NewspaperAuburn NY Citizen 1907 - 1526

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  • 8/13/2019 NewspaperAuburn NY Citizen 1907 - 1526

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    mm THE AtTBTJRN tTTTZEN, MO NPA T, JULY 2 9, 1907 .C O M I N G E V E N T S

    i t o r i u m A n n e x e -Moving p ictures , i l lu s tratedsongs and vaudevi l l e, 3 and4 and * and 9 p. m.vi l l e, 8:15.

    P E f l S O N L a

    Culver and friend

    has . returned

    Sodus Bay g iven ' by Miss

    from an outing on

    M. C. Andre ws and Mrs. A.

    yesterday from Wllkes-E . Tryon of Montreal ,

    s treet . Whi le swimm ingrem ain here until he Is

    Mary Vance has returned;

    and Quebec, where she wi l l

    He left th is morn ing for h i sstrong, credit , man of

    Mr*. -C!en W. Cray of

    W. Gillespie left for Buffaloneva, was the

    hero yenterday.

    left, this .morning for

    Chesebrough returned to Bath

    iss ioner Lou is F'. Sper-morn-seminary,morn ing and even ing in

    Mackay of Woodstock .a few of

    yesterday. Those whoAndrew J. Beswlek . Luther

    now a prosperous merof Seneca Fal l s cal l ed onW. Patterson , who hass

    s treet . *

    tracts in C hattanooga, Tenn . ,Rochester and Auburn .Mr. and Mrs . Arch ie Dean of Al bany are v i s i t ing John Fisher of109 Wal l s treet .M. Leroy Gates and s i s ter Ireneof Morri s s treet l eft Saturday forAmsterdam and Albany to v i s i t rel atives .Miss Mi ldred Manro entertained anumber of friends at the gri l l Fri day even ing in honor of her guest ,Miss Margaret Porter of Ovid . Thosewho composed the party were: MissLaura Rich , Miss Evelyn Leonard ,Miss Dorothy Hughi tt , Miss HazelBriggs , Haywood , Bartlett , Wi l lardKidney, Howard Colwel l , Merri l lGates , Merri l l P arker and Jack Mcin tosh . Miss Helen Manro and herguest , Miss Wi l l iams of I thaca, acted as chaperons .Miss Floss ie B . Thatcher andMiss Bertha Mundt l eft th i s morning for a two weeks ' s tay at Albany,New York and Atlantic Ci ty .Harvey Huff and wi fe wi l l spendtomorrow and Wedn esday of thisweek wi th the former's parents , Mr.and Mrs. Oliver Huff, in Semproni -

