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'-built V* pnn Huguenots In it they Sport in' THE MASSENA OBSERVER, MASSENA, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1938. PAGE SEVEN Massena High School Track Stars Bring Home Van Dusen Trophy i:.>•:•.•; to Garald J. '• ! h:j warriois! This | r^^Kjiers took their i Satin day when they :he Van DuLsen meet. First \ !e n d-a ; ni^ets. they also oa-p- rs- ;r. the A division. They u:. 'hi 1 championship over f • me dual champ. Third dev ret;:ed the Van Dusen cup wh.ch makes them three -• s th:.« vear so far. »-on : jien MASSENA WINS FROM BRASHER IN 7-0 SCORE Still going like a house on fire in the St. Lawrence County Ama- teur Baseball League, the local Massena Athletic Association base- ball clouters dished out another big win Sunday afternoon, this time over the Brasher 'Fails team, 370-J - 32? Preseott sician dam, N. Y itment 7 to 0. With George Weldher on the • al \i nT !1 o b , e . staged at i mound, the locals peeted off a. win hi L; h C ZTt and flrst P lace ^ the loop. This „! en DV tne & i ves the MAA s i ug g e rs their third ,weekenc: a, av break it ° f lba11 \ he The best of Northern H> e , Brasher ***\** two hits and H-ys in running pants ™ nked them out on the scores. -. the style bock; I Twent y-th-ree men cauae to bat, two >e lcweied or raised. ! were left sw »n-g:ing at the ipfite, St. Mary's Team Beats Massena Center The St. Mary's Softball team won over the Massena Center team by the s&in of their teeth at the Center grounds, Thursday night in a downpour of rain by a First No Hit, No Run Game Of Season Played Here t- 3 to score, the group a 7 to 2 lead in th« fifth ning 1 S^' Mary's team c (Massena Center in- ning 1 , Mary's team came The first no hit no run game was batted on the Alco fle!d in the softball season yesterday be- tween the Structural - Blooming 1 Mills and /Potioom squads. streaked' acros-3 the home zone for the only score of the team in the lto 2 battle. 'Jh' the second match, the Acces- sory Finishing team applied the The iPotroom team lost the title j finishing touches to the Rodding from toehlhd and pulled' the game out'of the fire and into the bag. The Center equad weakened and , with UwreMe Hod Dehind the let the visitors tag home seve.i maSk _ lBa Dufresne hurled tor in a 9 to 0 sloughter. Bill Lartimer hurled the 'ball down the drive for the no hit nc run game against the 'Pot roams times in the last two innings. John and 'Robert Rickard did the bell handling as pitcher for the C Center team andi Rush was catch- third ing. Hubert Dufresne pushed the t jj e sphere down the aisle for the St. 'Mary's team while •Edgar Pari- isian was halting the tosses. T he man and the giry are m m the Potrooms for the first and second innings and! he was re- lieved iby George Wilkins in the Johnson caught for In the Ibattles Friday night the Nayef Durham team won a fast game over the Massena Center outfit 'by a 2 to 1 score. The Dur- TH man and- are raforaf ffff ftf; ham team battling in exactly 27 bo hard' to decide | tnree walked, while the teammates Wli the last minute. indulged in a little support ) make the game a success. to x A couple of sof.ball j Maurice Archambeault doubled, -cheduled for tonight j DeShaw, Jukoski and iLahey tiild.— It costs only a singled which accounts for the jre en silver to enter runs in the third frame. In the • • gate or a tear in the fourth inning-, the locals hung up the fence.