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PAGE TWO THE OGDENSBURG REPUBLICAN-JOURNAL I \on Debt Cut Plea Tv Aid British Derided Paris Puzzled By Two Lapses—English Pay Domestic , Bill in Depreciated Pounds—Pass On To U. S. Money Allies Remit , Hy, greeted \fWfl .astonishing lapses, of memory in' Andrew : Mellon's plea-tor-the reduction-of the'Bflt- ish^debt. to-.compensate the depre; ciatlon of \sterling. • • . In • Ms-'. solicitude for the Brit- ish taxpayers'.,burdens are -heavy the de;bt to America does not in- crease';themjby/a-farthing, . . Ih.;de\ciajing.that'\it Is the duty : of.thoSe in authority to deal with realities,\ he o'mltteft a'mostimpojr- iant onje,, which \is not. British^ but other taxpayers' pay 'Britain's debt to .the Baited* States, and-thafc the fact'that it .will, regnire j$0 < -.pejr i ceit m^re- pounds t<? \pay /?rataiirs; ammatf 'contingept 'of \dollars* ••. to- Washihgton does \not >alter;vthat ifajfit in; t^e, leasts •, .\ t j - . . • .Merely^ Pjkss, -JVlongy, .On«.,, • 5 ' • Engflshmen-aE&itax^d.-heavily; to pay, tftfe 'dom^s'tite jdeb;^, wmph, \iuay\ be • paid, '. in.- 'depreciated, -paper Bounds^f mo're:;\€ c than*;'in*. gold; pb.und/s) -Bjitihe .pftymehtg:'. Clu>;t° America, by'-Britain ar.e,. ^nd 'will c'offtiHfre tb'be,' merely .tHe^passing • 09. qtiwhat- Britain's', debtors, £&•- .mittSjier,. ,.'.'\.. ,•->•\ ^* 'A whole, 'sentence of the Baltoufr declaration of August, 1922, which is the \basis' of Brit&irfs 'settlements •with her creditors; slipped\ Mr. Mel- Ion's mind. It is a 'sentence ' that safeguard's.England;against any in- creage^in hel\ obligations, to 1 \Wasa- ing'to% - - ' . . • ', ' To gp'Tmck-a'litfte, 'Great Brit- ain,!-wfe' owe'd'-3,'4Qu,000,000 pounds, . - r i;45Q'j60u,0fl0 ^pounds' by.G'erfnariy, 6^0,uQpOO poinds by' Russia, and\ 1,300^000,000 pounds by ner allies. '•She- o-wed in turn 350,000,000 pounds to the United States. If all debts had been paid in full Great •Britain would' have finished far ahead of the game. But some re- ductions were necessary and Bal- four,, with what now proves to have been prophetic foresight, made the famoue declaration: * \In no circumstances will we de- mand more from our debtors than is, necessary to pay our own credi- -tors.' 1 And h e added what Mr. Mel- lon forgot: \Everybody will find it natural that we cannot demand less!\ ' $160,000,000 Due Yearly The normal annuity from Eng- land to America is ?160,000,000, •#tiico r - with the pound at par, was about 32,000,000 pounds. At pres- ; erit :ex6bange it would be, if Brit- ain .were paying, this year, a-' little more than* 43,00,000. pounds. \What the difference will be when, and if, payments are resumed, nobody \known. But, in any case, it is not the'British taxpayer'\who Will suf- fer- -. t Balfour foresaw, everything and -prpvided for all emergencies'. If Britain's; debt in pounds increases because of the fall of the pound, Balfour has provided a perfect .judicial basis for passing the in- crease along to the same debtors who have until the moratorium paid all that Britain owed. 1 Who' will stand the increase? Evidently not Russian taxpayers, for Soviet Russia holds obstinate- ly .to Paragraph 3 of the decree of '•February, 1918, which reads: \All foreign loans, without ex- ception, are absolutely repudiated.\ And it Is apparent that it will not be ' German taxpayers, who from all indications, will pay less, not more, when the moratorium is over. Seven colonies and dominions and 16 other countries owe war* time debts to Great Britain. Few of these will be able to accept an npward revision of the settlements now in force. France and, Italy alone owe well more than -half of the' total (sup- posedly) collectable debt. But Italy is not in condition to accept a revision- upward. Only remains Prance, and as all the world is be- ing told, the French have, no busi- ness being so rich when al} the rest are poor. . But in the. event that the closing .words; of the Balfour' declaration are not enough to-save the British taxpayer from the terrible -plight foreseen by Mr.