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PAGE SIX SATURDAY, NOVEMBER TZ. Xlrats OGDENSBURG JOURNAL: 0&clensbur& Journal Telephone 858 for Business Office Telephone 858 for News and Editor- ial Department MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusive- ly entitled to the use of republica- tion of all news dispatches credited to it or nor not otherwise credited to this paper and also news published herein. The Let-Down is Terrific! J P McKINNEY & Son National Representative New York Office 30 Rockerfeller Plaza Chicago Office. 1605 Wrlgley Bldg. 400 N. Michigan Ave. San Francisco Office, 742 Market St., Room 202 MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS The Ogdensburg Journal Is on sale in New York at: Hotallng News Stand. Times Square Published Daily evenings, except Sunday Consolidation of the St. Lawrence Republican, established In 1855 Entered at the U. S. Post Office in Ogdensburg, N. Y. as sec- ond class mail matter. Published by the Northern New York Publishing Co., Inc., 308-310 Isabella St., Ogdensburg, N. Y. Frank E. Gannett, - president: Franklin R. Little, secretary treas- urer and publisher: Charles S. Cant- well, managing editor: Hugh B. Lancaster, business manager. Mau- rice B. Mitchell, advertising mana- ger, SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall Per Year »400 six Months 2.00 Thre6 Months . 1.00 One Month B0 Per Week by Carrier In the City of Ogdensburg 18 In St. Lawrence Coutty Per Week by Carrier 12 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail (Outside 8t. Lawrence County) Per Year *4.00 Six Months * 3.35 Three Months 1.60 One Month ~ - .80 Outside New York State 8.00 <&- The Journal*! Platform for Northern New York —The St. Lawrence Sea- way and power de- velopment — Harbor Improvement —A Bridge at Ogdens- burg —Fair prices for Dairy- men —Improved Roads for St. I^awrence County —Lower electric rates —City Manager . govern- ment for Ogdensburg <s> -^ The Grant C. Madill School Number 4 school is to be named Grant C. Madill School. This name was selected by the children who voted 330 to 377 that the school be named In honor of Dr. Madill. Oth- er names on which the children voted were Benjamin Franklinj Theodore Roosevelt, Thomas Jef- ferson and Van Rensselaer. The overwhelming vote for Dr. Madill indicates the love and es- teem in which he is held by the children of the city, as well as their parents. This is a tribute to Dr. Madill's life of service to his fellow men. He has devoted him- self to healing the sick and to help- ing others. Fame and fortune have come to Dr. Madill, but he has not sought them nor cared for them, they have come as the world's recognition of his great ability and skill. The children of Number 4 school and the Board of Education are to be commended in honoring that truly great man of the North Country—Dr. Grant C. Madill. Approved In The Main Indications are that New York state voters adopted six of the nine proposals for constitutional change submitted by the conven- tion and rejected three others. The 193S convention thus escapes the fate of the 1915 convention, whose members saw the results of their lahors rejected as a whole but sub- sequently adopted one by one as separate amendments. Adoptio of Proposition Number One means that the major part of the convention's work was ap- proved. The bill of rights is strengthened, home rule for cities and counties is refined, local tax resrictions on real estate are made more severe, but not too severe. The sensible provision of bus serv- ice for private school pupils, as a public safety measure, to the ex- tent that it Is provided for other school pupils, is permitted the Leg- islature. The relaxation of the prohibition against the appointment of legis- lators to civil offices will become dangerous only as some future governor uses it to attempt un- justified control of legislature ac- tion. There is no danger that the present Governor will do so. Failure of the ban on propor- tional representation, the most overwhelmingly defeated of all the proposals, -was a salutary rebuke to those who would deny home rule to communities which wish to use this method of voting. This is a local matter to be decided as local conditions warrent. Failure of the