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PAGE TWO SKMT1NBL. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 5, 1940 THE TICONDEROGA SENTINEL Established in 1872 JOHN B. TEFFT WILLIAM R. TEFFT Publisher Editor PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY flT TICONDEROG& N. Y. T<*l-*pl_on<» 63 Entered at tho postotfioo at Tieoiukroija. N. Y.. as second cJass J«* tte r LARGEST CIRCULATION IN ESSEX COUNTY I SUBSCRIPTION RATRS: $e.00 per year in the United States. j Canadian subscriptions, $2.30. i All subscriptions strictly in advance. ! Reading business notices 8 cents a line: second insertion, 5 cents a ! line. Itafcvs for display ad\crtising made known on application at husi- noss otlice. The Sentinel assumes no financial ivsponsihility for typographical errors in advertisements but will reprint that part of an advertisement in which the typographical error occurred. 'Advertisers will please notify the management immediately of any errors which may occur. This Week's Wash Wonder how much it costs George Tow no to fWd that huge Great Dane, which could roadily sorve as an un- derstudy for one of Mister Towne's tow trucks . . . Tho gang around Nick's really beliove in the fortune- tolling ability of that circulation- buildtng \Wishing WoH' feature in an Albany daily, and there's a scram- ble e\oryayem to learn what fate has m storo for the ensuing 24 hours ivrorment will he claimed for a n.i.Vihor of lads working in the Mine- ville mines, contending they're essen- tial eniplo\os in an industry essen- tial to tho nat'l defense program . . . A«!d Heautiful Children: Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Hughes' little daughter, who looks as though she'd climbed right out of a kiddies' picture book. The war-mongers who*re trying their damndest—intentional or other- wise—to drag us into the European brawl, insisting that regardless of what drastic procedure we take we CANT get in, also probably believe that it's possible to jump HALF WAY down Niagara Falls . . . And we also believe the average Anieri- contempt of the Axis Apes \ hav- An Ar&ument For Air Service Aivordini: to a curron? news dispatch from Lake Placid, ii'w rur.wa> s are now Iviny: constructed at the airport in that village a> an important pha<o o*' the program desivn.ed to ac- eommodate the piaiu-s of Canadian-Colonial Airways which are rxpoctoti to ir.ake regular stops at tho Adirondack resort next Summer on their lliphts between New York City and Montreal. The president of the system, we understand, has assured !>ake Placid town and village officials that if new runways are built and other improvements made at the airport, that his company's planes will provide service to that community and the surrounding resort area. If Lake Placid has met with success in persuading Canadian- can ' s ut * j Colonial to utilize its airport as a regular stop for the luxury J* * u t * c * sky-liners plying between New York and the Dominion metrop- ies of a olis. we believe Tieonderoga. with its new Federal airport, has an far as plot is concerned, all come out equally good argument with the air line officials, providing, of of the same scenario^scribWert type- course, suitable runways are constructed in the event that the JJJ^nJjU^ '^ £heduf«} ll ior ^e present facilities are unsatisfactory. main drageroo this winter, if current While Lake Placid would admittedly serve as an air terminal reports are as authentic as we're led for a vast amount of countryside devoted to summer resorts and : J***\*™ 1 6 • • • *? lUy 16 ^OPP^S days their thousands of patrons,'we believe that Ticonderoga's geo- before Merr y Xn>as ' graphical location is such that it would provide air service to as Th o X 'mas greeting cards soon to many potential passengers as a terminal at Lake Placid. be mailed out by Mr. and Mrs. ciar- For instance, we believe there are hundreds of owners of ence Gordon vMcNip> Mero and summer homes on the shores of Lake George who would wel- anT Mrs^McN^^n? the^Tuie \MC\ I come the convenient service to and from New York City which Mps- .*\ * Tentative arrangements would be atailable if Canadian-Colonial utilized the local airport can for the Yutetide street-Ught|ng j as a stop for at least one northbound and one southbound plane display to be turned on from Dec. ' ;^^ = each day, and it is probable that additional \sections\ might be ™ ^aifv ^ver^^SeViiiSi 0 ^ T\* i found necessary on Fridays for northbound flights, and on Sun- ing pJaiU \ in the* East is \operatinV^t j SU 2 days for southbound passengers who would be g-lad of any means near or full-capacity, with the lo- stories where the 1-column species of transportation which would permit them to spend longer eal mill one of the rare exceptions? (would do nicely for the average in- Ford ride ... a soft, quiet, level ride that took not only increased wheelbase and spnngbase ... but also a dozen vital changes in Ford sp\ 0 ^ shock absorbers- frame, stabilizer. It s a ride that tells its own story better than words ever could. Trv it today. Come io and meet the btggest *ord car ever built ... the roomiest bodies among this year's low-price leaders... the rtde that took the world by surprise. Let's talk \trade\ now on this really great new Ford! FORD The big low price Quality Car! FOR 1941 A. A. GARAGE, Ticonderoga, N.Y. J. J. BURNELL, Schroon Lake, N. Y. ^mammmmmammmtm SEC YOUR FORD DEALER FIRST FOR LOW-COST FINANCING wmmmmmmmmmKmmm In other words, it's raining pros- I terest \leads.