{ title: 'The Malone farmer. (Malone, N.Y.) 18??-19??, April 09, 1913, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1913-04-09/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1913-04-09/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1913-04-09/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1913-04-09/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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•#• «• PEOPLED WANT COLUMN. •» often 'sails a heose. oVS>lookWf<ff BEAl ESTATE BAR6AINS We ON SELL TOUR t£AL STATE A. B.PARMELEE * SON s Tmss LAXM AKD es PHorsarr AGKNT. GEO. W. DtTSTIN, FOR SAUE—A large well-built Louse barn, hen house, about IS acres of sjood land, facing Webster and Woodward streets, containing a nice lot of young fruit trees, all kinds of berries, currants, grapes, etc. In- <juire of Mrs. E. E. Muller, 167 Web- ster Street, Mai one, N. T, 14tf. TELEPHONE POLES—66 feet long for sale. Apply to A. P. Beebee, Malone. N. Y. 12tf Farms for Sale SEVERAL GOOD FARMS. SOME LARGE AND SMALL. INQUIRE Win. St. Mary, 45 W\ Main St., Maktie, N Y. A Good Spring Tonic. Forb i.sfckhead- a«fee,k»ef appetite, malaria, get a bot- tle ol Baxter's Mandrake Bitters,** best i dii Sold everywhere, Bqtdd TKEE GENERATIONS BATE PASSH) Shacetbe discovery ol DOWNS' ELIXIR far coagh*, colds and lung troubles but fcwaods remain to tefi the story of Us sjsoucsrrtil cures* Sold everywhere. Painting, Decorating and Paper Hanging Plastic Stucco and Kalsomining. I am now ready to show my Samples and give estimates on PAPER HANGING, PAINTING and DECORATING. A full fine of Walt Paper Samples, Util- ity Wall Board for partitions, B. & S. Wai) Beard for floor borders. W. B. Hebert, 120 Duane St., Home 'Phone 32 Out of town work given prompt attention. CAR LOADS CONSTANTLY ARRIVING OF FOLLOWING: THE Cream Separators, Gasoline Engines, Farm Wagons, Grain Drills, Manure Spreaders, Syracuse Plows, Harrows, Mowers, A pearl fro&ary on West Main street. The owner can find same at The Farmer office. 17wl WANTED — Girl or middle-aged woman for general housework. Ad- dress Box 28, EJoomlngdale, N. Y, 17w6 FOR SALE OR TO RENT—Modern house, large and roomy, bath and all conveniences, good barn. House conveniently located at head of Acad- emyy St.'t Fine view. Will sell or rent. T easy. C. W. Cady, corner and Academy Sts., Malone, 17tf S Terms Shields N. T. flection* on the Mystery of tlie Flowing: v S»p.—Syracuse College of Forestry indents Making Sugar at Wftnakena.—Injury to Old Tree by Ioe Storm Stirs Tender Sentiment. —Smallpox in a Lumber Camp. — Successful Test of Electric Car Carrying Its Own Power on Long R«n Between New York and Bos- People who predicted a short ma- ple sugar season this year were not good seers. The^ belong to the Various Com*mites.--\mmai Card Party and Hotter Soon to Bo Held. A largely attended meeting of The Woman's Hospital Club was hold at the rooms of the Mtilom* <;iub yes- terday afternoon. Ver> graining re- ports were given &y sev tees and by the treasur ed that thtre wer$ o\ < sand dollars in the »»\ the t-rfdit of the ehib, tween two and three nu had already been spent of bedding, etc., prcpu opening of the hospiln nil eommit- f. *-no etat- four thou- i>«.s 1-ank to n<i that be- (Jr-1 dollars! Will Decide Cam ol County Against Ex-Sheriff Henry, as Ottly a Question of Law te Involve*.— Retrial of I>eparots Damage Salt Against Rutland B. R. Opened Monday, Following the verdict in the .„ »f the Chateaugay Agricultural So- case oiety vs. Farley, elsewhere referred to in this issue, the partition of Carrie L. Hale vs. Albert I M\osier and others were ht-ard, an ax- tr pl f j Thfe Yea* By FtrM Cttnrch, Fulton, One of ttw? Strong- est Churches in the Territory. This morning Northern N. Y. at nine o'clock the Conference, met in Fi ence, met in annual session ut First Church, Ful- ton, and is attended by ail of the Methodist clergymen in St. Lawrence Jefferson, Utvis, Oneida, H^rkiraer TO RENT-—Fine flat, No. 244 East Main St. All modern equipment, bath, electric lights, etc. Suitable for small family. Inquire on the prem- ises. 17tf WANTED—Home* for Catholic chil- dren. People desiring- to adopt chil- dren apply to John W. Rowley, Su- perintendent of Poor, Mklone. 