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d our only e. We f M':*. r Coats Coats in is for to look. THE HERALD IS THE BIG Advertising Medium in South**\ Fwafclln »BI» St. LBWMMW CounllM ' Co. -Hnft READERS In thi» 4/UUs.ctIan-lOOO mort. LOUIS CSCHLiEP, Publisher The HERALD & Adirondack Mt. P«NM Comet mar 1800 baMi and Has Orer 4700 Re*dw. VOLUME XXLX. NUMBER 41. 29th YEAR ADIRONDACK MOUNTAIN PRESS TUPJPER LAKE, NEW YORK. FRIDAY,OCTOBER 9, 1925 I is TEL»H NEWS \MAiCME COAT ^^SfSllNWESOFlWEBIiNESS zzzzz^™>~<~~~ ntu oucc^a %J uto B. V. iana.Hta.ry ivi ciulrraun of t!w cxeca- tiv.j eoramlUvj ol th-.i j} P:w a of ffln-c- Great Events That Are Changing the World's Destiny Told in Paragraphs. jTr:; •• -s'••••••.-•• r v... ?ui\urit;!J!tt . hrt ->ainii nii.l .'.itii- ColonIe»-*-Newa From Europo That Will interest WASHINGTON The Rev. Dr. Janon Noble Plorce today declared the First Congregation- al Church building, attended by Presi- dent Cooltdge, la not safo. General Spears's plim for demili- tarized zones between European na- tiona to preserve peaeo finds favor with Interparliamentary Union dele- gates. Six navy air service officers declare tiu.ro is widespread dissatisfaction in the corps, but oppose Colonel Mit- chell's suggestions for reform. United States Supremo Court opened Its 1925 term with 7C2 cases on its docket A new attack on the validity of the Volstead law will take up the court's attention almost at once. Commissioner Frederick I. Thomp- F«E. Democrat, of Alabama, of tin Shipping Board, unexpectedly submit- ted Ms resignation to President Cooi- Wge. Tee president immediately ac- copied' tie resignation. It la effec- tive November h President Coolldge Is Interested to n proposal to, erect In Washington * memorial to Theodora Koosovclt, but to has not decided what form it should take or where it should ha placed. WASHINGTON.—Secretary Weeks, who ha3 been away'tram his desk at tho War Department for several months on account of illness, will r ttirn to Washington very soon, it is a noanced In official circles. WORLD'S BUSINESS A marked decline in th« yield of fisheries is noted by the Bureau of Fisheries of tho Department of Com- moreo in a statistlc.il bulletin Just iaui.d ; giving the figures of tho regular live-year official census. Construction programs throughout th« country generally promise to sup- ply ample employment for building workers over the fall months, and in romo instances well into tho 'Winter, according to a survey of labor con- ditions in tho building Industry just completed. The largest fall and winter business la the history of the automobile tira Industry is expected this year. Tho automobile Industry in tho past eight month.? has produced 2,510,339 cars and 310,213 trucks. The owners of stocki n gas and electric utility companies have mora than doubled since 1918. At present 2.511,279 men and women are part- ners in the public service companies of the country, says tho New York Slt Committee on Public Utility In- of imnttoa of ivjicrt-i th^t ft Ms wK'T oi 1 buklnt; corapanlva la in Uw fUdm; At«x\Tvrva In tUu iromjuncemnnt mt V.'.,n. v.'tura Jn:.i aflvr,.-a to pur- jt l <-II:L: la tlio AND EVENTS IN TtJPPER Rod and Gun Club Formed In Tupper isssssrj-™- , CONTENTS OF THIS EDITION 1. Lattt telegraph iiewn condensed. ti. Th» #reitt t'uiitliiueil atory, :i. Hliibtiatecl wuiuea « tu»htonw. i. UuilUy'j* Kvtiulug Fairy Tali-. &• Tito Kitchen Cabinet (Jlnu lut-Ijisi.- ti. N«w York State IU-WM VI IN THE ADIRONDACKS Woodcock FIVE CENTS PER COPY NEWSY NOTES FROM Look Before You Pull Tri Is Now Open I'•=.