{ title: 'The Plattsburgh sentinel. (Plattsburgh, N.Y.) 190?-1931, October 10, 1919, 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/sn88075736/1919-10-10/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075736/1919-10-10/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075736/1919-10-10/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075736/1919-10-10/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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FRI. PAGE THEBE * * % fe * * * * NORTHERN N. Y. 4* •& * '¥ * •& jvi M ^ s» s» The Lake Placid bus hacked down the Berkley hill in Saranac Lake Mon- day and wrecked the front of Miller's pharmacy. The machine had stopped at the top of the hill and suddenly baeked down. Wh^en the ear driven by George A. Stevens proprietor of the Stevens House, Lake Placid, turned out to avoid striking: another car near Ray Brook, Sunday, the machine went into the ditch. Mr. Stevens was quite bad- ly injured, there being fear of internal injury, Mrs. Stevens sustained a sprained wrist, Miss K. M. Hoag was injured about the hip and William Bee was cut on the head. Two children, aged six and three, living in Tupper Lake- were burned while playing with matches. Tho flames caught in their clothing: and on hearing their cries neighbors rush- ed in and tore the clothing from them and smothered the flames. The doc- tor found severe burns on their bodies but there is hope of their recovery. Thieves made away with about fifty gallons t)f vinegar from the store of Sagan & N T bble at Keeseville and the loss was not discovered for several •lays. The vinegar was carried away in pails, the barrel being drained. Vinegar retails at fifty cents a gallon. Miss Irene Hughes of Alexandria Bay is in JJie Water fbw'n hospital re- covering from an operation in which a piece of her shin bone was used to replace a dfseasred section of her spine. She Had been suffering from tuber- culosiswhfch had lodged in her spin* and the operation was performed as a last resort, ^he \h(is alVea'ajy been able to be up and to walk about and it is expected will be permanently cured. A. Burton Hepburn of New York has offered to give the, sum of $50,- 000 to the Canton Public Library to establish branches at Brarj^ Mills, Rensselaer Falls, Pyrites, and Morley, all located .within the town, if the town will raise $1,500 annually for maintenance. The tax payers will decide the matter at a special elec- tion. The freshmen of the Potsdam Tech were having a banquet at the Oswe- gathchie hotel; Qgdensburg, Sunday night when the sophomores burst in and a general fight ensued - Several were reported more or less injured and a doctor was called to attend them. The dinning room presented a dilapidated appearance when all was over, with tables overturned and dishes smashed. It wiH take seveial hundred dollars to square the dam- age William DeCarr, a resident of the town of Waverly ,is in the Franklin county iaiK charged with assault m the fust degiee, m filing a levolver at his wife which inflicted a serious wound in the left shoulder The shooting occuried at the home of their daughtei Mi-i. Joseph LaFiance of St., Regis Fahs The DeCans had not been living together but Mis DeCai r name home lo bee her daughtei and when hei husband learned that bhe had not come home to live with him he shot her Lon McDonald, the well known di ivcr, won a big stake at the Lexing- ton GiaYid Circuit last week when his uottei, Eaih Di earns made a new woild's lecord for the fastest thiee heath evtr trotted bv d. gelding in d lace The time was 2 03 3-4, 2 03 1-4 and 2 03 3-4 A family leun on and dinner was held at the home oi Mr ami Mrs H S liooch of North Bangoi last week This wab the fiiht time m twenty-nine years that the fdmilj had .ill heen together, a daughter coming irom Huron, So Dakota and a .son liom Madison So Dakota DISPLEASES GERMANS COBLEXZ — (Correspondence of The Associated Press)—More insist- ent protests than ever before against government food control, the host of , food profiteers and food brokers and , j the ever-increasini? speculation in for- j eign exchange now fill the columns of ' 1 the food journals and farm magazine:- ' I of Ocrmany. ^ j i Food prices continue very high. ; i This is attributed pavt!