in the end all you really have is memoriesfultonhistory.com/newspapers 21/clifton springs ny...

1
,-• ,-- "V £ .. . ^PfFfrT "T^ 3 - •£."'.. '" Hopewell Center G. L. Judson Jones, town clerk of Hope- weU, has toibmltUd the following ^^rm*] report: Three deaths, five births and seven marrtafe lloenses Issued; 4S resident hunting and fishing lloenses; 45 resident hunt- ing, five trapping and 19 fishing licenses; 49 deer and 195 dog licens- es and 219 papers filed during the year. Mr. Jones Is now taking the dog census. Everyone owning or harboring a dog Is required to pro- cure a license during the month of January. William Hebard ta 111 at his home = OUR NEIGHBORS AT ' .^Saaa^bBkaa SVM A Ca^e^B Mrs. S. L Wheat. Seneca Cattle Farmington ' Mrs. Sarah Reed of Dundee is 01 at the home of her son, Harry Reed and family. The card party sponsored by the Home Bureau unit was postponed from January 5 to Wednesday eve- ning. January 15. Mrs. Charles Isenhour, Mrs. James Berry and Mrs. William Dannahe will be In charge. Prises will be awarded and refreshments served. Mrs. Mary Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Brown entertained, on New Year's Day, the former's sister, Mrs. Earl Vandenberg, Mr. Vanden- berg and son, Blllie. of Rochester, Miss Isaphine Tracey of Canandal- gua, * another sister, and Mrs. Brown's daughters, Mrs. Harry Washburn and family of Clifton Sprinars and Mrs. Howard Newton and Mr. Newton of this place. Mr. and Mrs. William Stoddard and daughter, Miss Janice*, and son, Leonard, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George French, with Miss Doris Frost of Seneca Castle were New Year's Day guests of Mrs. Stod- dard's sister, Mrs. Adair Lauder, and family, of Victor. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Cole of the Orleans road and Mr. and Mrs. Ar- thur Middlebrook and daughter, Jean, were New Year's guests ot Mr. and Mrs. George Cole of Waterloo. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Appleton of Lafayette Highway entertained on New Year's Day, her mother, Mrs. George Woolston and daughter. Ruby, of East Bloomfleld, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Appleton, Jr., of South Bloomfleld and Mrs. Ruth Kille of Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan La- Cronl of Rochester were supper guests. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Swank of Detroit, Mich., visited her aunt, Mrs. Claude M. Caiman and family, Thursday. Miss Arlene Curtice of Rochester visited Miss Margaret Wood during the holidays. Mrs. J. P. Griffin and daughter. Miss Ruth Griffin, and Miss Mar- garet Sick of Caledonia and Lynn Burr were visitors at the Salisbury home, Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Frank wood and daughter, Miss Mary Wood, of Long Island were recent visitors of Miss Anna Wood of the County H o u s e Toad. The "watch night" service held at the Baptist church, Tuesday eve- ning, was wall attended and enjoyed by all present. Mrs. Richard Shek- el!, Jr., of Clfton Sprlngs-Shortsvllle road, served as chairman of the meeting and presented the following program: Song fest; devotional period—responsive reading led by S. I. Wheat; prayer by Rev. Harry M. Shepson; trio, "Whispering Hope," Miss Louise Holdforth of Belfast, Avery L. Hollenbeck and Richard ShekeU, Jr.; remarks, A. F. Hill- mire of Phelps; duet, "Sweeter as the Years Go By," Miss Holdforth, A L. Hollenbeck; congregational singing of group of songs; solo, "God's Tomorrow," A. L. Hollen- beck; remarks, Rev. H M. Shep- son, solo by William Holdforth, ShortsvUle, remarks by Rev. Dayton of Phelps Presbyterian church; ad- dress by Rev. Thorn N. Carter of Pandora, Ohio; benediction by the Rev. Mr. Shepson. Refreshments were served in the dining room with Mrs. Shekell, Mrs. Gladys McCar- thy, Mr. and Mrs. Hollenbeck in charge of arrangements. Prayer by Rev. Mr. Shepson preceded the ringing of the church bell proclaim- ing the New Year. Mrs. Clara Savage has gone to the home of her son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Emery Savage of Shorts- vllle-CU-ftcn Springs road, where she will spend the remainder of the Winter. Miss Clementine Fabrlzl of Utlca spent New Year's afternoon with Mrs. Elmer S. Salisbury of Clifton Springs-Orleans road. Gilbert Corbin left for Albany, Prof, and Mrs. O B . Walker of Syracuse were New Years guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Schoonmaker, returning to Syracuse, Thursday. —~m * «_„„L mMl Divine services will be conducted Mr and Mrs. Charles Spangle and ^ ^ t ^ ^^ ^ Cn h son, Henry, have returned to Alden MraC.a. 8T. JOHN'S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. L. G. Leonard, Pastor after spending the holiday vaca- tion with her sister, Mrs. Leon Jones and family. News has been received here of the Illness In a Toronto hospital of the Rev. John Gates, pastor of the services will begin at 10 o'clock with Sunday School and Bible Class fol- lowing Immediately after the service for worship. The young people of the Walther League Society will present a three- act play, "Let's Go Somewhere," at Seneca Castle Methodist church. He ) Farmington Grange Hall at 8 o'clock had gone to Toronto, Canada, to spend the holidays at the home of his daughter, Mrs. John Lay. Rev. Frank Swan of Penn Yan preached In the Methodist church, Sunday, In the absence of the pas- tor. Rev. John Gates. Freddie Snyder has-returned from Geneva General Hospital, where he underwent an operation for appen- dicitis. Jack Sloan, young son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sloan, Is recovering from pneumonia. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Goodwin of Ithaca and son, Paul Goodwin of Mitchell Field, L. I., Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Goodwin and sop, Fritz, of Ithaca were New Year's guests at the Goodwin Hurley home. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Ottley en- tertained at a family party, New Year's Eve. Guests were Mrs. Carl Estey and son, Warner, of Holcomb, Mr. and Mrs. George Vogt, Alice and Albert Vogt, of Aloquin and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Ottley and Hugh and Shirley Ottley of Seneca Castle. Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Gulvin and son, David, entertained the follow- ing guests on New Year's Eve: Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Soper, Milton Soper, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Buck, Mr. and Friday evening, January 17th. BENEDICT Eita Brown Benedict passed away, suddenly at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Bowers, near noon Saturday, as the result of burns. She is survived by her husband, Morton D. Benedict of Falrport; two sons, Charles A. and Harry J. Brown of Rochester; one sister Hattie I. Benedict of Farmington; three grandchildren and one great-grand- child. The funeral services were held, Monday afternoon, with the Rev. H. R. Saunders of Falrport, of- ficiating. Interment was made in Grand View Cemetery, Batavia. ——— No Armistice! as 1 USE WANT Sunday, after spending the holiday J ^re. George Ferguson, Duncan vacation with the "Bill and Hollen- Green, Miss Dorothy Williams of beck families and his sister, Miss Phyllis M. Corbin. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Pierce and children spent Sunday with out-of- town relatives. Mrs. Ina R. Weyneth and daugh- ter, Miss Jessie Ann, accompanied Mr. and Mrs. HOward E. Weyneth of Palmyra, to Clifton Springs, New Year's Day, to call on Mrs. Sidney Wheat, Jr., at the Sanitarium. Willis Wheeler and family have moved from the Gardner F. Green house to an out-of-town location. New Year's Day callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer S. Salisbury, of Clifton Springs-Or- leans road were: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Salisbury, Mrs. Robert Salis- bury, sons Thomas and David, and twin daughters, Linda Lee and Ro- berta Ann, and Mrs. George Salis- bury, all of Phelps, and Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hurlburt of Peru, N. Y. Mrs. Margaret Adams of Clifton Springs spent the day with her daughter, Mrs. Salisbury, and fam- ily. Ross E. McCarthy left, Sunday, to resume his studies at Hartwick Col- lege. Oneonta, after spending the Morton Benham of Flemington, holiday recess with his parents, Mr. N. J., Is spending a vacation with | and Mrs. Ross N. McCarthy. his parents, Mr, and Mrs. John H Benham. Mr. and Mrs. Ivo Dhondt and Miss Josephine Bator of Spangle street were New Year's Day guests of Mrs. Dhondt's niece, Mrs. Frank Burger, and family, Newark. Miss Bator spent a few days at the Burg- er home: Mr. and Mrs. Edward Holmes of Rochester and Mr. and Mrs. Ber- ton Mercer of McDonough were en- tertained at the Ell N. Howard home, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Stephens, ac- companied by* their daughter, Miss Ruth Stephens, and Miss Clara Thorpe of Syracuse, called on old friends and neighbors. New Year's Day. Miss Beatrice Wallace, who spent part of her vacation with her sis- ter, Mrs. Chester Haigh. and family. Lafayette Highway, has returned to Bowling Green College, Kentucky. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wilkinson entertained on New Year's Day, Her father, Emmett Brisee, and sister. Mrs. Ralph Curtice and family of Rochester. Mr. and Mrs. Lylle Edwards and son, Roger, of Niagara Falls, spent the week-end with his mother, Mrs. John Marsh of the Chapln road. WHITNEY—WOOD The marriage of Miss Emily Wood, daughter of~Mr. ^md^Mrs. Edward Wood, and W. Thatcher Whitney, aon of Mrs. Mabel Whitney of the Castle road, took place In the Meth- odist parsonage of Canandalgua, the pastor, Rev. Webster D. Melcher, performing the ceremony, Monday evening. December 30. The at- tendants were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vrooman of Clifton Springs. Mr. and Mrs. Whitney left on a short wedding trip and spent New Year's Day with Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Cai- man in rcimira The Immediate families witnessed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Whitney will reside on the Canandalgua-Seneca Castle road. James Sheppard and grandmoth- er. Mrs. Annie Christensen, are con- valescing from their recent illness. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon J. Fox and daughter, Betty, of Clifton Springs, were Sunday night supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney I. Wheat. Mr. and Mrs. William Holdforth and family of ShortsvUle were re- cent visitors in town. Miss Jessie Ann Weyneth returned home. Tuesday evening, from West Webster, where she spent several days with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn G. Myers. The lat- ter motored here with their niece. Elmer S. Salisbury of Clifton Springs-Orleans road spent Satur- day with his son, W. Ralph Salis- bury, in Rochester. George Robinson, who recently re- turned to his home east of this vil- lage, from Thompson Memorial hos- pital In Canandalgua, is slowly im- proving from his injuries received in a motor accident at Victor, sev- eral months ago. Miss Ima I. Bill has returned to Buffalo to resume teaching, after the holiday recess. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. RUands nf Stanley. Mr. and Mrs. William Llpker and son, Billy, of Seneca Castle, were guests, recently of Mr. and Mrs. James C. Llnehan. Miss Marlon Kennedy of Geneva has been the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter K. Kennedy. Geneva and Miss Betty Onderdonk of Number Nine. Mrs. George Smith entertained at her home in Seneca Castle in hon- or of her sister. Miss Ruth Buss, whose marriage to Robert Denison took place on New Year's Day. Games were enjoyed after which luncheon was served and the pre- sentation of gifts to the guest of honor was made. Christmas colors were used in house and table dec- orations for the occasion. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Schoonmaker, Mrs. F. E. Whitney, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Page and daughter, Miss Dorothy Page, were In Canandalgua to attend the funeral and burial of their cousin, Charles Furman of Brooklyn. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Schoonmaker entertained their daughters and their husbands, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Hubbard and daughter, Jane, of El- mlra; Mr. and Mrs. William D. Denise, Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Brownell, and their son, Henry L. Schoonmaker, all of Rochester, at a family dinner party, Sunday. Mrs. Adelaide Denise of Rochester was also a guest. Jane Hubbard re- mained with her grandparents for this week. - Mrs. Harold Peck of Pittsburgh, Pa., was the guest on Friday of the Misses Myra and Reta Peck. C. J. Estey returned from Owego, Monday, after spending several days with his son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Estey. Mrs. Ray AUis returned to her home in Medina, Saturday, after spending several days with her fath- er, William Mosey. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Blanding and son. Hal. Mrs. Margaret Hillegas and daughter. Martha, all of Syra- cuse, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice P. Whitney and sons, Roger and Hugh, were guests at a family dinner, on Sunday, of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. E Whitney. Miss Madalynne Bruce returned to Elmlra College, Sunday, after spending the Holiday vacation with her mother, Mrs. W. W. Bruce. The women of the Presbyterian church sponsored a games party. Friday evening, at the home of Mrs. Addle Whitney. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Kretchmer entertained friends at supper, Sat- urday night, in honor of Corporal Everett Scribner of Company B. Ge- neva, stationed at AnnistOn, Ala. Corporal Scribner, who has been spending the holidays at his home in Geneva, has left for Alabama to rejoin his company. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Allen en- tertained 26 members of their fam- ily at a dinner party, New Year's Day. Mr and Mrs. Charles R. Gardner and family, Mr. and Mrs. Howard DeLano with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gardner and Jean Audrey of Clifton Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sbear- man'of Canandalgua and Miss Mar- jorie Sharp of Geneva were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Estey and family, CooFey road, at a 6 o'clock dinner, New Year's Day. Dr. Wlllard Allen of Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Allen, and family, Friday evening and Saturday. Officers for the Friends Sunday School for 1941 are: Adeline Guelph, superintendent; Harold Baker, as- sistant superintendent; Margaret Allen, secretary; Elma Baker, as- sistant secretary; Mildred Allen, junior superintendent; Elsie Baker, assistant. Mrs. Ben VanWie of Schenevous spent the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Allen. Friends here regret the death of Mrs. J. Emily Flierl, wife of the late Rev. John Flierl, a former pastor of St. John's Evangelical Lutheran church here. She died December 25, at Lancaster. She leaves two daughters and two sons. Charles A. Lampman, Jr., son of Rev. and Mrs. Charles A. Lampman, and the Robert Bowerman children are HI. The Farmington Home Bureau will meet at the Farmington Grange Hall for the second lesson in recon- ditioning of furniture, Friday at 10 o'clock. Mrs. Raymond DeMay entertain- ed the Friendly Aid Society at her home, Wednesday afternoon. New developments in production and marketing will receive atten- tion in the Joint convention of po- tato and vegetable growers at Buf- falo on January 9 and 10. Y OU can fool some of the people some of the time, some of the people all of the time, but you can't fool all of the people even for a minute. The liquor traffic seems to forget that. Since It fooled enough of the people—by blaming its lawlessness and youth's wildness on prohibition —to get repeal in 1933 it has thought that everything was "okie- doke." At least once a year though the liquor traffic gets a rude awakening during the convention of National W. C. T. U. when it has to realize that here are 500,000 women, plus thousands of sympathetic non-mem- bers, who not only never were fooled about liquor but are out to do some- thing about it The 19*) convention marked the sixty-sixth year that this organiza- tion of mother-hearted women has fought for the American home and against anything that harms the home. Sixty-six years Is a long time and builds an experienced outlook. On the basis of those years of ex- perience and of close study of man- kind's history, the W. C. T. U. again reaffirmed its belief (and the ex- pressed belief of nearly every Prot- estant church) that there are only two ways to solve the liquor prob- lem: By abstinence for the individ- ual and by prohibition for the na- tion. Licensing systems, government control, self-policing by the liquor industry—the W. C. T. U. will listen courteously to all such suggestions, then point to history which has tried them all and found that they didn't Work. Then they probably will point to such things as the youth-patron- ized taverns of today, to homes wrecked by drinking mothers or fa- thers, to the highway death toll, to the alliances of liquor and politi- cians, and ask if you think such stop-gap systems are working now. Foremost throughout the conven- tion sessions, which heard encourag- ing reports that the pendulum of public opinion has swung from re- peal's favorable-to-liquor point to a critic al-of-liquor point and heard of temperance gains throughout the na- tion, were reports on the three so- cial effects of repeal which the W. C. T. U. believes have brought this new upsurge of temperance senti- ment. These are: Drinking drivers, drinking women, and drinking youth. Alongside them and equally consid- ered were the human and economic costs of liquor, the return of the saloon in disguise, and politics pol- luted by liquor and gambling hook- Not having signed an armistice after the shattering blow of repeal, the temperance forces have no thought of stopping now. The W. C. T. U. convention served notice that it was still on the trail of the liquor barons, armed with its twin weapons of education and legislation. Seeley Says: Before you buy that marked-down Suit, Overcoat, or Topcoat You Better Give Us A Look We still think we can Save You Money! Frank J. SEELEY "The Store of 1000 Trousers" Next to the Playhouse Canandaigua A program of mattress-making, to help use surplus cotton and to pro- vide adequate bedding fbr many families, Is underway" in New York state's rural areas. Advertising is a lubricant In wheels of distribution. THEY READ TOO MUCH* Two alert youths ran a sewing machine repair s h o p in Dayton, Ohio. The neighbors probably said they wouldn't amount to anything. They read too much. Yet all this time they waga studying—experi- menting—and reading, from the Dayton Public Library, the expen- sive technical books they could not themselves afford. On December 17, 1903. their heavier~than-air flying machine lifted successfully from a beach In the Carolina*, the first In history Its builders and pilots Orvtlle and Wilbur Wright -ALA. Bulletin. NipVTuck •* 1 aiss ooi wiuis The rain falls only on the just— Those friendly and obliging fellas. The reason? Wall, It I mutt tell— The unjust borrowed their um- brella* —Heavy «tuff Patience, Tuck, It's started throw* «t| things and maybe we'll gat the bone pretty MICA. , l.»