VOkLXXII -BROeKPORT, NEW YOBKSk THURSDAY, JULYJ5...

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VOkLXXII -BROeKPORT, NEW YOBKSk THURSDAY, JULYJ5 r 1928 CON SO L1 DATE 0 JUNE 1&N 1925 i a/ft"* at »«• u u m fill I I* ion VHVXX pttvToWn T^ani^Scliedule.HHatve Fast JBatd-hitti^g Outfit* Brockjlort Appar- ently Outclas&ed in Lea^ue7 HiltqpjTakes a Though 6 a m e and E>ropft Bro|?lcp3prt HI Cellar* i'*.Ste VIER ../ jFilmore H^Be.Vier died ar%e a a ^ . <!pimty HssiatHl'- Saturday? June *29. Tfie deceased was at one time i i the employ .of the Brockport ^pute*e-asd-has-4^d~in-iaisj?illage -for ah»put 20 years. The. funeral was held Tuesday in Rochester; Ife leaves one brother at Clyde, New York- Brockport lost another hard fought ball game on the .local diamond Sun- day afternoon before one,of the larg- tV est crowds towitness a game here this season. Coidwater won by a score of 6 to. 2r-^ ' T . ' Thl first--six innings were scoreless -WithJhe. visitors getting one map. \o *'third'°.He was thrown out attempting .to steal home. It was real baseball S^veatiV inning w.Tmn With — -until one out and a runner on second a liner went to. third? vvas picked .up by Delehanty. ahd thrown .to first.. The runner on -secondlrad Advanced and easily made third.. He;could,,have .been retired between the sScks. A long - drive fe to center scored ; both runners, —,^-_ Brockport came -back, in their half of t h e inning and sent two across to s even the count. -7— '-•'— -TaMi^gyihin^.HP r p.madL^o^ga_.W£QBg_in. the eighth and nineth and the visitors added two runs in each to their scbrer __,j2ne_pf the snappiest plays ever seen on thelaSprounT*mmdW^^ " OuHy : th¥-efth-JKhie^-wit^^ ^flld.mtgV.i^•;:••• • • 6 "'2 j750lti O]1 , hilt for the" pTst fortyyeaJFThas Seottsville- ( ;:..:.."" ' """" """"' ———---.-. - • H i l t o n l9 •.-'. ' Holley ....... is.- .... Albion .-...-. T..i ^hffffetfo r,,; , • • . ..„•„. ^a-flrst the batter hit a tejcrifla .drive ".®twe"en"rlr^an'cl-secondrit~was:sdoop-' -ed-upby Qarbett and from; his. kneps .tossed-to-Kruger to force at second *4»nd, thrown to first, to beat theJiatter. Phe-rbovs-^eeeteed a ..miicli-deserved hand when they trotted in. - Ifi.". Brockport has but two more home next Sunday and" Holley%will oppose us here July 29th. Both teams won on their diamond and should .furnish plenty ot opposition. '" ^"•'ifr'oc&poft'wnfiiltty at ClimluUu-tkc 25th, !Irondequoit the 22nd and Scotta- vllle on August 5th. - The- Box- sGore^olOBa , Si_l "_^__ t r . -&RO&>«»ORT- iUchols.lf a b r h 4 U" 0 Kruger, s . Barclay, cf ~Xenyon-,P-' -"-,7i . Corbett,2 .... Delehanty, 3b Iveson, lb' ... Wood, r ..... Hubbell.c _*©ilts ....... **HiieV ; , ; , ^ . 4 ii-iT- 4 0 1 4. 0 2 1 •0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 -2V2: 3 G 2 ^6 .Both teams s-iiceejded in.getting.men. on bases after the .nineth inning but couldn't -score' until' the eleventh. Dfelehanty stab"bed. a hot one that look- ed like £i sure Sit over the third sack^ He picked his man at first. : Boyd Williams did-the coaching for Brockport in Major league style. Score: b7~ihnirigs: ' ?•-> Brockport -0 0 0 0 0'DO 0 1^0 0—1 Hilton,' ' c-f 0 0 0 0.0 0 O'o'o.l-2 OBITUARY WEBSTER *•• * Martin't.. Webster aged 7$ dip at his home' at 135. Fayette, street,; Jiily^ - ; -3r&—Be—is survived by .four sons, John L., W a r r e n H., IVah B-,' and Ralph P., ail of" Brockport; five tlaugh- tea'S, " Mrs. Florence Burton,, Mrs. J & a a t Holcomb,_:Mfs. Edgar Carter, Mrs.' "Clara Webster -of. Rochester; 2 grandchildren. '. The funeral will be held from the nome, Thursdayp burial at La: Iteside cemeCery, Hamlin. . Yesterday's Scores Cold -Water-16, Seottsville 7. Hilton 2,-Brockportl, 11 innings. Holley. 6,'Charlotte 5.'.^ . Uvondequcit 9, Albion 3. Standings of the- Clubs. 4- HORNSBY Miss Louesa Hornsby aged 81 years, died at her home* oji Kenyon street, -Saturday, June 30. The deceased was born in Clarkson the daughter of A.I- fred Eornsby and Harriett Beaching. She has always^jfesided in-that sec Radio To m %M OLD FASHigNJfr ^STUMP" CAMPMGNlfhilfiAY e o $mJLt OtJ^ADiO 7 •J ' ' ' ' *'-'£H Swinging of A n n l ^ a c e Making etc; Will ^Oii^hue with Son\e Campiugners In- years gone by th,e §turflp speaker plasyed an import^M part .in. national political campaigns.. Candidates went on the road and took the stump in cities and towns froth coast to coast. is_the radio, going to iph us of the' good old political meetings^ -•-—--, Nbw a candidate ca,h'sit. comfoi'tably- b_eJore_j?, microphone and with one speech j-eifih"milflpi^"ot pe.rsons'j throughout Jtho cpuntry by means of | -5- 5 :3 2 .714^1 mltdelieFhonie in tfiTs vilTagg,, 2 .714.; Tll ^ f unera i services were h'eW Slon- £i'Qm_the Methodist churel at 2 .,J 5 ^ • day 'kondequeit . Brockport* !. _ ^__ * o'clock. She is survived by,one sister, ^—^S-H^i's-^lkiynes.-af-iQH-SSgeleC 6 ,2 ^° i a niece, Mrs. Deyo of Rochester. T 7 .222-t -- 1 ,,JLQRDAN. _ .. .-^Mra. Viola Jordan entered }ato rest General satisfaction with the opera- lr-sni-now 03a-until the-November elec-1 tion of central schools has been <?x- --tWr^HfrF^r^ife-W-ilLhe used extensive-. pressed- in answers' t^'a q»§§ti)OBa,ire ly by.P'olitieians to get their messages i.Oistvibutea throughout-^fehe--State—ta over to the public. ' ° pai-ents whose childr-ea- attend such -Last Thurs«aa}v;Mary Jane Holones -chaptexof O. ,E; S.-joiped-4,he-JJaaoniu Lodge in their annual picnic which wnshairi - on 4vhe- p i c n i c , g r o u n d s at Tnmtbarg.- A.^d&liGious^dln.ner ; . szaa. served to about 175 people at 1:30 P, M. This was followed by the sports wfiich everyone seemed to en-; JOK either,, ac^iveljr, Mi^m onlookers.. at tb.e home of her. son, Justin, • of ; :Roch^stetT^S^WdagyF--June30;- ;Mrs, ^Jordan was; pdrn in the town &f ,11am- ttn, -the daughter of- Mr.-.-?tt4 Mrs ; Jamens Blossoirw Deceased is swvlved -,by ttiree sons* James, and* Jastiti of •RflCb«st*J•: aiid-€heste¥-ofJBattlej- Cxeakv. Mich., one daughter, Mrs. Nellie Hart ^o^^troit^-Mich.i^terr graTMcAftdrejr •and ^vc^g*ea ; fe^mn4ehiklreji l L^y§ora brottier, Justin Blossom of \V^lker. Funeral'services were held f ijiesday with interment at Mt. Hope, The following people won prizes: Distab.ee for -6^11 throwing,.Frank- lin .BtKi^waUi Jlrs.jAlta Stewart; Dis- Ia^c^:fol^lmtt±D^ : tt^bath -Bee^n^MosieF and-vMrs. Le Roy Miller; *,Running race, u s c a r jMxcho Goold,—— 4 4 2 3 1 JU 0 2 0 2" 0 'CL 3. 6 1 4 0 0.. 2 Tdtals--34- -2 -6-27-17 *Batted 4or Wood la^aveHth- **Batted for Fults in eighth. _ COLDWATER . .—.v -..,... , ,. ._..,.. a b "Fisher, s —.. .MtaBi 2b.. .^L G. O'Brien, cf JSL-Q'Brfej}JSb' -rKohlinier,r ..- h- •2 1 1 0 5 4 2 4 - 3 0~ -1 1 -fr *Averyrlb ~. .r,;.-.-.., 4 1 2 S 0 A.Entriss >-.... Gaedline, c .:., MeiSIaidt, p TT, tFarreil ..,- Baker, If —.', ~ l 2r .l'_0_.:.0""0 4 1 l_^8'"l i" -jDl 1 0 0. 2 0 0 0 0 y + - Totals S4 § 9 27 '12 HM"P for Kohlmeir in eighth. Brockport 'Goldwater Errors* Kruger 2, Barclay 1, Kenyda 1, Delehantyi, Ivesofll, Hubbel -1, Goodline %.-.?. Rutan, A.very; stolen bases, G-. O'Brien ^—2^sacfifice, G. O'Brien 1; double plays, -Corbett to Kroger,to Iveson; left oh* V bases,. Coidwater 2*. Brockport 3; bases --•/Oh. bail§, Meiahardt 1, Kohlmeirti, struck but, by Kenyon 4, Meinhardt 5, ":Ko"hlnreir-3 > hit by pitcher; by Kenyon^ (G. O'Brien, Kohlmeir); wild pitches, dusky. wtoiing.pifcherj Meinhardt], yoh^ umpire,- Saa- Hlltbn Takes Tough tlame, 2-1 .~__3?7hat a. game, "What a game yet L - Brockport dropped it - to the Hilton 'tpwn team-yesterday by a; 2 tb }. scored 'Hiltpn scored ong run.in the first ai^d. iCT-usti3r the^eleventhl,-- ^_ The boys 'played wonderful base- . ball-and looked liked champions frett* the first right through.- In the nineth inijihg with Hiltpn , leading 1 to <), Gorbett singled, "went f7~*to^s%ctfaaw WilUainTbTffit~Slia" home on_Barclay's drive over, the. third base- "'sack, The crowd "went wild.' Billy Gocdph* Mary Doahe; Standing byroad, jumgj, Billie Gordon; Mary Guelph; RutUning~bToa^-iuimT,--Paur Grigen,_ Barbarft-.Dobson.—JIhe egg throwing- cpnAest.-.was-wan_ix._Es_Ai. Coapman and George A. Engel. They being the on«s to" throw an. egg the longest and farthest apart Avithoutl department' where there are 55. In the ..- • •— -—~~-:k •->---. 1 Kinaefgarten there are 3SrT5ad~the junlof- 52. The purpose of the school istlie de-vJelopnient of christian char- jcle^jhrpugh^.-lhe-, pfiristlanrzing ^ of "everyday— e : xperiences andr relation? breaking it. Other "games such' as dodge "ball 'andi a relay race Were enjoyed by.all. The big event ot the day was-theJaall. -gaEnts-TSe-i^rer^itire^f^^fia^^^ wgreruskJiowBrbnt they-\vere- smaH- -IteBiS-""^- ; - . - :. -"'''- i~y .^—^_.\. .. After a bafflet sttppe'r the picnicers. returned hom« feeling that they had had a happy and pleasant outing. 6OX ALFRED E. SMITH Peace and harmony prevailed at -Houston. wTiPtn.