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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 35

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ROCHESTER DEMOCRAT AND CIIROXTCLE. SUNDAY. XOYEMRER 21. 1910 rc STEUBEN ACTS ON PROPERTIES IN WEST UNION Le Roy Arranges Military Sendoff Le Roy Four Le Roy boys will receive a military sendoff to training camp on Wednesday. Charles Joseph Caccamisc and Ross Charles Caccamise of North Street; George H.

Page of Stafford, and Robert John Bobzin of Bergen are the first young men to be inducted into the U. S. Army iinder the selective service law from the Le Roy Local Draft Board 575. A short program will be held at the high school at noon when the Rev. Evan M.

Jones, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, will wish the boys good luck from the community. Members of the local draft board, the advisory board end members of Botts-Fiorite Post, American Legion, will be present. It Happened Here-By Morris The Le Roy High School Band and the American Legion Drum Corps will escort the group to the Blue Bus terminal opposite the village hall on West Main Street where they will leave for Rochester to enter the receiving station. All four are volunteers. Le ROY DAR SESSION Le Roy The November meeting of the Te-Car-Na-Wun-Na Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will be held Tuesday afternoon in the home of Mrs.

Clair Wilson, Clay Street, Cities Warned to Cut Expenses AKRON loans dearth as Defense Measure SEEN IN EVENT OF EMERGENCY, OFFICIALS OF TOWN CITY ASSOCIATIONS ADVISE THAT ALL MUNICIPALITIES CUT DOWN XPENSES" Capri Also Urges 1 Costs Cutting 1 At Buffalo I rrt--, Resolution Made To Legalize Lands Eath A resolution adopted by the Steuben County Board of Super vi.rs legalizes deeds of a num-ter of jiroperty owners in the Town of West Union, who for more 30 years have occupied nnd raid taxes on lands for which they held no deed. By this lesolution Steuben County, acquired the lands through tax sale, conveys them to the Fenn-Yoik Company, stipulating ifcat that company immediately must reconvey title to owners of farm from which such lands were taken originally. In all. nine parcels have been conveyed to the Penn-York Com D) OT mm fMm (A Sundial Gift of Forrnef Pupils Pty Put 'Waterloo's Park Lu A SUNDIAL WlrJFrR Pr7 NOW GRACES VILLAGE PARK AT WATERLOO. vr X.

I II pany, hesitles which the county has conveyer! others of these lands to owners of farms of which the parrels originally were a part. ThPre yet remain several parcels wherein the county awaits Rdvice es to whom the parcels shall be conveyed. Repeating 2 In Floor Ttie situation develops because of the Most Sensational Scoops Coverings That Oar Basement LYONS WAYNE COUNTY AMERICAN LEGION ANNOUNCES CAMPAIGN FOR A within the pa.nt few months land WORTHY CAUSE. owners in west union nave given leases of their property to tt -IP- T'enn-York Company, which plan WAYNE LEGION) flr- TO BUY 'LUNG' I to sink test oil and gas wells. It now develops that the leases were executed by parties who did not IRON LUNG Has Been Able to Bring To Rochester! hold title to portions eo leased.

ill WO CAMPAIGN Tte lands involved comprise a four rods wide, extending several miles through West Union, oeir.g Tne nea or a railroad, con struction of which was undertaken and then abandoned. The chapter goes back more than 70 years when the Hornells-ville, Rochester Pine Creek Kailroad -was proposed in 1870. A right-of-way was purchased over the entire distance between Roch- Expert to Show Lie Detector rster and Pine. Creek, Pa. A strip It West Union, as well as at sev At 2 Clifton Springs Meetings eral o-her points including that in tho towns of Canisteo and Clifton Springs Criminals get Greenwood was graded.

A financial panic of 1873 with its Black Friday" that rocked financial circles, resulted in abandon- (Used merit of work on the railroad. Bondholders soon after defaulted on the bonds and the entire prop caught: This, in essence, is the story back of Capt. Theodore Sterns talk and demonstration of the lie detector, to be brought to Clifton Springs Tuesday noon for the Rotary Club, and for the public in the Sanitarium at 8 p. m. No charge ia made for the evening entertainment.