    us. Mr. and Mrs. John Dunn Jr. arehaving p lans drawn for the cons truction of a beauti fu l new res i dence on the s i te of their presenthomo. 190 Genesee s treet .Superin tendent. Shaw of the Auburn Woolen Company came homefrom Oneida yesterday in h i s automobi le.Glenn F. Briggs has purchased athoroughbred sadd le horse for h i sdaughter, Miss Hazel Briggs .J* Reynolds Wai t and James E .Farrand wi l l l eave th i s even ing forNew York ci ty in the in terests ofH. R. Wait.Levi F. Nob le has returned froma two months ' geological survey Inthe southwest in the In terests ofthe Uni ted S tates government. Mr.Noble went as ass i s tant to Professor Sucher of the Peabody Museumat Yale un ivers i ty .Miss Ethel Beards ley and F .Burnham Chapman are v i s it ingMidsh ipman S loane Dannenhower at!Oswego. Midsh ipman Dannenhowerwi l l l eave shortly for Portsmouth ,N. H. , where he has been ass ignedto the new battlesh ip Kansas .Mr, and Mrs . Fred Johnson havereturned from a two weeks ' vacation spent at B lue Mountain lake.Willard II. Barnes Is spend ing hisvacation in Watertown.Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur B. Barnesand Mr. and Mrs. George W. Bowenleft las t week for Detroi t , Mich . , inMr. Bpwen's Peerless car.F. G. Reed and family of EastGenesee s treet l eft today for Mich i gan by way of the Great Lakes .Mrs. Lyman H. Rust and ch i ldrenleft th i s morn ing for Cananuaiguaand wi l l proceed later' to Hemlocklake for a coup le of w eeks ' s tay. Mr.Rust will join the party later.Joseph DeVore del ightfu l ly en terta ined a number of h i s friends atButtonwood cottage on Cayuga lakeyesterday. One of the most on oy-ab le features of the day was a tripon the lake beyond the Frontenacwreck and various other poin ts onOld Glory, owned by Captain HankLewis . Those on board bes ide thecaptain were: Miss Van Buren ofFu l ton , the Misses Margaret Warner and Latterman and LeonardRlackman of Syracuse of Kanoonacottage and the Misses Mabel andClara C. Marsh, Ruth Hood, Mr. andMrs. Baron Jones , Messrs . Rubert,DeVore and Van Camp of Button-wood cottage.Rev. S. O. Barne s, D. D., of theNorthern New York conferencepreached at both services at Trin i tyM- E . church yesterday. Two largecongregations l i s tened attentively toh is remarks , which were help fu land Instructive.The Mioses -Clara. Irene andBlanch e Holliday of .Fulton are thoguests of Miss Anna Bannon ofBurt avenue. ' . , ' . . . 'M'ss Martha MarMn of Willard Isthe guest of Mr. and Mrs . GeorgeF. Hennessy In Hami l ton avenue.Miss Mary E. A. Holmes and ulster, Mrs. M. F. Donovan, have returned from a pleasant visit atCleveland , O.Wil l iam Peterson of Cleveland ,O. , formerly of Auburn , i s spend ingthe week wi th relatives and friendsIn the city.N. P. L. Auditor P. R. Cole andwife of Geneva returned th i s morning from Ithaca where they spenta few days in camp on Cayuga lake,the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. C.Cummlngs .The fo l lowing named peop le arespend ing their vacations at Ontariopark, Lake Ontario: Dr. and Mrs.C. E, Spire of Jordan,. Mr. and Mrs.Frank Gokey and fami ly of Oswego.Ms . Anna Center of Weedsport, F.M. Forbes and .family of Sayre, Pa.and Mr. and Mrs. John Monihan andfamily of Auburn.Miss Edness C Lauren i s spending a month wi th friends at Delavan

    lake, Wiscons in .Miss Mary Preg and Miss AgnesYantch of Mechanic s treet l eft todayfor a v i s i t to Boston , Winthrop andseveral other p laces in the East.F. W. Grant of Dill street and E.A. Shaw of Mi l l avenue' . spent Sunday at Seneca river and came backwith a large su ing of f i sh .Oscar S. Hjinchett. C, W. Weeks.Miss Mabel Van. Dusen and Miss Bertha Smith a l l of Syracuse, took d in ner at the Osborne yesterday.Mrs. A. M. Seymour nnd grandson Master Harold of Detroi t arevisiting Mr. and Mrs. Johu Horn ofa East Genesee s treet .Mrs. Frank J . Reynolds and MissAgnes Browne are among the lu tearrival s from the Elks ' fes t iv i t i es inPhi ladelph ia . Subsequent to thereun ion M:. Reynolds and MUsBrowne spent several days wi ththeir s i s ter, Mrs . Frank Sch i l l ing, orWilmington , Del . Mr. and Mrs .Reynolds have returned to theirsummer home. Ferndale on Owasco.During the absence of h i s parentsfrom the ci ty Master Pau l , chaperoned by Mrs. C. B. Corey, enter ta ined a number of friends at thecottage.

    Frontenac Disaster the Mostin Many Years.M A N Y D E E D S O F H E R O I S MAnd None Was Braver Than Captain M. P. Brown

    and the Members of Hit CrewIt Is Indicated That *the Boat Burned in 11 Minutes Manyof the Scenes and Incidents.

