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THE HERALD 13 THE BIG, Advertising Medium In Southwn FranWIn anil St. law*«i«»CanintI«« North*'\ H««»M«am C«, READERS In tl.I. »ner#< LOUIS C. SCHL1EP, Publisher VOLUME XXIX. NUMBER The HERALD & Adirondack Ml. Press Cones near 1800 hontMS and Hat (her 4700 Read** ADIRONDACK MOUNTAIN PRESS LATE TELEGRAPH NEWS RADIOGRAM AND CABLf Big Stories and Minor Events \ Blue Penciled Into Quickly Read Paragraphs. QUIT-'. AT NATION 42. 29th YEAR Flow Jt ,-,,H ffom-BriKland to Imttua Btivt-.-a utmt'i I'VvJtfUt UrMv its r.vok cuilcl Sep. tumfcur W :,.uwa HI.wlv;t for nil tttrnt. lift i;lwoltt,a cb,ir,,i,;v t-f C* Jf-.a;i fo/ hnU t.. I BDi-iOl toi. cVcatJo t'-'M. 1)1. t IOOTJ. tt i f ,-- , 1 , , h . )J ' i/nWW rr: 1 TUPPER LAKE, NEW YORK, FRIDAY,OCTOBER 16, 1925 NEWS HERE AND THERE IN THE NHNHS Poultry Thteves Busy; Watch Your Birds FIVE CENTS PER COPY Dinner Held ere Last Week BOOST Miiu-Tyuui' <.it>, boti^l 5-uur friend; LkHj.-t lli>- JIUIK\ thai y».iu attaint, Itnust tin-nfivd u'u width yoH'ri' llv>» r H- Kiin t Uit'^unjs that ,u>u arc jtoost Tih? i>euult< fotitid about yuii 'rjii-j vnu i^i't iiloi'K without you. i';ut i.i i i - -.-i will 'in'' k<-r Mini tdi- 1 i . '.! l i I' Eat Your Northern Vegetables At Home AU records for summer automobile trtivfl tnJKloriditM't'ri' iirukl'K HI Juitf wfivn 1,(Hii» inVH, carryih^ lti.HU )i»s- sengi-rs, wt-rt> r«?eurdcJ at the Bf. Johns Rlvi-r ttrid|jt» in Jacksonville. Suwmer Kutoinobijc tr»v«'l to Miami ims nt'Veit (jfforp tx-fn us h»-avy. Tht* r\fcofd tlueM i...t in. l<i«!.• .•»! ••njri-.r.i.' !• i-.ri.la it NEWSY NOTES FROM CANADIAN PROVINCES DO1NGSAND HAPPENINGS IN OUR DOMINION NEIGHBOR THIS H»cRALt>— h'mil .-.••Li uert?n.) Throuflhout the World. WASHINGTON • Air Inquiry Board and Shenandoah Court resume hearings. President Coolldgu's message ex- pected to k«np Congress busy until summer. Cummin* proposes all excess earn- ings over 6 per cent b* given to W«st- «rn railroads. The United States Supremo Court granted Ohio, Pennsylvania and Min- nesota permission to Join with Vft* coniln in suit to prevent Cbk&go from divoiting great lakes water tiorougb. the drainage canal. / Mra, Alien B. Lawrence ot Wash- ington, widow of Ueut, Jolja Ballard. Lawrence, who perished in\the Shea- andoah disaster, Is the flrstlto rocolro a p-. nylon among the relatives ct sur- vivors. She is to get ff0 aWonth. By accepting the presidency of th» Emergency Fleet corporation Vlthout flrat ascertaining whetfer he\*oali ba agreeable to President Coojldge* Elmer B. Crowley has Incurrod^tt displeasure of the chief executive,^, Senator Swanson favors $600,000,000 tea reduction by extending national debt. Tho Assistant Attorney General in charge of the bureau for the defensa of suits against tha United States re- portcd to Attorney General Sargent that claims totaling over a billion and a half dollars were pending before tho United States Court of Claims on June 2'.. 1 representing 2941 cues. Mitchell's (separate air service both, assailed and defended before Aviation. Inquiry Board. WORLD'S BUSINESS '-I.'.'; .i'-oa m oi .•,,.\I1CJ1LHK'. jjioatk- ly crop ror-ort. Tho New York State Waterway3 Associatica goes on record against tho St. JLawrenco project und for tho Deeper Hudson. Tho Amortein legion's uevonth an- jiual coavontlon ended at Omaha, Neb,, vtith the eluvatton ot John R, (Go-got- •em) MeGrlgg ot East Cluveland Ohio, whlto haired, flfty-nino, lawyer and banker, and wounded overseas engl< netr officer, to tlio ofllco of national wmmander. Raymond B. Fasdick pleads United States enter League. James B. Duk«', tobacco multlmil- llonairo, dies in New York. --JiVbman aecrotary of missing New York broker 8tamn}_al3o-mlHste&.wlth 160,000. • . \ \ , Thlrty-fivo applications tor, the wb ,of executioner at Sta^, Slns\ Prison, Now York, havo Tjcin\ r£ct;lv,cd by Warden Lav.es elncu ttio riccnt n^- noun