reapportionment proposal gives the Legislature an inescapable obligation to devise a reapportionment procedure that will avoid politicial prejudice. Such a proposal, which should be made in the next Legislature, should avoid specification of dis- tricts and should provide, as the relected proposal did for some safe method of breaking a legis- lative deadlock. Defeat of the judiciary proposal Is a clear indication ot public op- te^*^— position to a too extensive review of the acts of administrative agen- cies. The Legislature still can pro- vide the extend of review re- quired. The specification of judicial district boundaries, by which Nassau residents would have ac- quired a district to themselves, was necessary. The Legislature has the power to create new dis- tricts when it chooses, and because of its Republican complexion is quite likely to meet the wishes of Nassau residents. The constitution still is an un- satisfactory document; it is too long; too statutory in its sec- tions. Perhaps in time its constitu- tional matter will be separated from its statutory tangle and it wUl become a document which the people can understand. Incredible Turk He had many themes. Mustapha —Kemal—Ghazi—Ataturk— these were but a few of the many ap- pellations by which he was known to his countrymen. He had many titles; but he scorned them all, except the af- fectionate one of \Father of the Turks.\ He had many careers—as sol- dier and general, as diplomat and president, as dictator and demo- cratic leader. He was at once quite openly a libertite and the censor of his country's morals. He lived hard- worked hard—played hard. During the World War he de- fended the Dardanelles down to his last round of shot—and turned back the might of the British fleet. After the war he toot a Tur- key that was defeated, dismem- bered and despised, and turned it into a powerful, self-reliant state. He took a land that was drown- ing in medieval terpor, awakened It, modernized its habits, industrial- ized its economy, propelled its In- habitants into the middle of the 20th century. He abolished the harem and the fez, rewrote the Koran, latinized the alphabet, equalized the sexes, gave Turkey an air force and every Turk a last name. He deposed the sultan, abolished the caliphate, bullied the Allies, threw the Greeks out of Smyrna, and moved his capital from the Bosphorus to the wilds of Ana- telia. He lived to see Turkey once more a power in Near-Eastern af- fairs—wooed by England with gold, by France with - concessions of territory, by Germany with credits, and by Russia with trade. In the light of his enormous achievements, Hitler would appear to be a piker and Mussolini but a posturing mountebank. Even more extraordinary, where these leaders attempt to crush all opposition, he deliberately set out to create his own. For he was a democrat at heart. And yet he suffered from the dictator's fatal curse. When he died, Kama! Ataturk—the Perfect Father of the Turks—left no one of sufficient statute to succeed him. Americas Together May Save a Way of Life • By BRUCE CATTON It is becoming more and more obvious that the Pan-American Conference which is to open in Peru next month presents New World democracy with a great\ opportunity. Events in the Old World are giving this meeting an importance which no previous Pan-American Conference has had. In the past, these conferences have been productive chiefly of high-sounding talk; this year, the logic of events is forcing the statesmen to act. • * * While it is true that democracy as we understand it is not a very robust growth below the equator, it also true that something funda- mental to the New World way of life is being threatened from Eu- rope. The Latin nations fought to free themselves of overseas tyranny, just as the people of the United States did; and although many of them have had dictator's of their own for many years, there is a world of dif- ference between their kind of dictatorship and the kind now domin- ant in Europe. The European dictatorships are not simply one-man tyrannies. They call for a regimentation of social and economic life such as no New \World tyrant ever dreamed of. They represent the growth in human society of a philosophy which would affect all international