latter had more notable than any other in America, but also that they differ, except in magnitude, essentially able objection to the Springfield course, there hi
suitable
another even worse, one not fitful or the conse*
aotessy tu say. out tbe excellent management of point some regatta. person who shall act as reieree it supposed they had'won, and some one on the sketches of the two principal courses which have rrom races held elsewhere.
the aunuai
They are attended by qoeaoe or any one year's caprice, but one inherent
judges' boat had, through mistake, given her men in the past been the scene of the great college
ASTICL« VTL
affiirs this season thus tar at fWatoga may possisporting men as races always are. They are accom- in the course itself and which cannot well be reSafvios 1—There shall be an annual meeting of the asbly preclude the necessity of ever raising the ques- sociation held on tho first Wednesday m Apiii, at saqb the flags, which they took to their boatuouses; aquatic contests.
panied oy betting and pool-selling, and so, I ven- moved. It Is nothing more nor less than that taa
it suttn bnt, on learning, to their great surprise, that the
taia. American oarsmen are lortunate in having place ss the association may decide upon at its anni
ture to Bar, are the races held every year in tne river here is crooked, so that for ten or a dot"a
inuuai
meeting of the year iimnedis e.y preceding.
T h e S a r a t o g a Course.
boats to row irom a given stsrting line and yet
decision had gone for Tale, promptly turned them
ae many courses to ehoose 'rt-om and on broad
Ssc. i— At this meeting the time, place and style•of'he
Scarcely more Important is It berore giving battle goodly cities or Springfield and Hartford. The allow each enough room to avoid fouling its oeigsv
next annual regatta sliall be decidel. and a set ot ..
over. The fact seems to be that Yale really supwaters tike tho^e of Saratoga fake and good pre
t rules
public selling of pools is indeed a nuisance which bur and still row a race absolutely fair ts, saving
and regulations adopted which shall be strictly observed
posed she had won, and Harvard that she had, to choose and know well your ground than in prevleua management such an unfortunate event at said regatta.
we hope to see aoated In time, bnt let tbe commu- on one condition, impossible. Tnat oondition IB
SBC. 3,—At this meeting all questionsof dispute betweeSi
ceoid scarcely occur. In the rn excitement of a anv ruembcrfOf clubs lelonglng to the association sh.ijr and it waa this doubt that accounted for tbe paring ror a rriendly bout with the oars to ch09.se nity that is without any public scandal of tbe kind one tnat is extremely difficult, indeed Imand know well the water. &gt; o one is better aware
practicable to require, and that u that tae
race there may be and often
bad steeriug, but be submitted to the association, and its decision shun be marked quiet prevailing in Springfield on the night
cast tbe first stone at Saratoga. The races are patin
members or clubs tailing lo comwhen the waters are broad aa khey always ought to tinaiwithall cases. Any oi thia esc aew shall be liable to alter a contest which used in otber years to bring of this than t*ie veteran orofesslonal. waen about ronized mainly by strangers who come bere tor the boats row in lanas. As it wss Isst rear, tae startply
the provisions
ing line was drawn across the river at right
a noisy hilarity and glee that all who ever ob- to row a race he ^vlll be on the water weeks in
be, there wui usually be found among amateurs at cxpuiai^n irom the association.
AiBTlCL* T i l l .
advance, studying its every eddy and current, purpose of attending tbem. and as tbey are held angles with its course.~-To draw the otber turee
toast a dispotduon to afiow somewhat for
Any club may be expelled from the association hvfa served it cannot readily forget. Yale certainly
only one or two weeks in the year it U difficult to miles away aroual the bend 01 tbe river at right
bad done better than was generally expected, and how the wind strikes It, where he can work to I
with its course would be glaringly
the faults oi each other. It la certainly two thirds vote ot all members present at auy annual
see how tbey can imperil the morality of the stu- angles there diagonal line was run, meant to de
meeting.
untair; so a
her captain and one otber of her men of that year beat advantage, and many more things which
to be hoped that
this
year, aa last, ,
i R T l C U IX.
dents who attend the regatta.
fairness to all,
mere may not occur another of these unhappy j There shall be one vtarly asses-tment. of such amount are hoping bard ere nightfall to take and carry he who is to risk much ought to know. Bat in the j "But the great bugbear that seems to have succeeded it is and without inquiring how well tl
enough to say tnat it was possible
as ibe association may decide, upou all members of tl
solection or an area lor a battle like that or to-day
away from all competitors the crown of victory
loais, and now, in the year i s h , lor tlhj first time association.
frightened our New England friends irom their lor one crew to row from tne s u n and cross taa
many other tilings have to be considered. For j
i B T I C l t Z.
for 1874,
finish tine and do actually less than three miles,
l ace j i g (ma ttie third in tile annals of onr col- i
This constitution may be altered and amended at anv
these meetings draw together not simply tu6 propriety ts the club house. The character of that while auother, seeming yet to steer well, nilgai
lege racing, did any other ln$titution save these ; annual meeting ot the association by a t o-thirds vote et
rowers themselves, but friends. In multitudes, institution is greatly misunderstood by people who really do more than three. Bnt in these dare,
members present
PREVIOUS EACES.
tee venture into these contests, in iseo Brown j tbe AaEfJnaaara—1. Any college not represented in any
when boats and oars and even men have improved
»
relatives, partisans, old oarsmen, strangers • have never been here.
-had entered with a crew audj boat both foolbhiy annual regatta shall thereby lose its membership in th»
so over those of past years, and races are won 0 /
ONLY A CI.UB HOPS*.
fond of manly sports and many more of
dght, and had como in last, with ber boat partly I association and representation In the convention of the
sections and fractions of a second instead ef
T h e Record ot O t h e r Y e a r s .
us&gt;i&gt;ciation.
every rant and station. No better proor It is not a public gambling boose, but a strictly miiiuies, a current, however slight, or a bead 1st
aaei w.th water. In 1870 she essayed again, but | * Passed April 2.1575, by third annual convention.
CMVEaSITT CBBWS.
could be had, if desired, of this than a private institution like the club nouses in our the conrse. Is keenly ieit, and should, if possible,
coLi-XGics Or taa associarios.
•
Date.
Time.
Course.
Contestants.
oaly IB the Freshman Race, and beat Harvard.
Amherst, Bowdoin, Brown. Columbia, Cornell, DartAi'G. 8, 1S32.—Lake Winnipiseogee, Centre
look at the influx into Saratoga during the last large cities, to which none but tbe initiated caa be avoided. Tbe wind will blow anywhere, and tl
Yale and Amherst, the latter of whom waa mouth, Barvard, Massachusetts Agricultural, irinify *
it can touch
it and so hazard
Harbor, two nuiea to windseven days. The press, to be sure, has contributed gain admittance, except by special request and somewhat thewater will ruffle race; but crooked
making her maiden appearance in these William* Vala.
conditions of a
ward.
permission. It began as a public house, but Mr. •streams and currents can oe avoided, aad in a
THE i-ARMER B0T8* VICTORT.
Oneida, Harvard. Won by two lengths. much towards it, laying before the public all doue \
meetings. Sow. la 1871 [Brown waa la
and to be done and the pleasure to be had if tbe Morrissey was forced at once to change Its charac- conflict wnere so much is staaed aa here surely
Halcyon, Yale (8-oared oarges)
Tills year tne Springfield Club generously gave a
both the rreahman Race and the UniverJULY 21,18*5.—Connecticut River, Springt rip was made: but there has been one steady, ter. Gambling is still supposed to oe tbe principal ought to be.
sity, while the Amherst Agricultural School— sec of champion coiora and six pieces of plate, and
field, Mass., one and a half
The good name of
ceaseless tide or a general, well-bred humanity object of the frequenters of tbe place, but tne busi- also mucb last vear the Springfield coorse suffered
at 7b. 5m. 31V*. that afternoon the sixes of Harnines down stream and bacK.
irom tbe wretched mismanagea separate laatuutton from Amherst College—made
ness is carried on entirely beyond the reach of the meat of tbe races themselves. Tne city had a
Iris, Harvard (8-oared oarge). 22:00
glad 01 an opportunity to combine a visit to the
ber arst appearance in tne University Bace, a step vard, Brown ana the Aggies all got away in fine
T. T„ Harvard (4-oared barge) 22:03
famous Springs with a sight or our principal public eye. It is the men who have their thousands committee and so had tbe students, and as eaca.
which the result showed she had no possible rea- style with an idea of obtaining the permanent
Nereid, Vale (6-oared)
23:38
relied on tbe otber, nothing, aa usual, was done oy
aquatic, and, It may be added, athletic spectacle. | tojisk upon whom the proprietor depends as pat- either. Tue reieree s boat rao short of good coal
ownership of said trophies. The weather waa clear
Nautilus, Yale (6-oared)
24:38
soa to regret. And It will be oi tntereat here toWorFor, Jond as we may think ourselves of outdoor j rons,and unless Amherst students have more money tost when she was most needed, aud he bad ta
day to Bete that on this same 2lst day of Jul*. and fine, the air and water quiet. Nobody had JULY 26, ISJ9. -Lake Quinsigamond, a half
cester, Mass., one and
sports, there is but one athletic event in the to spend than when I was at college I think that accept the bospitalities or the HERALD steam
ever heard of the Aggies and so did not expect tq,
isTl, three of tne men who fill as many seats of
lutie,- up the lake and back.
yacht; no one knew definitely where lay the Anted,
whole year in which the interest felt is at all gen- \ Mr. Morrissey would regard them as game beneath line, two of tbe boats instead of being paced at
Harvard (shell)
19:18
the Harvard boat BOW then roweo in the Harvard but long before that eventful quarter ol an hour
eral or about which we stop and read, and that is his notice. Indeed, r have learned on good author- least 100 teet apart at tne start were only 441
Yale (shell)
20:18
Vreahsaaa crew, Messrs. Dada, Goodwin and was over both Harvard and Brown formed their
Harvard (lapstreak) —
21:13
acquaintance in a way that has fastened Itself
this same University Race. It, like men, gams ' ity that no young man is admitted to the estab- the Freshman crews were to start at tarea
Meree, wane, in passing, it may be worth men
Brown (lapstreak)
, 24:40 - mueli of its best strength from its character, for lishment unless accompanied by some responsible and did not get off until two noors Utter; taa
University luewise; there was no system about
tuning tnat in a single scull raee earlier the same firmly, and wul likely not be forgotten ror years to JCLY 24, 1800.—Same course.
