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A DOUBLE-DROWNING The bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Rich I Monday. They were married June 30th and were on a canoe trip for a honeymoon Just how the accident causing their d^ath happened is not known. Mr. Sexton 4tept a diary J SIGNIFIES TIME Of PEACE! SI6H T THAT IS MARVELOUS FACTORYVILLE uly 11—K . Brad- j the European Kingfisher. Many beautiful legends are con- nected with the European kingfisher, or halcyon, as the bird was ancientiy belief was that and, since the last entry was on the called - An preceding Thursday,- it is thought * h e se /« n da * vs Preceding the shortest v a day of the year were used by the birds that they were drowned on that day. to build their nests, which, it was i thought, floated off on the water, and MANY VISIT AUSABLE CHASM j the seven days f o u owin g were de- The greaters number of visitors to, voted to hatching the eg^g. During ect of Nature's Creatures Far Above Mankind's. PUTNAM . I July 10—Royce Backus has pur- chased a Cole car. ford were week end guests of rela- Bert Best and family of West Hav- tives in Glens Palls. en, Vt., called on friends here recent- Elmer Hood of Ticonderoga spent ly. Sunday with his uncle, C. E. Thrush- Miss Marjory Bartholomew of er , and family. Bees humming birds, and other honey Whitehall is visiting at the home of Wm. Allen and family and mother, w — —*---D=i'»=« Mrs. Mary Armstrong, visited their Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Allen, bounds detect pollen deposits not by sense of smell or even by instinct, but - IWCeu tilt? -r_UlUi-ill Uiiic auu tire uicu - QUJUlliy. by a marvelously perfected sense of burnie colony * on the field o £ the iat . We wish to corr€Ct a mi8 take. It is sight, which enables them to differ- ter the putnam boya won by a score a Star car that Rev. Goodell has At a baseball game July 4th be- j Putnr.m nine and th« Glen- entiate between coh>r variations infi- O f 9 to g purchased instead of a Ford sedan. picturesque Ausable Chasm, the \Grand Canyon of the East,\ on any single day thus far this season was recorded Sunday, Julylst, when 497 persons were admitted to the Chasm. The fact that this was Dominion day in Canada and that many Canadian tourists motored down to visit the Chasm explains this unusual record. MILLION DOLLAR ESTATE Under the will of Robert H. Cook, probated in New York Friday, Georgie Newcomb and Jennie W. Newcomb of Whitehall, each receive $5^1000. Roberta H. Cunningham of R**chanicville is left 110,000. The remainder of an estate of about $1,- 000.000 goes to the widow, Mrs. Frances Cook of Whitehall. MOSES-LUDINUTON HOS- PITAL that period, \the halcyon days?,\ the ancients believed, the sea was always calm. That Is why the word \hal- eycn\ is used to describe calm, peace- 'ul days. The power of quelling storms was believed to have been conferred upon the kingfisher by Aeolus, the wind god, who made this dispensation when his daughter, Alcyone, and , her hus- band, Cyex, were changed into king- fishers. The kingfisher, from a perch some- times as high as 50 feet above the water, does a sudden dive, seizes a luckless fish in his long beak, flies back to his perch, tosses the fish Into the air, catches it again coming down, and swallows it head first. Newsy Little Notes From Ticon- derogra's Refuge for the Sick July 11—Peggy Schop, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Schop of New York, underwent an operation June 28th and will be discharged Thurs- day. Katherine Keegan, R. N., of Albany was special nurse on the case. E. Scuddard of Fort Ticonderoga underwent an operation July 3d and was discharged Wednesday.. Mrs. B. O'Connor of Glens Falls was admitted to the hospital July 1st for treatment. Joseph Ross of Crown Point, who has been in the hospital for treat- ment for the past few days, was dis- charged today. Jorn Baldwin of East Shoreham able to be up and take a few steps about the hospital Mrs. Flora Willis of Whitehall who underwent an operation June 28th, was discharged Wednesday. Maude Yuele of /Whitehall was spec- ial nurse on the case. Alfred Wheeler of Whitehall w, discharged Tuesday after