    The Frontenac d i saster on Cayugalake Saturday afternoon proved to beeven more heartrend ing as the subsequent detains were made knownthan the early s tory of the catastrophe which was first put intoprin t in the columns of the Ci tizen ,al though as s tated in Saturday's i s sue the loss of l i fe was the same asind icated .Tho fire proved to be the worstd i saster in the h i s tory Of navigationon the in land lakes 'of Central NewYork. It occurre d In the fraction ofan hour, when wi th scarcely anywarn ing of Impending danger the famous o ld s teamboat, the largest inthe f l eet owned by the Brown Transportation Company, took Are and In afew minutes burned to the water' se.3ge, forcing all passengers to Jumpoverboa rd With the loss of eightprecious l ives .The complete l i s t of the casual ti esas reported i s as fo l lows:T h e D e a d .Miss Ju l ia C. McC reoi -y , S la instreet , Cohoes .Miss Kstel la Cl in ton , I thaca.Mrs. l i ena Genung, wi fe of Dr.Homer Genung, Freevi l l e.Carl Homer Genung, her four yearold son. -. .Miss L ida Bennett , Frankfort, N.Grace Abel , aged 0 years , Tru-mansbui 'g .Miss Marietta Su l l ivan , lo87 SouthState s treet , Syracuse.Miss Eva W. S lott , Port Al leghany,Pa. ., The In jivcd ,The in jured were:S irs . John Abel , aged 74, Trumans-burg, burned on face and arms andsuffering greatly from shock . Takento the home of Jacob Di l l in seriouscond ition. Watf in charg e of GraceAbel , ch i ld v ictim.S l i ss S lary Bruyn , 410'West Genesee s treet , Syracuse. Bad ly burnetlon face, ea*s and left arm and handwhi le in water. Attended by Dr.Joseph P. Creyel ing of Auburn . Wentto her home in Syracuse.Miss Kl iza Tuth l l l , S l idd letown, X.V., burned about ftM'e and arms,Sirs. J. A* Genun g, wife of SheriffGenung of Ithaca:, burned on left sideof face.Miss Charlotte B i ighan i , Syracuse,s l ightly burned .With the exception of Mrs .Abel all of the Injured were in condition to return to their homes after treatment. About a score of thepassengers su ffered from exhaustionand exposure but after reach ingshore they were provided wi th s t imu lants and dry cloth ing and wereab le to depart fpr their respectivehomes by the regu lar and specialtrains , tho Leh igh Val ley Ra' lroadCompany despatch ing one from Auburn at 3:23 p. in. and from Itha caat 6 p. m>The S tart of the Trip .The Frontenac l eft Sheldrake onher midday trip northward after receiv ing passengers transferred fromthe Mohawk of the Brown Transportation Company and proceeded onher usual course in the face of anorthwest gale. Owing to the v iolence of the wind the passengers remained below. Oa board were about50 women , hal f a dozen male passengers and hal f a dozen ch i ldren .The vessel was In charge of CaptainMelvln P. Brown, owner, of Syracuse and under h im were Pi lot AlSmith of I thaca, Engineer HowardBachman of Seneca: Fal l s and thefirst mate and three deck hands.Al l to ld there were about 70sou ls aboard . Aurora was reachedhal f ah hour beh ind scheduled t imebut owing to the rough water Captain Brown wisely decided not toattempt a land ing and about 40basebal l en thus iasts on their way toUnion Springs for the Aurora-UnionSprings basebal l game fortunatelywere l eft beh ind and had to seekother means of transportation .The Frontenac then s tood out in to the midd le of the lake on herway to Farley' s poin t and was p icking her way in the teeth of. a 40mi le an hour gale, Sudden ly whenoff of b i l l s cove, about a mi le anda quarter south of Farley' s , one ofthe boy passengers d i scovered smokeIssuing from under the flooring under the upper deck .Captain Brown's Tale.The d i scovery may best be to ld InCaptau Brown's own words ae related to a Ctti sen repprter: "After weleft the peop le on the wharf at Aurora and fa i l ed to make our land ingwe headed for the midd le of thelake poin ting for Farley' s . I havenot tbe l east idea of the cause ofthe fire for the first intimation Ihad that anyth ing was wrong waswhen some boy passenger told me

