Misc. News from New York Newspapers
Syracuse NY Daily Standard, Mar. 05, 1877
Coal Dealers Visit.
On Saturday last a number of coal dealers from the western States,
visited Syracuse, and dined at the Vanderbilt House as the guests of
Mr. E. F. Holden. These gentlemen deal in the coal of the Delaware
and Lackawana and Delaware and Hudson and Morris Run Coal Companies
and have been looking at the mines and visiting the works of the
companies mentioned above. Their names are R. M. Law, O. S.
Richardson, A. H. West, and D. H. Neil of Chicago; A. H. Williams,
Canton, Ill.; J. S. Reynolds, Sycamore, Ill; W. J. Hunter, Elgin,
Ill; S. G. Magill, Clinton, Iowa; H. C. Sherman, Belvidere, Ill; J.
M. Borden, Dundas, Ill; S. M. Starkey, Rockford, Ill; H. S.
Hogeboom, Janesville, Wis; L. Wood, Batavia, Ill; and M. V. Brown,
Frankfort, Ill.
Same paper:
Mr. S. C. Magill, of Clinton, Iowa, where he is extensively engaged
in the coal business, was in town yesterday, on his way home, having
made extensive exploration of the coal regions of Pennsylvania in
company with some Syracuse coal dealers.
The Roman Citizen, Rome, NY, Oct 14, 1887
Several Fashionable Weddings
Wednesday Evening.
The very fashionable wedding of Claude C. Coan, of Clinton, Iowa,
and Miss Ernestine E. Nock, occurred at 7 o'clock at the residence
of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Nock, parents of the bride, on Embargo
street. The house was beautifully draped and festooned, many of the
ornatments being of a pink tint, thus making it a "pink wedding."
The wedding march was beautifully rendered by Koehl's full
orchestra. The groom was attended by John W. Dwight, of Dryden, N.
Y., and the bride by Miss Lydia Robie, of Bath, N. Y., Anne
Huntington, Irene Searles, and Emma Olney, of Rome. Rev. Joseph A.
Nock, of Trinity church, Alpena, Mich., brother of the bride's
father, performed the ceremony, at the conclusion of which a
magnificent wedding supper was served by Caterer Hackett, of Utica,
in a temporary dining room that had previously been erected on the
grounds. After partaking of the sumptuous repast, the dining hall
was cleared, and dancing occupied the attention of the guests during
the remainder of the evening. The wedding gifts were a magnificent
collection, and fully attested the popularity of the bride. The
attendance was very large, the following States being represented:
Minnesota, Texas, Iowa, Michigan and New York. Mr. Coan is engaged
in the banking business in Clinton, Iowa, whither he and his
estimable wife will go after an extended trip east.
Same paper:
W. F. Coan and wife and W. J. Young, of Clinton, Iowa, E. L.
Carpenter, of Minneapolis, Minn., and J. W. Dwight, of Dryden, were
in town this week.
The Evening Telegram - New York, Jan. 03, 1922
Society to Attend Her Wedding
(Photo of Alice Troubee Davison, daughter of Henry P. Davison,
famous banker, who today became the bride of A. L. Gates, of Iowa)
H. P. Davison's Daughter Bride of Yale Man Today
Miss Alice is Wed to Artemus L. Gates, of Clinton, Iowa, a Classmate
of Her Brother, in Picturesque Chapel at Locust Valley, L. I.
Locust Valley, L. I., Tuesday. In St. John's Chapel, the picturesque
little edifice at Lattiston, near here, this afternoon Miss Alice
Trubee Davison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry P. Davison, of New
York, was married to Mr. Artemus L. Gates, son of Mrs. E. L. Gates
of Clinton, Iowa.
The Rev. Dr. John H. Hinton performed the ceremony in the presence
of a brilliant gathering of relatives and friends who arrived from
New York by special train.
Mrs. Frances Davison was her sister's maid of honor, and the other
attendants were Mrs. Seth Low, Jr., Mrs. Robert A Lovett, Miss
Eleanor Parrish, of Richmond, Va.; Misses Louise Durant, Priscilla
Murdock, Mary K. Lincoln, Jean Fletcher and Henrietta Gates, Sister
of the bridesgroom. Florence and Edith Baker, the two little
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Baker, pr., served as flower
girls, and their brother, George F. Baker 3d, as page.
Mr. F. Trubes Davison, brother of the bride, who was a classmate of
Mr. Gates at Yale, acted as best man, and the ushers were Messrs.
Henry P. Davison, Jr., Charles P. Taft 2d, James Gould, J. V.
Forestal, John O. Farrar, Robert A Lovett, Davis S. Ingalls, J.
Ellot Woolley, John M. Vorys, Kenneth R. Smith, Edward B.
Leisenring, Charles Hathaway, Jr., Robert B. Deans, Folwell Coan,
Allan W. Ames, Henry M. Balbridge, Reginald G. Combe, Cassius M.
Clay and Archibald C. Mellwaine, Jr.
The Syracuse, NY, Journal, Jan. 12, 1905
The People of the state of New York To....(there are many, many
names listed here) ... Minnie Olds Fay (Mrs.), Clinton, Iowa; ....
Enok Bradford Chandler, Clinton, Iowa.... heirs at law and next of
kin of George C. Anderson, deceased, late of the Village of
Borodino, in the County of Onondago, New York, deceased, greeting:
Whereas, Frank Cotton of Borodino, N. Y., one of the executors and
Delphine Anderson of Grand Rapids, Michigan, the executrix named in
a certain instrument in writing, purporting to be the last will and
testament of said George C. Anderson, late of the Village of
Borodino, in the County of Onondaga, and State of New York,
deceased, and relating to both real and personal estate, have lately
made application to the Surrogate's Court of our County of Onondaga
to have said instrument in writing proved and recorded as a will of
real and personal estate: You and each of you are, therefore, hereby
cited to appear before our Surrogate of the County of Onondaga, at
the Surregate's Court of said County held at the Surrogate's office
in the City of Syracuse, in the County of Onondaga, New York, on the
27th day of February, 1905, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of that
day, then and there to attend the probate of said last will and
testament, and such of you as are under the age of twenty-one years
are required to appear by your general guardian, if you have one, or
if you have none, to appear and apply for one to be appointed; or in
the event of your neglect or failure to do so, a special guardian
will be appoint by the Surrogate to represent and act for you in the
proceeding.
Poughkeepsie, NY, Eagle News, Apr. 19, 1920
CLINTON, IOWA, BOY WINS ARMY CONTEST
Washington, April 16-- Donald L. Campbell, a 15 year old high school
student at Clinton, Iowa, was announced today as first prize winner
in the army national school contest for the best essay on the
benefits of enlistment in the army. Second prize went to Marjorie
Shoets, Chillicothe, Missouri, and third to Sallie Bowen Esson,
Olive Branch, Miss. Medals will be award the winners, who will get a
free trip to Washington by Secretary Baker.
Among those to whom honorable mention was given was Mildred Ruth
Bock, Buffalo, N. Y.