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«is % X H. ROY ALLEN, Editor and Publisher DEMOCRATIC IN EOLITIOS. PRICE FIVE CENTS f DL, 4$ CAPE wmt N. Y., THtfESMY, PBE^ET 24, LS21\ . 1 Condensed Intelligence Clipped From Exchanges For Readers of the Home Paper. —A new Presbyterian church is to, ' be erected at Inlet, Herkimer county. —The firemen of Gouverneur have ,. voted to purchase an uprto-date motor chemical. —The next convention of the State League of \Catholic Societies, will .be\ held in Utica May 28-31. —Thousands of bushels of potatoes pected to go to waste as a. result of the unexpected drop in the price. , —Four New York men weije fined $100. each for having in their posses- sion a deer caught out of season. —Since the Walker bill has been in operation the tax on boxing has net- ted the state more than $120,000. , —Every motor truck in New York state must be equipped this year with. non-glare lights that fully comply with the law. —Niagara county has 40|796 vot- ers, of whom 1 38,092 have enrolled. There are 23,458 Republicans and 8,- -- 219 Democrats. —A new High school building is to be erected at Baldwinsyjlle. The board has engaged Architect J. M. Piatt, of Rochester, to make the, plans. —Theodore Horton, of the State Department of Health, at Albany, has condemned the drinking water at Oneida. A filter and chlorine plant are recommended. —Clarence L. Allen, a clerk at Harrisville, formerly in the hotel business, filed a petition in bank- ruptcy recently with unsecured debts of $1,635 and no assets. —Chautauqua county officials are going to make war on weeds along the highways next summer and will hold abutting land owners responsible for the clearing up of the nuisances. —A Cortland dealer recently ship- ped two carloads of sheep-to a New York commission house from, which he received 4% cents per pound. Lamb chops were sold at SO cents a pound in that city. T-Mayor Hylan, of New York, has signed an ordinance passed by the Board of Aldermen exempting from taxation for a period of ten years, dwelling houses erected in that city from April 1920 to April 1922. —C. L. Cadle, superintendent of public works, has appointed Elmer J. Clark, of Syracuse, as assistant super- intendent of public works in charge of the middle division of the canal system, with headquarters in Syra- cuse. . —To commemorate the 50th anni- versary of the first session of the Grand Chapter,- Order of the- Eastern Star, which .occurred on June 7, 1871, \\\ members from all over the. state will make a pilgrimage to the Eastern Star Home at Oriskany early this June. A —A state board of moving picture censors to consist of three members, each w receive a salary of $3,000 a year, is provided for in a bill which has been introduced by Assemblyman Walter F. Clayton-, of Brooklyn, The commission is to have absolute auth- ority to determine the character of pictures which, may be shown on the screen and the terms, of office of each commissioner is to be five years. No picture disapproved of by the commis^ sion may be shown in any theater in New York state. —Receipts for the 1919 income tax .in New York, the first ever collected by the state, amounted to $37,354,- 865. This amount, said Mark Graves, director of the state income tax bu- reau, in making the announcement, will be fruther increased by $750,000' through the payment of additional as- sessments on returns already audited, which will send the total well over to the $38,000,000 mark. About 800,000 persons filed, returns and more .than 612,000 paid a tax in amounts from one cent to nearly $1,000,000.' —The record of the town of Rich- land shows 66 bu-ths and 68 deaths, in! the year 1920. _ —The First National Bank of Tully will increase its capital stock April 1 from $25,000 to $50;000. —Niagara Palls common- coimcii- has raised the pay of nurses in the municipal hospital to $90 a month. —Sleeping sickness cases are repor- ted from various parts of the state, indicating a spread of the malady- —Fire destroyed the plant of the National Sign company, at Hornell, recently, with a loss of about $50,000. —Since September an average of three people a day have been struck and injured \by automobiles in the city of Binghamton. —The Ladies' Hair Dressing Asso- ciation of New York has decided that wpmen's ears are once more to be ex- posed to the public gaze. . —A fire at Central Square recently entailed a loss of about $80,000. A large portion of the business section of the town was wiped out. -—Qver 1,000 cattle of Madison county have been condemned and kill- ed by.State and Federal inspectors. The milk