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Y ' U U^-Z^f-Ufa. «MMA h Pago Eight THE, mmX CBEEfcMWS r t II -s* Mir. rs f:K t^/ fi Mountain of Coal and a Sea of Oil Burned Up Yearly. THE USE OF OIL IS GROWING. It la Mpre Efficient Than Coal, Effects a Saving In Fire Room Complement ? and Is Cleaner to Handle-^CoaffhjT a Ship at Seals Mean Work. *- •'*— ••Figuratively.' speaking the United States navy consumes a mountain- of coal and a sea of oli ,eyery year, and (fie full question might Without levity be called a- burning one ivith the naval f ttcials at all times'^ '• ' ' -» No navy in the world has given the problem of coal supply, coal capacity aad speed in coaling ships more atten- . tion than has that of the United States. Coal Jised by the navy department for our fleets comes from the bitumin- ous regions of Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania. This coal Is shipped |rom the mines to the coast, the principal tidewater ports on tffe Atlantic coast being Philadelphia,- New Xork and Hampton Roads, Va. Gov- ernment colliers carry \the coal from _- these ports to the various coaling sta- tions of the navy, in Atlantic,. Pacific and Asiatic waters. •The chief coaling stations are at Bradford, in the state of Rhode Is- land; San Francisco; Honolulu, Cavite, P. I., and smaller stocks at Guantana- xno, Samoa and Guam. The 1 supply at these stations is kept up to the requir-. ed standard by frequent shipments - from the^Atlantie seaboard ports merV tipned In naval colliers or in chartered merchant vessels. The navy standard coal used by the American fleet meets the highest tests for'steaming purposes, for it gives the largest percentage of \steaming ra- dius\ per given quantity of coal. Th6 navy must have clean, dependable coal, for it means miles and, as far as pos- sible, preservation of machinery. { Coaling at sea igfcy well be called the nightmare of the navy. Every man on board, both, officers and-enlisted men, -dreads it. Laborious, tedious and nas- < ty, it ds an unwelcome duty, to be performed as quicKly as possible and,, then forgotten with fervent sighs of re- flet The coal is lifted from the collier's i.old in huge buckets raised by der- ricks, which carry ttfem to the war- ship's chutes, the coal feeing dumped fa great piles, on deck*, whence It is anoveled by the men into the chutes. Trimmers down in the bunkers do their part In properly distributing it. ' The work is heavy, dusty and dirty, and rolls', hot sausages and coffee are ART OF THE CAMERA. •The Firtt Chemical Step In the History \ \of Photography. The distinction of making the first chemical.step, in the history of photog- raphy belongs to Italy, owing to the discovery fry alch^elnists of the six- teebth century that nitrate chloride of silver is .blackened on exposure to light, ^vhile the foundation of photographic optics was laid by Sella Porta in his invention about 1569 of the camera,ob- seura—1. e., the darkening of nitrate of silver' by light |sd^i ? IjMAvii 22,191 <j A MERCANTILE CREDIT ^II 11 n 11 n 111111 ii r^i n i HIM r'f ''lii i TT^i ] uri 11 p 111 in i I i n 11 nrli i if n II n 1111 M i n n i r i n I^M mn m 11111 n 111111 n 111 n n j i n 111 pi I-I.I 11 I^JJ i i.f I-I-I t.fi'r j T1111 Ti i 11 •_, [ n-rnnmrr- Practical Way Telephone Solves Rial Difficulty. New ways are being discovered daily _ _ ;*<» harness—thfi_jtelepbone more -and Experiments in 1777 by Scheeje^ji m< ** e %i^J?.business,.And^checking -Swedish-chemist,aw bylffitter of Jena\ c* 631 *' by telephone is one of these. in 1803 in the action of rays of light ' Hie method, as practiced by\ the upon horn silver carried the science a C\^* Clearing House, in the heart of step further. But to Thomas Wedg- ^ wholesale cloaj^ and _suit sjectioniof jvood <xf jSnglandJbelongs the honor of New-^fqrk City,\ is^desoribed \in Tie Saving been the first to produce photo-' Telephone Review, N. Y., as an enii- graphs by the action of light 'on a Gently practical and effective way of sensitive surface, his Researches being making the telephone solve a real dif- much aided by the pbservations of Sir Humphry Davy,. These \photographs were made in 1802. Twelve years later Nicephore Niepce of Chalons-sur-Soane was the first to produce permanent pictures by the Acuity. Cutting down the big, risk of doing business is the object of much