23tf FOR SALE —Established millinery business of seventeen years. Aid- dress N. T. 121 Bast Main St., Makme, 47tf FOR SALE—Best river front lots in Fort Covingrton. Centrally located. For particulars address F. Bucklln. Fort Covington, N. T. 16wl OLD NEWSPAPERS in bundles of 25 can be procured at The Farmer office for 6 cents. WANTED—25 handy men on general construction work. Wages $1.75 to $2.25 per day. Jobs immediately available. Apply la person to Wxal Noonati, Aluminum Co. of America, N, T. IBWS TO LdBT—Well equipped cottage on the QL Zfewrenc* at Fraser's Point, P. Q. Three boats, piano, ice, wood. For-terms inquire of Mrs. Elizabeth M. Fra»r, F t Covinston. N. T. 12tf. DB, SALE—A one-half i«rt*r«st 2a a water power about one mile north of Malone village. Volume of water fenrteen thousand fast a minute. Dam 45 feet high can be construct- ed. Ample reservoir of 100 acres. Parties interested can call on or address A. P. Beebee, B. F. D., Ma- lone, N. Y. Utf, ,<• OLdD PAPERS—Special price on old newspapers put up in bundles of 16. B% discount on quantities of 60 or 100 set* or more. These papers SBH readily in snafcll towns at a rood profit; Write Stevens & Turner Co., MaJone, N. T. 2tf fOR SAJLE—Two coal heaters small •fee. Inquire if First St., Ma- •ne, N. Y. 46tf. Sugar and syrup labels can be pro* cured at The Malone Farmer office. PUBLIC AUCTION OF CATTLE — The underisgned will sell at public luctSon at our farm, on the town line road 4 miles north of Malone Tuesday, April 15, at one o'clock, 20 head of cattle, mostly grade Hol- steins. Among them some are fresh, some are springers and 3 are far- row due to freshen in September. A few nice 2 year old heifers due to freshen in September. Four yearling heifers. We are • selling our entire herd with the exception of 12 two- year-olds. It is not a case of weeding them out. The 20 cattle mentioned above will positively be sold. KANE BROTHERS, Wm. H. O'BRIEN, Auctioneer. 16w2 FARM FOR SALE—In town of Ran- cor, containing 130 acres in good state of cultivation. 100 acres under cultivation. Number one buildings. Good sugar works of 800 trees, new sugar house, two fruit orchards, run- ning water at house and barn Spring brook in pasture. Good lo- cation. A loaded team will make two trips a day to Malone or Ban- gor station. Reason for selling— ill health. Will sell on easy terms or exchange for something smaller. FRED J. \ Route 2, 3tf. WRENCE, ione, N. Y. AUCTION SALE— The undersigned will sell at public auction on his ua l Who can explain the mystery of the sap? It is supposed to be rais- ed from the, roots by capillary attrac- tion, and yet when a tree is tap- ped nobody seeme to know whether th*e sap runs UJP or runs down. Tap a tree at its base and it will run, or cut off its topmost twig and the sap bleeds there. Probably a tree la like a storage battery, and when surcharged with sap, the same capil- lary attraction which brings it up from the soil draws it to a wound, if properly located, from all direc- tions. Why is the sap of some trees much sweeter than the sap of oth- er varieties of trees or of other in- dividuals of the same variety? Why is the sap of the basswood and iieanlock stored later in the season than in the m&ple? By what necro- mancy does freezing an»j thawing force the storage of^majile sap to its highest maximum ? Cold alone will stop the flow and so will continued warmth. The process is as mysterious as the resurrection of the flowers—as of life itself, which nobody as yet hajs been able to fathom, though some have claimed to produce the simplest forms by chemical action. Under natural laws, which we do not comprehend, laws ordained by a supreme Omnipo- tence, the old Earth seems to have in itself the elements of life, and time and change^ have power to clothe these elements in new forms of creation fitted for the desert, the morass, for mountain and sea. For convenience we call it evolu- tion, but it remains the same mys- tery as we attempt to trace it in its endless ramifications, or hearer to its source. We do not know the extent of the attributes of vege- table life, which is apparently leas complex than animal life^—how much in its manifold forms it can taste or see or feel. Branches grow and