{ title: 'Chateaugay record and Franklin County Democrat. (Chateaugay, N.Y.) 189?-current, August 03, 1923, Page 3, Image 3', 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/sn87070301/1923-08-03/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070301/1923-08-03/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070301/1923-08-03/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070301/1923-08-03/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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J ^^^ RA I ta | ^j » i ^U^^^,i^Hsf ••¥* ^iN^w^ •* CHATEAUGAY RECORD FRIDAY, AUOTJQT* BURKE DEPARTMENT Tfess Nan •! Rev. and Hss. P . M. Walker and children, of Axab.oi|&, Canada ,are visltinc friends ia» this victnty. Rev. Walker was formerly pastor of the Burke and Bellmont Presbyter- lan churches and his many old time friends are pleased to meet him again rt this time. Mr. and Mrs. Beavis Williams spent Sunday in Cbatoaagay with friends. A ntnaer from this vicinity iave been attending the camp meeting which is now in session at Mooers. Farmers ere rushing their haying -vrhea the weather is favorable al- though their remains yet a large amount of uneat hay to be harvest- ed in this locality. Mrs. Julia Shat jote is the guest of friends in Chateaugf.:-. Mrs. Anna Shannon and daugh- ter are the guests of relative* in Fort Covington. There will be a meeting of the Burke Grange in the Grange Hall Tuesday evening, August 7th. It is requested that all members be pre- sent as several business matters of importance are to be decided. Barlow Crosby. Miss Ruby Crosby and Roy Crosby and family, former residents of Burke left by auto last Saturday for Iowa City, Iowa, to ma&e their future home. Mrs. Harry Stone and sons have gon to Montreal and other places in Canada, where they will spend a week with friends. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Erwin and Gwendolyn were over Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Smiih. at Hraser's Point.. Mr. and Mrs. George Howard and family have gone to Herkimer to reside. .sir. and Mrs. W. £. Stearns and daughter, of Newark, X. J. t and H. A. Savage and daughter, of Ames- buy, Mass.. spent the week-end vritt Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Mason. Mrs. Ellen Hill, of Essex Junc- tion, Vt.. who has been the guest of jir. and Mrs. Claik Paine, has re- turned to her honje. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Griffin spent Sunday at Chateaugay Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Martin, who Lave been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sellars, have returned to Springfield, Macs. Mr. and Mrs. W. Selkirk and Mrs. Walker spent Suaday at Og- eensburg. Arlington Reynolds spent Sunday ^,-ith his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur White, of Huntingdon, P. Q. . visited relatives in town Saturday. Mrs. John Witherell spent the week-end with friends in Hunting- don. Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Thayer and daughter left last Saturday for New • Hampshire arid a trip through the White Mountains. They expect to te gone two weeks. Mrs. Emile Tando left on Satur- day . for Hartford. Conn., and other laastern cities where she will visit relatives. Her sister, Mrs. Sherman Peach, of Malone, went with her. Mrs. Leila Yando. of Malone, spent Sunday with her mother. Mrs. New- a caller in town on Saturday. Vem Montgomery, of malone, was ion. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Edwards and Miss -Grace Edwards, of Malone, were guests of Mr. Edwards' mother on \\unday. Miss Mildred Williams is enjoying a two weeks vacation and is visiting friends in Bangor. Mrs. March is visiting friends in Chateaugay. Mrs. Gardner and children .''.re are visiting relatives in Central part of the State. Mrs. James Anderson and daugh- - Gladys and Mrs. George Ander- son spent one day last week in A.holstan with Mr. and MTS. John eUamilton. The Ladies Aid, of the North Burke church, will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wood Wednesday afternoon August 8th. \,l are cordially invited to attend. The proceeds from the last meeting that was held at AT. and Mrs. George Dechambeau's was |1.55. Miss Winifred Sheen, o£ Water- own, is spending a few weeks with her mother. Mrs. Homer Ccok is spending a tew days with her sister and father, .'