supply is seriously threaten- ed. —The Hailesboro cheese factory has been purchased from the Microu- tsicoa Brothers, of New York by the Gouverneur branch of the Dairymen's- League. '' —The assembly has passed the bill by Assemblyman Moran increasing from $2,400 to $3,600 the salary of the county \judge-and surrogate of Lewis county. —Hiram H. Swift, of Massena, owes $3,444 and lias $170 in assets, according to a voluntary petition in. bankruptcy filed in federal court, at Utica recently. —The senior class of the Copen- hagen High, school has elected the fol- lowing! officers: % President, Spenqer Harris; vice-president, Gladys Bon- ner; secretary, Minnie Roberts; treasurer, Marion Wright. —Highway Commissioner Herber't S. Sisson has appointed William B. Reid, of Weedsport, third deputy highway commissioner to succeed Charles Van Armburg, of Bingham- ton. The salary is $5,000 yearly. —The American Legion Post at Vernon goes on recoi-d as opposed to Oneida county raising by taxation $330,000' for a memorial for the dead of the World War. They believe th.at the county -as a whole would receive little benefit—that it would be better\ for towns and cities to act individu- ally. —Crap shooting and other forms of gambling in pool and billiard rooms is forbidden by terms of a bill intro- duced by Assemblyman William Duke,, of Alleghany county. It. would license all such establishments and force them to give a bond of $500- guaran- teeing that gambling would not be permitted. •—Maj, George F. Chandler, super- intendent of state police, who sent his resignation to Governor Miller\ to take effect March 1, may be retained in his state post. A well defined move- ment to bring about the continuance of Major Chandler's leadership of the organization he founded three years ago, has been established. —State Conservation Commissioner George D. Pratt places a capitalized value of approximately $54,000,000 on the thirty-three species of game birds, game animals and fur bearing animals of the state. These birds and animals, the commissioner says in his annual report return an annual divi- dend of more.than $3,200,d0'o', -and cost the state for their protection and increase only''about $182,000. The figures are based upon definite re- ports made by hunters and trappers of the actual amount of game killed during the year 1918. Size Up Your Condition. Look at the Facts Squarely IT PAYS TO HAVE GOOD HEALTH. Most Illnesses Are Prevented by a Good Supply of Rich, Red Blood Take Pepto-Mangan, the Red- Blood Builder Either you are in good health or .you-arft-oiot. There's .no half way. You may think • nothing of being a little run down. It may v not worry you jf you look pale. You may think you'll be all right, to-morrow or next day. But will you? Certain it is when yon do not- feel just right, you are not right. There is probably something the matter with your blood. And while you can g-et .around and do your work -you. are leaving yourself open to any of the diseases that are always waiting to take possession of run down people. When, you are pale and easily tired', when you cannot enjoy your meals, when you lose enthusfesm, your \blood needs attention. Take -Pepto-Mangan for awhile. It is a great tonic. It will build up-your resistance to disease, and you wall soon feel stronger. The little red corpuscles are fighters. They battle with disease germs and win out when there are enough of them. Keep your system well supplied. Then you will keep well and you will enjoy life. But be certain you get the genuine •Pepto-Mangan. Ask for it by the fuli name—\Glide's Pepto-Mangan.\ Some people take it in tablet form. It is so convenient. The liquid and the tablets v have the same medicinal value. Look for the name \Gude's\ on the package.—Adv. CHAUFFEUR'S EXAMINATION. More time will be devoted from now on to each applicant who seeks a chauffeur's license, according to an announcement oy Secretary of State Lyons, who hopes by this means to eliminate poorly qualified drivers.- With many.men'out of work, who own a car,\ there* is a demand \for th£_ex- aminer in all parts of the state these days. A chauffeur's examination has been ai-ranged for Watertown on March 4, at 9:30 o'clock, in the city hall. There will be an'examination in Ogdensburg on'. March 5. Chauffeur, examina- tions will be conducted in Albany each Monday, as has been the custom. Let us have your Job Printing. \Oh for a new generation of day . dreamers. They will not aslt 1s life worth living—tliey will 'make It so. They \v'H transform the sordid strug- •gle for existence Into Bloriou,s effort to become that which they have ad- mired and loved.