\ With that big penty elsewhere, and we don t even j aluminum plant going full blast, com- fight for democracy by giving a lit- get an occasional shower . . . Add;mercial salesmen claim Massena is | Ue space to the truth of feeding ^ s :. E th i it b H serial or or- iguring the remind him j today the most prosperous community ;—large or small—in the North Coun- freezing weather, there's only one gent who has an affection for thejment in order to withhold food from i their tocal airport—General Mud! he's > bomber week ends at their summer homes or at one of the scores hotels on the lake. _,„ _. , And a Ticonderoga air terminal would also provide similar Persons Who Never Worry: Eddie service for summer residents at Schroon Lake, a considerable Cunningham, who can't even tell portion of the Lake Champlain resort area, not to mention the der~mSrnbTO almost countless vacationist meccas such as Paradox. Severance, selective serv Lens Lake, Newcomb, Minerva, Elizabethtown and nearby Ver- eventually. mont summer colonies such as those at Lake Bomoseen and Lake St. Catherine—lust to mention a comparatively few. A3 an added inducement to Canadian-Colonial is the fact mmm that Ticonderoga is located directly on its present New York-;flying forces in Puerto\R*coTfor Burlington-Montreal route, and certainly if Lake Placid, many j * . m t mbe r of •** tTew 0f * btH miles off the established run and \beam\, is being given serious \ !?55 ~*L.°?* 2 th ^\^P £O1 thought as a stop. Ticonderoga should be accorded equal consider- ation. As for the runways at the local airport, we have been told; by airmen that except during extremely rainy weather, they; V _ VHWI ,___ ^^ would be entirely satisfactory for the accommodation of trans- Mate on the pia&e carrier port planes. But in the event that Canadian-Colonial insists upon j town** stationed at Pearl Harbor, hard-surface runways, we believe that if Lake Placid has financ- { Hawaii, is completing his nth year ed this requirement at no great expense to village or town-as ^f* t SSS^Si C. «M we have been given to understand—that Ticonderoga can find a; petty officer's rating, hem receive Similar mean.S of solving this problem. $103 monthly for the rest of hi* days 1 TbS^^e'^S^'a^r' remained ' lion Certainly, the government should be willing to extend its ***' he retires to_pnvate life in IMS. 'S^S^eS LtifaintoTSSS Another full cooperation, for after all, the airport here was constructed Bob .. KeIK ,. Moore would t at Federal expense as an important link in its commercial avia- i mO re invitations to dinner if he could tion development, and it seems reasonable to believe that a fed- depend upon that trick front tooth, eral grant could be secured for the construction of runwavs or •• **\<* ha s acquired the habit of slip- any other facilities which Canadian-Colonial might require lo in-!£S* e J* ^\Eiif is'Sot^fif elude Ticonderoga as a regular stop during the summer months vitties . . . sartorial\ snapshot: jim- for its planes. m v Carpenter fools Old Man Win- An air terminal here would be a tremendous asset to the \ ter o n particularly frigid ayems by community—an added means of attracting hundreds of additional i^ht over touting flannel paten vacationists to this area during the season—and that, translated ... as it fact or action that Compa into dollars and cents—means a greater source of revenue—di- B will entrain Jan. 3 or 4 for rectly or indirectly—to every man, woman and child in this en- ?*™p_ in Nort n \~~ to print it \in your column\ as the Sentinel had such a wide circulation that she felt others would read. \Mrs. Stafford pleads for 'America' to feed starving Europe.' Will you p g Europe thi s winter by tne Hoover plan? The average person has been told Hitler would take the food. The monsters, who perpetrate this state t i d ithhld fd f fellowmen. base this argument on sheer supposition, because to date Germany has never broken faith with ^ jthe 'American Friends Service Com- The Misses Mary and Thehna Cat-1 mittee,* which has been dealing with Hn were Sat. night guests of their j suffering in Germany since 1870. A uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Her- I Quaker worker who left Germany __*«._ •v.ftii <_ff M. «_™^ *£* '• hen Porter. in