relations, all trade relations, all cultural relations. They stand Xor a closing of opportunity and a fixing of social classes. The New World, both north and south of the equator, was settled and developed by men who opposed that sort of thing from the bottom of their souls. However imperfect democracy may have been in the United States, however much it may have been flouted in the Latin republics, the way of freedom has nevertheless been fundamental to the New World spirit. So this conference offers a great chance for the people of the New World to perfect their defenses. « * * That is not primarily a military problem. It calls for little in the way of conferences between military and naval authorities. If the statesmen can find ways to keep the channels of New World trade clear, if they can formulate some program by which the New World nations can, through the interchange of goods, services and ideas, maintain and improve their economic levels and move forward toward a freer and richer life—then there will he much less reason to he afraid of develop- ments in Europe. The dictator states may coerce a single nation; they cannot coerce half the world. In the Americas opportunity still exists. If the Ameri- cas stand together, they can make of their half of the world a thriving, unregimented trade area which totalitarian economics cannot effect And it that is done, the New World way of lite is Baved. This conference is thus an opportunity—and a challenge. If the statesmen meet it, the steady growth of the totalitarian idea, win re- ceive a definite and significant check. Questions and Answers YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any answerable Question ot tact or lo formation by writing to Frederick M. Kerby Question Editor, Off densburg Journal. Washington Bureau. 1013 Thirteenth Street. Wash tngton. D. C„ enclosing THREE cents in coin or postage stamps for reply. OGDENSBURG JOURNAL Q. Where is the main office of the Young Democrats? A. Shoreham Hotel, Washington, D. C. Charles H. Shreve Is the executive secretary. Q. Who composed \Shine On, Harvest Moon,\ and when was it published? A. The music Is by Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth, the \words by Jack Norworth. It was first sung in \The Follies of 1908,\ and pub- lished the same year. Q. What nationality and race Is the orchestra leader, Jan Garber? A. He is an American Jew, born in Indianapolis, Ihd. Q. Which countries have corpor- ative governments? A. Italy, Brazil, Greece and Por- tugal have corporative features in their systems of government. Q. How much has been allotted to the student-aid work of the Na- tional Youth Administration for the school year 1938-39, and how many students win receive assist- ance? A. Allocation of $21,750,000 to fi- nance the program has been ap- proved. More than 350,000 needy students -will receive assistance. Q. How many cigarettes -were manufactured in the United States States in 1937? A. The estimated number is 162,- 625,515,000. Q. How much does it cost to ob- tain a patent? A. For a patent on an article of manufacture, a process, or a com- pound, there is an initial govern- ment filing fee of $30, plus $1 for each claim over 20, payable with the application, and a final gov- ernment fee of $30, plus $1 for each claim over 20, payable with- in six months following tho notice of allowance. For a design patent there is one fee only, the amount depending upon the term for which protection is asked. The fee for a 3 1-2 year term is $10. for a 7-year term $15, and for a 14-year term $30, payable when the application is filed. These are government fees only and do not include the fee of an attorney whose services are almost indispensable, though not legally required. Q. Who was the first vice Pres- ident of the United States? A. John Adams. Q. How many Chinese are in the Dominion of Canada? A. The last Census enumerated 46,519. Q. Do lepers in the National Leprosarium at Carvllle, La., have to pay for board and treatment? A. All patients are clothed and otherwise cared for at Federal government expense. Mrs. NevJllo Chamberlain says her husband is dreadfully short ot socks. The world knows he got at least a pair of them at Munich and that by-election in Kent might be considered