it is well known that there need be no ' senior. Mr. Morrissey ia very careful not to out- getting toe boats into line, but tbey came dragging
Harvard
18:53
arteruooo aad oa the same track. Ten Kjck, the aaam With a light crew, eight pounds a man
along
anotuer, doing
Yale
19:05
suspicion ot unfair play in these contests, or rage public sentiment too far, and I venture to good. down one after eleven judges each other ao
proleaaional. who the other day disposed of Scharff lighter than the Harvards and a tnfle heavier
There were
at the amah
Brown
21:15
than Brown, these tough farmer boys pnt second JIJLT 29, 1S64.—Same course.
anything else not entirely frank and manly. Never predict that tbe students who visit tne regatta wuere four would have been a multitude, aad
and his mends' spare dollars at PeekskUl, was
after second between their rivals aa they stioi
once, to their credit be it said, have these races will find it impossible to get into tbe establish- two. or even one, enough; it was nearly dusk when
Yale.
, 19:01
easily neaten by Ellis Ward, Butler, of Boston, and
Harvard
,
, 19:43* developed anything not strictly fair, even the ment, even If they desired, and 01 coarse stodenta the gieat event of the day came off; no one
away hard
down
stream.
The bettinjr
uarriogton, ot Sanngfjeid.
^
couid
tell
who won; tbe noUormt of
nad been 18 oa Harvard to 12 on Brown JULY 28, I860.—same course.
habtt allowed in the English University races of the from Amherst would not with to try. • • *
the crewi were not sufficiently varied, so Mad
IKaUMiPE.
18:42*
to 4 on the strangers, and It showed how accur
"It is indeed supposed with good reason that Mr. they might be swiftly singled out, and the result
leading boat "washing" the other being discounHarvard
;
18:09
was decision
Two, kD4iD fact three otherleatare* also had this rate was the general Judgment by being wrong in JULY 27, isas.—Same course.
tenanted here, as jqekeying and unworthy.of gen- Morrissey ta secretly opposed to the regatta, and over aaud overwhich ts stid 10 so mucb doubt that
it was remarked taat of the eM
would defeat it if he had any power to do so, aa
•aee ef Ua% aad very noticeable ones. Vale waa every particular. The farmers led the Cambridge
Harvard
18:43* tlemen.
the auspices under which it is to be conducted will lime uproarious enthusiasm which made all WorYale
a* good as fter word, and Worcester was aban- men all the way to the finish, being there thirty19:10
be the most telling rebuke of his own proceedings cester ring and the overflowing balis of the Bay
JULY 19, 1867.—Same course.
Joaed. Inglesade, a UtUe place oa the CoBnectiThe question of what water will best suit these that could be given and mnat tend to his aowniali. »tate Hotel fairly rock, there was haraiy aay at
seven seconds ahead and the latter, twenty-four
Harvard
18:12*
taere,
am a little above Springfield, Mesaaehusetta, ahead of Brown, while the Aggies made tne aston
trials 01 speed has of late years wholly changed. Why should not Amherst give us her countenance all. All tue elements of a great race were almost
Yale
19:25*
ana nelp to make tne occasion a kind oi missionary and yet the aad bungling that marked
JULY 24,1868.—same course.
Being substituted for pretty Lake Qumaigaraoud. ishtngly fast time of iem, 4«Ss., Incorrectly
Up through 1870, with a rare exception, but two
every step 01 tbe work spoiled it ail. SpriacdeMI
Harvard.
17r48* boats at a tune competed, and so a narrow course , enterprise against evil f"
rehas yet to know the true fun and jollification o f a
- *»»»a, the course waa not, for many years, out to ported at first as I7m. « , s .
THX OBEATEtfT SCAKDit.
18:38*
great boat race. When
Mr. Rowland asserts that Saratoga bas as qmet tue race was abruptly poor Dunham was drowned
»»take and return, but straight away; a thing
like that or Lake Quinsigamond did very weiL But
JULY 23,1869.—Same course'.
and paiaiolly tarmioaeod|
This surely waa a new tum of things, to see the
*. populatioo as most New Eugland towns, al- and now, when even passable management woa
•ithoui a precedent in these college races, save
18:02
when, with the coming years, new colleges clamHarvard
tuough its churcfi attendance may be less. -The have carried all through well, netting ana
oldest college in the land, and one that had bniie
18 :U
• that oae-the first oi all—oa Lake Wtnnieptaeoored for representation, a track bad to be greatest scandal," he says, "that 1 have noticed
JULY 22,1870.—same course.
doue at all.
_ _„ . -_*-• .tee, ta liax. Now ail questions of iouiiag and chop- ap a long and brUhant record for aquatic prowess,
found adequate to the growing demand. And since I have been here te that occasioned by the
Harvard
20:30
It should be edd.»d that a marted eveat^in
forced to give way to an institution small and ot*
prurient curiosity of Christian people irom abroad,
Yale
Wtf off eaca other's rudders while rounding a
not m rows alone, for there is plenty or water
18:45
clergyman t s well as laymen, who have seemed
•takeboat will be done away, and bad tbe U:9 score. But from it to-dav Princeton may pluck up JULY 21,1871.—Connecticut River. Spring
in almost any part of the country broad mure anxious to get a peep at the inside ol Mr.
field, Mass., three miiea
heart, aad so might Onion, of Schenectady, and
***» beea here tnere might have heea a diff.reut
and nearly smooth enough to suffice for several Morrtssey's establishment, and to avail them- SSmely? tue stratghtawar-^a change aow never
down stream.
Rutgera and West Point and the Western Relikely to he turned back.
Agricultural
16:46* crews to row on abreast; and our many lakes selves of their freedom from tbe restraints of
teteu.
home to attend the races, than to drink our
serve and the midshipmen. Saratoga Lake, as we
Harvard
17.123* and aonds would no doubt furnish abundant room
U k t awiaaaAgstawwmd OaaBBBB*
laa coarse ran rrom stakaboata anchored oppowaters, or to attend our prayer meetings.
Brown
nave said, is broad enough, for all, and before
17:47*
la the heart of Btaasechueetts, nestling quietly
for work where the dangerous element of current This accounts for the fact that they know so
**»lagteatde, down tne stream, three miles, to a
nightfall, if alt goes well, wdl prove whether she JhXT 24, 1872.—Same course.
would be omitted; bnt.when tbe other requisites much more about tbe vices of the place thaa the among the Worcester bills, lies a pretty lake tarea
Amnerst.
16:33
*•* ttty feet aorth of Chloopee Bridge. The carhas not for tbe demands of a national regatta'
If they
as anxious
Harvard
16:57
are looked at, the quartering and caring for the stated residents. are tne were they would to see or four miles long, bearing tbe quaint old I
'•** to elaggish, probably about i strong as at
the good as they
evil
carry
Agricultural...
..... n.io
laciiiuea unequalled.
rowers and their property, and providing for back to their homes a somewhat different account name Qolnsigamond. It is not wide, being
^ • g t e M , where there is acarcelj any at i
Bowdoin
i7:M
T K srafBXK OP 1872
U
of the moral condition of tne place. The Christian any where much over quarter of a mile, while taa
*to Had of the year.
&lt;r\
friend and visitors numbering many thousands,
Williams.
ii:5»
people
are in the
saw a sight welcome and altogether new in tae
Yale
i8:i3
it will be seen at once that there must at least be to visit of Saratoga ot vice evenmain too Puritanical southern half of it ts so doited with Islands aad 1 ta
TALI Aasvyr axp war »
the haunts
irom motives,01 cu- water u so shallow as to make it about impossible
XINOB CSBWg.
rowing record of the country. Instead of two or
abundant hotel room close at band.
riosity."
P i other and moat ajgniacant leal ore of this
JULY 27, 1858.- -Lake uuinsigamond, Worto get much of a racing stretch taere. Bnt, dividTHB MABAOBBBXT OT THB BACB.
*"**~aee never beiore under any circumatancea three coliegea alone contending for the honor,
THE FROBLKU,
cester, Mass., one and a half
ing it near the centre, there need to ma a pontoon
1 waen the eventful day came six different atxOf the management or the race he says :—
miles up and back.
•**»»B—waa the absence
then, reduces itself to finding a course intrinsir erew from Tale.
"I believe that tne aasociation wdl be eqnally bridge, and now an earthen road keeps ap tae old
Yale Harvard (shell)
19:14
**rvk*d had Read aad Jones aad four new mea oared crewa from as many universities or colleges
caily good, lying near a city or large town, ca- 1 successful with the College Kegatta, J^fyffJVJ turnpike over which Dan Webster perhaps often
Harvard (shell)
19:16
•••to ready to meet Ber; aad eUdred, th famous drew into Hue. lng.eaide had given little tatlsiac- JULY 24, I860.—Same course.
oody w« „ our fi^aianitv rode te circuit, betweea Worsester two sattea
pableof accommodating many strangers. A look at ! the support of the whole ta
the
, ttoa, fewer people having gone to see tae race
cituensbip; m ""^
^J
Ha, vard Freshmen's Thetis
torekeef the
any place heretofore tned will show that no iatr is thoroughly in earnest° ia the X E r We west, aad Boston, forty-two east, fhat part ef tae
'AggieA" would try with hie man to I than were ever present before or since at oae of
matter, we
(Tapetreak)
19.40&amp;
solution of this problem haa, op tin now, been ire determiaed to seep toe affair £ « &gt;™» lake to tne north was that which has bscoses t o
\aie Freshmen's Givuna (lapa warm welcome. But Yale had made up these gatherings. Bo a change waa promptly
found. Had the water near either place named rice, If in order to do fitn we all have^kibe e ^ familiar in Tale aad Harvard tradition, and at Haa
streak)
20.30
m c
team.* - *** W O B W ° * 1 ** tara *«* ttom » Tnat niAde this year—a little lower down the Coanectl- JULY 24,1S60,—Same course.
been all it ahould oe, neither of them would long roued as support 01« ^ r d e i J J a « o b«ct^^ e r aM O * , ttgat craft of each shot oaee in sack July eat
militia tn special P o
r•^Jt\
aeW ^ n V
iiei*.*** aropaed the Mea of college rowing. cut, from a point opposite tae lower end or
Harvard Sophomore's Hatdee
suit, for the reason that tbey have hotel ac- j u nothing else, will keep the f ^ Sd E l ^ ^ i t a ^ throngs taa ttttte opening of the brtdtTe, eaeft
JZ."*
• • * eto*r eaoogh rrota taa tenor of s&gt;pnngleld to another three miles further dowa
(lapatreaa)
30.17
, t t
It is taeir
J
y ^
commodattons sufficient for only ordinary de- its pledges. mentation ^ g b a°r « tJ g a&amp; ^tJS r ' -" J , beartag six ateat hear ta, aad sped ewtMy away
Tale Sophomore's Thalia .lap*
* now*, waiak explain taeBaativea:permanent
01
n o .^ r
'
ap tae weat afeera to aad peat tae ceeteJ ta*
aad a little above tne finish of urn. in- »— — . . .
•weak)
Notgivea msnda, and It would not pay to build uerstood p e n e c U y * ' " * » *££"£
Kaw HavBB. Owe. h
t S e r e / t a a l ; grand stead, tt is act augmlar tf the tartl tee*
rt has been Mela tram taa start JOLT 29, 1984V—Same oourae.
^•fSAT^waiealefa. c B. c.*mere extenaive ones. This does not hold good of the colleges meat Be •
— • • • • • • »» behalf e( dm Ta&gt; Cglta be gttQceaBfoi, B U M
1 tuanaed ansa msaw as laaMasa^aaa
ftf*fBeM*bd*a^lt*%feJ^^
fweeUf
Harvard Sophomores..
. 19:0»
I # « soni»nB»raa.v,.W.....sv«il«

