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ir The Madrid Herald, February 22, 1917 PageS !' 0 \Hr*\ 1 •^^•fr********************* ^•{•++^.f.4.^^^^^.j.A^^. j.^ + &^ < .^, < ,^^ While Attend- ! ing the Auto Show in Ogd- ensbnrg Feb. 21, 22, 23, 24 Do not f,:<il to visit our stre and view the advance styles * iu spring footwear. All the new wool creations. Not onlv the. best at the price Bat the best at any price. BURKES' Ogdensburg, N. Y. •J••$*•$•'?• •$••$**$*vj«tt»»j»»i««$««-j*•?••?*•$*•$*•jt»$»»2** , 5**5«»j*•}*»£**$« *J**{*•$• **-*»J*••}• ****$•• *^***•• *•!**^*\i - **J**J**-!\• ^J**i»*-j*•>•• *v*• Mend The Breaks ••••«•«••«•••••••••••••*+« <>•••••«••>••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • * • • Perhaps you haven't time, or maybe you haven't the tools, but it is the better policy ^to keep your farm tools mended. Our specialty is to do the mending, to do it honestly and skilfully—that's what we're here for. When any tool or machine on the farm has a break, just call on or ;; phone, 1 Madrid Machine Shop & Garage ROBERT W. MARTIN, Prop. • *••••••••••••••••**••-•*•••• »*•••••••••••••••••••••*«« \^ Silver of Quality aed Beauty Unquestioned durability and exquisite de- = sign—the highest ideals in plated v/are —=, —are assured in spoons, forks and fancy serving pieces bearing the renowned trade mark 1847 ROGERS BROS. There are various makes of silver-plated tableware which are claimed to be \just as good,\ but, like all imitations, they lack the beauty and wearing quality identified with the original and genuine 184-7 ROGERS BROS, ware, popularly known as \Silver \Plate that Wears. \ Sold by leading dealers everywhere. /Send for cata- logue \CL showing all designs. / International Silver Co., M KIOEN°BR\AHHIA <=/, Meriden, Conn. Now is the time tojrefinish your old floors J If your floors are beginning to look dull and worn, ft. coat or two of _ VERNICOL will give them ne/w life and beauty. Vernicol is attractive, noijt-fading and easy to apply. Does not show hfeel marks and can b e washed with soap and water. Come in and we will show you how Vernicol makes old floors look like new. ' ADVERTISE I THE IADRID HERALD • rnpancr. BREWERIES NOT ADVERTISED. \ At the recent national convention of advertising men held at Philadelphia Che delegntes from Milwaukee conspic- uously omitted all reference to the product which made their city famous. A mammoth banner stretched in front of their headquarters informed the public that Milwaukee produces ?76,- 000,000 in iron, steel and machinery each year; $45,000,000 in packed and prepared meats; .$43,000,000 in leather and leather products, and various other useful commodities but there was nothing about its breweries. \Talk to the forty delegates from that city and you'll notice the same thing,\ says the North American of Philadelphia. \They'll throw up their huts over their 'largest tanneries'—and not a word about beer. They'll become enthusiastic over their 3,000 manufac- turing plants without mentioning the breweries. Talk to a member of the Milwaukee Ad. club, and he'll fill your ears full of the wonderful aehevemeuts of—not full-page booze ads, but a church advertising campaign.\ The same tiling was noticeable in the literature distributed. Banks published folders advertising the city as a home for business and omitted mention of the breweries. There was not a placard or a printed page in evidence at the convention on Milwaukee's muck- vauuted \temperance drink.\ MODERN NEWSPAPER MAN. ' The 400 newspaper correspondents attending the national Democratic con- vention in St. Louis were invited by Mr. August A. Buseh, head of the An- heuser-Busch Brewing company, to a mint julep function at his home. Less than 100 accepted, and a score of au- tomobiles the host had engaged for the occasion went away empty. One of those who declined the hospitality wrote Mr. Busch as follows: \The time has passed when news- paper men can keep the pace of the fastest men in the world and meddle with even the mildest of intoxicants. This fact is recognized in the most practical way by- a large majority of the craft. During last week at Chi- cago, when the pressure of work was tremendous and the weather abom- inable, I was in constant contact with the same body of correspondents who are here today, and in all that time I did not see even one nnder the in- fluence of drink. I hope to see the time come when men of my calling will no longer be exposed to the dan- gers which beset the now recognized standards of hospitality, but that the , open-handed friendliness which I know ; you feel toward your friends and mine will find some other form of espres- ; sion.