leaves turn toward the lifcht with a sense of its existence. Sound waves no doubt record themselves upon sensitive vegetable structures, aa phonographic film, and some, ^plants respond to touch and have limited power of motion, such the insect feeders. The most complex being which Karth has ye produced or known is man, because f intelli endowed This intelligence too is one of the products of life which nobody can explain. Life seems to pervade ev ery cell of a living being\ for science now preserves it in separated animal tissues by subjecting them to proper and continued temperatures. It ia all very strange. The mystery the spirit of life is all about and in us, yet there are those who, in this great intangible spirit- universe, claim to be material- The receipts from th- - cial have been increased Rev, I,,N purchase of bricks fey tin- « dren of the county are ,iK< in, and friends from n,ii who have heard ot tlu< prophets of Baal. True, it warmed up unexpectedly at first and the sap nearly dried up as the result of it, but Old Winter h^j since caught his « Clf ,_ t . Slg4 - 4 breath more than'once before expir- • !»*.»*, ing and there have been several re- lapses \of sugaring which have al- ready extended the season to its us- ual length; and the maple buds are not yet swollen. The trees seem to know what the weather is going to be better than we, for the overwarm- tng of the top of the, ground the last of March drives down the cold to the tree roots and holds back the buds for the cold waves which must of necessity follow unseasonable con- ditions. And until the buds swell the sap keeps flowing. We have heard about sap running a stream but we never almost witnessed it until Mon- day morning. On a fresh tree tapped one could hardly count between the drops, and the big run of this week will provide plenty of maple syrup for the flapjacks of the year to fol- low. ; tra panel of jurors having first been ; drawn. This was made necessary by ,and Oswego counties, with the ex- G ceptlon of Phoenix, a large part of Madison county ad ll f Franklin > king so- * bi-latt-a . illn As of jurymen or their families. Madison county and all except Saranac Lakt, which' te\m~ eluded in the Troy conference, ex- tending down the east and northeast' side of the Adirondack*. The Fui- ton church, where the conference ias ' i meets, is one of the strongest in the -. ~, _., « WJTO U x . «u«:nins,'!^\ ferem; *' havln * a membership of Horace Aubrey, George H Averill 1 U ' a Sunday School enrollment of- ------ - ' '' K8C <—• a church property valued the result of the drawing Rus- sell J. Cunningham, A. H. Mould, ' Chas. E. Stewart, Joseph F. Dum; 'ITohn i P < R - Kirk ' ^on^rd ^ Hutunli •oming Alfred Boyea, Caraius M. Hastings, Henry E. Kimpton, Frank E. Kft- cham, Willard D. Warner, Lansing 585 an d at $59,000. present pastor. Bishop Hurt, ~ who Rev. C. L. Peck is the ber of pastoral changes is looked for. her portion of the property. The de- arrangement made several years prio next month. Earlville, a settlement of Chateaugay, near the f'ana Wiaor the scene of & bold shortly after eight o'clo* k night. Mrs. J. A. Cook runs eral store there and her livin are in a part of the building. Mrs. Cook and others were about the store j' all evening until ten o'clock. On go- j ing into the living grooms she found ' ' a if h« should stay on the farm and care for his father, who was nearly blind, the farm would be his. He also alleged that the other children had all left | home and had received their shiares j of their father's property. The moth- 't hld star wit- °orroborat- ppy °'tne children was « °L defenda ? t aa d his story of the arrangement al- leeed to «*•« someoaie had entered a rear win- I y, h I dow ahd taken her handbag from J us ^ ana - the closet containing over a thous- S C and dollars in currency. Tracks, apparently of rubber boots, led to ai*8 from th e window, departing in a different direction from which made -with her they came, but they could not folLo»w«d and there was no other to ttee offender except suspicion. ' Sheriff Edwards was notified and at once took steps to -secure trained bloodhounds to put on the trail ] Theee Were located at two poin jury upheld defen contention and gave him a verdict. In the case of Bcutley Dustin va Michael J. Crowley, an action for damages for injuries resulting from an automobile accident last season, a motion was made to set aside a settlement to which defendant had .sentcd under an alleged misappre- hension. After hearing both sides the judge set aside the' settlement and the case was restored to the in . , .