Cfh leave from the Elgin, 111., Police Department where his work is all in the field of crime detection, Captain Stern brings with him not only the lie detector, or polygraph, as developed by Prof. erty was sold in county sections at execution sale. The portion of tlie roadbed in Steuben County was purchased by the late Frank Sullivan Smith of Angelica. The graded bed from CanLsteo to Leonard Keeler of Northwestern University under -whom Captain Stern was trained, but also models of medieval torture instruments such as the rack, wheel and thumbscrew, and other devices of an age that was not choosey about who confessed or why, so long as there was a victim. Finger printing is to be explained, with aid of charts; ballistics, the etudy of guns and bullets, gets its turn, and several other methods of checking on veracity also are discussed.

The "word-association reaction-time" test gets credit for good work; in this, verbal responses of suspected criminals are studied with the knowledge that mental aeosciations between one word and another are delayed if the words have strong emotional meanings A master buying stroke again brings you a repeat sale of two of the most sensational scoops we have ever been able to bring to Rochester. All of you thrift-wise Rochesterians with an eye for quality come a-running Many rugs first quality but slightly soiled during storage; some slightly irregular. Every one a colossal value! Greenwood later was acquired by a railroad that was built and op erated between Canisteo and Phinglehouse, and has not Prlc. Type When Perfect Our Price been operated for several years. That portion of the roadbed in West Union remained in idleness end the taxes were allowed to lapse, when in 1908 it was pur chased by Steuben County at a tax sale.

The county waited until 1912 and then executed its deed for the land in West Union. SCHOOL NIGHT LISTS SPEECH Alexander With Assemblyman Harold C. Ostertag, Attica, as the keynote speaker, "Know Your School Night" will be observed at Alexander Central School Tuesday. The legislator's topic will be "Know Your America." The building will be open for inspection and the Parent-Teacher Association will be in charge of the program. lor the involved persons.

The psycho-galvanmeter uses another principle, a slight current of electricity is passed through an area of human skin. When this area 1s dampened by the sweat usually produced by nervousness According to James S. Drake landowners gradually began to reincorporate this roadbed into the several farms from which It was originally taken. Assessors, too, began including this strip in the Size Type If Perfect 7x9 Floral Ail-Over 7'4ux9 All-Over 7x9 Floral $47.95 7x9 Spiderwe've $48.95 Fern $49.95 9x1 2' 10" Spiderwe've $72.50 9xl4'4" Twistweave $86.75 9x12 Plain $54.00 Figured Hook $56.75 Axminster 9x117" Twistweave $75.50 Price Type Size When Perfect Our Price Floral $23.95 $18.75 5'6Mx9 Floral $23.00 $17.50 5x9 Floral $22.50 Fern $24.60 $17.89 Fern $18.75 $12.50 3'5Mx9 Fern $14.50 9.95 Twist $46.25 $345 Floral $29.95 $19.95 Figured $29.95 $1 9.95 Leaf $65.50 $42.95 Floral $51.50 $34.50 8x9 Scroll $39.75 $29.50 9xl3'2" Plain $99.75 $55.50 9x7 Hook $32.50 $19.95 Size 3x9 35x72 3x4' 10" 3x4' 10" 3x9 6x7'x6" 6x9'2" lO'' 6x9'2" jpeprrtive farm assessments; own Our Price $34.25 $19.95 $19.95 $34.75 $33.89 $37.50 $59.95 $49.95 $39.95 $18.75 $29.98 $22.50 $49.50 $79.50 Axminster Axminster Wilton Wilton Wilton Wilton Axminster Wilton Twistweave Wilton Axminster Axminster Wilton Wilton 2.75 4.50 5.75 2.98 2.69 2.98 2.75 9.98 2.75 8.50 8.25 4.95 5.75 2.98 $1 6.75 9.95 4.95 4.75 4.98 $1 $21.50 $1 $1 8.35 $1 $1 rrs paid taxes on the strip and the county accepted taxes. Grad ually the county's tax sale deed of 1912 became forgotten.