receiving treatment for an infected hand. John Kent of Crown Point was dis- charged July 7th. Mrs. Etta Griffin of Newcomb, who underwent a SetiSus operation June 18th, is able to-^jke a few steps about the hospital H $ •• Frank Aubun of Whitehall contin ues to improve, y Alfred Dan of New York, who is in Camp Moses, Schroon Lake, was brought to the hospital Sunday af- ternoon. Miss Janet Wheeler is spec- ial nurse on the Harold Beebe of Clemons was dis- charged July 7th. Harvey Peck underwent a mino operation July 6th. Mrs. Ralph Braley was discharged July 7th after a serious operation June 18th. Alma and Katherine Garfield un derwent minor operations Tuesday. Katherine Murphy of Port Henry underwent a minor operation Wed- nesday. Mary Owen, daughter of Mr. an< Mrs. Edward Owen of NewcomB, un- derwent an emergency operation Tuesday. C:orge Morhous of Sodom is in a critical condition at this writing. Mis Maud Willard, R. N., is special nursi on the <a?e. Neil Tripp of Ticonderoga under- went an operation Wednesday. Hi condition is satisfactory. William Stanton of Crown Point who underwent an operation last week, continues to improve. Morton Meyers, ten year old son of Mr. and Mrs. M. Myers of New York, underwent an emergency operation July NOTHING TO BE SORRY FOR As is Here Pointed Out, There May Even Be Advantages in Having a Swelled Head. We often hear a so-called swelled, head mentioned as if it were u thing to be deplored. Yet what could give the proprietor more joy than a swelled head? Imagine the satisfaction of waking up in the morning and looking at the sunshine with the thought: 'Well, well, there's the aid sun up again to do me homage^ Good old sun to light up the world mostly on my account. What a great fellow I am! Well, I'll start out now and give a lot of folks a treat by talking with them. No use being a great chap like nitely too fine for perception by hu- Nelson Pangburn has returned af- Mrs. Laura Bradford has gone to man vision, according to Prof. Frank ter spending a week at his home in Brandon and expects to spend the summer there with relatives, and Mr. and L . W. Bradford is very bad with E. Lutz and F. K. Kicntmeyer, who Schenectady read papers on the pollination of flow- Mrs. A. H. Boun the America] Mr - and Mrs - Carlton Boun and son heart trouble. centIy - t .. .„ Mrs. Harry Sweat. In order to minimize the possibility Mr and Mrs Bert Patterson recent A. Y. Murdock and son Howard cousin, are haying at Long Point this week on Mr. Murdock's farm, of Mrs. Lavina Stanton of Port Hen- of hybrid plant development through willsboro spent Sabbath at the home ry has_ bought the Norman Hildreth the pollination of two unrelated plant O f her father, H. L. Roberts. l b k h H fi d Mi R d M y g place, better known as the Henry Wll h sects, according to the new theory. Na- has species, nature has provided fine grada- Mrs. Minnie Root and Mrs. Dalton Wells house. tions of color imperceptible to the hu- of Whitehall have been visiting at Mrs. Geo. Fiske and sons, Bernard man eye but readilv discernible to in- the home of Roy Herrick. and Morris and Edwin? of Walling^ \ T Roberts motored to North ford, Vt., are visiting relatives in rpnr^nt«fivw of Pach series of bird *\\• auu mT *' Randa11 ' who are vis \ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Davis hnve been July 11—Very dry and no signs of representathes of each species of bird itjng their daugnter Mrs H L Rob . camping at Eagle Lake for the past ! i» erts. week. A quiet wedding took place July Mrs. Lousia Herrick of Mineville CROWN POINT P. W. Bradshaw and son William attended the ball gam* in- Ticonde- roga Sunday. Miss Florence Bradshaw has re- turned home after spending several days with her sister, Mrs.-C. P. Lest- er, in Ticonderoga. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rafferty of this town and Mr. and Mrs. Leon Wells, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Lester and Miss Florence Bradshaw of Ticonde- roga motored to Chestertown July 4th and attended Steve Hayes' out door pavilion dance. Mr. Hayes ex- pects to give a dance every Wednes- day night. Mrs. Philip Kerwood and daughter Marion and son Alden of Whitehall spent the week end with Mr: ana Mrs. James McCormick. Miss Margaret Canning and Master Winiam of Port Henry were recent guests of Miss Grace McCormick. p and insect an individual fondness for a given color gradation. When a bee, A que edng p y Mrs. Lousia Herric for example, starts out on his daily 4th at the P. P. parsonage when Har- was in town Tuesday, routine he visits only such flowers as old Belden and Miss Ruth Davies appeal to his individual color tastes, were united in marriage by Rev. S. In this manner he pollinates only such G. Shaw with Mr. and Mrs. Emraer flowers as are identical with each [ Shepardson of Benson as witnesses. nth*,- wh « s tn snwips and uR ro ex- ' The ha PPy couple left immediately 1 LVr on a short trip to P^tsburg. In the Regents preliminary exam- art color gradation. Occasionally after an annual election, an irresponsible boe or bee-ess may run wild among all sorts of colors and conditions of plants, thereby playing hob with na- ture, and crenting anything f sunflower with pansy petals to a double-jointed Jonquil. Such hybrid citations are called mutations, and frequently they are the basis for a new species. However, such things rarely happen, bees being, on the whole, rather me- thodical and reliable individuals. But there isn't anything to.be done about and Mrs. Emraer July 9—Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Norton and five children spent the Fourth with his uncle, Michael Mullen. .. .•.»* v\v. *»^ e ,^i.i.u I** ^..u.\.«. j tnuui Mrs. Jos. Delaire drove to Ticon- family row, or inations held June ig_20, the follow- deroga Tuesday. ing pupils attained a standing of 75 Chas. Hitt has sold all his cattle, per cent or over: Spelling—Perry 15 head, to Chas. Bigelow of Crown Clute, Marguerite Coltey, Bertha Point. Davis, Vivian it, anyway. - . . , Odell and Elsie John Kent came home from the ,nj a jSchwerdtfeger. Arithmetic — Elsie hospital last week. His foot is doin ; S?\ 1 -—e--itf .-fTor. L'llfnn Schwerdtfeger, as well as can be expected. Irene Best, Perry Clute, Frank Craig, Mrs. Harry King spent several Bertha Davis and Frances Petty, days at the home of her parents last eography—Herbert Backus and Ri- weak. 1 Grahom. Elem. English—Irene Mrs. Chas. Hitt visited her sister Best, John Cook, Elsie and Lillian in Livingston last week. Schwerdtfeger. U. S. History—Irene Mr. and Mrs. John Ackerman and Best, Perry Clute, John Cook, Ward son were at the O'Keefe home last Courtney and Elsie Schwerdtfeger. Wednesday. Beatrice Palmer is working ai FORMER TRAVELING SALESMAN Eagle Lake. DEAD There-wjll^ be an open meetinga « and *eep,» g ^ r .11 , . »£*. ™» ^^ »™ the joy I can. Everybody who comes into contact with me is bound to be better for it.\ \Why feel sorry for a fellow like that?\ asks? a writer in Collier's. Who con Id possibly pet more fun out of life? True, be may be gaining his satisfaction on a false premise. But then how muny of us can prove that our scheme of life 5s free from flnws? The man with a swelled head is a joy to himself and a constant source of amusement to his neighbors. Perhaps we should envy him Instead of feeling sorry for him. Curious Feat of a Steeplejack. In telling a tall tree it is usual to cut through the trunk at the base and then to let the tree fall with a crash, or by means of ropes to ease Its descent in a given direction. At Rose Hill, California, a tall euca- lyptus tree, 180 feet high, has been cut down from the top. A steeplejack was engaged to do the work, and he climbed almost to the top, and began to cut off a ten- foot length. The section had a rope fastened round it before it was cut through, and when it was separated the steeplejack lowered the section to the ground. T^en he proceeded to cut another ten-foot length in the same way, and so on until the whole tree had been felled. The work took nearly a week. The tree was closely surrounded by buildings. If It had been sawn through below there yras nowhere for it to fall without doing damage to surrounding property. Insult to Injury. The 5:43, acting in accordance to one of those inexplicable rules which late commut- is, stopped just outside the terminal, and several hundred return- ing