TEE THESE GBEAT EACIHG COURSIS.

Saratoga, Sprija#field, L a k e
Qiiuisi^amoiid.

TJLTZ

J^aftUeY^ RE*" •"" * • * ~

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— "

— —

1

VTEW YOBK HERALD, THUBSftAT, JULY 16, lSTi.HtwlAtTA ffiDmCHft
a j B p i H l of ta« trtoffa. wWM,
tbs o r i a i r r way. dtreetrr aroaad.
/Tun, ^rae^paarteTa. wait* Danas
w on art* r Tbere • nothing
Ha tan west t a i l (be an* aiw
w e e e l Moeot Wigwaas enpatna baavy or ctoaMry. koagiaboat Goodwin, tail as be
-jritacrewutetaistbeaiore
•a* ar MM* froax at* start, wbLc oa
la. Taa stor s uue
i tk*a strsngtb coaw aot be
ahntptiy
r aaost oC Aireedi taw conpiaint la tbat
taey are down *r too tarn aad fine, and itfcabard
to I M fast
M t M k t weather.
of MHiaf a n tot Baiika M a a o / eraar sy stealkawt tratoiBg;a «*** Coal tar The old
e€
iettgbt
are fav •* if* ttaaae longer thai tbsia-aotbiBg bet aaaat and old oread and a little
i t oorti and m t t . bareaoga aotats—U working aa it always does wort and
antioraly AbettareO, tanngb from eoabtla** aiwara win.
• H » N M tb* wts4 sjirai BOBBS good vegetables right InTae idea of dolna wltaout
ibeir season I One wouid
aay nottcwabts eorreat ttual
araots* of geod ractag. wooM tbat men wbo tboogbt at ail lor tbemselves
What sense Is tb*rt in traineeeh to t'if»-twa to Woroeaier, ing ap know better. for a race, spending time and
a wools rear
B)e*lags-eed tbe ionaer, baewles aa
aosjaa sooaojr aad labor, aad atterj a crew
lasty road, cooid by tbe ear* of
It gotten into working coder, leediag tbem
t Waraaster Railroad laad many p w
oa food wbieb. instead ol longina- for, they loathe*
a——
ftofaana,
B O C % BBBBWS^BBB bendy a* *e* watsr: a fact
^fPBTrSB •SSWRBBB? w W * J ^aiaiPfcjflWP
ber rt-aJa It was koto getting Beeean't taosries like marwe,
Harvard on aad forgetUog all aboot bia vttaiuj,, and tben
b e t a s a* mmr*j*J»t
etting blm whipped la a canter by a smaller man
warn Saratoga,
ke King. A nan at
of
rtfitaw, bee ret, not leei dragawd aad the topaad b(s condition does
sober
all goor, batonprovides? for ksep- ©ommoolT ilgbt and spnagr. aad when he is so
watered aad la
there will oaaaJly be found a lltUs flesh on his nt*.
1

S

They Are and Where They
Come From.

C

I

I

Twin Prl arete a Crew.
Next in alphabetical order come tbe men of New
Jersey, aod old, ae la Nassau Ball, yet making this
year tbeir first appearance In these contests. They
bare at home one advantage which none of tbeir
rivals know, indeed two: tbey have water to row
oa that is never known to be rough, and Its sides
are everjwnere parallel end so hear together tbat
tbey most soon learn to row straight, ao that we
may look for some fine steering from them
today.
The water ia question is that
exhilarating sheet known as tbe Delaware and
Raman Canal, aad ao other college represented
here to-day can boast anything like tbat Williams,
to be sure, comes the nearest, bat tbe Hoosec has
one little antic unknown probably to the gay
canal—it dries up. In many ways have the newspapers contributed to make these races what tbey
are to-day, and no college has felt this in a more
practical way than Princeton. For, standing in
need or a soluble boat bouse, Mr. Robert Bonner,
of the Ledper, handed tbem $2,000 towards
erecting one, I which made the rest easy.
The cause of boating at Harvard, for
instance, aod
donbtleeo
at
any
other
of oar colleges, never from any one man received
00 large a contribution. Princeton is reputed to
have tbe nearest approach to a gymnastic professor which any college in this country has yet
found; aad many oi her men had already a reputation as skilful gymnasts, a fact wbicb did not insure good rowing stuff, but still bore that way.
She baa also a, very large Dumber of undergraduates, both 'the Middle and southern States
being strongly represented. Her crew Is one of
the lightest of the nine, Williams and Wesleyan
only weighing mas. They have taken hold of
their work with a good deal of snap, eighteen men
being said to have commenced last fall to try for
places on the crew, and all winter long the rowing
weights at the gymnasium were filled easily. The
men have come up here anything but heavy, in
fact, almost too fine, and should be more careful in
this respect, and doubtless will another year. One
of mean. Mr. Adoicks, knew something of boat
racing before, having, it Is said, a fair record as a
sculler on the Schuylkill. The story goes, also,
tnat alter one race he was seen to
taint away. A while ago these Princeton
men would have bees, at either Harvard
or Yale, regarded as a fine, strong crew; Out
during the last few years, and especially last year,
there was such a constant cropping up of unusually good men—and now there are more than
ever—that these pew comers are really one of the
weakest looking; of all. They—Williams, Trinity,
Cornell and Dartmouth—bave all along been
named as likely to make up this afternoon tbe last
live. If eacb one of them were as good a man in
one sense or the word as the lather of one of tbem
(llali) Is in anotber there would be a lightning race between tbem and the winners
belore nightfall for
tbe first place at
the finish. lr tbey will come up anotber year
with more beet In tbeir boat and especially
with more evidence that they bave been
faithfully and judiciously coached tbey may come
home in the nrstj group of three. Tne observer
would quickly class tbem as city rattier than
countrv boys, as of the sort that fill the outrigger
ot Harvard or Columbia rather than of -inewy
Wesleran or brawny Dartmouth. Tbay are of the
sort tbat, like a certain kind ot cat, are always
better than tfiey look.
The other day
a man of tbeir stamp or even more so, of ptpestem
arms and slab chest, and as modest as be is tough,
rowed as one off a pair and beat a rtvai boat in
which sat one of the very toughest, probably the
very toughest, American college oarsman, certainly
tbe oes; developed in the upper works tbat ever
sat In a boat. Hislarms were over an Inch,probably
nearly two inches, larger than any here to-day. He
bad trained for nls race; his mate looked a good
man, almost as good as the companion of tbe thin
man, and yet the pipestem arms made it hot
work for him all tbe way, and when they
crossed tbe line tae reieree decided that Ptpestem
and bis boat bad won. Tbe blood and otner elements which enable a man to thus do far more
than bis looks would teem to justify are said to flow
freely in some of fbese Princeton veins, so to-morrow's news may be tbat one ol tne to be first four
dropped out and Princeton took bei place. But
probably not.

fore tbey are forty, wfli get ao that tbey ean walk
in an boor nearer five Bales than four, or pall an
ear with the stall aad seay President Eliot, of Bar*
vard, need to, mid doamaess, with three weeks'
training, would to-day: can oeat, say some or their
owa students at what tbey love to do aad esteem thomoefvee goad at, they will begin
to find those students liking tbem in a way tbey
bave aever dreamed of nor really deserved. There
is 00 oeed of racing power. Bat there is Deed of
manly vigor fit to battle with the annoyaoces and
obstacles each day—a miniature life time—bas in
store to try os and prop as with, aad the faculty
which doea what in it lies to disseminate tbat
vigor, keeping ft, of course, within bonds ana
secondary to the end it ts a means to. is going to
do a food, far-reaching and not like most of tbe
studies here and there liberally endowed coming
home to hot a few, bat unlversaL Be Amen te the
prompt and wise action of Trinity and Columbia:
May tbe men of both do credit today to tbe sous
friends who have thus atood up behind tbem joat
where tbey appreciated it most grate mi ly.
•

Tbe

Wesleyan

Crew.

WOWMDOt

tbat
to
after ante
erne tbey wiu aa
nave to work
it i s quite
possible tbat tbe aquatic name of either may be
brighter now than it ever wui again. Both are
very strong tbM year; yet suppose Columbia or
Wesleyan ar Cornell or Dartmouth should eacb
beat both BOW, would it oot begin to
look ae if
tbetr
day
waa paetr
If
tbis Enghsb stroke ti the only correct
oae to row—and it 1 s certainly gaining favor—It
will net be long till ah ta e colleges bave it by
heart. Large and powerml men are plenty outside ef Cambridge aad New Haven as well as in
tbem, as several otuer crews bere oow show, bo,
at least, there is abundant work cut oat ahead.
Tale has come op this year quite strong, as bas
been said, though sne retains bat two 01 her lest
year's crew, while Harvard, whom she would soonest beat, has roar ef hers, end the best four, fl
there ts marked superiority in tbe English stroke,
as rawed by Yale, she Is likeiy to win; but tbat ts
not yet quite proven. She bas one advantage—
her captain is old, much older than any of bis
crew or of Harvard's. Poor yean more of development of wia and judgment ought to tell, and
they do tell in this tbe best, though act the
strongest or toughest, stroke oarsman Yale ever
bad. Her men look well all through—no uneasiness
about any ef them not being strour enough lor
his work. It is getting easier to obtain good men
now than formerly, because more are eager to
row and take tbe steps to become fit. Indeed, it
may be that tweaty years later no faster speed
may be attained tban oow. Men averaging 180
pounds in weight after training are large, wellsized men. Boats are about as light as it seems
possible to make them compatible with sufficient
strength to stand any wear at all. If the London
Rowing Club stroke is perfeot Yale ts as likely to
bave it now, wnen Mr. Cook has devoted so much
time and thought ana care to its acquisition, as
she ever will be again. Should Harvard beat ber
tbis time it will not be from rowiag the same sort of,
stroke and rowing it better, but mainly because
Harvard Is by half a dozen pounds a man larger
and stronger. When two crews get so tbat they
row equally well and have similar boots, as well
as equal experience, a few pounds—in England a
single pound—is believed to tell, in single sculls
it does not seem to make so much difference, one
or our very fast amateur single scullers, for instance, weighing, If tbe report be correct, but lis
pounds. But in pulling one oar In a boat or four,
or six or eight good men have seldom weighed
below 140. From the number of men Yale will
keep over till anotber year I think she will prove
very last in 1876; and if these races continue at
Saratoga there will be one comfort—one can at
least compare the time of crews of different years
when made over the same track. 80 much depends on what the condition of tbe water may be
tbis afternoon or to-morrow, or whenever else the
race may, on account of tbe rough weather—for I
do not think tney will stop for rain—be postponed to. But seldom bave matters looked better
for Yale on tbe eve of a great race.

jftfjffn!

a

^7jm^S^^!l

" •*•«°

«« » w*

el STi*^*?ltoZ£J?'J E2Z- *? '