anoUuw, Do You Remember When Scanning Files of 10, 25 and 30 Years Ago Nov. 12, 1908 Nathan Frank's store employes organize a social club with the fol- lowing officers: Charles Forrester, president; Mrs. William Joy, vice- president; Miss Anna Goldstone, secretary; Miss Violet Oliver, treasurer. Meetings will be held twice a month. A crowd of 300 persons attend- ed annual Fireman's Ballot State Armory last night. * Nov. 18, 1928 President Coolidge advocates adequate naval force to ensure protection, Report Vickers to build ship- yard below Frescott. Industrial fu- ture of town looks bright. St Lawrence beats Clarkson in first game played by rivals on Potedam field. Score was 9-0. Dr, and Mrs. P.-E. Clark en- tertain in honor of their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Huff, urer. Mr. Huff was formerly president of tho Huif-Daland airplane plant here. Mrs. Roy B. Rowell recovers from operation which she recent- ly underwent at the A, Barton Hepburn Hospital. No. 12, 1913 Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Mary Louise Whalen and Clarence W, Graffin, both of tlus city, which took place in New York City, Nov. 4. A copy of the new charter of Clarkson Memorial College, made necessary by the recent change in name of this Institution, has been received. The following officers were named at a, recent meeting of the Boys' Literary Society of St. Mary's Acaidemy: Arthur B. Graf- fin, president; Edward Hyatt, sec- retary and Prank Connors, treas- IN FILMDOM By BATJL HARBISON Hollywood—\This Is Don Hart- man,\ said the press agent, intro- ducing a short, cheerful-look- ing man. \And this\—•indicating a tan, sad-looking fellow—\is Frank Butler. Comedy-writing team. The best, absolutely. They wrote \Par- is Honeymoon,\ the Bine Crosby picture I'm working on. Say, may- be you guys would tell him about how you wrote 'Paris Honey- moon.'\ \Sure said Butler. \We've got nothing to do. Nothing, that is, ex- cept write another comedy. You know, the main difference between a comedy writer and dramatic writer is clothes. The dramatic writer is clothes. The d4wmatic blue serge suit and the comedy writer's outfit looks like something by Walt Disney. The reason—\ \The idea is,\ broke in Hart- man, \that the dray-ma gent is supposed to look serious and dig- nified in a story conference while the comedy guy has to get laughs. When a scene falls flat as he reads it aloud to the boss, he can always get a laugh out of his get-up. It's a form of job Insurance.\ \When you were writing 'Paris Honeymoon,'\ suggested the press agent, \I suppose you—\ Comedy Must Stay Funny \Of course, the big headache,\ interrupted Butler, \is how to be funny. Remember that a screen writer Is supposed to get Ms stuff actually on the screen. Before this happens, a line or situation has to seem funny to a producer, his sec- retary, office boy, chauffeur, wife, cook and gardener. If it doesn't, its out! Now a scene that might seem hilarious to a producer on Mon- day may fall flat as a curbstone chewing gum on Tuesday if his eggs happened to be cold at break- fast. Dozens of our funniest scenes get tossed into yawning wastebaskets and—\ \I might mention,\ said Hart- man, \that the wastebaskets al- ways are yawning before our scenes reach them. As a matter of fact, the cleaning women and janitors here at Paramount are our best audience. And only last week a man at the city dump tele- phoned and asked how soon he could expect some more of our stuff. He said he and the boys were dying over it!\ \In 'Paris Honeymoon',\ broke in the press agent, rather desper- ately, \you —\ A Catalog (of Laughs \In case you are interested in the different kinds of laughs, said Butler:, ignoring the appeal, \there are the snicker, the giggle, the chuckle;, the guffaw, or belly- laugh, and 'the paroxysm in which you are carried out of the theater and revived! by a pulmotor squad. \We have never actually seen this last one occur, but rival comedy writers tell us it happens on their pictures regularly. laughed First At Bear Grease \The first laugh in history,\ explained Hartman, \was when a caveman slipped on a hunk of bear grease and fell flat on his leopard skin. His next-cave neigh- bor then emitted a hyena-like sound which at that time was thought to be caused by stomach ulcers. But the first caveman tried his bear-grease fall and again again with the same, result. Pretty soon he was known around the vil- lage as the Groucho Marx of the Stone Age until somebody beaned him with a club. That drew the first belly-laugh.