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BOUND VOLUMES, February 6, 2014

200 YEARS AGO
The monies actually received into the Treasury during the year ending on the 30th of September 1813 amount to $37,544,954.93. Added to the balance in the Treasury on October 1, 1812 the aggregate amount is $39,907,607.62. A total of $18,484,750 of which has been expended for the Military Department, including militia and volunteers, and the Indian Department; for the Navy Department including the building of new ships and the Marine Corps, $6,420,707.20.
February 5, 1814

175 YEARS AGO
Small Pox – We notice by the inspector’s annual report of deaths that 91 persons died of this loathsome disease during the past year in the single city of New York. In regard to other diseases, this fact would have been unworthy of notice; since against their ravages there is no known specific. But, when vaccination furnishes a complete secure remedy against dying with the small pox, but not from having it, it argues either gross ignorance or gross negligence, somewhere, that such numbers should annually become victims to it. We are by no means in favor of laws to compel people to take care of themselves. But to compel them to take suitable care of those whom Providence and the laws have committed to their charge, is neither unreasonable nor improper. It strikes us, therefore, that a law compelling parents and masters to have their children and servants vaccinated would be unobjectionable upon principle, and might be productive of highly beneficial practical results.
February 11, 1839

150 YEARS AGO
Yankee Card Press –We have just added to our office equipment one of Gordon’s superior Card Presses, which turns off cards and other light work with great rapidity and in a superior style. Those who admire a handsome piece of machinery should call in and take a look at this Press. We can now furnish Cards at the same rates we were charging before the manufacturer doubled his price.
National Bank – We learn that the Second National Bank of Cooperstown has been organized, with a capital of $100,000, with right to increase it to $500,000; fifty percent of the capital has been paid in. This Bank has been appointed as a permanent depository of public moneys and a financial agent of the United States. The officers are J.P. Sill, President; G. Pomeroy Keese, Vice President; Dorr Russell, Cashier; F.G. Lee, Teller; D.A. Avery, Book Keeper.
February 5, 1864

100 YEARS AGO
Last week The Freeman’s Journal published an article which previously appeared in the Schenevus Monitor, stating that Billy Mills, a former well-known baseball player in this vicinity, was dying of consumption in the Alms House at Rome. Billy received a copy of the paper containing his death notice and he was very much pleased with the sympathy which was being wasted upon him. In a denial published in the Rome Sentinel he claims to be very much alive and is making plans to play ball during the coming summer. Mills is quartered at the Oneida County Hospital, not the County Home, and is receiving treatment for a mild form of tuberculosis. Mills’ health began to fail last September and gradually worsened until he began taking treatment in the hospital. Since then he has nearly regained his normal weight of 150 pounds.
February 4, 1914

75 YEARS AGO
President Roosevelt pays tribute to General Doubleday – Speaking as “one of the fans,” President Roosevelt sent a message to the New York Chapter Baseball Writers Dinner at the Commodore Hotel Sunday night and it was read from the dais: “We should be grateful,” he wrote, “to Abner Doubleday: Little did he, or the group that was with him at Cooperstown, N.Y., in 1839 realize the boon they were giving the nation in devising baseball. The rules of the game have changed since Doubleday and his associates formulated them a century ago, but baseball, through all changes and chances, has grown steadily in popular favor, and remains today the great American sport, with its fans counted by the millions. Gen. Doubleday was a distinguished soldier both in the Mexican and Civil Wars. But his part in giving us baseball – he was a youth of twenty at the time – shows again that peace has her victories no less renowned than war. Please extend to all the diners hearty greetings from one of the fans. Franklin D. Roosevelt.”
February 8, 1939

50 YEARS AGO
A $100,000 item appears in the state’s 1964 budget designated for use in getting work started on a new State Park along the shores of Hyde Bay on Otsego Lake. The Division of Parks will use it for “limited development of only such essential utilities as water supply, sanitary facilities, power, roads and parking that are absolutely necessary for day use (beach, swimming and picnicking). During the first year, the Division hopes to have erected a temporary bathhouse and comfort station, and some improvement to a proposed $5,000 bathing beach stretching northward along the bay above the mouth of Shadow Brook.
February 5, 1964

25 YEARS AGO
Members of the Schuyler Lake Fire Department
discovered the body of William Reynolds of Richfield Springs, who fell through the ice thinned by warm weather on Canadarago Lake last week. The search for Reynolds lasted almost three days with about 100 workers and special equipment brought in. Last Wednesday, Reynolds left his home on State Hwy. 28 to take a walk on the ice with his pet poodle Andy. When the dog returned a short time later soaking wet, neighbors went to look for Reynolds. Cries for help were heard by the initial searchers, but no one was able to spot him.
February 8, 1989

10 YEARS AGO
Violations of the Cooperstown Central School’s Athletic Code of Conduct have forced six of the school’s nine winter sports teams to play short-handed. CCS Superintendent Mary Jo McPhail refused to say how many students were involved in the infractions but the sanctions have affected both varsity and junior varsity squads. Unofficial sources say that affected students attended a party at which drugs, alcohol and tobacco were used.
February 6, 2004

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