\ ;o the law valuation of the mark. The official exchange rate for thf' mark for Sep- tember at headquarters of tho Ameri- ' con Forces in Germany was 21 marks to the dollar. Since Germany resumed- commer- cial relations with the outside world, she has been able to import only mcagro quantities of necessary and staple foodstuffs, with the exception of fish and milk, the food journals say. There has been a good crop of fruits 'and Vegetables throughout Germany!\ Livestock is reported to be about twenty per cent below normal with lit- tle prospect of enough food to stimu- late breeding- except possibly of hogs. KOUSAK IS ONLY HOPE CAMPAIGN TO EXTEND STK0Y8F CONSTITUTION j OF RUSSIA SAYS WARD SUNDAY SCHOOL WORK IMPORTANT TO PEOPLE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS OLD STORY OF LONDON HAVING SKY SCRAPERS Th P.oaid of Education of Ma- lone at a, recent meeting voud to in- <: I ease the salaries of the Ucieheit* in the village schools the salai les of lh< (superintendent the libiauan and the .sceretaiy by fifty dollait, Under the present schedule the minimum balai^ paid to the tejeheis, with thiee excep- tions 1& ^IZO The Ame.ui.rUi hotel at Canton has been bold to M J ll.u t mgton of Og- tUnsliuic,' and .1 p Uunett of Pots,- cLinj, and possession wil 1 he gj^ca-Xo- vemher fu*i The h ' ' wrfi now be lenovated and ma> \ mipiiovoments made * \ A piUent iioia the St ite» hospil il at U^densbui g v\a& lotind utudeiing .uou.ul Theiesa Mojidiy He w is lot Ued up and t ui attendant Horn th'- hospit il came foi him The man had been at the 1 hospital foi loui jrats LONDON—(Correspondence of The Associated Press)—The old question of whether London is to have sky- scrapers is being revived because of the high price of property in the busi- ness section an dthe lack of space in office buildings. The government buildings in White- hall are four stories high, but it ha? been found necessary to add a story to the War Office to meet the demands of the department. One well-known architect in touch with the govern- ment's pjans expressed the opinion that \unless the new and the old minis- tries were content to do their work outside ofi the area devoted to gov- ernmental activities skyscrapers were inevitable in Whitehall. Generally speaking, however, Lon- don does not like tall buildings. Peray Tubbs, past president of the Society of Architects, declared that if the sky- scraper was to come it would be nec- essary to widen the streets. j \But space in London is not so scarce as it is in New York which is an island,\ he said ' I think the traf- fic problem will not become so un- weild\ that we shall be afiaid to let London expand an\ luither outwards and we will ,hc compelled to expand it upwards Feisonallv I alwajb feel that wheiv sk\sciapets abound the man in the street moves in the bottom of a well American architects, who r u e hoio erecting a nuge depaitment stoie ha\e repeatedly asked IOI pnmisMon to ex-f tend the main building high enough to ' accommodate not only the present business ot tht- concern but to ptovide ' for the future, and have met with no encouiagement whatevei LONDON—Colonel John Ward who has just returned from Siberia where he commanded a battalion of British troops which helped to overthrow the Bolshevik power there, says, \In my opinion the only chance for idemorraey in Russia l:e-= in the success of ICol- <:h<ik. His attitude on the land ques- tion show? that he is not the reaction- ary he has been represented. He sees clearly that the distribution of big estates unions the peasantry can- not be interfered with. \It is proposed that those land owners who ha\e survived Bolshevism shall be'given compensation for the land they have lost but there is no idea of restoring the land to them. Kolshak stand.s up for the poor peas- ants against what Lenine has been called the 'village of bourgeoisie.' \It is found that well-to-do peas- ants had murdered many of the land- owners, given a meagre portion of the poorest land to the poor peasants and