\ i! HAVE NO USE FOR LIQUOR. ' \The position of our organization is well known,\ says Mr. W. S. Slone, grand chief of the Brotherhood of Lo- comotive Engineers. \We fight the liquor evil perhaps as hard as any of the churches. Liquor has no place In our modern railroading. Then' is no class of men in the world of whom more is required and who should have clearer heads than the men in charge of the transportation services of this country. Those of us who have been in the railroad game for years know the infinitesimal space of time that spells the difference between safety and disaster. There is no question but that liquor does slow down the brain action and the man in the cab of the locomotive: and the man in charge of the train, even though he has no re- gard for his own safety, has no busi- ness to use it in any way; by so doing he endangers others.\ BELIEVED IN PROHIBITION. The late James J. Hill, the railway magnate, was an advocate of national prohibition and would shortly have made a public statement indorsing it, was the assertion made by Prof. Irv- ing Fisher at St. Louis, when he brought before the resolutions commit- tee of the Democratic party the matter of a prohibition plank in the party platform. \I received a letter from Mr. Hill,\ said Professor Fisher, \in which he declared that the greatest factor in the promotion of crime, dis- ease and poverty in this - nation was the liquor traffic, and that he delieved national prohibition was the best solu- tion of the problem.\ i \BEER SMELL IS OUT.\ This is the sign, in big display type, over a shoe shop in the city of Den- ver. The proprietor occupies one of the buildings vacated by a saloon- keeper on January 1. He calls him- self \the shoe merchant extraordinary of Denver, Omaha and Lincoln,\ and he urges former saloon patrons \not to cry over spilt booze,\ but to pat- ronize Budd's Shoe Shop. PLEA TO SOLDIERS. Circulars have been sent to the Aus- trian soldiers urging them not to drink ilcoholics, \as they make men slug- rish and incapable of marching, inter- em with guild shooting, and render ne more .susceptible to infectious clis ases.\ ZER CONSUMPTION. During VJ1~>, Americans drank • 2,- !ti,.\i:;~ fewer pints of beer than :i 1011. These bottles would make a oluran 303,447 miles high, according o the Michigan Campaign Manual. | MILLIONS FOR INSTITUTIONS Prisons, Asylums and Hospitals Prob- ably Will Get Increase. Albany, NV Y., Feb. 20.—A'mT.i n dollar emergency appropriation for state prisons, asylums and hOopit ,1.- will be presented to the le-isJaaue this week. The manag. rs of li.e var ous institutions have united in an appeal for aid, asserting that beavesn the time they submitted the r e t:- mates for the current year and th: time they were able' to close eon- tracts for food, clothing and fre! prices jumped so that the appropria- tions will be exhausted long before the fiscal year expiree on Jit.y 1. In the case of some of the n •'••••! tions which have farms the n:::n.••;*;•:> say that they will he- unable lo b :,• seeds for the spring planting u-ile •:-- more money is immediately available. The legislatures in the financial committees were at first inclined to turn a deaf esr to any request which would add a n unexpected million dol- lars to the already swollen budget they are facing on account of the ac- tivities of the militia, and other fac- tors. During the week, however, lie managements of the state institutions were able to present figures of so convincing a na'ure that the commit- tees have d'ci'ed that the requests cannot be den'el w thont lval differ- ing for tre ••'a'e's ward\. The bill v.ill sec rd ng'.y be urgtd for imme- •r,'!te p •.-; ,a':p. PLAN FUST FINISH Representatives to Hold Night Sessions to Rush Legislation. Washington, Feb. 20.