.:r«. Wilber Cook and Arthur Roby. s. Matilda Wood, of Malone, is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Mars'-i. GREAT \GOLD BLUFFS\ HOAX 'Nigh Tom Mix's Favorite Horse Human\ Tom Mix says: \There are horses, and there are jus: animals; but the finest bit of horseflesh I have ever thrown a leg ovar is Tony, the one 1 rie'e now in my pictures produced by Fox. He is the nearest approach to human that I know. Sell him? i would as soon think of selling a aaraii beinr- Xot old Tony—he's a real pal\ And those who have watched Ton- going through nis tricks, un- tying kno'.s and doing other tmngs required by the story, agree with Toni about nis favorite mount. If you like spirited a.tion in addition to seeing real intelligence in ani- nials. go to the Buike Theatre on Sr.tr.rday when the latest Fox pic- ture str.rrin^ Tom M:x ts shown. It - called \For Big Stakes,\ and is a rir-ing romance with the scene aid in Arizona. Notice The assessment roll of. the town of Burke has been completed and the board of assessors will meet in the Town Hall on Tuesday, August 21st to hear any complaints regard- ing the assessments on the above mentioned assessment roll. Dated Augut 1st. 1923. GEORGE MARSH, HORACE T. JOHNSON, HARDY MILLER Dated August 1st, 1923. Reported Finding of Yellow Metal Caused Intense Excitement in San Francisco in 1851. To San Francisco in January, 1851, came a tale that set even its excite- ment-jaded pulses a-throb. Briefly, 19 prospectors had proceeded in the steam- er Chesapeake toward the Klamath river, and near this stream the sea- shore for miles was composed—half, at least—of pure gold, writes Eugene Cunningham in Adventure Maga- zine. Digging was not required One had only to raise as much as he wished of the golden sand from the beach. I Small wonder that San Francisco went mad Eight vessels prepared to sail • for \Gold Bluffs.\ | Then the bottom dropped out. It I was rumored first that the gold was I mixed with black and gray sands; that I because of its exceeding fineness it I could not be separated from the sand. '• Worse still, the sea washed through ! huge piles of collected sand and flood-\ 1 tide brought none of it back. Work- ! lng \Gold Bluffs\ promised a reversal ! of ordinary mining—gold went into, I Instead of coming out of, the ground. So the greatest excitement of the I decade was doae. But it was a thrill- i er\ while It lasted. FELT THE BISHOP WAS SAFE NORTH BURKE Chester Hay, of Maione, s; ent Sunday at Mr. and Mrs. George De- chambeau's. Mrs. Carey, of Malone, spent one day recently with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Pelton. Mr. and Mrs. Myron Badger and Robert Patterson motored to Glen- elm, Sunday to spond the evening -•: the home of,JMr. and Mrs. Samuel Patterson. BURKE THEATRE SATURDAY, AUG. 4 8:00 P. M. Tom Mix and TONY — in — -\FOR BIG STAKES 59 See the greatest romance of rough riding, straight shooting, trick roping, desperate adventure and quick- witted love-making ever enacted by Tom Mix. ALSO- ART ACORD \In the Days of Buffalo Bui\ CHAPIER 14 Prices lO and 39c Woman's Apprehension* Disappeared With Her Increasing Confidence In the Small Boy. When Phillips Brooks, the great \low church\ bishop of Massachusetts, made his visitation at the Church of the Advent, Boston, celebrated for its elaborate ritual, the rector consider- ately inquired if the bishop would like the usual service simplified. \Oh no,\ was the reply. \Turn everything on!\ A young but well-trained acolyte j was told to attend the bishop, and | before the towering figure paced, with ! Impressive dignity, the small red-cas- socked lad. A lady, who knew and admired Phil- lips Brooks, but knew little of ritual, regarded the situation at first with anxious face, but soon became serene. On leaving the church after service, she remarked: \In the beginning I was dreadfully afraid the bishop would not know where to go or what to do, but I felt perfectly safe about him when I saw that little boy knew a great deal more about it all than the bishop did. and was taking good care of him.