joined the bulk of the estate to their own holdings. Kolchak, with the advice of representatives of the Allies, clecided to secure for the poor peasants a fair distribution of the land. When this was known the com- paratively wealthy peasants, who had secured the biggest share of the land raised the cry that the old state of affairs was to be restored. In some cases they stirred up the peasants to revolt and caused disturbances which had to be put down by force. \To know what Bolshevism is you should have been with me at Perm when the ice on the river was melt- ing and the bodies of many who had been murdered by the Bolsheviki were revealed. I. myself, saw fifty of them and among them were the bodies of a number of women and children. At one place there was a wash-house built over the river. The Bolsheviki cut a hole in the floor through which they dropped their victims into the deep-waters beneath. Bolshevism means the end of democracy. I am certain that if Russia is left to the Bolsheviki, it will utimately return to autocracy. ALBANY, Oct. 8—The New York State Interdenominational Sunday school campaign, in progress this week is a challenge to the Christian forces of the state to meet a great need, ac- cording to- K. .1. Hockenbury. c; aign director. Pledges are being sought for a four-year program of extension work to meet victory reconstruction needs Charles J. Vert, 15 North Catherhr of the country, state, international and Street, world's Sunday school a Saranac Chapter Memtx?rs Surprised by Statement of Xiles on Illegal Voters, Floaters The first meeting of the season, mp- 1 ft 19-^t), of Saranac Chapter, Daugh- ter* of the American Revolution, was held on'Saturday, October, 4, at three P. M., in the home of the \Regent. Mrs. iciation, ! Mrs. Vert r>rrsid each functioning without over-lap- _ a largi attendance, ping of effort in a certain territory. I reive*! from omV\r: The war caused a loss of 1,000,000 and Mrs Geor: in Sunday school enrollment, and this delegate to at must he retrieved. Furthermore, ' f -r,cf of the a and there was Reports were re- \l-!' and committees. Tuttl-3 was elected a ttend the State Confer- •ganization to he held at there are upwards of 800,000 children Auburn ,r. November. Miss Pearsall of in this state alone who are not in any Albanv who is muking a state survey Sunday school. These conditions pre- f or ihe Department of Education gave sent the challenge which the Sunday ' a pnic ticil talk on the Department's school people aim to meet at home. ' : ( i Ptl i o f \Americanization.\ and its and in the mission fields more startling possible application to Plattsburgh condition\ than these are presented all( } vicinity. Miss Pearsall was fol- togother with an opportunity for doing \ 0 \\Q.\ by Mr. H. Clay Niles, • who Christian missionary work r that church statesmen say will not recur within a century. RED CROSS SURPRISES LITHUANIAN DOCTORS KOVNO—The American Red Cross has just brought into Kovno eight car- loads of hospital, medical and surgi- cal supplies. These articles have been unknown to Lithuanian doctors for at least three jears aand greatly longed foi They are being distributed srn rapidly as possible to the hospitals, to the lazarette*. and to the local doctors in remote sections, under the super- v lsion of the Lithuanian Minister of Public Health and Captain C. S. Paine, of Detioit SEA PLANE FELL INTO BAYOCCUPANTS KILLED (B> the Associated Press) PENSACOLA, Fla . Get S—Three naval aviators, including Boatswain were killed today, when their sea llo> McMillan of Rochester, N. Y., BRAZILIANS NOT GIVEN TO TIPPLING PRACTICE RIO I)\E JANEIRO BRAZIL — plane fell into the sea (Coi lespondence of The Assoeiaied day Piesv)—Should piohibition e\t i be- come effective >n Bi i/il it i> piobable that lew Fi izihan^ would be gteatly affected bv it The Buzihu i ippu - ciitlv uuf. nyU<u( <oi spongdiin k Coffee is thf nation il beveia^o and the eoiiee shops U€ among the ni- itiesting sights ot m e e ltv Thcv ai e to be lound «.