--The GAA I four more runs bringing the game Unusual Dof-Drawn Transportation An unusual dog-drawn transporta- tation service operated in Alaska about 1800. At times, says Col- lier's Weekly, a train would consist of 24 eight-fOM sledges, tied end to j fn\1S?' 1 Grow\ < who\'wk6'* f walked'\by end, pulled by 350 Eskimo dogs, i pitcher Len (Riokurd. In the sec- minutes of ball handling pushed across the plate two runs in the first and second innin.?. From then on the game was tight. Joe Jukoski was hero for the afternoon as he clouted a third bagger, second man up, to bring :a-jr,-r: t:=r its first annual ban-j to a 7 to 0 level in favor of the - F:Uy at the Par-T-Ori:i — • MAA group. :ss M.-LiUfrhlin ingoing to make | As the game went into the ' cher. 3 ~* «.. bt- sport-* harnessed two abreast. The crew of 30 men worked in two shifts, one steeping while the other pa- trolled the line of animals, which was a half mile long. — .... The game «as called in the _• affair-Plenty of letters I eighth, Massent went to town 2nd ! seventh and went down in the log • : a'hed out for the girl (staged a last minute flood of runs I legal at a 7 to 0 finish. I pot my first ticket Sat-I which were not put on the books,' The score by innings: ' n and it wasn't for any due to rain killing the chances of .(MASSENA 003400 0—7 Circus either.-The tick- .Brasher coming before George Wei- ©RASHER PALLS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0 >r putting my automobile —— , i>rig pla.ee. 1ATES WIN 1ST MONEY «MEET A::ho.uh Massena Pirates didn't l-nurr. hr.me from the Northern Iyer Y..!k Firemen's Convention juth 'he winning cup, they made pore money than other teaans in lie eor.-.-.-ts. The Pirates came -brick from the J'to-ee-«la>- convention at Alexandria ' JBay over t'he weekend enlarging; I'ie department coffers by $185. ' Lake Placid,~ cup winner, won , |S22 m prizes. The local team copped two flrst , J'aces two seconds and two thirds! |2J was the first group to regis- ( a: convention headqurrters. a prize for this also. l/irst prize was won in Hook and j £der Class C *i$d>' -Motor Hose B.' Second prize \was fft*\ ond race ii. Hook and -Adder Cj e iiuok'* :ace. The Pirates fiok thud :>lice m the department ist ami Motor Hook and (Lad- ond Inning Charles Konkoski crossed the home (base for the Winning point. Rayino of the Center tribe Mill on diamond 2 in a 15 to 1 massacre. Three home runs were hit by the Accessory gang. J'.m' Love hit the first circuit blow in the fourth inning with none on base. In the next inning, Stanley Kocienski belted out the second and in the sixth, pitcher Compo followed suit.e. Martin, playing right field for the Rodd'lng Mill team, crossed the plate on an error. The Mill team clouted out two hits and the one run off pitcher Don Compo. Accessory Burnie. c Holcott. r Locey, rf Finishing ab r hi Rodding Mill r. 3 1 _I> 4 1 E.Fruski. lb 4 (i Lav*, cf 4 Whiting, 3b 4 Creiror. M 4 Kocienski. If 4 2 2 1'McGrah. c ab 3 (I 2 0 MASSENA WINS TRACK MEET BY SMALL MARGIN The Massena track team not satisfied with one trophy, and flrst leg on the championship Monday Luncheon Club award, paraded up the track field Saturday afternoon to keep permanently the Van Dusen trophy. The locals showed their ability in the field and track as they hung up a close win, 60 to 51 ipoints to j take the Van Dusen meet. Ogdens- 'burg placed second, Malone took third with 47 to the good. This m'ikes the fifth consecutive Van JDusen meet that the locals I have piled up since entering the annual tournament. Entering In i 1934, the locals have kept their winning stareak. The meet origina .1 in -«n(i l'Ewelston. p 3 0 HMolnar. lb 3 0 0 -.- .-\ \ .\ „ „, , .. | 1 McKenzie.ib 2on I m Academy team of (Malone retir- ! 2b 1 o o; ed the flrst trophy as the result of I K ; 2 SiMcConnelLSb 2 0 0 victories in; 1925, . 21 Palmer »s 2 0 0' 3conn S 3 2iMaitin, rf 2 l o' 1*8387, 1928. 