{ title: 'Chateaugay record and Franklin County Democrat. (Chateaugay, N.Y.) 189?-current, July 27, 1923, Page 5, Image 5', 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/sn87070301/1923-07-27/ed-1/seq-5/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070301/1923-07-27/ed-1/seq-5.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070301/1923-07-27/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070301/1923-07-27/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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CHATEAUGAY EBCORD FRIDAY, tVVS 27, l9 ^ Warm Weather Necessities • i ' Screen Doors Scrota Wistiows GarJoiiHoM Lawn Mo were •lack and G*W-Juzod Wire Cloth Ice Cream Freezers Refrigerators Supertax, Perfection and Florence 03 Cookstoves W. D. RYAN & CO., Winchester Store Thrift testimonials of Successful Men \Save and teach all you are interested in to save; thus pave the way for mor- al and material success.'* —Thomas Jefferson. Resolve at once to save and be rational; Open your account at The First National FIRST NATIONAL BANK CHATEAUGAY, N. Y. 4% Interest in Saving Account Department. Small Accounts Welcome. §• TAKE CARE OF YOUR MILK Warm weather is here. Special car* should be given all utensils used in caring lor your milk. Examine your cans to see that they are perfect- ly dean before putting milk into them. Put cans oa rack in milk-house as soon as you get home. Boil strainer cloth after each milking, or you will have high bacteria count. Cool milk promptly after milking and keep cool until delivered at plant. Sheffield Condensed Milk Co. CHATXATJOAY, M. Y. Wall Paper We now have a complete line of rugs in Wilton's, Axminster's, Brus- seTTapestries, Crex, and Neponset qualities in all sizes and prices that do net carry the 30% addition to last year's prices on woolens. We also are showing 20 patterns of Wall Paper at 20c per double roll. Duffy Bros. Dry Goods Store Sta Captain's Daughter Hat Crossed Pacific Twist and tt Master of Qeography. ———. , Sja» Praadaee, OaLr-a«ppam »•• «en • Itttte stai tf* r«*n «M. tat 9«« UndhimtU apMtBMnt, ate«tr tar- aiaaad tttMgh • UttJa Hawaii, wttft your mo&ar aad faUiar, a»d wiini that ulna jvi waDtad rat otfjfectraaft daor jmi foaod yonraalf oa tba tea*, aairow dock of a abip, wlta'ctooda aaa dootfs of white cavraaa ovarhaad, and nothing, uluutiw «r» could roach, bntthaaea. Suppose that iaatead of loarntoc •* play; ta« **d hop scotch you learned how to box the compaaa and knew every line aad rope and stay and sail and piece of rigging on a ship; that In- stead of entertaining yourself with doll boose and playing grownup and going to kindergarten you were amused by being taught the difference between a skys'l and a tops'l, a spanker and a Jib, a brigantine and a barf. Suppose you were a little sailor lass, daughter of a ship captain and grand- daughter of a master and owner of ships, born within sight of the sea, and never out of sight of it and most of your life upon it. If you were all these things you would be exactly like Margaret Ster- ling, mascot, favorite, tyrant, pet and plaything of the ship E. R. Sterling, the largest six-masted barkentlne in the world. Father Is Captain. Margaret's father is Capt B. M. Sterling, master of the big barkentlne, who is, in turn, son of Capt B. R. Ster- ling, manufacturing owner of the Tea- sel and one of the unusual and pic- turesque men of the sea. Margaret has been twice across the Pacific, and into and out of most of the ports of the South seas. She knows more about geography than the average college 1 graduate. In short, Margaret la a daughter of the sea. The whole family is a remarkable and interesting one Captain Sterling might have stepped right out of one of Peter B. Kyne's \Cappy Ricks\ stories, for every minute of bis life is full of the sort of modern sea business of which Kyne writes so interestingly. His son, Oapt. Ray Sterling, would have come from one of Joseph Con- rad's tales. He might have been the young master In the story called \Youth.\ He is quiet, reserved, solidly built, clear-eyed, capable, thoughtful and a master seaman. His wife, Margaret's mother, might have come out of a novel by Kath- leen Norris or by William McFie. She Is too pretty for any possible ship master's wife; she is a gracious hos- tess, a pleasant, well read, cultured quiet voiced little Australian girt, full of fun and jokes, an ideal mother and an unusual wife. Her romance with the silent, grave, strong young Captain Sterling is a story by itself. She was one of the belles of Australia before her marriage, and It is safe to assume that the captain's luck lefj more than one young landsman in the Antipodes forlorn and bereft Life Full of Thrills. There have been enough adventures packed Into the lives of these people aboard the E. R. Sterling to make sev- eral books. They think little of them. Margaret, the baby. Is as blase as an old salt. \I'm getting perfectly tired of this life,\ she said, with a yawn. \I pre- fer to stay ashore and I'm going t. make dadfly give up the 9hip and come with as to live in a house soon.