\civwh<it but rii e Os- pcciallv nuiiKious in the down-town section, and along the prim lpal ave- &-GOVERNMENTON MORE GENEROUS BASIS LONDON, Oct. 8—It is understood that the Cabinet is prepared to for- mulate a scheme of solution of the Irish trouble by means of a measure giantmg self-government on most gen- erous basis. gave an outline of the history of the Constitution of the United States and SAW OVER THREE YEARS' SERVICE IN WORLD WAR Thi --hops aic on the stie>et ilooi ai e wide open and contain ntimcious small tables Lxcellent eofiee genei.illy. lilaek and .stiong is s<ived m tinj | eu])s at the unifoi m pi ice equivalent i 10 .ibout 2 1-2 eeuts a cup j It is in these shop*- and while Mp-J ping tlieii eofrce that manv Biazilians discus^ business oi bociai alfaiib and also watch the passing thiongs. Manj of the shops- i< mam open all night'and aie well pationi/td In 1 ict some ot them eontam mote pationt> at Jam than at any othei time Neailv all ol the 1 coffee shops- can j an abundant J s'ock of alcoholic hquoiis tout the little call toi it FORD PLANNING LINE OF STEAMERS TO CORK LONDON, Octy&—The Cork De- velopment Association his leceived a cablegiam from Henr.v Void, .stating that he is considei ing iummg a line ot steamers, to Ireland ESKIMOS WHO Ml KDJ JUD MISSION UUrs P YKDONED The Citizens' c!uh of M issen i h i voted to buv tho Allen House hot* property to be used as a home 1 o the du b It is pi mm d to develop th ! J1 T \\* '' n< MV l V' ll modc>led atl01 th( moiiumc .a in~Tia~l\l S ~n ~ Squ iro b. m r ' '112 It e l iug h Do w ehutel i JJ- hlcjphe n s cloc k towe i ( IIIA l.en - CANADA VICTORY FLAG STAFF SET UP IN LONDON LONDON—C mad't s \ictoi\ flag stall has been eiectcel on v ictoi \ mound at the \ictotv g ite entidiue o Kt w O n den—a stiaight Oiegon pine- 21~> f< et higii and almost thu< ttet in dumctci it the bise It is the ^ift ot the ji^opl' o! 13iili-h Co- Hinilni to London and l inK- v\ith Liu l.lest struclure in London, Nelson's- Lake Placid Club When tlu Allguod Motion Pietuie company was taking stems a' Ktfse- ville and Audible Ch i-m on. ol tlu stais Chr- UuLehintoi did I uskv btunt He ( i ossi r| i small b i ul<j;f two Ji< t \\j(l . wh< < h spiiimd th < eh ism ehiu a inoir, U \(l< 'Jh f mat him .'ould s; o tcioss i t oi'h h milts <u i lioui mil i t w t s %Mt h difli c ult, tl i .-Kto i Ke)) t liom noun,' oi l the < d^e ti t Hie p i ink L p i til Secretai \ o f Stil p Huso i s lum, Miloro d lo r th e ipp o nun i.l i- - i i tan o f th e Watenouu rhiml.i hom t ) «}J0 Wto'ii to w e > Uiuus e e» 1 fuels) Mil an d b t P nil's* Cdthcdia l ' b i COUNCIL COMMISSIONS TO ADJUST MATTERS \> \RIS, ()( t S —The Supn m» ( Coun_ < tl deonh d to i u m a suh-«.onumttc< oij ie]n i itiun s to t ik< u p th e questio n ol *th\ pi ovisionm g i i \IIHII\ i il tl iii- ui e thi s 1M IIIL, ( nu t el on \nothe i I ml\ xh M i ttlu Fi n ti-ii i n lilnipn i. l-'raiH; L. Polk. A O l TAW A Oet fe —Tw o Eskimos , si. me in <d to lit* nnpiisonmen t for lauidiim ^ tw o Roma n Cuholi c mis - siona i it v an d eatin g th i h« ai ts of thei r victim s we n pinione d no m Calgar y \n niU ntiai \ Th t Eskimo s « tll tiuhd throug h th< Aui u tuio n toi tw o \ tar s befor e the \ we' e (apuni d Ti n j kne w noth - ing ol cnili^itio n unti l pi ice d on tria l BRITIANS IMPATIENT FOR WIDE AIR SERVICE LONDO N - T h it piss.eii,er s ar e i IK i' \ iw uun^ th ( es t ibhshmen t o f u> pi i H IOUUS i o distan t point s i n th< i.in i li i:ni]nii . j s .show n b y th e 11 q m M- i u , n , k< i s i ' toned b y a com - 1'iti l w h e h ope i uc s a n ,in | lan e lin e iini n FulKsioi K IM i o fin- O n th e <l i\ ulini'n v. IM , oponci l (h e onic e ot ih t e om p ti n wa s bcsie-,t u b y iti - <|iin us i,) K ti n ho w soo n it wil l lie Frank C. Delaney has returned to his home in this city after over three and one-half years overseas with the Canadian army. Mr, Delaney enlisted in Montreal, with a Canadian regiment, for active service, and sailed for England April 1. 