•-•& oMiiflf cl l a ui.; be d tea •1:3 In uia New York homo with a •eneral nerrou3' breakdown, It was earned. In announcing the plans of the Met- ropolitan Opera Company for the com- ing season, Qiullo Qattl-Casazza, gen- eral manager, gave out the news that •Miss Marion Talley of Kansas City, tha lS-ycar-old daughter of a telegraph operator, who mado a sensation at an tradition in 1922, has received a con- tract from tho company and will ap- pear during tho second half ot the sea- son. Threo thousand film actors paraded tho streets o! Vienna, Austria, as a protest against tho Importation ot for- eign films. Twenty passengers and three train- men woro Injured and many other pas- Bongera were bruised when two pas- senger trains on tho Houston &Texag Central Railroad collided head on In the yards at Bryan, Texas. President Coolldge. announced he hail cut tho tariff duty on live bob- white quail GO por cent. This action wn i taken t tho instance* of Game Commti-ioncrs of PennRylvanla, Mary- land and otheri who propagate birds. Henry Troy Istas, a senior, Yale's only Mind student, is tho winner tbi* year of the Edward J. Phelps Me- >ri?il scholarship. Istas, whose home .. In New Haven, 13 perhaps one of tho outstanding figures in the student boily .it Yale- today. Pour Now Jersey State troopers and former prohibition agent captured a 4Mti.f<xst tarfto at MasonviUa with $r.']!i,H£!O worth of liquor and flfty-slx prlfiroexs who carried $123,000 in cur- '• nncy. Six trucks and four motor cars wero seized. Some of the prison- er i set liro to the barge and tried to swim ashore. A navy airplane en routo from San DJtego, Cal., to Baltimore, and piloted by Lieutenant Commantler A. E. Mont- gomery, crashed near Des Molnes. Tliu pilot, with S..'.. Chamberlain and Charles Kldder, mechanic, escaped injury. Elmer Quaekenbush, 17, and Arthur Brown, of CanajoharW, N. Y., died after heing overcome, by fumes in a vinegar vat at the plant of John Vos- burg & Son. Attempts were made for four hour3 to revive the two with • --mi:* • • ll. '. '.,.!, ... •.. .. .. • ... • .I.;,H ied their intention oi joining. Officers elected .were: President, John H. Black; Vice-President, I rank Smith; Secretary, Chas. T. Fletcher; Treasurer Chas. E. Knox; Board of Directors, E. M. Richardson, E. W. Owen, Tupper Lake; Thomas Fortin, Edw. Burnette, Junction; P. H. Alexander, F ' Kn»pp,. Moody. The annual dues are $3.00, of j which |25 will go to the New York State department The Conservation Commission at Al- bany was represented by Cronk S Rog- ers of Syracuie, who gave an interest- ing address relating to good work by the organization thruout the State pith beat methods of preventing poaching; and illegal slaughter of game, all of which was made clear by actual view s shown by the movie machine operated by E. J. McGuirk of Albany. E. M, Richardson, chairman of the board of directors and active promoter, who is employed at Ricquette Lake came down to attend the meeting. October 19 has been named aa the date of the first regular meeting of the club. Local Aillrom ir'lOTll UH il,-it i\r>- > • u • i . Hpurtnicrl lick Via nil ually tVt'*( r trackK v. i in lu.ia who Iiuvc* •« till s Wick upnteil hy < »-r<*' '****•-ti in. .: i •• - 'f i '.i ! M'I-U Iri thf in the re- lwi*, sfiftc nil itifi-- . ,'•• , ... DO1NGSANUHAPPENINGSIN OUR DOMINION NEIGHBOR THE HKRALU— JV*ml do *otr* famine CStttifcilied wants caluinn, Editorial column. Wit and humor sparkling bits. Cross Word puizles. A Trip To Florida In The Adirondacks Dogs Again Are Killing Sheep] Dogs are again at their devil's work in the sheep pasture about upper and lower Chateaugay lake*. Within a fort night they have killed several shetp. However, the killers have not had everything their own way. Sheep own- lmotorb. In some sections of Columbia Coun- ty, Now York, fruit trees are partly in blo.«som tho second time this season. At Spencertown a bartlett pear tree 1» blossoming, while at Glenco M11I3, about ten miles from Hudson, an ap- ple tree has beautiful sprays of bloom. At tho same time there Is fruit on the tree. . ... Envelopes, statements, shipping tags and letterheads tastefully printed at reasonable rates, and with promptness. Louis C. Sehliep Press. Herald Build'g. Red Gross Movement to Organize Chapter Here Miss Susan Johnson, of Utica, field secretary for the Northern New York district, National Red Cross socity, has been doing much here during the pact week in the interest of establishing a local Chapter of the National Organi- zation to work in connection with the branch at the Federal hospital which is in charge of Miss Nell Ennis, formerly of Washington. The local Red Cross, of which Mrs. A. B. Flanders is chairman has been a branch of the aaranac Lake Chapter of the National Organization. The needs of over a ISO