effort on the part of merchants in airlines of business. Wholesale merchants are constantly confronted with the prob- means of solar radiation, his process, blem of determining whether or not to described.as -beliograr-bj. consisting in extend credit to retailers and, if credit coating a piece of plated «0ver or glass *» extended, the amount. -How to de- with bitumen. | termine all this while the buyer is in The daguerrotype, which did justice the wholesale establishment is also a without mercy, was produced about vital problem, for the representative 1839 by Daguerre a\nd Niepce. For Qt toe house might endeavor to sell a more than twenty years the daguerro- large bill of goods, if the buyer's credit type, facetious descriptions of which were good, instead of merely taking a are found in the pages of SamuelLe- small order. Then, too, a retail mer- ver, Dickens, Thackeray and Reade, chant's credit may be good to-day and held tyrannous sway, W. H.- Fox Tal- bad a month from to-day. - - - hot in the, meantime vainly trying to ' .The problem of solving all these Ail-. Ljflgi,\ he, says,' \was an Italian eervx-d to tbej.men every=_two- houi^t-^ ble,Ban ^ <>f \t D eTniddle\ages. He had —\adornig\coaling. \To further stimulate them the ship's band often plays stir- ring airs. When a warship is in port she. is coaled from barges lying alongside, the wal beirig lifted by derricks In huge bags which hold 800 pounds of coal each. 'The battleship Arkansas can stow 2,754 tons of coal and the Texas S.CKKHons. __.:'- - - —• 5 The use of fuel oil in the navy is Increasing yearly and will continue to increase, as the new ships, especially the new dreadnaughts, * consume oil; and more oil burners are planned for the future, 1 According to the navy department, there is much to be said in favor of oil St effects a considerable reduction in fireroom complement, It-isanoreefBcient .ftjhan :coal in jthat!i2Q0 galops of -oil 1 '^c^iVds_qf_a. j ton)j;do the\work\ atameltoin'of good coal, and there is a great deal of refuse in coal (ashes, - etc), with much additional loss due to ' fine particles of coal going up the stacks unconsumed. The United States navy has two oil \supply ships, the Kanawha and the Maumee, each of them capable of mak- ing, fourteen knots an hour and carry- ing 7#>4 -tons of fuel oil. Oiling a ship does away with much, of the labor'and all of the dirt so trying in coaling. ' In port\ the problem of pumping the oil from the huge tank on <idoek into tie pipes on the side of the vessel is com- paratively a simple one, .. r Supplying oil to a ship at sea, how- ever, is hot- yet satisfactorily settled. fiXpefiments in fueling ships at sea With oil form an important item in naval strategy at this time. Just what has been accomplished in this matter of experimentation may not yet be di- ( vulged.—Providence Journal, I [ • . Plants Without Roots. ' The \flower of the air\ is aTiurious plant found in. China and Japan. It is eb emailed because it appears to have no root and is never fixed to the earth. It twines around a dry . tree or sterile rock. Each shoot produces two- or three flowers like a lily-white, tranie- parent and odoriferous. It is capable of being transported,..60p_or_700 mile's, and\ it grows as it travels, suspended on a twig. An\ Eye to Busirrewi. 'll'vo-noticed onc^-thag-a-btrnt-tBCBT secure recognition for his calotype process, which, by the aid of paper steeped in nitrate of silver, produced the negative or invisible-picture now used in all, photographs. * To Howe is credited' the invention of the changing box, containing:^ dozen Or more plates with a special form of Acuities for wholesalers in women's wear lines has been largely m.et by the \telephone service\ rendered by the -Credit Clearing House. The method followed by members of this house in securing \up-to-the-minute\ Informa- tion about the credit of buyers and their ability to pay for goods they de- dark bath, which can be changed with aire\ to purchase is most interesting, one plate at a time from the box and . For example, John Jones from Blank- then inserted in the camera for ex- posure. • Changes in \the photographic appara- tus with the introduction of sensitive films supported not on glass but on a flexible material led many leading pho- tographers of the late sixties and early ^seventies to seek a material which, al- though possessing the transparency of glass, would Be less brittle.