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THE JOUENAL AND fclSPIJBLIGAjf, LOWmLE, N. ?., THUESDAY* MAEOH 20,1952. PAGE FlVll i*_. aco*e OF et aAie !* only, igomeots he aaid, BHc fl y tehes of Ooounis- en miles Ooneer- ifia-per- i: te aa- right ott peat pre^ ' fishHigr : of the «», fc- iOowmoc or', and Kinder? *» and Bswfeer; Mr ttke' : (hefaw and; the i (below ital sec- tbe use H, arti- ufcktafls, •cottons ii signs, he Pan- ad (falls «ScaHe ' LATB >iws fav ' (FLOMIK »ICKOT) Mm Laiv*a wood, and Albert Betwudfn, indbo. River RoiaH were . drtlera ttmrsday of, bat week at ,lthe home of Mr and. Mn» Brvtn Mt*«*t water St. Mrs Pfcketlt and . Mm Wood, have been oH Ptalte for a song time, mire wtw mirpriBea <b see. her drop in but very glad. (Mr. and Mia Joseph left aat^wtth, their goods fttotn water St. where JrJey haved Kve*J a long time in the wecmore house, to their new home In 'TO** with their son, Who has iwork there, the Joseph will be much rnisBed by their friends and Neigh- bors hear, tut It wHI be belter for Ithem air to be tbgather Mr aild Mrs Arthur Arte, and faeriUy are Moving from Hie CharCe Oabbro 1 9 Stairs apartment where they Waved aiao lived a long tine «o the half house where the Joseph went out some changes going on. t. gg ^wJ^w^ntydur ;iof EASTER! we your appointment •hady Avs Opp. Town Hart Theatre Phone 158 For Appointment -=* Mr Audi EaHy, water Sfc fell oil: the icy -side walk bat week arid struck on his head, it sure hurt liar a, |sme but better nor. better try and •tfantt up Mr. DbBy. Mr and Mrs Hryin Pickett, Mm Hazel Dot&n, and . daughter were enyited ii* tbursday evera* a t •Mr and Mrs FViy Osbom Water. St. Movetog pictures -. were enjoyed throughe the evening untBl mid night, the' Osborne have a . picture (Machine • and have' some' \very. nice pictures tm anarJqjBfcleeyeoing. firing is just around the corner but whit comer? sure dosent look; to much in that Bne yet- ' the Oktiftoa Grange tire sure having some amVM crowds, there wont be standing room-if they keep on coining. w«H It i s such a nice floor and very good music * good caHfcar. alt are very sacWbte people some of the crowd comes from De pawvttle, OhQlUon, XarkrgeviBe and other places of long distance they haive suoh * goad tame the first time going there, they sure dent target the next-sat night. Chainpsbn Grange has a very large modem kitchen. tats of long tables where can sit down to eat your Hood, after getting it alt the window, ft » beat by a. large ftrmfce. wont get cote there: the CotTDBpeoder* has been, ask by a Middfe-age Lady, to write the HttSe Ut of Companion news, seems diss lady is alone add she would like very much 1b get in touch wMh a ntee. Gentleman Ctonpanton. this woman is of iMbae-age was Married once her KusnanH is dead, she Is a. very nice women and she would like to get in touch with some nice Guy. this women does not live in Dow- wUte. or near Ldwvnae she lives i n another town aB togather. now if there i s any Gentleman that i s look- ing for a. good companion better not lei this one get. away. abe > - 'likes' Oankaog, and gdoil tiroes but she does not- drink jibe- win ;. be just a. friend or she possible would marry if their were fhe right Guy. better 0o see and talk with her you might like her if you Hlte to dance take her along. she ownes her own, home it i s a very cute psace. there must: be some ITJntaTmtor o r WWbwere. that that. • bit .