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THE COURIER. BBOOKFIBLD. K. Y , WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1926 9 NORTH BROOKFIELD ----- We r e ^ t to leam that Charles Elliott -who recently under went an operation a t Homeopathic Jan. 11—1 Charles Elli-__ ___ went an o p e r a t io n _________^ ____ Hospital, Utica, does not gain as rapidly as his friends wish. C. E. Bacon spent Sunday in Wa- ten^le. . Mrs. C. E. Hibbard spent Thursday in Waterville. g _ _ . - S. W. Bentley spent Monday in Oriskany Falls. Mrs. Minnie Avery hr sick list ^ e past week. h a s been on the Mr. and Mrs. Raymond. B arnes and G. £. Barnes attended the funeral of p a r i e s Hayden held a t St. Bernard’s Church, Waterville, Monday morning. M. E. CHURCH A. A. Sturgeon, Pastor Sunday School 1:30 P. M. Afternoon worship 2:30 p. m. BAPTIST CHURCH S. D. Yorh^ Pastor Sunday, January 17, regular morn ing worship at eleven. Bible school a t noon. The Young Yeople’s meeting will Be held at the home of Mildred Oliver at 7:30. Leader, Helen Cook. l^ d a y evening of this week a toe social will be held at Hie home of Marion Green. Everyone invited. Ladies please bring sandwiches. The Great Northern Railroad has tunnel 7 miles long tbroi ade mountains, which i the line 18 miles and lo\._. elevation 1,000 feet, a t a cost of begim a tunn< the Cas ’ shorten the elev WEST SIDE ted his father, Charles Elliott, who is Club v in the Homeopathic Hospital, Utica, the hoi and found him quite comfortable Jacksoin after his operation.operat Later reports ___ ____ _ . _ from Mr. Eluott are not as favorable. The boys and girls classes of the iptist Sunday School will ' ' icial s’- ----- .. _ hold a toe lome of Miss Marion inday Scho( the home day evening, January li are enjoying our first g SANGERFIELD Jan. 11—^The Sangerfield Cornell will hold its annual banquet at >me o f Mr. and Mrs. Com io on Wednesday evening. Mrs. J. B. Plante and Miss Mary ^illianmiams wereere inn Uticatica recentlyecent to w i U r Isecui-e license p k te s for their cars. dren, of North Brookfield, spent Wed- i^ C T t^^ L t**of^^'^ p i nesday night with her parents, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. P . Kelly. Mrs. Kelly is and Mrs. Frank Furner. _ I recovering from the grippe. Mrs. Ed..Bai-nes. and daughter. of,^°“ f^ ^em^^ recently visited the T. T. Will Hubbardsville, visitec Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bh Mr. and Mrs. Lambert are receiving congratulations upon the arrival of Mary Williams attended the Eistei dfodd in Utica on New Year’s Day. George McNamara was in Utica week acting in the capacity of SOUTH HAMILTON Jan. 11—Mrs. Chas. Anderson and Mrs. Jay Harris were in Earlville last Tuesday to attend a Home Bureau meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Ci Vernon farm to Mr. Branr Mr. and Mrs. spent a few days in Vernon this past week visiting their daughter, Mrs. Peter Teeps. The Home LeRoy Larkin There were ing. A few r Thursday, January 7. e not many out to this meet- _ _w blouses were fitted. The next meeting will be held with Mrs. Mattie York on Thursday, Jan. 21. It is requested th a t those who are making the blouses try to be present and please be sure and bring j blouses and dress forms. Clyde Reese is kept from attending school on account of quite serious trouble with his eyes. tr^ d i s has sold his 120 acre Bekowitz of Utica, purchased the John Waterville. ____ ____ Jerry entertained the Wednesday Bridge Club at her home. Thomas Jones has recently spent day a t T. T. Wiliams.’ Dr. F. J . Douglas of Utica and D O. W. Burhyte of Sauquoit wei called here last Friday in consulta- on over the case of Mrs. Isaac Beek- lan who has been ilL Frank Matthews received the ne\ of the death of his nephew, Emers( Walls in Franklin Springs on Satur- BEAVER MEADOW To make room for 1926 Wall paper, we will sell all pap er in stock at 8c.~ to 19c. a roll. These have formerly sold from 13c. to 35c. a roll. Large stock. E. L. R E I L L Y WATERVILLE. N. Y. _ y r tle Smith, who h a s been spend ing some time a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bailey a t the West Side rg for Mrs. Bailey and infant jnter, returned home a few days rests at Curtis Ingalls.’ The unit of the Home Bureau at South Hamilton met with Mrs. LeRoy Larkin last Thursday to fit blous - There was not a very large crowd count of the cold weathe Winter B a r g a i n s Men*s all Wool $4 Shirts .reduced to $2.98. All sizes Boys and Girls 4 buckle Arctics, 8 1-2 to 2 size reduced to $L98 25 pairs of Boys 1 buckle Overs, with long stockings, reduced to $2.50 Boys Sheep Skin Coats $7.50, reduced to $5.75 R.RKUTSCHBACH SHERBURNE ,N. Y. A Persian cat sold by Rigdon of Sterling, 111., week later after being carrit imles in a basket Miss Lil her home male attir ~fe years Charles Cole, dumb beggar rested for cursing a man to-give him money. „ . Jits. ’ ng., declared _______ ___________ vyed after ^ being given beer that a w a n t ^ fo r some t-me sirs. Nettie Bacon of East Haniil- I has been spending the week-end m h as been spending with her son and family. Albert Holden has returned after iding a w e ^ with his parents at ler and wUl be roads. The next meeting a t Mrs. Vem York’s. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hai Norwich last Wednesday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Bacon and daughter Dorothy, spent New Year’s in Sherburne. Curtis Ingalls was in Norwich o day last week o n business. HAMILTON CENTER Jan. 11—^Mr. and Mrs. Ralph John- a i ^ son,on, Mr&rs. .^lecta e c ta Beekmiifi,eekmUfi, ^ n a i ^ s M E B onson and «duldren o f Hamil- ___ Mrs. Floyd Ripley and chil dren of Hubbatdsville, nave been re cent guests of Mrs. Eugene Beek- grandmother. George Shores is on the sick list. Miss Mary Ripley is home fi -------- \ if sicknes Binghamton bn accoumt o f sickness. Several from the Center attended ■ ■ Gilbert P< t e ^ f ^ t i c a Is visiting from the Center attei funearl of Gilbert Peck a t Pool- lie Simday. ISicbard Jarvis Mr. and Mrs. BL R. Dart. Clarence Brooks o f Chadwicks spent Simday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bronson. Mr. and Mrs. lisle Jehnson o f Ham ilton were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Handin. Mr. and Mrs. E. E . Beekman spent Wednesday a t Preston. EAST HAMILTON Jan. 11—^Mr. and Mrs. H arry Sar gent and son Clesson were gue.sts of Mr. and Mrs. P a t M niphy a t Hub bardsville Sunday. Mrs. Nettie Bacon has returned home a ^ r spendbg the past week with her son Floyd Bacon and family at South ELamilton. lainuwit, Mrs .^^^rette Bacon has new elec- lisle Brown o f South Hamilton was lest of Mrs. Florence BroWn Mon- Ifixst tim e th [ter look it o Cornell foi ’ Week. SNAPPY STUFF Odd ISits s f Nekfs, Gathered from Far a n d Near Mrs. G. H. returned a ried fifty pretended deaf and of Chicago, was ar- who refused picion to have a du right eyelid. J. C. Koerner o f Chicago found an ab^doned baby in an empty radio cabinet on tiie porch of his home. Clara n., a prize cow. died in Lon don of lead poisoning just after she had been sold for $4,500. . . . . . ________________ When two Chicago policemen tried 1*^8 ewes and $1.95 from those lamb- to a rrest Mrs. Bridget O’Brien for in- “ S early, toxication she cut them both with a Charles broken in < walked to idler, an anim recently in Ma ons in her funer le right A ie t monkey belonging (.. __ William Phillips of Swansea, Wales, killed by police after it b:cam«». li and bit three treatme liner who died illes, had three lions procession. A score of policemen were requirei to quell a riot which occurred whei five aces were discovered in a deck used by Chicago poker drove him ___ _ ' .rs. Anne “Curtin, aged 74. who 3 on a farm near Crediton, Eng., never seer ” - ■ • ^ When aske< are fiard to get Alfred Menzines, recently an itiner ant evangelist was sent to prison in Birmingham, Eng., for a burglaiT committed in 190D. Exhibitors at London stock shov ly “doll up’’ their pij or rosettes, but mu . r ppwder the pigs’ skins ---------------- done before. G0I4 bars worth $200,000 had to be guarded for 24 hours after a truck carrying it from Gravesend don ran into a di' ’ Mra. Mary Cabot of Mossley, Eng., cast her first vote at the age of 103. Sergius Zoltowski, a former Eus- makes a living as a boot- ors of the waterlogged oner Eva spent five days _ the rigging before being rescued. In a round-up of hmn, Eng., 4,200 we air-tight chamber Mme. Jeanne Ixmraine of Mar- eilles gave birth to five babies but nly one lived. Mrs. Alexander McCormack, who eclared she bad never had a spell of ickness, died suddenly at Glasgow at the age of 105. the request of a dancing in- whq died recently in Paris, ir funeral. , Fli with ribbo not rouge or i as has bee ... Jravesend to Lon- litch and was wrecked. ---- .red by rats scampering from a mine, 60 miners near Prague fled just in time to escape a flood which would have drowned them all. Testifying that her husband always took a hatchet to bed to keep her frightened, Mrs. Amelia Dorian of Chicago was granted a divorce. Neighbors filed suit against Johr Shaw of Newport, Wales, because his bees frequently stung them. Hans Grand, diamond