1930. Malone won the l UPlantv. r 20 o I title land leg on the cup in 1951. Laba. 2b (I O'Carron. rf 2 0 0 1 1 OiJerome. If 0 0 i Since 1934 Oerald J. (Donnelly's Total 40 15 121 Total 22 1 RODDINC. MILL 0 o 1 0 ft 0 0—1 ACCESSORY FINISHING - '•group of powerful tracksters have 2' burnt cinder path victories that will not be forgotten. 14 2 12 5 x—15 IT'S HARD TO BELIEVE By Harold J. Murphj MASSSENA TEAM LOSES TILT TO ST, LAWRENCE OW PEAff * AFTER I CJOT HIM ALU OQBSSEP UP *O(2 COMPANY ANP LOOM. MAMA, ISN'T QAG5 A GCEAT DOG OFF MY JACKET// Captain Ashley and Russell Jerd 'both set new marks in the meet, .pushed across four runs to make Captain Ashley established a new _ pole vault record of 11 feet 9 i _ the score read 9 to 5. Getting care- inches He skhntned over the bar . . less in the flrst part of the last in-1 W jth the skill of a college per- ! Victim 01 Drink Habit ning, the collegeians put three j former. The previous record in Ogdensburg was 10 feet 6 inches i'more runs on the books. Wes Pemberton, -who was hurling and by the mark Ashley up until relieved Viskovich 'who tossed the ball ' ed fourth in tlhe broad jump. Because of his fondness for set it : vineg-ar, Louis Smith, 35, of rural Romeo Takes First Prize in Tourney Rooky (Romeo, • last year's > Onondaga County thief i - |?rar.k M H the Convention were id Weegar; Captain .11. L. Riley, H. Shar- Smith. C. Smith, J. King, •::. J Borden, J. iDuvall, G. A. White, G. Robinson and -!, driver of the squadicar. STARS DEFEAT If Y NAME The S*. irs captained by Percy j |(fSnaughnessy took over the Jun- Hoi\ Name team last night at Washington diamond fey a 12 la: *,.,•• The Junior Holy Name team |copped the first game of their series played yesterday. |JJ the second battle the Nayef- ^ham squad tore down the win- s? hop-s of the Holy Name team •he Mfth inning and won the us* as they piled in seven runs. I TV CVholic boys as in the prey- \s battles took the lead tempor- 1% and then handed victory to pir opponents as the game pro- f-^sed. Houlihan for the Stars ou*. the only circuit blow e seven inning bat-to-4>at Charlie slanxmed out his the bases\ hit in the Utttt ., •, with no one on base. CHf- !•*<! Jesmer caught for tthe Stars. ball team lost its flrst ball game of i ixl ^ three innings the 1933 season in an exhibition the drive, allowing the liar- j \Rusaell Jerd, who is beginning to Smith was arrested for breaking Larrie Arch- i fans believe that he is the fastest The Massena Athletic Association i ries only one hit in the remain-j make Northern New York_ sport intQ & Stanford grocery store to j touriament. This time golfer Romeo was awarded three golf balls for taking the flag stoppln& ; human nex t to Je«se Owens, step- get a jar of pickles so that he,. c l led made the rounds accompan- ied a lively and fast century in j might drink the vinegar. On two ! ^rnie Vag-ner ^as^econd^vith match Saturday to the St. Law- Coach Tom Sullivan twisted his) 10 seconds flat. Jerd placed the! previous occasions he has been I an 87, and Tom 'Fitsspatrick plac- rence Larries by a 12 to 5 score. lineup around and around giving j / c . lnd f. r8 ? nd . P U8hed h j»nself over convicted of breaking windows for ed third. The locals led the pack in the hitting department but got jittery Paczakowskl, Flanagan, .Hurray in the first few inning and let' and Paxton did the twirling for erch man a fair chance to play. | the line about four yards ahead of - the same p Ur p 0S e. Leo Hutt of COflA. In the 220, Jerd placed first also. He galloped the costly errors slip past them. The ' winners and Hoffman was behind I °^lin 22^5 seconds. He out-, Greets Cuba 'MIAA team allowed the visitors , the plate, four runs in the first. Uip to the last of the fourth in- j ninff. the score was 4 to 0 in favor of the red r.nd gray outfit. It look- ed like a sbutout game, then John Jukoski took to the plate and con- nected with one of Paczkowski tosses