-air' news • should sound good. Whey two must be lonesome for a msiVaeisi .to;Set, Wiou* w*h her: cUt at 40 Water Sit Losntne and get; jour infonnatJon o f who .she is an* wbtr* she ifcws than- yo-u can g o eight there and see for your sanV I w^be WoUnc for that nice Guy :$OK hii''inn>rmfttiinii. . Mrs Osu*e Qsbbrn of Water 'St' -mas' supper guest sun. of lust week: at Mr and Mrs W m PhDBpe o n Bootwick St, Mrs Vhy Osbom -Water St was a guest aat evening alfc her sister: Brrth-day party, her sister - i s Mrs :.Ed»ai WrUtemB of the west road; three rSrtn-day cakes were made; and aat that was present enjoyed a grand evening. Wa*sr ANO Of? TME HIGHEST f ;:•'.:-\ . i- '• •i ^ Wis GIVE • -•—'\' S&H O RE EN S T km PS f- CutTOhi VIRKL£P ~ 'tTZOr GENERAL MERCHANDISE •Ju^SRcM^N.N.Y. rW 9/9 F 2 fv^t&^v 3MEMLHT Martanefcurg is a paiten it in the Lewis 00 Hoepitel hta ftieridB wiah a short stiay tor h&n therelbutbetter be good and get. a good rest then., you might be as good as new again after you go home , Demo Cheese -Giving Cited In Albany Paper .A Story on Awemblytnan Benja- min. Demo's bobby of gifting, friends with Lewis dounty Cheddar cheese, appeared recently in T^Roseberry's \Roving Reportier\ cofunm in the' Aabany Times Union I t was sent to the Journal by a; subBcriber. (not Mr. iberoo) and H hereby re-printed to A>1. At Christmas, a select -group of the state's law makers find in their etorktngs a iSwe-pouna LewfaOounfy Cheddar cheese- Lewis county Ched- dar, you must know, is one of the most toothsome of native cheeses, albeit rattier dKficuJt to come by in the state, where it i s made. The Santa who. Distributes the cheeses, not only a t YuJetide, but a t odd. ttrnea the year round when h e feels be can no longer resist gtvmg somebody a cheese, is Assemblyman Benjamin-H. Demo (whose name has nothing to do with his pontics, h e bemg as Republican as the cheese i s Cheddar). ABBemMyman Demo, Who comes from Grogban where he i s a baoker, repreaenta the cheeseland of New York State in the I^gUature—that is, the met country of the St Law- rence VaJBey. Lewis county cheeses are, in a way, his trademark, and i t i s a consunmiatton devoutly to be wished by any cheese fancier to ge t on bai mBsnng-fllat. Wejbouad menttbn that Mr. Demo isnt i n the marfeet for any new cue- tomem These cheeses cost him *4 a pf eoe. Be .has 30 of them ibid away each Jufy by one,of the big, cheese nictories i n his bailiwick, so that they' wilt be aged properly by ;Oiristoi8s> -';.\'. Agng i s .one secret of the ex- -celience of Lewfe County cheeses.: The reasbd we don't gek them i n our *oreo--at least, not in .their pristine arid linspoited condttjon—is that jnoBt of them are' bought up by <he: ,]Bpees»dMB«r' -people, :. : tamui~. Mted into a gummy chunk of some- thfag, bhen aUpped ,-back' into the state: in '.dsjgusw. Most of the- real native cheese we get in A»any i s imported from WlaUorMn. - St LAwrence County stands first ir. New? tors; State cheese product- ion, Witt over 9,<K»,O0O pounds pro- duced in - DB50; and Oouvemeur is 'the- \cheese capital\ of the State. Uwi» Carty TOD* second with 0,000,000 pounds. Used t o be quite a rivBiry between: Lefwfs and Her- Mrner OourJUaB, but Herkimer i s nfaw dowh to less than 1,000,000, ' Lewis County atao makes; sbme- *Hbg caKed \coon cheese,\ which Mr. Demo explains is sort of nke iQinatian cheese. Thne was when tt* generous Mr. Demo used to send gtffcs of mapie- «ycup to Ms' friends, too, but thwt was when maple syrup waft cheaper. Discharged Veto Should . . Report Former Employment ExTServiceiTien recently discharged (from service were' aidvised today by Stuart J. H<irri8, State