By action of the supervisors In legalizing deeds to this property in West Union, rights of the original owners ns well ns the lease ruhts of the Penn-York Company will be conserved equitably, it is arising from guilt, the current passes through the skin more readily causing changes in the recording instrument. Another instrument sometimes used is the "pneumograph," which records the inspiration-expiration, ratio of suspected person. A Vittorio Benussi, of the University of Gretz, after extended research found that liars are betrayed by their breathing; that they catch their breath quickly just before telling a lie, and that they put more effort and drive into the job of trying to deceive an examiner than do truth tellers. The one to be dtnonstrated by Captain Stem is the polygraph, which depends on blood pressure, and he has a projection arrangement that enables the entire audience to follow the readings of his recording instrument as he worms the truth out of some one selected from the crowd in the auditorium. 9x18 Wilton No Down Payment on Purchases of $15 or More! Wayne Farmers Hold Session at Wolcott School Wolcott The annual organization meeting of the Wayne County Agricultural Association, held In Ieavenworth Central School here, resulted in the election of Lawrence Stone of Wolcott as chairman of the community committeemen.

He also was elected delegate to the county organization meeting In Sodus at a later date. Hugh Green of Wolcott was elected vicechairman and Charles H. TIawley of Red Creek regular member of the community committee. Harvey A. Weaver, administrativa assistant from the conservation office in Sodus, explained thi 1941 program soon to be put into action.

He pointed out that a new practice of much interest to participants in the fruit belt of the county has been added. That is the removal apple trees of unprofitable variety. 8 in Batavia Area Slated for Army Eatavia Seven volunteers and cr.e draftee comprise the first contingent of eight from the Eatavia area to be inducted into the United States Army in Rochester next Wednesday. Nikitas D. Dipson, chairman of the district Draft Board, yesterday er.nounced the composition of the initial delegation as follows: Cosimo K.

Battaglia, 21; Chester J. Zaremski. 22; Paul M. Casper, 26: Wilbur Nephew, 28; Michael A. Marshall, 26; Claude A.

Baker, 30, end Robert T. Reid, 30, volunteers, all of Batavia, and Frank J. Stro-gen, 22, Eatavia, the Number 1 man on the draft roster. Waterloo Workers Push Britain Aid Waterloo An invitation has; been extended to the public by: Miss Bertha Berry, chairman of, the recently formed Waterloo' branch of "Bundles for Britain," to Get here at 9:30 and join the fun of finding the rug you want. More exciting than an old fashioned rummage sale.

And make the luckiest purchase you've had a chance at in a month of Sundays Price When Perfect Price When Perfect Type Type Organ Rites Slated For Gorham Church Gorham Dedication of the new rebuilt organ of the Gorham Methodist Church is scheduled for visit the chapter's headquarters in firemen's rooms here and be made acquainted with the work that is being done for the suffering people in England. On display in the rooms are all types of the knitted articles needed while articles for sale include knitting bags, lapel pins, buttons and the like. Proceeds from these sales go into a fund to carry on this work. Miss Berry announced that the rooms are open on Wednesday and Friday afternoons from 2 until 5 o'clock and that a supply of yarn has been received that is available for volunteer knitters. next Sunday evening.

The Rev. S. G. Houghton, Geneva District superintendent, will be the speaker. Out of town soloists and musicians will assist in the musical program, to be given by the church choir.

The choir will wear robes purchased recently for the dedication service. The affair will be open to the public. Bristol Valley Grange Lists Dance Friday Bristol The second in a series cf three dances to be given by members of Bristol Valley Grange in the Bristol Valley Grange Hall at Baptist Hill will be held Friday evening. An orchestra from Atlanta will furnish music for old end new dances. Committee in charge of arrangements includes Mr.

and Mrs. Anson Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Rogers, Mr. and Mrs.

George Ward, Mr. and Mrs. William Mosher and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Marshall.

