{ title: 'Norwood news. (Norwood, N.Y.) 1878-1941, September 01, 1915, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn88075693/1915-09-01/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075693/1915-09-01/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075693/1915-09-01/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075693/1915-09-01/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Northern NY Library Network
^^T^-^-y-\**^.^ '•tf' \«*» t, ••\*•«» *8 w l& f 31 m T ! <1 i 4 VO^JME,38 NORWOOD,'ST. LAWRENCE C6UNTY;,;NEW, YORK, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 1915. ,-..'•\'• NUMBERED 'i t—Potsdam fair next week. —Malone fair Sept. 14, 15, 16 and 17. See announcement on page 2. —An enterprising exchange has a long catalogue of work for rainy days;' but, then, who wants to work on rainy days? . —Regular communications of What Cheer' Lodge will be resumed oh Tuesday evening, Sept. 7, opening at 7:30. - - , —The Norwood Machine Company is installing a 100 horsepower boiler and engine in the mill.of George N. Gibson at West Stockholm, to be used as an auxiliary power in time of low water.. —A family of four—father, moth- er, son and daughter—were wiped out in an automobile accident near As^ bury Park, N. J., recently. The distressing tragedy suggests that family autoing parties should leave at feast one member at home to sign for the insurance money. —A white lie can start from' the center of a town and go around until High School opens Sep- e^xjn«s^the-o«ter--eir&le-in-amazTOg- -tn-Qg^nimhMr-g. ahnnlH take, tfrp Hpr-.. short time, but you would never think it was the little innocent' thing it. seemed when it started. When it ar- rives it is so loaded down with contri- butions that are black as night and * cruel as death, it is another story. —When you pull down the town in which is your home, you are pulling down yourself, and when you build up vou are building up yourself and your neighbor. Try and banish trom mina the mistaken idea that all good things are away off in some other locality. Give your town all the praise it can legitimately bear. -It certainly will do \you no harm and will cost you nothing; and above all patronize your home institutions. —A Canton lady last week enjoyed a trip on a St. Lawrence steamer. At one place .where they stopped a mother of a small girl got off the steamer and when • she returned she carried a small toy. like a miniature windmill, which she presented to the child. The latter speedily espied up- on it the words \Made in Germany\ and she insisted in having them scratched off. This being accom- plished she held it. to the breeze and proudly announced that \It runs ever so much better now.'' —The Canadian Pacific R. R. has practically notified the unmarried men in its service that their services are not needed by the railroad. . This is because they are failing to volunteer as they should for the war with Ger- many On their pay envblopes is printed '' Your king and country need you, we don't \ The government is about to send out something similar for unmarried employes. It will soon be so that a man must either be mar- ~ried~m Canada-or go-to-war r -else-nei will be in disgrace with all' his fel- lows A social law, unwritten, is sometimes just as forcible as though enacted into statute. —That America will be a great dumping ground for European products immediately following the declaration of peace, is the opinion of Robert Grimshaw, consulting^ engineer and lecturer in New York University. Mr. Grimshaw returned from Germany a few months ago, where he familiar- ized himself thoroughly with condi- tions in that country.. He declares that after the war there