\ The press agent left off tearing his hair and interposed quickly: \You certainly did get a lot of belly-laughs in \Paris Hon—' \ \Actually it's easy to analyze what makes you laugh,\ declared Butler. \If a tramp slips and falls in the mud, that's a snicker. - I f a pompous-looking gent does it, that's a giiggle. If he has a top hat and frock coat and has Just come from the office where he bawled out a meek clerk, his fall gets a chuckle. But it's a guffaw if the clerk accidentally trips the tough emplloyer.\ \Couldn't you illustrate those different laiughs with situations in 'Paris Honeymoon'?\ the press agent pleaded. Mud Pies Before Your Eyes \Of course, pie can be substi- tuted for nuud, as you have doubt- less come to realize,\ resumed Hartman. \'The idea is that you are snug and smug in your seat while right before your eyes some- one else — someone who's may- be doing better than you financial- ly and socially — is being made ridiculous and uncomfortable. This gives you a superior feeling, which is something everybody rel- ishes.\ \There aire other kinds of com- edy,\ said Butler, \but bear grease is Ithe basis of them aU. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 3ATKS entrg* Cub One ttme •> ».x> JO Tnxee tfmM 10 JOS Six times ...07 Ad Minimum charga -~- .43 Minimum cash ~..~~ -SO Phone your Classified Ad M 8S9. Dally r»t* per una for con- secutive Insertion*: raUNTS 850 Announcements LOST — Gold Chain and Cross. Finder please call Mrs. Earl, 335-J. Keward. QUICK DIVORCES: — No publicity. American attorney. Box 1736, El Paso,. Texas. LOST—Black IrlBh setter, grayish tipped nose, white at throat, named Pal, license 301554. He Is afraid of guns — merely a family pet, Reward alive or dead. Stan- ley Law, Canton, N. Y, LOST—Two fox hounds, 1 black and tan, 1 white and black. Reward. Walter W. Carruthers, Wadding- ton. Automotive FOR SALE— 1937 DeSoto Coach, 6,000 mUes, with heater. SMITH, EtTSSELL & LAHUJ5 501 State St. Repairing Service Stations RADIATORS — Repaired, also cleaned and flushed. Nate's Auto Parts, 301 N. Water St. Professional Service WM. T. HALES —' Calmer Chiro- practor. 314 Franklin St. Phone 354. WILL SWAP — Purebred Holstein bull calf, 5 mos. old, for heifer coming 2 coming in; 6 (second litter) sows to freshen middle of January for cattle of any kind.- 2 sulky plows, one Percival No. 12, and one Syracuse No. 73 for grass calves; service boar, 1 yr. old, for fat pig or 2 sboats. Wm. J. Brown, R. 2 Heuvelton. WILL SWAP—Registered 2 year old Holstein bull, second best strain in the State, T.B. tested, for 2 good colts of the present year. This Is a good chance for a dairy- man to improve his herd. W. R. Todd, DePeyster Phone 9-F-4. WILL SWAP — New Hampshire Red pullets for grass calves or what have you. Glenn Steen, Plackville. WILL SWAP — A few choice pair of game Bantams for pullets. Phone 4-F-S, Lee A. McCready, Lisbon, N. T. WILL SWAP — Grass calves for pigs. Ward Willard, Heuvelton, N. Y. Real Estate For Rent ALBANY AVE. 419 6 rooms and bath, entire! 1 \ scorated. Ga- rage. J. B. AH.-..-, 802 Washington. St. HRANKLIN ST. 412 — Furnished apartment, heat, light and hot water. Frlgldalre. FOR RENT — Garage, also sleep- ing room. Inquire 311 Morris St. PARK ST. 327 — 3-room furnished apartment with bath. Heat and hghts included. Eva Lavarnway, FOR RENT—Small furnished apart- ment. BeUe Jameson, 525 \Wash- ington St. CAROLINE ST. 624 *- Unfurnished apartment for rent. Inquire above address. Help Wanted \WOMEN \WANTED — Address our catalogs. 