Teteram Couiselor and/or Director Rajsniond (Strife of tihe local Vetertmij' Service Agency not to Beaitate i n reporting to -their foqner plaices of emlploy- inenlt in order that they might pro- tect thenraeiyeS. under the .provisions of the Federal Rer-Employmeult Act. iMr, Harris pSSnted. out that a. vet- eran has 90 days after discharge i n which to appXy for reinstatement to- hte former position. -. Ctounselbr Harris amd/or Director Strife, said tKat employees wl«o have ieflt their positions for the purpose oSf being in^eted in, enlMimg-in, or deteajmin^ pbjiufaal fitmesla tb^enter fhe Aimed:.,IWces or for perforanng. •traSntog- duty i n the Armed Forces also have', employment rights. • However, in these indfianccs the einployee MSI* make application, for reinatot<3nertt wSthin 30 days fo»ow- In^ release from, service. .\' . NeiHter Truman or Eisanhower i s oSecialiy running, jbut the President is not runm^ just a bit faster than tbe geaeooa1.^--ifetnifinder. • \One Great Hour of Sharing\ Rev. WMJfam Sawta, president of the Lowvflle Ministerial Aasocfaition, reports that ' all the Proteatant OJurcfces of Cohvyflle willparticipate to \One Great Hour of Sharing\ Sunday, March 23rd This 'affering •«fill go to Ghurch World Service, which renders Owi*i6Ji service and aid around the world, but especfaHy in Korea, tad**, in the Near East and i n Central Europe. (During 1951 the 36 denommabionfl cooperating in Church World Service (tupped overseas 9,612,594 pounds of ictowng, food and mSsceaaneous sup- plies, including medicine. B y Amer- ican values, these shipments are rated as worth *3,901,985.00. Be-. cause of this Good Samaiitanagency of Americwr Christianity, thousands live who Otherwise would have died; and tens of thosfandw are healthier and more secure. The good record of 1951 sborifd be improved in 1052. The world need' i s otiB great. In India i t i s reported' that the rnoriaoon has failed again i n some areas, s o that the food crisis: goes, into the sixth year because of drought. Korea still cries out i n desperate need. AH of Europe weat' of the iron curtain; and particularly Germany, YugoSkvia, and Greece, i s the stopping place of refugees from: war on communism. Church World Service i s committed to carry a heavy load here. The LowviBe Proteabant churches dUolude the Baptist, Episcopal, Meth- od**, Naaarene and Preabyterian churches. Each church will receive a Special entering on Sunday, March 23rd. Lewis Highways Closed To Excessive Loads AM county highways an d some state and village roads were; dosed to toads jit! excess of two tons per wheel•--'statibMtg Monday, i t was an- nounced b y the Lewis County De- partment of'; H^hwnye. The fempotBry clonings will re- main in effect until the frost is out ,lpf.-tne ground accbrdinjg,.to Levi P, M. Gaylord, Lewis county superin- tendent or highways, Mr. GayJorf^atao said, that \last year the highway department had good cooperation! except tbit a- very- few rnstances on thai restrJction. . The restntatioB is imposed .to: save the taspayera' mvestrnent and to preserve '.the.