«H»r WNU S«rvic«.» Wine Storekeeper Finds War Ruini His Business COLUMBUS.—"I can't fight the whole of Europe, I surrender," ex- claimed Byron Goldsmith, several thousand miles away from military hostilities as be closed ,up his Co- lumbus wine store. First came the Spanish civil war. Columbus citizens took sides and Spanish wines were boycotted. The public boycott was extended to Rhine wines when Hitler began to march. Italy entered the war and people shunned Goldsmith's Italian wines. Italy blockaded Greece and stopped exports of Grecian wines. Then no Hungarian, no French and very little Portugal wine came to Goldsmith's store. So he closed it, 'Victim" of "unsettled Interna- Uonal conditions " Don't take my, WORD fW ill BBUSa FRI., SAT., JAN. 10-11 Lew Ayres—Lionel Barry more— Laraine Day "DR. KILDARE'S CRISIS" SUN., MON., TUES., January 12-14 11101 HYMN •••% 0UVIA •• HAVIUAMD Canadian Boy Invents Self-Directed Bomb NELSON, B C -A now type of directional aerial bomb originat- ed by a 14-year-old Nelson boy, Allan Ramaden. is being closely studied In Ottawa. Young Ramaden conceived the Idea of a bomb which through a photo-electric cell might be self- directed by light action when dropped on e / S5SB FRANK COLBY = GALA Adj. Pertaining to festivitles.- The pronunciation most often heard, "GAL-luh," in which the first syllable rhymes with pal, has no dictionary support whatever. However, there is a word that is correctly pronounced "GAL-luh"; it is Galla, an African tribe. Therefore, when we speak of, say, a church festival as a "GAL-luh" occasion, what we actually say is that the festivities are of, for, and by a tribe of savage and coffee-col- ored Africans. Any editor would stigmatize this as extremely inac- curate reporting. e~nrit syllable of gala Should rhyme with either bay or bah. Correct pronunciations: First choice: GAY-luh Second choice: GAH-lah (Capitals indicate syllables to be accented.) From Los Angeles: Perhaps you can answer the burning question: "Who's Yehudl?" M. E. F. Answer: Yehudi (Jehudi) is a He- brew name which means "a Jew." In Biblical times Jehudi was the son of Nethaniah. The only modern Yehudi I know of Is the young and gifted concert violinist, Yehudi Menuhin. His name is pronounced: yeh-HOO-dee MEN-yoe-tn. (B«U Syndicate—WNU SarvUw.) O Easter Eggs May Soon Come Naturally Colored Joseph's coat of many colors may find a modern counterpart In the harmony of hues produced naturally by hois of Uncle Sam at the Na- tional Research Center, Beltsville, Md. Coloring the yolks of eggs by feeding has already been described, but "painting" the shells in a variety of colors—Including the patriotic em- blem "red, white and blue"—repre- sents a novel process. The hens, when bred and selected according to a formula of poultry specialists, become nature's own artists and no longer is it necessary to color eggs with artificial dyes for Easter or other occasions. Differ- ent breeds produce a rainbow of colors—already ranging from pearly white, through the various shades of brown, to a sky-blue. Red, striped or spotted, or other fantastic hues is not a remote possibility in Uncle Sam's color schemes. This could be accomplished by cross breeding through strains within the breeds, say the experts. Experiments by the Poultry lab- oratory 6T IR6 United States depart* ment of agriculture Indicate that in- dividual hens within the breed may "blue print" eggs of different col- ors, yet the color for each hen is a fixed factor. With respect to breeds. Black Minorcas and White Leghorns produce white-shelled eggs; wiode Island Reds and Plymouth Jftocks lay those of various shades of brown; Barnevelders turn out prod- ucts of a deep coffee brown In col- or: and Araucanas, believe it or not, lay sky-blue eggs. The poultry breeder ot the future —by crossing breeds and through combining strains within breeds- may dictate the color of his eggs as his fancy suits. r WED., THUR., Jan. 15-16 "LONG VOYAGE HOME" John Wayne—Ian Hunter PLUS "WHERE DID YOU GET THAT GIRL" Leon Errol Helen Parish 3 nrr*a>ui D mnuromci YOO OP6N " ^ I HAVfi Twc <SARI>IV4& -rue KSV CA.H UATtt ,-• BUT I -TM6 LOCK (Pviaae Laater-WHU tervteaj 'Campbell's"" Jewelry Store 25th Anniversary We atari ^xwr 2§lh year of busineas in Canandalgua with confidence that our Sil- ver Anniversary Year will ahow a continued growth of this complete Jewelry and Gift business. DIAMOND VAL .•- ... .. M V / Omaha Girl Organizes Club for Tall People OMAHA, NEB. — Organisation of a social club for tan men and women In Omaha is announced by Marie Trca. 19, who is three-fourths of an inch over six feet. Qualifications for the club: men must be at least six feet four Inches tall and not over seven feet; women six fact to she feet tour. Age limits era II to SB and any member marry* ing a person under the height re- quirement* will be dropped auto* matieallv Circulars distributed by Mist Trca promised "picnics, hikes, dance*, wiener roasta and parties to make the members the envy of all small fry." Our carefully selected dia- monds individually In- spected for perfection, brilliance and fine color, are priced to give better value than most stores of- fer. We have no secret marks on our diamond ring tags. Each one is plainly marked with the exact weight, color and perfection of the center diamond. You also find the price there in plain figures. We welcome com- parison of price, value and quality with offerings in other stores. WE DO FINE HUNTING 1 Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: In The End All You Really Have Is Memoriesfultonhistory.com/Newspapers 21/Clifton Springs NY Press/Clifton... · Mrs. Elmer S. Salisbury of Clifton Springs-Orleans road. Gilbert Corbin