-Mellon .that tax- payer is sheltered by a second and surer protection. Not the foreign debt, but the domestic debt, is what, loads the British -taxpayer down. Britain owes her own internal bondholders By HARRY MASON KNOX Laigh Tarbeg Vanda, a purebred Ayrshire, four year old, at the Maple Vista farm of L. L. Grow and Sons, Fort Jackson, \N. Y., made the record of 16,722 lbs. of milk yielding 602.32 lbs. of butter- fat, average test 4.14 percent in an appaling sum, and this is at present being paid off in pounds worth f3.30 instead of ?4.83, a sav- ing of $1.56 on every pound. It depreciation continues^ the dom- estic debt will be still easier to pay and may be virtually wiped out. The economy effected will much more than compensate add-* ed burden to the taxpayers in any possibe augmentation of their pay- ments to the United States. And this is the greatest Finance Minister since Alexander Hamilton'. 305\ days,* This is a great record and we of Paradise Dalryland should herald it to the dairy world. Yanda is an intensified dairy-typed matron descended from produc- ing and show ancestry, Mr. Grow purchased her with another matron from the Scotland importation of Ness and Son In her two-year old form. She was one of hiB foundation matrons of his Ayr- shire herd. In 1930 the Grows placed their herd on the Herd Test plan and as one of the herd in three year old form, Vanda un- der ordinary care completed a Meritorious Herd Test record of 10,621 lbs, of milk 423 lbs, of fat ThiB year Roll of Honor work has been the activity at Maple Vista and Vanda did herself proud as \well as bringing fame to the Grows, the Ayrshire world and our • praised Paradise Dairyland. She got so hot in July and the flies be' freshened, Nov. 11, 1930 dropping a fine heifer calt«\b3r Hobgland Syn- dicate and 373 flays afterward dropped another 1 mice heifer calf by Cavalier's Monogram, qualifying her tor the Holl -oil Honor. She has another daughter by Hobsland Syndicate. The first daughter she was car- rying when Mr. Grow purchased her, is by the famed imported Ness show bulli, Howie's Top Grade. It will interest the dairymen to know how she was handled and what she ate during this world's producing fete. • At 5 a. m., she had beet pulpit, molasses and grain; after this eat- ing whatever ensilage she wanted. At 9 a. m., alfallfa or mixed hay was fed and at 112 noon beet pulp and grain; at 4 p. m. ensilage, mol- asses and grain, and at 8 p. m,, beet pulp sweetened and grain. After she was given this, she was allowed all the falfalfa she would eat. She was fed this until she went to pasture on May 20th when the ensilage was left off. She was in pasture day and night until it came so bad. She was then kept 1n days, and turned out at Might, until the middle of August when she was let out in the morning for two hours, brought back to the barn and kept in until evening when she was taken out at night for one hour and 15 minutes. She was then brought in and fed sweetened beet pulp and grain, and then given green alfalfa. Thtfs she was handled as a great producing matron should be. No doubt she will be continued in her produc- tive work right along as these roy- ally bred four daughters develop and come into milk lustre will be added to this world's record ma- tron. My vision is a remarkable family for the Maple Vista herd if they are retained and developed. We may look back a decade from now to this illustrious matron and at that time view the achieve; ments of her. daughters, grand- daughters and great-granddaugh- ters. May they be mated With achievement sires that this world's Tecord made in Paradise Dairyland in 1931 may be carried on and on to the benefit of the Jtigbly quali- fied stock of this land of ours. O, Guthrie Dunn, G. Penman and M. Shackelton - 'have.-' arrived in. Brisbane, Australia^ from Scotland, * 'in their voyage around the world in a fifty-foot ketch. OUND Schedule effective September 8tb, 1931 Eastern Standard Time Leave Ogdehsburg $:00 A M., 1t45 P. M.' Direct connections for all point* south. Low fare everywhere. New York—One way T 140.85 Special Excursion .. •. , -r-Return Trip; $ 16.30 New 0g(3ensburg Hotel State Street Phone 604 . R, S. MOORE, Agent ' Accidental Criminals Are Model Prisoners i ..... \ '-' Several-years^ago this writer was one of-a small company of men and women which was being shown through the State's Prison for men at Auburn. We visited one cell block, several workshops and the - infirmary. On our way out our guide led us into the dentist's office. The dentist had just finished with a patient and was sterilizing his instruments. He was a tall, fine