-Govftrnnr ALSmith was. noaninated for the presidency ot the United States by~the Democratic party last week... - T h e "'Governor is, without a doubt, the "3^it-po5Ular candidate the dele- garfees'-Hjeuld select and even- should he not Tviu in Novemeber, he is sure to give the-Republican horhinee,,Her'- bert Hoover* a re|l race. -jbOTCct-ffeTmrerats ;are a h g a d y - c heierve"l;hat ng JNew Yorirstate an as New YorE goes, sdTgoes tne nation. ~ W e iiave^ hr afiother column .clip- pings from several Western New York weekly papers who greatly favor Mr. Hoover. Whejther the weekly Repub- lican niRwapapflrs can off-set the New Y^rk-dailicD ^Yil]^remai^ to be seen.: At any rate, as^we.see it,,the ( battle -will-be—fojlght- in the-empire-sta ! Jbs. Daniels,, secretary of the navy inrthe eabiiEet trf the late- ex-president WilSQfl.- iliiS- called o n the^-soufhorn ter^-th Democrats _to stand sblidly behind Gov Smith. -Mr. Danieis-iS: a^-Qry ,r . T " _.fflilfi * large, manbe^-oJE-dry iSnuth- ern voters may sWit<3h_to Mr. Hpover. or not vote at- all. It is. generally con- ceded that the south will remain solid; •We -wish again to call attention to ol^r readers' to, the political stahd of THE REPUBLIC;Di®qCRAT T It.'fe Ja^M33EF^rjAfflL^PER. --The editor will welcomes signed/articles .regarding tiie candidates of both par- ties .for p-ubiieatioh. The paper is your paper- and ybu should, feel -free to use it's columns , at iahy time. T»o insure iDsertitsnrarficles^shouid be" typed or clearly written and handed to «s hot later thafl Tuesday, VacatioirSchod r Attendance Grows Tbte sirbliTnent of -the Bpoekport Comanunity Vacation, churqh school, Ihat^iSTbetag-held daily at the Baptist; church^Js now 151); including'•children, from, the Baptist, Presbytefiah^.iletho- diit' and Episcopal charcsliea. The largest registration is in the Primary stumpspeecaesV Jiadib requireB a hif* ferent-techniQtt'et;-the^voiee-inust-« > do everytLhia^. ^ Time will tell _ whether the radio wiil take - the n^lacr ^f-^he.-^tumpr whether-pttbMe=i»en will in the future turn: Loitror ifrottt it Wheh^desfrous of making public utterances. -ships..Ihe_ fiourses that_^ire_Jeing taupJVafe.t|o_deyelppe phristiaii atti- tude-toward life. -That being^-nsed! to the„ Kindergarten is the standard, course^ in. the primary world jfriend- stal* wife the Latin Amerlcan--ooun~ tries is .being followed, and ia the jumepr .a christian Knighthoodj project is tiie basis of study. ; AJLolApiLc^pjni3^Jn^do-^gjgjb^ insteriietienj and expressionalseoxk^ All handwork is correlated with the pro]-. ecL Each day" there is a preriod of ;aupjervised_play^ EJvery .Tuesday;at"9 o*cTocIT w-ofship ser^iee j&f the entire seh&ol is held^ in •whicfr-each department has a sharer At the first one a talk on ''weeds" was given by Rev. Emery D. Webster, of- ^"m^WeS^yteTfteif School will run for two more weeks closing B*riday, July" 2TF. An Explanation In June this paper carried a request that persons interested in pjbgr_achool -sites than theUwd adyertiserd. should get", options or present their .ideas to e Board- ef-Educatioii for action" Only one peYson has responded and that tft" noav^iiaVtiptioiSs^oalcVnot-beT^:] obCalned "ph^the p'ropcrty.. Tie tfotfrd of JEdUcation has labored diligently to get options 6n other sites v^*ich^vbuld be -feasible h u t withoiit_suiecesi__sad it therefore prevented from adveitis- 1 ing other than the two unless condem- nation-proceedings were -instituted a n d in both_such_jgases the cost-of the sites, if" the' ideas pSfiT'bw'.nefs "pre- va,iiedj Would- run into iSB.OOG" $40^00 each. •-, *The Swastika Home jBu;ieau" will meet - at the hpnie ^oi Mrs, Arthur Southoomfee Monday? 4 -July % to ar- raiige the project program for next tl-thofie-havittg- can'dy* money- will please bring or -send it to the Bueeting. . • * ". the great radio "hook-ups" now used I can , t gl gg p » in reporting *of big events* over the j., '~~Z— radio. ** "What a, difference r between this method o.f reaching the public and the j metthpd ol addressKng many compara-|- tiv.elx'.- small groups of persons one j after another, day after-day and weekj ^K5F^^5Hktrrrz^r^^-—-.——--—-.— r Radio has- already jiai3iei!j?oimtless 1 speeches of a political najure over.;, the air,-andit seems yeryjilcely that | 25th ANNIVERSARY ^JEiir. and M&s. Ctaylord Castor enter- tained at their home on Spring street thtrfy-oiie guests for_dinner oa the eve- ning of June 23 tt the event'being thejir twenty-fifth Wedding anniversary, Mr.. and Mrs. Castor were rnar-ried in this village^j>y tbfe Re"v ; .Norris.. of the MethodisT Episcopal Church^ T£T couple 'were the recipients of many beautifui-stiyer pieces. ° ' WARNS OF MQ3Q.U1T0S AT „. QOpMPQi CAMP -Seattle^-Allan D. McDonald is not at aircheerfUl about President Obol- idge's eEcfice^of Brule, Wis., for his vacation, camp* McDonald, a retired logger, warns that the mosquitos in Brule are simply terrible.. . ^h^mqsqnrtos'arVsxr bad -thei-e," says McDbhald,--""-£ha.£ we used to hing pieces of pork on ojir suspenders for them to feed on, They"bUzz around'' like a-"bmich of. tractors so that you Parents Approve of Central Physicians Approve . °of Special Pla^t^s . Dr's Hazen and Mann, health offi- cers, and Mrs. Matie T; Jones, public health nurse, of Brockport and Sweden^ \yhp/jepresented;. "this community at the twe^tT^eTelittrimnual-eonfereftee 0^ 'heaith officers and public,, health .nurse's* at Saratoga Springs on June 26,27 and 28, reports that is was.the largest and best conference ever held, "a total of nearly 1200 delegates being r e g i s t e r e d . «, ' ' * The Conference was opened .by Dr. Matthias Nicoll, Jr.,-State Commission- •er of Health.* He called, attention to the.! large_number of needless deaths of jnothers during childbir^i and pplfc ted out w-ay&-by which these fatalities may be reduced* D r r ^ r r y B . Trick, President, ot the State Medical Socie, ty., spoke bn^he^ecWIit^Of^COopera- tion between practicing physicians Kiwanis Celebrate FORMER MAYOR, ROSTER ^D&RESSES Wivei, Sister? and Sweethearts Join with Kiwanians inr3ird- - Annual Celebration Kiwanis of Brockpoi't with--their wives, sisters and sweethearts, .atig*- mented by fifty odd' frohi itocheHei^ . enjoyed to the utmost the thitd anni- . versary dinner of the .Club at Hotel Brockport Wednesday evening oriast^ .week. "... - - - - - r —— -• . - _ President H. B. MacArthur was in his usual judicial robesind with.jpine^_ honeyed words, slapped on some fines ,-^ijm and health, officials. Df, Thomas- Ord-' before-Qie party got aown to thereat Very^F^w Opposed - •CTnelHtfei^p^e-'-betweenrs^umiESBealr- ihg and raoio oroadcasttngi as-'far-nis' political speeches is .concerned, is-'tha^ perieTTCe what " the schools,'i-a~an-effort to- leiuauthfij^al •^e^ttoent-of^h^ss^dmJilioj^^ wltilethe main atteudaiice at poIRIcaX gatherings is made, up-of many friends and admirers of the ofatqrs,.the radio reaches friend and'tbe alike. % Another thing which- must be con siderfflf-^B* lhar"^£fflEflp^spwtein& ^nrd--whdciLii(tve keeixeeen^^fprme'l. The radio—^broa4castJaig-^a«li--haw«j_thei-e. own technia.ue. Of what use in radio bToa^reas , of feature, the waving of arms, the gesticulations that play so .large a part„,in increasing, t%;ag^tiveness of attitude of" rural people* and lead to hafti^)lthle-suEaie£MDn that those :whp-wish •to. knpw. the facts Regarding central ScBools ask the: parents in such districts. '••--. MR. HERBERT HOOVER 4 Ih a Wnse the Taomination -of Her- bert Hoover and Charles Curtis at Kansas City is a distinct victory for tne inuueiatial country presi of Kew York State. It is true that metropoli- an dailies - without-^bxcepQon.. now ad-, mit;t|ig_3treiigth of the tidket. ^ It was- the^ sniangr aew-spapers . of the-atatajghO!_were first aboard the jEEopyer ,band.wagon-; and' Wjho^-eariled oh the fight early and late. CbmnieBit ©f'f&ur~o£ tiiem follows: The Suffolk Cdiifity News: "Already result -of ,the^Conisqenllpn.. wje,_h8,ve learaed-e? -a ffiinlb'er-of Democrats i who have expressed th.eir^e£arMna- tion to ybi& for Hoover and Curtis." The : P s ^ d - ^ R e V i e w ^ T i m g s : , . "."Hefr bert ""Hoover is by far the inbst~a~*b% presidenttai candidate sin^e the days of Woodrow Wilson.-His accomplish- ments put hto far abov^e Harding or Coolidge.-" "f ^T^3; biSei iaen or stronger. candidates it would -be hard to find. Mr. Hoover's name is a household name throughput the nation*, Senator Curtis and his career are equally appealing. Hudson Falls Herald: ''Herbert Hooverris- muen like ^resident Cool- idge.- He Is a practical "mail who is far more concerned with the welfare of the country than he is for 'any prominence that may come to him if he is- , -eleTited- i -i?residemV T h e party could hot have made a wiser choice." ^ HALU-WHITNEY the J i a r r k g e 0f_Miss Cjara_Whit- ney of his yillage and Mr. N^wlon Hall'of Hilton was solemnized at the Hilton Baptist-parsonage ^Friday, eve.