2c each paid in advance plus bonuses. Everything supplied. Free details furnished. Royal Products, G. P. O. Box 164, Brooklyn, N. Y. WANTED—Men and women, fuU or part time, make extra money for Christmas. Must have pleasant personality and neat appearance. Pleasant and dignified work. Ap- ply 9 a.m. to 12, 212 1-2 Ford St. Employment Wanted COMPETENT — Middle-aged wom- an win take care of children aft- ernoons or evenings, or wiU sit with elderly person or lnvaUd. Phone 896-R. Poultry and Supplies FOR SALE — English White Leg- horn pullets — laying. Al Marlow, Linden Soad. Hione 16-F-3. FOR SALE—25 April hatched New Hampshire pullets, now laying. O. D. Hutchinson, Heuvelton. PERO LANE — 208, House Xor rent at once. Inquire 718 Wash- ington St. FOR RENT—-Large furnished, heat- ed bedroom, nice location. Inquire 324 New Yorlc Avenue. SEXMOUR ST. 414 — Comfortable modern home with garage, near Silk Mill, Phone 1161-R, FOR RENT — Furnished or unfur- nished 5-room apaxranent, also 7- room unfurnished apartment. It. K. Wilcox, Ford St. Garage. Phone 355. FOR RENT—301 Knox St. Inquire at office Levi Hasbrouclt Estate or Trust Dept., Ogdensburg Trust Co. Real Estate For Sale FOR SALE — Temple Residence, Corner \Washington & Franklin Streets, consisting of corner resi- dence and adjoining lot. For terms apply to Robert S. Water- man, Attorney, Legal Notice FOR SALE — Fresh eggs delivered in the city. Wm. H. Green, Canton Kd. Ebone 16-I\-4. FOR SALE — Or will swap for wood, 70 Gasson Strain, special mating, yearling hens. Fred R. Backus, Ogdensburg, R. F. D. 3. Dogs, Cats, Other Pets Dr. Brady's Health Talks iiiypocrates, Galen and I T HE father of medicine had his favorite prescription for cough, too. While it may not have been so good as mine, I'm willing to concede that for his time Hippocrates was a wise old doctor. The medicine he prescribed for cough was called hydromel. Like Fool Proof Cough Medi- cine it was simple, homely and quite harmless in any case. Here's the way to make Hydromel: Take of honey, one teacupful. of water, three teacupfuls. Boil them together, and there you arc. Dose: A swallow or two every lit- tle while, Hippocrates said? \Hydromel is moderately diuretic; It softens tho lungs, Is moderately nourish- ing, expectorant, laxative, and aUoviatcs a cough; it lubricates tho sputum.\ Even 01' Doe Galen who con- sidered MB medical colleagues Ignorant had a favorable word for Hippocrates' hydromel (per- haps because Hippocrates had been dead 2300 years or so). Said Galen \Hydromel clears out tho air passages, and thus promotes expectoration. When sputa are thick and viscid it cuts and thins them.\ Now, although I haven't tried it, I can conceive of no reason why one should not mix some honey in tho batch of fool proof cough medicine and so gain the advantage of having Hippocrates, Galen and Brady standing around tho bed stroking our whiskers and watching for the crisis or something. Singers and speakers, many amateurs and professionals have used Xor years an agreeable yet efficacious astringent garglo or- iginated by Mr. Jos. W. England, pharmacist la Philadelphia hos- pital. It is prepared by dissol- ving 2 dram* (2 tcaspoonfuls) of potassium chlorate In four oun«* of boiling water, which stands cooling while 1 dram (tea-spoonful) of alum is dis- solved in 2« ounces of stronger ross *mter> to which *re then added in i!he order named one- half ounce (tablespoonful) of glycerin, one-half ounce of plain syrup or honey (tablespoonful) and finally three drams (3 table- spoonfuls) of fluidextract of eucalyptus rostrata (red gum). Shake this ruby-red liquid up and add it; to the reserved por- tion. The product should bo a clear ruby-red liquid of agree- able odor and taste. For use, add a tabliespoonful of it to an eq.ual quantity of water and gargle. Gai'gle once or twice within tho half hour before sing- ing or speaking. Or use It every few hours Iter relief o.f mild sore throat If the druggist cannot supply fluidextract of eucalyptus ros- trata (red gum), fluidextract of kino may Ibe substituted in the formula, using TWO drams (2 tcaspoonfuls) of it instead of three drams of red gum. QtJESTIOINS AND ANSWERS rieaso Forgive CDS Regret yosir surrender to spelling Iodine with final e. Expect you will soon imake -up your mind \whether to (spell i t mucus or phos- phorous—so far you seem fickle about it. CI. W. H, Answer—Not BO fickle as help- less — proofreaders, typographers, stenographers and editors have something to say about how or •whether I Bhall spell my words. I gave up llodin mainly because a lot of laymen think lodin 9s some- thing different from the Iodine thov have always known. Mucus Is tho noun;; mucous the adjective, of cource. Phosphorus Is correct; no such weird as phosphorous. Gefiyrigli: I93S FOR SALE—Five Great Dane pup- pies, 3\ males and 2 females. Floyd Blair, Heuvelton, N. Y. Live Stock FOR SALE—Purebred Narragansett Toms and hen turkeys. Mrs. Roy MadUl, R. 1 Heuvelton, McHwee Farm. Livestock Wanted WANTED TO BUY — Beef cattle, canners, cutters, hogs and buns. 1002 State Street, Phone 1181. Merchandise BUY DIRECT—From manufacturer. 