-condSKfen-. o f th e roads Dot- the remainder of the year\ dectalred the superintendent. Errforcement wit be up to state poike and the Lewis county sher- iffs departonent. Tawn.roads affected-by the rul- ing are; Croghlan, SwimBodBelfort- Indian River roads; Denmark Rob- ertB-EVasthal River and Ridge road; Diana,' StoamwMHl, , French SebHe- ment, MSoTotelbranoh, HenryKbriball's mat anal North Bonaparte rofcds; Harrtsburg,- River road; LowviBe, Ridge roaU; MMMburg, Tatoott's, Morgan gulf and HoustwUfc . gulf roads; PMokney, McDonaad and Corey roads; Turin, Carpenter, Tab- olts, and Housevtlle . Gulf roads; Wajtbon,. Chases. Bake and . River *OBHS; West Turin, Zfentaer, Crbn T •eizer, Joseph Kraeger, George Erae- ger, Beecher and Crofoot Hill roads; V. L. Oritrander, auperinteaaent of operation and maintenance for the state department of public works, has also ordered the following- sec- itSons of state highways posted: Route 26A flrom Naumburg to the Jefferson comity line, a distance, of. 6.4 nnles, and. from, Lowvflle to Gro- gban ama front th e MBngsworth (bridge tip the Crogban village line, a., distertce of 65 miles; Routes 26 -and 337 from CcmBtaiblevHle . to Ljions •Halle, 5.7 mBes and Route 194 from Baines Corners to Copenhagen, 92 'aniles^ ' -'•.•.•-. \^ • Al Cook Celebrates 89th Birthday Sunday— Writes Own Story For Journal .Albert Oook, weB-known LowviHe (rasdent, cetejbireJtes hie 89th birth- day on 'Sunday. A l wrote his own story, which we are publishing just as it was sent in, since we consider it shows the remarkaibte possession of all Me faculrdee, which h e stfll retain* • \I aim witting you this BttJe letter to tell' you I wMl be 89 years old: March 23rd. Now I was born m Uowtvute on March 23, 1S63. My grandmther was Rev. Jacob J. Cook land My parents was Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Cook. I was married to Eliza- beth GHrOy in 1884, of Lyons Falls. I have; three sons and a daughter. I; have 8 granttAildreh'and five great- gJlahncjUidren. ' 'T. left actiool when I was: 11 yeers old, My ifirBt. job wa» with H. W. Brown in a grocery store. I then went to work for Holt. John CDon- nell i n the Tinjies office, I: was with O. Van. Nlamee for 4 yeers and then, (Went to. work-'for C, V. Morrison at 18 dofllare per month. Mr. PhiHilps came down, to the miil and arranged (to have me work for hnn a t 5 dol- lars per week. I spent 50 yeers with' him ( on the Journal and RepulbE- can) and h»d a nerved breakdown. I was iu the St. Lawrence. State: Hospital-for 21 yeers. I hekwd start the K of C In Lowville in the St, Peter's Church. I was a charter member and I am now flie oldest Past Grand RnJght- I was the ChanceBpr for 3 yeers and Grand Knight for; two yeers. I am also a member of BiBhop Conroy, AaeerriMy of the K of C. lam also a member of the Holy Name Society; of;>sit Peter's- Church of Lowvflle, and held - prominent .office in (the: Bfline. T aim the oldest volunteer fire- : man in Lowville. I went t o Carth- age to help run that village- •Now I will ibe 89 yeers old on March 23rd and would like to have ray (friends send me a card. I f you do not send me a card, send me a little money as I am on the Welfare. Ha! Ha! YOURS, truly, , . lAabert A. Cook, v' . ; \' R..D. 4, Lowville. ON DEAHFS LIST Boltsdam, Mar 17, Rosemaryprun- er.t, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. Har- old A. Grunert, 49 Dayem St;, Low- ville, was named on the Dean's List of \itilie State; tltarrerslty TdaiorJersf College - a t Potsdam for the. first setaester of the 1951-52 canege year. To be on the Dean's list.a student noiKlt rmSTVilaSn: anvaverage oif \B\ or Mg^ier for' the semester. (Miss Gnmert i s a jinnor majoring in Elementary Educaticm. and- is a nwariber of Alpha Delta Sorority. ^?