{ title: 'The Brockport republic. (Brockport, N.Y.) 1856-1925, November 29, 1923, Page 7, Image 7', 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/sn86053142/1923-11-29/ed-1/seq-7/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86053142/1923-11-29/ed-1/seq-7.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86053142/1923-11-29/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86053142/1923-11-29/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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^-^^•e^MEPUBUC^BRp^kRbRt^ 29, 1 «j2» _3|™ ,-5LssS|aiBJ --iSBSM Kr-I HP V\ ?ti3K<w\!TP* ^i?*flSPI!HP : X'-r Luxury and Style Every type of Overcoat, that is in good style and ta$Je, is on display ju& now. The best type Coats are alike suited to all ages. L. AcUer Bros/ Makes From $35J00 to $50.00 Other Reliable Overcoats $25.00 to $32.0> E.HARRISON & CO. MASONIC BLOCK HE ThahksglvhVg dinner ex- alts an art which In more hurried and less hospitable • seasons aeednes and falls-^\ rubbing, but will liialje'jtwe in \raising more than, ordinarily needod. Am- monia, like borax, is go milil as to be harmless to fabrics.—Mutism i'llscilla. VISIBILITY A URGE FACTOR Ousty or Misty Atmosphere Means a Great Deal in Aviation and Navigation. Visibility is a large 'fat'tor In ajr Bight-.and in various surface opera- tions, espec}aliy navigation, A knowl- edge of conditions governing visibil- ity is therefore of consldt-ruhle Im- portance. Dustiness or mistiness may Why- Vibration-Affects' Sound. It Is said tluuWeertuin experiments have shown that a vibration of sound having an amplitude of less than one- _______ _ twelve-millionth of a centimeter could ' ~^?^?r? & i ] ™H^-! tnnt ^ K ^ ^ T stm affect the-sense of hearing. Such a vibration would be so short that It would have to be enlarged 100 times before tie most powerful microscope could render it visible, supposing that it were capable of being-seen at Euttiilure for Christmas <£ : J : A piece of JEu^rBJtuFe-makes an ideal Caft, because of its long service and usefulness. « We cordially invite you^tpfcaU and look over-\our large asMrSnenTof ©ft UrtMerfor the grawn^rTttid \ntor; child- ren and know you will findjbur prices as reasonable as can JhtiomidLaflj^here/ * ———7 ^ Smoking Stands Cedar Chests. Pedestals Chairs and Rockers Reed Furniture Tea Wagons Davenports Gard Tables , Carpet Sweeper* *> Small Rugs Candlesticks Mirrors Tables of All Kinds Costumers figures not least among the domestic worries, attendant upon the festive, celebration. Comparatively few men nowadays combine the-dexterity and jspeed de- manded. Faced by the necessity\ oT having to carve, the modern man ei- ther shrinks hack appalled or takes up • the steel with mttFtyrlike resignation, and often with disastrous results. It .was not so In the good old days. A certain immortal chronicle records that \Mr Wilkes-was very assiduous in helping Doctor Johnson to some fine veal. 'Pray give* me leave, sir. It Is better here—a little of the brown —some fat, sir—a little of the stuf- fing.* \ But somehow, midway in the mid-Victorian age,- the ability to carve passed from the commonalty. The roast left the dinner table for the sideboard. Perhaps butlers were then both numerous anti cheap, or perhaps It was evolution. Mr. Strfichey doesn't tell. But no one disputes the fact. TheTyounjr' Englishman of today finds \the roast beef of Old England\ as impregnable as would-be invaders did .Jrer-llfl-oodiOi jeallsJ' .. __ \ Yet the act of carving elves to hos- pltntlty n cTrtntrt .trnrnelirnsss, an infor- mality, whl<4» meals served from slde- -befrpd-oy-KIt<»noft--seam tt^la.'k,—tt-ln^ dicates the host's pcrsdinal interest in each guest; it carries with it, more- over, a suggestion of. unselfishness. coal or