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Rheumatism Neuralgia Sprains r Miss C. MAHOJCTY, of 1708 K. 8U W, WtthiMtoa, I>.a, writes: •• I sufc f««d with7h«umaU*m tor JITO yww and I have iu*t got liold of your W- moot,^a ft has don« me BO modi g$h£iir^ *****»\**» &fetstl* Noras Maa- A.WEIMUX, of «B Thompson ««*« ia mj%Tr M destroyed fl*e years ago astd left me with a jentfag at niglit so tkat I could not rtewp. A friend told m© to try yoar idnUaeat and now 1 could not do without it. I tod after its a*el caa steep.\ SLOANS LINIMENT ^Isagood liniment. Tk*epiton hand all the time. My daughter sprained her wrist and used your liniment, and it has not hurt her since.\ JOSEPH HATCHER, of Selma, N. C, R.F.D., No. 4. At All Dealers Price 25c, 50c., $1.00 Canada's Offering It IM d0TH0r Mt e*i h* H0r Mntm em*is ham* ree Homesteads ssaft , are thous- bf Free Home- sieft,whichtothe making entry in v*>arK'time will be ±0 $25 acre. These lands wefl adapted to Strain growing& cattle • Itecwfent Railway -, • Facilities I In many cases the railways in , 1 Canada have been built in ad- I vance of settlement, and in ashort J time there will not be a settler ^ who need be more than ten or from a fine of rail- •e regulated Social Condition*. The Ameri- — - J -\»— - — tome in West- not a stranger _____ .having nearly ^^S_S*^ J. S. Crawford 301E_ Geoeaee St. Syracuse, N. Y. 3 or address Supt. of Immigration, 13 Ottawa, Canada. PIANO TUNING. When your Pianos Need TUNING OR REPAIRING Telephone or Call Verne W. Hoxie, 21 ELM ST., MALONE, N. Y. Has been three years with M. SLASON &SON. GUARANTEES SATISFACTION. Local Department STOCK Reducing Sale! I am making an effort to reduce my stock at least two-thirds—and will #ve you the benefit. Come and see the bargains in SHOES AND RUBBERS. LUMBERMEN'S RUBBERS, at cost price to close out. DONT FAIL TO COME AND SE E S. BOWAB. 161 E. Main St. Hayes Block. Makme\. A FULL LINE Of Calendars. Diaries. Ledgers, Ac- count Books, Post Cards. Book- lets. Burnt Leather Goods, Prayer Books. Rosaries and Novelties. GUT FLOWERS. MISS McDOVALD'S STATIONERY STORE, West Main Street. Malone. N. Y. f COAL, D.L.&W. SCRANTON COAL the best to be procured. JrYices as Low as the Lowest The steel tube whrtch conducts the water from the\ b-W-J&heaK. to the yr& ter wheels of thV DeGrasse Paper Co at Pyrites collapsed early last week Tuesday morning. No one was Injur- ed, but the accident necessitates the closing down of the mill for about two weeks, while repairs axe being mode. About 250 feet of the tube will have to be replaced. The new Saranac Lake General Hospital just opened will accommo- date 12 patients and will not receive tuberculosis cases except for sur- gical treatment. There are two wards with three beds each, for which the rates are $8 a week; four private rooms at $20 a week, and two rooms with bath in a private ward at $30 a week. The rates include board, or- dinary nursijig and medical and sur- gical supplies, but not medical at- tendance. A charge of $5 is made for the use of the operating room. Police. Captain Owen Sullivan, of Og-densburg, N. Y., is to bring tion ag-ainst a western railroad cor- poration for $25,000 damages for the death of \Diamond Dick,\ Dr. Geo. B. McClelland, his brother-in-1; which occurred'at La Cygne, Kansas, on I>ec. 1, 1912. McClelland was driving 1 across the railroad tracks •when his rig was struck by an ex- press train. He was taken to a Kan- sas City Hospital, where he died of his injuries. Syracuse •lawyers will prosecute the action. James White, a likely young -n 25 years of age and an -industrious workman, was killed near St. Albany last week while performing his du- ties as a brake-man on the Central Vermont R. R., and his body was, \brought to Malone Thursday morning It was taken to the ho<me of G. Casazza on Willow St. where it re- mained until the burial from Notre Dame church Friday A. M. White's parents, who survive him, reside on a farm in the McGillick neighborh.00 in the southwestern part of the town. There are two brothers, Lawrence, of Malone, and Silas, of Santa Clara; also three sisters, one of whom is Mrs. Lewis Casa'zza, of Malone. The sympathy of all goes out to the af- flicted family. Fraud is alleged in the recent town election in Franklin. It is claimed that many illegal votes were polled, especially in the first district whera 198 votes were cast on a registration last fall of 163. In this district Fad- den received 140 for supervisor and St. Clair 5 8. One lifelong: voter claims that at least 25 persons vot- ed there without a challenge who were total strangers to him, and that he personally saw one Canadian n<H naturalized, several Clinton coun- ty men and one resident of St. Lawrence county cast their votes. We learn that a judicial review of the election will be demanded, though Mr. St. Clair is