,-• , - - " V £

.. . ^PfFfrT "T^3-

• £ . " ' . . ' "

Hopewell Center G. L.

Judson Jones, town clerk of Hope-weU, has toibmltUd the following ^^rm*] report: Three deaths, five births and seven marrtafe lloenses Issued; 4S resident hunting and fishing lloenses; 45 resident hunt­ing, five trapping and 19 fishing licenses; 49 deer and 195 dog licens­es and 219 papers filed during the year. Mr. Jones Is now taking the dog census. Everyone owning or harboring a dog Is required to pro­cure a license during the month of January.

William Hebard ta 111 at his home

=

OUR NEIGHBORS AT ' .̂ Saaa^bBkaa S V M A Ca^e^B

Mrs. S. L Wheat.

Seneca Cattle Farmington '

Mrs. Sarah Reed of Dundee is 01 at the home of her son, Harry Reed and family.

The card party sponsored by the Home Bureau unit was postponed from January 5 to Wednesday eve­ning. January 15. Mrs. Charles Isenhour, Mrs. James Berry and Mrs. William Dannahe will be In charge. Prises will be awarded and refreshments served.

Mrs. Mary Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Brown entertained, on New Year's Day, the former's sister, Mrs. Earl Vandenberg, Mr. Vanden-berg and son, Blllie. of Rochester, Miss Isaphine Tracey of Canandal­gua, * another sister, and Mrs. Brown's daughters, Mrs. Harry Washburn and family of Clifton Sprinars and Mrs. Howard Newton and Mr. Newton of this place.

Mr. and Mrs. William Stoddard and daughter, Miss Janice*, and son, Leonard, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George French, with Miss Doris Frost of Seneca Castle were New Year's Day guests of Mrs. Stod­dard's sister, Mrs. Adair Lauder, and family, of Victor.

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Cole of the Orleans road and Mr. and Mrs. Ar­thur Middlebrook and daughter, Jean, were New Year's guests ot Mr. and Mrs. George Cole of Waterloo.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Appleton of Lafayette Highway entertained on New Year's Day, her mother, Mrs. George Woolston and daughter. Ruby, of East Bloomfleld, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Appleton, Jr., of South Bloomfleld and Mrs. Ruth Kille of Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan La-Cronl of Rochester were supper guests.

Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Swank of Detroit, Mich., visited her aunt, Mrs. Claude M. Caiman and family, Thursday.

Miss Arlene Curtice of Rochester visited Miss Margaret Wood during the holidays.

Mrs. J. P. Griffin and daughter. Miss Ruth Griffin, and Miss Mar­garet Sick of Caledonia and Lynn Burr were visitors at the Salisbury home, Sunday

Mr. and Mrs. Frank wood and daughter, Miss Mary Wood, of Long Island were recent visitors of Miss Anna Wood of the County H o u s e Toad.

The "watch night" service held at the Baptist church, Tuesday eve­ning, was wall attended and enjoyed by all present. Mrs. Richard Shek­el!, Jr., of Clfton Sprlngs-Shortsvllle road, served as chairman of the meeting and presented the following program: Song fest; devotional period—responsive reading led by S. I. Wheat; prayer by Rev. Harry M. Shepson; trio, "Whispering Hope," Miss Louise Holdforth of Belfast, Avery L. Hollenbeck and Richard ShekeU, Jr.; remarks, A. F. Hill-mire of Phelps; duet, "Sweeter as the Years Go By," Miss Holdforth, A L. Hollenbeck; congregational singing of group of songs; solo, "God's Tomorrow," A. L. Hollen­beck; remarks, Rev. H M. Shep­son, solo by William Holdforth, ShortsvUle, remarks by Rev. Dayton of Phelps Presbyterian church; ad­dress by Rev. Thorn N. Carter of Pandora, Ohio; benediction by the Rev. Mr. Shepson. Refreshments were served in the dining room with Mrs. Shekell, Mrs. Gladys McCar­thy, Mr. and Mrs. Hollenbeck in charge of arrangements. Prayer by Rev. Mr. Shepson preceded the ringing of the church bell proclaim­ing the New Year.

Mrs. Clara Savage has gone to the home of her son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Emery Savage of Shorts-vllle-CU-ftcn Springs road, where she will spend the remainder of the Winter.

Miss Clementine Fabrlzl of Utlca spent New Year's afternoon with Mrs. Elmer S. Salisbury of Clifton Springs-Orleans road.

Gilbert Corbin left for Albany,

Prof, and Mrs. O B . Walker of Syracuse were New Years guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Schoonmaker, returning to Syracuse, Thursday.

—~m * « _ „ „ L mMl Divine services will be conducted Mr and Mrs. Charles Spangle and ^ ^ t ^ ^ ^ ^ C n h

son, Henry, have returned to Alden

MraC.a.

8T. JOHN'S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH

Rev. L. G. Leonard, Pastor

after spending the holiday vaca­tion with her sister, Mrs. Leon Jones and family.

News has been received here of the Illness In a Toronto hospital of the Rev. John Gates, pastor of the

services will begin at 10 o'clock with Sunday School and Bible Class fol­lowing Immediately after the service for worship.

The young people of the Walther League Society will present a three-act play, "Let's Go Somewhere," at

Seneca Castle Methodist church. He ) Farmington Grange Hall at 8 o'clock had gone to Toronto, Canada, to spend the holidays at the home of his daughter, Mrs. John Lay.

Rev. Frank Swan of Penn Yan preached In the Methodist church, Sunday, In the absence of the pas­tor. Rev. John Gates.

Freddie Snyder has-returned from Geneva General Hospital, where he underwent an operation for appen­dicitis.

Jack Sloan, young son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sloan, Is recovering from pneumonia.

Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Goodwin of Ithaca and son, Paul Goodwin of Mitchell Field, L. I., Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Goodwin and sop, Fritz, of Ithaca were New Year's guests at the Goodwin Hurley home.