other fuels, seen as smoke at lower levels. Some dust particles cbme from volcanoes, Some, It is thought, may pome from Interplanet- ary spaces. The weather bureau of the United States Department or Ag- rlculture was provided with an In- the^ art of carving. The -<fuesfloh r \Who. Is tncaSeT^ tjirn'ment ToxTSeaaiaihg^almaspIverlc \' dust In May, 1922. A dust count has been taken daily during the last year. The dust counter UBed collects the dust from a known volume of air and deposits it on a small and very thin glass disk, where bjHSTeans of n pow- erful microscope'the particles can be counted-• and their character deter- mined. Tests have shown about 00 dust particles a cable centimeter on a yery clear, dry'day, and ns high as 933 a cubic centimeter on one day of limited visibility, but with the same dry condition of the air. which pre- vailed on the former occasion. «™' U«£S^ 0ET tieHESi FJ10M- flUBBim Why Cities of the Old World Have KevenuerWhich AT=e iJftkftovvH M America: This- country -Is-ieoteea-uptjfi'by—thfr less bountiful and more thrifty coun- tries of Hhjrope as a land of great ex- travagance and waste. In Paris, long before the householder Is awake, a wb61e~ar-my of scavengers and glean- ers has passed through his \back: lane and ransacked his garbage tins, some collecting hair, some rags, some bones. By eight o'clock in the morning there is very little left for the regular de-. partment to \carry\\awav:- Wfluern »el- _ence_has discovered ways of turning almost every kind of rujiblsh Into something useful. Refuse is burned 'In specially constructed furnaces and the beat produced generates steam to drive the dynamos ^that produce elec- tric light. The ashes are used to make concrete. Soapsuds,\instead of flowing away to pollute the streams and— rivers, are -strained;—mixed- with lime and pressed trifo\ fuel bricks' which when burned give out a greater heat than coal gas would produce. The carcass of a herse-jnay be put to al- most endless uses. The hair Is woven Into haircloth or used to' stuff mat- tresses. The hide makes good leather. Glue and gelatine are obtained from the tendons. The hones reappear as knife handles and buttons, other by-, products are prussiare of potash and artificial manure. Fi.sb scales are the material, from which some of the most beautiful artificial pea* are manu- factured. T? •*«! Se?S--*«SS! HBF fill. Old persons, It Is said, do not hear ..Mfch notes[which are audible to young Tiersons and there Is reason to be- lieve that babies hear notes that are Inaudible to their elders.. .\ . . El.ctrlctty Thaws Meat. Frozen beef or mutton has been dif- ficult to handle hitherto because of the care, required to thaw It after ship- ment. Days were SeeSe\a~tS defrost it -properly, and during the process much of the meat was lost. If the defrost- ing was hurried, the meat lost Its flavor. A new method, whereby an alternat- ing current of electricity is pnssnd through the meat, promises material .helpJEor..the: •packiaijJadjistrY,.. JtJyjthe....: use of electric current an entire beef carcass can be defrosted in an hmir. Jtfhy Eastern Peoples Like Pearls. In Persia and Arabia poajcls are-ben lleved to be conducive to contentment of mind, body and soul, and the beau-\ tleB bf ancient Egypt, about the time of good old Tut'Ankh-Amen, tooR pul- verized pearls to make their eyes big and brilliant, just as atropine Is used today. The Hindus, who recognized only- four shades tn the color of pearls' —yellow, honey, white nnd blue—wear the first to bring wealth; the second, the honey, to get understanding; the third to bring fame and the fourth, the blue pearl, to bring them t-ood for- tune In ahy of Their unrtwriktirgs. OH! MY BACK! The Expression of Many a Kidney sufferer A siifbBBrn backache