-^Boston Herald. EATING FOR HIS LIFE. Story of One Man Who Did Not Dig His Grave With Hia Teeth. In the American Magazine a writer cites the case of Lulgi Cornaro, to whom he acknowledged his debt of health^ money enough and leisure enough so that Satan found plenty of work for hi« idle hands during bis first forty years. About his fortieth birthday he fell sick, and- the doctors told him to make his will,'as he could not possibly live another year._ \Luigi died a t 104 painlessly,\'as one who pasjiejLlnto„.afcSweefr-sleepj' in tKe- 1 words of his granddaughter. \What gave him those extra sixty- four years ; of life? Not doctors—he had nothing to do with tbeni; not ihed- icine; not exercise. Lulgi simply stop- ped eating! He made a careful study of himself to discover Just how little food he could eat and still feel well Out of this study he soon learned the valuable truth that 'most men dig their graves with theirteeth.' ^ s \Most me£~dte because they have so loaded their bodies with excess food that their organs of elimination have broken under the strain. Most men are tired because they are\ self poison- ed with too much food'. All this Luigi\ discovered and wrote in a book called the 'Temperate Life.' \Aside from the fact that I- belong to a family that grows stronger as it grows older, I owe to Luigi more than to any''-one else tie good health and happiness which I- enjoy today at thir- ty.\ ' Perfect Poetry. Who wrote the most perfect lines of English poetry? Personally, writes a correspondent, I find it hard to choose between Shelley's His head was bound with pansies over- blown And faded violets, white and pied and blue; Tennyson's Music, that gentiler on the spirit lies Than tired eyelids upon-tired eyes, tod .Swinburne's - i found in dreams a place of wind_attd ~ flowers, T Full of sweet trees and colofr of glad grass. —London Chronicle. ville, who is in New 'York for the pur- pose of purchasing some waists, drops in to see the stock that Smith & Com- pany is handling. While the sales- man is showing him their stock a clerk, in the office telephones to the Credit Clearing House obtains the rating of John Jones and gives- this information to the salesman, who then knows to what'extent credit should be allowed. i Thus the wholesale merchant is en- abled to sell only to those retail mer- chants whose c/edit is good; largely eliminating the chance of financial loss from the -sale of goods to merchants whose \credit is poor, or dishonest buy- ers who habitually overstock and re- turn goods that they cannot sell. .' : It'may readily be seen, therefore, that,the benefits of conducting a cen- tralized credit conlroljirejmany. Jguch- arTarrangemeri^ delivers to one center- the buying \activities and the-pa'yment methods of the buyer, and establishes a central point at which the current transactions of the buyer are viewed and Impartially judged. That this service by telephone is held to be Important by manufacturer^ of women's «• wear is shown by the fact that more, tfian iO^OO-eSedit-^quiries^ are received by telephone each month, and as the average account approxi- mates $300 the credit inquiries thus passed on monthly amount to $3,000,- 000 and annually $36,000,000. \I Have Rarely Seen Fashions With Such ^y>^rtI^^taUles^ , , It is only natural that a woman *§hould want to look as'yputhful dnd charming as possjblev To attain a youthful^ appearaneg mJtnade very-easy^this r sqason since - ;Spring\StylesraWVery'youtHFuI in design. Even were the- styles not so pretty, the colors would appeal because of the bright shades and daring ideas. Together they form an appeal not easily overcome. A scroll through ariyfsection of the store will ^ prove to you that the pustomer we have quoted summed up the \style situation for spring in a single sentence. • __ y Great Good News for the Stout Women—Suits and Coats in Sizes 44 and Larger—The Season's Best Styles The day of the stout woman, worrying over her clothes not being as stylish as her slender sister's is rapidly passing. Manufacturers are specializing, on clothes for stout women and these new Spring suits and coats are an excellent example. So please remember that if you wear a size 44 or-larger,\ it will be your duty to visit our suit and coat section, try on the garments and learn to your own satis- faction how cleverly the new styles have been arranged to meet the demands of your figure. •. Prices $14.00 to $25.00. » , GIVE US MENI Give us Men! '.'