\—Har- per's Magazine. New SUEDE SANDALS High and Low Heels A Wide Variety of HOSIERY AWAITS YOUR SELECTION Silk Stockings Ladies' Pure Silk Hose, lisle garter top, black, cordovan, grey and white at $1.50 Ladies' Pure Thread Silk Hose, full fashioned, blk., white and cordovan, .75-2.50 Silk Hose with \Panel Back,\ black, cordovan, grey and castor, Special at $1.25 Silk Hose with pointed heel black only, at SL25 SPORT HOSIERY Ladies' Dropstitch Mercerized Hose Black and Cordovan at 50c Boys' and Giris' Wide English Ribbed Hose, with cuff 3-4 length, black and cordovan, at 25c Ladies' New Wide Ribbed Sport Hose Black, Cordovan and Grey at 60c Boys' Wool Grey Hose at 60c and $1.00 Complete Line of Comfort Shoes Peake & Co. Walton Shoes For Boys and Girls A Wise Man Said I will build my HOME, BARN and GARAGE of Per- manent Material. So this WISE MAN used the HOLLOW Concrete BLOCK which made his buildings FIRE, FROST AND MOISTURE PROOF. Yearly paint bills and depreciation were reduced to a minimum and his children and children's children blessed him FOREVER AFTERWARDS. An Inventor at Seventeen. One Saturday morning, more than 60 years ago, writes Floyd L. Darrow tn St. Nicholas Magazine, a man and a boy might have been observed stand- ing over a piece of pipe in a maehinw shop in Schenectady. 2*. T. The man was giving instructions to bis fourteen- year-old son, George Westinghon.se. Jr., as to how he wished this pipe to be cat into, pieces of a certain length. George had wanted to go on a hike with some other boys, but his father, a somewhat stern man, was assigning j a task which, he assured the lad, would require all his spare time for several days to come. While his fa- ther had been talking, the boy had been tnlnf-'ng out a scheme to escape rf.is drudgery. In a few hours he had rigged up a combination of tools which, when attached to a power machine, automatically fed the pipe and cot It Into the proper lengths. In this youthful incident we have the first glimpse of the wonderful in- ventive genius of one of the most ex- traordinary men that America has ever produced—George Westinghouse. Malone, Concrete Products Co* Phone 236 W Malone Jet., N. Y. History of Vaccination. Smallpox vaccination, generally re- garded as a modern practice, dates back mora than 2,000 years, according i to Dr. W. G. McCoy, director of the i Hygenic Laboratory of the United I Statu Public Health service. \When j the ancients noticed that recovery from the first attack gave Immunity from others,\ says Doctor McCoy, \they be- gan inoculating their fellows; first- by exposing well persons to others ill with the disease and later by inoculation.\ Jenner. who is generally conceded to nave been die father of vaccina- j Hon for smallpox wtth cowpox, eely \ptit vaccination on a rock where it ; would be immovable,\ explains Doctor McCoy. Records show that years be- | fore Jenner*» time men had been vac- cinated with cowpox and then with smallpox to demonatvate tbelr immu- nity. ELLENBTJEGH DEPOT , Ai the movlen ,- rlday night. See > OUT old frteno* Harry Carey in, the; \Ki . Back. ' Ford Service Station Always Insist Upon Genuine Ford Parts Only Genuine Ford Parts should ever be used in repair- ing Ford cars. Ford parts are specially designed and constructed to meet the various strains and stresses to which the car is subjected. Genuine Ford parts are sold at prices as low as is con- sistent with high quality. It is false economy to buy imrtatoon parts at cheap prices, both from a iSf„° ln - vF**^^ and the Possibility of ^\\treatS^ Si FOrdS °? P&rtS ,™ \P\*^ ^at- tit SL » T W Part £» been Studied to is&iss of steel most adaptab,e * * i-cw ,f \sis tor sffii£& - s MKSttt^^^Hff Gabriel Snubbers for Ford Cars, $15 Per Set of Four. Oliver & Spellman \WE SAY IT WITH SE RVr CE » American Gssolise. Qwier State ami Pennzoil Motor Oik