1916. It became known that Mr. Delaney was an expert accountant and when the regiment arrived in England he was transferred to the auditing department of the Canadian army, which was composed of about one hundred men. While abroad Mr. Delaney made several trips back anel forth between England and France, in connectior with the work of his department. While he saw much of the country he regrets exceedingly that he had no chance at the front lines, which was what he enlisted for. He did, how- ever, gain a world of experience, and speaks in the highest terms of the people with whom ne came in contact in England and France. He arrived at Halifax from Southhampton on Sept. 29. Mr. Delaney is no stranger to sol- diers' life and when a mere boy en- listed as a volunteer and fought all through the Spanish-American war. He returned from Cuba with a ser- geant's chevron and remained at his home here until he enlised in Canada for service overseas. He has accepted a position with C. H. Oliver Co., in the insurance busi- ness in this city. - advocated* i:.* study as a means of I Americanizing the coming generations ! Mr. Nile? surprised some of < his aueii- nco by stating that a thousand \float- ers\ (illegal voters) were in evidence at the fast election in the City of Piatteburgh. Miss Ellen Hewitt, the Registrar of the Chapter, who is also a promin- Y.W.L FUND CAMPAIGN IS FORMALLY ENDED ent \White Riboner,\ spoke briefly of the 18th Amendment to the Constitu- tion (concerning Prohibition) and pending enforcement legislation. Dur- ing the program Mrs. Florence Wever McKirmey played several piano solos A social hour followed, during which coffee tvas served, the hostess being assisted by Mrs. Watson Wilcox and Miss Elizabeth Mooers Ulery. . Rates RESTRICTIONS RAISED ON SALE OF GOV. BACON Hotel and Restaurant Men May Pur- chase Quantities From Consign- ment Now at City HaJl. Still Irfulis Amount Neodixi. Hopes Tlwt Means Will l>e Found to Raise Balance. At a meeting of the Board of Man- agers of the Young Women's .League yesterday the finance cimp.a^n was Although only The sale of the Government bacon at City Hall has settled down to some- thing like a steady distribution, about 600 pounds having been disposed of Tuesday and 90 0 day before^ Many country residents have not yet had an opportunity of coming to town to make their purchases, yet the percentage of these is Increasing which would indicate that people in farming communities recognize the saving made on the ordinary retail price of the bacon. Those who have already purchased the bacon are the best advertisements for it, and their recommend has in- duced others who were at first some- what skeptical as to the quality of the bacon, not only to buy one can but after examination to return for more. Mr. Eastman, of the Underwood Company, yesterday received a com- munication from Glens Falls, which states that from now on the bacon may be purchased by hotels and restau- rants if they choose to avail themselves of the opportunity. This will undoub- teelly have the effect of cleaning up the local supply more quickly than it would be otherwise, and will probably cause individuals to put in their re- quisitions at once. The name of \William Hohenzollern is noc em the list of those whom the German government has derided to prosecuxe for responsibility -[or the •ar. The Swedish embassy at Petrograd has been looted by the Bolsheviki. Eugene Hamilton, colored was an- other addition to the Judge Lynch law of Georgia when he was hanged by a mob for trying to kill a white man. The colored men serving a ten year sentence was taken from the Jas- par county jail by the mob. Xo le?s than eleven Englishmen have laid claims to inventing the war cank. Civil war between north and south China has again broken out. A trade union of English clergymen !-Q enforce a minimum salary is being idvocated. Federal Trade Commissioner Hous- ton Thomson says this country squan- lers $500,000,000 each year in wild 'at speculation. The House of representatives has voted in maintaining the war tax Movie picture houses. Mrs. Seymour E. J, Cox of New York and her son, Seymour, nine years old have ju^t completed a 2000 air p from ouston, Te:.. r to Mineola, L. I. The newspapers of Lima, Peru, have been shut down by a strike. Four masked men entered a Pitts- burg bank, Tuesday, took the manag- ers $1200 ring and gold watch but overlooked a big stack of Liberty bonds. Mrs. Elizabeth Liznik. 