—Night ses- sions of the house beginning today were planned by the democratic lead- ers in order to get through necessary legislation before the sixty-fourth con- gress expires a week from Saturday. The army appropriation bin will be up all day today and tonight, accord- ing to present plans. The military academy appropriation bill will fol- low the army bill, and the big sundry civil bill, reported today, will be the next of the annual supply measures to he considered. The fight over prohibition measures, including the senate amendment to the postoffice appropriation bill, and the senate bill for prohibiten in the District of Columbia, is expected to come up at any time. The house had its last consideration of hills on what its known as ihe unanimous consent calendar, which can be considered if anv member objects. Many bills were up but few were passed. The Randall bill, to ex- clude alcoholic advertising, was strick- en from the calendar wither discus- sion. A bill to authorize the treasury to issue gold certificates in large de- nominations, so as to avoid handling the same aggregate value in sir ..Her denominations, was passed. * •* ! Now is Your Chance i 4. 31 TO BUY A FUR COAT AT f ! + . * ! * * t P 1 ->•?< A VERY LOW PRICE , «• • We still have on hand fifteen hundred dollars worth of Ladies Fu r * • Coats that must be sold this season They were bought early last spring, and yon would be saving 25 per cent on them even at regular market prices. We Are Going to Close Them Out at 20 Per Cent Discount which brings the prices down to about one-half their actual value, All Splendid Selected Coats in Pony, Muskrat, Near Seal and Hudson Seal All our F\ir Sets at same reduction. Don't Wait Come Now. Up-to-daT;e Dry Goods Lincoln E. Lewis st pprdStreet gdensburg *^^t>£4t^*£*»£t*£4»|4*£4*£*t£l »£*»£•*£< *£t»£<»|4 •£«•£«•£«•£* t£t4£«-.£« *£••£+ «£t*^^t^*£**£l*£4 •£*•£•»£«»£• •£**£t*£tf£*»£t*£-<*£*l^«*£t*£t>£t •£»*$« •{»•£» MYSTERY AT EDISON PLANT 'WANTED HER TO SUFFER ; -Do you pull tdeth Mr. Henpeck- Wllhout pain? Dentist—Oh! yes, sir. ! Mr. Henpeck—Then you won't do, My mother-in-law wants to get seven extracted, so I'll have to take hei l elsewhere. at is a The answer is: ' A PAIR OF OUS SHOES FOR YOUNG WOMEN*. A bargain because enormous value for the money— value in workmanship, style and fit. Shoes that vibrate with style for early spring. Sherwell 6c Fraser 68 Ford Street \ Ogdensburg, N. Y. •5- • * • • * + % St. Lawrence Comity Savings Bank Qgdensburg, N.Y. Please note what James J. Hill, the great railroad and empire builder, said: ' 'If you want to know whether you are destined to be a success or not, you can easily find out. The test is simple and infallible: Are you able to save money? If not, drop out. You will lose. You may think not, but you will lose as sure as fate, for the seed of success is not in you.\ Business by mail solicited. \ ANDREW IFIVING, President J. E. KHXY Treasurer \ - 4 • • • • • • • • Wizard Believed to Ee V.'orking in Retreat on Subma' -: e Detector. Orange, N. J., Fi' . - >.- - The nature o£ the scientific v .'it that Tnomas A. Edison is condr; ug at his new labor- atory on Bap ilocl f . en the summit of the Oran ' .nouniains, stilt remains a uiyster: but tho^e interested in trying tu expla'n the eledrical wiz- ard's n ove we/\- quite sure it concerns the (V tovery of submarines at sea. Time who have been watching the con re!e building on the mountain lop r-'pot lhat they have .-een the in- ventor with a telescope gazi'.g over the vast v«lley reaches lie mv. They assert that the impres.-ion one gets looking off ISagle Rock is the same as one gels at sea. and lhat it would be an ideal place in which to develop some powerful gla-.s. The inventor'--' workroom i* on the second floor or the building, and it would be impossible for any one to peep in on his wor'i. Manv persons flocked lo the scene ypsierday with the hope of seeing ihe iircit'T at work, but their pa'ent \wii i iy was unrewarded. Thinking about selling your house? To get the greatest cash Value for your property you should make sure that it looks in first-class condition. HIGH STANDARD; LIQUID • PAINT JEsTl Will make a world of difference in the looks of your house. It will make your property worth more— a clean, new-looking house sells quicker and commands a higher price than an old dingy place. The cost of the paint has been known to come back ten t o one. If thinking of selling, think first of painting. Ask ns for an estimate on your requirements. WANTED! WANTED! Cabbage, turnips, p©tatoes, dressed pork, veal and beef. Dailey Bros Norwood, N. Y. Make Your Name Synonymous With Your Product. This C-jn Uoly Be Dona by Coir tan i i-ud. Intelligent Ad- voi'iiMim In a Good Medium. This Paper Is a Good Medium Egg Sandwick and Coffee are made better here than any- where else. We also have a special knack for all kinds of HOT LUNCHES •\\V en tor w t h special ca tu calls for quick sorvicp. U Ni* 5 L*a u»a w w» ki \i aJJ Waddington, New York