^j' I- I i $ •'•:' ». SINGER i:' SEWING MACHINE COilPANY U Witotoivii NEW and USED in LOWVILLE, N. Y At 140 Dayan St. Across From Firo Dept. 3 DAYS ONLY Thursday ^-~ March 27 ay -***- 28 -^ 29th 14 Hunting Accidents In State Last Year Attanyr-iNew York State B&d 44X huntthg. accidents, involving firearms in. 19^, t>)nservaition Cornmlasioner Senry B.. Duryea. revealed today. Of that numb*, he said, J7 accidents were fatal, four more than in the previous .year but one' leas' than in 1*49 despite approximately 100,000 more hunters aOeW. Six of tfte.17 fatal mjuriee ,and ,3T,.out of the 141 mon-faial were seK-mflicted. - : -\. Of the total accidents, only 17. in-' volved deer hunters among the more (than 400,000 persons who obtained licenses t o take deer. Six were fatal, the same number as in 1950. ^ , Again,. accidental .discharge' of firearms from careleasness led th e accident list with 74 injuries. Of the ianing ©8 nrishBips, 49 hunters were wounded (by others firing at; game while IB hunterBaajmitteditihey actually mistook their victmiS for game of one kind or another. Major cause of injuries through carelessness was the fact that hunt- ers failed to use tihe safety, devices with .which then; guns were equip- ped. I f these 'devices had been in use at least 60 o£ the 74 accidental dis- charges never would have occurred, Commissicoier Duryea pointed out Thirty guns atone were discharged when their (users (fetL crossed fences or when brn^taanpSdthe 'triggers. Two of them were discharged while carried: 'loaded, illegally, i n cats. Rabbit hunters Were th e moat shot—43 of them, one less than in. 1949, despite the fact that many thousands more hunters spent untold more. inanHbours 'after * leotfohtafls last FaB. 'because of geSietlany more abundant supplies. Wbodohuck hunt- ers numbered only two less victims than deer hunters wihile partri<ige hunting drew 12 casualties, squirrels 9, pheasants % and feses 5, The re^ irtainder were about equally divided between ducks, crows and a scatter- ing oif a/half-dozen- other species, IShtrtguns causes 94 mishaps, rifles 45 and fisVo were unknown. - Of interest ft^ bt.doiibtBuX signi- ficanee was the fact that 44 of (the 141 injured hurifers were: dty-resi- jdenits._g«r; •STorfc 'Ciry cohfeibuted only four while Binghaniton and TJtici.'eici.had, Bve^. , 4-H ^tlpiSni'ttoie^t '•'ytta -Deerii^ii Joihr Jimiors *•& Club hopes to kill every rat. in Deer River ana Denmark! The-Club i s sponswrrng a com- munity rat control proejet usrpg the new rat poison called '*WaTfarfa.'' I t reaHty works. Rats cost maBons of doQars every year in useless waste. Re**dents of the two villages may caM the 4-H Otub leader, Mrs. Asa Gordon (phone Carthage 1H00W2) ifor further details Of this project. . The chief spur to writing is the refusal of (friends to listen jyhen you'ira talking. S' '\'•••- .' -•-.'-'.. •'•' •'. 8 A. KARL ARTHUR, Editor and Owner. PHYLLIS-MARIE ARTHUR, Associate Editor \ L.YL.E A. CALVER, Advertising Manager Official Paper of TivWn and County. (Issued Weekly;) Journal Established 1838. Republican Established 1830 Entered at the post-pffloa at Lowville, N. V, as second-class mall Matter. Terms of Subscription:—93.00 per year If paid In advance, • AH subseripUons discontinued a t the expiration of the time paid lor or'eanUnusd at the option of the publisher. The acceptance o f a paper froaa the post orflee by a subscriber when not paid in advance Is con- sldsrsd • bona fide promise of payment for the time the subscriber The Journal and Republican has a larger circulation than any other Lawns county papsr, consequently being, b y far (he moat desirable medium for advertising. Our rates ara reasonable. MKMBKII NSW VOMK PRKM ASaoCIATION MEPiCiN PES5 I AT I OB A LAD V E B TI SIM C Ren B iiJTiTi <r B •BW TOBB ^ CBICAOO . OBtXOIT DID YOU VOTE AT YOUE VILLAGE ELECTION! • .