suburbanites sighed wearily, for they were hungry. Time passed and the 5:43 made no movement. The slgha of hunger in- creased. Then, as though the malevolent rail- road men had planned it, along came an Omaha-bound train and stopped on the next track. Thus it was that in three coaches the returning suburban- ites, crowded and jammed into their straight-backed seats or standing, were awarded the view of travelers who lounged comfortably in parlor enrs and in elaborately appointed s!uokerg. In the fourth coach matters were even worse. Opposite It the dining car had pulled up. A miserable quar- ter-hour it was when the hungry com- muters, already lats for dinner, strove to keep their eyes and thoughts from Mit* smooth, sleek goers west, who con- • -mue<l warm, fragrant dishes a few ot away.—Chicago Post. . , ,. ^ TT „ . , the Grange Friday night. Farm Bu- Adelbert H. Farrmgton, for many reau Manager Smith and Mrs Smith rears a traveling salesman covering will be present. this section, died Monday at his home Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Murray aJ in Whitehall. For the past few vJldVcotta^e 17 SetUed * n MiS S Pen months, due to heart trouble, he had Ve Alvi n°vl?gel is home doing hii been in failing health. He retired haying. from work a few months ago. He _____ was 75 years of age and is survived NORTH HUDSON by his wife and a daughter. | July n _ Farmers are busy jusl now doing their haying. A ligb crop is expected this season. Samuel and Lorenzo Dnntley too! up a bee tree a few day ago with 11 pounds of honey in it. and is improved at this writ- Jul 3d^ai ing? /I Julyf 12—Mrs. G. Moulton of Schroc% Lake passed away here last ni £m r d the b0< ? y> * n charge of Un- dertalpr Bohrmann, \was taken to her home today. GIFTS ACKNOWLEDGED Advice to Obese. Your stomach long having been used I to caring for more food than your system needed, is enlarged, and when you eat moderately there are the wide-. open spaces longing to be occupied. That is why you still feel hungry and unsatisfied. Now if you will go on a three-day liquid or fruit dipt, not totaling over 500 or 600 calories a day, this will re- duce it to its normal size and very much less food than you have been used to will satisfy you. Then you can easily ^o on your reduction diet as though it were a feast. For these shrinking days I advise about 100 calories every two or three hours during the day. You will lose Odd Forms of Rent. A quaint survival from the early t liirtt j enth century was witnessed at :' e Law Courts in London, Eng., re- <>:itly. when the city solicitor and the cromlary made their annual attend- '!n-e before the kings remembrancer r > tender rent service on behalf of the >y corpora lion for two properties at •SH» time l»e!<l under the cro-wn. For the first of these, described as t piece of waste land called the Moors, n the county of Salop, but long since >'it of the possession of the corpor- rioti. the city solicitor cut one faggot ill a hatchet and another with a bill i<w»k. and for the second, a tenement -Ted Hie Forge. \In the parish of St |(v,i^nt Dnnes. which was pulled >mn by a mol> in the reign of Rich • 1-1 II. fir'rt never restored, the city so- : < it or counted out six horseshoes and :i mills. Childish. The Woman went to see some chil dien who r/ere in the hospital in a p< OY part of the city. When she went in there was undue t .Ncite/iient. \Say ma'am, you came In ^ tp\i. didn't you?\ \No the Woman said. \I didn't.\ There was evident surprise and dis- ;ipT>ointment. \We saw a taxi outside- WHITE CHURCH July 10—Mr. and Mrs. Alanson Petty of Bridport are visiting in this vicinity. Susan and Zilpha Spaulding ac- companied their uncle and aunt to Sen reap Lake today, going by way of El&S^ftitowRV ;«t •^•W -fe^ CTarrison Fish has retuTtied from Albert Weed 8. L. WEED & BCRLMGH GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS OFFICE IN GILLIGAX & STEVEN 8 BLOCK SHOWS SUPREMACY OF MAN ett last week. Mrs. S. H. Graves has has two lummer guests from Brooklyn and 'xpects more soon. Mr. and Mrs. Noel LaMagedlain nd daughter of New Havon, Conn., nd Mr. and Mrs. Garland Dennis oi 'roy are guests of Mrs. H. E. Hoa ; ;es and father. Mr. and Mrs. Noble Benedict were t Lewis Monday to attend the fu- leral of their brother, Merle Bene- ict. • Miss Susan Reynolds is in New ork on a case. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Sullivan, Miss Mary Sullivan and Mr. and Mrs. Rock ~TV\ Havens and son of Glens Palls were Moriah. week end guests at E. W. DeLong's. A ° ance was heId Tuesday i Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Graves and the nome ot Walter Allen. uest motored to Schroon for din- 1 Mr - and Mrs - M« rk Wright at-1 ler Sunday. tended the Fourth of July celebration Mr. and Mrs. Noble Benedict have at Weatport. ' ' vj een entertaining their father and ] John Woods has sold his place to brother, Messrs. Wm. and Harry Ben- nett, of Scranton, Pa., also their aunt from Vermont the past week. Mrs. Chas. Merriam and children spent last week with Mrs. George Merriam of Vergennes, Vt. Miss Styles of New York is a ejuest f her niece, Mrs. Wm. Burroughs. E. W. DeLong has a quantity of beet tops for greens. Very good. The Philathea class enjoyed a very pleasant evening at Katherine Mc- \ntyre's last meeting. Miss Mclntyre and Mrs. S. L. Mclntyre were host- 3es. Mrs. Walter Marvin, Mrs. John Brown and Miss Eva Richards of Elizabethtown called at Mrs. J. Hodges' Thursday. Single Blaet of Dynamite Mas Power to Destroy What Nature Took Centuries to Build. 1 Mrs. John Gero and children eal ed on her mother, Mrs. Albert Walk er, Thursday evening, i Florence Landon has returned ti her home in Moriah after spendim about three weeks in North Hudso; working for Mrs. John Gero. Samuel Gero and son Samuel wert home for a couple of days from Un derwood, where they have emplo; ment. : Patrick Sullivan of the blister rui camp at Johnson pond was seen o our streets Monday. Mrs. Wm. Walker and daughtei Evelyn are visiting her son at Lak< Placid for a few days. Mrs. Jennie Phinney of Moria The next time you pass one of the •xcavations that are being made in the solid rock here, there and every- ' visited Mrs!\Georg\e*Hozley'a coupl where in New York these days for O f days last week, foundations of new buildings, stop, j look and wonder, says the New York Sun. Every foot of rock that Is de- stroyed by these workers with pick and steam shovel, drill and dynamite, nature spent a hundred years to make. For stratified rock forms at the rate of about one foot in a century. So it follows that if you see an excava- tion through stratified rock 30 fent deep this means that within a few MORIAH Mrs. Winch and daughter Ruth o South Glens Falls are visiting friend in town this week. Born July 9th, a son to Mr. am Mrs. Roy Olcott. Congratulations. Mrs. Asa Hall and daughter Pau ine are visiting Mr. *and Mrs. Joh Sherman. Kathleen Watkins returned t weeks''time 3,000 years of nature's Rhode Island Thursday after spend labor has been destroyed through the in « tnree weeks with her parents, M: Ihis is one thing o won er o\er ( j au ghj er s o f p ort H enr y S pent Sun when lookmg ut such an excavation. day with Mrs Dorcas p e pper. But it is not all. | Mrs. Wm. Kingdollar and daughte: When this rock was being formed o1T*Batavia are visiting her fathe man had not appeared on the earth. Lemuel Atwood, this week/* Yet tt«p earth in those dim jiges »>f Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Mclntyre am th<* past teemed with living cmtttirts. otbr friends of Ticonderoga called or CreMturfs th-it through the pa.«« : r\ of Mrs - Rosetta Palmer and Mrs. J untold million's oi years, developed Fit ^ & %^ k ^ e ^^ weird monsters unlike anything known |^ r e g n ^fm a Winship *\* today. They ruled the earth, the air and the water. And part of their do- minion was this region of New York where man's dominion is now su- preme. Some of these creatures, as they walked over this region, stepped into Methodist Church Jtev. Ralph G. JPinley, I-astor Class meeting at 10 o'clock. Morn ing prayer and sermon at 10:30 The pastor will preach upon the sub shallow water and left the imprint of Iject, \The Wages Versus the Gift. -Jimmie i tnGi r footsteps in the mud, which, as Everybody welcome. Sunday schoo from five to ten pounds during this : did—his bed's near the window—and ' i t hardened into rock preserved the im- an( j Bible classes at 12 o'clock Then period and it gives you a gloriole start, j when you come in then we said ...... After that it is not wise to lose over two pounds a week.