- ning, ^56^22^ "at 7:30 o'clock, Dr. S. M. Traver officiating. The attef\d ; wire Mr. Wilbur Hall and Miis Clara Hoag, Mr, Hall is' employed, at The: A, &r-p.-^canBiag — faeery ofr this •village. ""• mean The quegtionaires-.were answered bjf persons, in all types of central dis- trlctfirsom'e of which-have. been.ppexA- tiffg for several yfears-and others., of way, "Dean of* the"*Alb*arIy""M*e<lieal" College,- gave suggestions as. t o -.l.iow the dearth of physicians in. rural dist- ricts.miglrt beovercome. ••'— ~ Dr.'Edward S.MoSweeny, Medical Pire'ctor of the New Yorlc Telephone Company, Emphasized the need for methods Jjy„whleh easesjaf 'tuberoalo-. sis> could Jjfi discovered, earlier J n the^ course of the dis'ease, this giving pa- tienisjL.gi'eater'chanee for recovery:. •Dr. Charles Armstrong-, Surgeon, Unitfd States Public Health Service, Qut-ltoed rthe beat methods fur Ote- control of smaHpo&jthrotfgh vaccina- itib"h"r~"~' : ''' j '"r-r-'""» ' ''••" rglrty^sig^er^Tat^t^'^ ^cases_of smallpox occurtng in upstate" Ivfew York iiT the- past 10-yeays werefc Tf>pH<>H ffjve hn impartial view of-ihe -~at^t6'6 time the report was prt-paredr answerajhad been received from 407 use of toxn-aptitoxin was - shown- "By ^^r^B^EUJaoherts:of the State Dflnart- ment of Health. . Deaths-from measels are usually" dtie. to improper care or neitect~JatftejirV : heads of rural families in 18" ^^^^^^^on^chmv^r^^e^^^ districts. The questions and the sum- mary Ttollow: Are the driyers,careful about the safe- , -{-ial- ^-oUp^eQafefbntea-aliseuaaed ttiefc problems; Wednesday a home visltof a..nurse to supexvlseintanl.laaltll.'waTr successfully dramaftzed. School nurs- ing was discussed by""Mils"."Jessie" , -ty^ajid comiort of the children? 'Number reporting," .386; -yes,; 366; __.np,_21 ' ;..•.•• Are you reasonablywelisatlsffedwith the transpiirtatioii ofTrour-chtldren , to school and 7 felufn^Wcraatfer'-xe-. porting, .382; yes, 33S;uo, 44 is the instruction- received- and the school is. geiiernirsatisfactory? Num- ber reporting, 40Ji.no, 6 Are your children as well treated in,, , } . T . ... . .-..- IL-'I'J -. „i__' - .;; .,'4* „ Especial license plate for doctors mo school as the village children? Num-i * * a .~- TEe~pubirc health nurses heht-fcwo- -ohseEYatiort. ^&m "i^deBtjgy^but -. . separate sessions. On~Triegagy~BpHc^ 4n - a-Tdgoroaa fashion the Vblsteadact ' ^riaW, "heaitlf'e'ducatioh^director at- -or -draw_a_gopA,hand; at_ bridge j ^ ber -repoxting,,390; yes, 3585-50^®; you -prefjr •"ren ;o*1iaTe~yo-arictrird i rurei attend ~a "bne-teacher IcTraort KmxibW" rep1>ftinrr3S§ ryes, 34; -no, 354 ..'-.. In connection withth'e above it may ^r-marked—degree--of—enthusiasm—is-pie wedlda ^oint ont that a trifle over manifest *fe behalf,of the^ticket and, in addition,, to the satisfaetipn general* ly expressed i -§y Republcans oyer the 8O;00.0 buses m the D"nietd States there N a-re Heaj-ly" SBJOOV "us'6d~for" the transportation of school children. It is esUmaled thai dui-Ing 1027 these scjigoTbuses cal-ried §Sl724^ cbliMren- .each. school d&y over £52,892i miles of road to 14,695 schools. . - - ' •- ~ Karrowly th William Anson E>oty Jr., eleyen, was setting up a target for LeRoy, Castor, •Wfef-^tOTi^t^is^oino- on jthp.Ijalte. Road, Clarkson, when the °gun, which •liny ^.nnt IrtinW Wit* Inndad. went off and shot Billy in the head. He was ^immediately rushed r to the General Hospital in Rochester and it was at first thought that the sight of one eye would be itist. Later reports, however, state-^h*at_4he bullet-^»assed_hfilMfifiiL the brain and the eye, doing my d&m- age to either eye, thus-savi. sight. •* .-.-... ' It is hoped that the-late report-may prove true. • '." . OT ants SOME REWARBI Chelmsford, Ehg-r-rA junk dealer ^dckjidjrfiJIJO^iH^lie.street here, re- turned it to the owner, ajid was fe^ warded with eight cents. THANK YOU ^r We wish to thank our many cor r respondents urid/'^tdverttsers- for oring us this week by sending. Copy ealier. Close t6 100 percent answered the call and made possible another Bire—editionT—^was-a--real help-a&d was" greatly- appreciated; "" HepublicVDemocrat"-""" sever vaeetnated, wfrie-4?- percent o&-|— purred in communites where vacolna- tipn is hot compurspiy- -foi' school attendance. The progress.; whieh-is-heing - mad •hrthe-eHuiuiatlutfof diphtliefla. by lllti than the desease itself. The greatest and children of this age should be pro- tected aginst exposure when possible. the State Normal School at New Paftz. "A-trone of the meetings the health, officers went on record as favoring a tPJL fiSTt. loayme Is Last Jinx Day ^weetmeats^of_Uietac_casion.; Without detracting from the high character of other* entertainers the several songs sung* by Mrs. Kenneth-. Heinrich wetre easily the feature'.of the occaasloii. v Ex-Mayor ^Poster gave a glo^ving ac —^-. " \i George L. Foster count pf his trip to Africa and the Kimbferly mines and as a result pf in-this country, j. R. Hogan is" noOIe~teTl6w^wh'o- east tk« snakes out of Ireland bttt he cast a s'pelt over aHT)y his"deft tricka of~magic t jlLyou want a rope spliced J r R r t o d o " i t t o r y o u . Mr. and Mrs. David Wolf are BJC- tisttf ha their ability to^ make violin, and piano accorgon talk, and can get a hearing^iy-^ia" time tfiey elect to — come backi ' - - - - - . - - .... _ > Baptists Combine Cohaolidation of Colgate Theologi- ^arl-^eininaiy--ajid4he-Roeheste^J r heete, Pridayr,-Joly thirteenth^-wilCbe the I l0g* c ^ Sewinaiy forming-an ihstito^ '• last Jinx^ Day "bt^tbe-year-.-'--——. »tibn-kMitpprp^^itfiy~fMi%5M^a'_*" , ~ Eog-^sojae^iaioBt--I ! rigay>. the tfair^' dowmont, was vbtpd. at o, : mceting-of> Jta^ith,_has been.regarded as a par- tichlai'Iy ^ntaeky dayr ^fWs supersti- tion has hung on-where many have been forgotten'. Not so lohg^ago there were hundreds, of. superstitions, and. all were implicity beleived> Now, with the masses more generally educated, there are fewer s^erstitloiis and few- er persons take any stocky in those :.thai.'aro-lcft.--.^,'--n--L- •'• »•'• l '.,,.^-^- r ^»^. At one time a" man~wal"SuTr Sard luck would come his way if a plack cat crossed: bis path ortif he happened to Walk, under ,a -ladder. And sotne- times hard luck- did come his Way, but it really Was not the black~ea"f or the ladder .that was re&ponsible.' It was his own mental attitude. Expect- ing disaster he met it! tgti of Progress ts'theTless^ en^hg .of superstition! And one of the strongest of these old superstitions is that one which- pertains to Friday; the thirteenths At one time JUiaii>' people 1 - would not take ctiances or make in- vestments' or .get. married on Friday,, •ir-teeatb~- - Tijey-seemed. tn tbJbak. it was a day of calamity-^-a Jinx Day. Make up your mind on Friday, the thU-teenth; that It is not differeiit from any ether4ay^-It^the mental attitude AIR MAIL SERVICE EXTENDS Washington-^Twenty-six states are now^ being served by air mail. The T o s t - Office Department . announces that before 4he end of June there^will be ~dTfeW^irrsatlTeWicTerihto; tHf^R Ave states.. that'c'o/Uhte. When Friday,, tie?--, thir- teenth, comes~af ound, there" ars tEranyi people, hQ doubts whoi^ill watch theif e steps Pretty, closely.' One cohsoiatlea- —they are'greatly in the minority! the,"Baptist Education Society of the Stite oLNrew York. t - The nevv institution "will be located" *- in Rochester and will be Known as the G^lgatae^ciiester Divinity School, and the two theolQ^cal-faisulties w^*^' be eombiaedi ll-ZT u: The merger is efMc^ive at once with*- J Classes to be opened in Rochester this OVERDOSE OF TONIC COSTS DRY 6 AGENT, JOB" Newaf£ ? -^hoinas R.. Bailey, probi- bition agent, was discharged after be- Tng Jtrmig^it t.r> court for. driving an automobile while, drunk. Dr. E. H. Hellitein testified when Bailey was discharged that he had prescribed a tonic for the dry agent, which was highly, alcholic, and Bailey" had takeo. an overdose. -ff^rm r MrrifiACiF «I'VFN *^** • JBY ATTLAMrtTC AFT1ER A YEAR~~ -ttian Greenwacn- «Jompr^rbre year ^gc^ThojwaM^Kroyer, of this" % .city, threw oVerboa,rd from a trans- atlantic laner a message in a bottle. it was "wasMed ashore on the coast "*. of Icelan-d, where it \fas found byia " f * Z ^ Evidently the Republicans were anx- ious to bolt~thg convehttoii daor : be- fore-ahy^-bf-the-^dalk,.horses ese'apjad- with the nomination, ,' " % fifteen-yeat-old boypv?hO; returnea~tlMr -jQessage tB•I&oyer•.• - f -^-^ ^-l<ctnfe, T sland_i's. all • excited'abouta- matt who has sv»ch,f|trbng teeth" and~ tough tissues that^ie-can-eat pleeei- ofglass.aiM^i^ain;Unharmed. We*tf like to see)ho\^ hereaots on the.rfto|»t ^ --bise^its^of^so^;;!!^^^^^!^ pwe "know!"" •t * *5.**.Tff j^ajfgjBSjwyrjSi;; ii4^gg; 'LU^-.Z^^^jihTr-, '- '!V . it HA-JMSBMI tfe> ^^Mr'jWiii • ,'^T, iLijut utaii^^^ ^MMilEii^^^^ ?apf^*^^5-»si^p*^r^