cement that John Hulbi-yt, tho pr* gent Incumbent, will rctiro 6n pt-n- Jano 3tl. Scimor nprllcantn oft«ar orkneo In ktHinKGi-nBai3s ; ia tho war\ as a retommBliJaftea. LI«tit> nrtnt- ComwandfT Byrd takes McMillan, and Insistj u^ can coniufcr Artie. lors In baseball, commarco and ciacr.tlon, pay last tribute at Math- v.mn funeral. Vulo sets asidfl 203 aen'j n^ar Yule Bowl, New Haven, for zoological and botanical pw.'rve. LO.IKUO fw Political Education orms thirty-second year on November 7 at Town Hall. Now York. Protestant Episcopal Hoir-;s> of Clah- wj3 strikes \otiL-y\ from tln> marrlas* ceremony; Ei^hops enjoined tram dt- peeing Drown. .kTo than b''\ u:;-srtvicL* mi'ti '<>v» down for ttte dirmorand were entertain- ed with a program presided over by G. P. Hull, commander of the Tupper Lake Post. Among the speakcra were Dr. Cook, head of the Tapper Likke Veterans Bur- eau Hospital, and Oul. O|rastead, form- erly of the 27th Division and now servjnK in the Veterans Bureau. . From Saranac Luke the guesta includ- ed Alexander Nelson, county chairman. Claude Leister, commander of Jackson A. Matthews Post, members of the Bur- eau medical staff of Saranac Lake* and other ex-service men. Ii' you'd make >oui* city better, Boost it to the final letter. Northern New York Swept By Snow Storm Four more concerns ara added to tho super-power merger. Labor Bureau report* wag» leve continues without much change; r t^rta good crops. Interstate commerce commission ordered Chicago & Northwestern railroad to increase passenger com mutation fares 20 per cent. Each Individual's share of tho $4,- 827,003,324 in circulation October 1 was $42.17. On September 1 the per capita amount was $41.81, Treasury officials said. Tho right of State to enforce mini- mum wage laws was argued in tho Supreme Court. Settlement of tho Ciecho-Slovakian debt issue in \Washington will be fol- lowed immediately by a $25,000,000 loan to that country. During the next sixty-two years, Ciecho-SlovaMa is to pay tho United States a little more than $300,000,000. An agreement to .this effect was reached by tbe-Sent negotiators. Mayor HyLiaT of Nuw York, still considering third party question. Browcra a-lmlt swkins compromise with ilryd to kgaliz.j \war bttr.\ San,Fraud co Kives ht-roL-s' wel- come to returning flytra who triuj to reach Ha«jaii. Gt-nwal Sammmll opposes fopa- rato air unit In talk before veterans' cribvcntlon. 'JHenry For.l taform'.'-l the govern- nii-nt th.it h> had signed thi> contract for the purcbaso of ^uu vessels to be scrapp-J. Senator Cop>?Iand defends new Je^ sey asylum mannr'-'ntunt. The Milwaukee CleartoK Houso As- goclation is offering rewards of $2,500 for.ilead bandits and only $1,000 for live ones. Two hundred of Boston's policemen will ba taught tho fundamentals of law and pollco etiquette at Boston university. BIGGER OUR CIRCULATION To Oust Disturbers At Public Dances ^The Tupper Lik<- Board of Trustees has secured Jamsjs 1\. Fox, former State trouper, to succeed George L. Reed as patrolman at Tapper- Luke, Mr. Reed has teen temi-cirarily filling the vacancy created by tt\ resignation of John LDe- Chariifaeau, '.The board aaid Fox has not been named chief of police, but if ho proves satisfactory ani stays on the force thru tho winter, he will be pro- mot>d to the office of chief. An ordinance compelling all persons operating dances or dance halls to se- cure a special, permit from the police department for any and all public dances also was pas-si.J. A fee of $5.00 will be charged for $ie issuance of this permit and tbirf sum will be used to provide for a policeman who will be in attendance thruout the evening This action was taken t'? curb disturbances. This ord- inance became effective Oct. 15. The board decided to abolish a plan to deposit all village moneys in the Tupper Life National Bank on a daily \balance system. This system was to have been started this