—Health Bulletin. knew'd you'd come In it. There ain't been anyone come in a taxi.\ And the Womnn derided the next prlnt a perf ect outline on the sur- ? ace ' of tl f e stone . others, sinking to tne bottom of deeper water that was then w here i S now dry land, were is a class and a wel ning service and o'clock. We use Not All He Expected. A youth who had accomplished a pood deal in football, but little in his studies, was dropped from one pre- paratory school and immediately in- vited to enter another. He had been A Jarge quantity of books from | there bm a few days when he met a Mrs. Jonathan Moore of New.York, \ member of the faculty. old cotton and linen from Mr. and Mrs. M. Russell, magazines from Mrs. \Well said the professor, \how do you find it here?\ \Pr&ty fair,\ said the boy. '^That's good. Find it smooth going, G«orge Vaughn of Putnam, ice cream for the patients from Mrs. Ar- ^ thur Mitchell of Penn Tan flowers ^ ^^ f ^^ from Mrs. John Nedeau and Grimes, ^ f<> ^ that exaetly „ he rGmarke(L Floral Co. and eighty-five cans ofj 4Th e ^.^ sf>rt {)f rough yet , Ic fruit and pickle*, old cotton and lin-j places S j r .\—Philadelphia Ledger. en, magazines, jelly, several bottles \ come for all. sermon at 7:3 the \fan cards. time she would drive up in a taxi if burled in the mud. As this mud turned j The special song sermon will b< there was so much prestige attached. to l roc k, their bones fossilized into the \The Old Rugged Cross.\ The bei —New York Sun. j wa ter from the 'and and tMe streams, place to spend an hour Sunday ev< ! settled to the bottom and, in its turn, ning is at this service. Every we! Air Service Over English Channel. ' was hardened into stone. And so, come. \ For the first time in history, more i ave r on layer, r.he rock was formed. | than 1,000 people have crossed the n ,j] es j n depth. As it formed it im- i j English channel by air in one week, prisoned and turned to fossils the j The total number of passengers and bones of many a bizarre creature that iTew on the continental airplanes from no raan ever saw, but whose likeness August 14 to 20 was 1,076, of whom an( i history may be found in these 734 were paying passengers, the re- records of stone. mainder being crew. These people A blast of dynamite! The rock were carried in 209 machines, the falls shattered. Men lift the pieces British ships carrying «2<J passengers into containers^ The great cranes, as Pray«r meeting Thursday at 7:3 !p. m. in 173 machines against 72 foreign ma- chines which carried 114 passengers. of grape juice and a pair of crutches from the F. L. Brust estate. LeROYJLMEAD INStntAKCE AGENT , Leading Insurance Companies of the World Tfeo-4-roc*, K. T A Mean Trick. In Poston a young lawyer, who spent most of his time trying to seem busy and prosperous, went out for a while, leaving on his door a card neat- ly marked^ \Will b4 back in an hour.\ On his return he found that some envious rival had inscribed underneath: \What for?' High Price for « Tiny Skin. Russian sables are the best seen for great hole wi many years, prices for the skin of a single member of this small species of the weasel tribe varying from $100 to $250, but the <v»?t of t\ coat vonld be from $10,000 upwards. Nutria furs ob- tained from the skin of the coypus rat, a native of Rrg^i,! and tbe Argentine. •re plentiful, and are to be popular as trimming* for collar*, coats, etc. by magic, lift the containers and dump the contents intq the wagons waiting above. Who cates if the work of 30 centuries , is destroyed? Soon this be the basement ot a skyscraper. It will be filled all day and every day with men carrying on their busy bustling activities with no thought of the strange animals that made this very spot their home mil* lions of years gone by. STREETROAB METHODIST CHURCH Sunday school and Bible classes a 2:00 o'clock. Com© and bring th< children. Preaching service at 2:3 o'clock. A most cordial invitation CROWN POINT Pearl Street in. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Call of Poult- iy were guests of Mrs. Lillian Bar- July 10 — Frances Waite left Thursday for .Cornell summer school. Mrs, Arthur Carey and Mrs. Hugh Fleming recently visited at W. H. Mclntyre's Mrs. L, Barber and children are guests ot her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kimball. Heary Peck and Will Fiske were in Montreal Sunday. Mrs. L. Cleland and son Robert are spending a few weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Napoleon Noel. Mrs. Robert Howard is attending Plattsburg summer school. Miss Winnie Northy is a guest of her sister, Mrs. Amos Stanton. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bums and Mr. and MrB. A. L. Deyo called on their parents at Port Henry Sunday. Mrs. Frank Heaton and children are guests of her sister, Mrs. Sen. Tralnor. Elmer Spaulding and family were in Port Henry Sunday. The Philathea class met at Kate Mclntyre's this month. Next meet- ing at Madeline Kimball's. Hostess- es, Mrs. Ernest LeFoy and Mrs. Geo. Ingloston. Mrs. Lillian Stiles of Paterson, N. J., is a guest of her niece, Mrs. H. Burrough. g y We are glad to see the frame of Ross Harris' new house going up. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Graham and E. W. DeLonj r.nd daughter were at Ticonderoga Tuesday last. Ed. Miller has gone to Vermont to work in haying. one of bis brothers and has mov- ed to the Hubert Hendrix house. Mr. and Mrs. Smith Wilson. of Schroon were at Joseph Delonn's the first of last week. Mrs. Etta Carr has returned to her work at Crown Point. Mrs. Marjorie Wyette is quite ill at the home of Wm. Greer. Clifford Wright and family spent the 4th at Lincoln pond. Mrs. Zilpha Spaulding and son Ned are at Chilson today. Mrs. Elsie Combs and son have re- turned to their home at Whitehall. Mabel Graham is visiting Cynthia Brooks. The Methodist church at the Cen- ter united with^the church here for -h? Sunday evening service. The usual chureU service will begin at eight o'clock Sunday evening. Rev. Harold Jones expects to be assisted by/a speaker from Albany. Try GOT \Want' Arivs. is extended to all. R. V, SMITH AGENT FOR Connecticut Fire Insurance Co Assets nearly $7,000,000 Surplus over $1,200,000 ? PMMpect Street, Ticonderoga, X ¥. WALK-OVER Here's The Answer! An aggressive shoe merchant of \Indiana asked for an honest, straight-fron>the-shoulder reason why Walk-Over Shfxvs are worth $7 to $10. Here's the answ^ev. It,speaks for itself. GEO. E. KEITH COMPANY, Walk-Over Shoes Campello, Brockton, Mass., U. S. A. Mr. Lew D. Wallace, % Wallace Shoe Store, Bit knell, Indiana Dear Mr. Wallace: You ask, \Is quality worthy of the prices?*' Oar answer is, \Yes always.\ No one wants cheap shoes any miore than he wants cheap meat. People spend two-thirds of their lives in shoes. Shoes support the body. Hats, neckties or glove* merely rest on the body. Shoes are a foundation. The others merely decorate. Did you eveif hear of a \corrective\ hat? An \ortho- pedic\ necktie? A \common sense\ glove? No, and the reason is obvious. A cheap shoe may look like a good shoe. Two rail- road tickets look alike, but one will carry you further than another.. WALK-OVER shoes will carry you further than cheap shoes. Fancy shoes in quick-changing styles have brought an era of short-lived, hurriedly constructed footwear. There is a beauty of quality that outranks mere temporary styiq attraction, and there is an increasing appreciation of that goodness by the buying public. Cheap shoes may look like WALK-OVERS in the store window. It is after the test of six months' wear that WALK-OVERS prove their \worthwhileness.\ WALK-OVER shoes fit._The care in design and con- struction that makes.WALK-OVER shoes good shoes, is never placed secondary to outward appearance. One who buys a cheap article feels good once, when he is buying it, and is disgusted every time he wears it. One who buys a good article feels better every time he uses it, for the memory of quality remains long after the price is forgotten. Yours very truly, GEO. E. KEITH COMPANY, Ernest A. Burrell, Credit-Sales Department. Stevens & Weed Co. GiDigan & Stevens Block, Ticonderoga ] -^sfei^