members of families of ex- service men in the hospital, who are now living in town and which number will constantly increase have occasion- ed Miss Johnson's activities in behalf of an independent Chapter here. During her stay in town JAiss Johnson was a guest at Sunset Cottages, on Big Tupper Lake. She also visited at the Red Cross rooms at the Federal hospit- al and conferred with many people pro- minent in the work. Mrs. A. B. Flanders, chairman here, left Wednesday, Sept 30 fora visit at Newington, Ont., where her mother, Mrs. gnes McDonald, has been with relatives the past month. During her absence John B Goff will act as tern* porary chairman of the local Red Cross. jii BIGGER AND BIGGER OUR CIRCULATION THE Sing Sing Executioner Resigns His Job A former Franklin county resident who summered in Florida wrote on July 25th another old resident, who has been a frequent winter visitor to that State, as follows: \Your letter finds me quite well, but I have perspired so much down here this summer that I have loit about 12 pounds in weight. The real estate men will tell that Florida is a fine summer resort. It is about as much a summer resort as H—1 is-—every day jurt like th* day before and after a rain it come* out just as hot as ever. You feel just about like a stewed prume most of the time. But ,as you know, the climate in winter is fine, and the climate is what they are selling. It is sure getting higher every day. Say, honest,! csn'tunderstand it. I don't know what people are going to do- that is the people who come down this winter. You can't rent a house in— now for love or money. A man just above me rented his garage for $60 per month. The mayor of St, Petersburg has warned the people who expect to come down to bring plenty of money with them. Your post card of Wilmington Notch came very near making me homesick. You are sure right; they don't have anything like that in this State. In fact, I have notas yet, found any spot as pretty as the old Adirondacks. I killed a rattlesnake on my front lawn a week or so ago. Had an opportunity to sell our house; could have made $1,2(10 on it; but it would cost that much more to build another, so did not sell. It is rather lonesome for me at times, forj am all alone in the house; anl one gets sick of his own company at times, nu matter how good it is. But we have got to fight it to a finish \ This letter tells a significant story. Thousands of northerners arc parking up for Florida expecting io m tkc thai State their permanent homu. It' ont is financially able to go there for the win- ter and return tor the summer i» is ali right. Nothing could be finer, but traveling back and forth, unless ope is a good speculator or real estate gambl- er, won't buy miik_fflr_the baby, A man had better think twice when se- lecting his permanent spring, summer, fall and winter domicile. —Malone Farmer ers have shot some of the doKs and have high hopes of getting the ethers Dog* in the Chateaugay country have been a menace for many months Snot only to shtep but alto to the deer herds of that section. The dogs have been hunted by game '.protectors and resi- dents, but it appears some of them bear charmed life. WEDDINGS • • * LaVallee-Clarke At seven o'clock Wednesday morning, in the Sisters chapel of Holy Ghost Con- vent, Mwo Lorena Mary Clarke, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs- A. T. Clarke, jr., andAlbtrtA LaVallee, grocer of the Junction, ion of Mr. and Mrs. D. La- Vallee, were united in marriage by Rev- Leo LaRose, assistant parish priest at St Alphonsua church, who also per- formed similar ceremonies on Monday and Tuesday morning in the absence of Rev. E. 0. Hervieux. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Lucille M. Clarke, as maid of hon- or, the groom by his brother-in-law, Nelson Dumolin. Following the ceremony a sumptuous wedding breakfast was served at the Clarke residence in West Park struct attended by parents of the bride and groom and a few immediate relatives, after which the happy young couple left on their honeymoon trip which includes a ten day auto tour of Canada and the New England State?, visiting Montreal, Quebec, Boston, Mass., and other cities of interest. After their return, Mr. and Mrs.