{ title: 'Chateaugay record and Franklin County Democrat. (Chateaugay, N.Y.) 189?-current, July 27, 1923, Page 6, Image 6', 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-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070301/1923-07-27/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070301/1923-07-27/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070301/1923-07-27/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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-»—•i^i.iwMUMi) ,. kllA „. BU>w „ y AY, JULY 87, 1923 CHATEAUGAY RECORD IDLE MONEY repceaents waste just as do idle factories, idle farmers or ad!* men. . Suypbts funds deposited with The Peoples Trust Company of Matone earns 4 per cent compound interest, and they wewk far yeu m|eonspl«le safety, protected by son- servalive management* by Capital, Ssurplus and Undi^Jdwl Profits of $582000.00, by sttkt State sttpsarvisicai and by our membership m me Federal icssjerw Sgsjssm. Depeeis wefeomed m my amount feem $1 upwards, BARGAINS IN HOSIERY AND UNDERWEAR E. SMITH & CO., 3p««i«ny s«°r« Ford Flat Rate Service Believing that both the public and dealer are better satisfied •with contract prices, I will handle all Ford repairs on a flat rate basis. Prices Quoted Include a guarantee as to workman- ship and eaOefiactlon. — Genuine Ford Parts — Factory - Operation __. Number eru» 1 Overhaul motor •• S 1!M}9 1_A Overhaul motor and transmission 80.00 2 Clean carbon and grind valves 8.00 8 Tighten one connecting rod 1.00 3-A Tighten additional connec ting rods each 26 8-B Tighten No. 4 connecting rod additional _.. .50 4 Pit one connecting rod and piston assembly 2.00 4-A Fit additional rod and piB tons each 1.00 4-B Fit No. 4 connecting rod an d piston only 2.60 4-C Fit No. 4 connecting rod and pston, additional 1.60\ 5 Install transmission linings 8.75 6-A Install transmission linings with starter 8.26 6 Overhaul generator «•• • •••• 2.00 7 Overhaul starter 2.00 8 Remove and lnstal.1 radiator -... .76 9 Install eye head gasket » 60 10 Install timer • £0 11 Adjust clutch and transmission bands 60 12 Adjust transmission bands 25 13 Rebush spindle and adjust wheel bearings each 75 14 Install Universal Joint 2.50 16 Overhaul rear end ••OJ 18 Install one brake shoe 50 17 Replace front spring -75 17-A Replace broken leaf In front spring 1.00 18 Replace rear spring .. J-60 18-A Replace broken leaf in rear spring 8.00 18 Install front cross member 6.00 20 Focus lamps • : __; * > * V ' '' »•*« 21 Fit all connecting rods, pistons, rings and grind valves.. 7.60 22 Install pinion gear 8-|J<( 88 Install front radius rod »•••• ;•••• *•< »0 84 Install one rear radius rod 60 85 Install brake rods each 25 All other Ford work at flat rate prices. Let a quote you on any operation. | W. L. ENGLISH 110UCHER GARAGE WEST MAIN ST. K Ameriean Qasoime and Ons i Gesmme Ford Parts ARMY TANKS MOW DOWN TREES Uncle Sam's Mechanical Ele- phants Stage Short for Staff College Students. Washington.—Uncle Sam's herd of mechanical elephants recently showed on* at the army tank school. Camp Meade, Md., in a demonstration put on for the benefit of some seventy of- ficers and Instructors from the stafl* school at the army war college. Half a dozen of the huge, lumber- ing \Mark VHI\ giant tanks devel- oped during the war, but too late to share In the fighting, and a whole flock of the six-ton French type which did get into action participated in the show. The demonstration Is one of the series of educational exhibits for the staff college students, all of whom are experienced officers whose military In- struction Is being rounded out to In- sure an adequate supply of general\ officers and men with general staff qualifications. Tear Down Trees. To Introduce the student officers to the possibilities of modern tank war- fare, Col. S. D. Rockenbach, com- mandant, of the tank corps and school, sent two of his huge 40-ton \Mark VIII\ monsters skinnishing through the heavy woods on either side of a narrow roadway. When the signal to advance was given, the land battle- ships surged forward resistlessly, tearing great swaths as they passed, as though twin, narrow gauge cy- clones had cut parallel paths of wreck- age through the woodland. Towering trees went down before them like reeds, the tanks