month, but it waa said the balance would be so small as to not prove practicable. It was agreed tkif in the future all persons who do not pay their light and power bills after the first warning will have the service suspended immediately These two public utilities are operated by the village. A final warning is is- sued to all delinquents tliut unless their accounts are settled in full service will be discontinued. Saturday, October 10, Tapper Lake, Franklin county and Northern New York was swept by the most severe •now storm and bliziwd knows in this section in many yean at such an early date in October. The snowfall, which began in Tupper Lake spread a white blanket 7 inches deep thruout the county, Saturday night the mercury column reached the 20 degree mark, the first real winter weather almost never arrives in this section before November 25th. Usually there are slight flurries the latter part of October but the recent blimrd shatters all record*, belnjc of January propor- tions. Scores of, motorists on the Tupper Luke-Canton roadway reported being delayed several hours by large drifts. The Tupper Lake Saranac Lake road- way was blocked in several places by drifts and tourists were forced to dig their way with shovels. Engineers on the New York Central and N. Y. & O. railways reported encountering drifts that delayed their trains. Deer hunters were the only group to w«lcomethe snow, which didn't last, but if it had remained, they would of tracked their prhe many miles. The season opened yesterday, Oct. IS, and will close Nov. 15. There was much excitement at Eliza- bethtown recently when Nelson Den- ton hastened into the village and told of having seen a moose in the woods with- in a short distance of the Essex county seat. Other hunters who later viewed the tracks of the animal asxert they wenmB.de by a moose about two year old • As the last nttive moose in the Adi rondacks was killed years ago, it is be- lieved the animal seen recently escaped from a private preserve. • WiUUit '.tn'V.'l Ut* .•;t.!,l >vij(sl. , 111\ i la HOMESPUN YARN your t Add a pair of glovi.s to the cle t-'tiuiiimunt if you would keep hands looking und ittllun well. fiow much milk do you UH«V A quart a Uuy Tor children uni a pint a dity lur ndults in recatumunded l»s hfitatt uu- \Wash after wvt-ry wi-iuring\ i good program for niakinK Miih. uuu- garni«.-nts and stadaiiRH Aeur iuu.4*-i. TupperLakeHerald & Adirondack Mt. Press * Direct Newspaper Advertising Is Acknowledged by Expert Salesmen, to be the Best -The Merchant, cf Tupper Lake Sa«.ac Lake, Long Lake, North Creek ^Tow»s ot Hamilton County are now offered a Big A ing Outlet for TH1SIR SALES. * BRIEFS BY GABLE, WIRE, WIRELESS Supreme Court rules Seneca Indians are riot a nation. New York City budget tentatively fixed at $430,701,930. : Supremo Court limits search of homes withouj; warrant. Supreme Court refuses to rsopen Trade Association cases. Representative Madden denounces army and navy \air orgies.\ Naval experts says removal ol sixta engine of Shenandoah .was a m'^f' One price rule for commutation told down by Interstate Commerce Com- A good vucuunr lilo <aX u rug butausu it roinu/i.s tut (•mbi.iia<id ilirt which cuts the ttbera m the rug and wears it out. Aunt Ada'H axioms: A littUs child karns bt-st by experience. Avcuu \don'ta and arrange his ssurrountlingh HO he can touch things without hurt- ing himself or disrupting the house- hold. Making a budget is always in order, and the state colleges of agriculture and homo economics at Ithaca have copies for free distribution. Just OSK forH-124. • . Save the surface and you save all applies to complexions as well as to porch floors. -The only difference is that with complexions one should start work from the inside. Sleeping Deer Rushes for Cover R. W. Hsyes of Pine Grove had an unusual experience while getting a load of wood from a clearing recently, when he disturbed