will be in Germany alone at least 2, 000,000 hlen who will return home and find that they have no jobs. He believes that these men will be put to work at about 50 cents a day and ; that the pro: duct of thier hands is going to be dumped in America. Mr. Grimahaw states that by no means all the indus- trial population of Germany arfe en- gaged in the manufacture of products consumed in war maneuvers. Mouh> tains of manufactures arbbelng turnejd out and stored until such tithe a* the seas will be open to German ionv merce, when they will be dumped in the United States. • \ —Who Pays,, a t Opera 'House •to*' 1 night. > \ . —Organ cheap, or will exchange for wood. Steals,' —All low shoes to clbsa out at greatly reduced prices'latHenspni'Sj- —Will pay cash fbjtI'yTJv& poultry*; Call onj>r write Prank%'Batter* «*r No^ba,. %%-* : —There will be jnfeyief .•:$$$&' House Thursday, Friday ftoipatpfasy nights this week. Wateh for, Onatlle Chaplin'i appearance |$ar4^yiiigth\ r-»tbe coffee oi «xc^l!encW!rtfttei Vermont twwd coffee .H gaiftWg friend. «**ry a*y by it* #MW drinking qu»litiw. A.k your grocer —Pomona Grange meeting at Win- throp today. . ' Norwood tember 7th. —Potsdam fair, Sept. 7, 8, 9 and 10. See advertisement on page 4. —J. D. Stearns has a new Ford touring car fully equipDed with an electric starter, electric lights, shock absorber etc. —Another big hen's egg. W. W. Leonard exhibited an egg Friday morning which measured 8|:x6i. inches and weighed just 4 ounces. It was laid by a Plymouth Rock at the Leonr ard farm one mile south of, this vil- lage. —The five counties in the United States leading in value of all crops produced in 1909* as returned by the Thirteenth United States Census, are Los Angeles County, Cal., with a value of . $14,720,884; Lancaster County, Pa., $13,059,588; McLean County, Wash., $12,540,694; and Livingston County, III., $11,377,297. Aut mobiles in this section -going folk-Madrid-Ogdensburg stone 'road. This road is now completed with the exception of a mile between Aliens corners and Dixon sphool house, and that part is in fairly good condition. Many prefer this route, instead of the state road by way of Potsdam and Canton. —If there were more push in the world there would be fewer hungry, half ^clothed, suffering children ;f ewer brokn-down, dissipated men and women; less need .of alms-houses, houses of correction and homes for the friendless. Push means a lift for neighbor in trouble. Push means a life for yourself out of the slough of despondency and shiftlessness, out of trouble, real and fancied. Push never hurts anybody. The harder the push the better, if it is .given in the right direction. Always push up hill—few people need a. push- down hill. • —Farmers are having a hard time securing the great crop of' grain, that has been grown the past , season. Sorne farmers are not through haying yet owing to the continued wet weath- er. Nearly every day for the past week it has rained; only occasionly the sun has shone but not of sufficient duration to enable farmers to secure their grain. It Would seem as though it would get rained out before .long; probably after the.'Gouverneur fair closes we will have fine weather. Corn is looking well and there will be ah immense crop to put in the silos. Theie is some complaint that potatoes\ are rotting. —Antwerp Gazette. —Thd plant of the Utility Paper. Mills, Inc., in Potsdam, which has been -undergoing! alterations and i?e- -pairs—thelpalJJfewjn^nthS^isjn^arlng completion, and Will soon be in oper- ation. The company has expended close to $40,000 in repairs and new machinery, and, when\\the plant starts it will be one of the best in this part Sf the state, and will have many nov- el features besides. I t will be a uniotk- mill running three shifts. Present plans call for the employment' of 75 men or thereabouts, but in a year or so;' it is . likely that the cpm- rpany will install anotheir. paper ma-, chine,, atid this will, double the pay- roll. It has orders on .