    that there must be a fire as smokewas coming up from below. I looked and saw smoke coming up fromunder the th ird deck . I ran andtold Engineer Bachman to s tart thepumps and he d id so at once. ThenI turned on the valves , and we hadtwo two-Inch s treams p laying rightaway, I managed the one on theupper deck and Bachman d irectedthe one below,"The boat began going up l ike somuch powder. I saw the f lre wasgain ing and I l eft the nozzle a minute to run to the p i lot house andordered Al Smith to head for theshore f i t fu l l speed . The promenadedeck amldsh ip was a l l ab laze and Ip icked up my hose again and heldthe f lames for awhi le, cal l ing Outwi th my m en to . the passengers totake l i fe preservers and go forwardand to be ready to l eave when westruck . "Al l . of the. passengers were belowbut were beginn ing to get exci tedand we had d i ff i cu l ty in gett ing themforward . The fl re was then gain ingon me and I saw i t was useless todevote my efforts to the 4ho8e andleaving It pointed into the flames Ibegan putting l i fe preservers on thepassengers . Most of them alreadyhad them on . We grounded in afew minutes and then they wouldnot l eave the boat. I had to throwsome peop le off the boat and whi lethey were in the water I pushed themtoward shore wi th the gang p lank ,tel l ing them to walk after they gotin a ways . We had 400 l ife preservers, ha lf cork, and half planks , andthere were on ly about 50 to 60 passengers ,""The passengers say there were70 aboard?" in terrupted the reporter. " .;"There cou ld not have been thatmany," responded Captain Brown."How many ti ckets had you col l ected?" was asked ."I had not taken them Up yet,but I am sure there were not over6Q," in s i s ted the captain . Continuing h i s narrative he said :Peop le Were Frightened ."The water was not deep but theywere frightened and the rough watermade them th ink i t was much deeper than i t real ly was . My men d idgood work and 1 was the las t manto l eave the boat. 1 cannot tel l whatcaused the f i re as there was no s ignof flames In the hold, nor near thesmokestack , nor in the k i tchen . Mywife was down there wi th the s tewardess , Mrs . Nel l i e Hickok , andthere was no s ign of f l re there. Wehave no oi l room or lamp room onthe boat."Camper Maw It Firs t .The f l re must have orig inated afew m i nutes before 1 o 'clock , be-cause R. B . Ferri s , a camper on Farley' s , was s i tt ing in h i s cottage wai t-l ing to take the approach ing boat andhe said he. had just look ed at his

    I clpek which showed 1 o 'clock anda moment afterward he saw thatthe Frontenac was burn ing. He wentoutdoors and making sure that thesmoke was i ssu ing from the super*structure and not from the smokerstack he excla imed: "My God , theFrontcnac' s afire." Without wai tinga moment he ran toward the i l l -fatedvessel which waft now s i l en tly making for the east shore of the lakeenveloped in a cloud of smoke wi thoccas ional outbursts of f lame fromthe s tarboard s ide near the wheelbox. ';..-.Minister Did Good Woi-klRev. A. A. McKay of Westminster Presbyterian church ofth i s ci ty who was campingwith seven ^ mal l >boys in atent on Utt' s poin t facing the burning boat, heard Mr. Ferri s ' s criesand was off in an instant to the res cue. Other campers fo l lowed on butthe nearst poin t on the shore to thevessel was over a mi le away and themen ran madly through the underbrush and along the rugged shorel ine, frequently going knee deep inthe mud of bogs and being compel ledto retrace their foots teps , theirheart s being p ierced every t ime theyreached an open ing and saw thefrantic women and ch i ldren in hol i day garb dropping help less ly fromthe boat, wh ich now lay wi th herbow stuck In the soft ooze of thebar off the Dill farm, a few rodsnorth p f the Big Gul ley brook , andabout 450 feet from shore.Firs t on the Scene.

    The f i rs t rescuers on the scene arrived in an exhausted cond i tion butthey p lunged at once in to the merci l ess surf and began help ing the v ict ims ashore. Some of the womenshowed remarkable heroi sm andpresence of mind and the command,"I 'm al l right now, go and help someone el se." was frequently made tothe rescuers as they s taggered outtoward the boat, battl ing against thewaves and inhal ing smoke and hotair fumes from the roaring furnacenear which 50 persons were s truggl ing for their l ives ,S la le Paasengei s Coward ly .The few male passengers a lone d i s