opposed to a contest. Mr. Fadden's final majority was three votes. If there was illegal voting those responsible for it ought to be prosecuted to the full extent of the law, whether or not the re- sult - of the election is affected by the contest. Mr. McKillip, of Frank- lin Falls, was in Malorie on Saturday consulting attorneys in the matter as the representative of a large number of people of that town. We doubt whether the election would be set aside, as there were no chal- lenges, and if illegal votes were cas1 they were undoubtedly recorded foi both candidates. The golden jubilee of the coming of the Gray Nuns to Ogdensburg and the purchase by them of th old Ford Mansion from which has grown what is now known as th Ogdensburg City Hospital and Or- phan Asylum, occurs in June next The year also marks the golden ju- bilee 01 the profession of Sister St. Theresa, the venerable superior o the Orphanage and Home for th< Aged. When the first group of Gray Nuns arrived in Oe-densburg- there was no hospital, no orphanage, home for the aged poor anywhere in this section of the state. The little band of pioneers, six in number, came from the \Mother r Home,\ in Ottawa, or Byetown, O.nt, as it was known in those days. Their entire capital at the time might be summed up as an abundance of good will, strong and abiding desire to do good a T )d a vow of consecration to the service of the poor. These were very tangible assets, but they have realized great things in the end Truly the little mustard seed of \har- ity pLmuHi in Og-dcnsburg away back in June. 1863, has since grown and developed into a mighty tree, beneath* whose branches thousands of p< nd many more thousands of siok have found shelter and have learned forget their sufferings. Sister Theresa has been at the head of the Qgrd-essburg institutions for almost quarter of a century, during which' has been built the new City Hospital nd St. John's Hospital for Conta- gious Diseases, while the number of ;d poor and dependent children cared for gots on increasing year by year. By a happy coincidence a new building for the orphanage and school will be completed in June of s year of jubilee at a cost of about ?50,0G0, some ?4«,000 of which has already benn subscribed. There are at pres&nt 160 children in the Home and the number who have gone forth from the institution will total well nijrh 3,000. The various departments of all these charities are in charge of 21 consecrated Sisters. ttLOD RUBBER CSOODS FOR WOMAN'S HOSPITAL CIJCB. Th-e attention of housewives is called to the requ*«t of tho Woman's Hospital Club thflut all old rubber goods be saved. Everything: in old rubber from automobile tir«s to rub- ber bands for fruit cans can be> util- •d—• riil bur owr/hois, boots,\ costtar,- hot water bags, hose pip«s. PhbnM h all ready for collectors who will ga<ther before the middle of May. . • . ABE YOU CONSTIPATED? it so, «et a box of Dr Kltxg'a New Ufe Pills, take them regularly, and four trouble will qulcky disappear, they will stimulate the liver, im- prove your digestion and get rid of all the poison* from your system, fhey will surety get you we!! again, t&c at all druggists.'—Adv. Do you want Accident, Health, LJ- abtUty or Automobile Insurance? Talk with Skeel or his agents, Ma- to N Y. Get our new 1913 rates. Adv. Washington state has just abolish. e4 capital punishment Senator TiUman's comparison of the Democratic office seekers to \wtfld oases of the desert,\ is more amtisir* than c^mjplimeat&ry. I Unole Sam is stt obliging landlord. n Mrs. Wllsttn dossn't like the waH paper la the WMti House she may Co to ttos^ store tad order what site wsiots and Uiwflte Sam will r«paper the whole st»e-fa«i« for h«r. A WOMAN'S WISDOM. The worried mother wakes up to Im r her fasfcy'i ks«vy bresthJA|~i tittle cough—perhsps the croup or whooping oough. Sbe doss as* want to send for the doctor wbsa serfcaps the trouble does not amount to atvoh. finally the thinks of that medical book her lather gave her, The GOMM 9mm Medical Adviser, by E. V. Pierce, M. D. She says \ just the thing to find Oat what » the matter with the little dear.\ Two million households in this oovatryeffll one-and it's to be had for only 31c. in stataps—1,000 pages in splendid cloth binding. A good family adviser in any emergency. It is for either set. This is what many women write Dr. Pierce—in respect to his \ Favorite Prescription, ** * remedy which has made thousands of melancholy and miserable women eheerful and happy, by curing the painful womanly diseases which undermine a woman's health and strength. \My dosire is to write a few Hnes to let you know what your valuable medicine has done for me,\ writes Mas. MARGARET ZrRnRRT. of 333 S. Bctst&lon Htroot. Baltimore, Md. « Before the storck came to our house 1 Max a very sick woman. I wrote you for advice which was kindly <*iven and which mado mo a different woman in ashort time. After taking the first bottle of 'Favorite Prescription' I began improving so that I hardly know I was in surh a condition. I did my own housrvrork—washing- and ironine. eootdng, •sewinjr. and tN- w<^t of ,,n nurwi three cMl<ir< n who bad vr -h. I >,ar*ilv Know of tl>»* advf-Tit teni minutes hfforo. ( v\y v u$ \\. 