WHOLE NO. 1

height, j ft, 11* m., weight, its.
» -»-. « j
t - W . H. Addicks. rbtaadalpaia; age, so, asbrht
» rt. • * to.; weight, las. ""*~— " • * • •"•»*,
8 - 0 . M.
ft. 1 0 * i n ; w e i g h t , ISO.
I —R. J. Hall, Sew Tork;
l a . ; ™'WarilV, IwVi
weight

bft, W; height, 5 ft MX

•te heejrbt, a ^
• M la.; weight, tad.
Bow— w. M Smith, Peterson,
L
leight, I ft, A ta.; weight, ltd •V * | •*% » j
M
Average-Ot weight, Ud M; of ••*•**» *fv u
la.; 01 ego. r
B o a t built by rearoo; length, a t * rt.; wbtfl
I t * In. The crew will appear to light cetera*
flannel trimmed with black, aad orange bands*?
chieis.

asrnaouMir- !•!*»
i O A R D H R * WAMT&amp;b—Sat

&gt; O A » " A $ &amp;. L O O d j a O W A N T K D - l

r.rthcoi
B8sBFlS&amp;^v?K.'l25,
w^e8rruBTrjM(Ti_
usee notions— rirr«

* *

rawciTOH reaaHMXM.
*frofc^— Benjamin NioboH (captain). New Tort*
age, 18; height. &amp; ft l o * in.; weight, lis ibs.
'
1-4. 8. Fly. Cedar Rapid a. Iowa; ass, sp; betgtt
tit. 10*111.; weigh t i t s lb*.
^"»
s—J Williamson, Osoorn, Ohio; age, 21: aeurti
6 ft 10 in; weight, 146 lbs.
*f*
«—J. A. Campbell, Washington; age. i t ; height
« ft # * m.: weight, lia tba.
^ ^
6—0. Halgtead, Newark, N. J., age, 20; height
• ft. t x t a . : weight, 1*7 lbs.
* s
Mtm—c O. Green, Oder Rapids, Iowa; axe. itheight, ft ft. T in.; wei* h i its loa.
^" »
Averages—Of weight, -.48; of height, ft ft. MM. •
of age, ia.
Tbetr appearance in the race will be the same as
tbe University crew. •
rmuriTT.
Strot*.—H. 0. Dubois, Falrbaolt, Minn; age. itheight, 6 lk; weight, i«2 lbs.
^* '
2—J. DeF. MoKennan (captain). Washington
Pa.; age. 81; height, e ft. 8 tn.; weight, 175 lbs.
3— WillMm i. Roberts, Detroit; age, a- height.
• it. 1 in.; weight, lift lbs.
^ * ^
4—Clarendon G. Bulkiey, Lebanon, N. H.; weight
lftOlbe.
^ ^
ft—9. D. Hooker, Watertown, N. 1.; age, m :
height. 6 ft. Mn,: weight, lftft lbs.
Bow.-O. M. uuBois, Falrbaolt, Minn.; age, S3;
height, 5 it. 11 in.; weight, 158 lbs.
Averages—Of welgat, 166 lbs.; of height, • f t ;
of age, 22.
Boat built by Elliott; length, 4»H f t ; width,
10* inches. Tbe crew will be arrayea next Thursday in white drawers, gauze shirts and alternate
green and white hanafcerchteia.