__ ... _ _ » Central New York, one btlonging to I ^ Iendar - Later it was put over the the JST. Y. Central R. R. and anoth- | Ier ^ „_ _,_ ^ er to a resident^ of Wampsville, and j reached Tupp«?P Lake Sunday night. Monday morning- Detective McQuade| W ' brought them ompany with to Malone, and, the. sheriff, went and! The attk>n < entitled, The County - I of Franklin against Geo. S. Henry, as brought to recover moneys paid him while sheriff.for caring for Chinese prisoners. During the term to Thjs averages, from one year to an- other, about one third the memsber- the. Conference. Only two w, me pastors have died during the year. These are Rev. S. M. Fisk, on* of the patriarchs, who has long beer superannuated, and Rev. A. E. Page a comparatively young man, who was» serving the church at Farishville. Some idea of the importance of the conference may be gained from the fact that it contains 280 churches* valued at about $2,000,000, and 188 parsonages valued at $3997000, on aD of which property there was an in- debtedness one year ago of less than 480,000. The church membership of the. ''onference, including probation- ers, is about ^0,000. There are 295 Sunday Schools, with over 4,000 offi- cers and teachers and nearly 40,060 enrolled members. About $80,000 WHUB raised by the conference last year for church benevolences, and nearly $187,000 for pastoral support, be- sides many thousands for other pur« posee. Two questions ,of grave interest Will ooane before the conference, via* The problem confronting the country work, or what shall be done with country charges that are unable long- er to give a comfortable support to their pastors; and the work among \ s Italians in the cities. These are the scene of th-e burglary. The dogs followed a. trail f#ttr or five to a house atross the lin* 1 in Canad, ., jberge, the board of supervisors voted mikst the latter 50 cents per week for The officers made thorough innuiry, but were unable t$> do much over the border, an«| tie money was not found. The s\herift return- ed Monday nijrht but MvQuade re- j msained at th* scene with the doss j , 7? on Tuesday to make- further attempts i sn . l * rm to locate the guilty party. Clothes of ' * hem ; but the count y wanted the the suspected man in the case were ' boarU n »>ney, so the board of super- procured; of his predecessor, F. S. Steen- I tw o stT&te & c Quostoins and the con- 'sideration of them wUl doubtles* bring ( - forth considerable discussion Som* feel that the Italian work should take preference to the coun try work, while others are of the* Opinion that the work m our needy rural sections should bo regarded a& foremost. In the entire Methodist Episcopal connection there are 131 conferences e covering the United States and for each Chinaman cared for in the United States prisoners, whose board the county received handsome sum after the sheriffs 'ffice was tna.de a salaried position. \ talk at the time that th< was not obliged to receive yards. It was shaped like one of the famous umbrella trees of Florida and was almost as perfectly propor- tioned as though it had been year- ly groomed. Jn blossoming time it made a picture- ol nailing white ami of the superlative degree gence with which he is l did not think to put props under it i until relieved of ^ eight of ice. ted-by both parties. The next case called was that of Elizabeth Desparois vs. the Rutland Smallpox has appeared th-e past R. R. Co. for injuries alleged to Week »r so in more than a half doz- have been received in a railroad ae- en towns in Centr.il N ,w York, and cident in 1911. The action was tried the state inspectors have traced the I at the fall term of the court in -source of tht conu.