cutter of ‘ msterdam, when arrested icion of stealing gems, was found I tov e a diamond hidden under his In all of the years the results were in III favor of late lambing. The early lambs were dropped m February and marketed in July. The late lambs were dropped in May and June and marketed in Novemier. During the five-year neriotl, the re fits of the studies snowed an av erage net profit of $5.47 per ewe f i r late lambing and only $2.41 per ewe I of this class, and l , are considered conclusive. During the last year of the experiment, w.hidb ided in November, 1924. tiie differ- Certain natives of Australia are said to live almost entirely upon a diet of mushrooms. Adventurers ara still searching for treasure supposed to have been bmied by Pancho Villa, noted M encaa bandit. Danish sdoom clin g i^ to ■' who divorced her husbai perance, remarried 1' Sir Brace T physician, recoi bies to make ti their lungs. W hat is thought to I largest chrysanthemum in a t Osidca, Japan, Tampa, Fla., for Fanny Curry of London won a e suit ag(ainst a dealer who CTHE WHY of SUPERSTITIONS By H. I R V I N Q KI NQ THE EXTRA PLATE iT_F AN extra plate be a placed on the table whe ing set for a meal It is some visitor is coming hungry. t found in various cldentally sign that IN THIS STATE Results from the experiments in the relative economy of early and late Iamb production show th a t late lamb ing is the more profitable under con ditions of pasture and climate that revaa in New England and the ad acmit part o f New York State. The exi>enments were conducted by live stock specialists o f the United States Department o f Agriculture on the de partm ent farm a t Middlehury, Vt. and covered a period of five years a superstition f lety specified of its habitats. It is, of c tlons of the country; the American Folk-Lore society specified Ohio as one lUght must fact, which Idea pro duced the theory of that sympathetic- magic which, from primitive times, had such a strong hold upon the minds of our ancestors. They were diligent seekers after the relation effect. Ever therefore, every cause, every act, must have an effect What would be the natural effect of placing an extra plate upon the fable? Why, the effect produced, or signified, by the associ ation of ideas, which would be that of someone coming hungry. Only ad mit, as did the ancients, that what is connected In thought is connected in fact and the rest Is easy—the se- qnence of events clearly marked ont. It should be noted, too, that In this system of reasoning to avoid the cause w a | Id avoid the effect. Most of the lately enoui you avoid what the omen Therefore, If you have lugh for your own dinner, be carefnl not to place an extra plate en the table, and then if a bnngry Tlsitor should drop in it will be by pure accident and not owing to your I drop in it will All of the 135 ships of the famous Spanish Armada combined only epual the tonage of the liner Ma- Lieut.-Colonel Clarence O. Sherrill has resigned from, the Army to be come city manager of Cincinnati. ta Know to Choose a % idio —told in plain language h y one of the world’s greatest radio engineers, Mr. J o s ^ D. R. Freed, President of the Freed-Eisemann Radio Car> poration. —a booklet small enough tm slide into a man’s vest pocket dr a woman’s purse. A post-card, *phone call o r visit to our store will plao* one in your hand& IT’S W ORTH GETTINGI F r e e d -E i s e m a n n t aAOXO JUtCMJVSJU Authorised Dealer for Freed-Eiseman» Radio R e tdm n We also carry Crosley and Atwnfm'- Kent sets. R. p . MIRES ^RLV ILLE Yotii* Dfttg Store wants will receive prompt attentioD^ Mail us your order* S. G. Allen - Corner Drug Store EARLVILLE, N.Y. SHEETROCK Sheetrock makes permanent, tigkt-jointed non-warping walls and ceilings. Sheetrock is fireproof. LighL saws and nails like lumber A wall-board which takes any decoration. SOLD BY Conkling-Rogers Co. Lunaher & Building Materials EarlviUe,N.T itifif a U V Bl« EHOUSHBtraX ' *»v‘PlETB THE mCKJE^THE PRINTER'S DEVIL By Cliarlei Sugfiroe MOr MUCHMOUe4- VJK7 DOirr I PICK OU I SOME OTHER. U M E ^ HOWW. WHEOnOB-OJeSSIBErreSlRaMfORNMV/SPER-' THE •nMEISUPVOWORaoWAMPIDOHrWAMnDM'SS A, SlHOfi CdPH-NN WIPE AM> 1 COlHOirr KEB» HOUSE j g VJtTHOUTMOua.T’M'ERt fVE TAKEM IT EVER SlklCE K «VAKreO*RAISeO rr PMIA A PUP^/ IKEEPOUTUtiMa ASIOU&AS I j- TEU,VOUWHAT, I •miM KM UEeor'tH B ^ BEST UBUSPAPER U4 THSS PART OF THE. « STATE. AWO WE HEARD OIHBIS SfM SO TOOl ~ IDOMT SEE WHERE SOU aST SO MUCH UBUS; AMO MOU ARE CHARHABLE AMD POUT PLAN EWEWT UUE IM HOUR. (APER' tS FtT TDREAD AMD WORTH R^iDIKla' l\MAItrTOSEI©1HE The Faithful SuhserSdt:?