^he. books now for nine months ahead. The company •has recently completed a doncrete;fi}-_ ter house just easl* of the main nrilh It has installed three new beaters and six or seven.electric motors* An Erie •steam engine, of\ variable speed has also been ittstalled., A novel feature of the. mills equipment will' be used iii .poWer traiismissiba.,instead of. belts. The silent- chain is a deparii tire which has billy, come into use the .past few years;, but it is nowbeing .generally adopted, .' Much less los\s> of'poWer in transmission is; claitned with the' silehtechain,--thin,.hincter. j -ih§ ; halt system. Considerable Of ,'th6\-:ih'aV ! chinery in/tHe;planfe<#iil toe-dijre.c'tly connected V, The 5 itJjtility jniUa wili( m&Rp; qttliptlie finest: gr^ade; Of. book .iihatleffii'liU^erS;. ah\d'';W;iiiv'get> ; ,; their \-'- \f r.'F m ^^!^np, ./b^ate* ; '*rtark:|d : tljepateht ifp'r;Which irn6l' s '%2>*H% T^mM?tfitt \give - ^ i ' i ^ fci -*--'-' '•'••*ait<ie.;4Wunt being: etspl^yed at 3T • SMI goods of \&tMt \•'; jews Wmm f»*«c!iDBi | PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS J Dr. Sumner and party has returned from camp at Mountain View. Miss Lucia Yale spent last week at the home of Levi Powers in Louis- ville. Mr. and Mrs, Fred Nelson ,are visit- ing Mr. Nelson's mother, Mrs. • E. Nelson. Miss Mary Phelps went to Malone last Wednesday to visit friends for a fewdays. - , Patrick Flynn came up from the East last week to visit his people in this village. ..'. _.. _.\ Mrs. Frank Waldo, of Detroit, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. D, Fuller,. Friday. Miss Jeannette Douglass, of Ray- mondville, called on friends in Nor- wood Saturday. ' . Mr. Mark Cummings,\ of St. Louis, spent a few days . calling on friends in town last week. Mr.\and Mrs. Nelson Collins, of Boston are spendnig a week with Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Collins. Miss Margaret Sullivan and Mrs. James Hickey have returned s from a week's trip-to Syracuse. Miss Veronica Lowe, of -Lowell, Mass., is spending\ a few days visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Healy. Mrs. Kate Sutherland and Mrs. Owen McCarthy, of Boston, are the guerflaof Mrs,. Leun Austin,—=—=•** Miss Grace McAllister is spending a month with her aunt, Mrs. C. C. Hall, before returning to Syracuse. Mr. P. E. Nichols, who has been visiting friends for the past two weeks, returned to Boston Saturday. Mr. L. A.' Pease and daughter, Helen, of Dunkirk, arrived in town Monday andsJeft for home Tuesday. Prin. C. S. Sumner and wife, Mrs. Ada Sumner and daughter, Ruth-were the guests of Dr. ,C. 0. Sumner over Sunday. Mrs. Herbertine Davis and little Louise and Gerald, visited her parents, Mr. arid'-' Mrs. Ira B. Pierce, a few days last week. - Little Jefferson Hale, who has been ill the past two weeks, at his grand- parents, Mrs. S. M. Hale, is so fai improved as to be able to go home. Vivian G. Bell, special agent for the New York Life,Ins. Co. in this territory, left Tuesday for Cedar Point, - Ohio, to attend a meeting of big writers of Life Insurance. Mr. and Mrs. Raphael Cardinal an- nounce the marriage of their daugh- ter, Mary Josephine, to Robert J. Burns. The ceremony will take place at St. Andrew's church, Tuesday a. m. Sept. 7,, 1915, at nine o'clock. _Miss J. M. Reagan, of Fort Worth, Texas, clime to~N6Tw~o J od,-Wednesday,- to visit her sister, Mrs. Dennis Kelly. Miss Reagan re'tiimtd Sunday morn- ing accompanied by Mrs. Kelly, who will spend the winter with her sister in Texas. Miss Delia Plumley has returned frp'iri- - Saranac Lake where she has been employed by the Mountain Home Telephone Co. during the summer. Miss Plumley is much improved in health and is able to take up her du- ties as chief operator in the local tel- ephone .ekehange.- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Williams, of Lake ' \View MjchigEin, are visiting Mrs. VfrlItems' brother, A. J. Faros- worth; and family and: Other relatives in this. vicinity. .Mrs. Wllliahis Was* formerly Miss. Hattie. Farnsworth, of Norforkj and this is her first visit to, •her-.-Bltiye,. town ity, thirty years. ,\.-.- „/ Harold Pierce; whd, has been s^endr ing. the iummy vacation; wj[|h his .^atHeiy.S.; Ei-.^ieM\^.^^^^^'-^-^^^. i?iKd% to tesurrte .hia.'schpotw.brk; at; $he|^;jpv4\ .-.|t|'^s^a;ii|d^^;^bks; : %a*iiey,|jiis.', year:,,|ty^^^b^'Di|i : iy' j|ecord!,for ^h'ich pager he reported- ;'c,ollf,gjs;;hew^' , THi's'St-ear'.foe';tia'»been', given 'the. .reporting..of brderd'-ftnd lOdgbs at an increase of salary. «R0&fihg tjiat lasts # Stiearfts.'. f-Gbbd ftiptoif Washer $8,0B; ; ; • \• • • 'S'tejBttis. '- ^JHa;Ve:-\ic*6eiwed -^JhtSblpie flfe#; cpata indflu^6/ai^|icd^^ ; , : Sr^t|i'Srd,' • , : .rrh^pbctaV' ;p!$iSriflgS; • in/ -looy^'-e-iijaii- '0cW: i&0&&'*$*¥; a^par^l fa;|fe : (Sobsbn&bs. •' : ,•• >.• - •- ; -•• • -;\ ••'••.•! '•''' • 'i^T)ib: dpettirig: tlie^ibial '4tfe?aipt|'b^ ; willpFrid&yt Se^t. t^t Klbiii |[ig ! iBihBtrbl: Hm$ ariy» febH't %ajt tihtil tfeevlasfc tfa'lag 'tb;'«ew^-atb*erve.M.b^i , ; ,, -an'dl. tfteii i*y>^by 4idh'..t : 'm; ,&%* gbo,?!' le^oft ilbfe Vtaj^ mtiwt ih»% to sit. *w*y vbfcfe «fc«je -m -c^nftb* ,4m'Qf ^-•'•''\»-^'\t , «^1»l*MlO/illWB't n B'|^^| —\The progressive party will grow stronger as 1916. approaches)\ says George W. Perkins. We recall that, as a small boy, we. always whistled loudly when passing the village grave- yard at dusk. , —\After all,\ says the popular fallacy, \It is a matter of taste!\ But taste is not a personal matter. It is no more mere preference than judgment is mere opinion. It implies not only artistic feeling and critical power, but their cultivation too. .' —Misfortune and disgrace may have overtaken your neighbor, but it does not become you to get on the housetops and shout it out to the world. You will not be called upon topay'fdr or answer for any of the sins of your neighbor'. You have all you can attend to to pay for your own indiscetions. —An exchange remarks that the most -'powerful king .is wor-kins - ; laziest shir-king; the leanest chin-, king; the most thirsty, drin-king; the slyest, win-king; the best liked by all ladies, tal-king; the most humiliating, sin-king;! - the most stern, span-king; the most lovelyr spar-king;, the most optical, loo-kirig; the.most vibrating,\sha-king the most despised, snea-king. —While ten men watch for chances one man makes a chance. While ten men wait for something to turn up, one turns some thing up; so while ten fail che succeeds, and is called a man of luck,' the favorite of fortune. •T-iink and fnrt.nrip arfi.the result of MPKINLEY'S, EXAMPLE The Meadville Tribune r Republican reminds us that when William Mc- Kinley entered the.White Hoiise on March 4, 1897, after four years of Democratic nationaLcontrol, a special session of Congress to undo the. pros- perity-wrecking and deficit-making laws of the preceding four years was the first thing determined on. • He had the hew Congress in session March 15, had the protective tariff bill through the House March 31, and had~« it enacted into law on July 24. In other words, • in less than five months time the Wilson-Gorman law was off the statute books and a pros- perity-making law was substituted without the loss of valuable time. ' Manufacturers . and business men responded with enthusiasm to the now prospects, and there followed the greatest era of industrial development the country ever knew. President McKinley realized his du- ty as the \advance agent of prosperi- ty.