t deer family. He first came within inches of step- ping on a b«U urown fawn asleep in the grass. As the fawn leaped to its feet, a large doe and another fawn jumped up near by and the family ru*bed into the cover of some bushes. The Pine Grove resident evidently invaded the deer retreat at a time the family were having a mid-d»y sletp. Horse Shot in Mistake for Game Gilbert Holmes of Dickinson Centre, is most indignant at the loss of a young horse which was shot while at, pasture, The animal had been shot in the should- er and then left tq suffer. When found by the owner the horse was in pitiable condition and had evidently been in ag- ony for days. It is believed the horse was shot by a hunter in mistake for game. These are the kind of hunters tlint make hunting dangerous. Potato Market Opens At One Dollar The Malone and vicinity potato mark- et has opened with dealers paying the growers one dollar per bushel for stock of good quality for shipment to the cent- ral markets. With the cooler weather growers are rushing the harvest of the crop and it is expected deliveries will be active at the price stated. There is little to change former esti- mates as to the yield per acre in fields but while the crop is a light one com pared with the heavy production of 1924 the price is so far in advance of the fig- ures of a year ago that growers are\en- couraged over the present market out- look. sonville. They are eating northern vegetables in Florida now; in fact all kinds of food is coming from the north. We heard the other day that beef cattle are being shipped then* by express. Think of it! No wonder an embargo is being placed on everything but food. We trust that it may not be necessary to establish a bread line as in Los Angeles a few y«»rs ago when thousands of Northerners had to live in tents on the outskirts of the city and couldn't earn money enough to get home. Better take « round-trip ticket if you want to see the State of Florida, and have only a small bankroll A HYMN FOR THE HARD BOILED While on one of his visitations a well-known bishop W»K stay ing at the home of a member of h!» flack. H« was awakened t?«irly by the tents of a soprano voice singing '•Nearer, My God, to Thee.\ As the bishop lay in bPd hi* meditated upon tftt* piety which his hofot^s must possess to enable twr to go about the hou>t< HO eurly in tl» 4 morning ringing such a noble hymn. At breakfast he xpoke to her about it and tald[ haw pka«eil ht< was. \O Lor'!\ nhe replied. \That'H the hymn I boil egg-; by; three verges for M>ft und llv»3 verxea for hard.\ —Kv».*rybody\« Magazine. \How much, more rent can people stand than they are now paying? Will there be any farmers left in New York .state if the taxes on the farms ;ure rained? They are leaving now by th« thousands ev«ry year and moving Into tho cltfrB. If these constitu- tional amendment? of Governor Smith's are not defeated a real burden will be loaded onto a class of pur people frast ablo to stand it—tho farmer and the rent pay*r. The voters at the November election should bury both thene amendments In the same grave, and by so doing adhere to the Coolldge policy of economy and re- trenchment.\ — Lieutenant Governor Lowman. , i i) !i I . Ill is! u >l * i IIT' V M »Hr .* )u 'i . -IUD Ui»f ,iii(>st n.'jiioie in ;uiy uumuu. habitation, is to be constructed next ymr for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police at the far end of EHesmere Is- land. Yeggmen were foiled in an attempt to rob the strong box of the Hanqua Ctimuienne Nationals brancn at Ste. Agathe, Man., when their aceteylenv torch failed to function, Tney left be- hind the torch, but took away the u<l, er'H revolver. The following municipalities in Que- bec have been authorized to borrow by an Orilnr-In-Council slgnua recently: St. Henri, *5i>,0W; Valleyfleld, |175,- UOU; Cacouna, flO.OUO; Cauwpsca), 