-.on to th* ium- I 1912 and consumed considerable time ber camps near St. The man who assumes to be- jy seems that a sick lumberman from! and this is a retrial. farm one half mile east of lieve only what he can see and un- o«ie of these cami* ma* taken into press the case is still on a private house na r MJnoa, and April 16th. at one o'clock, the follow- e of which he himself is the. principal carried the central part The Knights of Pythias six milch com, four of which to -other villages cate their new Home at Ogdensburg: have freshened; two two-year olds, one to freshen soon; three yearling Down in Oaej&a coun- with imposing exercises on July 4th livsery steble at j and committees on reception, finance. PROMPT SERVICE, CLOSE PRICES\ in the Adirondack* Pu sleds, mowing ma- entertainment, decorations and trans pils of the Blltmore School are mak- chine, horse rake, plow, potato plow, it was dlecoyered that parts of the state will be represent Lake, having morning: household furniture town hall and going out thereat of ©th«r housekeeping utenails. B. J. TA1XOR, infected, tha.t they had public gather! expected from New the day for practical reaearoli. The York and Brooklyn alone. Governor BREWSTKR «, MALQNE, N students of the State Banger Schoo: Q'BIUBN, AuotJoneer Sulaer is considering an invitation to be present, and the. supreme chan cellor of the order is expected as of the honor guests. There will be a parade from the city to the Home in the forenoon and the plans are of the State College Syracuse are making* maple sugar on it started in the nearby Ittin- woods, unusual preoautiona be taken in this county to They have a complete outfit boat and most modern %H utensils and machinery to have the exercises been floating around in j time for visitors to witness the reg- Pranklin county towi&. It! uiar. Fourth of July sports at the learning thus to utilize the standing tt to he bt dta Th tormt t th best advantage. would be well to watch students take part in every operation The direct primary bill and other firofe the tapping- of the trees to th« amendments to present harmless children's e«rru& They are also receiving Instruction in the utilization and forest waa*e and ra election Jaw Introduced by Assembly- HATSMtE WHY? PRIGBS AND n*ui Vert, of Clinton county, been-smothered in committee. A mo- One day recently a oar left the tion to discharge the. committee was Central station at New Tork, and, beaten by a strict party vote: is the Mil which sought to abolish ob«erYin«r winter condl- the designation of candidates by par- Of trees and for«>at and f©ceiv bottmy, geology an< Iatl»at«ly associated at Boston, a distance of for years has with storage while he has succeed^ *i AM) attiA* vehicles MMb oommitteee and substitutes desig- petition of the electors It also deprived any can for nomination of the benefit the party emblem, to which power, he has been Bat Tammany wuW have It aad no reMef front tats for the frem New T passengers « cost of H COStS car complete is ind or a well before election but doe* compelled gators of every * totl party to *urre&<*er to an extotlag or* the rif^t to perpetuate tt Una ofDcial nsimary i tlcltet by QManttttw designation, ttm th© to have th« j>«rfer«atial any number* a run feave to Th« New th« car plac* and will k«eo the yoke on the fwther by d«lly use. law such payments were il- _legul. and suit was afterwards direct- 1 ed to be brought to recover the moneys so paid. The honest in- tent of both ex-sheriffs has not been questioned. A jury was called in this rase and testimony presented green, the like of which\ the\village Friday Saturday Judge Borst was In did not possess, and best of all right \Amsterdam holding a special terra, in the most conspicuous part of the ' bnt ino case was continued Monday town. Nearly one ^hole side of the corning. At the close of the evi- tree\*has been broken down and des-, donce J t was f(>u n<3 that there was troyed by the ice. spoiling its uni- i Practically no disagreement as to form proportions, but there is con- matters of fact, only the construc- siderable of the u-p left to cause, tion of the law itself being involved, the busy man to pa ,se and admire ' The matter was therefore taken from Local Department At the monthly meeting of ttwi Malone Board of Trade last evening 1 , Judge Paddock made a report upon the establishment of the Farm Bu- reau and the work done to secure It, In which he represented