    p layed rank coward ice and nei ther amember of the sh ip ' s crew nor a s in gle camper cou ld be found who recogn ized a male passenger among thoseass i s t ing in bringing the help lessashore. I t I s a s ign if i cant fact thatal though newspaper representativeswere on the scene soon after thebeach ing they cou ld not locate anyof the male passengers among the benumbed and d i shevel led survivors onthe shore.James J . Murphy of I thaca, whowas one of tbe b ig heroes of the day.and who ass i s ted in bringing eightpersons ashore, sa id that on one tripout to the sh ip a male passenger,wearing a b lue su i t and a man ofrather s tout phys ique, went aboutl ike an auctioneer yel l ing frantical ly ,"$500 to the man who saves mywife!" to which Murphy responded ,"Save her yoursel f , you b ig , fat "as he continued to devote h imsel f tothe nearest persons in d i s tress , regard less of their identi ty .The woman who was valued at$500 was a good swimmer and managed to reach shore herself, and itwas said later that the man in b luedes ired on ly that h i s wi fe be saved ,h i s in tention being to sacri f i ce h imsel f If necessary. The fact remains ,however, that he was not amongthose who remained on the scene towork to exhaustion for the unfortu nate v ictims of the holocaust.Other male passengers , i t i s sa id ,made for the rai l road track soon after reach ing dry ground and duringthe rest Of the day were scarce a l though many of the women survivorsins i s ted on s taying on the groundand doing everyth ing poss ib le forthose who needed attention .

    The Honor Rol l .Among those whose names belongon the honor rol l , includ ing the officers and crew of the vessel. Werethe fo l lowing. Rev. A. A. McKay ofAuburn , Hart Carr, John Redmond,Thomas Redmond, Mr. and Mrs . Jacob Di l l and Robert Di l lfho cared for 14 of the survivors at their home, Charles Carr,Raymond Barber, Robert Irving,Floyd Hennessy , Wi l l iam Whipp le,James Ferri s , Asa Hoff, R. B . Ferri s ,Charles G. Adams of Auburn , FrankHi l l , foreman of the Leh igh Val leysection gang; Wal lace Vreeland , JohnLeonard and James J . Murphy ofI thaca, who was camping near by.He was hunting in the woods andhad been shooting woodchucks whenhe happened to look out on the lakeand was horri f i ed to see the vesselhead ing for the beach al l ab laze. Hedropped h i s gun and ammu nitionbel t and , p ick ing h i s way through aswamp, was among the f i rs t to swimOut to the boat. He is tall and athleti c and h i s closeness at the t imewas a fortunate circumstance as hewas hot exhausted as other rescuersal though he soon worked h imsel t tocol lapse by making trip after trip outto the wreck . When there was nothing more that cou ld be done in theway of sa lvage he returned to thewoods on ly to f ind that some onehad found and carried off his gun.Arthur D. Kel ler of \T ew York andHugh Kimbal l of th i s ci ty wereamong the o lder campers in Rev. A.A. McKay's party . They swam outto the wreck and ass i s ted several toshore whi le a l l of the smal l boysin the party ran back and s trippedtheir ten t of b lankets In which thebod ies were wrapped .Captain I ias t to Xea ve.Captain Brown was the las t oneto l eave the wreck but bes ides as s i s t ing many in adjusting l i fe pre*servers managed to get h i s wi fe,son Roland , Miss Mary Bruyn andothers ashore. Chief EngineerBachman, a l though he might havesaved about $200 in personal property from h 's locker, ass i s ted eig^tpersons ashore. He had to drivesome women forward by force inorder that t lhey would be away fromthe b laze when , the vessel turned

    toward shore and the wind sh i ftedthe f lames. A man named Hazard ,who broke both oars in h i s effortsto reach the boat a l so ass i s ted inthe work of rescue. Pi lot Al Smithof I thaca, a l though 62 years of age,s tuck to h i s p i lot house to the las t ,and after ass i s t ing four personshad to be a ided h imsel f in gett ingashore. A large number of heroeswhose names cou ld not be l earneddid nob le work . Among the woman passengers there were manywho by their coolness and independence ass i s ted materia l ly in keep ingdown the pan ic that inevi tab ly fo l lowed after the a l ternative of ri sk ing l ife by f l re or water was theon ly contingency offered to the unfortunate passengers .Not a whis tl e was sounded during the progress of the d i sasterand the pal l ing crack le of f lamesdeadened the shrieks of the v ict ims as they unwi l l ingly abandonedthe veses l . the boi l ing surf qu ietingall -lis they Were imm ersed andfought their way despairingly toward shore. Once ashore theydropped on the ground in exhaustion and a calamitous qu iet hungoyer the scene, tho rescuers wasting no t ime in moving about.Fire Was Quick .