looking young man who wore a flower in the lapei of his white surgeon's Jacket. He greeted us with the utmost courtesy and manifested no little pride in displaying before our unprofessional efes the modern devices for dental surgery with which nis office was equipped. Before we left he had thoroughly insinuated himself into the good graces of the woman members of our party. As we were proceeding through the front corri- dor, on our way to the main gate, one of the women said to me': \What a perfectly stunning man that dentist was. I imagine he would be the most gentle sort of a practitioner, he seems so kind and considerate/'' - A moment later I spoke to the guard who was acting as our guide about the dentist. \Does that dentist have a private practice, or is his work all confined to the.prison?\ I asked. T,he.guard looked at,me with a wry smile. \He has a private (Practice, but\ it.is all confined to 1 the prison. That man's going to be jour dentist'Ifor a long time. You see', he's serving a life sentence for toe murder of ,his wife.\ i * * * On subsequent visits.to Auburn I came to learn that the mo3t iterrible persons in ,the prison are not the perpetrators of the most [heinous offenses; On the • contrary, the men and women who have ibeen committed 'on murder charges are often the most intelligent, 'humane and< best behaved of aU the inmates of the institution. Inquiry 'brought an explanation of this. \The average murderer or murderess,\ said my informant, \is generally what we in the prison call an accidental criminal. His in- stincts are rarely criminal at all. The man serving a sentence for imurder is usuaUy guilty of just one terrible gesture. He kills in the (heat of an uncontroUable passion, and lives out the rest of his days In Iregret. I venture to say that in most instances the accidental crimi- inal would go through with the act, even though the- gun he fired would discharge at both ends and kill the man who fired it as well as the intended victim,\ > I.was thinking of this explanation as I sat in the small chapel- theater of the women's department of Auburn Prison the other night\ watching an inmates' show in which seven members of the cast weiie women who were serving from \20 years to life,\ as the sentence reads.\ V- \ for murder^ There was nothing about these women to distinguish them; from, the.io.ther women in the cast; there was nothing fiendish-in their appearance. A large young woman with a good-natured, kindly iacejl'fcandedL-jne.a program. I'whispered to the prison attache who .accompanied me, \What is she in for?\ L \She'\killed a man,'' Was the prompt answer. J. learned subsequently that in the prison population of only slightly • rS'than \100 woman felons, 35 of them are serving \terms for murder. Perhaps my interest .in these woman killers was excited by what we 'call morbid curio'sityi but I found my attention centered almost exclusively upon them. I asked everyone I met in the prison about them. What were their'reactions to'their crimes? How did they respond to .prison discipline?- Did. they manifest regret? ' JBi suibstar*e, the answer was generally the same: \They're the best people in the prison.\ From-'the way some of the persons connected with the prison talked, you might have thought they would heartily welcome an entire prison of murderesses. . * * * in the \be\st of the Shavian prefaces, the preface to the play .\Androcles and the Lion,!' the famous Irish sage says: \The primitive idea \of\ justice' is partly legalized revenge and partly expiation by sacrifice.\ This may very probably be true. But what can we do with a murderer or a murderess? What other alternative is open to us than imprisonment' or capital punishment? Our civilization has not yet come along to the point where we whole-heartedly abhor the idea of human killing. We even glorify the act under the banner of patriotism' and carry it out without a tremor under the cold blooded auspices cf the law. But such philosophy is a divergence from the main purpose of this column. Someday someone Is going to. write in and say, \Shoeman stick to your last'.\- We are back, if you will permit this sort of fancy, in Auburn, under the escort of Dr. Prank L. Heacox, superintendent of the. women's prison. • - , The floors, you would find,, are almost snow white. I asked the good doctor about this! \How in the wOTld do.you keep these..floors so clean?