\ WORTH WHILE GOOD THINGS. Apples are fruit of which one never tires and they are usually In season In some form. Spiced Apple. — Wipe, core and' pare six large apples and arrange them in a baking dish. Mix sugar,, a pinch of salt and' cinnamon to taste to fill the cavities. Add wa- ter and\ bake until the apples are soft, basting often with, the sirup in the dish. Re- move to the oven and brown. Chill, serve with sugar arid cream. For the meringue use the whites of two eggs, four tablespoonfuls of sugar ana one- half teaspoonful of flavoring extract. Huntington Soup.—To one cupful of corn add two cupful? of chicken stock, two eupfuls of tomatoes, one sliced onion; bring to the boiling point and simmer for twenty minutes.- Melt one and one-half tablespoonfuls of butter, add the same amount of flour and pour oh gradually, stirring all the while the hot mixture. Season with salt and cayenne. Beef Steak a la Henrlette.—Wipe a porterhouse steak, cut one and one- half inches in thickness, broil eight minutes, turning frequently. Pour one- half of the sauce on a hot platter, lay in it the steak, cover; with the remain- ing sauce and garnish with parsley and grated horseradish. Sauce Henrlette.—Wash one-half cupful of butter and diylde into three parts. Put one piece In a saucepan, with the yolks of three eggs slightly beaten and mixed with one-half table- spoonful of lemon juice and one table- spoonful of water. Set the saucepan into a larger one of hot water, place over the Are and stir constantly until the butter is melted. Add a second piece of butter, and when melted the third piece, then add two tablespoon- fuls of tomato, puree, one of Worcesr tershire sauce, one-half tablespoonfut of parsley, one-half teaspoonfu] of minced parsley; one-half teaspoouful f»f salt and a .dash of cayenne. This sauce should be perfectly smooth and of the consistency of a boiled custard-. To prepare the tomato puree cook a cupful of tomato until thick, reduce tp three tablespoonfuls, then put through. a sieve. •-= - v, ,, . A woodlot should be treated as the principal in a savings bank. The an- nual growth of wood corresponds to compound interest. When you cut out more than the equivalent of the growth, you are drawing upon your principal. IS PIONEER LGGH3N WORKER Washington Man, Field Organizer, Will Help Supervise National Movement for More Members. ' Robert A. Le Roux, who was one Of: the pioneer American Legion work- ers in the state of \ Washington,\ has been appoint-' ad. field organiz- er ' at national 'lendquarters, and eft recently for Nevada to begin vorlc there. ^ Mr. Le Roux is i newspaper man md has had eqn- iderable experi- ence \in the field . _ d.e Served with a CifmYdinn infantry unit in France dur- ing the war. He is one of several na- tional field organizers whose duty it Will be to supervise speakers and oth- er organizers 'in the national move- ment for more members for the Amer- ican Legion. The membership cam- paign to be carried out this year will he national in scope. of... ;M.II./.U1H DADDYDF LEGION 'POPPY DAY' v.^ ) Buckeye Major Credited With Orig- inating Idea of Wearing Blossom In Memory of Heroes. *> Major W-nrle C. Christy of Youngs- town Post, No. 15, of the American Legion at Youngs- town, O., is said to have originat- ed the Legion's \Poppy duj\ and the idea pf sell- ing poppies on the street, to be worn in remem- brance of our dead heroes of-the World war. The poppy was adopted at the iH,,. j. ^\f.S Cleveland convention of the j-,egion us the official flower of the former serv- ice men's organisation.. Agrigraphs. Test seed samples now to find what prpportion you can count on when sotting time comes. Uncle Ab says-that you can call him a pagan if you like, but ire bows /to the twin goddesses of health and hap- piness. Of course the purebred sire is the ni$£ l \step bufthefS's'\ jio g'Ood argu- ment against purebred females -in livestock improvement. Iowa State college claims most stu- dents in agrfculture, . giving second place to Cornell, and third to Oregon. The rest of the first ten ih order are Wisconsin, Ohio, Illinois, Massachu- setts, Michigan, Nebraska, Pennsyl- vania. Homespun Yarn. Milk'furnishes cvitamines; we can't grow without' 'em. A fireplace is a!splendid ventilator and a good social center. ~ As the tag end of winter approach- es, watch out that the meals are \not lacking in vegetables. Tarts are not the only way of utili- zing left-over pie crust. Try making patty shells, for serving creamed meat or vegetables. Medical supervision of school chil- dren, .closely followed