Transcript of VOkLXXII -BROeKPORT, NEW YOBKSk THURSDAY, JULYJ5...

Page 1: VOkLXXII -BROeKPORT, NEW YOBKSk THURSDAY, JULYJ5 …nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn88074072/1928-07-05/ed-1/seq-1.pdfVOkLXXII -BROeKPORT, NEW YOBKSk THURSDAY, JULYJ5r 1928 CON SO

VOkLXXII -BROeKPORT, NEW YOBKSk THURSDAY, JULYJ5r 1928 CON SO L1 DATE 0 J U N E 1&N 1925

i a/ft"* a t » « • • u u m f i l l I

I*

ion VHVXX pttvToWn T^ani^Scliedule.HHatve Fast JBatd-hitti^g Outfit* Brockjlort Appar­ently Outclas&ed in Lea^ue7 HiltqpjTakes a Though 6ame and E>ropft Bro|?lcp3prt HI Cellar*

i'*.Ste VIER . . / jF i lmore H ^ B e . V i e r died a r % e

a a ^ . <!pimty HssiatHl'- Saturday? June *29. Tfie deceased was a t one time i i t he employ .of the Brockport

^ p u t e * e - a s d - h a s - 4 ^ d ~ i n - i a i s j ? i l l a g e -for ah»put 20 years . The. funeral was held T u e s d a y in Rochester; Ife leaves one b ro the r a t Clyde, New York-

Brockport lost another h a r d fought ball game on t h e .local diamond Sun­day af ternoon before one,of the larg-

t V est crowds t o w i t n e s s a game here this season. Coidwater won by a score of 6 to. 2r-^ ' • T • . '

T h l first--six innings were scoreless -WithJhe. visi tors getting one map. \ o *'third'°.He was th rown out a t tempt ing . t o s t ea l home. I t w a s real baseball

S^veatiV inning w.Tmn With — -until one ou t and a runner on second a liner went to. third? vvas picked .up by Delehanty. ahd th rown .to first.. The runner on - secondl rad Advanced and easily made third. . H e ; c o u l d , , h a v e

.been ret i red be tween the sScks. A long - drive fe to center scored ; both

runners , — , ^ - _ Brockpor t came -back, i n their half

of t h e inning and sent two across t o s e v e n t h e count. - 7 — '-•'—

-TaMi^gyihin^.HPrp.madL^o^ga_.W£QBg_in. the e ighth and nineth and the visitors added two runs i n each to their scbrer

__,j2ne_pf t h e snappies t plays ever seen on t h e l a S p r o u n T * m m d W ^ ^

" OuHy:th¥-efth-JKhie^-wit^^

^ f l l d . m t g V . i ^ • ; : • • • • • • 6 "'2 j 7 5 0 l t i O ] 1 , hilt for the" pTst for tyyeaJFThas Seottsville- ( ; : . . : . ."" ' """" """"' ———---.-. - • H i l t o n l9 •.-'. ' Holley . . . . . . . i s . - . . . . Albion .-...-. T..i ^hffffetfo r,,; , • • • . ..„•„.

^ a - f l r s t t h e bat ter h i t a tejcrifla . d r ive ".®twe"en"rlr^an'cl-secondrit~was:sdoop-' - e d - u p b y Qarbet t and from; his. kneps

. t o s s e d - t o - K r u g e r to force at second *4»nd, t h r o w n to first, t o beat theJ ia t t e r .