37 years old was tied to her bed and murdered by bandits in Yonkers, Tuesday. Nineteen Metropolitan policemen of Boston who refused strike duty when- the city of Boston police struck were dismissed and now they are trying to get back. The master bakers of the state in convention at Syracuse declared thai the five cent loaf is gone forever. About 12,000 New York Longshore- men dissatisfied with conditions, de- lied the parent body and w^eat on • strike Tuesday. The endowment fund of Harvard college has now' reached a total of $2,S14,000. Fifty dollars a month is now being ur^?ed as the lowest pay in the Navy. The continued shortage of sugar brings to the fore the need of Federal control of the product. A Women's Republican club has heen organized in Philadelphia. The United States ia to make a loan of $13.1)00.000 to Ukraine. ,A fat lady and a wilei man appear- ing in a show at Windsor, Me., caught the strike fever this week and re- fused to perform unless their de- mands for more money were complied with. 1 Society women of Washington calle 1 upon Vice-President Marshall to urge servants to display more interest in the kitchen. The servants in tuan might demand that the society women Advertlrftuxients from one to five 1 25c one day, BOo one week, two weeks,) $1.50 lour weeks. Over Fire Lines One time, 6c per line, two times 10c per line, threrf time* 15c per line* four timee 20c per lin«, one month 25c per line. WANTED—A woman for f«ner*l housework, plain evoking. N*» young girl need apply,* but woma* who is accustomed to keeping house is desired. Ph'ona 71-Sf* Mrs. T. F. Mannlx, 84 Oak St. Plattsburg. formally ended^ $3s37.37 h.id come in. it was decideel not to extend^ the campaign further. This means that the work can be , a« it has been but that! not entirely finished till 1880. It has The building of St. Peter's Cathedral in Rome was started in 1450, but was hi ( o tl ( ti n I*L\\ U'l IL! \HO\ Ol \i L i» \rmom s< i \ i ii\K>KI iK : n u . ( oini n t < o l th < \ \ ,i i u \mi i H i i n ' h t i . Ti n s U i! n l o Mi' i i 1 t u u ti i i ' h i >> i carried on there are no funds for developing the J work. Tt is hoped however, that by j r .entertainments those departments' which need to he enlarged, may be financed. . The Board of Manager wish to ox- press their appreciation of the way the girls have helped to raise this money to keep their Club House. Botn girls and Board of Managers are very grateful to all those' who have contri- buted and hope that they will learn to know the League better and will eome> and see the work that is beini? done there. The League is a neces- sity lo Pittsburgh and since Pitts- burgh people are to finance it they should understand its aims and be m touch with its activities. • The League wishes to send a large box of warm clothing to the Armen- ian children—warm clothes may be sent ihere at any time during the next two weeks. Help your girls give com- fort io the girls of that stricken land! Xext week will he Cook Week ut the League. Any reading material will be> appreciated. Literature is es- pei-iully neeek-d for th^e younger cliil- dren. Help fill the> book shelves! There will be a supper and im- portant meeting of the Cluga Club at 6:^0 tonight. been estimated that the total cost was : far from $75,000,000. WORLD EVENTS The United States submarine G-7 ! rammed and laid open the bow of the WELLS CREDITED WITH INVENTING WAR TANK I.OXDOX, Oct. S.— II. G. Wells is the original though indirect inventor of the Link. A Hritihh commission heard claims to ihe invention of the armored chari- ote-s that proved such a vital factor in Colonial line .steamship, Lexington i New York harbor, Monday evenin; lloth vessels were seriously damaged but no one boarel either was seriously hurt. , The police of Akron, O., have un- earthed a plot by the I. W. W. to incite negroes to riot and murder. I Alexander J. Lerroux, lender of- the ' Republican party in Spain has de- cldi-eel that if the peace treaty wins out his country will be a republic. Machine- guns have commanded the* .streets of Lisbon, Portugal during the past few