What name has come to the front swiiter, more
sorely and more deservedly than that of tbese
same Wealeyans r A handful of men, wbo hardlymany of tbem—know tbe meaning of a spare dolT b e Mew off Dartaswwtbu
lar, or even fifty cents, they bave come up bere
There to something solid, too, about tbat name.
certainly no richer than Amherst, and with
It suggests Daniel Webster and ;be great college
not roar or five or their old team for a nucleus, but
law case, and White Mountains aad rocks and
only one, and bave already made themselves a
things stance aad Arm aad staole. dad yet la
name in advance tbat DO man will say is not dethis sort of wort tbey do hot want to be so
served. Let some one wbo bas been so busy all
bis life making money tbat he has had no time to do
stable, bat to move, right along, aad to move
any good with it, and now finds tbe end of bis days
aa fast aa to beat the others. Tbey came
conironting htm, put a good sized Wesleyan codicil
ap lest year ta Springfield, tbe taUeet men
in the document whioh begins "Imprimis." l a m
of ail, and. like Coraeli, tbe heaviest. But
not a Wesleyan but come from one of tbe oldest,
CslwaaMa C'rvw.
these tog men did not kaow how to use their
and weattbiest and moat renowned universities in
airbabeticaily this year come strength, aad tbey trained la a system which
tbe mod, bat I bave seen now the Wealeyans bave
af Mew Tor* city, the men of Col am- was exoeedtngly saccoasral in taking whatever
behaved for two years, and 1 like them; Indeed,
year, ender the super vision of strength tbey had. Jest look at itl Three
am forced to, for self-reliance sod self-respect soon
af the Ward crew, "Beak," they miles of walking before breakfast, when moat men
command respect. Few men who have studied
| trst oa the Harlem River and later oa are weak from being twelve or fourteen hours
what has been going-en hereabouts during the
last week will place tbem later than third to-night,
taa Osesaectieat. Ht overwork ed them at an y r• te empty, and do not feet like work; au. miles of
and more will put them first, land yet no English
aret, gfTUig then both too much rowiag aad too j ^ j ^ ^ h t afterwards, then a nice six-mile
stroke can be laid at tbeir door, aad tbey are one
Mb walking. Por heavy, borly men, wbo have row, then some dinner, six miles more row and six
of the lightest of the crews. With a bricklayer for
trrewa phlegmatic and lasr, this nay work well more oi walk, an 1 finally, alter snpper. another
bow and wheelwright for stroke and some
three-mf'e walk to top off with, aad that in midsumeaeagb; bat lor aa aeuve sttyyeetb, store or lesa mer weather, say tike Monday two weeks ago. Is It
farmers scattered la between, they remind
ke aisbslag all the time. It does aot pay, aa tee v straage that tbey were not fit to do their work?
one of a certain raiisphtter whose only
JOead tbea, aad so stacaenod work oa reaching All tbe strangeness would bare been rather tbe
gas jet fizzed out nightly from the old back
such a dose as that.
naringneid. Last year taey averaged aboot ISI, other way alter
log, or the quiet man wbo thought he oouid handle
aad, tboagb thought fair, there v a oon- It was natural enough for them to loaf this year,
a refractory Illinois regiment in the first days of
and likely enough it
the war. I saw two or tbem on Monday, whoa the
TEACHING YOUNG HAND3 TO BOW.
atderable awkwardness
among tbem, and could do, for it wouldwas almost tae best thing they
take tbetr systems almost a
lake was white with foam and Shell rowing out of
aw they
were booked for a lew place year to recruit from such wUd treatment. Was it
tbe question, walking smartly along tbe road, ID
ta
tee
race.
Qeee
ap to the time wonderful tbat one evening as tbey were getting
The following extract from the book entitled
flannel sntrt and trousers, sleeves rolled up, no
af the race tbey met with an accident one day owt of the ooat four men vomited • Or tbat next
"Principles of Rowing at Harvard," compiled from
hats and brown, tougb-lookini forearms projectwhile practising oa the river which did their day tbey coato scarcely crawla about, and some
tbe rules used at Oxford, will be 01 value beret—
were seriously ilit Tbougb
majority of the
ing from the sleeves, which would, from tbeir
chances ao good, another crew coming across men are new they suggeat laat year's in
We must start lrom the principle that rowing it
sinewy look and goodly size, catch any one's eye
tbetr coarse aad stapidly keeping no lookout, ran several ways. They are again tue tallest ot
an imitative art; that a man ts made, not bora, a
at once. They are going into the loot races, too,
genius at tne oar, and that you must sbow yoar
these dewa pretty hard, their bow running into all, averaging over six leet in height. Tney
save one, and if the prize was for the best paper
pupil what he is to do, and how. You must give
tea beck of oee of the Columbia waist oars, Mr. are almost certainly tbe heaviest, lake such
ou tbe microcosm and tbe macrocosm they would
him something to studr, and you must oversee tut
a crew and put it through as Cook has done his
aad making an ngly cash, which, of Yale men or Goodwin bis few Harvard, and it is
wbole position and all bis motions. You can do
doubtless all bave a hack at it. They have in no
this onlv in a boat roomy, comfortable aod steady;
way hid themselves while here, but did
nafltted him for work. Notwitb- bard to say where tbey would stop. But with tbetr
THE COLLEGE GBSWS.
thereforetheir work where all the world might
drawback and their mistakes in QUICK, scratcny, unfinished stroke, nothing but
First, pat him into a pair-oar boat a gig witb
see, and take
their time,
too,
if it
Watting tbey made a sharp race with several sheer strength or accident o tueir rivals ean
solid sides, but with proper arrangement of seat
wanted to. Tbey are not ashamed of their
Corrected S t a t i s t i c s for R e f e r e n c e .
bring tbein m first, second or third. Good,
stretcher and outrigger. Sit down oa the aiter
crews, laklag a good place well ap in the centre.
careiul coaching, applied with tact and much
time, and need not be,: and I qnes- l
As the regatta is so near at bond we publish thwart and make htm see bow and where voor leet
In oee respect both then and now tbey are ex- good nature, but applied—thai is what, they
tion If it would not be wise for all crews to row on I carefully corrected lists of the crews, with certain are placed, she heels resting together aod'tbe toes
aredingty well off. Their boating Interests were a want. It is a fine thing this year that all the proturned out/
time openly and, publicly, and even announce at statistics, which will be found generally conven- particular/ then cause blm to imitate you in that
Next put tbe oars into bis bands,
year ago permanently endowed by the faculty fessional trainers sre at last discarded. Uncomwiiat hour they would go rather man lollow this !
placing them about tbree and a half inches apart,
with aa annoity of
$1,000, which,
of monly tough men, tnejr injucbtleseiy suppose that
plan which now obtains ef doing light work In the | ient :—
tbe outside band close to tbe end, but not capplag
much, and
DARTMOUTH.
«..urse. prevents the problem of expense a:i others can stand a*these wen in consequence
i t I! it Ik a square loomed oar all fingers ef the
middle of the course, or starting or finishing short, j
back them up d.- were
ol Dartmouth.
Strotce—Charles u. Gates, Kennebunkport Me.; i ou'side hand are held over and tne tbuma
la preparing for these aaass from giving Tnvre never wan any need of having a prolessional
or effecting some other of the hundred and one ruses I age, 22; height, 6 ft. 1 * in.; weigut, 172 lbs.
band alone
but
to deceive tne vigilant toot. Has any one or the I 2—Frank W. Mitchell, Manchester, N. H.; age, 01 Ittbe ainside loomed oars let underneath; come
Baacb, if aay, trouble, and it ta pleasant trainer at most of tbe colleges. Never jet for a
11 be round
beta thumbs
crews booked for a low down place to-day really j 22: height. 8 ft.; welgnt, 170 lbs.
day bad Uarvard one, uiougu she had occasionally
to aote tbat only recently the authorities at
underneath. Moke htm then get forward, direct3—Charles W. Eager, Manchester, N. H.; age, ing all his limbs with your bands; see tbat he
misled anybody f Their tactics are understood,
Trtaity bave done even better than this, covering tatkeu oi it. Good lungs and vital power these
to bave, and they may to-day
straightens bis back, squares his shouluers, holds
aod though tney may cease the watchful rival a 19; height 6 ft 1 in.: weight, 162 lbs.
tae entire expenses ot the racing crew. This is a Dartaiouto men seem some or tbe smaller meu who
4—Benjamin
pall her through past
Hi tie more trouble in getting their time, he will age. 21; heightF. fRobinson, Manchester, N. H.; up his head, extends his arms fully to their reach,
« t ; weight 140 lbs.
step to tbe rlgbt direction aad will go far towards* row better, of course, too, it is always to be borne
keeps the outside wrist fiat with the arm. tbe inget it ail the same. What, for instance, is to bin5—William F. Westgate, Haverhill, N. H.; age, side brought over tbe handle and beat convexly.
encouraging a hearty, gtuerou* health throughout in mind that eacb crew bas its own tactics,
aer a being off tbe mile stake in the woods on 22; belght, ft ft. 11 in.; weight 162 lbs.
Then, sitting down in your place, go through U«
the college, sad so sending out men fit to stand and it may be tbat these stalwart sons
Bow— Willis G. Eatou, Jr., Lowell; age, 21; motions described in taking a stroke, and let blm
eituer shore and off the two mile, and, having
of Hew llsnipsbire, when a few mioutes alter
tba •tram aad tear of life and u k e thing* as they
see what you are doing. Repeat the several parts
first compared watcnes, noting every crew tbat Mfeigbu o ft, 11* in.; weight, 160 lbs.
four this afternoon comes and tbey are getting
cosae- Laat tali the Columbia men. soi.n after tbe aiong wull down tti« oecond mile, will let out a reef
passed and the second at which It passes ? A of Averages—Of weight 169* lbs.; of height 6 f t ; 01 tbe operation, giving to each a name; then
age, 21.
mate him follow those motions in tbe air,
coansnencement of their term, set energetically at In toeir backs and *&gt;kim lightly oust some of those
little addition, subtraction aod multiplication soon
Tbe boat is Elliott's make, of cedar. 48 ft long that be may fix in bis mind where
tell the rest.
worn about making np tbU year's crew. Three of who are more popular with the wise ones and
and 19* ID. wide. Tbe crew will be bare-bacfted his shoulders, bands, knees ana elbows
and dressed in green haudkerchlels ought to be at tbe commencement aad
the old men, tae three forward ones— Smith. Moore those who purport to kuow. In making up their
All but Eustis, the stroke, will stay for another OD Thursday, and green tights.
(or turbans)
can do
the finish. Next make nim dtp Into tbe water at
year, and some for more. We have seen strong
and tbmoada—are oot, Timpeon, Goodwin and minus wnai a crewthink thatmen often show a
HARVARD.
strange tendency to
tbe college which
ao angle of eighty degrees aod pull througn •
crews, with similar grounds tor hope, stay and deOrtse-oid, all of Hew Tork city, u s i n g their places. won tbe last year will win this, when, in iact, the
Stroke— R. H. Dana, Boston; age, 23; height ft f t small area, the rudder being put against blm.
moralize; but there is not much danger of lellows
Again with your hands regulate his posture aad
tbey are larger men than their predecessors, men are ail or nearly ail diflerent, and little can
of the stamp of tbese doing tbe like. If the plan 10 in.: weight, 168 lbs.
2—D. c. Bacon, Jamaica Plain; age, 20; height let nim try a second stroke, applying little presbe told about tbem. This glitter and glare of being
which bas been agitated somewhat of an allsure, instruct mm to have his chest well best
college six or lour or eight to bave 6 f t ; weight, 163 lbs.
• tandlog eacb over 5 leet 11 inches, and each talked about before tbe public may be tbe spur to
forward toward the loom, that he may strike the
3—W. Goodwin (captain), Jamaica Plain ;ege,
a friendly tbree or four mile brush with
some; others may see tbat in taking bold of a dimwetgbing over ldj pound*.
Cornell, too, the cult project and working it up with energy tbey
water with a mil tension, and feel resistance at
a Cambridge or Oxford crew is put vigorously 21; height 6 ft.; weight, 170 lbs.
4—H. L. Morse, Boston; age, 21; h e i g h t , O f t once. Make him look at tua blade now, and let
heaviest man hut year, bas gained, and bis mate an .mpression on their fellows sure to tell oy
through, there will be found, doubtless, at least
him endeavor to force it into travelling witb tbe
one or two good Methodists in the American * in.; weight, 108 lbs.
crew bid Air to be one ot the heaviest and by; out often tuere is au entire or at least a par6—W. R. Taylor, Jefferson; age, 21;height 6 f t edges vertical; and when he bae succeeded take
party. A little coaching would not hurt them, to
tial lack ol tbe Bptilt wbu-b tbe year before enected
la the race, averaging close to 15» pounds
your own oar and row a mild stroke with one
be sure, though somehow they bave managed now &gt;«in.; welg&amp;t, 170 lbs.
Bow—YT. P. Otis, Chicago; age,21; height 6 ft. hand, watching his performance, end urging on bti
a piece. Tbey bave unproved markedly since last ao inucn and so toe new crew does not do so well.
and tben to do without it; and we should be glad
memory the several parts of his lesson. Featherto see tbem brought forward as samples of one of 9 tn.; weight 166 lbs.
year, aad to-day you bear no one name tue toreAverages—Of weight, 165 lbs.; of height b f t ing is an accomplishment to be subsequently acConnecticut's test products, the timber nutmegs
Tbe Harvard Crew.
Btost three without including Columbia, some
quired. Let bim be first led on by patenal
U S in.; of age, 21.
even being old and feeble in comparison.
High up on a grassy knoll overhanging the lake
even placing her first. This is a long stride lor
Tne boat M a Blaikie, 60 feet long and 21 inches tuition to get a stroke through and to rlg-u himwide. Its weight is about 140 lbs. White tights self square and upright after it is finished, for the
ber, and, ti the confidence is not misplaced, win In its northwest coruer and quite near Mr. Leslie's