£5' Men—from every rank, Fresh and free arid frank; iMenof.thougbt^and reading, \ • Men of light and leading, JSJenot loyal breeding, \N. \ ' • The Nation's -welfare speeding: ' Men_o£falth-and not of fiction, Men of lofty aim in action: - Give us Men—I say again, Give us Men! Give us Men I ° Strong and stalwart ones: Men wliom highest hope inspires, Men whom purest honor fires, Men who trample Self beneath them, I Men who make their country wreath thenj As her no'ble sons, - WQrthy of their aires, Men who never shame their mothers. Men who never fail their brothers,\ True, however false are others: ' <-' Give us Men—I say again, Give us Men! '. ,' Give us Men! Men who, when the tempest gather* ..Grasp the Standard of their'fathers ' In the thickest fight; Men who strike for. home and altar, ^Let the coward cringe .and falter) • • God defend the right! True as truth though lorn and lonely, Tender, as the brave: are only; Men who tread where saints have trod, Men for Country—Home—and GOd: . Give us Men!. I say again—again— Give us such Men! BISHOP OF EXETER. _ (fteprlritedJn JQj.e_ Telephone Review.) oriental mystics who tour the country from time to time.\ \Well?\. ,\ \They can always emerge from their oriental mysticism long enough to count up the box office receipts.\—Bir- mingham Age-Herald. Easier Still, \4 scientist can take one bone and reconstruct a dynosaur.\ \Thafs nothing. Our landlady can take one bone gnd reconstruct a din- ner.\-;Kansas'City Journal. Logical Golncluaipn. \I feel all gone to pieces this morn- ing,\ \What do you think is the matter?\ \I suppose it is because I am broke.\ —Baltimore American. No man can avoid his own company, so he had better toake it as good eo \possible. * \ Deacon Blimber Says: \A fefter^ kin forgive his enemies easy enough.' but consarned ef it donH come pooty -ding hard sometimes' for him tp forgive bis friends.\—Brown- ing's Magazine. Considerate. • Watyon—Alfle says lie married a rich Womau in-,<,n-(1ei- Unit hi* wife-might hat«eeterytlTiit«\ijihe'rt'aintdd.--Llfe. , , „ 11,1.1. Ill !••!• IN I Poor Spelling of Public Make* Work For \Information.\ The difficulty of the man to whom the dictionary was recolnmenfled as a cure for bad spelling and who com- plained that he couldn't find a word Unless he knew how. to spell it, is encountered every day~-by-frtelephone- users. The Telephone Review, N. X.. calls attention to the fact that many •'information\- calls-are received for How th« Ancients Regarded Iron. ', The nncfent Egyptians believed that iron was the bone o.f Typhon, the ene- my of Osiris, And for this reason it ,was considered impure. No \one cohld make flse of it, even for the most ordinary requirements' of life without polluting his soul in a way tp cause him harm „__„_—- - both on earthjanflJiU&&j>theE r ggej^ printeo-m the, diroetoryr sfmply because people do not know the correct spelling of \the 'name and con- sequently are unable to flnd-'it tn the directory One subscriber confessed to having searched the entire list of \A's\ for \Eyres.\ Another failed to find his friend \Dioei'kin\ (pronounced Durkin). Difficulty was encountered with such n»mes as the' following: Women's Spring Coats—Much Favored Models- , This is a model that falls below the knees and because of 'this length it U=„.-mych favored by most, women, aside from'the fact that it is smart and fashionable. The garments fit loose, have a very attractive tollar with new idea in pockets that seem to give an added touch of smartness and- makp. file ^tsle-'un«sual^ V^ry^arefully^-taaored-showmg-sTIp^rtdr workmanship throughout. Colors are Black iSlue, Gold, Mustard Green. ._ Priced, $5,00, $6.00, $7.00, $8.00, $9.00, $10.00, $14.00, $15.00, $16.00, '$18.00, $20.00. ... ii The Parrot Is Merely Repeating What Everybody Knows- \Thafs a Very Pretty Waist You Have On.t\ (And Quite Naturally It Came from VfcALTONS), It doesn't take a parrot long to learn anything when it's repeated very, very often. So it's very natural that a parrot should repeat what she hears continuously. Women who buy their waists -at this store always have their friends remark, and on practically every occasioik-\My what a pretty waist you have on\—and then the question naturally arises, \Where did you get it?