\ I said. The doctor smiled. \The' first -thing the women who come here I learn/' he replied, \is the dignity of common labor.. These floors are hand scrubbed every day.\ In this work, Dr. Heacox explained, two former Follies girls, a dozen women cha*geff„with •murder, -pickpockets,/'gun molls,\ and jmost of the other 1 felons''in the institution are engaged. There, is no •rank in prison iabq$.i-?--^.~_^<»v«3fa-'f:5'-=i'-* - *\- *'- ' J We moved Into the hospital corridor and stopped before one of the ,smaU cubicle \homes\ of an inmate. It contained an iron he'd, a 'dresser, a small writing desk and a chair. Pictures adorned the walls. '\this said jDr. Heacox, \is „the room of my- assistant in the jhospital work., There is no finer, mdre trusted- or more capable woman in the prison.. She-is a gem.\ \And what,'*' x asked, with a touch of levity, \did this admirable [person do, to bring her behind the gates of a state's prison?\ \ \Sh# murdered her husband,\ was the quick, but almost casual, •IllSsEfe- '- • WEEKLY REVIEW \ •> It's Purple Anti-Knock PAN^AM GASOLINE AND MOTOROILS DISTRIBUTOR Potsdam American Oil Co. Inc. 16 Depot Street, Pottdam, N. Y. Phone 2419 P. P. Hamilton, 2103 Ford St., Ogdensburfl, N. Y* Quick Starting Clean Burning OGDENSBURG BUSINESS SCHOOL Students now being enrolled in Day and Night classes for Secretarial and Commercial Training Telephone 172-W Over 134 Ford Street Blue Bird Beauty Shoppe \Josephine Calvo, Prop. All branches of Beauty Culture \only high grade work\ Phone 489 207 Ford St. McGuire Agency Writes Latest Auto Protection Liability Law Now In Effect Forces Drivers to Hold Better Protection — Modern Types Available Now Sam's Service Always-Ready Can you keep your car in a s good condition in the winter #me a s in the summer time, and if y>u do you will get almost aB much service out of it in cold weather as in the warm. But in order to do it,'you must have your car greased regularly and oiled,, • Sam's, Service .Station, corner Canton and State Streets maintain a complete service .station for auto- mobile^. Here you may have your car greased the modern way; win- ter oil placed In the crank case and rear end, and the gas tank filled .with the best grade of gasoline-^ Colonial or Esso gasoline. , Car owners have found that the expense is less in the end if they have their car greased regularly.\ A car that is. given adequate care will long outlast the automobile that is allowed to\'rack itself to Pieces because of uhgreasea bear- ings, and i n a short time appears to he years older. , The care your car. needs is given by Sam's Service Station. They understand the necessity of thor- oughly greasing a car. Telephone 663 and have them call at your home for your car. They will give it a thorough greasing and deliver it to your home. A. B. C. Painting and Decorating Service — THE MODERN METHOD — .-:' . Spray Painting Is Quicker • - • Economical. Offices And Stores Painted Over Night. No Muss Or Inconvenience. 56 Cornell Ave. Massena, N. Y. Phones 228-M; 2G-P-5 SUNDAY DINNER 50c Quality, Quantity, Service Be Convinced ' Phone Reservation Now, Ideal for parties, swimming, boating, camping. Riverside Hotel p. H. SULLIVAN, Prop. Rensselaer Falls, N. Y. Phone 17-F-23 SAY IT WITH FLOWERS The Plant Shop F. A. RICHARDSON, Prop. Morristown, N. Y. Tel. 2-F-12 TASTY BAKE SHOPPE^ 201 Isabella Street Delicious pastries. Home-made Bread, Birthday Cakes. Delivery 4 to 6 P. M. PHONE 1020 DAVID H. SCOTT PAINTING AND PAPERHANGING V DECORATING OF ALL KINDS Exclusive Agent — New York Wallpaper Company Work Guaranteed Free Estimates 820 Mansion Ave. ... ph(Jne 733,^ SAM'S SERVICE STATION Colonial, Esso Gas and OH Greasing Jobs Called For And Delivered Cor. Canton and State Sts. * Phone 663 Seott Reatfy To Improve Homes How does that home of yours look to you-this winter? The cold months are at best a time when each one of us spends most of our resting time Indoors and passing thq .long .eyenings with a fcaok or at the card table, How much more comfortable it seem,s if the walls are newly decorate'd with the lat- est design In wall paper or freshly painted-in a quiet, restful tone which is conducive to the happi- ness and contentment in a home. To have the interior of your house redecorated it is necessary to employ someone who Is not onlj an expert in the business and hav- ing the newest ideas, but someone who is .backed by years of exper- ience in, dealing' with every prob- lem in successful painting and pa- pering. Ogdensburg is fortunate indeed to have as an, authority on decorating David H. Scott who has been in this work for twelve years. 