{ title: 'The Malone farmer. (Malone, N.Y.) 18??-19??, February 26, 1936, Page 2, Image 2', 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/sn84031968/1936-02-26/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1936-02-26/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1936-02-26/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1936-02-26/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Northern NY Library Network
v WAUMAS FAR*** - W>»LrtHIH« CORPORATION IJDON R. RUSSELL. irer, Malone Secretary, Malone O«oe 1 W Main tt* Ualon* N. Y. JSU R. RUSSELL Editor and Buainesa Manager Entered as second class matter at the postofflce in Malone, NY., un- der act of Congress, July 1, 191S. YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION RATES Local (within 150 miles of Malone) >..•.. 1136 IT. S. Outside of ISO mile zone $2.00 Canadian subscriptions ...... $2.00 ADVERTISING RATES Furnished on Application THE MALONE FARMER 8U8PENDS PUBLICATION With this issue of The Malone Farmer the paper closes Its career * which has extended over a period of more than 55 years. It has en- joyed the patronage of loyal sub- scribers who have looked for its coming with anticipation for it chronicled the important local news. Many readers who live at a distance will perhaps feel the loss of the paper's weekly visit keenly. - Through the courtesy of The Ma- lone Evening Telegram all those subscribers who have paid in ad- vance for The Farmer will be fur- nished with the daily issues of The Telegram for the time covered by their advance payment. The bulk of the subscription list will be sampled by The Telegram for a short period in the hope that many will transfer their affections ana subscribe for The Telegram which covers all the news of the territory surrounding Malone, and of the world at large, in much more de- tail than has been possible in The Farmer. Mrs. Anna Strompf of New York City, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Nedeau and other relatives in town. Mrs. Walter Jennings, New York City, is visiting relatives in Malone. TET JZDDO HIGHLAHD CO AL So you will know what to order next winter. OLD LINE GOAL GO. 20 Amsden St Phone 777 MALOKEL N. Y. An inspiring and Impressive dis- course on the important \attributes and characteristics of America's outstanding national figures, Wash- ington and Lincoln, and the way those features are symbolized in the edifices erected to commemor- by. of ate their greatness was given Rev. Charles A. Boyd, pastor the Baptist Church at Thursdays Rotary luncheon at Hotel Flanagan. Tis subject was \The Monument and the Memorial.\ Visitors included Judge A. H The monument 1$ a slender shaft overhead skylight so placed that of wb^e;in^Me*-:\:^e'9rwdeilr-of the light falls just where it should its simplicity is broken by no orna- •—on a colossal marble statue of the mentation. There are no breaks in i Great Emancipator, seated, and its symmetrical straight lines, and! looking out through the opening at no attempt to make it seem any- thing other than a simple, straight and towering shaft of marble. One has said of it: \In stormy weather it suggests the Washington Monument and on toward the Capitol at the other end of the Mall. This statue, by Daniel Chester French, is one of the mas- terpieces of this outstanding sculp- a mountain peak standing immov- j tor - J t is one of the most impres- able with the mists drifting by.\ | sive of a11 the many Lincoln sta- Here Mr. Boyd referred to Wash- tues in the country; as is fitting, iagton*s experience with squatters | Perhaps the yery best of them on his lands in Pennsylvania and ^ T -**-•-- with land agents who were offering seme of his property for sale as if it was their own* He spent the en- all Nothing else than this statue is to be found in the interior except the words of the Gettysburg speech on one side wall and those of the tire month of September and part | second inaugural on. tn e other. Weller of Saranac Lake, president of the Kiwanis Club of that vil- lage; L. J. Cheverette of Tuppertof October on a tour of inspection! The beauty of the setting, Lake and Rotarians C. J. Stickney I through that area and kept a diary j dignity of the approach, the' of Saranac Lake and V. H. La- j of the trip. ijesty of the many columns, Rocque of Tupper Lake. Past President F. P. Fisk was in charge of the program and intro- duced the speaker. During delivery of his address Mr. Boyd showed several magnifi- cent pictures of the monument and memorial with views of the capital tho ma- all His love for the exact truth, and I unite to prepare the mind for the his constant determination to learn j quieting, calming effect of that the truth and live by it is interest- ; great statue. This is also a symbol ingly shown in his comment in the 1 as well as a memorial. It speaks diary at the end of the journey: in convincing manner of the su- \I am well pleased with my jour- ney, as it has been the means of preme greatness of the man who dared to be and could be calm