Is cause -to fflls- pr»ct kidney trouble. When the kid- neys-arff- inflamed- and-awollenr stoop- ing brinss a sharp twinge in the small Nuts for Thanksgiving Afteraj?ij» Dinner, a heavy Dessert is/not desirable either for health or ertjoyrftent. Nuts, assorted from the many varieties we have jiislt received, answers the question easily and economically. j_ '_ Note These Prices New English Walnuts Brazil \Nuts Mixed Nuts 33c lb. 27c lb. 25c4b. ' NEW Soft Milk Cheese per lb,, 29c Old Whit© Gheese per Gold Medal Flour, ZA\. lb. sack .98c \ Pillsbury's Best, Hi lb sack ^ .,,.,,,...».,-.. T .,,. . ^98&— ONEiOA COUNTY CREAMERiES^CGT THOMAS 0*BRIEN, Mgr. - Brockport, N,T. •3 ' S^ IS1Z, f \/J.!!!r r '',^, nmtt--ltnatt.tolralilt.lQ M»_tlMlL Ml } a».f-E^toi > ln« T ^u^ ro ^UM4---vA6K^W^fel4tau 4 HiUSt nPrrOTCE . foreiro. tenmornrllv. tvrvrtm' hnt nrlinri\ nnH n-niv. ' s ntp I. __.._..___ .1 • •> ' •» —or\ must perforce . forego, temnorarllyt ; coftversation, bntfter, repartee.. He must concentrate; he mufft make t haste-; for tho-nA-la-lnnp, tlit^ time Is -f fleetinfi. and the plates euoL _ F\ortnnntely the custom of carving the ThTOksi?h4ng--turkey-at-+r«^-hri)l« s - has become a fised part of the day's ritual. That this graciuus art is thus kept from Complete disuse, and is, iir- deed^exalted-by reasonaof Its-assocla-- tion wRh the-fiias4-+}lsUaetl,v &nenean of the yeat's .holidays, ma.v even ap- pear -to. sf34se_iikfe£ashioiied, aaprog^es- siie souls \as as adilittrttinl -Ggnse for- giving thanks. SOFTENERS FOR ffftRD WATER Washing Soda I* Cheapest, but Borax, Ammonia and Kerosene Also ArVuWfuT.-\ far the last; five-.--years w,as lauib or Floor and Table Lamps Hoosler Kitchen Cabinets Hoover Electric Gleaners High Chairs Coaster Wagons Children's Rockers Kiddie Cars Desk Sets Velocipedes Doll Carriages Child's Costumers •*•*»» GEORGE DUNN FURNITURE and UNDERTAKING BROCKPORT, N. Y. East Side Main St, <9 Near Bridge,, m. FOR THE BEST RESULTS PATRONIZE THE REPUBLIC JOB DEPARTMENT The problem of hard water Is ©n« which cniitronts a.'great trrany^ouse^ wives on wash day^ There are many chemical agents used to soften „th« water. Washing soda is the cheapest agent, and -perhaps the most generally effective. Two points only must be re- membered In employing it. First, sec that It Is • entirely dissolved before adding-lt^to the washing water. Any tiny undissolved particles will go to work enthusiastically where they fall, and in their zeal are apt to eat up fabric and all. This Is the explanation of the occurrence^ of holes and weak •pots where washing soda has been carelessly used. ' Second, rinse with extreme care. .Use even more than ordinary precaution. The nose la an excellent court of last appeal to judge whether linen has be.en sufficiently rinsed. If it smells soapy, or alkaline, return it for another swim in clear water. Some * kinds of bluing will make rust spots on the clothes If the soapy water LB not. thoroughly rinsed out before immersion, in the bluing water. £ Borax is a most satisfactory Water •oftener. it acts as a mild bleach to whiten linen and It has a slight germi- cidal action. It i s entirely safe to use, and Is less dangerous to colored fab- rics than washing soda. Ammonia and kerosene are also use- ful. Two tab|espoonfuls of kerosene In a Jub of hard'water will Bave soap and without deterioration and without im- \ ai tlle ^ ack Lhat aJmost takes tb - e paiFHig-the- keeplas qualities of the .»F«*#I» a^ay. Duan*£j£$tt§y;Pills re-, meat, • viVe slitggtsh kidneys—relievo achlnig This process is expected to Be of ; hacks. Here's convincing proof 6f particular value on shipboard, where It . m f*rit. frozen: but when-. unttL .BOW, ; sh.w : 4pteasa ^ w • Koeb€S ^. T KL T. -says: { thawing-has prevented It's wider use. t1 Toe Maori to Expect. \*T?OTI are a man of coujftesyT*. . I \My kidneys got-out of w=haok -and I suffered from backache. 