4 David H.' Scott of 320 Mansion Avenue handles a complete line of wallpaper, being the exclusive agent in Ogdensburg for the past seven years. Prior to that time he was in tlia same business in Carth- age for five years. 1 AROUND EMPIRE STATE f <$ s : $ Buffalo, N.-Y., Jan. 2. (AP)— Mayor. Qharles E. Uoesch does not think there should be a blanket re- duction in salaries of city em- ployes because of the depression. He said in his annual message yes- terday. The reduction had been recommended by the Municipal Re 1 - search Bureau. * Blue Bird Beauty Shop Extra Modern Although the year 1931 has pass- ed and the yea* 1932 is two days old, women are still giving serious thought to beauty. And there is no place in town wihere beauty is bet- ter taken care of and stimulated than at the Blue Bird Beauty Shoppe. In this sanitairy and up-to-the- minute shop the attendants are not only operators but artists who have studied thie care of the skin and hair and hands and who have had great Experience. Always the Blue Bird Beauty Shoppe is offer- ing something mew, the most mod- ern treatments and hair arrange-- ments from tha fashion centers of the world, New York and Paris, The Edmond method of perman- ent waving is rased and the nat- ural softness and lustre of this famous wave diefies nature's own handiwork. The well-groomed Wo- man will Want one of these perman- ents to -help heir through the social season. - Manicuring aind finger waving is done at this modern beauty parlor. Facials,. •aj:cord!ing to a desired method, may Ibe obtained at the shoppe. Last, but not least, and what really should come first is the shampoo. , Hair cannot Ibe a t its best unless it is entirely Ifree from dust and oil, sa to Tiave your qurl loot its best get a shampoo fir.sL 'You will bei excellently taken care of in every beauty aid or treat- ment that you receive at the Blue Bird Beauty (Shoppe, 207 Ford Street, v * • - * Into your memorial you build your memories and hopes. It is -the iutward sign of love, rever- ence and devotion. 'Our show room ift filled, with Quality memorials of latest de- signs for ywiir consideration. Call and see us*. Witherbee & Whalen MAMLE 3 Hodskln.Street Canton General Auto Service Repairing >• Battery . Ignition No Charjje For Estimates P. L. Reed 117 Washington St. :phone 8,7-J Rose Manor MORRJSTOWN, N. V;\ Market and Grocery « Member 'Sale Every Day The* I. GV A Way.\ W. J. HEVERLY I. G. A. Waddington, N. Y. Tel. 8-F-21 Turkey, Chicken and Steak Dinner* Every Sunday From 12 to 2 p, hi. 6 \to 8' p. m.: PHONE 30-F-4 Perry's Car Laundry Has Reasonable Rate Watertown, N. Y., Jan. 2. (AP) —Pounding a railroad torpedo With a stone cost the life of Charles Pinner, 14, yesterday. The boy died two hours after the explosion. Hendricks and Moore Well Drfflers WORK GUARANTEED NO CHARGE FORTESTiMATES -Rlehvnie, s N. Y. J '\ Phone 33 . E. F. LYTLE Farm Machinery and Implements See Us First for New McCormlck Deerlng Milking Machine Rensselaer Falls, N. Y. Telephone Heuvelton 10-F-12 * ' . \ ' N PERRY'S \• CAR LAUNDRY Now is The Titae To Simoniz Your Car Against Weather Elements. PHONE 63 Cor. State & Jersey Ave. *•• • . * Used Cars And Parts Bought and Sold Also Used Tiros BERT WOOD 1856 Ford St. 714 Canton St. Phone 647 Phone 216AV Jamestown, N. Y., Jan. 2 (AP)—A baseball game scheduled yesterday between the, Jamestown orioles and an industrial team was called off for the same reason games are post- poned in mid-summer. It rained. Schenectady, N. Y„ Jan. 2. (AP) —One head-on automobile crash re- sulted in bne death and injured six near here yesterday and another sent four persons to hospitals, two with possible fractured skulls. The first was ft three-car crash on the Schenectady-Saratoga road, the third car. strinking telephone pole trying, to.* avoid thejtwo which met, headrqn. Joseph, ffceagan, SQ, of Schenectady, was .killed. The other accident happened on the gchenec-. tad?fTroy toad. The injured were all from Schenectady.