up by parents, is the only solution of the problem of diseases of childhood.. What shall I put in the school lunch to-day ? Ask the University of the State of New York at Albany or the agricultural college at Ithaca for suggestions. In planning the papering this spring, distinguish between warm and cold colors. No dark room should be made gloomy with greys or deep, blues, and bright tans are equally dis- tressing on the walls of a sunny room. When sewing in a room with a car- pet or large rug on the floor, an old sheet tacked over the working- space will catch threads and scraps. It is quickly and easily taken up when the work for the day is finished and makes sweeping and- dusting unnecessary. Watertown, Chaumont & /Cape Vin- cent Sua Line Howard H..Vrooman, Prop. Leave \Watertown: 7:30 a. mj,* 2:00 p. m., 5:00 \p. m; ..Leave Chaumont: 8:15 a. m., 2:45. p. m., 5:45 p. mi • 'Leave Three Mile Bay: 8:25 a. m., 2:55 p. m., 5:65 p. m. Arrive Gape Vincent: 8:50 a. m., 3:20 p. m., 6:20 p. m. Leave Cape Vincent: 9:80 a. m., 3:30 p. fa., 7:00 p. m. Leave Three Mile Bay: 9:55 a. m., 3:55 p. m., 7:25 p. m. Leave Chaumont: 10:05 a. m., 4:05 p. m,, 7:35 p. m. Arrive Watertown: 10:60 a. m., 4:60 p. m., 8:20 p. m. Extra—Leave Watertown Saturday and Sunday, at 10 a. m. and 10 p. m.> Leave Cape Vincent Saturday and Sunday at 12:30 p. m.; Monday, 7:15 a. m. • No extra 7:00 a. m. trip Sun- day. The Soul of the Grange * f Within Grange halls I have witnessed all the prob- lems of life worked out: Acquaintance ripen into courtship and marriage, the next generation appear and be accepted into the order, old age give way to youth and then pass\ to the Great Husbandman.. I - have seen bitterness turned to forgiveness under the • ' careful hand of peacemakers. Always the influence has been one to create a bond b? friendship,\ 1 —From THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN of May 1 5th, 1920. The soul 6f the Grange is It holds that the highest lived; that the foundation The better-living influences of the Grange radiate, throughout the com- munity! They are back of our county agents,' of the demonstration work, of our Schools. Friendship and well being spun within Grange halls are woven throughput the whole fab- ric of our country life. In this age of faltering faith there is need for strong leadership. This the Grange^ offers. You need'its f sound counsel, its friendly .associa- tions. It needs your support. manifest kf the farm home. achievement is a life well for such a life is the home. THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN gives credit to the* Grange for its whole-, some and helpful work; that is the kind of work this great weekly itself is doing. It helps to build a contented and prosperous farm life. Each.- week's issue is filled with cheering stories andinspiring editorials. It fits right into the home and i s a welcome weekly visitor. ONE DOLLAR spent for a year's sub- scription will pay you rich dividends* Send us your order Now J Jefferson Cdttijty Ptfffifcfia Grange Mrs. E. E. Parker, Secretary ' . L¥, Burton, Master - ; . Brownville, New York La Fargeville, New York * Dear Secretary: I'm glad to see the Grange being pushed with good advertising. And here's my dollar for THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN for a year—52 weekly issues. Please forward my order to the Publishers at Independence. Square, PMladelphia; pa. ' . '\ (My Name)- (My Address)- (Town) -— 4State^ *=£= Five Miniate .Ghats onOar Presidents **tft#**S0S*^l By .4AIVIES MORGAN OF JEFFERSON (Cjopyrlelit, 1020. by Jamos Morgan.) A NEW EPOCH G= 1877^-AprII, President Hayes withdrew Federal troops from Southern State cap- itals. Banislted alcoholic liquors from the White House. June and July, ordered out Federal troops In the great railway strike. 1878^-Vetoed Silver bill, which was passed over his veto. 1879—Specie payments resumed. 1893—Jan. 17; death of' Hayes at Fremont, O., aged 70. . . \ ' \ -O tiTTH serves his party best whe JCJ. .serves his. country best.'