188 coil Cotton & Felt Innerspring mattress with handles, ventilators, and Art Ticking — Regular $19.50 valuu — $9.75. Clickner Mattress Co., 524 Covington St. FEED—Pratt's Pig Ration grows them quick, Pratt's Laying Mash makes big eggs and lots of them. Pratt's Dairy Rations top them aU. Try and be convinced. Maple City Milling Co. Phone 69. WINDOW GLASS — We do glazing. Sash called for and delivered. Barr's Hardware Store. Phone 337 DON'T WAIT—For colds, Prevent them with Halibut Oil Capsules, 100 for 98c at Pagano's Cut Rate GLOCOAT SPECIAL — We have a few deals left — Johnson's half gallon size Glocoat with an ap- plier and a fun size dust mop and handle for your floor — regular value $2.85 — and you get them all for the price of the Glocoat, $1.89 wlule they last. Hackett's Hardware. WATER COLLECTIONS City of Ogdensburg Water rates are now due and may be paid at the City Treas- urer's office City Hall, Eoom (5) during office hours from nine a.xn. to five p.m. Saturdays nine a.m. to 12 Noon for 30 days from date of notice without penalty. Aft- er December (7) 1938 10 percent win be added. Invoices have been mailed and should be presented when making payments. MERRITT M. MORSE City Treasurer Dated Nov. 7, 1938 BENNETTS, GUYETTES ON TRIP tend i etteri caro of Ogdentbtwfli Journal, NOW ON DISPLAY — The newest, most beautiful showing of wall- paper you've ever seen! Come in and inspect it. Hagglund's Wall- paper & Paint Store, 337 State St. SPECIAL — Electric heating pads, regular price $2.50, now $1.75. Brandy's State Street Drug Store. Phone 198 — we deliver. ELECTRIC — Washing Machines, $10.00 at Mayer's Exchange. STOVES—Before buying stoves, see our wood and coal ranges, heat- ers and oil heaters. Sperling's Furniture Store. Barter and £xchsnge WILL SWAP — 2 fresh cows Xor oats. Brees & Perrln, R. 2 De- kalb Jet. WILL SWAP — Double white iron bed, spring and mattress for po- tatoes or apples. 327 Park St. WILL SWAP—Economy King cream separator, 600 capacity, also good cow dog, for hens or what have you. Anna Bishop, R. l, Ham- mond, N. Y, WILL SWAP—Heifers, 2 show cases, cow cUppers or a hay loader for pullets, heavy ones preferred. Mrs. Ezra Planty. R. 1 Potsdam, Location West Potsdam* Norwood—Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Bennett of Norwood and Mrs. Ray- mond Guyette of Norfolk, are vis- iting relatives in Pennsylvania and Seaford, Delaware. Mrs. Catherine Snow is spending some time with relatives in Louis- viUe. Mrs. James Hurley of Malone spent Tuesday and Wednesday with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. R, A. Perry of Elizabeth, N. J., spent the week- end -with her parents, Mr. ajid Mrs. Melvin Cardinal. James Hughes of Utica visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Hughes, over the weekend. Mrs. Donald Grant and daugh- ter, Janis and Joan, have returned to their home in Montreal, Canada after spending a month with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hale. Mrs. Lillian M. Powell left Sun- day for Newark, N. Y. where she will spend the winter with her daughter, Miss Frances Powell. Kenneth Maclver of Kingston, spent the weekend with his moth- er, Mrs. Frances Maclver. MCOLETTE DEMANDS TRIAL Canton—John Nicolette, Pots- dam, demanded a trial when ar- raigned Thursday morning on a speeding charge by Chief of Po- lice IT. Sherman Grant in police court before Justice Charles E. Bowers. The trial date was set for 10 a.m. Tuesday. Chief Grant alleges that Nicol- ette was speeding on Main St. at 2 a.m. Nov. 2, in his complaint. ANSWERS TO TEST QUESTIONS Below are the answers to test questions printed on page 4. 1. Gamma. 2. Yes. 3. South Atlantic. 4. Mount Vesuvius. 5. K. G. Bugg. 6. Violet. 7.. France. 8. On the little finger or the third finger of either hand. 9. Famous French musical com- poser. 10. Amethyst. ,_ ,