The W i l l i a m s Crew.
and crimson (magenta) handkerchiefs will be treat thing here to be aimed at is to get nim from
grounds Is a large and rather Imposing white
ge tar towards showing tbat tbe city boyti get a building, the external appearance of which Is
be first to learn form. Application 01 strengths
All will remember that ar tbe eleven crews which worn next week in tne regatta.
of no consequence. Let bim only attain to pulling
• eight and spring about tbem that tbe country rather pretentious, but on entering which a feelcrossed the famous finish lint lost year, below
WBSLRTAN.
an
upright
Tne Trtmlty Crew.
Springfield, there was doubt about tbe position of
buys do oot have, and tbat telle in this shell ing of disappointment creeps over one; for the
Stroke—J' E. Eustis, Hammond. N. Y.; age, 26; and oar horizontally through his -reach, duly folwithout contortion, and all else will
The Trinity crew. The name reminds one ol several. There was no such doubt as to Williams. height 6 ft 11 in.; weight, ISO lbs.
i icing. Tbey have been out daily, and evidently floors are bare and almost damp, and, with the
low.
stroke with yoo
2—0 P. Marsh, West Newton, Pa.; age, 22; in an Next teach blm to keep in let him row hard
easy paddle, and never
lute their work, while this general confidence uncut grass outside, gives tbe wbole place an air Cambridge, England, whose Trinity is a great row- Her position was clear and unmistakable. She height 6 ft. 8 * in.; weight, 147 lbs.
bas mastered
man can
sreats oaly to do them good. If they should win of neglect. Tue walls are about as b ire as tne ing college, the Third Tilnity crew for instance, was last Many a crew so placed would have crept
3—H. C. Hermans, Coining, N. Y.; age, 22; height, till hebe transformedall tbe points. Any with certhus
into an oarsman
away and not crossed tbe line at; all. But that is 6 ft.; weight, 163 lbs.
It would probably do their college very great good, floors, and though in tbese annual jaunts to train- having a few years ago made wonderfully fast
not tbe way tbey da things in Williams4—G. M. Warren, Deer Island, Me.; age, 24; tainty and without distress to himself.
especially m New York city; aad the day may not ing quarters Harvard—for this is her temporary time on the Henley track. Connecticut is doing town.
But it will be said, "Toe time and trouble con
There is no back down
there. height, 5 ft. 6 In.; weight 144 lbs.
home—bas hit upon some quarters where the very well this year, as last, sending three of the
be fax off when »bt will take the pride in this col- opportunities for self-denial were excellent, she
6—J. William Whitney, Spragne's Corners, N. Y.; sumed in this operation are endless, and tbe attenSuch
a
defeat
would
bave
scared
tion required tor it far too laborious; besides,
lege of hers that Boston does in her netgnbonng bas succeeded in this direction this time perhaps crews—Yale, Wesieyan and Trinity—to only two many a crew oat of any mtnre races. But Wil- age, 24; height, 6 i t 10 la.; weight, 140 lbe.
iSoto—w. H.
south Berwick, Me.; age, wnere is the man to be found wbo thus teaci.es
Harvard, bhe ceruinly has the knack of making better than ever. Going behind tbe bouse and from Massachusetts, one from New Hampshire, liams has not scared. She is nere to-day to do as 21; height, 6 i t Downs,weight. 146 lbs.
scientifically tbe elements ol the craltr' To this
9 in.;
mends, and if tap thirty-four of ber practice along down tbe back lot an eighth of a mile, one from New Jersey and two from New York, well as she can, and better than their best is not
Averages—Of weight, 160 lbs.; of height 6 ft 9 tt is replied, "You might teach four lessons of
fifteen minutes each to so many Freshmen in sa
grew to three or fear more In tbe race she will, you came to a long, low wooden sbed, new and for Rhode Island adding a Fresbman crew. Trinity claimed even for the angels. She has at the head Hi.; of age. 23.
And considering that
otnerwiss
Boat
48
Indeed, make it hot work for any crew to beat ber. its purposes well built, and from its lurther end bad a notion of being in these races long ago, ef ber company a strong, good man. Her men laat Inches; built by Elliott; length,Thefeet; width, 19* hoar.down your whole crew you would hands in a
weight, 169 pounds.
men
runs a short bridge down to a float on tbe edge of having been one of tbe four colleges, Harvard, year were tbe heavier, bat those or this year are lavender drawers and handkerchiefs. will row in take every day at a great of green
ater biae snirts aad Mae and white handkerchiefs
six-oar
expenditure of time
and voice, yoo will find that at tne end of the week
alternating will make one need to look sharp to tbe lake. Here at many hours of the day you will Yale snd Brown being the other three, which were the belter developed. The crew baa changed
WU.UAKS,
find half a dozen men about, and you will not have
have spent
more boars
distinguish ber from Yale, whose blue caps and to look long until a large "H" on a flannel shirt or represented by delegates in the convention of May completely, save one man, and he the best
Stroke—John Gonster (captain), Scranton, Pa.; you yoo do asno recommended; ID a boat
it
but you
26, 186*. But tbe melancholy disaster of that year, there, aod be Gonster. One of the requi- age. 23; height. &amp; ft 11 in.; weight, 159 lbs.
-white shirts all believe are to be well to tbe front. something saying "Harvard University Boat Club"
have now spent them to some
sites for good rowing is water.
Part of
2—M. P. Washburn, East Boston; age, 19; height, yoo will have advanced 100 per cent purpose;
lartber
Their bow la said to be a little flighty, bat the or an old envelope on tbe floor directed to some one tbe drowning of George E. Dunham the stroke of last year tbe men indulged in a few 8 It. 8* io.; weight 144 lbs.
toward tbe formation a boat's crew than by any
eaaras la ao broad and made so plain by tbe many of tbe Harvard crew makes you quite certain tbat the Yale boat, his beat having collided with another, spoonfuls, and called it tbe Hoosac. Then tor
a—J. H. Hayoes, Howe, Mass.; age, 26; height, method'of doing It in of lump. You have been acta
baay• tbat there is good reason to believe be win tbe crimson flag, with white oars across it and the ended the arrangements for any race that year. quite a while they did without It bad evapo- 6 ft. 10* in.; weight 146 lbs.
ing as an instructor instead of a bully; teaching
4—c. Gilbert
avoid a foui la drawing for positions tbey fell letters "U. B. C." fluttering on the boose bact up Tbe same colleges were again represented on tbe rated. Pretty hard work to get ap a crew on in.; weight 168Milton; age. 19; height 6 ft 10* by gentle, intelligible words, and still more by
lbs.
visible actions, tbe things to be done, instead of
tbe bill is tbat of tbe Harvard crew. Tbat flag, by 23d of February, 1859, tbis time at Providence, such a track as that But Gunster fought on. He
5—H. 2. Barker, Burlington, Vt, age, 21; height shouting out a vocabulary of technical terms "not
third from tbe eastern or farther shore, between tbe way, bas a record which makes it every year
R. I., and decided to have tbe race on Lake Quln- has tbe face of a man who does Dot let go easily 6 ft 7* 10.; welgnt, 141 lbs.
tbem
friacetoa aad Yale, but ail are good enough, so more precious to every wearer of the red;
Bow—Benjamin Norton, Plat tab urg, N. Y.; age, understood by the people," and repeatingshould
sigamond, tbe first one, by tbe way. on tbat water. and his record bears him oot He has not, like
endlessly, because it was not possible they
111 tue difference.
18; height, 6 it. 9 in. 5 weight 140 lbs.
for five years ago, on a staff on tbt
be obeyed. Of what earthly use can It be to roar
Wnen tbe tune came arotnd It was found. I be- Columbia on tbe Harlem, for instance, a chance to
b
Averages—Of weight 148 l ' s . ; 01 h e i g h t 6 f t 9 oat to No 2, "Qoleger forward, longer tn tbe water,
bank ef the Thames, four miles above
lieve, that Trinity could njpt mate np a crew, so see others row and take notes aod encouragement. ID. ; 01 age, 21.
Tbe Cornell ( r f w ,
doa, there was run up at about
don't roll oot 01 tiie boat!" He bas not yet been
Boat built by Blatkie; length, 60 ft; width 21 In.: taught tbe motions necessary for getting forward
Harvard, Yale and browa|had it all to themselves. Probably among all tne Berkshire hills there M not
H lITl tbe men of Coraeli wanted and tried hard daybreak a nag of broad brae ground,
another six-oared shell beat than that of his col- weight 139 lbs. The crew will appear in white at all; be cannot keep his oar half a secbo pat to aa appearaace among their lellows, aad white bars across it, and having tbe three large She was not heard from again till 1873, when she lege. That his men bave been at some bard mus- tights and handkerchiefs of royal purple.
right
ond burled, because his untutored wrists
outa vigorous training tor that purpose; but, letters -L. R. t . " stretching from tbe staff Lon- entered tbe association; but tbetr boat getting cular work their well knit aod showy muscles tesrain.
and abouiders are altogether out of tbeir
wards, and above It, by tbe courtesy or Its owners, stove up while coining on the care they bad tify. Barker, for instance, looks decidedly strong,
stroke—R. J. Cook (captain), Lafayette, Pa,; age, places. He knows nottuag about letcuing
to floaacial embarrassments, were unable
each
red
a purchase from bis feet and throwing his weigot
Nothing and Gunster to muscular deveiODmeat has hardly 26; height, 6 it. 8 in.; weight 165 tbs.
be do oa. Bat, by careiol management, tbey last wbo were tben acting aa hosts, this same oldwitu again, unfortunately, to withdraw.
2-J. Kennedy, Struthera, Ohio; age, S3; height, backward from the commencement of tbe stroke,
flag swung gracefully out to tbe oreexe. Its own- daunted, they made anotber try last year, and
a superior on the late. Bat a man may be very 6 i t ; weight, 164 lbs.
year were enrobed among tae eleven, and came up ers this year have, by their record and their pracand, accordingly, be makes a irantlc effort to do a
3— William c. Hall, Buffalo, N. Y, age, 20; height bit of work by some Kind ol clumsy wrench, ail
with a team large and poweriat, bringing with tice, made toemaslvee much respected, and no came up to SpringJUeld with a crew averaging muscular and not pull a strong oar, for his
,;
ft 10
screwed and doubled up.
tease a loousa piece of expense—a professional man who pretends to know anything of tbe merits light—about 145—several of whom had seen some strength may lie ID muscles whioh are 6 4—D. in.; weight Ml lbs,
Keiloig,
Te tbs difficulty of providing Instructors in the
A crew of 6 ft.; weight 152Spuyten DoyeH; age, 20; height,
rowing, and one or two considerable gymnastics. Dot much used ID rowing.
ti alnei, Beary Coulter, of Pittsburg. One or two of ol the various crews encamped about this lake, if
lbs.
pair-oars, one word will serve for aa answer. Bo
stonecutters or machinists might be exceedingly
6—Fred. Wood, Norwalk, Conn. ; age, ao; height yea really intend to teach, in the proper tease
were stalwart looting fellows and at once attempting to forecast tbe result of the great Among the eleven crews they were in tbe modest'
strong, but, unless young men, would need long
wben yon stand up in the six-oars' stern r If you
ked thai respect lor themselves Which big fight to-day, would for one moment, if asked to group which did not like to push themselves for- coaching before they would be dangerous. There I ft 11 to.; weight 166 lbs.
Bow—George L. Bronnell, East Hadden, Coon.; do, tben every thiug taught there can be tangttt tar
BMB often get with very ntue working and deserve name tbe first fonr crews on the homestretch, ward too boldly at tbe finish. Neglect of training, ts a look 01 strength scattered bere and there age, 20; belght 6 ft 8 ID. : weight 161 lbs.
more expeditiously, thoroughly and efficiently in
or even the flrat three, think of omitting HarAvereges—Ot weight, 154* ibs.; of height, 5 ft. tbe little gig. But if you are not able to impart
aa lltue. A day or two before tbe race one oi them, vard. Ail of ner men but one are large and tall too, bad doubtless something to do with this: but I tnroutrh the Williams crew, tnough neither bow
the
elements
of
rowing
drawn iroin
iNituto. took part ia tbe College single scull rac#, ! and shapely, and that one is large enough. They tbe charge will hardly hold good this year. The nor No. 3 is more than moderate. Can they beat 10 in.; of age, 21.
your own knowledge, and are content te use
TALK FRESHMAN.
aad was beaten almost out of sight by a poor, tbin, , are brown and hearty, and noticeably free from crew were gotten together as early as April last, 1 Princeton? may, perhaps, be tbe pertinent quesStroke— E. C. Cook (captain), Worcester, Mass.; merely a cycle of indiscriminate, general appeals
without introduction, or illustration, or point
baagry-looting fellow treat Yale named s*ift. the lean and hungry look so common among rac- and saw plenty of work in their barge—a sort of ; tion to-day, for the race between tbe two will be age 22; height. 5 ft. 10 ID.; weight 166 lbs.
2- W. W. Collin, Pen Yan, N. Y.; age, II; height applicable to particular cases, tben you are as imThis towered tbe estimate set on toem, though not j ing crews in former years; for both last boat not unlike a racing shell in length, but i exciting, even If not so much so as that among
1
postor.
1
Part of tbe Interest this great 6 ft. 10 in,: weight 170 lbs.
saach, aad they went into the Cmver»lty Race very year and this tbese men used their reason la tbe broader and deeper [and nearly twice as heavy— \ tne leaders.
1 should deal in the same way, mutatis muttmOis,
3—L. H. Bradley, Hastings, N. Y.; age, 20; height,
g convenient for any work ! race engenders is in tbe number of little races it
matter of diet, and you will find on tbeir table
» c b taooght of. fbey drew a position outside of
with a more advanced oarsman wbo requires corthe Connecticut lyl Instead of one of the lightest contains and tbe sharp, well defined feeling; of 6 it.; weight, let ibs.
and liberal rare. How
out last
4—M. G. Nixon, Chicago, 111.; age 19: height, 6 f t rection tn style. The young oarsman wno has
ait, aad wore forced either to row across a good bas already been shown, they camefonr best they wanted to take
year
and tbe