\ The,answer is always \At- Walton's.\ Tf perchance the price is asked—there's another very pleasant surprise. For this season „We have a collection of the most wonderfully designed waists We have had in years. They are almost beyond the description. - r . Prices 69c to $4.98. , S r« • ••#• Co. PULASKI NEW YORK -iiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiniiiinii n 11 n • 1 ^JJ^'^ •iittiinm*ini-<iiiiitiiiiifiiiimtitn*iiiit-iiitiiiniiinininniiiiiniiiiiimi ll inuij l<tlli | tl | tlIll , ltt , i rrT-ryTrT^-rr,-,-,^,- MAKE TOURISTS MARVEL 1,250,000 TONS OF COAL \Th* Sharp Gontr»»t» Between Au«tr»- r lia and. New Zealand. One of the first surprises awaiting the tourist from the northern hemi- sphere ' is to find that Australia and New Zealand may not be grouped as two islands of like appearance, differ- ing mainly in size, near ' neighbors which may be treated as a unit New Zealand is nearly twice as far from Australia as Bermuda Is from New Jfork. and is not only east, but also south? S?our days' travel aeross*a«hllly Is ^required for the traverse from \ •lingtou to Sydney, and after-excl lng the chill midsummer cllma' the New Zealand lake region for th heat of Adelaide one readily .accepts' the evidence of the map tb,at the south-, ern coast of the Australian mainland', has the latitude of central New Jersey, while.the southernmost of the three'> island's which compose the Dominion ~bi New Zealand occupies the position of southern Newfoundland. In climate- and vegetation the* two dominions are as unlike as Norway and South Carolina. NewZealahd is a land . of mountains,,gorges, rivers and fiords. The higher peaks of the South Island are eternally snow capped, and the glaciers of * Its southern Alps rival those of Switzerland. Tie surrounding seas are too cold for corals. > Among the mountains of the North Island vol-', canic fires are still active, and the That -Amount\ Will Pass Over St. Lawrence Division for Canadian Railroad. A. million and a quarter tons of coal are,to pass o\ver the St. Lawrence' di- vision of the New York Central be* tween April 1, 1917 and April 1, 1918, consigned to the Canadian Pacific 'railroad. In the winter month's this will be shipped via Norwood to Ma\ lone, thence to Valieyfield where.it ; tn & Board of Supervisors at the spec wiJl'be'taken'by4he>Canadiatt Bacifiij-i-ial session Jiext.manUi—iter the pres^ railroad. ( ent there will 'fee n o changes. In the summer months the coal w'iir \*^h^&nevr--superintsHdent aas ium. He was present, at the meeting of th^e-Board of-ManageTs and assum- ed his duties immediately'after bein? appointed. ' Dr. Deuel will, make daily visits' to the institution 1 , though he is not compelled to give his entire time to its direction. .»Whether this policy will be chang- ed and\ Doctor Deuel made resident superintendent is a matter that the Board of Managers are considering, arid one which may be taken up wUh Ogdensburg and there put on and-brought to Canadian ports, erto the coal used by this gr,eat oad, which is now operated by anadian government, has-been hased in the western part of Can- ada'and in Nova Scotia, but on ac count of the number of -\men taken in \Been a resident of Adams for several years, is'a-well known physician in the northern part of the state.. He is a health officer of the Village and was formerly one of the coroners Jn-Jef- ferson county. \ . He is particularly qualified for the sanatorium work, having made to- 1 the armies it has been impossible special study, of tuoWculosis at the to mine sufficient quantities. Even' at Metropolitan _ Hospital, New York the present' tipe there h ar'e immense ' City, shipments of coal 'passing through 1 FREE SEED SUPPLY EXHAUSTED Since the home gardening move- ment began .throughout\ the country as a means to meet the increased cost of food the Department of Agri- culture has been, swamped with hun- dreds of thousands of requests for free seeds. Officials of the Department say that unfortunately they have nb o seeds to distribute. The seeds' proVided by Congress are distributed by members geysers andI hot springs are little h« ™ £?$£££F2^&%?