- . - Mechanlcville, N. Y., Jan. 2. (AP) —Mother Julia, 7S, n nun *for 54 years, died yesterday at St. Paul's convent here. She was one of the oldest nuns in the state. She taught school in Troy, her birth? place, before entering the St. Jo- seph Sisterhood, Automobile manufacturers say that the paint on the automobile that they mahe will last for some years to come but there is no paint that will last; very long if the automobile is washed by any one who is not am expert at it., There are many wayis to wash a machine; the wrong way leaves many min- ute scratches >on the body which in time become so numerous that it Will be impossible to get a shine on the automobile and this is the way that an inexperienced person washes his machine; the right way leaves no scratches whatsoever on the body and brings out the gloss .of the paint and this is the way \that Perry's Car Laundry at the corner of State and Jersey Avenue will wash your car. Their charge for washing a car regardless of size or model is ?1.00. A wash and polish $2.00. Added to this they do simonizing. Simonizing lis very, very import- ant. Without simoniz, the finish soon looks old and worn. Colors fade, and the* car's sale or trade-in value drops way down. Nothing takes the place of sim- oniz. It guaffds the beauty with a hard, brilliant surface. Checks the destructive elffects of weather and grime. Protects the finish from in- jury. The charge for a wash and sim- oniz is $4.00 to $5.50 depending on the size of ilhe car. Telephone Perry's Car Laundry at 53 and have them call at your home for your car. They will give it a thorough wash and then Will Simoniz it if you desire. After the work Is completed in their usual fine manner,, they will bring your ear back, spic and span and ready to go. Morrow's Garage Expert General Repairing Batteries Charged, Greasing 632 Canton St; ' Phorii- 2i4ViJ Automatic Plumbing—Service Tj-uek—* Repairing' ^w-& McEwen §03 Park St; Efaone 385-W -v> .>,-.\ vr. Marble City Auto Wrecking Company Complete Line of New and Used- AUTO PARTS Tires, Tubes and Accessories \We Sell For Less\ Open'Evenings . 100 Mill Street (JoUVerneur,' N, Y. Phone 290-W OGDENSBURG WINDOW CLEANING CO. Store, Office Windows Cleaned. Also Private Houses and Storm Windows Washed. 327 STATE ST. Phone 1053 or 78S Knob Cigars \Always Good\ A Home Product LEWIS'AND LEWIS, INC. Coal and Petroleum Products Hammond, N. Y,, DELORE DOE Freight Trucking and Storage 411 Rosseel St. Phone 757 Ogdensburg, N. Y. Sand and Gravel.. AH Grades • B. j. Earl Williams St, Phone 822-J S- Brookdale Mrs. EASRL STICKNBY, COT. -4> Brookdate—Floyd Chapman who has been in the Hepburn Hospital at Ogdensburg for the past few weeks for an operation fop mastoid ear, returned home Wednesday and is gainipg. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stickney and son Kenneth .spent Christmas day with llr. -and Mrs. Harold Nichols and son Junior and uncle Barnett Harriman alt Louisville. A Christmas tree and party was enjoyed by the pupils of this school Wednesday. Mrs. iCarl Cas- tle, teacher,, served dainty refresh- ments andl all reported a jolly time. A Christmas tree and exercises were held at the W, M, church. Thursday evening. Rev. and Mrs. Dennis Osgood and Mrs. Llillian Starlcs were call- ers at Camton and Ogdensburg CLAUDE H. PEESTON i - • - \ 1 Mortician Heuvelton, New York—Telephone 124 Monday, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hoxie and daughters Of North Lawrence vis- ited Mr. and Mrs..Fred-Carson and children, and Mr. *nd Mrs^ Lester Jenkins recently. ' Mr. and Mrs. \Clinton Burhap arid daughter Laviha and Mr. arid Mrs. Ivan Talcott of Jenkins Neigh- borhood, visited Mrv and Mrs. Earl Stickney and son Sunday. . Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Curtis , and daughters were callers at Mass^ria last Wednesday. • .••••. The state bf< California, wall soon advertise for Bids, 04 -26 -Southern California highway project? esti- mated to cost $9,916,966. ; Cook county, Illinois, sales • of new automobiles for the first 2$ days of November totaled l,9S9j compared with 1,858 for thei entire month of November, 1930. This is the first increase over a previous year's month since October, 1929. < j •\ ^mMm^ -* .—SPECIALISTS-^ -In distinctive \int«r^qr 0/ exterior deodratio'n in paint or wallpaper, . No Charge, for' EstjmatW 516 Lafayette St «ioneS7S-W .