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Ottley en­tertained at a family party, New Year's Eve. Guests were Mrs. Carl Estey and son, Warner, of Holcomb, Mr. and Mrs. George Vogt, Alice and Albert Vogt, of Aloquin and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Ottley and Hugh and Shirley Ottley of Seneca Castle.

Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Gulvin and son, David, entertained the follow­ing guests on New Year's Eve: Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Soper, Milton Soper, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Buck, Mr. and

Friday evening, January 17th.

BENEDICT Eita Brown Benedict passed away,

suddenly at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Bowers, near noon Saturday, as the result of burns. She is survived by her husband, Morton D. Benedict of Falrport; two sons, Charles A. and Harry J. Brown of Rochester; one sister Hattie I. Benedict of Farmington; three grandchildren and one great-grand­child. The funeral services were held, Monday afternoon, with the Rev. H. R. Saunders of Falrport, of­ficiating. Interment was made in Grand View Cemetery, Batavia.

— — —

No Armistice!

as 1 USE WANT

Sunday, after spending the holiday J ^re. George Ferguson, Duncan vacation with the "Bill and Hollen- Green, Miss Dorothy Williams of beck families and his sister, Miss Phyllis M. Corbin.

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Pierce and children spent Sunday with out-of-town relatives.

Mrs. Ina R. Weyneth and daugh­ter, Miss Jessie Ann, accompanied Mr. and Mrs. HOward E. Weyneth of Palmyra, to Clifton Springs, New Year's Day, to call on Mrs. Sidney Wheat, Jr., at the Sanitarium.

Willis Wheeler and family have moved from the Gardner F. Green house to an out-of-town location.

New Year's Day callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer S. Salisbury, of Clifton Springs-Or­leans road were: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Salisbury, Mrs. Robert Salis­bury, sons Thomas and David, and twin daughters, Linda Lee and Ro­berta Ann, and Mrs. George Salis­bury, all of Phelps, and Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hurlburt of Peru, N. Y. Mrs. Margaret Adams of Clifton Springs spent the day with her daughter, Mrs. Salisbury, and fam­ily.

Ross E. McCarthy left, Sunday, t o resume his studies at Hartwick Col­lege. Oneonta, after spending the

Morton Benham of Flemington, holiday recess with his parents, Mr. N. J., Is spending a vacation with | and Mrs. Ross N. McCarthy. his parents, Mr, and Mrs. J o h n H Benham.

Mr. and Mrs. Ivo Dhondt and Miss Josephine Bator of Spangle street were New Year's Day guests of Mrs. Dhondt's niece, Mrs. Frank Burger, and family, Newark. Miss Bator spent a few days at the Burg­er home:

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Holmes of Rochester and Mr. and Mrs. Ber-ton Mercer of McDonough were en­tertained at the Ell N. Howard home, Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Byron Stephens, ac­companied by* their daughter, Miss Ruth Stephens, and Miss Clara Thorpe of Syracuse, called on old friends and neighbors. New Year's Day.

Miss Beatrice Wallace, who spent part of her vacation with her sis­ter, Mrs. Chester Haigh. and family. Lafayette Highway, has returned to Bowling Green College, Kentucky.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wilkinson entertained on New Year's Day, Her father, Emmett Brisee, and sister. Mrs. Ralph Curtice and family of Rochester.

Mr. and Mrs. Lylle Edwards and son, Roger, of Niagara Falls, spent the week-end with his mother, Mrs. John Marsh of the Chapln road.

WHITNEY—WOOD The marriage of Miss Emily Wood,

daughter of~Mr. ^md^Mrs. Edward Wood, and W. Thatcher Whitney, aon of Mrs. Mabel Whitney of the Castle road, took place In the Meth­odist parsonage of Canandalgua, the pastor, Rev. Webster D. Melcher, performing the ceremony, Monday evening. December 30. The at­tendants were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vrooman of Clifton Springs. Mr. and Mrs. Whitney left on a short wedding trip and spent New Year's Day with Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Cai­man in rcimira The Immediate families witnessed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Whitney will reside on the Canandalgua-Seneca Castle road.

James Sheppard and grandmoth­er. Mrs. Annie Christensen, are con­valescing from their recent illness.

Mr. and Mrs. Gordon J. Fox and daughter, Betty, of Clifton Springs, were Sunday night supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney I. Wheat.

Mr. and Mrs. William Holdforth and family of ShortsvUle were re­cent visitors in town.

Miss Jessie Ann Weyneth returned home. Tuesday evening, from West Webster, where she spent several days with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn G. Myers. The lat­ter motored here with their niece.

Elmer S. Salisbury of Clifton Springs-Orleans road spent Satur­day with his son, W. Ralph Salis­bury, in Rochester.

George Robinson, who recently re­turned to his home east of this vil­lage, from Thompson Memorial hos­pital In Canandalgua, is slowly im­proving from his injuries received in a motor accident at Victor, sev­eral months ago.

Miss Ima I. Bill has returned to Buffalo to resume teaching, after the holiday recess.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. RUands nf Stanley. Mr. and Mrs. William Llpker and son, Billy, of Seneca Castle, were guests, recently of Mr. and Mrs. James C. Llnehan.

Miss Marlon Kennedy of Geneva has been the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter K. Kennedy.

Geneva and Miss Betty Onderdonk of Number Nine.

Mrs. George Smith entertained at her home in Seneca Castle in hon­or of her sister. Miss Ruth Buss, whose marriage to Robert Denison took place on New Year's Day. Games were enjoyed after which luncheon was served and the pre­sentation of gifts to the guest of honor was made. Christmas colors were used in house and table dec­orations for the occasion.

Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Schoonmaker, Mrs. F. E. Whitney, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Page and daughter, Miss Dorothy Page, were In Canandalgua to attend the funeral and burial of their cousin, Charles Furman of Brooklyn.

Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Schoonmaker entertained their daughters and their husbands, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Hubbard and daughter, Jane, of El-mlra; Mr. and Mrs. William D. Denise, Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Brownell, and their son, Henry L. Schoonmaker, all of Rochester, at a family dinner party, Sunday. Mrs. Adelaide Denise of Rochester was also a guest. Jane Hubbard re­mained with her grandparents for this week. -

Mrs. Harold Peck of Pittsburgh, Pa., was the guest on Friday of the Misses Myra and Reta Peck.

C. J. Estey returned from Owego, Monday, after spending several days with his son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Estey.

Mrs. Ray AUis returned to her home in Medina, Saturday, after spending several days with her fath­er, William Mosey.

Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Blanding and son. Hal. Mrs. Margaret Hillegas and daughter. Martha, all of Syra­cuse, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice P. Whitney and sons, Roger and Hugh, were guests at a family dinner, on Sunday, of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. E Whitney.

Miss Madalynne Bruce returned to Elmlra College, Sunday, after spending the Holiday vacation with her mother, Mrs. W. W. Bruce.

The women of the Presbyterian church sponsored a games party. Friday evening, at the home of Mrs. Addle Whitney.

Mr. and Mrs. Grant Kretchmer entertained friends at supper, Sat­urday night, in honor of Corporal Everett Scribner of Company B. Ge­neva, stationed at AnnistOn, Ala. Corporal Scribner, who has been spending the holidays at his home in Geneva, has left for Alabama to rejoin his company.

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Allen en­tertained 26 members of their fam­ily at a dinner party, New Year's Day.

Mr and Mrs. Charles R. Gardner and family, Mr. and Mrs. Howard DeLano with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gardner and Jean Audrey of Clifton Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sbear-man'of Canandalgua and Miss Mar-jorie Sharp of Geneva were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Estey and family, CooFey road, at a 6 o'clock dinner, New Year's Day.

Dr. Wlllard Allen of Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Allen, and family, Friday evening and Saturday.

Officers for the Friends Sunday School for 1941 are: Adeline Guelph, superintendent; Harold Baker, as­sistant superintendent; Margaret Allen, secretary; Elma Baker, as­sistant secretary; Mildred Allen, junior superintendent; Elsie Baker, assistant.

Mrs. Ben VanWie of Schenevous spent the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Allen.

Friends here regret the death of Mrs. J. Emily Flierl, wife of the late Rev. John Flierl, a former pastor of St. John's Evangelical Lutheran church here. She died December 25, at Lancaster. She leaves two daughters and two sons.

Charles A. Lampman, Jr., son of Rev. and Mrs. Charles A. Lampman, and the Robert Bowerman children are HI.

The Farmington Home Bureau will meet at the Farmington Grange Hall for the second lesson in recon­ditioning of furniture, Friday at 10 o'clock.

Mrs. Raymond DeMay entertain­ed the Friendly Aid Society at her home, Wednesday afternoon.

New developments in production and marketing will receive atten­tion in the Joint convention of po­tato and vegetable growers at Buf­falo on January 9 and 10.

YOU can fool some of the people some of the time, some of the

people all of the time, but you can't fool all of the people even for a minute.

The liquor traffic seems to forget that. Since It fooled enough of the people—by blaming its lawlessness and youth's wildness on prohibition —to get repeal in 1933 it has thought that everything was "okie-doke."

At least once a year though the liquor traffic gets a rude awakening during the convention of National W. C. T. U. when it has to realize that here are 500,000 women, plus thousands of sympathetic non-mem­bers, who not only never were fooled about liquor but are out to do some­thing about i t

The 19*) convention marked the sixty-sixth year that this organiza­tion of mother-hearted women has fought for the American home and against anything that harms the home. Sixty-six years Is a long time and builds an experienced outlook.

On the basis of those years of ex­perience and of close study of man­kind's history, the W. C. T. U. again reaffirmed its belief (and the ex­pressed belief of nearly every Prot­estant church) that there are only two ways to solve the liquor prob­lem: By abstinence for the individ­ual and by prohibition for the na­tion.

Licensing systems, government control, self-policing by the liquor industry—the W. C. T. U. will listen courteously to all such suggestions, then point to history which has tried them all and found that they didn't Work. Then they probably will point to such things as the youth-patron­ized taverns of today, to homes wrecked by drinking mothers or fa­thers, to the highway death toll, to the alliances of liquor and politi­cians, and ask if you think such stop-gap systems are working now.

Foremost throughout the conven­tion sessions, which heard encourag­ing reports that the pendulum of public opinion has swung from re­peal's favorable-to-liquor point to a critic al-of-liquor point and heard of temperance gains throughout the na­tion, were reports on the three so­cial effects of repeal which the W. C. T. U. believes have brought this new upsurge of temperance senti­ment.

These are: Drinking drivers, drinking women, and drinking youth. Alongside them and equally consid­ered were the human and economic costs of liquor, the return of the saloon in disguise, and politics pol­luted by liquor and gambling hook-

Not having signed an armistice after the shattering blow of repeal, the temperance forces have no thought of stopping now. The W. C. T. U. convention served notice that it was still on the trail of the liquor barons, armed with its twin weapons of education and legislation.

Seeley Says: Before you buy

that marked-down Suit, Overcoat, or Topcoat

You Better Give Us

A Look

We still think we can Save You Money!

Frank J.

SEELEY "The Store of 1000 Trousers"

Next to the Playhouse Canandaigua

A program of mattress-making, to help use surplus cotton and to pro­vide adequate bedding fbr many families, Is underway" in New York state's rural areas.

Advertising is a lubricant In wheels of distribution.

THEY READ TOO MUCH* Two alert youths ran a sewing

machine repair s h o p in Dayton, Ohio. The neighbors probably said they wouldn't amount to anything. They read too much. Yet all this time they waga studying—experi­menting—and reading, from the Dayton Public Library, the expen­sive technical books they could not themselves afford. On December 17, 1903. their heavier~than-air flying machine lifted successfully from a beach In the Carolina*, the first In history Its builders and pilots

Orvtlle and Wilbur Wright - A L A . Bulletin.