the Board of Trade very efficiently. A vote of thanks wfe* tendered him for his in- terest and untiring efforts In the matter, which have bee« crowned with success. Speaker Clark, of the house of rep- resentatives. ha« appointed Congress- man Merrltt a member of the com- mittee on Hulf«. Thte is probably the most Important commHtee to tho house and Is seldom accorded to* * new member. Mr. Merritt's. loag ser- vice in Albany, during whieh he we* speaker, majority and minority leath- er- of the assembly,* peculiarly quai- Ifies him fo th l b y, peuliarly quai- es him for the place and brought m the welld h on his hurried errui.ds, and to cheer j the jury and left to the decision of j lf ttieT % wayfarer. out men and taken them away. As a rule these men have made good wherever they have gone and by their splendid accomplish- ments have brought honor to their home conference. Several men who started within its bounds have been elevated to the episcopacy and other offices of high honor within the gift of the church. Rev, George Mains, D. D., now the senior member of the Book Concern, the greatest pub- lishing house in the world, was born within the bounds of this conference. So waa Dr. Tipple, now the. presi- dent of Drew Theological Seminary. lfi< him the well-earned honor. Those who participated in ^i» Knights of Pytbfcus Minstrels werto delightfully entertain^ at St. Mark*« church last evening at a luncheon. There were music and other social features and ail had a very pleasant time. F. H. Bryant, president or the Men's Club of the church, presided, and remarks w«re made by R$v Barrett, Messrs. Kirk and Main, ami Judge Borst, who was an invited guest. The singers who participated in the minetrel \entertainment fur- nished the music. The Rutla-nd R. R. has been hav- ing all sorts of trouble with its road- bed in Vermont and has been <J«> touring trains from Alburgh, to SK Albans and Burlington for consider- ably more than a week on account of washouts, making the trains very late. The three mll« stone fill in th« lake near South Hero has been git- ing the most trouble, as repairs wer« washed away in the wttod and higft water before completed. Cobbl© stone for the top of the. fill haa been hauled by cars from the gravel pit to Malone. The New York State Underwriter*' Association have voted to hold their July meeting st U*e Loon Lakf* House. At least 16$ special agenU and officers of fir« insurance com- panies and their wive* will be presj- ent and the meetin#-4a- expected to prove a very enjoyabto one. The Loon Lake House was chosen as a result of the efforts of G. H. Hale. Last year the underwriters met at the Stevens House, Lake Placid *.«=«, «•* Ttifiy foriner »y tt«W their summer I the con- meeting annually at Hotel Frontenac, doubtless Tfiou s an1 3 Islands, until it was burn- ed. Invitations have been issued for th« wedding of Lieut, Aivin Inman Mar- shall, son of N. M. Marshall, pres- ident of the People's National Bank, and Miss Carolyn Louise Howard, daughter of 'Village President Geo. S. Howard. The wedding takes place at the Congregational church Satur- day, April 19th, at six o'clock, Rev. Mr. Duffield officiating, to be fol- lowed by a reception at the home of the bride at 7:30 o'clock. Invitation*} to the latter function are limited. Mr. Marshall is first lieutenant of Co. K and a popular officer. He had been connected for some years withi the well-known hardware firm of H. n< jljD. Thompson A Co. His bride- to-be is an accomplished yowng lady bad somebody the r-ourt upon briefs to be submit- were added to the have during years gone out from this territory the list would be. a long one. One of the bishops remarked some years ago : that he^could take the pastors o£ the | Northern New York conference and supply the churches of Chi more satisfactory manner then filled. There is among the ministers of ero * to • th G conference aJ» exceptionally good • spirit, so that harmony and unity {prevail to a remarkable extend. This j fact has been often noted and com- | mented upon by visiting ministers from other conferences. At the pres- ent tin*© the conference hns a large quota qt promising young men, many of them graduates-of the best schools, who have made good in their work. The