- I)id you vote at your village election! Probably not. Why not! Well, you'll say, in Lowville there wasn't any contest, so my vote didn't matter. You'll have a good excuse for not. votingj whatever it may be. Your delinquency, you think, is not very serious. But it is. A village election doesn't have the glamour or excitement of a state or national election. You usually know the men you're voting for, and don't' expect them to be £ods or supermen. Often times they have held their \jobs for years, and you feel tQo lazy to think of ;a good write-in candidate who might stir things up a little. *fou'^fil continue to criticize.the ones you do vpte for, but \ybtt ciS&t.be bothered to change a well-entrenched regime.' -f This sort of pici^ire is being multiplied by the thousands in all the villages of America today. In the particular it doesn't look serious. In the aggregate, it is a modern tragedy. Epr apathy can lose us our vaunted freedom quicker than bullets. This can^fc-be-bothered aMtudft 4s responsible for the wrong type of people getting into state iind national offices. And they woiddn't be there, if ;it hadn't all started & those little village elections, where most people say, .\Oh he's doing all right I guess. Might as well let Mm hold office a few more years?' • . Entrenched authority always carries with it an aura of intimidation. It is easier for the man who holds the job to keep it, than for someone else to get.voted into it. Tradition is fine, but it is also confining. It stunts growth, keeps the more conservative minds at the top, laying down the law. It keeps the people in comfortable ruts, and pre- serves illusions that have no place in the realities of today. So you didn't \vote. Wejl, no one will put you in jail for it. It isn't a misdemeanpr^ But don't let it become a habit, for if you don't use your tight to vote, the day may come when you'll not have that right! HERE'S HOW YOU CAN i: Make Money Grow Wjfli Stocks or yoto-retirement fiSS*r\ ? • current lhcome^- 1941 with tolc^S wtJ^J^ |ttvested ™ to flSgg fa l 95 t No ^esswo^^ B ? nICera ' ^^ spread over 150I2W sfao^ n^T^ Testment & what you wishTseH wS%™? ^ Stocka ^vest MofawkyalleylwesbagCo/hc. 238 Genesee, Otica, N. Y. %i : 4-3195 .?BU.- ECONOMICAL POWER MAXIMUM EFFICIENCY ,, 69\ HARVESTOR mi ill. MODEL \R\ TRACTOR TfreModeIRind«\69\H«Te«or «t» perfect barrelling combina- nonv Tbe'Rl «Iw«j« hu plcffir of nieWepoVer«hendKgqiaEget> - tomgh. lft Ulltr it 'tm fliutyf t*ittr ii*m mlj*!tt ewdgh tcitn jtm tied it. The \Einjtti-tip\ ljdranli'cconlrolsof«helCie«med with tbe \69\ nuke hixresting a OM-man optntion. The Vision- lined design of the R lets you see .wfial; you're doing. The smooth riding qualities . . . easy steering ..'• hand operated dutch... quick, acting brakes ... nuke the job less tiring on long voik days dut» inghanfit.' ~ You'll te wise to check the many features of both the ILtractor and the Harrestor • \69\ before your harvesting problems arise. Both machines are designed with tn> diuonal MM quality for economy and dependability in operation. And remember, special equipment is available to adopt thy \hanesfr ing team\ to yo«r particular COB* diuons.... no maner what. VOU* MAt,* SI ••*.* ... ( SAUS AND St*VICI \' '\**\' . Watch for the Date of Our Big-r- F R 1 B M 0 V I B. iB H 0 W ,|> Coming Soon « J. StURTZ, Sales & Sefvfce BHiJHtiaVB. ^^^^ L0WVILLB PHONE 200 TO-DAY AT ALL GROCERS r y0x-•*;'•: mm*