learned to row beiore coming to cbilege la likely to
be neaviest crews of tbe year, 1] partisansbip among the spectators. These ore tbe ! 11* tn.; weight 159lbs.
half a mile long aod so shoal that tbetr 'men ol tbem are here now. Three of them have they ore oow one 01
6—F. W. Wheaton,
; age, 19; height 6 I t i be as lull or faults as tbe ill-taogbt "tomid" nun.
0 years oi age, and bave a
but faults of a different character, and which are
elements of the genuine enthusiasm one M
i meat have oitoa touched bottom, or else row just graduated this month, and two ol toe three, averaging twenty-t
oee reaching Saratoga they !! sure to find on the grand stand, and all 8 * in.; weight, 146 lbs.
finely to
because glossed
Bote—C. 8. Mervlne, Wilton, Pa.; age, 23; height, more by a certainpasa concealed, and not palpaoie
• teat course aroaad It. 8ttn, nothing daunted, Messrs. Dana and Goodwin, will probably join the boat from Elliott
over
facility or style,
i men enjoy real enthusiasm. But Gunster 6 It. 8 in.; weigot, 163 lbs.
tbey kept cat, aad l believe that ever since ; Colombia Law school in the fall, where tbey will have been staying at! John Riley's,'lar up the west ; graduates this year, and without him his
from
clumsiness. Now you may do mucb
Averages—Of weight 160* lbs.; of height, 6 f t with positiveman in a aix-oar, out yet you cannot
shore
well out of
tbe
such a
bbe general uncertainly as te tbe order of coming ' meet, a Columbia man told me, recently, some of public 01 the lake andthem are sixtbe way ofand college will have a harder struggle to be on hand 10 tn.; of age, 20.
eye. Four of
leet bigb,
make up a
watch him or talk to bim as you can in a pair. 1
unless
ta tbat year tbey claim tbat tbey were fourth. Colombia's best men, and maythat tbev willcrew tbe average height M ail six ts six leet, one 01 • next year, they hodthey do unexpectedly well
The Yale university crew's six oar was built by should therefore put bim al*o in a gig, first
• to-day, thau
this. Indeed I have heard it
tuere—tnougn it is more likely
pun
mhatever doubt there may be about any of the their last race to-day. as co.lege men usually do on tbem having an iach to spare. They bave predicted that she will be tne first to drop out of Bloikte; length, 60 tt.; width, 21 ID. The Fresh- properly arranged, along with a steady old band,
men
boat; length! 4 0 * f
Cook over [them to show
&gt; catering aext year's race to ease tbey sre graduation. This crew bas bad the usual risks to had notheir abundant strength, and, tbem bow tbe association. Hardly another seems so doubt- 21 In. use an Elliot win wear blue tights t ; width. ana make tbem row a long even stroke. I should
Tbe crews
and hand- sit opposite bim and contemplate nim all over,
to use
in common ful. Wesleyan is not so rich in money, but
this aad one Of the older ones like Harvard run which accompany training, and has not come with many of tbe clews here to-day, that is just she has the great boon, the men. with men kerchief, and knit gauze shirts, wnlte.
observing especially tbe position of bis bands,
BROWN PRE8HMBN.
ar Tale k* tbe winner, taat uncertainty will bardly oO entirely unhurt. Stomachs bave been more wnat tne? must necil stm tbe care bestowed on of the right stamp you can do almost anything
leet, wrists and elbows. I should make bioi leel
tneir rowing by the lew who do the best work human. Princeton ts not strong, but it is her first
Stroke—W. A. Peck, Barnngton, R. L; age, 20; sure wbetber be felt an equal pressure upon the
of Corned. Something aboot tbem or less unruly, boils have staid away pretty offers them somethidg ol such value that they will
height o ft. 11 in.; weight, 161 lbs.
heel or eacb root at tbe first part of the stroke.
and much was not expected of ber. Her
power, aad tbe vigorous, self-reryimg well, bat tbe high, almost feverish, condition oi scarcely fail to copy it, and. with such material as year, too, abounds. Columbia is fast, tbis year,
2—C. M, Lee, Newport; age, 20; height, 5 t t I should make bim try to be conscious tbat his
the btooa which so much hearty lood and bard theirs to draw oa, wi|i by next vear be well up in cash,
who eadewed their young raivaraity work beget makes some of tne men cbale on much
shoulders are not contracted in tne forward rearh
and oot at all poor. Dartmouth is strong 11 in.; weight 145 lbs. •
3—w. R. sttnets (captain), Providence; age, 20: and that tbey are dropped again quite square, and
auaifloentiy m well represented acre by leas provocation than they would out of training. the trout rank. One (great aid to this desirable and confident and does not stand on
end in tbe substantial ait they are reported to trifles; Cornell never was weak; Trinity, as height 6 f t ; weight, 164 lbs.
his chest expanded at the leathering; also, tbat
same strong, self-dependent leUows. The largest, heaviest and naturally strongest man have had from tbeir fkculty—a thing whicn, Better we have said, bos come up fast, at least in strengb,
4—G. w. Dow, Lawrence, Mass.; age, 22; height, his olade'B lower tip throws the water a.t in~
stays from last year and goes from la the boat—ibe farmer, Taylor—has one most tn*n almost any other, illustrates the enurmous while her Faculty witb the cash have made tier 6 i t ; weight 1(58lbs. -*
stead of slivering it; tbat ma knuckles
collegte rowing since ten
ago,
6—S. J. Bradbury, Providence; age, 20; height. 1 always touch his ribs; tbat be is oot
&gt; bow. Be la a reputed good steersman, aa troublesome fault, and the way tbe crew naturally stride taken In whicuJ would oave done years tben foundation sure. 'Harvard and Yale—well, Yale
lacuity
this
screwed on either side wben forward; tbat
aa ear as taey have, aiaewy aad hedvy, devote themselves to setting him know it does not for tbe bave been tbbugbt almost mad—the said awore off one year, but will, probably, never do it 6 it. 10* in.; weignt 142 lbs.
would
Bow— A. G. GritTeo, Litchfield; age20; belght ! tue resistance Is perfeot aad en Ore at
netabiag eearty let, aa Ohio raftaaae and inured mate him a bit more good natured. Nearly every aid being no less than tne entire defraying of their again—at least as long as Mr, Cook stays in Col'
! the first moment of tbe blade's contact with the
be oatdeor Hie. Be m tbetr captain, and u be stroae be pulls be, being a starboard oar, reaches training expenses. Ana yet is it not about time ior lege. The probability ts tnat if auy gap is made it f ft. 9 * in.; weight 140 lbs.
Averages—Oi weight 160 lbs; of height 6 ft 9 water; and tbat from the same moment toe
will be swiftly tilled, and tbat the number will inbas a surowf saeegh crew t e allow ao good a man
water, gathered ap by tbe Made, be driven sad
as be to pail tbe bow oar—in some ways the easiest too lar over to port at tae beginning, swings ail tbe colleges t4 be rollowmg the good crease rather tban diminish, snd it is equally likely in.; of age, 20.
one class
Boat built oy Blaikie; length, 4»* f t ; width, I burled right away in a moss, ao that tae kola,
s a c at too boat—he must bave a pewenhi lot. across to starboard in the middle and back too tar example set by Trinity and Columbia* Ifstands in that beiore this week u oot we shall know whether
Williams will remain. Cambridge, England, has 21 in. Tne men do oot use the sliding seats, un- ' made at first, be carried away astern of the boat
u of men above another in this country
tbe only other of the old beads, was a to port at the end. in these boats, narrow as &amp;
Mat year, and even tbea praised by ordinary chair, aad with bottoms as smooth and need of vigorous pnytsiune it is that lavored one bad far more reason to feel bad, but she never like all tne other crews. The crew wui appear In I I should take particular care that he sits well ottr
which goes
having
af tbe flueet amateur oarsmen be slippery aa human skill can make tbem, ibis sort vantages of througn uor colleges, of tbeir the ad- »aid, Die. She docs not seem to know how, or care white and brown salts, with brown beadercbieiS . bis work; tor sitting too tow and at too great a
a systematic training
mentai
distance from mS thole are tbe two points m a
for the head.
an. Ho at a man oi power and stay, and oi periortnance doea not do. A man ought to powers certainly, and nominally their moral too. to team. Neither should wuiioms.
man's position wbicb unfailingly ruin nit rowiag.
COLtmiA.
ltd. Be took his tarn as a
No man need go out off his own circle or more tban
: Also that bis elbows are not turned outward, and
row
and
aad
Stroke— B. F. Rets, New York city; age, 20; tbat bis inside arm ts as tree aad ngfd from '*•
TMe Vale Crew*
aad tae very mention oi across straight forward tbea bact, keeps oot ODen nis eyes to see abundant proof 01 this.
the boat, and
sne
on Aad tbe
6
i t l b hardy aad outdoor taat ceutd
since John
No maiden entry this year or last for Tale; her height, C.ft I * ID. ; weight 16310*.21; height, 6 f t I shoulder as the other. Again, see that his recovery
a «vel keel; but row aay other way, ana you roll Harvard lack has been the same ever tn the land,
tall to make late toasth aad useful. Hat tour
2—R.
Cornell..New Terr; age,
founded the first college
forward is Instantaneous; and I would expiaia
oame is short enough, bat ber record reaches 9 in.; weight 171 lbs.
no weak apota, nil are her ao that all the other t-ars are annoyed oy tu Jonathan Edwards, Mr instance, having a body
and
3— Ed. &amp;. iupallo. New Yort; age, 21; height 6 ft.; and exemplify tbe elastic spring necessary to tost
aad Henderson loosing For it uexcessively annoying when all are rowing tbat would not stand a quarter of a inlie of tne back to a time beiore four of her to-day's crew
most pointedly.
'••, T .;
wiry ana aasd to rowing, while the river selected smoothly along to bave her take a sadden lurch sort of work daily don« en this lake. Here and tuere were born. Much of It is oat over pleasant read- weight, 156 lbs.
4—G. Gnswoid, Now Tort; age, 18; height 6 f t ; | Finally, 1 should pat blm 00 the back, aad t f l
oaother tCarwta) tar toggtiig oa was tbe Deia- down to one side or tbe other, and ail on one side are Beecners aad Butlers and Bismarcks showing
him what the one dr two prominent points of bis
wttb aaflaeato snare aad sreing at aaariy And their oars so buried in the water that they tne enormous amount of mental tabor he can do wbo ing for ber friends, aot that tt tells of anything to weight 168 lbs.
6-J. T. Goodwin, New Tork; age, 24; height 6 rt 1 failings are, and desire bim to remember tbem
etaat be saada of good staff. Finally tbey
with good mind lndt
also in a aano corport. feel ashamed of, bat simply because tn all ber coo- I 11 in.; weight 157 lbs.
1 careiuliy on tae next occasion of rowing 10 tbe
can hardly get tbem oat or avoid a crab, and
has yei
Bow— P. rtippson. New Tork { age, 22; height 5 six. Then a word wui suffice from yoo, as it wui
M i ^ M t n aa t a t aa be and aataraUy wetgb- especially when tney tnow it is not their tanlL it Nothing tbatphysical been devised bas done as tests ber proportion of victories is small. There
much ior tbe
being 01 oar students as
his wort
»v«rJBB, ao Baa by hard wort trained down to is net at ati unlikely that Mr. Tavior»» oar being a these same annual at tic meetings, if tben tbe is nothing new in that Pour years she went with- f ft. 11* inches; weight 166 lbs. of height 6 ft 10* recall an item of 4, elbows,"already grafted open
Averages—Ol
his mind, as -No.
*»wrisi*,T' -bead."
utile too long inboard has raucn to do with this; faculties would send 1 t the best men—men round out a victory; not so did Cambridge, commencing 1 in.; of age, 21.weujfit, 169lbs.;
1 l
cl
, But througoout the lesson 1 should Insist on n:
L** * * » * . H °*e Grant, a to? pound man, at but it is pretty close to the race a w to nave sacb ' and fun, strong, _
mentally and physically— in '36. Tbea she won twice. Then five times Bbe
Columbia's boat u newly built, by Fearon; 49* , doing to the iractlou 01 a letter what IM required
Wt,a
r O
M
a glaring deiact u it can possibly be a voiced, ana let tbem, until a be\t , plan ts hit upon, foUow in lost incessantly; bat Cambridge did nine, com- ft. long, 21 in. wide: weighs 14* lbs. Tbe racing of him, 11 it is in ms power, and remind bim f*
the footsteps wisely taken by Trinity and Colomdeuxhi ai»*»e4iajthaecewit,wea anaoyed toflno- captain Goodwin ta hardly yet decided a / t \ bia, and w esieysn wit aot be far behind, for she mencing in '61. Last year she got the prize, and ! dress consists ol blue tights and white handker- ! every occasion 01 bis retspstng Into a RwrfBtoeaf
ciueia.
Of i t
»e tae atocy BOBS tbat be irtisiaii tin. AS a whether be bad aot better drop TAyio?
•wafiBsttV
I shall leave rowing men to decide wbetber tats
and
pot
la
bit
place
Doveaa,
one leges, and, think of 14 her President has actually It may be thkt now she again, following tbe
*ro**-C. C. King, MsJone, N. T.; age, tt; height, be the rational method oi teaching and the more
Cambridge
tola
time
in '88,
af tba subaotatea, and tba
oow oar beeo dowo here i t the crews' qoarters lead of
16a
its purpose; or the
11
on
a
long
term of 6 ft. 10* in.; weightToledo; age, 23; height. 6 f t 9 adequate toshouts snd abuse, »ooeteungin P * "
of tost year's crow. Tbe latter is a good man ior H ***!_*, l o ° k H "a °oj»!
2—J. H. southard,
oar. amid
«•••»"••
H e m u s t bas started off
his wekfbt, bat twenty pounds amaiter than be a irood feiiow snd tbe sort of man victory. There is something refreshing te all i n ; weight 146.
biiity of stopping or rej^ttoffbf' potaw »•*•&gt;
3— MM- Carver, PecatonlD, HL; ego, 25; height, cated after a tresh start or anything tike qniet fQTaylor; and as Taylor will be tbe strongest saaa to know. He certainly bas struck tbe right
Jjo^Rlwt^sa.^
to read that 'bus througn all ber dark
^^
; ~ r
" bsottoB oa tbe PS".?*. ^ . J ! ? w * ? 5 | g f f c 5 l i
gir*a seveai"
sat aext tear's crew it seems desirable a possible way of getting bold 01 a Mbow'a reelings, and
aba never turned bar back to tbe enemy, • rt u n . ; weignt 17*.
TZP
"iSSf Z2*JtZrZ SL the famooTAinold
again,! woaid
to m a w bias, aad be will arobaaiy row this alter
tt would be equally painful to bear tbat she
tleeaaa. aad aa i
&gt;«n«H«« wort T
&lt; aeT
,1
mea »rae«ooe-tiiey
of dotag so. It has been much
to Mare. We auwX fbwt
iwt
- wore, wbo M M into
many flail yean, ana maybe bar m s j .
i bejs&amp;t» ft. M Ut j weight l i t ,