    The entire catastrophe occup iedscar cely 15 minutes . When fi rs t noti ced afire by Mr. Ferri s from h iscottage at Farley' s i t wa 1 o 'clockPi lot Al Smith and Captain Brownleft the beached wreck after a l lothers had gone and Mr. Smith ' swatch , accurate because of i ts useto keep the vesse l on schedu le at herd i fferent s tops , had ceased to beatat 1:11 o 'clock , thus ind icatingthat on ly 11 minutes at the mostelapsed in bringing the boat ashoreand removing al l passengers . ;

    Min is ter' s Nob le Work .Ae fast as the v ictims werebrought ashore those among therescuers not engaged in the waterset to work to resusci tate any thatshowed s igns of l ife. Rev. A. A.McKay, wbo was somew hat fami l iarwi th the fi rs t a id emerge ncy ru lesfor reviving drowning persons worked l ike a Tro jan , devoting, a lmost anhour to the Genung ch i ld , who, accord ing to James J . Murphy ofI thaca, who brought h im ashore,was s t i l l a l ive. In sp i te of Rev.McKay's devoted efforts the sparkof l i fe went out and at 3 o 'clock thel i tt l e lad wee la id bes ide h i s motherin tbe ghastly row of bod ies s tretched on the shale in Di l l ' s cove. Mr.McKay . took charge of t he bod ies

    (Continued on s ixth page. )

    I N D A Y O F FCitizen's Male Employes En

    joy First Khun Bake.W E N T T T E R R A C E V I L L AAnd There Had the Time of

    Their Uvea With JimWylie Catering.

    ^ YOUR

    Weather cond i tions were idealyesterday for the f i rs t annual Klambake of the male employes of TheCitizen on the grounds of the summer home of Mr. and Mrs . RobertSch icht, Terrace Vi l la , Owasco lake.The s tart was made from the cornerof Genesee and South s treets at 9:30a. m. and at shortly after 10 the 40or more workers and a few s /uestsboarded T . M. Osborne's s teamlaunch Dolph in and at 11:15 werelanded at the scene of the day's fes t iv i t i es . Caterer James Wyl ie wasearly on the scene and had prepareda f ine lunch for the a lready hungryvoyagers , after exchanges of greetings wi th Mr. and Mrs . Sch icht andfami ly .

    The day was spent most en joy-ab ly , which included a boat ride after lunch to Wi l low Poin t, the summer home of Mr. Osborne, where atour of inspection of the groundsw a s m a d e b y s o m e w h i l e o t h e r sp layed basebal l . The return wasmade about 3 o 'clock and from thento the t ime of the bake the Ci tsamused themselves in ways too manyto mention . The much-w ai ted-forbake came at 5 o 'clock and the wayIn which al l went at i t proved eachman had been saving h imsel f for theoccas ion . With the fine shore menuand tho jes ts and s tories of thoseassembled around the long tab le themeal was over on ly too qu ick ly , orto quote from S ig . Guggenheim:'The on ly th ing I don ' t l ike aboutth i s d inner Js that i t takes away m yappeti te." Mr. Guggenheim , whowas one of the guests , proved h imsel f to be a regu lar Pooh Bah , in clud ing ch ief p i lot , gu ide, custod ianof the faucets and head s tory-tel l er.I t was just before the Dolph in wasready to proceed to the foot of thelake that the most exci t ing incidentof the day took p lace and whichlooked for a t ime as though theday, after a l l . were about to terminate in a tragedy. The attention ofseveral of the man on shore wascal led to a man and woman havinga hot argument in a row boat a hundred yards or so from the end ofthe dock . Evidently they had s tartedout for a day's fishing. Th e argu ment grew warmer and warmer, theoccupants became greatly agi tatedand in the mix-up that fo l lowed , thecraft was overturned and the pairwent in to the drink . Cries for helpimmediately resounded on the s t i l leven ing air and a volunteer partywas made up from among the Ci ti zen men who hastened to the sceneto rescue the immersed coup le.the l i fe-saving crew neared thescene of t ie t ip -over those on shorecou ld hear cons iderab ly more laughter thai i i s usual ly wont to occur onsuci i an occas ion and wondered whythe rescu ing party d idn ' t makegreater efforts to take the man andwoman in to their boat. S lowly thetwo craft neared the shore and tothe chagrin of those wai ting i t wasd iscovered that the "man" and "woman" were two of the Klam Bak eparty who had so cleverly d i sgu isedthemselves that their identi ty d idn ' tbecome known unti l those who hadstarted to their rescue came in toclose range.During the course of the dayfriends about the lake who had motoror sail boats dropped in to gret thep icn ickers and to treat several torides about the lake, w hi le Emi lKraemer, Mr. Sch icht and FrankWilk inson took view s of . the assem b lage. After good byes and thanksto Mr. and Mrs . Sch icht and fami lyfor their hosp i ta l i ty and the generalgood time the return trip was madeat 7:30 amid regrets that a daycou ldn ' t be s tretched in to 24 hours .There was general sati s faction expressed wi th the day's outing, andthe annual Klam Bake of The Ci ti zen has now become an es tab l i shedinsti tu tion .