conference services at Pulton will continue for about a Week, the of sterling worth. Their many friends) will be glad to know that they will make their home in Malone, having already engaged a neat cottage on Lawrence Avenue. At the rfgiilar meeting of Co. K Monday night, the Company voted to attend the wedding in uniform. ifirs. A. Garreau and four children, one a babe of four weeks, of Lon- g\ieil,a suburb of Monteral, are visit- ing at the home of her brother, Dr. Senecal, in Plattsburgh, driven from their home by floods. The Garreaus) kept watfh of the rising water and • one night'before retiring removed ev- erything from the basement of their house, fearing that during the nigh* the water would reach that part of . th«ir house. At aivcmt—8~ A.~ M. Mr. Garreau -was awakened by the pounding of ice agamst the sides of , the house. He found that the water had reached the first floor. He went \ basement to draw the fire and? Mrs'. Garreau followed. The water rose so rapidly that he was obliged to take her in hie arms and carry her through the water to an upper floor. The .tide soon reached the se- cond story and the family and neigh- bors who had gathered there had to be removed in boats, the water hav- ing reached a depth of fully fourteen) feet above the street level. After several weeks and a chase all cjver th* southern part of the coun- ty ChUsf of Police Brennan, of Sara- . ; pastors all returning to their stations «*«-ia»5e. and Sheriff Edwards fin- *\* *<x*t*<l Thomas Reese, who re-;. or going to new locations after the appointments for the ensuing year have been rvad on Monday or Tues- day. These are made by the bishop, with the advice of district superin- tendents who compose his cabinet, and of whom there are four. If a plan introduced at a recent meeting of the S. P. C. A. is adopt- ed, .Jefferson county will have home for old and lame horses, where th«7 may be kept when they are too infirm to work. This plan^has been adopted in Massachusetts. The plan as outlined was to get a farm which is not in ttse, or to secure the loan of some, pert of a farm. H^re la horses and animals, whose days of uaefutn«s» are over, will be taken to end their day* i s pws?i The box party given by the Ban gor- Grange Saturday evening waa largely attended and proved a. big success. Clarence Rarwood's team of hi* was succejMfnt In the old-fi spelling-down cont<«t. Two •upporters bolides himself were not swelled 6own. v?\. H. O'Brien prov- ed himself a host in conducting the aoctloo and tfeere wasn't a slow mln- U*» during the sale. The bidding was humorous and spirited and the boxes) sold at an average of nearly a dol- lar each. A handsome sum went in- to the Orange ©offers a* til* n«ttft of the sate. A buggy whip last article sold and Uve swetttd the : i received from the sfele above the *60 mark. T*e Graa*» *tt> give another of tt» popular entftrtaln- meets on April 19th. j sides between Alderbrook and Sugar* . aush in the town of Franklin, and for assault and not*- was wanted support of his wife and children. He has been Held for the grand Jury and ban fixed at $1,000 which ha furnished.*- The most serious charge against him seems to be that in a terribly cold day last winter he compelled two of his little children to work out of doors on a drain until the hands of both of them* and also the feet of one were more or leas frozen. Their ages, we hear were 9 and 11 years. The sheriff attempted to locate him some weeks ago, but be managed to get out of reach. Saturday*'night Brennan. who had learned that Kee«e had return- ed home, sent word to the sheriff to come af once to Saranevc Uke. With Tornkey LaPlant the sheriff start- ed on the night train which left about three-quarters of aa hour la- ter. Brennan had as automobile ail ready and the party went througti woods home. the night to th* Tlwgr feofid that th« man th*y sougfct had been there bn* had teft tiw hoasK. They followed Mm tmll to u oid boose in th« the Highway. Th« but Ke*©^ 1 w«»# oot «oua4. Then a search of th« %*n wte made and Brennan locat- •k him hWtag under the floor o« Re came out rub- pr«t«eding to h«v« ««eo ateeptog there. He admitted ttttft weeks h« hm.4 about m the woods keeping out o§ sight of people m ord^r to avoj£