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*iv GLENFIELD Taken to the Hepburn Hospital- Ladles' Aid Society to Hold Meeting To-Night—Notes and Personals of the Villagers. (Lira. M. Charles Kelly, Correap't.) Ray Owens hae moved MB family to Otter-'Creek. Leonard Crouse has moved his fam- ily to Otter Creek. Mrs. David La Bell, Utica, was a re- cent guest of Mr. and Mrs. •William Hilts. Miss Emma Brisson is at Evans Mills with her uncle, Rev. Louis Brisson. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Doty have re- turned from a motor trip to Smiths- port, Pa. George Livens,, Albany, has been called here by the serious illness of Amos Livens. Mra. Edgar Brooks, of Woodcliffe, N. J., was a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Cooke. . Miss Elsie Koster, of Lovrville, Is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Herrick. Howard Gad la has moved his fam- ily into one of the Charles Mihalyl houses on Deforest avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schrader have returned to their home after spend- ing some time at Cooks Falls. Gloria ^ Moffatt is spending some time with her sister, Mrs. Hubert Bel- linger and family, at Thendara. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Rinkenburg were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Brenon and family at Carthage. Misses Reba and Laura Rennie, of Otter Creek, are. spending some time at the home,of Alfred Htgby and family. Mr. and Mrs. Anton Baumgartener and family have rented furnished rooms in the home. of Mrs. Anna Rinkenburg. \ Clifton Severs, who has been spend- ing some time with Mr. and Mra. Ed- ward Witherall, has returned to Sheffield. Pa. Rev. George Brisson, who has been spending, a few days with his brother, Rev. Louis Brisson, Evans Mills, has returned home. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Cooke enter- tained last week, Mrs. O. H. Cooke,.of Lyons Falls, and her daughter Cora of St. Paul, Minn. Mrs. Louis Weibert is at Ogdens— burg visiting her mother, Mrs. Wil- liam Dekin, who is a patient in the Hepburn Hospital. Misses Gertrude and Frances Gibe\on, of Carthage, were week-end guesTs of Mr. and Mra. Le Roy Gibelon and family. Donald Salmon, who has been spending the summer with his par- ents, Mr. aru.1 Mrs. L. H. Salmon, haa returned to Syracuse University.' Miss Sarah Burdick left her home here for Branchland, W. Va., where she had an appointment 03 librarian in the Guyan Va^ey High School. The- death is announced of the five- months old son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wittwer on Friday of last week. The baby had been ill for about two weeks. Mrs. Eva LaCiair, who has been spending some time in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ossont, has re- turned to her home at Island Pond, Vt. Mr. and Mrs^-Frederick Widmeyer and son Frederick, Jr., of Beaver Falls, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Widmeyer and fam- ily. Mrs. William Crouse daughters, Helen and Shirley, sons, Foster and Allen, have returned from Utica where they visited MrB. Crouse's sis- ter. Deforest Burdick, who is our local radio fan, has been in communication this week with_ Germany, France, Belgium, Newfoundland, Cuba and California. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Cass entertained recently Mrs. Henry Cass, of Brant- ingham; Mrs. Ingram, Port Leyden, and Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Olmsted, Otter Creek. Mr. and Mrs. Winslow Griffith and two children, of Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Griffith a.nd daugh- ter, of Glen Park, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Griffith. Misses Reba and Laura Rennie and Mrs. Alfred Higby spent Friday at Boonville where Miss Laura Rennie was operated on for the removal of her tonsils by Dr. Barlette. Mrs. Eva LaClair, who has been spending some time at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ossont, has been called home to Island Pond, Vt., by the Illness of her mother. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Higby recently entertained Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rennie, of Otter Creek; Mr. and Mrs. Francis Rennie, of Dannettsburg, and Lowell Waldron, of Petrie'a Corners. . Mrs. Janet Bruet, Mrs. Eva Bruet Christian, of Croghan, and Miss Mary Ann Denesia, of Watertown, were re- cent guests of Mrs. Elizabeth Oulon and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ossont. Rev. Albert Hyde, of Lyons, and Rev. and Mrs. John Joslyn and son, of Syracuse, who have been recent visitors of Spencer Burdick and fam- ily, have returned to their homes. Mr. and Mrs. William Riffanacht and daughter, Gladys Sue, of Herki- rner, were -week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Salmon and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Widmeyer and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lansing Dekin re- cently motored to Ogdensburg, where they visited Mrs. William Dekin, a patient at the Hepburn Hospital. William Dekin returned with them. Mrs. William Dekin, who has been seriously ill for the past two weeks, -was taken Tuesday morning in Dekin's ambulance of Lowville to the Hepburn Hospital at Ogdensburg, for treatment. The Ladies' Aid of the M. E. church will hold a business meeting at the church Thursday afternoon, Septem- ber 26. All members are Urged to be present as important business will be transacted. Mrs. George La Fountaine, Miss Grace La Fountalno, Francis Wood, Harry Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. Le Roy La Fountaine and Mr. and Mrs. Spencer La Fountaine, all of Water- town, were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burdick. Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Howell were Mrs. Tyler Gould, of Detroit, Mich.; Miss Anna and Nicho- las GaVber, of Croghan; Miss Laver- ene Kirch and Tracy Gregory, of Boonville, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Paddock, daughter Hortense and son Gerald, of Carthage. FIRE PREVENTION WEEK President Hoover Designates Week of October & - President Hoover has Issued a pro- clamation designating the week of October 6 as national fire prevention week. \For two consecutive years fire loss- es in the United States have been de- creased and there are indications of a further reduction during the: present year,\ the president Bald. The fire prevention* week Is fixe4 by- the anniversary date 6t the great Chicago fire4 • \To each •citizen I recommend full cooperation in securing wider under- standing of individual responsibility for it is only through further elimina- tion of human.negligence that lasting progress can be obtained,\ the pro- clamation sets forth. Ftro at HarriavUre. A house owned by Claire Atkinson, located about a half mile from Harrls- vllle. burned to the ground at 7 a. m.. Friday morning. Firemen from the Harrisvllle Fire department respond- ed. but were unable to save the house Or contents. The origin of the fire is unknown. The loss is estimated about $2,000. T Fade oat that to absolute •*>. '\\' » , -m';^**-- with the new ZERO KNOCK RATING GASOLINE Are you bothered by die oonitant ping^ ping of a noisy motor? ffUf^tt TYTini., thf> tiffi-teat, unp^r* Fade it to zero « . • with the new TYDOL ETHYL. Are you aggravated by a labored pound, pound, pound, when you're climbing hills? Fade it to zero . • . with the new TYDOL # BTHYL. Are you tired of the spiteful knock, knock,' knock, when you're plowing through mud and sand? Fade it to serol . . with the new TYDOL ETHYL, power, anti-knock fuel that has taken all motor* dom by storm. And ETHYL, the undisputed leadei of anti-knock compounds. ^ With the smooth and mighty power-trust of Hi* test TYDOL has been merged the famous \knock the knock'* magic of BTHYL. .. forming a new super fuel with an absolute ZERO knock rating. TYDOL BTHYL is a fuel for the car owner who demands the very best and will take no substitutes. \And why should he? It costs but 3c more per gallon than ordinary gasolines. ' KNOCK RATING OF 6 PROMINENT PREMIUM GASOLINES ^ Tb*»e 3 oent premium fuoliaM w«r* tmted on the MldftW (Bounciaf Pin) Indicator Moordiaf to an established standard soale over* period ot6 months, from Nov., 1928, to May, 1929, with the following 1 molts: MNIMVM KNOCK SATING MAXIMUM AVKKACB KNOCK KNOCK BATING HATING Fuel A .... Fuel B . . . . Fuel G . . . . Fuel D . . . . Fuel B . . . . 6 . 5 . 0 . 3 . 3 . 10 13 5 7 . • . . 6V 2 S , . . . 4»/ a . . 9 . . 