-. . With those watchwords Hayes had sacrificed himself and his administer tion to reunite North and South, to cleanse the civil service and to regen- erate the -Republican party. So qui- etly, so coldly, so undramatically did he go about all those great objects thgt he remained to the end of his term one of the most misunderstood 'most underestimated presidents, the Republican leaders hating him as an apostate- and the Democrats despis- ing him as a fraud. He selected one.of the most dis- tinguished cabinets in history. But ,he did it without consulting party leaders or considering the claims of factions, and the offended senate threatened \and muttered' for nearly a week before it confirmed the nomi- nations. To the disgust of \practical politicians\ he \threw away\ a high- class foreign mission on a man like James Russell Lowell, \a dashed lit- erary feller,\ as Senator Cameron said, and he enraged Roscoe Conk- 'ling by flinging the, political machine : of the imperious senator out of the federal offices in New York city. He would also have made a start toward #:v-\ / %*M \ -**-:• # .1 Lucy Webb Hayes. the removal of the civil service from politics and spoHs-mongering- hail not both parties combined, in congress to thwart- his every effort in- that direc- tion. Hayes' boldest challenge to \the Republican politicians was his aban- donment of their 12-year struggle to reconstruct the Southern states from Washington. Ever since congress had seized from Lincoln's lifeless hand the control of reconstruction, the entire \proceeding had been a tragic failure. Hayes came to the presidency in the depths of an industrial prostra- tion when wandering bands of tramps thronged the highways of tlfe land, and soon the first great railway strike paralyzed transportation be- tween the Atlantic and tbe Missis- sippi. In response to. the popular cry for \more money\ -both parties in congress were for repealing or modi- fying the resumption act and for in- flating, the currency^ with greenbacks on silver coinage. The president firmly resisted such a surrender. Had not. his' veto of the silver bill been overridden he, would have saved the country from taking .the first step on the road that led it to the brink of free silver, in 1893. All this independence cost Hayes the support of the political time serv- ers and the applause of the partisan\ press. These united in denouncing and ridiculing him \as a renegade in politics' and as a sniveling hypocrite In private life. The White House \went dry\ for the first time under the Hayes', and the president was held up to con- tempt as a rrian too stingy to stand treat and too weak to- resist a domi- neering wife. Hayes found the North and South divided and he left them more nearly reunited than, they had been in a generation. He found .the national currency paper and he left it gold and silver. He found the prosperity of tbe country at dead low tide and he left it a,t,high tide. It fell to Hayes to ring down the curtain on the epoch of the Civil war and to usher -in another epoch. The ^voices of the *past cried out against him, but in his complete' re- tirement from politics he lived to hear tb,& \voices of the new time gjve a more favorable and a more Just ver- dict on his administration. Sings an unnamed lover of the farm, The country is ia. place to live in, as well as a place in which .to earn a liv- ing. One-third of our people must be on the land and that third must love the land. I plead for the wilds that have not been manicured. Brief Mention of the Happenings In the Many Villages and Hamlets of the County. LEAVE YOUR OEDER FOR EK- GRAVED CALLING CARDS. —The village of Adams has raised $500 for the European Relief fund. --The dates for the twelfth annual automobile show in Watertown have been set for March 16, 17, 18 and 19. —The debt on the Henderson Meth- odist church, about $100, has been wiped out through the kindness of Mrs. Olive McCumber. —The Kirk-Maher company, of Wa- tertown, will turn out 250,000 gallons of ice cream this year. This will be about 35,000 gallons more than last year. —According to figures just made public Jefferson county is the banner county in the state in Home Bureau membership, it having reached a to- tal of 1,043. —Lincoln Algate, of Henderson, ap- peared in county .court, at Watertown, recently a dnentered a plea of guilty to violating the excise laws. He paid a fine of $50. —The St. Regis Paper company pays about one-quarter of the total state, county and town taxes of the town of Wilna. The total amount of the company's tax this year was $21,- 000. —The members of Depauville Lodge No. 688, P. & A. M., with the Ladies of the Eastern Star will burn the mortgage on the Masonic hall in that village on Friday evening of this week, holding a big celebration. The hall was completed and dedicated- in 1908. \ —The Watertown post-office had 22 postal savings accounts witlT\tbtal deposits of $10;537 on June 30, 1920, according to a report made public by Postmaster General A. S. Burleson. Other offices in Jefferson county, the number of depositors and total de- posits of that date are as follows: Sackets Harbor, 8, $1,311;; Alexandria Bay, 3, $107; Antwerp, 