Phe-rbovs-^eeeteed a ..miicli-deserved hand when they trotted in . -

Ifi.". Brockpor t h a s but two more home

nex t Sunday and" Holley%will oppose us h e r e July 29th. Both teams won on t he i r diamond a n d should . furnish p lenty o t opposition. '"

^"•'ifr'oc&poft'wnfiiltty at ClimluUu-tkc 25th, !Irondequoit t h e 22nd and Scotta-vllle on August 5th. - T h e - Box- sGore^olOBa ,Si_l "_^__ tr .

-&RO&>«»ORT-

iUchols. lf a b r h 4 U" 0

Kruger, s . Barclay, cf

~Xenyon-,P-' -"-,7i . Corbet t ,2 . . . . Delehanty, 3b Iveson, l b ' . . . Wood, r . . . . . Hubbe l l . c

_*©ilts . . . . . . . **HiieV ; , ; , ^ .

4 ii-iT-4 0 1

4 . 0 2 1

•0 0 0 0

0 a 0 0

-2V2: 3 G 2 ^6

.Both teams s-iiceejded in .get t ing.men. on bases after the .nineth inning bu t couldn't -score ' un t i l ' t h e e leventh. Dfelehanty stab"bed. a hot one t h a t look­ed l ike £i sure S i t o v e r t h e th i rd sack^ He picked his man a t first. •: Boyd Wil l iams d id - the coaching for Brockport in Major league s ty le . Score: b7~ihnirigs: ' ?•->

Brockport - 0 0 0 0 0 'DO 0 1^0 0—1 Hilton, ' ' c-f 0 0 0 0.0 0 O ' o ' o . l - 2

OBITUARY

WEBSTER *•• * Mar t in ' t . . Webs te r aged 7$ d i p a t

h is home ' a t 135. Fayet te , s t reet , ; Jiily^ -;-3r&—Be—is survived by .four sons,

John L., W a r r e n H., IVah B-,' and Ralph P., a i l of" Brockport ; five tlaugh-tea'S, " Mrs. Florence Burton,, Mrs.

J & a a t Holcomb,_:Mfs. Edgar Car ter , Mrs.' "Clara Webs te r -of. Rochester ; 2 grandchildren. '.

T h e funeral will be held from the nome, T h u r s d a y p burial a t La: Iteside cemeCery, Haml in .

. Yesterday 's Scores Cold -Water-16, Seottsville 7. Hilton 2,-Brockport l , 11 innings. Holley. 6 , 'Charlot te 5 . ' . ^ . Uvondequcit 9, Albion 3 . •

Standings of the- Clubs.

4-• HORNSBY Miss Louesa Hornsby aged 81 years,

died a t h e r home* oji Kenyon street, -Saturday, June 30. The deceased was born in Clarkson the daughter of A.I-fred E o r n s b y a n d Har r i e t t Beaching.

She has always^jfesided in- that sec

Radio To m %M

OLD FASHigNJfr ^STUMP" CAMPMGNlfhilfiAY e o

$mJLt OtJ^ADiO 7 •J ' ' ' ' *'-'£H

Swinging of A n n l ^ a c e Making etc; Will ^Oi i^hue with

Son\e Campiugners

In- yea r s gone by th,e §turflp speaker plasyed a n impor t^M p a r t .in. nat ional political campaigns.. Candidates wen t on the road and took the s tump in cit ies a n d towns froth coast to coast. is_the radio, going t o i p h u s of the' good old political m e e t i n g s ^ - • -—-- ,

Nbw a candidate ca,h'sit. comfoi'tably-b_eJore_j?, microphone and wi th one speech j - e i f i h " m i l f l p i ^ " o t pe.rsons'j throughout Jtho cpuntry by means of |

-5-

5

:3

2 .714^1 ml tde l i eFhon ie in tfiTs vilTagg,, 2 .714.; T l l ^ f u n e r a i services were h'eW Slon-

£i'Qm_the Methodist c h u r e l at 2 . , J 5 ^ • day

'kondequei t . Brockport* !.

_ ^__ * o'clock. She is survived by,one sister, ^—^S-H^i 's-^lkiynes.-af-iQH-SSgeleC 6 , 2 ^ ° i a niece, Mrs. Deyo of Roches ter . T

7 .222-t - - 1 ,,JLQRDAN. _ . . .-^Mra. Viola Jordan entered }ato r e s t

General sat isfaction wi th the opera-lr-sni-now 03a-until the-November elec-1 t ion of central schools has been <?x-

--tWr^HfrF^r^ife-W-ilLhe used extensive- . pressed- in answers ' t ^ ' a q»§§ti)OBa,ire ly by.P'olitieians to get t he i r messages i.Oistvibutea throughout-^fehe--State—ta over to the public. ' ° pai-ents whose childr-ea- a t tend such

-Las t Thurs«aa}v;Mary Jane Holones -chaptexof O. ,E; S.-joiped-4,he-JJaaoniu Lodge in the i r annua l picnic which wnshairi - on 4vhe- picnic, g rounds a t Tnmtbarg.- A.^d&liGious^dln.ner ;. szaa. served t o about 175 people a t 1:30 P, M. This was followed by t h e spor t s wfiich everyone seemed to en-; JOK either,, ac^iveljr, Mi^m onlookers..

at tb.e home of her. son, Justin, • of ; :Roch^stetT^S^WdagyF--June30;- ;Mrs , ^ J o r d a n was; pdrn in the t own &f ,11am-

ttn, -the d a u g h t e r of- Mr.-.-?tt4 Mrs ;

Jamens Blossoirw Deceased i s s w v l v e d -,by t t i ree sons* James, and* Jastiti of •RflCb«st*J•: aiid-€heste¥-ofJBattlej- Cxeakv. Mich., one daughter , Mrs . Nellie H a r t ^ o ^ ^ t r o i t ^ - M i c h . i ^ t e r r graTMcAftdrejr •and ^vc^g*ea ;fe^mn4ehiklrej i lL^y§ora brottier, J u s t i n Blossom of \V^lker . F u n e r a l ' s e r v i c e s were he ld f ijiesday with interment a t Mt. Hope,

The following people won p r i zes : Distab.ee fo r -6^11 th rowing , .F rank­

lin .BtKi^waUi J l r s . j A l t a S tewar t ; Dis-Ia^c^:fol^lmtt±D^ : t t^bath -Bee^n^MosieF and-vMrs. L e Roy Miller; *,Running race, u sca r jMxcho G o o l d , — —

4 4 2 3 1

JU

0

2

0

2"

0

'CL

3 .

6

1 4 0 0..

2 Tdtals--34- -2 -6 -27-17

*Bat ted 4or Wood la^aveHth- — **Batted for Fu l t s in eighth.

_ COLDWATER .

. — . v -..,... , ,. ._..,.. a b "Fisher, s — . . .MtaBi 2 b . . .^L G. O'Brien, cf

JSL-Q'Brfej}JSb' -rKohlinier,r . . -

h -•2 1 1 0

5 4 2 4

- 3 0~ -1 1 -fr *Averyrlb ~. . r , ; . - . - . . , 4 1 2 S 0 A . E n t r i s s >-.... Gaedline, c . : . , MeiSIa id t , p TT, tFar re i l . . , -Baker , If — . ' ,

~l2r .l'_0_.:.0""0 4 1 l _ ^ 8 ' " l

i" -jDl 1 0 0. 2 0 0 0 0

y + - Totals S4 § 9 27 '12 HM"P for Kohlmei r in eighth.

Brockpor t 'Goldwater

Errors* Kruger 2, Barclay 1, Kenyda 1, Delehanty i , Ivesofll, Hubbel - 1 , Goodline % . - . ? . Rutan , A.very; stolen bases, G-. O'Brien

^—2^sacfifice, G. O'Brien 1; double plays, -Corbet t t o K r o g e r , t o Iveson; left oh*

V bases,. Coidwater 2*. Brockport 3 ; bases --•/Oh. bail§, Meiahardt 1, Kohlmeirti,

s t r u c k bu t , by Kenyon 4, Meinhardt 5, ":Ko"hlnreir-3 > h i t by p i tcher ; by Kenyon^

(G. O'Brien, Kohlmei r ) ; wild pi tches,

dusky.

wtoi ing.pifcher j Meinhardt], yoh^ umpire,- Saa-

Hlltbn Takes Tough t l a m e , 2-1

.~__3?7hat a. game, "What a game y e t

L- Brockpor t dropped it - t o the Hilton ' t p w n team-yes terday by a; 2 t b }. scored 'Hi l tpn scored ong run . in the first ai^d.

iCT-usti3r the^eleventhl,-- ^ _ The boys 'played wonderful base-

. ba l l -and looked liked champions frett* t h e first r ight through.- •

I n t h e nineth inijihg with Hil tpn , leading 1 to <), Gorbett singled, "went

f7~*to^s%ctfaaw WilUainTbTffit~Slia" home on_Barclay's dr ive over, the. th i rd base-

"'sack, T h e crowd "went wild.'