8 . -2H TTDOL BTHYL 0 0 . I, like a lullaby quieting a cranky babe, this new Zero Knock Rating Gasoline will hush to sleep every protesting zing and pound of a stress- resenting engine. It stops the knock'.by removing the cause ... by substituting the silent, powerful push of a silken fuel for the violent \hammer- blows\ of ordinary gasolines. For the new TYDOL BTHYL -is an all-star com* w blnation of two of the greatest motor fuel advances SMITH OIL CO. Make a 10 Gallon Test The next time you need fasoliot drire Dp to • TYDOL pomp and try out tea gallons of this modern fuel. It win only eott you 30o more than'lO galloat of ordinary gas. No more . . . perhaps lea* ... than you hare been paying for other premium gasoline*. But in any event, 30c is a small amount to gamble to prove to yourself just what a xtm knock Mtinf gasoline will do ia your owa ear* , < TYDOL DEALER NOW OFFERS YOU— I. The same Hi-test TYDOL (green) 1 •.. Hhtest TYDOL will continue to bt tho leader of non-premium gasolines—un- ! changed in quality or in price. ! 2. The new TYDOL ETHYL (red) ... m de luxe, super fuel with a zero knock rating, at onl} 3c more a gallon. f •3. VEEDOL Motor Oil ... Made 100% from Pennsylvania end other paraflmebsse 1 crudes ... the choice of famous aviators. HAR iv» LESS . \ v. '..'. U \ . H< . •- . ! »' I i • '• 1 . ' • • • • . W . I : • : N - : ! i ' \ Price 75 Cents, At .Your Druggist. Journal and Republican want and for sale advertisements \do the trick.\ One cent a word, cash with order, no adver- tisement for less than 25 cents. tHi costs P RIVATE property is ex- pensive Luckless auto- mobile owners have often regtetted that they had no Property Damage Insurance. Carry /Etna Combination Automobile Insurance—with Property Damage limits. iETNA-IZE LLOYD SCHANTZ A«* CASTOBLAND, N. T. Successor to T. H. Glenn Who remembers the good old days when you could ^get a five-cent dish •of ice cream for a nickle? BUY BODS AT \ currtat. New Way to Milk Cows woodorful NEW pU»!i»<, oowt otbar mixhtn— amr iZ* &S-- NO_*g!^*, »_»•** StrS-p*i«^l ot'K nidi tow vvtt/bM FREE Demonstration jour own cow»-th>t TlM will ml'k til year po«r» Gmto, m \r - Stud lor Free Catalog . v. Ateat for RMTIM UtDdnff BUchine* SEND FOB CATAIXMHJE \We own and offer subject ^o previous sale the lowing well diversified list of bonds which are attractive both for yield and likelihood of price appreciation: FOREIGN Kingdom of Denmark 5%%, due August 1,1955 Imperial Japanese GovJ. 6^%, doe February 1,1954 of Bordeau 6%, due November 1,1934 f UTILTTXES Northern New York Utilities 1st mtge. 5%, due 1x117 15^1963 Northern Ohio Telephone 1st mtge. 5%%, due February 2,1957 BAILBOADS Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. 1st mtge. 5%, due March 1st, 2000 * New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Co. Improvement 6%, due May 1,1931 Southern Pacific Co. 4%—Collateral secured by Central Pacific Stock, due August 1,1949 Great Northern Railway Co. of Canada 1st mtge. 4%—underlying obligation Canadian National Railway, due October 1,1934 Black River National Bank of Lowville SECURITIES DEPARTMENT Watch Tongue For Signs of Illness Your tongue ia nothing more than the upper end of your stomach and intestines. It is the first thing- your doctor looks at. It tells at a glance the condition of your diges- tive system — and physicians say that 90 per cent of all sicknesses start with stomach and bowel trouble. A white or yellow- ish coating on your tongue is a danger signal of those diges- tive disorders. It tells you why the least ex- ertion tires you out; unftrtjowf why you hate pains in TONGVB the bowels, gas, sour mtry morning! stomach, dixzy spells. And ifs a sign you need Tanlac This good old reliable neipe cal wrecks, S tie helps you. Tanlac contains no mineral drugs; it is made of barks, nerbs and roots—nature's own medicines for the sick. Get a bottle from your druggjst today. Tour money back if it doesn't help you. 52M111ION BOTIlfS USED Against Collision, Fire Liability, AriASO&rhnsof FffiE, UFE, ACdDEUT, HEALTH J.DMOORE&SON .One after^anbther, nien come into our store, to look. They see tod tfien buy a JR TOPCOAT Come in and see pur selection of new Fall Suits and Top- coats. You'll like the new colorings, weaves and smart styles and the prices also. THE LEWIS 1 LOWVILLE, N. Y. BOONVILLE, N. Y, Free to Public TU oafar Dkrtbi Ae U. S. wbera eataloc* aoJ MnrtNM maHtot •oTwing; •ttTline of baainew bm obtwMd Fr«e u4 Without at Amenta* ladnatrul library- ^ JM AthetiMt M»tter 70a are .—.w.^1 in; MM will beproopdr foo»«<ted. AMEIICAI IIIISTtlAL BUY «_^.—_^^ .... . ~. • s .^-^*^^;*v ^