13,500; Cabano, *lS,0im; Melbourne, ll.nuO; Delery,-$:5,fl«0; Litchfield, |»,- MO. , *| Crushed between an elevator caga and a doorwf y when a stalled elevator ho was crawling from suddenly went into motionj, Ernest Surteem aged 55, a, meHHenger In the employ of the Ot- tawa ImproVement CommliHion, was instantly killsd lu an office building in Ottawa, \ ^'\ Six-cent street car fare* will con- tinue to prevail In Vancouver, jB. C, fur the next three year*. The City Council pa-Hed a by-law ratifying the turmK recently decided upon betwe«n the city and the street railway com- pany, continuing the existing rate until November, 1928. Little Margaret Barripr, flve-yearold daughter of a farmer of Stmthclalr, Man., wan terribly Injured when she wax run over by a loaded grain wagon which was hacking Into a granary. Bhe wax rusfcwd tu a hospital, where doc- fountl »'Y*'ry nb broken and the * puncturi'd. LETTER HEADS, ENVELOPES yellow or white second sheets and all kinds of liusinesrt stationery furnl»h«d at rpanonafcU' prices. Ruled blank*, program*, financial reports, etc. Wed* tljng stationery, latest styles of type, printed on s-hort notice. , HKMLD-PRESS. f HE Merchants who advertise In this paper will give yon best values for your money. Sam's Lunch Near Post Office Special Dlnntr Every Day 50c / 12 noon to 1^30 p. m. 5;30 to 7 p. JU. Sunday Chicken Dinner 50c (Tables Set Hotel Style-Table Cloths) Table-Board, $6.00 w«k-21 Meals Lunches at all Hours t SdCro«s authorities torn trad* committee to cov«r New York city to &3SA Columbia Un earn way through college In 8.200 O SSZOtio** ^ higher wa*es and shorter hours generally faces la- tor leaders at Atlantic City, ti Frank P.B 000OO000O000O00OO90O0OO0OO CONTENTS OF THIS EDITION 1. Late telegraph news condensed. 2. The great continued story. ' 3. Illustrated women's fashions. 4. Daddy's Evening k Fairy Tale. 5. The Kitchen Cabinet (fine recipes). 0. New York State news condensed.-~ ble ln Cara Nome AGRIGfiAPHS subscribe to your home town news-' paper. | < A farm inventory Is the cornerstone jf farm bookkeeping. i] Well greased tools stored to sheds bespeak good farmers. Uncle Ab says a full . stomach curneth away wrath, and he's glad here's no law against keeping folka good-natured that way. 7. General Bibl lesson. 9. Poultry column. 10. Good roads, building, repairs. 11. Large pictures, news, ©vents. IUM «^*c w. — —„.. — . 12. Miscellaneous stories— I ages 6.7 per cent below tho average for How to Keep Well,\ health col. | the past ten years ' The United States department of igriculture estimates that the yield to the acre for all eropa this year aver- bl th average for ajrs summoned by Ma <&*f- . . of Mitchell angered hy delay oi in United State. « «S to S-51 vlcthhs. SPORTINCT Princeton i Leading news articles. Tupper Lake articles, items. Neighboring towns, neWB, items. Adirondack news, items. Reliable advertisements, > Classified wants column. Editorial column. Wit and humor sparkling hits, Groaa Word puzzles. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWKVOOO mrammf^mwamwaakiaBfii NO SMOKING SIGNS \No Smoking Signs for sale.\ HERALD PRESS, Progressive Printers. For those who are thinking o£ chang- ing their dairying practices, thtf col- lege of agriculture at Ithaca has a bul- letin entitled \Calculating me cost of milk production.\ It's free—ask for F-142. . There's sometning for every fanner in the list of correspondence courses from the state college of agriculture tu, Ithaea; farm management, dairying, fruits, vegetables, poultry, bees, sheep, swine, and farm mechanics are all In. eluded. •\ • • • Whw» hn««»«\ l* *** — 8H1PPI Saul ift your tags. They *r« 6r«ltmt, |O TAGS !«n tor ihipping it twiM tor uti otiiar The Complete Beauty Treatment Every Cstra Nome toilet article is designed to help beautify the complexion, and each carries the dainty fragrance of Cara Nome. You will love to use it for its odor alone. $1.00 i r H ; f •4 A '\