\ She talks like a woman of twenty at times. But who wouldn't, if she had only old sailors and mother and father to learn with and from, and only saw other little people once in a blue moon, when the big barkentlne Is tied op at some pier or In some dock discharging or taking on cargo. Margaret says she is going to make the captain stay ashore soon so that she can go to school and have a back yard and a sand pile and play with little girls of her age as much as she likes. ROMANCE OF LOST ATLANTIS •panlah Seiantlsta AMMWMO That Mand Has Boon Located Off Coast a* That Country. People who like thotr science waU atfsad with roauaco will at attractad to Ota aaaoaBcaaMBt of IS* Spaalaa which aays that tha Hat •f Atlantis haa aoan laattai aff ef Spain. DotaOa of ttria ta- taroatlnc aiacoTory ara not yat avafl- ahlo to (ha pnWle, aat that w«l last* all the awn roam ft* n» ago and vitality at lha ataty that thart waa once a groat aad eaa> laat coaatry aaawwhara watt of Oto Pttlara at Barcalaa watch grow to • aaagalflcanca patatef aH daacriyttaa, aad than sank into the OM has eaaaed am* than oaa geographer to thfal that somewhere back in the misty past than moat have beta a aottd baato for the legend. Nobody knows how old the story la. Homer kne./ It, aad Plato gave the world a description of the place, but every mention of K. however early, is accompanied by the assurance that the date of the sub- mergence was even than In the re- motest past m£^iSJ&^ia Here is a chance for you t o get started toward greater profits—or to build up a business of tour own—and $5 to make the start. only Banks loaned $2,000,OOP to boy and girl club members in the Unit- ed States last year. And both banks and youngsters gained there- by. EVES THAT SEE How will you ever know you can see as well as you could be made to see if you don't have your eyes test- ed? Tfou can read every day of two or more people seeing the same thing differently. Thettr hearts were right but their eyes were wrong, and they didn't know it! Best facilities and improved methods, insuring the best results at the least expense. J. STEWART FLINT, Optometrist Will be at Union House July 10. GIVE HIM A CALL. Poland Gains Population. Warsaw, Poland.—Repatriation and immigration with natural growth have added to the population of Poland In recent years, until the republic counts 30,000,000 Inhabitants. Horse Travel* 500 Miles to Old Home Paris, Ky.—William Haag, a farmer, who came here from Jefferson City. Mo., several weeks ago, has received a letter from a Jefferson City man, clearing up the mystery of a horse which disappeared from Haag's barn. The horse is at home. The animal was purchased by Haag from a Jefferson City neighbor In whose family it had been for eight years. When the horse was missed Haag advertised throughout this section and offered a reward. He bad lost hope of recovering the animal when the letter came from Jefferson Crty. The horse bad traveled alone 500 miles between the Haag farm in this county and Its home In Missouri. Tft* letter said the horse was *6in tnd exhausted. Dairymen's League ICE CREAM and Soft Drinks We can supply all your needs in these lines, and solicit year patronage. Booth Near TowrHall Maurice Jarvis, Prop. Everywhere, Ford One-ton Trucks and Light Denver? Cars are saving more than this every year for their users. So, as soon as your truck starts running it will quickly take care of the purchase price and add as welt new It will widen the area in which you can do business, enlarge the number of customers you can serve—and keep your delivery costs down to the lowest point. Start now toward the ownership of a Ford Truck or Light Delivery Car—use the $ roo Under the terms of this Plan, we deposit this Enrolls money in a local bank at You interest. Each week you add a little more— this also draws interest. And in a short time the truck is yours to use. Come in and let us give you full particulars. Oliver &Spellman This Bank Depository for Ford Weekly Purchase Plan Pay- meats First National Bank Of Chateaagay West End Service Station Prest-O-Lite BJATTERIjES A Life For Every Car We also carry, a good grade of cheaper batteries. OLIVER &SPELLMAN FOR SALE! The property in the village of Burke known as the McKenzie property, consisting oi grist, flour and corn metfl mill, equipped with water power and gasoline engine* or conld be ran with electric power. Also mod- ern dwelling house, bam and garage. A fine spring on the premises j about 18 acre s in all; large orchard of the choicest apples, a large garden; could be run as a dairy or chicken farm. There is also a large ice pond of spring water on the premises* Easy terms of payment.^ Inquire of JOHNSTON BROS. & CO. CHATEAUGAY, N. Y. Let Welch Fix Your Car = IT WILL BE RIGHT —= Twenty Years Experience. All Makes. All Work Guaranteed. Sprague Building, Chateaugay