The f.nal dance in the series is listed for December. Burgundy Wilton Peach Loop Pile Mixed Needlepoint Red Axminster Plain Slate Eggshell Wilton Mauve Twistweave Slate Wilton Gray Wilton Peach Twist Ash Rose Wilton Beige Wilton Heavy Velvet-Slate Figured Smoke Needlepoint Maple Twist Figured Burgundy Green. Plain Green Mauve Wilton Gray Figured Rust Fern Fern Axminster Size 3x9'9" 4x4'5" I'lO" 4x7 Wxirs" 6xl3'9" 5x3 1'6" IOVxIO" 7x6' 10" 6x1 5'6" 9x12 9x12 9x12 9x12 9x12 9x12 Size 9x21 8x1 06" 9x12 s'lo'xmo" 8x14 9x21 9x13 9x22 10x18 lOYW m'-xNT 12x107" I I'lO'xl l'8" 1 1 3'8" 12x13 15x16 I 6Txb'2" Our Price 8.95 $19.95 $11.75 $11.95 5.50 5.75 $16.95 $15.95 $11.75 $19.95 8.75 $12.75 $15.95 9.98 $34.50 $75.00 $19.98 $15.75 $34.50 $22.50 $39.95 $15.75 $39.95 $29.95 $15.95 $24.98 Our Price. $69.95 $24.98 $25.75 $34.50 $35.50 $35.75 $34.50 $89.95 $25.75 $59.50 $49.50 $22.50 $54.00 $55.50 $42.50 $42.50 $69.50 $44.50 $49.95 $74.50 $69.75 $89.50 $119.00 $72.50 $135.50 $23.50 $52.30 $25.25 $26.75 $13.50 $40.25 $42.19 $28.15 $52.50 $25.50 $45.00 $38.25 $23.25 $82.00 $226.75 $42.75 $37.50 $92.50 $41.25 $71.25 $71.25 $71.25 $42.50 Axminster Leaf $178.00 Blue Wilton $64.25 Slate Wilton $63.50 Red Persian Border $71.25 Mauve Loop Weave $77.75 (2) Rose Decorator Type. $34.50 Green Twistweave $81.00 Brown Hook $208.95 Blue Wilton $51.50 Blue Twistweave $130.90 Red Wilton $135.00 Green Wilton $55.75 Green Wilton $99.75 Green Wilton $105.75 Burgundy Wilton $94.75 Green Twistweave $95.25 Hook Blue $152.50 Green Hook $1 14.75 White Wilton I 18.50 Blue Wilton $146.75 Lime Super Velvet $172.50 D'c't'r Type Champagne.

$20 1. 25 Rose Taupe Chenille $278.50 Round Beige Wilton $191.50 Beige Ex. Hvy Dec. Type $341.50 ANY DAMAGE ANY MAKE EXPERT WORKMANSHIP fc't' tj uMfc you jWrK i AZjJ- 1 1 Lttrun Loves CUJ JfjM CLEANED Tinting Glazing at Rust Modern Geneva Club Waits Talk on 'Plastics' Canandaigua Dr. Dwight C.

Carpenter, research chief at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, Geneva, will be guest speaker at a meeting of the Woman's City Club in the Congregational social rooms here at 8 p. ni. tomorrow. He will talk on ''Plastics" under sponsorship of the club's popular science committee, cf which Mrs. Andrew M.

Johnston is chairman. INSPECTION AT STANLEY Stanley Scout Executive Fred Quinn of Geneva will inspect the Stanley Boy Scouts tomorrow. At that time a Court of Honor also will be held and awards made to scouts. The ceremony is open to the public and Scoutmaster Ed- in extra jnarge BURNS TEARS HOLES FYPFRTIY DCWOVPM Red Persian Eggshell Axminster Modern Rust Red Chinese Woolen Knitted Mater- '5 HOSIERY REPAIR ials, Low Prieei. CLOVE CLEANING TEXTILE WEAVING 1 DEPT.

MAIN FLOOR Because Quantities Are Limited It Is Advisable to Shop in Person SIBLEY. LINDSAY CURR CO. AISLE 11.

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Pages Available:
2,656,601
Years Available:
1871-2024