^ La- Vallee will reside in their new home at the Junction, near tho Holy Name church, which Mr. LaVallte has provid- ed for his bridt'. p ;tsou 'Or.i.i\t>t auiuim,' .if gins next Thursday, October lith, and Tupper Lalx* and vicinity hunters are already fully prepared for the opening date and will lose no time in getting in- to the woods and camps as soon si the legal restriction on deer is removed. Recent severe fn sts have turned the foliage on the forest*trees to beautiful autumn tints and to go into the woods now is to set a gorgeous panorama of colors, varying from the dark green of spruce, balsam and pine, to the gold of birches and beeches and the crimson of the raapki.a riot of colors that extends from the valleys and foot hills to the highest mountain tops. With present weather indications, however, thtre is little prospect that the leaves will be off the hardwood trees by October 15th, and so the hunters will have to match their skill against the in- stinctive caution and cunning of the deer, if they get a shot, as the thick fol- iage is a good protection to the hunted, but this only adds to the zest of deer hunting to many sportmen, and when they get a buck under these' conditions they feel that the trophy has beenlirtr- ly won. The outlook for deer hunters in the Adirondack woods this fall is apparent ly the best in recent years. . TnpperLakeHerald & Adirondack Wit. Pre*^^^\ Direct Newspaper Advertising Is Acknowledged by Expert Salesmen, to be the Best John Hulbert, the hermit of Sing Sing, who has sent the voltage crashing thru 140 men in his 11 year term as the State enecutioner, has tfted of the mo- notony of his job and recently resigned Hulbert's victims included Lieutenant Becker, Dr. Harvey Warren Waite, the poisoner, and one pair of brothers who went out the same night last spring, the Diamond boys. HOMESPUN YARN 1 Pears cut in half and baked like apples make a good dessert. Aunt Ada's axioms: The best help some people ever have is an emer- gency. Put a newspaper on the floor or table where there is a messy job; then gather up the refuse in the paper and burn the whole thing. LeFebvre- Frechette Present indications point to a slight- ly less total crop of apples in New York State than last year but more saleable apples and a bigger per cent of Grade A fruit, according to a market and crop survc* recently made public by the N. Y, State College of agriculture »nd the marketing committee of the N. Y State farm bureau fedcratl->n. The buck- wheat acrtage for N. Y State will be about S.GW.TOO bushels, a third of a million less than last yew. New York produces one-third of the United States crop, which is estimated this year as slightly over last year's crop. Adirondack Waters Alive With Fish Some fine great northern pike are be- ing fctk< n at Meacham Lnk?. An Albany woman recently caught three in one day whose total weight wastfs pounds. The largest of the three was a 15 pound fighter The following day she caught one weighing 12 pounds. yawl. John Stackable, a miner employed by Lite Minto Coal company, was badly crushed by a falling rock while he was working alone In a mine at Minto, N.B., and died a short while after ha WUH rescued. He ttad been pinned down by the large rock for about t>Igut or nine hours before his slight was discovered. He leaves a wife and Jive small children. • A dispatch from Quebec City wys the North Shore. Power Company, a subsidiary of the Shawinigan Water and Power Company, Is now complet- ing the harnessing of some 10,000 horsepower at the Chemlne« Falls, on the BatiBcan river. This power will be available shortly and ia derived from water falls, which were teased from the government Emily Belle Basse of Gait, Ont., nu nine grandparents altr*. She i* the granddaughter ot Mr. and Mr*. J. Ud dell of Gait, and of Mr. and Mrs. H, F. Sasse of SU Qeorge. The great grand- parents are Mr. and Mm, R< D. LJddel! of Flint, Mich.; Mrs, M A. Clark of Quelph; Mrs, M. S. Sasie of Pwia and Mrs. K. Tfeompton of Columbm. Ohio. ^ JOHN8BURQ MjTon Bennett of Warrensburg waa ' in this place Thursday. Mm. i<froy Straight spent W«dne«« day with Glefm K«H« relative*. .MIMH Florence Twig* of The Olen tin* been visiting local relative* Mi.