MllTESTAirrS OP 1874

*

boat, made of naff of about the thickness of
ordinary cigar box, rapidly aver the water
very day, data aot take very long to
er a twist some where,
aad taa
prudent way weald be to have at hand a gig or
stronger boat far practice, ao tbat tbe
might be at ber best order at tbe crisis, notwithstanding tbese obstacles, however, her men are
as boperoi, though all this talk about undying determination to wta which has bees going the
rounds of tbe press aad a credited to tbem has
come from other Up*, or rather pent, and makes
wtthal rather en tcrtaining reading for tbese mwers
as tbey rte off in their b am mocks in tbe intervals
between work.

Bi-. At, 1ST ATE

r*«i« -out
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flMAMCIAL—SKVMra

PACK.

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PACK-

•OHBKH. C A f t R U a a - s , AC~4ftmm P A
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MOTRL.H^-«KVKJ&lt;TM P*c«—Fifth column.
Mill -i- ~ It-• 1M8.
Ktvlii f i t - j m u .

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WA.NTA.AJ— S « I

IMSTRl O T I O N - S a o o s a P A * « - F i r t h eolt
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MATRIMONIAL—SWVJIO P A U — Fttth col

MKOKALr— Tni»n PA**—Sixth column.
•lSCfcl.l.AfcHO(-.H ADVKKiiefc.Mli.MTS—
Stx«* column.
MtHCKI.LAMXHTi—nooiw PAC«— Fifth
M U - I O A L - S M O K P Pi*.*—Sixth c u l u n i a
K h f P i aUCATIONS— pirra P * « A - - I X U
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flAMOFuRTKh.
ORGANS. 4C.—. StOJi
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R O P O . - A L R — i MIBU I'/ki.c—MXUI co-emu

WKOPRTMIOK AL MTlATIOS.S WASTE)
Tnt«r&gt; PA**—Fourth column.
r a o i ' h h i Y O P T o r T H E C U T FOR
KhNT—MHTOSU PAUK—First column.
BKAL RMTATK TO MXCUAMOE-4&gt;aooi
column.

BRA I. I-HTATR WAKTRD—««COKO

PAO&gt;-

BKLIGIOI'S NOTICE*— Tl*Af P * o * - F i r »
BMWAMOM—FIHST PAOI—itoconri coiunin
BAi.FK AT AlCTION—KlMf l'A(ifc-lilU)
UIIII1A

• r r t J A T l o N S WANTED— r R M A f . E S - T s u
second, third *tid tourih columns.
BTTIJATioNH WAMTBJD—MALES—laiaa
column.
ayp.ClAL KOTTCF8—rtwrr PAOS-JVCOIWI
Sl'MMKK REKORTK—^BIBNTM PAu*~&lt;ixt
TME TRADE-— T a i a n PASS—Sixth co.umi
TIIE T I R F - F I X S T PA«*-fuir&lt;l column.
TO LET IOR BtTSINBKS rTRPOnEU—I
Second column.
A A V B L I . K K S ' &lt;iUIDB-8*co*D PAU*—F(
column A
TJirrVRNISUED ROOMS AND Al'AETME
SBTOKD P*r&gt;*—Second column
WESTCHESTER COUNTY M O P K B T T F(
TO LKT
Sat'osn PAOX— Pir&gt;t colue
I A C U T 8 , STEAMBOATS, A C . - F W A M PAUI

arao.
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AOKbt V OP T H E
HERALD.

B88BS.

NE

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�</text>
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                  <text>Mapping Saratoga Springs</text>
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              <name>Date</name>
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      <name>Map</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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          <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>
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          <description>Natural language description of the map itself, providing a general summary of the map and noting significant features. &#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>Saratoga Springs hosted several college summer rowing contests in the 1870s, to wide national interest. Maps helped those who couldn’t participate or cheer on the rowers get a sense of their course. In 1874, the New York Herald Tribune published a “Regatta Edition,” leading with three regatta route maps: one for Saratoga Springs, Springfield, Mass and Worcester, Mass. The Saratoga map covers the area around Lake Saratoga with a notional map of downtown Saratoga Springs, and includes routes and roads linking the race to the surrounding area. Details to interest local and sportsman alike were included, from each crew's boathouse to properties along the lake, including houses (such as that of publisher Frank Leslie), a grist mill and saw mill, Chapman's Grove and hotels.</text>
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                <text>"The Battle of the Oars," New York Herald, Regatta Edition, July 16, 1874</text>
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                <text>Fisk and son., engravers</text>
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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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      <description>Cartographic document</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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              <text>In 1923, the City Council adopted its first zoning ordinance dividing the city into four types of district—(1) residential single family; (2) two family; (3) hotel and boarding house; and (4) unlimited use.  In an April 23 City Council meeting, Mayor James D. McNulty noted that the City had ordered a map made and published in The Saratogian “to give taxpayers and citizens an idea of what is to be done.”  After addressing individual requests, the council provisionally adopted the ordinance. After defeat in a November referendum for failure to allow two-family homes on the city’s east side, a revised ordinance was adopted in December to prevent apparent plans to turn some North Broadway homes into boarding houses. </text>
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          <name>Theme</name>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>[Zoning] Map, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</text>
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            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
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                <text>Map and Description of Proposed New Zoning Plan for City</text>
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            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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                <text>The Saratogian</text>
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      <name>Hyperlink</name>
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          <name>URL</name>
          <description/>
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              <text>http://fultonhistory.com/Fulton.html</text>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>Fulton County History (website)</text>
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            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>A website with digitized versions of many of New York State's newspapers, including the Saratogian, dataing back to the 19th century.   The search engine can be particular, so when searching for Saratoga Springs or area materials, it can be helpful to include the newspaper title (e.g. Saratogian) in the search.</text>
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            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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              <text>Skidmore College</text>
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          <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>
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              <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>
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          <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>Education</text>
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          <description>Publisher of the item, or of the book or atlas in which it appears.</description>
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              <text>Skidmore College</text>
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                <text>Skidmore Alumnae Quarterly. Vol. 22, no. 2, Winter 1944 (January). </text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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            <name>Creator</name>
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                <text>Gerish, Phyllis Olga, '44 </text>
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          <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>
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          <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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="3158">
              <text>A 1923 blueprint plan of the 1772 Kayaderosseras Patent map held by the county historian.  The text of the map title has been transcribed.</text>
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          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
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              <text>Saratoga Room, Saratoga Springs Public Library</text>
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          <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>
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              <text>Other</text>
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          <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>
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              <text>Property maps</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Topographic 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>
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              <text>Discovery and Exploration</text>
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              <text>Property and Development</text>
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          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
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              <text>J. Dym</text>
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          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
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              <text>3/29/2015</text>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>A Map of the Survey and Partition of all that Tract of Land situate, lying and being in the county of Albany known by the name of KAYADEROSSERAS alias QUEENSBOROUGH for the partition whereof...</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>Mapping Saratoga Springs</text>
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      <name>Map</name>
      <description>Cartographic document</description>
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        <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>
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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>
          <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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              <text>City</text>
            </elementText>
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        <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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="3171">
              <text>City Plan</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="3172">
              <text>Cities and Towns</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Record Contributor</name>
          <description>Individual who prepared the item and/or edited it.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3173">
              <text>J. Dym</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="120">
          <name>Record Creation Date</name>
          <description>Day/Month/Year of record creation/edit</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3174">
              <text>3/29/2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <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>
            </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="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>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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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="3167">
                <text>[Sketch map, 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="3168">
                <text>1829</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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        <name>churches</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="185">
        <name>De Witt</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4">
        <name>manuscript</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="245">
        <name>map</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="184">
        <name>Steel</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="183">
        <name>Walton</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
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          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>Mapping Saratoga Springs</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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            <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>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Map</name>
      <description>Cartographic document</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="118">
          <name>Repository</name>
          <description>Name of the repository that holds the original item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3191">
              <text>Geography and Map Division, Library of Congress</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="3192">
              <text>State</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>
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              <text>Topographic 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>
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              <text>Founding Documents</text>
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          <name>Scale</name>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>ca. 1:950,000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>A Map of the State of New York</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1804</text>
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            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>An 1804 map of New York State that shows a cluster of buildings at the spot where Saratoga Springs will form.  This may be the earliest depiction of Saratoga Springs properties on a published map.  Thanks to Field Horne for the research.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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                <text>eng</text>
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            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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                <text>De Witt, Simeon</text>
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        <name>map</name>
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      <tag tagId="70">
        <name>roads</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="98">
        <name>Saratoga County</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>state map</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
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