Nov. 17, 1917 (No Nov. 18 edition)
Military euchre and knitting will be features at the Elks Lodge room next Thursday evening. Also a vaudeville act will be held throughout the evening during the intermission.
Nov. 18, 1937
William J. Dewitt, president of the Shoe Form Co., and president of the Auburn Chamber of Commerce, accompanied by Mrs. Dewitt, left Wednesday for Europe on the Queen Mary.
Nov. 18, 1997
STERLING - The absentee ballots for the Sterling town council race got a second look Monday. And this time the Cayuga County Board of Elections counted four voided ballots from last week. Even with the additional ballots, Democrat William Schoonmaker still trailed Republican Joseph Doherty by one vote, 486 to 485. The four ballots in question lacked Taddeo's name. The ballots were among the 30 plus ballots sent out on Oct. 14.
Nov. 18, 2002
SENECA FALLS - A tire fire Saturday in Seneca Falls caused a state of emergency in the village and remains under investigation today as the Department of Environmental Conservation awaits test results on possible ground-water contamination. DEC Environmental Conservation Officer Keith Levanway said investigators would examine runoff from water and foam used to douse the fire to see if it caused any chemical contamination.
- Compiled by Linda Simmons
Nov. 18, 1937
William J. Dewitt, president of the Shoe Form Co., and president of the Auburn Chamber of Commerce, accompanied by Mrs. Dewitt, left Wednesday for Europe on the Queen Mary.
Nov. 18, 1997
STERLING - The absentee ballots for the Sterling town council race got a second look Monday. And this time the Cayuga County Board of Elections counted four voided ballots from last week. Even with the additional ballots, Democrat William Schoonmaker still trailed Republican Joseph Doherty by one vote, 486 to 485. The four ballots in question lacked Taddeo's name. The ballots were among the 30 plus ballots sent out on Oct. 14.
Nov. 18, 2002
SENECA FALLS - A tire fire Saturday in Seneca Falls caused a state of emergency in the village and remains under investigation today as the Department of Environmental Conservation awaits test results on possible ground-water contamination. DEC Environmental Conservation Officer Keith Levanway said investigators would examine runoff from water and foam used to douse the fire to see if it caused any chemical contamination.
- Compiled by Linda Simmons