\ He had no fear of Congress in extra session. '' The people have on- ly recently voted that this (a protec- tive tariff enacted)\ shall'. be done, \ ne declared • in~h1a iuaugura i J7-\-and- nothing is moire binding -upon the agents.of their will .than the obliga- tion of immediate action.\ ~\\\\,\r The McKinley example of prompt achievement is precisely what the peopM are today determined shall be followed by the Republican President sure to enter the White House on March 4, 1917. His name is of ho great consequence; but his purpose is, honest endeavor, work and toil, and if you would succeed, go to work, and resign your membership in the chance waiters brigade, as life is all too short foy those long waits. —Adirondack deer hunters this fall are certain of good sport, for the gnumber of deer, both bucks and dogs,, 'seen in the wdods this summer seem ;,t0 bear out the conclusion that the peetfooted red deer are more' numer- ous this Season than ever. According to the New York State game laws,- only buck deer with horns two inches in length may be shot. Despite the fact that the does are protected, they do not seem to preponderate over the male deer.. —August 27,. seven ladies of the Norwood Woman's Christian Temper- ance Union were entertained by th*e\ Potsdam». Union at the pleasant and commodius home of Mrs. H. M. Coun^ tryman. The' . beautiful day, the pleasant ride, the hearty welcome, combined with the very- instructive IHdT generous entertainment made the Occasion one long to be remembered. We moat-heartily\ thank the Potsdam ladies for their kindness and hospital- ity The Norwood Union. -r-All things that we call wealth come from the land by work. Even the money that we buy or sell these -things for-, the tools that we_use to^ make' them, the, machines.we use in manufacturing them, are themselves drawn from the land, and hence capi- tal is only that part ol wealth, of the product of land and labor, which is used to make or\ get more wealth. There is money to be made out of the soil, i* you go at.it intelligently. lAiiy man who has brains enough tb pbnduct any kind of business success- fully, .or who'knows'enough to make tf profit in the employmeut.of labor- ers, or who is a good enough finan- cier\ to make money out of the soil. ;The same -attention to detail's of the crops and the'..farm in all departments jjrili bring to him satisfactory profits. 0f course he must have experience, hut by going, slowly at first on the best information obtainable andiprpfit- ing by the experience\ of others, which 'fb can ascertain by'reading and con- vers&tipn, he-can, in a year or sohy the. ehjploymerit'pf laborers skilled iii ,farm wbr-fe have a fajf more satisfac- ,.;tpr^: .Business' established tbiah is pos- ;-gifef<8..jii any other way.. What chance ; of' Success has a business mail Of small *^ean's-iftv-tti^ .Hvirtjjg? jSe Will only groW old; try- ifig to keep abreast of his expenses. |iaijy bi tnes^:,:ipSo>1e haite a natural iilfiiig :; fbr .ih^^f^dj-'Vtthie^- Ibvb -tp; 'prutfeV'tio^nian'ti^ .per V,.: r - ',.•'-''.' 1',:'.'''' ?!:•••. •.''.' ** : *V'..' ... .J.-.'.i'u •••-'i.i ana tnre~mbre closely'it Tflaralleh'-thg McKinley way of quickly restoring prosperity, he more empha\Eic\wffl , be the majority vote cast for him in the election of 1916.