grinding them re- morselessly under the steel-shod run- ners. At times each tank was knock- ing over half a dozen trees at the same time, literally rooting them from the earth and lumbering forward over prostrate trunks a foot or more In diameter. The sheer power of the geared liberty engines overcame every obstacle of ditch or bank or brush or tree clump, and not an Inch to right or left from the selected course were the monsters forced to swerve. Later a miniature tank attack was delivered over the rough, sandy field that Is the playground of the school herd. Three \Mark VITPs\ led the drive, their stx-pounder guns roaring and machine guns snarling as they crept forward behind a smoke bar- rage hurled from their guns. They looked like crawling dragons, breath- ing smoke and flame as they shoul- dered their way over ditches and sand dunes to disappear ove» a ridge be- yond to clouds of dust and spouts of flying debris flung up from land mines that gave a realistic battle picture. Little Fellows In Wake. Behind the big fellows came a far- flung line of the little six-tonners. spitting with machine gun and one- pounder fire. A dozen or more of the two-man tanks made up this line. Colonel Rockenbach explained to the visiting officers that what they had seen thus far were tanks developed during the war. He recalled that in the first requisition from General Pershing for tank equipment, the call had come for the elements which would make up a land fleet, the fight- ing tanks with auxiliary equipment of cross country, rough-going machines to bring up the artillery and supplies. Since the war, he added, some prog- ress toward filling that requisition had been made. At a signal the new type, the 15-ton \medium tank\ of the future, charged out into the rough field. It fairly raced over humps and hummocks at a 12-mile gait, twisting and turning like a reotorboat. Behind it came a \seventy-five\ gun riding a similar mechanism and plunging about the field at high speed regardless of holes or ditches. It traveled with equal speed In either direction. Behind these two came the cross-country truck for ammunition, gasoline, oil and supplies. These three, Colonel Rock- enbach said, were the beginnings of the American land fleet that would play a great role In any future war. None of them was perfected as yet, he added, but within them were the eletaents of a new day In battle when machines would take more of the bur- den from the fighting men. Dog-Eating Ceases as Igorotes Try Out Beef Manila.—The dog market of Baguio has disappeared entirely and the eat- ing of dogs by the Igorots, a non- Christian tribe, has been reduced to a minimum, according to Col. Henry Knauber, head of the constabulary academy at Baguio. \Introduction of the meat of cattle and hogs has turned the Igorots, who formerly ate dogs, Into eaters of meats recognized by the civilized world as eatable,\ said Col. Knauber. \These people had to have some kind of m^at and years ago the only ani- mal they knew was the dog. \When civilization introduced cat- tle and domestic hogs to these moun- tain - people, they quit eating dogs. Only a few scattering cases of dog eating have been reported for some time, and these were among the peo- ples living far back In the hills!\ Has Dollar Dated 179S. Mlllersburg, O.—A United States stiver dollar, bearing the date 1795, ©f which series only a small number were muted, has Men found la the poesas- -atoa of Nmpolson KaUfer, aged as* eaatrlc hare. »,^/%^r flfe (PouniwWome WOOD-OIL-COAL - -*^- - DUPLEX -/ / / -V~^^7-ter COME IN AND SEE OUR LINE OF RANGES The Most Complete Shown in Northern New York GREENE'S Exclusive Alcazar Dealer A. J. ELLIOTT. Prop. MALONE, N. Y. LESSON IN ROYAL WEDDING Writer Sees Significance In Nuptials ef Union of the Duke of York With a Commoner. The marriage of the duke of York and Lady Elisabeth Bowes-Lyon was invested with an exceptional degree of that human nature which makes the whole world kin and with something more. It was a noteworthy reminder of the radical contrast between roy- alty in Great Britain and in some other lands; for example, the states of Germany under the monarchist regime. In one of the latter, Willis Fletcher Johnson writes In the North American Review, such a marriage would have been impossible; it