my obtaining a knowledge of facts ami <i conflict. city. Other pictures of Lincoln j—coming at the temper and dis-I Though the figure is of ICE RBFRIGEItlTOR, Good new, for sale cheap. Call «it' W. Main St., Malone. tfeL mT WANTED—500 bushels market tatoes about March 1st. SI quantity and price to H. 8. Corinth, N. Y. WANTED—Stocked, equipped farm, at least 25 cows, on good road, near church, high school (or bus) for rent by experienced farmer own help. Would board owner, desired. References. State first letter. Address \Renter this paper. MISS HAZEL OOBB \* FEBRUARY BRIDB OP THOMAS JOCK and Washington and of scenes con- nected with their lives were exhi- bited after meeting:. Mr. Boyd's address in part fol- lows: Away back in the days immedi- ately following the Revolutionary much — - | xiiuu^ii nj^ lifetuic 10 \ji. much position of the western inhabitants; more than life size > to stand there —and making reflections thereon, | and ]ook into that lined and care _ which, otherwise, must have been | worn facej to gaze at those large. as wild, incoherent, or perhaps as 1 relaxed hands resting on the arms foreign from the truth as the in- j of tne chair> a i most makes on. consistency of the reports which 11 feel that he is in the ac tual pres- h id f th have received, even from those War the grateful citizenry of the J whom most credit seemed due.\ infant republic began to talk about' Washington did not want highly the erection of some suitable mem- orial to be erected in honor of tho man who had been \first in and was to become \first in peace and first in the hearts of his coun- colored fairy tales, but plain, un- varnished facts. And this applied, war\ not merely to this journey which was especially concerned with his own business interests: it was a 100 Na- ence of the living- Lincoln. Time dees not permit us to enter into a study of his many-sided genius, we may have but a single glimpse, and that is the one suggested by the statue, his calmness. Lincoln lived and did his work Miss Hazel Cobb, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Cobb of Con- stable, became the bride of Thomas P. Jock of Helena at a ceremony Thursday night in the Methodist Church parsonage at Chateaugay. I The Rev. E. O. Webster, pastor, officiated. The ceremony was per- formed at 8:15 o'clock. The bride was attractively attir- ed in a blue swagger suit with matching accessories. The newlyweds departed imme- diately after ceremony on a wed- ding trip to Montreal. characteristic of his life, from his I in the midst of upsetting and dis- earliest days in the wilderness o f | turbine days. It was just one hun- trymen.\ Just a little over yearp ago the \Washington _.„ . tional Monument Society\ was Virginia as a young surveyor - to j dred > rear s a §\° last > rear that he formed for the purpose of raising the final acts of his second term j entered politics, serving the first funds by popular subscription. The as President of the United States, j of his terms in the Illinois legis- cornesstone was laid in 1848 an3 ' Another phase of the symbolism | the work progressed till 1855. Then' of the monument which is revealed j beginning to Laziness may be a disease; haps diligence can be, too. per- Life is interesting enough for us. that most of us want it to go on. with the shaft at a height of 152 in that long journey to \The West\ feet, the funds were used up and is the uprightness of the man. Re- the work stopped. The monument j member that an important part of remained in this unfinished condi- tion for more than 20 years, when Congress was aroused to the situ- the purpose of this long and toil- some journey was to find out the fact about the squatters who were ation, took over the work from reported to have taken possession the Monument Society, appropriat- of some of his best land. ed a large sum of money and turn- After about three weeks of tra- ed the completion of the monument over to the army engineers. It was dedicated on February 21, 1885, and the orator of the day was the man who had spoken at the laying of the cornerstone 37 years before, Robert C. Winthrop, of Boston. In his cornerstone address Mr. Win- throp said, evidently after a care- ful study of the plans: of his terms in the Illinois lature. The state was even then be torn between two about the Mexican War. citements of the decade veling and inspecting, Washington ! reached the westernmost of his holdings in the state of Pennsyl- vania and found a colony of some 16 individuals and families, immi- grants from Scotland, living upon it. His usual attention to details is shown by the fact that he lists in his diary very carefully each man, the amount of land he claim- opinions on the slavery question. Elected to Congress in 1846, he was in time to be in on the debate The ex- 1850-1860 the endless debating, discussion, compromising and quarreling about the slavery question are too well known to all students of American I history to need more than a pass- \Lay the cornerstone of a monu-ied to