—The Protectionist. STUNU IN A NEW PLACE BUSINESS NOTICES NOTICE ; r Of Special School Meeting. Pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Education passed_jt a meel- - ing of said Board, held on the even- ing of August 10th 1915, notice IB- herehy given that a Special School Meeting X)f the residents, inhabitants and freeliolders ,of Union Free School , Dislrict Np; j, of the towns of Pots- d.am and Norfolk, St. Lawrence Couh- ty,\*N. Y ; , -'authorized by law to vote therein, will be held in Music Hall m the village of Norwood, in said Dis- trict on Friday, Sept 10th, 1915, at 8 o'clock jn the evening of *thafr day, for the purpose of electing_three_ trustees in the place of Fred R. Smith, Frank L. Smith and Paul E. Walker, whose terms of office Jiave expired, and also a district clerk, also for the purpose of receiving and act- ing upon the report of the trustees for the past year and the estimates of the amounts required to be raised for the coming year from direct taxation, also whether the trustees shall be author- ehd the sum of $30 for. tf ,L-'Mr prizes in speaking contest the coming year. Dated, Norwood, N Y , August 11th, 1915. - ' .W. J FI%cher, Pre3. of the Boai5j|of Education, H. m . Bailey, (l Clerk^of said Board. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS \ I desii'ij to announce to the anb- scribers of the Norwood NewtfAjhat I ^Mf^^Sgri^'^ucefSsB' of iiheir\ llv# if; ;|ljby ^Orkbd •.th'b.ittil< ; '-dndr-it iff -tt .life ^birftjMngi. 45, W<\ #Rflbber toqfing $1 8 50 . (Stearn^ *A.t;-;''0pbr'a ; 'Hpusie jtonightj, ^lip, {&0i<:;y \\.' ',\ : ' '.«, ; '' - ., •• ;'.' ir^islt-pa'id' ib*',all^vk|«idshb^' live fbv^l','\'*... '• ' At & Cassady,! .•Ktput^ % . .H^jjb ; di %,'%. Special fot this Week: Oiily* %&» '^ib^;'ijotit%''stJitsj : .';sk«r.tsi-waists- ; ahi' ito^iV'V^'Siodl cp»JiSbin% tm.% Weekj «d^ti;,;*h&.ti«M'Stft.'g«it ; *e«.ay ; iot % •dfttn, iiii fai r ^ $€k : A man and a woman dropped into a small town recently and put up at the best hotel. The'next morning they secured a rig each, and started over the country asking the farmer folks for a chicken'for an orphan's home in St. Louis. After two days begging they sold the chickens to a local deal- er for $30 and left town. Their loot included severaal cash donations. A variation of the scheme is for a man, wearing some sort of a badge, to call on the farmer under the name of the department of health and de- mand to see his poultry. After ex- amination he condemns twenty or thir- ty hens and tells the farmer that they will have to be killed because they are diseased. He very kindly offers to take the chickens and db-the killing himself. If the. farmer consents, the man takes the chickens to the nearest comimssion merchant and sells them. The scheme is being worked all over the country. If a man or woman calls on you with a demand that looks sus- picious, call up your local authorities and ask by what right'they are asking to inspect your stock and poultry. When~you-get-the,answer,- turjn_ihem over to the police. \ —The Murray Hill Hotel, on Mur- ray Isle, one of the largest of the Thousand Islands hosteleries has been purchased by a Texas syndicate head- ed by Mr. Robert Cbrley; of Beau- mont, according to the St. Lawrence Buletin. Mr. Corley is there, now, looking over the property. ' His plans provide for opening next spring with new organization and new attractions. No public announcement has as yet been made, but it is Understopd that a vigorous and progressive policy will be carried put. —If you want to give a- unique lawn social, here is the way one was •recently given at Massena, called the' Feast of Seven Tables. Any color scheme may be used. . Their arrange- ment follows:. The fiijst table was in brown with bouquet pf ox-eyed dais- ies, and from ; it was served coffee, baked b'eahs^and Browfti W^ad.., A t the white table- sugar, creatti and White bread sahdwiches were served* At .the yellow table salads were 'served, at the gree|i table* jemoaade, at the red table, raspberry j^llp,- at the lavender table, ice ci£am , eplpied 1 With grape.juipe ahd at: thepi.wk tapl'e ; ;'c:akb : Was/SfetYed.