would have had to be morganatic, the wife forever doomed to a rank Inferior to her hus- band's and her children debarred from the succession. In Great Britain, though one of the oldest and proudest monarchies in the world, it was not only possible but also was not even regarded as extraordinary, and It was as complete and valid as though the bride had been of royal blood. Before the wedding a subject and a com- moner. Instantly after that ceremony she was a \royal highness,\ standing In direct and close succession to the throne as the wife of the heir pre- sumptive. The fine tribute to woman- hood was obvious, and no less so was the demonstration of the essential unity between sovereign and people. The best American democrats, who Justly boast that any native citlsen may become president, must appreci- ate a kingdom in which a subject and commoner may become queen and the son of a commoner may become king and emperor. WHArS IN A NAME? A TOM hr any other name might smell unreel Bat tfaslaaleswafartjls and Granite Oo^ «*niB withes STBENERGE & FELTON, Props. 120 West Mala St Pkooe Set-J Ovposite Franklin House GET OUR PRICES WE£CAKKY A RILL SUPPLY OF w ^£fg±J whea 'Flour Bran Middlings Cracked Corn Oats Scratch Grains Com Meal Salt, etc. Uncle Ab says: A community it- self beautiful so It could sell out and move away; and then it found lit couldn't afford to sell. DOGS All Dog licenses expire on June 80. The 1923 license fee is due July 1. E^wy dog must wear a tag oi tho current dog license year. A dog without such tag is not pro- tected by law, and no such action can be maintained for his injury or destruction. An unlicensed dog may be seized and killed,, and the fact (that a dog is without a tag ispresumptive evi- dence that the dog is unlicensed. Dog licenses must bo obtaiaed- ed fro! the clerk of the telty or town where the dog is harbored or inapt : License fees are as follows: Male Dog ?2.25 Female Dog ».25 Spayed Female Dog 2.25 These amounts include clerk's fees No license can be issued for less than the full license fee. The owner of a dog who fails or refuses to obtain a license for the nog as required by law incurs a penalty of ?10.ut> and costs. The assessors of towns and the police departments of cities are re- quired to prepare in June of each year a list of dog owners. The omission of the name of an owner from the assessors' or police list will not excuse the owner from ob- taining a license. E. A. CHASE, Town Clerk. H. P. HARRICA, Weputy Clerk. Chateaugay, N. Y. TO KENT—Cottages at Chat- eaugay Lake. Also tor sale, se- veral building lots. Apply te Will- iam Phllp. WANTED—Ten cords of dry slat •wood and five cord* of split wood, hardwood. Louis Morse. Game in ereryjdery awl secure latest quotations. E. A. McCOY, 1 iver Street BRING IN YOUR CALFSKINS; J, FRANCIS KORAN Attorney and Counselor at Law. Office over Kissane's Quality Store, Chateaugay, N. Y. GUT C. KTBBT, D. M. D. Dental office over Hoy's store BralnardsviUe, N. Y. Tel. 88- P 1-2. DR. H. D. WRAY, DENTIST 26 East Main St., Phone ?S1 Malone, N« Y. E. G. DOUGLAS, D. D. g. Dental office over Duffy Bros, ston in the Anderson block, Chateau gay, N. Y. J. W. CAMPBELL, D. D. 8. Dental rooms In Beman block. Nev and improved apparatus. Al work entrusted to me will b< satisfactorily executed. \ > TT.VTV (A Bright CHeertU Kitchen THOS J- BWZPATRICK, Lawyer, Office In rooms over Firs National Bank, Chateaugay, N. Y S. B. OOPPS, Undertaker and Bmbalmer. Ah work promptly and carefully at tended to night and day. „ .J For the real mother and home-maker\ the kitchen, nursery and bathroom rank ' as the three most important rooms in : the house, not only in sanitary arrange- ments but in beauty and\ comfort.' White walls and woodwork should be; kept a pure white in order to maintain' most bright and cheerful surroundings, -, Barreled Sunlight is the ideal inter-' ior white paint for this purpose. Ittt I cheaper than enamel and much easier' to apply, can be washed and won't need! repainting for years. Contains no lead \ or varnish and dries with a hard, beau-' tiful gloss. .} awm*BH-BRAinranr oo. Undertakers and Bmbalmers, Th.w •assay, N. T. Cay ealla tT«J. Might eatn SS-J. Prompt attaav .1 » A SIZE FOR EVERT PURPOSE WW. arff fUtm, ffwrfe, timtt. MJ ffaa* W.D.RYAN&CO.