Billy Gocdph* Mary Doahe; Standing byroad, jumgj, Bil l ie Gordon; Mary Guelph; RutUning~bToa^-iuimT,--Paur Grigen,_ Barbarft-.Dobson.—JIhe egg

throwing- cpnAest.-.was-wan_ix._Es_Ai. Coapman and George A. Engel . They being t h e on«s to" throw an. egg t h e longest and farthest a p a r t Avithoutl depa r tmen t ' w h e r e t h e r e a r e 55. In t h e

..- • •— -—~~-:k • - > - - - . 1 Kinaefgarten t he re a r e 3SrT5ad~the

junlof- 52. The purpose of t h e school i s t l i e de-vJelopnient of chris t ian char-jc le^ jhrpugh^ . - lhe- , pfiristlanrzing^ of "everyday— e :xperiences andr relat ion?

breaking it. Other "games such' a s dodge "ball

'andi a relay r ace Were enjoyed by.al l . The big e v e n t ot t h e day was- theJaal l . - g a E n t s - T S e - i ^ r e r ^ i t i r e ^ f ^ ^ f i a ^ ^ ^ wgre ru skJ iowBrbn t they- \ve re - smaH--IteBiS-""^- ;- . - :. -"'''- i~y .^—^_.\. ..

After a bafflet sttppe'r the picnicers. re turned hom« feel ing t ha t they had had a happy and pleasant out ing.

6 O X ALFRED E. SMITH

P e a c e and ha rmony prevailed a t -Houston. wTiPtn.-Govftrnnr ALSmith was. noaninated for t h e pres idency o t t h e United S t a t e s by~the Democra t ic pa r ty l a s t week... -

T h e "'Governor is, w i thou t a doubt, t he "3^ i t -po5Ular candidate the dele-garfees'-Hjeuld select a n d even- should he n o t Tviu i n Novemeber, h e is s u r e to give the-Republ ican horhinee,,Her'-b e r t Hoover* a r e | l r ace .

-jbOTCct-ffeTmrerats ;are ahgady-c

heierve"l;hat n g JNew Y o r i r s t a t e a n as New YorE goes, sdTgoes t n e na t ion . ~ W e iiave^ hr afiother column .clip­p i n g s from seve ra l Wes te rn New York weekly papers w h o great ly favor Mr. Hoover. Whejther the weekly Repub­l ican niRwapapflrs can off-set the New Y^rk-dail icD ^Yil]^remai^ t o be seen.: A t any ra te , a s ^ w e . s e e i t , , t h e ( b a t t l e -will-be—fojlght- i n the -empi re - s t a !

Jbs . Daniels,, s e c r e t a r y of the navy inr the eabiiEet trf t h e late- ex-president WilSQfl.- iliiS- called o n the^-soufhorn

t e r ^ - t h

Democrats _to s t and sblidly behind Gov Smith. -Mr. Danieis-iS: a^-Qry ,r.T" _ . f f l i l f i * large, manbe^-oJE-dry iSnuth-e r n voters may sWit<3h_to M r . Hpover. o r not vote at- a l l . It i s . generally con­ceded tha t t h e sou th will remain solid;

•We -wish again to call a t t en t ion to

ol^r r eade r s ' to, t h e poli t ical s tahd of T H E R E P U B L I C ; D i ® q C R A T T I t . ' f e J a ^ M 3 3 E F ^ r j A f f l L ^ P E R . --The editor will welcomes s i g n e d / a r t i c l e s .regarding t i ie candidates of both par­t i e s .for p-ubiieatioh. T h e paper i s y o u r paper- and ybu should, feel -free t o use i t ' s columns , at iahy t ime . T»o insure iDsertitsnrarficles^shouid be" typed or c lear ly wr i t ten a n d handed t o «s hot l a t e r thafl Tuesday, •

VacatioirSchod r Attendance Grows Tbte s i rb l iTnent o f -the Bpoekport

Comanunity Vacation, churqh school, Ihat^iSTbetag-held dai ly a t the Baptist; church^Js n o w 151); including'•children, from, the Bapt is t , Presbytefiah^. i letho-d i i t ' and Episcopal charcsliea. T h e largest regis t ra t ion is in the P r i m a r y

s tumpspeecaesV Jiadib requireB a hif* ferent-techniQtt'et;-the^voiee-inust-«>do everytLhia^. ^

Time will te l l _ whether t h e radio wi i l t a k e - the n ^ l a c r ^ f - ^ h e . - ^ t u m p r whether-pttbMe=i»en w i l l in t h e future tu rn : Loi t ror ifrottt i t Wheh^desfrous o f m a k i n g public u t t e rances .

-ships. .Ihe_ fiourses t h a t _ ^ i r e _ J e i n g taupJVafe. t |o_deyelppe phristiaii a t t i ­tude- toward life. -That being^-nsed! to the„ Kindergar ten is t h e s t andard , course^ i n . t h e primary wor ld jfriend-stal* wife t h e Latin Amerlcan--ooun~ t r ies is .being followed, a n d i a t h e jumepr .a chris t ian Knighthoodj project is t i ie bas is of study. ;

A J L o l A p i L c ^ p j n i 3 ^ J n ^ d o - ^ g j g j b ^ insteriietienj a n d expressionalseoxk^ A l l handwork is correlated wi th t h e pro]-. ecL E a c h day" there i s a preriod of ;aupjervised_play^

EJvery .Tuesday;at"9 o*cTocIT w-ofship ser^iee j&f t h e en t i re seh&ol is he ld^ in •whicfr-each depar tment h a s a sharer At t h e first one a ta lk on ' 'weeds" w a s given by Rev. Emery D. Webster , of-

^"m^WeS^yteTfte i f School will run for two more weeks

closing B*riday, July" 2TF.

An Explanation In J u n e this paper carried a reques t

t h a t persons interes ted in pjbgr_achool -sites t han t h e U w d adyertiserd. should get", options o r present the i r .ideas to

e Board- ef-Educatioii for action" Only one peYson has responded and

t h a t tft" noav^iiaVtiptioiSs^oalcVnot-beT^:] obCalned "ph^the p'ropcrty.. T i e tfotfrd

of JEdUcation has labored dil igently to g e t options 6n other sites v^*ich^vbuld be -feasible h u t withoiit_suiecesi__sad i t therefore prevented from adveitis-1

i ng other than the two unless condem­n a t i o n - p r o c e e d i n g s w e r e - ins t i tu ted a n d in both_such_jgases t h e cost-of the s i tes , if" the ' ideas pSfiT'bw'.nefs "pre-va,iiedj Would- run into iSB.OOG" $40^00 each. •-, —

*The Swast ika Home jBu;ieau" will mee t - a t t he hpnie ^oi Mrs , Arthur Southoomfee Monday?4-July % to ar-raiige the project program for nex t

tl-thofie-havittg- can'dy* money-wi l l please b r ing or -send it to the Bueeting. . • * ".

t he grea t radio "hook-ups" now used I c a n , t g l g g p » in report ing *of b ig events* over t h e j . , '~~Z—

radio. ** "What a, d i f ference r be tween th i s

method o.f reach ing t h e public and t h e j metthpd ol addressKng m a n y compara- |-tiv.elx'.- small groups of persons one j af ter another , day after-day and week j

^ K 5 F ^ ^ 5 H k t r r r z ^ r ^ ^ - — - . — — - - — - . — r

Radio has- a l r eady jiai3iei!j?oimtless 1 speeches of a polit ical najure over.;, t h e a i r , - a n d i t s e e m s yeryji lcely tha t |

25th ANNIVERSARY

^JEiir. a n d M&s. Ctaylord Castor enter­tained a t their home on Spr ing s t ree t thtrfy-oiie guests for_dinner oa the eve­n i n g of June 23 t tthe e v e n t ' b e i n g thejir twenty-fifth Wedding anniversary , Mr.. and Mrs. Castor were rnar-ried in t h i s village^j>y tbfe Re"v; .Norris.. of t h e MethodisT Episcopal Church^ T £ T couple 'were t h e rec ip ien t s of many beautifui-stiyer pieces . °

' WARNS O F MQ3Q.U1T0S AT „ . Q O p M P Q i CAMP

-Seat t le^-Allan D. McDonald is not a t a i rcheer fUl abou t Pres iden t Obol-idge's eEcfice^of Brule, Wis., for h i s vacation, camp* McDonald, a re t i red logger, warns tha t t h e mosquitos in Brule a r e simply terrible.. . ^ h ^ m q s q n r t o s ' a r V s x r bad -thei-e,"

says McDbhald,--""-£ha.£ we used to h ing pieces of pork on ojir suspenders for them t o feed on, They"bUzz around'' l ike a-"bmich of. t ractors so t h a t you