for a homer. HOLY NAME MEN LOSE BY 11-8 raced the OETA streak, iLeo Hutt, ; Seven other Cuba's in the United hy ^^ odth , r ^7 &r l s .! n ^ h \l e 7^ 'States received greetings from Borglnm, the Sculptor Solon Hannibal Borglum was boni in Ogden, Utah, on December 22, 1868. He studied under Louis P. Besides placing first in the 100. l^\^\ '^\^ £**\£\*? \\\i- Reb 'sso in the Cincinnati Art school i:220, pole vault, Henry Bouchard i ^Y^xr •° n \endryx ot • and under F remiet in Paris. He 1 tossed the sphere to 43 feet 5 1-2 I Cuba > N - * •> m connection with Air took as his early subjects cowboys, inches. Lawrence Martin pushed Mail Week. His honor's greetings; Indians and other figures of Western The Larries hung- up five runs in I „ _ , , . „ , I the line, (Malone pushed in two and The Nayef-Durhaan softball team Canton one . himself over the low timber in were carried to Alabama, Illinois, 27.5 seconds to bound five firsts Kansas, Missouri, New Mexico | for the locals. CXF1A. had three on North Dakota and Ohio. New York's Cuba is the largesi QSE LANP TPHE Treaty of Sevres had left Turkey an emaciated state in J 1919—robbed of its Asiatic pos- ! sessions. Particularly did it gall j Mustapha Kemal Pasha that the A i.i L o-j \--- ii i * ..Li A CL ,,, Greeks had obtained Smyrna, im- Althaugh 93 years old last month, Isaac A. Sharp, well; po rtant and historic Turkish port known auctioneer and esteemed Ogdensburg resident, still i on the Aegean sea. doesn't know what a headache feels like. j So the blond, gray-eyed Gen- eral Kemal set about righting the the flrst of the sixth to take the f took its first victory of the 1938 interest out of the game. Then as | season last nigftt at the Washing- the battle raged on, the locals ton grounds over the Holy Name ~ team hy s. 11 to 8 score. ! Chet iMarando first man up, slap- peat out a hit for the Durham nine. Rover Frank Fellegrino belted out the second hit of the ^ame as he I ole aptfe. tBron-t, ; j cTTettf V/ia» < *the flrai out -^fhen RedF j' Karkerson connected the tomato t j for a long drive which was stretch- , ed into a homer. With these three , runs scored, the ole game was un-! der way and plenty of comnipetition . was staged in the field and at bat. i The Holy Name grabbed five j more runs in the third and then snapped 'back in the fourth to snrish out two more runs. The score read 8 to 3 in favor of the j Holy Name clan. Then as the last i of the fifth hit the books, the J Durham team smeared the inning with seven safe runs. f Chet Marando was on the cnound for the Durham team and Allen j Murray was behind the; mask, j Marando allowed the Holy Name 1 teftm 16 hits. Tom MoGuire alid | the deliveries over the plate for j the Holy Name and Ed 'Kuca held 'his throws. McGuire allowed the victors 14 hits. Nayef-Dnrham I Hutent Center of the eight in the United States Massena's Golf Pro Bo i ts for Bait Divers Off Tee Tom MrCuire was on the rubber I* the H- iv Name and JEd Kuca ! behind 'he home sack. I In the Stars team were the fol- Lyl* Rofbinson, ChaHea Mike iPrashaw, (Robert Raymond; Sharlow, Cfeorge •Cliff, Percjr O'Shaughne»sy, Houlihan\ Roy Squires and 0! \d Jesmer. Name: Alfred Patrazaaek, Francia. (EM Kuca, Walter Levj Parisian, Norman ;'• Clyde Lacomb, Pete Teasier, Pod^urski. -Bruno Kwasney, and Tom McGuire. periods: 303000 1—7 10 7 4 0 0 X-—. 12 fCastleman h i nBig Pike y '-eyed 'S p s in t h e pu^ed in a 4- pounds* aanre Is- Btver. . r c astleman put -mihnom* kL e 4u o f hb Iin « an * w * -*\ 1 \ -?. n the other. After patienf- for nibbles and this sspecie <whicft f*« m*\ ' hn Pe whicll waut long and a foot .arfcund Tourney lon.LaPreg ia8ued for the 4&L at the GBrasher {or Personally, he has never thought much about this—but it is doubtful if any other adult in this section of the state can lay claim to such a thing. When interviewed, Mr. Sharp who throughout his life has been a stickler for the truth said: \You'd better let me put it this way. I never remember of having had a headajebe. I might have had such a thin/ but if I did Incidentally, Mr. Sharp has a ig when a small boy—• ,Tl can't recall it.