'n M » h ; ,hy h a< i\;it as a hntter-ball. I>r. Pierc.vs i u\(.rit^ iTcwripthm i* t-hp bosi medicine for any woman t-> i;i i- n \i ben la tbi.-> c..iiditiou. 1 recommend it fids/' 'That's Jnst What Tve Been Looking For\ i HILE we were getting the opinion of farmers on our new cream separa- tor^ power outfits, one of them said: \I have been looking for such a combination as this. I need an en- gine with that kind of a gear on it to sfow down the speed. There are half a dozen small ma- chines on my farm for that engine to run. I .want that outfit \ This is a sample of the enthusiasm with which our new power outfits have been re- ceived. The outfit consists of an IHC Cream Separator Dairymaid, Bluebell, or Lily and a one-horsepower back-geared IHC en- gine. The engine is mounted on a portable trucks and can be used for any farm work to which power can be applied. The back gear adjustment runs at the proper speed to operate any hand turned machine. The working parts on I H C cream separa- tors are accurately made and the bearings are well lubricated. The shafts and spindle are the strongest used in any separator. The shaft and spindle bearings are supported by the frame, but have no contact with it — the con- tact is between the steel spindles and phosphor bronze bushings. 4 The gears are spirally cut so that there is no lost motion between them. They are entirely protected from grit and milk, but are easily accessible for cleaning. See the local dealers who handle these ma- chines. You can get catalogues and full information from them, or, write International Harvester Company cf America (Incorporated) « Ogdemburg N. Y. Easter Excursion to New York City Thursday, March 20th $ io.oo R T °r Return limit, March 30th Special Music in all the Churches. See the Wonderful Fifth Avenue Easter Fashion Parade. For full information, railroad tickets and sleeping car accommodations, commit N«w York Central Ticket Agent. NEWYORICt (CENTRAL) V LINES J BR. TMJBEAU'S 1OLPEKIENCE. \When I bought the first land on which the Adirondack Sanatorium I* built,\ writes Dr. Trudeau, of fiaranac Lake, \I paid %26 an acre for it, because it was a small piece and a selected site, but the price then w*s thought absurdly high. Every time I have purchased more land the price has risen steadily, and my last pur- chase of five acres cost me $6,000. Meanwhile the villa*** of Saraoac I_ake, whose limits were nearly on* mile away from the sanatorium, has steadily crept up towards the institu- tion until now private'residences are built at its' very gates and rent and sell for prices which are far in ex- cess of similar properties in small towns elsewhere. Of course, we doctors know that the idea of a sanltorium being any danger to the community in which it is located is simply absurd, and that, on the contrary, the education which comes from within its walls is an immense protection to the neigh- borhood. Tuberculosis is a commu- nicable disease under certain condi- tions, but it is not at all like any of the highly infectious diseases, such as »mail-pox, measles, etc. It is a disease where any danger of infection is within doors, and even this, with the simplest precautions, can be ob- viated. To my knowledge there has never been an employe who came to the Adirondack Sanatorium in sound health who developed tuberculosis while there; and a sanatorium can more endanger the health of the neighborhood\ in \\whichit is built, even if the residences are at its very gates, than it could if it were plac- ed on top of a hig-h mountain, mile) away from habitations. I In fact scientists, are beginning to think that, although every precaution should be taken to guard children against infection, adults are much more resisting- and are with some difficulty infected, because practical- ly all of them have come in con- tact with the bacilli of tuberculosis during early life and most of them have destroyed thesse bacilli in their systems and have thus become more or less protected against infection. The resistance displayed by adults to the frequent slight infection to which they are necessarily constantly ex posed in civilized life and their re- markable resistance in many in- stances to the constant and closes contact with tuberculosis, sometimes for a lifetime, without suffering th< least harm, is in the opinion o some scientists explained in this way. Now that we fcave taught the pub- Ii>- that ^tuberculosis is a • communi- cable disease under certain condi tions, it remains' to teach them just what the danger is and what not to be ai'raid of. BEST KNOWN COUGH REMEDY, For forty-three years Dr. King'_ New Discovery has been known throughout the woHd as the most re- liable coug-h remedy. Over three mil- lion bottles were uhed last year Isn't this proof? It will get rid of your cough or we will refund your money. J. j. Owens, of Allendale, S. C, writes the way hundeffds of others have done: \After twenty years, 1 find that Dr. King's New Discovery is the best remedy for coughs and colds that I have ever us ed.