-s Katharine Armstrong, teacher in District IS Mpent thetoeek-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Harry Arm- strong at Fox Lair Camp, Oregon. Huiuid curnright anei cl«uu» urcutt of Poland *»>v»» wjfk-enJ xuestg at the Jtonu* uf Mr. and Mrx, O«orge TWIM. Kloyd TWISK and friend of Glaveri- VHIP are spending Saturday and Sun- day with relatives in town. Mr. and Mr.«. Elmer Hurt of South Glen* FaOn np»>nt Sunday in town. Mr«. Chlo*; Clfvelan*! h»R returned frcim visiting out of town friends. Gam>* I'rotwi-tor Mark Stewart visit- eil Garnet Luke Saturday looking after violators ot the game. M*\lvin Campney of Garnet was a Mt't Joral bu'ini-ss caller on Saturday. Mrs. Guy Alexander of North CreeE was recently In town calling on local relative*. Mr. and Mr* Mark H. Stewart and KOE Edward visited Mr. and Mrs. Floyd tHewarr In Sodom Thursday evening. Thoma» N'oble has a new radio In- Ktitll<>d tn his renldence which Is giving good results. Mile aid Feiale fldp Wale* Representatives everywhere. Sell Hosiery, Underwear, Dresses, to Wear- er. GWMI pay. All or part time. Samples furnished. (District Managers wanted.) KEYSTONE MILLS, Amaterdam N. Y. C. ftlfott & Son Purchase Lumber C. H. Elliott & Son, extensive man- ufacturers of hardwood lumber and man* gle rollers for foreign trade, with mills at Tupper Lake, Canton and Potsdam, have purchased from the Emporium Forestry Co., of Conifer, 4,000,000 feet of hardwood for their Potadam mill. The logs will be cut at the rate of one million each year for four years. The land to be lumbered is in the town of Colton, St. Lawrence County, and com- prises sections 39,40, 41, 45, 46 and 47, and is known as die Beswick tract. The Elliott new mill at Tupper Lake will soon be ready to begin catting the 3,000,000 feet of hardwood recently pur- chased from the Li$ehfield Park pro- perty. At seven o'clock Tuesday morning in the little chapel of £t. Alphonsus church occurred the wedding of Homer Le. Febvre, and Miss Alma Frechette, both of Tupper Lake. Sponsors were Damaa LeFebvrr, bro- ther of the groom, Alfred Frechette, jr, and MisiiCecile l*rechette, brother and Bister of the bride and Mine Mildred Jcs-' aie. The nuptials were celebrated with Mass by Rev. Leo LaRose, local assist* ant parish priest in St. Alphonsus parish who is officiating during temporary ab- sence of Rev. E. O. Hervieux. j After the ceremony a day of feasting and celebrating was held at home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Frechette, sr. The couple jtett Tuesday night for their honeymoon in New York after which they will reside in Hartford Conn. Carroll-Dlsotell -with DRUGSTORE » The Merchants of tupper- L*e,, S Lake, Lon* Lake, North Creelc and Towns of 8 Hamilton County are now offered a Big Advertis- w iug Outlet for THBIp-SALES. 'The Home Sam's Lunch Near Post Office Special Dinner Every Day 50c 12 noon to 1:30 p. m. • 5:30 to 7 p. m, Sunday Chicken Dinner 50c (Table* Set Hotel Style-Table Cloths) Table-Board, $6.00 week-21 Meals \Toast your own,\ fs a good slogan for picnics. Try i t with ham, bacon, cheese or marmalade sandwiches and see how good they are. Buttonholes, whether well or poorly made, will look better it the material Is pulled lengthwise with the button' hole just as it IB pressed. A long handle on the pan cover if as convenient as a long handle on the pan. If you can't buy one, get the man of the house to make a long A pretty wedding occurred Monday morninR at St. Alphonsus church, Rev. Leo LaRose officiating. The contracting parties were Misa Lena Elizabeth Diso- tell, of Tupper Lake and James Carroll, >f Saranac Lake. Sponsors were, Miss Lulu Glrard of the Junction and Wilfred Disotell, the bride's brother. Following a dainty wedding breakfast at the home of Mrs. Edmond Auclair, sister of the bride and with whom sh@ had resided since their parents death, the happy couple left for a honeymoon trip to Montreal and Quebec. ^ Oh their return tho^ will maki- their home in Saranae Lak< ^ The Klenzo Treatment For White Teetli, Healthy Gums and a Clean Mouth No Dental Treatment Can Accomplish More y Sold Only At \*$ -J 4 ••••»•