\ record in auctioneering which is something tp shoot at. Once he conducted seven big auctions in eight days. On another occasion he sold one at a time, 96 head of cattle in twp hours and 15 min- utes. ; He is also I one of the oldest au- tomobile drivers in the United States todayf His most! prized possession table in his home in stands on a New York Avenue. It is a huge silver water urn which he won Sept. 14, 191?, at the Ogdensburg Fair, for exhibiting the best pair of horses foi style action, break- ing and all-around appearance. And thougi he gets into the news every once- in a wMIs w the fact is—he doesn't like publicity! Today's Hard to Believe Story: On a hot Jul a girl walke< O Store in James Doe, wanted a pair There was extraordittary extraordinary had a double •he bad two day two years ago into Burke's Shoe The next day which was Sun-1 wrong, as he saw it. In two years day. found Mr. Doe at Sandy | he had drilled 90,000 fanatical Beach. He fell into conversation I nationalists into an army. Defy-. with a man there. The man told him he had seen something un- usual. U waa a girl who bad been in swimming- A girl with two heels on one foot! Mr. Doe, this time, reported the matter to the local police. Chief Herbert Myers traced the young woman and she was taken into custody near Glens Falls. And she proved to be the girl sought by the magazine. It'g Hard to Believe—but by a freak coincident, the girl, and the magajfine which caused her appre- hension, arrived at Burke's Store AT THBS. VBBY SAME SECOND that day. The postman who delivered the publication had walked in beside H A Toxmto With a Human Face: Wb«l Pore«t Waterman thd t lentburgr. She tore clerk, that *he of ihoes. nothing, of course, aj&ou* all this. The thing -was — the girl hee?; that Is to say, heel bones on one foot whicjf r< squired 'the Jbedl;^of the shoe to te specially adju»te<l to fit. This was done Hr, Doe—and a wearing Iter wn- in the store by gfrrt then left, «no«« . ,'. i Mr. Doe then tlroBed to th« back of the store, and satj down for a mo* ment to glance atja copy of a shoe ma«a*i»e. TnriHiif off the page*, he ca«e npos «* *nnowic«ni«it. It had b«4n Ini erted by the autaor- itiM 1B th» stite jo* Idaho anJ re* nuested that aftoej te* 1 ****\* ' lookout for a iHrl iwlth * ~^\» f HEEL! at Ogdensbure gathered tome to- matoes fn his garden, a few years ago, ht dt4n't pay any particular attention to them. HP placed them In tha gsmgt. ard kiter rsturned. hooilnt dawn, however, bfl sud- d«aly got- a rfinck. A face which Inojtoad HA t'lit of a soru&kta dwiff wi»* *tfrln' <r ' v n at Win, And then b« bud to i-\;sh. It wwtonly a toBMhv Hr> was so :ntrigu«d by tj»« **faoe M tfiat h<> later .made a of it which hangs in his possi- ft Popey of the Seven To add two numbers to tJ wbft* will maJte the remit Jem, place a small 3 at op of the l and a jottom on the right these two tfum- in this manner read; thrfte^and- pictured above. Alexander of brought, from te Alexander it while in ing the glowering of the Allies he marched these men against 150,- 000 Greeks. At the end of a year's fighting he finally drove the Greeks into the sea, literally burned them out of Smyrna. By. 1923 Turkey had won back most of its lost territory and' forthwith the now all-powerful Kemal took office as the president of the first'Turkish republic. He immediately abolished the Cal- iphate and removed Sultan