\ For coughs and colds and all throat and lung- troubles, it has nc equal. 50c and $1.00 a all druggists —Adv. »fait \WiLson green\ is now the propel thin-g. That is the color of the frown worn at the' inaugural recepti Mrs. Woodrow Wilson. This silk, j which is a 40-inch Cha.rm.-use. w : madt by the oldest silk manufactii j er i 11 Ameri 011 —the same mak<?r jwhom was entrusted the w^avin-er { the materials for the inaiisrur {gowns- of all presidents' wives\ fro Mrs. Grant to Mrs. Taft. j ed that this manufacture ;a popularity for the iif-v.- \Wilson ; Green\ quite a*; STeat as that enjo> : ed by his \AHoe' B1W and \Helen Pink.\ W. J. Semper, of Water-town, wh< recently returned from thi j Linos. Wivs not favorably _ j with that country. He says j-roing in 1 to fruit raising there is like going out on the Pine Plains, clearing off 1 t lot of scrub, pine a.nd underbrush, buiidin.tr a <Sh&ck and waiting, five \eai\s for returns. Living costs there J early twice what it does in the United States, the soil seems poo and communication is very bad. I: is estimate*3 that nobody sftvould set- tle there unless he has fund of S500 an acre, to tide him over. Hay costs $42 per ton and a duty of To cents a case has to be paid the Cuban government for all iruit shipped from the island. Mr. Semper was favorably impressed witt Cuba, BEST FOR SKJX DISEASE, Nearly every skin disease yieldi quickly and permanently to Buck len's Arnica Salve, and nothing is better for burns or bruises. Soothes and heals. John Deye, of' Glad win. Mich., says, after suffering twelve years with skin ailment and spend- ing ?4O0 in doctors' bills, Bueklen's Arnica Salve cured him. It will help you. Only 25c. Recommended by all druggists.—Adv. , Accidents will happen, but the best regulated families keep Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil for such emergencies. Two sizes, 25 and 50c, at all stores.— Adv. \ \Pittsburgh Perfect\ Twice Earnest to Erect, looks Best, lasts Longest— , the Most Satisfactory Fence in die World There yoVjiave it in a nutshell. The heaviiAcalvanized special Open Hearth Wire il ^nequalled in toughness, strength and di It is ^cientificalljjjconstructed and de- signed to meet you&^eeds without waste, and thereby saves \ V money. \Pittsburgh Pei' ^eliminates end- less repairs, and effectually stops this drain on your time, energy and purse. You can buy the present-day \Pittsburgh Perfect\ Fence, put it op, and then for- get it for years. This is true fence- economy. You'll spend much less money for your fencing if you always buy \Pittsburgh Perfect.\ Every Rod Guarantied SWKELESS SOFT COAL MMESR, JONES CASTOR IA Sold on Approval If you buy a piano of us and It doesn't prove satisfactory to the last degree, we ask you to come and choose another Kits place. There isn't any \STRING \attached to that statement. We are as anxious as you can possibly be to have you pos- sess a piano that w HI be a credit to your home and the store that sold it. A first payment of $10 and future monthly payments of small amounts will secure a SATISFACTORY piano at once. \ ESTABLISHED 1876 MALONE.IRY. The New Quincy Market OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE. THIS OLDEST OF MALONE'S MARKETS Has been completely renovated and is now conducted by MAGUIRE BROTHERS. Lowest Possible Prices CONSISTENT WITH THE HANDLING OF NOTHING BUT THE HIGH EST CLASS OP FOOD-STUFF. Staple and Fancy Groceries and Meats . VEGETABLES IN SEASON. \ SPECIALTY OF FRIDAY WANTS It is to your advantage to Call on Us. HOME *PHONE 167. •+•+•^••••+•+•+1 I COLUMBIA BATTERIES. ll We have made a contract to handle Columbia Batteries for 1913 and will receive fresh shipments each week, Send to us for your batteries and you are sure to get fresh stock. I WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HL D_ Thompson & Co., MAI-ONE'S MODERN HARDWARE, Mill and Main Streets, - - Malone, N. Y. MEAT SCRARS Feed it ihc year 'round and have eggs Winter i. Summer Sold By All F««d Dealers. INSURANCE IT IS PATHETIC To observe how hard some men work to evade paying out money for insurance and it is ludtcrooa to hear these same mem tell of their hard luck after a low occurs. Don't join this class, {attire now, with DUDLEY «f EDWARDS. HOKTON BLOCK, - . - MALONE. NY <