1 could hardiy *g« uul ui. 'hjal murnluga-aaMi-I hM io \I try to be.\ ahswefexLSennlor §pr- ; place nry arms on the chaxr to get up -^hum*-^—™ 'aaaiLaitUng—AH^iLMlns.^took. maA | \What would you do if a woman • the small of my back. (My kidneys ' were to be the opposing candidate?\ I aoted too ftequentlr and the secretions -You've^got to draw the line some- k^^, te ,£«„*>. \l \often became-no Where. in a street car, but not In the United States senate.\ Wool Growing I* Ptcltnlng. \The production of sheep for wool «lnne t«i niptdiv on the Wane in the dizzy jiadasy I^ls-^nuVjaie^MOTre^jnie-joLtSieq: atfeack.\ Price sue. a ply~ ask\ Wr a kMhleyr remedy—geT Poan's Ktdney Ptlla—'the oaanae that TJnitea,States. ..More and more ens- jphHsis is being placed on the produc- \Honef lamb and mnttott-fOT-t-he- tahleT although only S.7 per cent at the meat ^cnnBamed JsrJjve average^Ai»ericajL|- .ieur^^M^^ffder joj: Jgon. ^elden mutton- Guarflfivcfc— ~'~~rr^\~:~ \We want a iftan for out Informa- tion -bureau,\ said the manager. \He must be a wide-awake fellow and ac- customed to complaints.\ \That's me,\ replied* the applicant. \Fin the father of twins.\—Cornell Widow. Credit for Their Service. World war veterans, applying for positions with the government, are allowed five points In the civil service «xamlnat!ons, while disabled ex-serv- ice men are given a credit of ten points. Hollow Wordi and Empty. First Critic—Poet Bndd insists that he writes best with an empty stomach. • Second Critic—^Judging from his poems, I would say they were also . written with an empty head. New Crap Diseases. Fifteen new diseases of field and vegetable crops were reported In the United States during 1922. Twelve crops were affected. They were car- rot, radish, Swiss chard, lettuce, po- tato, radish, Chinese cabbage, bean, watermelon, sweet potato, tomato and tobacco. Most of the new diseases appeared In very restricted areas, seeming to be the result of abnormal climatic and similar conditions. .Mr, LaaiSngjhaxb--F|bster«MBiburn Co^ Mfrs., Buffalo, rT. Y~ .1 NOTICE TO QrlEMTORS- .&-., jBr(pvn > 3\ 1 ' r ggSl ffOS*^08gifea£: ^Monrce^-noti^ttriereovsivea7 accord' tag to lavAo all -persons hav-Sag -claims &E demands against Petgr-EIler.lats odEJS tbe^o'vnr^^larkisonreonatjc^ofriMon' | •' roe, State of New Tofk, <aeceaiSed, ts pTeseut the. same with the vouchers therefor, to the undersigned Admin- istrator at his place for the transaction of buffEheasi as such AdmTlnlstrffitor\ at the law office of Nat O. Lester, In Brockport, N. Y., on or before the 27th day of .May 1924. Dated November 16th 1923. Conrad Eller, Aximlmistiijtor -.Nat O. Lester, AttornO^^lor A^Untn- istraitor, Brockport, N. Y. FREE Oyster Shell for Poultry Raisers / 10 pounds of Oyster Shell FREE with each 10O pound bag of BLATCHFORD'S Ffll-the-Baaket Egg Mash Blatchford's makes year a- round layers—try it now and get your oyster shell free. PERRY C. SHAFER Brockport IS REFLECTED mTHE •.•' , d. \ ewe ivx vm Dainty, tasteful, pleasing jewelry appointments almost ii variably accompany a personality of that description. The clothes you wear, the things you do, are no more io-- dieattve.-of-your £haractef-ihaa your jewelry-selection*... • v That is why we ask you carefully to make your selectlonTieref iiftrl DIAMONDS &r JEWELRY OF QUALITY 'Ifllfc I M 1*% •m'mzm ar; s A '-*=:*• ^V 4=1 BUDCKFOPT NY HQLLEY.N' iMHHiaaMf • si • • • • s • • • a • • • LET US DO YOTJRT H AU LIN64 by the Job or tjour Local or Long Distance DAY OR NIGHT Wood & Ba^tiaa* 187-J or 139 ' *•-' li»«S',;'-'. -. ^^^^^^^^^^^&iy^&^# r iV 1 ^ v % v \ ? • 'Aw ^mM^^^^Mimr^ illw^fep# JvSS rf&fe