Mo- hammed VI. Thence- began a series of re- forms that; is still shaking Turkey into a modern state. Fezzes were discarded, women were unveiled and permitted to vote, a new *1-, phabet was written, education wasj made compulsory for those under ^ 40, church was separated from! state, buildings were modernized! and good roads started across the'J nation. Meanwhile Kemal had risen to supreme power. Soldier, . statesman*, poker! player, .hard, 1 drinker, he had ' become the say*, ior, dictator and national hero of' his country. He 1 • is shown here en' a 1931 Tbrklsh postage stamp-. • (Copyright, 1939. NBA Service, inc.)' life, notable works being his \Last Round-Up\ and \Burial on the Plains.\ In 1911 he completed his bronze, \God's Command to Re- treat,\ representing Napoleon on horseback. Two statues of his in stone were unveiled in 1920 in the churchyard of St. Mark's in the Bowery, New York city. He was Y. M. C. A. secretary with the French army in 1918, won the Croix Frank H. Brown of the Pulaski power plant caught a 3 1-2 pound brown trout in Lighthouse Hill pond. Wheu the fish was dressed, j de Guerre, \and later was with the ita stomach was found .to- contain,j A. E. J\ in France. He died among: other miscellaneous articles, f 1922. two % nuts, a % machine bolt, and , ~ • a 3 i-inch nut. Upon hearing- of the trout's diet, Use for Auxiliary Valve An auxiliary valve on a steam K. A- Halsey, Pulaski ang-ler, sent I pump is a supplement to another to a mail order firm for a box of | valve. In case of a steam turbine- assorted bolts which he intends to try as bait in the pond. driven pump it is the extra nozzle valve to take care of low steam con- ditions. In the case of a recipro- Rejected Suitor Bums eating pump, it may be the valve .„,,„,, o . , „ .„ in the by-pass around the'governing Arnold Roberts, 24, of Granville mechanism. .\burned\ when 21-year-old Harriet I Diplock refused to consider him as ja suitor. Charged with third de- ^ree arson later, he admitted set- Court House Bell Tolled In the cupola of the Washington !£, . ta which, d*™^ a ha| y iZX'^T^Z\ ,bam belonging to his beloved's ; was tolled at the death of each per- son in the community. ibam b father. Crow, ss ah r hi »b 2 1 0!J. Riekard. r 2 o n T.Jukonki. 2b .\! 0 11 Ray mo. rf 3 1 0 A Vll Fros, r Dywan. p K 3 0 3 0 y 0 IA Valley, ss e 0 The atrove swing- photo shows j the Massena Country Club pro after he has knocked one of his Joe Mertens golf 'balls off its tee ! for a good 200 yard drive. l'B.Rickard.cb 3 o ot 'Down at the club he Is called O'R.St.Adamg. 3 0 1! Joe but when introduced they un- Kwasney. lb 3 0 C.Konko»ki.cf 2 1 tlT>vtor. lb 3 A. Jukoski.rf 2 0 I 1 ..Rickard.p 2 C«to. If 2 0 l'Rtuh. c 2 Pusek. 3b ..2 0 0|G. Lee. If 2 0 0 Kwatiney, c 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Total 23 2 5| Scon by inninpra: MASSKN4 ORNTER NAYEF-DURHAM .. 0 L.St. Adams 2 0 0 Total 24 1 4 0 0 0 10 0 0—1 1 10 0 0 0 x—2 UPTOWN GROUP BEATS PLANT The <Uptown-IPlant feud was set- tled Saturday afternoon with the TJntown clubbers turning in a 50% tb\24% win over the AOQA men. This marked the flrst .big event of the season in which nearly 40 mebera of the Country Club took part. The Uptown team was composed of' members in the business sec- tion. The iPlant team (players are employed in the (plant of the Alum- inum Company of America. After the duel, the winner \were guests of the losers at a dinner at the club house. raveled his full name of Joe IMer- tens. He i s a gradluate of Syra- i cuae Vocational High School of / 1988 and a former Yacht Club cad\ | die master of Syracuse. (Last | year he was pro at the Ogdens- j burg Club. I Besides being a good instructor and a regular fellow, he has a fav- orite saying, \Yes you Ibet\ The