August told audiences in Kart- !K£T__ ££rt2«.t Sa ^2^^K • Mrs - William Harrington is having Uord and Northampton that Holland tboean. just to make certain that no one o f th e ^^ Qolds which geem ; was eating ^t^ than Germany, her so prevalent naw* , ; conqueror, and that the slaughtering Marilyn Moses also has been a vie- i of cattle in Denmark was greatly tim of one for a few days. | exaggerated—less than 10 per cent Mrs. Richard Tobin of Silver Bay ! were killed. If the Quaker's work and her sister. Miss Blanche Thatch\-1 is not good enough for some, in Mr. er. have returned to their separate \ Hoover's plan there will never be homes after having spent a week in '• more than two week's food supply Albany. jsent in at one time. So any viola- Thomas Daniels, who is attending ; tio n °* the agrement would make college in Springfield, Mass., arrived j possible its instantaneous termina- G-E'S BEAUTIFUL NEW CONSOLE RADIO IS TOPS IN QUALITY, FEA- TURES, PERFORMANCE! fact withheld from the public is that Belgium, Norway, Hol- land and Poland have funds \in this , country with which to pay for food m . and will not require our ships for ain transportation of food. It costs us who were going to\ Plattsburg for 1 nothing and the friends for democ- training. They were from Virginia! racy it will gain is worth hosts of and some were evidently from the \ armies. 1 Sunday, when I he returned to college. Charles Moses of New Bruns\ v J. took the sleeper from N. Y. lay night, arriving here Sat. a ; went to his berth soon after he board- ed the train, he did not notice these until morning, then seeing one starves or not, which makes its boast 'serves Humanity rather ironic. So I hope The Springfield News at least tire area. Treat yourself to a dem- onstration of this new G-E Radio. Listen to its rich, golden tone!Glory in its beautiful design. You'll be convinced mat this is your radio. You'll want to buy it NOW and start eal — : program. sound during ._. airline are properly approached with the proposition, that they and killed b - a ^ me warden? will give the matter the serious consideration which we contend it deserves. Despite proclamations to the con- '' by Roosevelt, Lehman, et al. Miller still believes that lopping back in his seat, he paused j wiU 'serve humanity* by writing more and asked if he was sick. \No! But | about the Hoover Plan!\ s I didn't have any money for a berth ) Indications are clear that Congress ' >py and hungry. All they' will, take definite action with regard 1 left the de-! to national pensions in January as a dough- a result of continuous effort on the j ipple.\ \How many are i Part of the Townsen^ organization J — - -- \Seven *and these indications have - J: —*' there of you?\ C. M. asked, was the reply, \and no The Old, Old Story There is one letter that most of us accept as a tradition Christinas. It is the letter that brings us our Christmas Seals. 28th muo Baiph Murdock & fam- Year after year, we receive that letter. We send our money. a y u * p * *in crown Point . . . One of We do this because we know that something worthwhile is being the first coach hounds we've seen done with our money. sillce ^^ wiieek... had his famous direct j money.\ bearing on the move to obtain re- actions from the field regarding a 1 new third party. I Space does not permit me of wr ig a bit from Rev. C. Murray's ser- mon this week—sorry about it—hope I to do so ne:.t week. TOP ALLOWANCE-EASY TERMS Few of us, though, take an active interest in how our money i^'sLSS ITSe^TSa^own! is spent to combat one of our most dreadful enemies—tubercu- ed, we understand, by Mr. and Mrs. losis. The horror of tuberculosis is fading gradually. That is Harold Freeman ... Doc Bowers and enough for most of us. We read each year of the declining death i ^. 5 ^ as ^ y a *££ l ? a i5£? Beao \ rate. Perhaps, we even know the fact that the death rate from 1 FeSw ^^ \?wL^btJoo^of those to the boys and the trail- long enough at Whitehall could eat. The lawyer and Charles \ \I Followed Gold/' by E. C. Tre- had eaten at Fort Edward. Evident- j lawney-Ansell is the story of a man ly some of the boys had a little mon- j pioneer, prospector and miner, who '\ lad brought back $1.00. followed the call of gold all over iOOK WHAT YOU Of f t ir Equtpped foe Frequency Modulation «nd Television Sound! it Dual Beam-a-scopes for fine Domestic and Inter* national Reception! No Aeri- al—No Ground! + Dual Dynanower Speakers — 20*6 inches of Speaker Perform- ance for Extended Tonal R*ngc! • Super Powered Chassis for Powerful. De- pendable Performance * Plus Many More Advanced and Exclusive G-E Features! weren't those mountaineers ? The boy to give us the training camp,\ and indeed said, \They are e I* : t? tter tuberculosis among people of all ages has been CUt three-fourths > \soap order\ kids who used to ring the y wer e grateful to the Ticonder- | of