days because of riots. tSeneral Mustapha Kemal, Turkish Nationalist lender is credited with forcing the cabinet lo resign and now it is saiel he menaces the monarchy. The Loyal Order of Moose have de e-iiled to extend the range of their order to Prance and England. A bill to encourage reclamation of th\ Nevada forest has passed the House ot Representatives. Albert Lay, 48 years OKI, father of six children killed his wife and then himself in New York, Monday. American claims for damages against Mexico amount to $2:1.000,000. Spanish miners have won their de- mands for u seven hour day. Prof. Loomis of Amherst college, Mass., has found an egs in Nevada sands which he reckons is about one million years olel. Mrs. Hazel Leukerts is held ai Von- DESIRABLE RESIDENCE Located on one of the streets of the City. Prio« For further partciulars inquhtt of K. E. Healey, 27 CUiton Street, ' Piatta- burgh, N. Y. WANTKD—A young man to learn tho clothing business, also a mar,' ^ith some experience. AppTy to l»esse-' Baker Co.. 135 Main St., -JBroakton, Mass. AUCTION SALE Having sold \my farm I will sell at public auction all my livestock Vnd farming, implejinents on Tuesday, 14th\*af Ven o'clock'in thfe it&iti Fj^.itflgMlff Five thousand Russian failing' get a permit to march in Wednesday, proceeded to panfcde, <de- ft*d ttesr police and a battle r*?$f •*»- sued in thja vicinity of Whil Square. LONDON, Oct. 8—There is a stronfe impression in political circles tha^ fft% long expected changes at the Adtntr- alty are imminent. - ' The chief of these of course, Would be the appointment, so clearly desig- nated by public opinion, of Sir David Beatty as first sea lord. ThHs Svouk mean tHe* Wnsfer ot Sir Ttoslyn Wemyss to another sphere- of activity. .. • w DEMINE (By the Associated Press) LONDON, Oct. 8—The capture of show a little more common sense and the city of Voronezh, 275 milfes south- humanity. j cas t of Moscow, by the anti-Bolshe- The Longshoremen strike at New v ik forces of General 'DenekJne is ad- York, is attributed to 1. W. W. influ- j mitfced in a Soviet wjreless inessa.go once as 20 of that tribe have been from Moscow. Gen. Denekine's, dav- among the men recently stirring up airy is advancing on Usman, 85 mite* dissatisfaction. The labor union north of Voronezh. leaders opposed the <?trike. A message from General Denekine's The Mikaflo of Japan fs expected to headquarters receivea October \ff re- sign the-peace treaty -within a week, ported the capture of 15,000 BojjifcfeV. The ratification of the parliament is vik \during operations' around Tot- <• the Allif.s.. and in the course of the sossion War Minister Churchill, after SLI\H)U the invention was not due to of many mmds, declared Mr. Wells hail in-*!, 1 written down the ldi-a of the tank, long before the war. Uuv a s.u- k o f flour i.nlav. >au will i\<- inoiuM, J nv,i - .-,-..-k y.\ .in . Si n ti l Ui I. >\ 1 \'K \\ .- n s Sim . , 1') i 1 .nil.HI JVlk-h.. e-h; • o f ha\ ing fe d i-ortosive tablets t o her two young daughter.-, who died. Cincinnati has adopted an ordin- th clock ali d an hou he who round. Louis iMai'kowitz, a New York je\v- 'e-r ha « admin t-d lu> loeea'ee t S I 50 0 i ,ishisnn « men t o s^ei enliste d i n the A YOUNG MA!fS 286 Acre Dairy Farm $1000 DOWN This farm is in the State of Vermont, County qf ' Addison, 286 acres, 100 grassland tillage, balance past- • ure and wood land, will carry 60 cows, 1 1-2 miles to ! village, school, stores, etc., 1 mile to creamery, house •is 2 story, 14 rooms, good condition, fair set of out- [buildings, with every tool and implement that could, j be had on such a farm, 37 milch cows, 1 bull, 1 3-p^il ; Perfection Milker, sugar works equipped, 800 tin > ; buckets, a nice lot of wood and timber, running water.; ; to house and barn, meadows all level and smooth, free [from stone and well fenced and in the very highest; [ state of cultivation. - > The purchase \price of this farm, stock and tools is-! | $15,000; 31000 down and half the proceeds for re- j »mainder. < CORKINS & MARTIN, ] Bristol, Vt. j iGEORGH VV. CORKINS, Bristol, Vt., Phone55-li. JOHN D. MARTIN, Bristol, Vt., Phone 28-11.