King Charles Spaniel The King Charles spaniel, a breed of toy dog, is t o known because it became fashionable in the reifn of Charles II. Seniority Rights Demanded By Older Group of Caddies No fist fights developed during the 10 minute strike held Satur- day afternoon at the Otfassena Country Club by tfae older caddies. The older club handler* and ball chasers protested over their seniority right*. The younger boys \who seemed to be getting all the breaks, disobeying <s»ddy rules, forced themselves upon the mem- The tape WU bers that -wanted caddies. The old- Ladiftn, andjer caddies owapteined, and when face 1« op the next fcatch of three hour men called by the pro, everyone remained motionless. [The second call came, then the third, finally Arthur Vail, chairman of the greens committee, came forward. He' settled the dispute With BUI Bogdovitx and George i (Patterson, speaking for the strikers. The new deal, which was grant- ed by Mr. Vail to the'caddie*, is that the pro vriu inaugurate a new caddy system. In this system * certain group ai caddies will IM picked for the staff, fives button*. «11. tun under a more orderly system. | Gun Shots By W. F. W. Intensive -practice is being held every afternoon from 4:30 to 6, at the rifle and pistol ranges, on ttie (Rod and Gun Club property, north of the pontoon bridge. fEJvery j shooter and would-be shooter is hereby invited to come out andi join the fun. Rifle shooters we particularly scarce. Where are all pf these ve- teran deer hunters, who like to keep their eyes in shape with a little .22 practice during the sum- mer? This is also a good spot tor some of the former members of Jerry Donnelly's rifle teams to add to their laurels. • * • Jim GJascock has graduated from stationary targets to trap fbooting- with his revolver. If clay pigeons aren't available, hell shoot at cans, blocks of 'wood, or assorted jewelry. Tough luck, Sob. * • • When we stated last week that McCarthy was doing a little prac- tice on the side, we didn't know the half of it thriving thumbtacks ig at 20 paces is hot stuff. you p h u # yo want .proof, ask iSYencoy l>egre, ••-#*• \ Don't forget that the teem 1 en- tries for the match at PJattsburg, on June It, must be mailed toy next Monday. That me^ns plenty of parcttee this week! Ogdensburg-Massena Bus Line \Safety Plus Economy\^ ' Mat*. „ , , Fare Round Trip Ug-densburg to Lisbon Cors 25c $ 40 Ogdensburg to Waddington 55 C \ 85 Ogdensburg to Louisville _ _ 75 C 1*20 Ogdensburg to Massena 95 C 150 Massena to Ogdensburg 95c « j'gg Massena to Lisbon Cors _ _ 75 C 115 Masaena to Waddington _ 45c .'75 Massena to Louisville ....._ _ 25c .40 Waddington to Lisbon Cors 30c .50 Waddington to Louisville 25c _ .40 Rural rate, Minimum 25c, 10 miles and under. Packages, 25 pounds and under, 25c and 15c to Waddington and rural, lc added for each pound over 25 pounds. Low weekly rates on request. Make Syracuse and Watertown bus connection on 7:30 bus leaving Massena. ,, Cir * 1 i* •'» fr- ft- DON'T BE FINANCIALLY EMBARRASSED! • • • It is always *r«ry embarrass- The whole purpose ol inf to be short of cashT But JRcnojufrloan service It some people hesitate to bor- to lend row bvcsBS* they think it will bt even more embar- rassiaf to ask for a loan! Well,, it ith't at Personal finance Co.! Ton can who rtquirtd tlttwhtn. •# eMityterefey iereMewils Come in and talk it over' in a private consultation Y 't b H ffficulties, just as c-Jnest ?»» to*™\ **« room. Y09 matt b* atkinff wm ** m ^ 1 us a f avoiwire'll aptr * The Overta* lit music, an overture ts in In- trotfuction to an oratorio, oper«, or other large composition. Don't htsittt* to come in, your calling. WtWfM ttfiH* w « $aoo PERSONAL FINANCE COMPWy 301 STATE P^ONE in?\ MtDomm *- stw • •*•••• • * ir