Parents Approve of Central

Physicians Approve . °of Special Pla t̂̂ s

. Dr 's Hazen and Mann, hea l th offi­cers , and Mrs . Matie T; Jones, publ ic hea l th nurse, of Brockport a n d Sweden^ \yhp/ jepresented; . "this community a t t h e twe^tT^eTel i t t r imnual-eonferef tee 0^ 'heaith officers and public,, hea l th .nurse's* a t Sara toga Spr ings on J u n e 26,27 and 28, reports that is w a s . t h e l a rges t and best conference ever held, "a total of near ly 1200 delegates being regis tered. «, ' ' *

The Conference w a s opened .by Dr. Mat th ias Nicoll, Jr . ,-State Commission-•er of Health.* He called, a t tent ion to the.! l a rge_number of needless dea ths of j n o t h e r s dur ing chi ldbi r^ i and pplfc t e d out w-ay&-by which these fatali t ies may be reduced* D r r ^ r r y B . Trick, Pres ident , ot the S ta te Medical Socie, ty., spoke bn^he^ecWIi t^Of^COopera-tion between practicing physicians

Kiwanis Celebrate

FORMER MAYOR, ROSTER ^D&RESSES

W i v e i , Sis ter? a n d S w e e t h e a r t s

J o i n w i t h K i w a n i a n s i n r 3 i r d - -

A n n u a l C e l e b r a t i o n

Kiwanis o f Brockpoi't wi th-- their wives, s i s t e r s a n d sweethear ts , .atig*-mented by fifty odd' frohi i tocheHei^

. enjoyed to t h e u tmost the th i td anni- . versary dinner of the .Club at Hotel Brockport Wednesday evening o r i a s t ^

.week. " . . . - - - - - r — — -• . - _

President H. B . MacArthur was in h i s u sua l judicial r o b e s i n d with.jpine^_ honeyed words, s lapped on some fines

,-^ijm

and heal th , officials. Df, Thomas- Ord-' before-Qie par ty got aown to t h e r e a t

Very^F^w Opposed

- •CTnelHtfei^p^e-'-betweenrs^umiESBealr-i hg and raoio oroadcasttngi as-'far-nis' political speeches i s .concerned, i s - ' tha^ perieTTCe what " the

schools,'i-a~an-effort to- l e iuau thf i j^a l • ^ e ^ t t o e n t - o f ^ h ^ s s ^ d m J i l i o j ^ ^

w l t i l e t h e main a t teudai ice a t poIRIcaX gather ings i s made, up-of many friends a n d admirers of t h e ofa tqrs , . the radio reaches friend a n d ' t b e a l ike . %

Another th ing which- must be con siderfflf-^B* lhar"^£fflEflp^spwtein& ^nrd--whdciLii(tve k e e i x e e e n ^ ^ f p r m e ' l . The radio—^broa4castJaig-^a«li--haw«j_thei-e. own technia.ue. Of w h a t use in radio bToa^reas,

of feature, the w a v i n g of a rms , t h e gest iculat ions t h a t p l ay so . large a part„,in increasing, t % ; a g ^ t i v e n e s s of

a t t i t ude of" ru ra l people* and lead to hafti^)lthle-suEaie£MDn that those :whp-wish •to.

knpw. the facts Regarding central ScBools ask the: paren ts in such d is t r ic t s . '••--.

MR. HERBERT HOOVER

4Ih a W n s e t h e Taomination -of H e r ­b e r t Hoover a n d Charles Curt is a t K a n s a s City is a dist inct victory for t n e inuueiatial country p r e s i of Kew York S ta te . It i s true t ha t metropoli­a n dai l ies - without-^bxcepQon.. now ad-, mit; t | ig_3treiigth of the tidket. ^

It was- the^ sniangr aew-spapers . of the -a ta ta jghO!_were first aboard the jEEopyer ,band.wagon-; a n d ' Wjho^-eariled o h the fight ear ly and l a t e . CbmnieBit ©f'f&ur~o£ tiiem follows:

The Suffolk Cdiifity N e w s : "Already

r e s u l t -of ,the^Conisqenllpn.. wje,_h8,ve l e a r a e d - e ? -a ffiinlb'er-of Democra ts

i who have expressed t h . e i r ^e£a rMna-t ion t o ybi& for Hoover and Curt is ."

T h e : Ps^d-^ReView^ Timgs: , . "."Hefr ber t ""Hoover is by far the inbst~a~*b% pres ident ta i candidate sin^e the days of Woodrow W i l s o n . - H i s accomplish­men t s put h t o far abov^e Hard ing or Coolidge.-" " f

^ T ^ 3 ; b i S e i i aen or s t ronger . candidates i t would -be hard t o find. Mr. Hoover 's name is a household n a m e throughput the nation*, Sena tor Curt is and h i s career a re equally appealing.

Hudson Fal ls Herald: ' 'Herbert Hooverr i s - muen like ^ res ident Cool­idge.- He Is a pract ical "mail who is far more concerned wi th t h e welfare of t h e count ry than he is for 'any prominence t h a t may come to h i m if h e is-,-eleTited-i-i?residemV T h e par ty could hot have made a wiser choice."

^ HALU-WHITNEY

the J i a r r k g e 0f_Miss Cjara_Whit-ney of h i s yi l lage and Mr. N^wlon Hal l 'o f Hi l ton was solemnized a t the Hil ton Bapt i s t -parsonage ^Fr iday , eve.-ning, ^ 5 6 ^ 2 2 ^ "at 7:30 o'clock, Dr. S . M . Traver officiating. T h e attef\d ;

w i r e Mr. Wilbur Ha l l and Mi is Clara Hoag, Mr, Hall is ' employed, a t

The: A, &r -p . - ^canBiag — faeery ofr this •village. ""•

mean The quegtionaires-.were answered bjf

persons, in all types of central dis-trlctfirsom'e of which-have. been.ppexA-tiffg for severa l yfears-and o thers . , of

way, "Dean of* the"*Alb*arIy""M*e<lieal" College,- gave suggestions as. t o -.l.iow t h e dea r th of physicians in. rural dist­r i c t s .mig l r t b e o v e r c o m e . ••'— ~

D r . ' E d w a r d S .MoSweeny , Medical Pire 'c tor of the New Yorlc Telephone Company, Emphasized t h e need for

m e t h o d s Jjy„whleh eases jaf 'tuberoalo-. sis> could Jjfi discovered, earl ier J n the^ course of t h e dis'ease, this giving pa-t ienis jL.gi 'eater 'chanee for recovery:.

•Dr. Char les Armstrong-, Surgeon, Uni t fd S t a t e s Public Heal th Service , Qut-ltoed rthe beat methods fur Ote-cont ro l of smaHpo&jthrotfgh vaccina-

itib"h"r~"~' : ' ' ' j '"r-r-'""» • ' ''••" r g l r t y ^ s i g ^ e r ^ T a t ^ t ^ ' ^

^cases_of smallpox occur tng in upsta te" Ivfew York iiT the- pas t 10-yeays w e r e f c

Tf>pH<>H ffjve hn impart ial view of-ihe

-~at^t6'6 time t h e repor t was prt-paredr answera jhad been received from 407

use of toxn-aptitoxin was - shown- "By ^ ^ r ^ B ^ E U J a o h e r t s : o f the Sta te Dflnart-

m e n t of Hea l th . . D e a t h s - f r o m measels a re usually"

dtie. to improper care or neitect~JatftejirV :

heads of r u r a l families i n 18" ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ o n ^ c h m v ^ r ^ ^ e ^ ^ ^

distr ic ts . T h e quest ions and the sum­m a r y Ttollow: — Are t h e driyers,careful about the safe-

, -{-ial- ̂ -oUp^eQafefbntea-aliseuaaed t t iefc problems; Wednesday a home v i s l t o f a..nurse to supexvlseintanl . laal t l l . 'waTr successfully dramaftzed. School nurs­ing was discussed by""Mils"."Jessie"

, - t y^a j id comiort of t h e children? ' N u m b e r reporting," .386; -yes,; 366;

_ _ . n p , _ 2 1 ' ; . . • . • •

Are you r ea sonab lywe l i s a t l s f f edwi th the transpiir tat ioi i ofTrour-chtldren

, t o school and7 felufn^Wcraatfer'-xe-. porting, .382; yes, 3 3 S ; u o , 44

i s t h e instruction- received- and the school is. geiiernirsatisfactory? Num­ber report ing, 4 0 J i . n o , 6

Are y o u r children as well t r e a t e d in, , , } . T ™ . . . . . .-..-I L - ' I ' J - . „ i _ _ ' - .;; . , '4* „ Especia l l icense plate for doctors mo school as t h e village chi ldren? Num-i * * a.~-

TEe~pubirc heal th nur ses heht-fcwo- - o h s e E Y a t i o r t . ^ & m " i ^ d e B t j g y ^ b u t - . . separa te sessions. On~Triegagy~BpHc^ 4 n - a-Tdgoroaa fashion the V b l s t e a d a c t

' ^ r i a W , "heai t l f ' e 'ducat ioh^director a t - -or -d raw_a_gopA,hand; at_ bridge j ^

ber -repoxting,,390; y e s , 3585-50^®; you -prefjr

• " r en ;o*1iaTe~yo-arictrirdi

rurei a t tend ~a "bne-teacher IcTraort KmxibW" rep1>ftinrr3S§ r y e s , 34; -no, 354 . . ' - . . In connection w i t h t h ' e above it may