    Ice BiReduIf you buy o

    REFRIGERATOReducedPrice$&75Refrigerat$6.9

    H . T r a u b M R S H E N R T J

    Death in Sonera Fal lWel l Known Seneca Fal l s . Ju ly san S tone S toweH, wStowel l , ed i tor of theRevei l l e, d ied at the faState s treet las t eveni i l lness extend ing over so vera1 weeks , aged 7Mrs. S towel l was agreat k indness of healoved and respected byher. A bright, sunnshe exerted an in flueupon those about her.was th i s more mani feshome, and where herdeep ly fel t .She i s survived byand one daughter, M(Stowel l , and by one Charles O. Goodyear, The funeral wi l l be helcopal church , of which s i s ten t member. Wednnoon , Rev. W. B . Cla

    Chicago and BWhen you go west , the New York Central found the qu ickest andA U R O R A D K F K A T S

    Fast Game in t he l e a g u e S a t u rAurora. Ju ly 29.mous basebal l team wstraight, v ictory by tagame from the FronteSprings at the High sUnion Springs , Saturdaof 7 to 4. Union Sprthe scoring by makingthe f i rs t inn ing, main lyThey secured one runon a s ingle past th irdwhich got lost in the went for a four-sackor. ed their usual fast gamhi l l v ictory, scoring third and tying the scoinning. Their one rufol lowed by Fessenden 'again making honors won the game in the sety s t i ck work and fastScore by inn ings:Au r o r a f l f l 1 1 M fni oi i Sp 'Ks 3 0 0 0. 0 1R a t t r r i e * A u r o r a . B . Hpr:m: t 'n i on Sprtn jf f . J. HB!*! on ba lls , of t Hy. ioAt r u r k ou t . b y H yd on u m p ir e . B u r k *t t .Ludlowvi l l e broke eterloo at Waterloo. Twere shut out in the to 0 , winn ing the seconFol lowing i s the s tl eague:ri ubs . WAu r or a t 'n io n S p r in g* L u d l o w v i l l e W at e r l oo Colorado and th

    Dai ly excurs ions by 'Central l ines . Enquire' Excurs ion fares .

    Vacation Necess i t i es .Tn the l ine of outing shoes andoxfords can eas i ly be taken care ofat Hadsel l e' s great ru tting sale. Al louting footwear at greatly reducedprices . C. A. Hadsel l e.Youthfu l Campers .The fo l lowing party of young'menand boys have been camping at Utt' sPoin t, Cayuga lake, under the supervi s ion of Rev. Arthur A. M cKay:Arthur D. Kel lar of New York ci ty ,Hugh R. Kimbal l . Les l i e Case. Edward Barnhart. Lawrence Doane.Frederick Maine, Howard Mapes . a l lof Auburn . They have had as guestsJ R . S t e r l i n g . M r s . A . A . M c K ay .Mrs. Maine. Mrs . Mapes , Miss HazelMassey and Elwin M apes . Theynamed their camp. Camp Wachl ta .

    EnU-rtained Chaoler.W. B . Murphy, private secretaryto Lieutenant Governor LewisChanler, en tertained h i s em ployerand friends at the O'Keefe summerhome on Cayuga lake yesterday. Heis occupying i t for the summe r. Intbe party were Lieutenant GovernorChanler. h i s brother. Robert Chan-len S tate Engineer Frederick Skene,Willia m J. Conner* of Buffalo andother pol i t i cal cel lbri t i es . Dr. M. P.Conway and party of friends went tothe p lace wi th an automobi le andwere among those en tertained .

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