NipVTuck •* 1 aiss ooi wiuis

The rain falls only on the just— Those friendly and obliging fellas. The reason? Wall, It I mutt tell— The unjust borrowed their um­

brella* —Heavy «tuff

Patience, Tuck, It's started throw* « t | things and maybe we'll gat the bone pretty MICA. ,

l.»«H»r WNU S«rvic«.»

Wine Storekeeper Finds W a r R u i n i H i s B u s i n e s s

COLUMBUS.—"I can't fight the whole of Europe, I surrender," ex­claimed Byron Goldsmith, several thousand miles away from military hostilities as be closed ,up his Co­lumbus wine store.

First came the Spanish civil war. Columbus citizens took sides and Spanish wines were boycotted. The public boycott was extended to Rhine wines when Hitler began to march.

Italy entered the war and people shunned Goldsmith's Italian wines. Italy blockaded Greece and stopped exports of Grecian wines.

Then no Hungarian, no French and very little Portugal wine came to Goldsmith's store. So he closed it, 'Victim" of "unsettled Interna-Uonal conditions "

Don't take my, WORD fW ill

BBUSa FRI., SAT., JAN. 10-11

Lew Ayres—Lionel Barry more— Laraine Day

"DR. KILDARE'S CRISIS"

SUN., MON., TUES., January 12-14

11101 HYMN •••% 0UVIA • • HAVIUAMD

Canadian Boy Invents Self-Directed Bomb

NELSON, B C - A now type of directional aerial bomb originat­ed by a 14-year-old Nelson boy, Allan Ramaden. is being closely studied In Ottawa.

Young Ramaden conceived the Idea of a bomb which through a photo-electric cell might be self-directed by light action when dropped on e

/

S5SB FRANK COLBY =

GALA

Adj. Pertaining to festivitles.-

The pronunciation most often heard, "GAL-luh," in which the first syllable rhymes with pal, has no dictionary support whatever.

However, there is a word that is correctly pronounced "GAL-luh"; it is Galla, an African tribe.

Therefore, when we speak of, say, a church festival as a "GAL-luh" occasion, what we actually say is that the festivities are of, for, and by a tribe of savage and coffee-col­ored Africans. Any editor would stigmatize this as extremely inac­curate reporting.

e~nrit syllable of gala Should rhyme with either bay or bah.

Correct pronunciations: First choice: GAY-luh Second choice: GAH-lah

(Capitals indicate syllables to be accented.)

From Los Angeles: Perhaps you can answer the burning question: "Who's Yehudl?" M. E. F.

Answer: Yehudi (Jehudi) is a He­brew name which means "a Jew." In Biblical times Jehudi was the son of Nethaniah.

The only modern Yehudi I know of Is the young and gifted concert violinist, Yehudi Menuhin. His name is pronounced: yeh-HOO-dee MEN-yoe-tn.

(B«U Syndicate—WNU SarvUw.) O

Easter Eggs May Soon Come Naturally Colored

Joseph's coat of many colors may find a modern counterpart In the harmony of hues produced naturally by hois of Uncle Sam at the Na­tional Research Center, Beltsville, Md. Coloring the yolks of eggs by feeding has already been described, but "painting" the shells in a variety of colors—Including the patriotic em­blem "red, white and blue"—repre­sents a novel process.

The hens, when bred and selected according to a formula of poultry specialists, become nature's own artists and no longer is it necessary to color eggs with artificial dyes for Easter or other occasions. Differ­ent breeds produce a rainbow of colors—already ranging from pearly white, through the various shades of brown, to a sky-blue. Red, striped or spotted, or other fantastic hues is not a remote possibility in Uncle Sam's color schemes. This could be accomplished by cross breeding through strains within the breeds, say the experts.

Experiments by the Poultry lab­oratory 6T IR6 United States depart* ment of agriculture Indicate that in­dividual hens within the breed may "blue print" eggs of different col­ors, yet the color for each hen is a fixed factor. With respect to breeds. Black Minorcas and White Leghorns produce white-shelled eggs; wiode Island Reds and Plymouth Jftocks lay those of various shades of brown; Barnevelders turn out prod­ucts of a deep coffee brown In col­or: and Araucanas, believe it or not, lay sky-blue eggs.

The poultry breeder ot the future —by crossing breeds and through combining strains within breeds-may dictate the color of his eggs as his fancy suits.

r

WED., THUR., Jan. 15-16 "LONG VOYAGE

HOME" John Wayne—Ian Hunter

PLUS "WHERE DID YOU GET

THAT GIRL" Leon Errol — Helen Parish

3 nrr*a>ui

D mnuromci

YOO OP6N " ^ I HAVfi Twc <SARI>IV4& -rue KSV CA.H UATtt , - • BUT I

-TM6 LOCK

(Pviaae Laater-WHU tervteaj

'Campbell's"" Jewelry Store

25th Anniversary We atari ^xwr 2§lh year of busineas in Canandalgua with confidence that our Sil­ver Anniversary Year will ahow a continued growth of this complete Jewelry and Gift business.

DIAMOND VAL

.•-. . . . . M V

/

Omaha Girl Organizes Club for Tall People

OMAHA, NEB. — Organisation of a social club for tan men and women In Omaha is announced by Marie Trca. 19, who is three-fourths of an inch over six feet.

Qualifications for the club: men must be at least six feet four Inches tall and not over seven feet; women six fact to she feet tour. Age limits era II to SB and any member marry* ing a person under the height re­quirement* will be dropped auto* matieallv

Circulars distributed by Mist Trca promised "picnics, hikes, dance*, wiener roasta and parties to make the members the envy of all small fry."

Our carefully selected dia­monds individually In­spected for perfection, brilliance and fine color, are priced to give better value than most stores of­fer. We have no secret marks on our diamond ring tags. Each one is plainly marked with the exact weight, color and perfection of the center diamond. You also find the price there in plain figures. We welcome com­parison of price, value and quality with offerings in other stores.

WE DO FINE HUNTING 1

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

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