1, $030; Carth- age, 7, $1,052; Redwood, 1, $1.00. —As a part of the Americanization program being carried on by the Ma^ sonic fraternity all over the country, a large meeting of Master Masons of Watertown and the surrounding com- munities may be called at the Mason- ic temple, in Watertown, some time this spring by Worshipful William W. Waddingham, master of Watertown Lodge, No. 49. It is likely that John Lloyd Thomas, of New York, will ad- dress the meeting. —A church brotherhood has been formed at Thousand Island Park with the following officers: President, Thomas Mitchell, Thousand Island Bark; vice-president, Chester A. Nunn Pine View; secretary, John D. Wag- oner, Pine View; treasurer, Hanley Cupernall, Thousand Island Park; committee on music, organist, John D. Wagoner; chorister, George Danough. —The Republican enrollment in Jefferson county has increased from 7,514 in 1913 to 22,051 in 1921, while the Democratic enrollmejit for the same period has increased only from 4,825 to 7,810, according to a com- parative table of enrollment prepar- ed by the board of elections. TIME TABLE. . Until further notice trains on the Cape Vincetet branch will leave and arrive at the Cape as follows: Week Days Leave—7:10 A. M., 11:30 A. M*., 4:00 P. M. Arrive—9:40 A. M., 2:30 P. M., 6:45 P. M. Sundays Arrive—9:40 A. M., 4:30 P. M. Leave—11:30 A. M., 5:20 P. M. —Fifty members have recently been added to the Bassett-Baxter Post, Am- erican Legion, at Carthage. —Senator Fred B. Pitcher, of Wa- tertown, has introduced three bills in the senate amending the banking law. —A number of cases of smallpox are reported throughout the county. Every precaution is being- taken to prevent the spread of the disease. —It is said that there are six can- didates who want to succeed Post- master Robert Purcell, at Philadel- phia. The position pays about $1,700 a year. —Dr. Lois L. Gannett, who has been in New York for the past four weeks, making a special study of\ electrical treatments has returned to Adams and resumed her practice. —Edmund McOmber celebrated his 92nd birthday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Charles Overton, at Black River, on Sunday last. For one of his age, Mr. McOmber is in remark- able health. —Roy Benjamin,.-aged 36 years, had his left leg quite badly fractured at the plant of the Brownville Paper company Saturday morning-. 'He was taken to the City hospital, Water- town, for treatment. * —The first year English class \of the Carthage High school is rehears- ing for' the presentation of \The Courtshop of Miles Standisli,\ to be given in the assembly hall of the school Thursday evening, March 3. —The veterans of the World War have organized'an American Legion Post at Black River and named it the William C. Dexter Post in memory of Private William Charles Dexter, who paid the supreme sacrifice in Prance. Clarence Slack has been elected commander. —According to figures prepared by the immigration education depart- ment of the State Department of Education, Jefferson county has 864 persons out of a population, of 82,250 who said they could neither read nor write any language or speak English.. There are 487 in Watertown, accord- ing to the record. .—Captain D. Rogers, of Watertown, has offered a solution of a problem which perplexes George D. Pratt, state conservation commissioner—the preservation of black bass. \Pay a bounty on every snake and every eel caught in the St. Lawrence river. Make it compulsory to kill dog fish instead of throwing them back in the water.\ Such is his proposition and other river men agree with him. —Through the home bureau of Limerick a boys' reading club has been organized, named \Pals All.\ The officers are: President, Howard Norton; vice-president, Leroy Smith; secretary, Pei-cy Klock; treasurer, Leon W- Wells; chairman of enter- tainment, Albert Liseome. The meet- ings are held Tuesday evening of each week at the schoolhouhe. The read- er is I. P. Smith. The Boy Scout's books are being\ read. A short en- tertainment follows the reading. t'W. unniintii j Fufteral Director # Calls Answered Anywhere |> Day or Night % AUTOMOBILE EQUIPMENT | J|* Hearse and Ambulance { |j I* Prompt Service <& § CAPE VINCENT, N. T. | Subscribe for the Eagle. $1.50. a year. Start an Interest Account in the Jefferson County National Bank Watertown. This old, reliable institution, with an ex- perience of over a century, pays interest ^ at the rate of 4, Per Cent. 1^._^ _^ , 1816—1921 Largest National Bank in Northern New- » York WATERTOWN, N. Y, JEFFEDS0HX0UNTY NATIONAL BANK JEFFI&Sotf COUNTY'S PIONEER BANK illlHH