occupy, whether \meadow' ment which shall adequately be- speak the gratitude of the whole American people to the illustrious Father of his Country. Build it to the skies; you cannot outreach the loftiness of his principles! Found it upon the massive and eternal rock; you cannot make it more en- during than his fame! Exhaust upon it the rules and principles of or \arable\ land, number and style of buildings and whether fenced or not. At a meeting with these \squatters\ he discussed with them the question what they were going j. of Washington more to do about occupying land which j ever before, probably. ing- reference. Then, with his before their eyes whenever election to the presidency, came the climax of all the \upsetting and disturbing days\ in the long-drawn and heart-rending struggle of the Civil War. How could any man be calm in such days as those? How except through an inner sense of right- ness and justice, a loyalty to con- viction and an acting in line with conscience. The eyes of the nation, yea, of the world, are focused on the city belonged to him. It would have been quite in ac- cordance with the customs of fron- tier times to have settled such mat- ters by force. Washington was none other than the commander-in- chief who had just concluded a suc- cessful war against England. These men were unknown immigrants, \squatters\ on land rightfully be- j longing to another. But Washing- ) ton wa,s not the man to use force; \ today than It is fortun- | ate that dominating the sky-line of I that city is \The Monument\—like \a mountain peak standing immov- able with the mists drifting by.\ Fortunate that whatever man may occupy the White House, and whatever men may hurry to and fro beneath the great dome at the other end of the Mall, there is al- ways there before their eyes this challenging reminder of strength, of sturdiness, of lofty idealism, and of the uprightness of an abiding faith in god and justice to fellow- men. It is fortunate, indeed, that in times of crisis and of problems, the men in Washington who aspire to be the leaders of a nation, have they will take the time to see it, \The Memorial,\ in its calm and stately dignity. For it calls them to calm deliberation in the midst of furore and fussiness; to 'highly resolve' to place the welfare of men above the making of money; it is an ever- present challenge that they should plan and execute, legislate and ad- judicate \with malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right\ to the end that there may result \a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all the world\ (from the conclusion of Lincoln's second inaugural ad- dress.) f MALONE BUSINESS DIRECTORY] of charge- m Off* r ' JOHN W. GENAWAY LAWYER Over The Malone Farmer Office Malone, N. Y. JOHN P. BADGER Attorney and Counsellor at Law tary Public in Office. Non-Resi- dent attorneys invited to use office. he rather trusted in the due pro- cesses of law even in those rough j times, and left the matter in the hands of a local lawyer, a Mr. Thomas Smith, of Carlisle, Pa., to prosecute the suit. It is interesting to note that suit was finally decid- ed (two years later) in Washing- ton's favor. Court Houge , Malone, N. Y. Very different from the single, Phone 82 simple, towering shaft which re- Specialties: Bankruptcy, Wills minds us of Washington is the j Settlement of Estates, Real Estate Greek-Temple bit of architecture j Practice. Collections made. No- which is the Lincoln Memorial. There are several interesting things about this structure: its material— exterior, Colorado Yule marble from the Rocky Mountains, some 300 miles west of Denver; steps and platform, pink Milford granite, from Massachusetts; interior, In- diana limestone; and the Interior floor, Tennessee marble: (Appro- priate indeed, that the memorial for the man who held the Union to- gether should be of materials from! iu AWilft _ «**J tht Par West, the Middle West, the AttOmey and East and the South.) Its columns, 36 of them, one for each of the states of thes Union In 1865, when Lincoln died: the carved festoons above the columns—48 of them, to suggest the enlargement of the Union at the prevent time. * One of the most Interesting fea- ture* to the fact that this Greek temple has no door—only an ever* RALPH R, LEVY LAWYER Offices, 90 East Main St Malone, N. Y. Offices formerly occupied by Judge Bryant H. W. MAIN at Law Offices at Court House Malone, N. Y. ARTHUR W. HANDLY Counsellor at Law 27 E. Main St, Malone, N. Y. Money to loan on real estate Mourtty ,W. G. MULLARNEY LAWYER 38 E. Main St. Malone, N. Y. Telephone 672 FRANK BIGELOW LAWYER Office Pearl St. Malone, N. Y. ALLEN & McCLARY COUNSELLORS AT LAW Over Endicott-Johnson 'WILLIAM ST. MARY LAWYER Legal work of all kinds. Money to loan at 5% on Real Estate.. S3 West Main St. Malone. N. t. GEORGE J. MOORE LAWYER Offices, Plaza Theatre Bldgr. Pearl Street; Malone, N. f DR. H. D. WRAY ~- DENTIST r : Telephone 881 93 East Main St Malone, N. % Love will find * iray, but 1* always beat? , W%m^^