^r-marked—degree--of—enthusiasm—is-pie wedlda ^ o i n t on t t h a t a trifle over

manifes t *fe behalf ,of the^ t i cke t and, i n addition,, to t h e satisfaetipn general* l y expressed i-§y Republcans oyer the

8O;00.0 buses m t h e D"nietd States thereNa-re Heaj-ly" SBJOOV "us'6d~for" the t r anspor ta t ion of school chi ldren. I t i s esUmaled thai dui-Ing 1027 these scjigoTbuses cal-ried §Sl724^ cbliMren-.each. school d&y over £52,892i miles of road t o 14,695 schools. . - - ' •- ~

Karrowly th

William Anson E>oty J r . , e leyen, was se t t ing up a t a r g e t for LeRoy, Castor, • W f e f - ^ t O T i ^ t ^ i s ^ o i n o - on jthp.Ijalte. Road, Clarkson, w h e n the °gun, which •liny ^ . n n t IrtinW Wit* Inndad. w e n t

off a n d shot Billy i n t h e head . H e was ^immediately rushed r to t h e General Hospital in Roches ter and i t w a s a t first thought tha t the s ight of o n e eye would be itist. La te r repor t s , however, state-^h*at_4he bullet-^»assed_hfilMfifiiL the brain a n d the eye, doing my d&m-age to e i the r eye , t h u s - s a v i . s ight . •* . - . - . . . ' It is hoped that the-late repor t -may prove t r u e . • ' ." .

OT an ts

SOME REWARBI Chelmsford, Ehg-r-rA j u n k dealer

^dckj id j r f i J I JO^iH^l ie . s t ree t h e r e , re­tu rned i t to t h e owner, ajid w a s fe^ warded wi th e igh t cents .

THANK YOU ^r W e wish to t h a n k our many cor r

respondents urid/'^tdverttsers- for or ing us t h i s week b y sending . Copy ealier. Close t6 100 pe rcen t answered the call a n d m a d e possible another Bire—editionT—^was-a--real help-a&d was" greatly- appreciated;

"" HepublicVDemocrat"-"""

s e v e r vaeetnated, wfrie-4?- percent o&-|— pur red in communi tes where vacolna-t ipn is h o t compurspiy- -foi' school a t t endance .

T h e progress.; whieh- i s -he ing - m a d •hrthe-eHuiuiatlutfof diphtliefla. by lllti

t han the desease itself. The g rea tes t

and children of this age should be pro­tec ted agins t exposure when possible.

the S ta te Normal School a t New Paftz.

"A-trone of the mee t ings the health, officers w e n t on record a s favoring a

tPJL fiSTt.

loayme Is Last Jinx Day

^weetmeats^of_Uietac_casion.; Wi thou t de t rac t ing from the high

cha rac te r of other* en te r ta iners the several songs sung* b y Mrs. Kenneth-. He in r i ch wetre easily the feature' .of the occaasloii. v

Ex-Mayor ^Poster g a v e a glo^ving ac

—^-. " \i

George L. Foster

count pf h i s t r ip t o Africa and the Kimbferly mines and as a r e s u l t pf

in- this country, j . R. Hogan is" noOIe~teTl6w^wh'o-

ea s t t k « snakes out of Ireland bt t t h e cas t a s'pelt over aHT)y his "deft t r i cka of~magic t j l L y o u want a rope spl iced

J r R r t o do" i t t o r y o u . Mr. and Mrs. David Wolf a r e BJC-

tisttf ha t he i r ab i l i ty to^ m a k e violin, and p iano accorgon talk, and can g e t a h e a r i n g ^ i y - ^ i a " t ime t f iey elect t o — come backi ' - - - - - . - - . . . . _ >

Baptists Combine

Cohaolidation of Colgate Theologi -^arl-^eininaiy--aj id4he-Roeheste^J rheete,

Pridayr,-Joly thi r teenth^-wilCbe t h e I l 0 g * c ^ S e w i n a i y forming-an i h s t i t o ^ '• las t Jinx^ Day "bt^tbe-year-.-'--——. » t i b n - k M i t p p r p ^ ^ i t f i y ~ f M i % 5 M ^ a ' _ * " , ~

Eog-^sojae^iaioBt--I !rigay>. t h e tfair^' dowmont, was vbtpd. at o,: mceting-of> J ta^ i th ,_has b e e n . r e g a r d e d a s a par-tichlai'Iy ^ n t a e k y d a y r ^fWs supers t i ­t ion has hung o n - w h e r e many h a v e been forgotten'. Not so lohg^ago t h e r e were h u n d r e d s , of. supersti t ions, and. all were implicity beleived> Now, w i t h the masses more general ly educa ted , the re a r e fewer s^e r s t i t l o i i s and few­er persons take a n y stocky i n t h o s e :.thai.'aro-lcft.--.^,'--n--L- •'• »•'• l '.,,.^-^-r^»^.

A t one t ime a" man~wal"SuTr S a r d luck would come h i s w a y if a p lack ca t crossed: b is pa th or t i f he happened to Walk, under ,a -ladder. And sotne-times h a r d luck- did come his Way, but it really Was n o t t h e black~ea"f o r the ladder . that was re&ponsible. ' I t was his own mental att i tude. Expect-ing d isas ter he m e t it!

tgti of Progress ts ' theTless^ en^hg .of superst i t ion! And one of t h e s t rongest of these old supers t i t ions i s t h a t one which- pertains to Fr iday; t h e thir teenths At one time JUiaii>' people1-would no t take ctiances or m a k e in­ves tments ' or .get. mar r ied on Friday,,

•ir-teeatb~- - Tijey-seemed. tn tbJbak. it was a day of calamity-^-a J inx Day.

Make up your mind o n Friday, t h e thU-teenth; t ha t I t i s not differeiit from a n y e t h e r 4 a y ^ - I t ^ t h e m e n t a l a t t i tude

AIR MAIL SERVICE EXTENDS Washington-^Twenty-s ix s ta tes a re

now^ being served by air mai l . T h e Tos t - Office Depar tment .. announces that before 4 h e end of June there^will be ~dTfeW^irrsatlTeWicTerihto; tHf^R Ave states..

that'c'o/Uhte. W h e n Friday, , tie?--, thir­teenth, comes~af ound, there" ars tEranyi people, hQ doubts w h o i ^ i l l w a t c h theife

steps Pretty, closely. ' O n e cohsoiat lea-—they a r e ' g r e a t l y in t h e minor i ty!

the,"Baptist Education Society of t h e S t i t e oLNrew York . t -

T h e nevv inst i tut ion "will b e loca ted" *-in Roches te r a n d w i l l b e Known a s the G^lga tae^c i ies te r Divinity School , and t h e t w o theolQ^cal-faisult ies w ^ * ^ ' b e eombiaedi ll-ZT u:

T h e merger i s efMc^ive a t once with*- J Classes to be opened in Roches te r t h i s

OVERDOSE O F TONIC COSTS DRY

6 AGENT, J O B " N e w a f £ ? - ^ h o i n a s R.. Bailey, probi-

b i t ion agent, w a s discharged after b e -Tng Jtrmig^it t.r> court fo r . driving a n automobi le while, drunk.

Dr. E. H . He l l i t e i n testified w h e n Bai ley was discharged tha t h e h a d presc r ibed a ton ic for t h e dry agen t , wh ich w a s highly, alcholic, a n d Bai ley" h a d takeo. an overdose.

-ff^rm r MrrifiACiF «I 'VFN *^** • JBY ATTLAMrtTC AFT1ER A YEAR~~

-ttian Greenwacn- « J o m p r ^ r b r e y e a r ^ g c ^ T h o j w a M ^ K r o y e r , of t h i s " % .city, th rew oVerboa,rd from a t r a n s ­a t lan t ic laner a message in a bot t le .

i t was "wasMed ashore on t h e coas t "*. of Icelan-d, where i t \ f a s found b y i a "f*

Z ^

Evidently the Republicans were anx­ious to bolt~thg convehttoii daor: be-fore-ahy^-bf-the-^dalk,.horses ese'apjad-with the nomination, ,' "

%

fifteen-yeat-old boypv?hO; returnea~tlMr -jQessage tB•I&oyer•.• - f — -^-^

^-l<ctnfe,Tsland_i's. all • excited'abouta-matt who has sv»ch,f |trbng teeth" and~ tough tissues that^ie-can-eat pleeei-ofglass.aiM^i^ain;Unharmed. We*tf like to see)ho\^ hereaots on the.rfto|»t ^

- -b i se^ i t s^of^so^ ; ; ! !^^^^^!^ pwe "know!""

•t *

*5.**.Tff

j^ajfgjBSjwyrjSi;; ii4^gg; 'LU^-.Z^^^jihTr-, ' - '!V .

it HA-JMSBMI tfe> ^^Mr'jWiii • ,'^T, i L i j u t u t a i i ^ ^ ^ ^MMilEii^^^^

?apf^*^^5-»si^p*^r^