the great Klondike rush and the Since 1907, the first year of the Seal Sale. j Tteoaderoga doorbells throughout the ^5^ an d Ne w X°F k lawyer... The I mining We have forgotten the despair that once struek us whenever [ JJSV * * Ad& H * Bdsome Youn s s *« re: we heard the verdict—consumption. We know now that tuber- • * ^*w*»- culosis, if discovered in time, can be cured. We know that the; u th€ X-ray can find eariy tuberculosis in time to cure it. ibers of _. This year, as in other years recently, the tuberculosis assoc-; squad—live up to their names, the iations are asking us to do one more thing in addition to giving \ Gt^s* *&& Blade .should have a our dollars. Their request is reasonable. Their having to make j p^^nf^virtwS\* 1 ^. ^Sat^woSt such a request is ironicaL They are forced to ask us to drop our \ working class being organized bv attitude of complacency toward tuberculosis. Great though the j Wait Bradford will be good news f< Green's heirs. Nay! Nay! ' have not South Africa, western America, A- laska, Mexico, Canada and Siberia. Here one reads of prospecting in British Colombia, of the early days * — — '\ rush and the Yukon River- engaged by one of Hettie! The author describes the different The good Samaritans gone to their reward who liked the clear which comes from our spring, and he gets a couple glass jugs from our means of transport used by miners and prospectors in the various coun- tries. He tells of going into un- known lands with wagon caravan, dog-sledge, pack mule and canoe, of fighting off hostile natives, shooting rapids in a canoe and of the starva- tion and the terrible blizzards en- victories of the past are, tuberculosis is not under control in this!£»« med H** and 0.^ dor i^L fi !! t ~f kl s naus< country. It is our lives and our children's lives the tuberculosis j S^tvl^X* b^e^Tev^ | J? ages of 15 and 45 are killed for yj And these are the i j Earl d iS Boiton who tuberculosis than by any other disease. young, active, productive years of life. . __ Sixty-four thousand persons died of tuberculosis last year, j Brant That means that the disease MBed 175 persons a day, or one per-1 med, ^ son every eight minutes. j M \ So the eradication of tuberculosis? cannot yet be taken com- j plaeently. It can be eradicated. It will be eradicated—if wej continue to regard the disease as a deadly enemy that can be j N O wonder that flrat forced out of this country through the combined efforts of scient- 1* 1 **** ists, medical men, health departments, tuberculosis associations i J™ and every single individual in this country. We are fairly warned this year that if our own money must | wonder the be used to fight our own indifference and complacency toward a |iy «car»d . . . While w% deadly enemy of ours, as well as used to fight the enemy itself, {\\ complete victory will be delayed interminably. ' and choking, filled wi€h terrible, I This is a thrilling odyssey of gold useating stuff. ifull of drama, romance and adven- J. immediately shed his over- tare which will appeal to all ages and _ rnftI1T JTLd began manipulating throat- all kinds of people from the million- » ffrThr».!^f^^ ' lun S s * spine, etc., rested, and again aire to the man in the street. *-^2S£S g resumed treatment and at last he maddest man ; was easier And ^^ mustard paste and hot water bottle, he, \ \ i 1 almost j this, • writer, and patient, are very grate- ;ful to Dr. Robert Johnson, and Ber- narr Macfadden in Nov. 30th Liberty Maga^e certainly gives chiroprac- BBSB Met ••dpc tbttfc* RheMitic Pail «iicklf r taat first snowfall was tors their deserving share in the aid t tabtepmftils two Montcataao thorooghly,; they give to suffering humanity. ^tJ^^SZST* No troable t *D —d JIMMMH, oo x__*dot_Jy HERE'S A HONEY! iiuilt-in Antcnnft — No out* side aerial, no ground—Dy- napower Speaker — Power- ful Superheterodyne Grcuit — Automatic Volume Coo- twl — AC-DC Operation — Smartly Designed Cabinet. The Ticonderoga Electric Light 6* Power Company TICONDEROGA, N. Y. FETES FLINT The Homestead Law Office 17 So. Main Street—Port Henry Trials, all courts, Estates, Bank- mptey, Specialties, Family Practice, Expert Collections, Legal Consulta- 47tf tions. NOTICE TO CREDITORS letter from our niece, \ord of Springfield, a clipping from . of that city, an article that she had written for that paper and wished I would ask our editor All claims against WILLIAM HUTCHINSON late of Crown Point, N. Y-, must be presented to his Exec- utor, at the Office of J. W. Wyman, S\^ Banker, Crown Point, N. Y., before 'February 17th, 1941. Dated, August 7th, 1940. Walter B. Wyman, Executor. OONROBT8 PHARMACY j Attorney* for^EbSSltor Tieonderoga, X. T. j Port Henry, N. Y. 3&»6 CHAMPLAIN VALLEY DRY CLEANERS Oor. Lake George Av«- and Place **IT PATS TO LOOK FIT* Telephone 326 FOR PROMPT SERVICE AJVD QUALITY WORK WRKD A BirRLKlGH FIRE INSURANCE AGENTS N.Y.