£ ^^.S&^&T&'g- stone parK. ±ne aoongmai innaDuants 1 an attack when shot by a sniper. As a ^„uAhu, .,«m into in tvio summer . of-New Zealandrairthe-time-of-theU' ; -mrwasTSSl^<fflffljrcztemdtar tte i fcl ^^>L^5^tejn_^summer. discovery by Captain „ Cook were the; he was gased and even-at the present' most advanced of all the. south Pacific time is suffering from the effects of races, while the aborigines of Aus- J the poison. . ; tralia are. the lowest In Intelligence of. Although he |annot speak of condi- \ali human beings, tions across the seas, he did not re- Australia is 'fn no sense Inferior to, frain from expressing the apprecia- ' tion of the British and the Canadians Watertowru There are 28 carloads of, coal t0 be sent this afternoon into. Canada by a special train. . • ' I In the vicinity of Montreal there' are 20 inunition factories and in other parts of Canada there are many other plants but this coal is not to be used for them, it is solely for the use of the railroad- t • Lieutenant Alfred C. Stewart of Montreal -recently returned from the front, is here as a representative of the Canadian railroad and arranging BORN ANETTE—In Lorraine, N. T., March 10, 1917, to Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Anette a-son. New Zealand In geographic interest, but lofty peaks, profound canyons and- active volcanoes -are lackiag. Its'rivers We-'-wimpresstve—and—its—permanent lakes small and few in number. It 5s a continent ppmposed of plains iilter- rupted by ridge-* flild.mountqj.n l;no)is y»ft— Burns Byrnes ' White Whyte Spear • Spier Kiley , Reilly SteVeUson Stephenson , Meyer Myer Meier Cramer Kramer Krenmer Kaiser Reiser Keyser Considerable difficulty was also met alijDtcatlng: \Sceery'/' arid \VeseeiUus.\ Start -Sa-viriQ : N'a<ff. ' -'You have to lourn the 'v-lrtile 'df thrift mid saving before 'the age of twenty-five. - ' says a banker. \Iri\ or- der to become thrifty'and saving a young ur,w iiiusl begin just as soon as he-Ktartn to'cai'n money. There is only, one way to. save, and that is continu- ously 11 lid regularly. -And when a man's salary is rffiised his savings should in- crease: It is remarkable how savings Will accumulated I claim that unless 1 sickness prevents, and sickness, is only too often the result of the lack of $av-- ing,-,that the average man who ^s 'will- ing to work and save can become rea- sonably 'independent at sixty. If you are. wise, young mai}, \you will start - £6 save now.\ *-' - - , . . . — jjiiiiinm.il 1 ii'n fbr the work of Ambassador Gerard in Berlin in behalf of the British sol- diers. He is at the \Woodruff. DR. VWC> DEUEL\ NEW HEAD, ^EASW.Ffip SANAXORHJW-^^y^^ Adams Physician Accepts Temporary Appointment, Which Board of Man- atfers, Wi'l'Make Permanent After Investigation Dr. \W. E. Deuel of. Adams was ap- pointed superintendeiit of the Oswego County Tuberculosis Sanatorium in the town of Orwell by the Board of Managers, .which met at the institu- tion last Thursday afternoon. He suc- ceeds Dr. A. Garfield Dunbar,' whose resignation was accepted on Monday. The appointment of Dr. Deuel is temporary,\ but it will probably be made permanent after the affairs of the hospital are again gotten in pro- per shape. , i Dr. Deuel will receive • 'compensa- tion of $150 per mon;.h. and expanses and will-devote practically all of his ! „.attention to fhe ! affair MARRIED •' KENT—WAGGONER— Tn Lacona, - N. Y., March\ 21, 1917, by, Eev. S. B. CWens, Ernest Floyd Kent of Sandy • Creek and Miss Unah Pauling Wag- goner of Lacona. ENTERED INTO RE§T -In Mexico, N. Y., March IS. 1917, -«airore-en--Drmw,^rd~ttrTe9.rs. Funeral services were-held at his Jate home Wednesday at two p. m. Inter- ment at Mexico, N. Y. GREY—At Mannsvllle, N. Y., March H. 1917, Iola, infant daughter of Mr. ana Mrs. Harry Grey. Remains placed, in vault. BAHI3ER—In Ellisbtirg, N. Y. March 1?. 1917,-Mrs. Emma Barber, aged 59 >i.- Funeral from the home of her son, Floyd Ba#berf in Adams, Wednesday. DEMPSTER—In Belleville, N\. Y., March 18, 1917, Adelbert B. Dempster, aged 0' - years. BAILfeY-In I^orralne, N. Y., .March .1, 1917, Frank Bailey aged 60 yeais. MAINE—In-Preble, N. Y., March 1, 3- '• Mi's. Addle Carlyle Maine, wife? of ™e late Rev. .E.; F. Maine, aged 83 jears. Sometimes the majority make jus : tree weak-kneed. . •„„ Don't get too ambitious m paying \off .fancied insults.. • . The man Who lives for self alone, is •'- •':Vjay^te--n:a|feJJy-tefe.,H:,;'\ •••-•• ;oi^6.Wn>tbfe^^i^fe-M%4^fe^ t *J ^..'j