-'-' \Ot.h^rr 'tia.biib'^vWbre' 1 arrah'ged'abotit^ the yarci' i; Wh|ire '-per-. isphs ate tfie dilfetfept cpu*se¥ as the'y jde^irbdi Tickets Wiithvfe^Sfi^H'ijntp'^rfl ;We|b.'bttiichb3^ .'lis. Ihe,;^ers^^!e|e;'iB,i|.bdi; 'JFO^bW-ingt- ,- the>.;Supi?'b« ianv. 'ex'.cb'ilen't; ptbgfcaift;«# ypcai sblbp; ahd re^ifati'bni; jWi^giy^n^; •''''•'\'''';• *\v\,':' ••',.; ,' ; '\'.v'-\'i'.\.. : have engaged Mr. Arthur Pernice as agent and that he will, during the next few weeks, work m the towns of Stockholm and Brasher. As the News has not had any regular agent for the past few years, there is a number i n arrears whom, 1 turst, will be pleased tb receiv e -him when he calls. H e will also solicit new subscriptions .\ Respectfully yours, A. H Nickerson, Publisher. For Sale f Farm known as old Chamberlain farm,. 1£ miles from Chamberlain corners, consisting of between 90 to 10.0 acres, near school house and rail- road and on main road going to Ma- drid. The land is nearly all tilable and has a good pasture with lirpok running through The Grasse river borders on the front. For further in-* formation inquire of J A Chamberlainn, Chase Mills, N. Y. AT WONDERLAND Wednesday, 6 reels, 6 Two features, 'two comedies Thursday, Friday and Saturday., 5 reels each night Keystone comedies Friday and Sat- urday. Next Monday the new Exploits of Elaine. i ^ ;_: •,'^%*)a.jtpre'ai,t fcpls,, •;all' pxieSs*.; 'alsV'bbcjife 8t0^e8;'aii'a/ ; heatie|si : .\; ;.•> • • ! ' '\\•••[ ;'' ' >•:'. . '.. : ; ''?'^t^ari|s:^. - ; ' '.•r^tend^''Whb.' : |a|| l ifc'^pera; : Sp'usV tbirfih^ • \T!h%e '%i]i: v |ig:|^o? ^atflrb'^eli k*0ei> p'#n^4ficp^ij-'oi' 'iUlf^\^^jpJafty#4iiip^' %*&&§• ;'^er£ m$t» .ohty, teee ; ' 'feetf HM^I: #if; 'Wfy% t , wJiielt *e,*«girei' ;'• •\ \.' ^'% <»fWtfr&toJitf. frt^f *-4>Pmm 'porfca| ; *£pecial ; tadjes* NOTICE The annual Meeting of the Hale Cemetary Association will be held in the M- E. Church, North Stockholm, 1 N. Yi, Tuesday evening, Sept 7th, at 7 -.30 p. m. All persons interested A are requested to attend. C S. Knapp, Secy. For Sale My house and lot on Pine street^ Norwood. Has water and sewer con* nection and electric lights. All Ift^J first class condition If interested* write H. R Showbn, \ 480 South Meadow St.. n Watertown^H ± M Advertised Letters List of unclaimed letters remaining | in the post office at Norwood, N. 5f.,*lJ Augiist 30th, 1915. Mr Lester Og-\ den, Edna pbterson, Mr. Earl Hunter,, Mrs. A, Henderson, Miss Anna Grii*. fitb. T W O'Dnscoll, P. M. ; .... Notice , All members of the Harmony Re-J bekah. Lodge .ue requested to he pre»4 eht-^Oh—Eiiday evening, ^.Sept. 3, ass there is important business to lt»el b^oaghj;. before the lodge. Notice, Amatelirs. AH filjiis,developed free. Sehd i One 4oJl.|ini; we will get your Wojfflt 'fight; -^jngi; Special attention 'HHjj giyett. |p .^lail orders. Atherton^ ^t^fo^.'^'biji^erneurHN. Y. ;'''':••• ;>•\?•. Fof Sale . •;;,^y;':hb'u& , ahd , lot on ' l8r^<| sit*bf!|s.\IJb|ftWOod Call at ifc.'^V bst^bt'^i.klerms and prices^ h \''''^'..'•'•''k';:: ^' D - Dr «P«f* . S^le^v^ew street, se^wii rlhqiijjje;^?'\ '£, H .RanlBey^l- ' once, For Sale second hand iron poii r 'B»o», ^:hejite1f*^