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o , ' • <&\ H. ROY ALLEN, Editor and Publisher DEMOCRATIC IN POLITICS. PRICE FIVE CENTS VOL. 50 GAPE VINCENT, N. Y., THtfESBAY, OCTOBER 26, 1922 NO. tt —The Diamond Excelsior Works, of Fulton, has been incorporated with a capital stock of $100,000, —Miss Mollie Boberts,'o£ Lowville, has been elected president of .the senior class at the Potsdam Normal school. , —The Potsdam hoard of health has urged vaccination, because of the dis- covery of several cases of smallpox near that village. —The Rochester Chapter of the American Bed Cross has sent 4,000 pairs of women's and children's shoes' to\ help clothe the- suffering: ffiefttgees; ?my>rna.\ V ..' . ..^'--vaK. • ; • -\' ^^TOie, St, Lawrence toarble qiuaim- es, near iGouverneiir, have been sold to E. J. Debold, of Boston. The price was $15,000. The property is said to be worth $60,000. —The Echo of the Northland, a publication gotten out toy the students of the Lake Placid High school will make its appearance on the last Fri- day of each month. —The Conservation Commission will feature , a special display of pheasants at the Ogdensbuiig poultry show, which will open at the armory there November 28. —^Gold has been discovered in,the town of Bleecker, Fulton county,.and Silas F. Homing and Joseph, A. Ross have filed p. notice of discovery with the secretary of state. —An increase of $50,000 is noted in the capitalization of the Ogdensburg Gas company, according to papers filed in the secretary of state's office, at Albany. The company is mow per- mitted to operate on a capitalization of $200,000. —The biggest seizure of booze •made during the past summer was made at Malone when a freight car, loaded with what was billed as \bar- neled fish,\ was held up by the cus- toms authorities last Wednesday. The \fish\ concealed 'anywhere from 25 to 35 quaaits of hootch in each barrel. There were 65 barrels of \fish\ which means about 4,000 quarts of \joy pro- ducer.\ 1 —The Hotel Curtis, at Barnes iCor- ners, one of the landmarks of the village, will be sold at public auc- tion on Monday morning, October 30, to settle the estate of the former owner, Fred ,W. Clark, who was drowtned ,a few weeks ago. The ho- tel is .about 25 years old and is well known, to motorists of the North Country and tourists who have visit- ed that section. —A Canadian lynx, young but full of fight, was shot recently by Arthur Woo&chlager, of Lowville, while hunting with a party of friends in the vicinity of Half ' Moon Lake. The hunter's first two shots missed and the cat was 30 yards away and near- ly ready to spring when the third shot ended its life. The lynx measur- ed five feet and seven inches in length and stood 20 inches in height. It weighed 48 pounds. —Portraits of Theodore Roosevelt will be unveiled in armories through- out New York state on October 2Y, Mr. Roosevelt's birthday. The por- traits, which bear the legend, \Keep up the fight for Americanism\ and the last public message of Mr. Roose- velt, -read at a mass meeting of the American Defense Society in the New. York Hippodrome on January 5, 1919, the night before he died, are gifts of the society. —The Ogdensbuiig City orphanage and home for the aged has launched a campaign - to raise the sum of $62,- 202:54, representing the indebtedness at the date of the last annual report dn July. It is stated *hat the indebt- edness confronting the institution re- sulted largely from the greatly in- creased c'osts which the war brought about. There are more than 300 children and old people being cared for at the home. STOKIESOF QREAT INDIANS By Elmo Scoll Walson \-wij w^lu, lj'iz, We.-m'rn Newspaper Union OPECHANCANQUGH FOUGHT AT AGE OF 100 YEARS \ O N A March day, 300 years ago, the colony of Virginia, witnessed the greatest Indian' massacre the American continent lias ever known. Within an hour 347 men, vyome.n and children had' been slaughtered and SO plantations along the James- river had been reduced to six: Back of this carnival of blood'was the crafty brain of one man—Opechiincanbugh. chief of the I'amunUeys. ,Oppchanennqugh's hatred'' for the fwajl^s'*dote<'l^|!onir'\(4i^'tfffle^Kat : '_ i the : 'doughty' Capr..'John Smith' had\ seized him by the hair and marched him away at Hi point of a pistol because the chief l,ii,d refused 1 to sell the starv- ing colonists food. He was soon ran- somed; by his tribesmen but he never forgot the humiliation. His brother, Powhatan, held the Pnmnnkey In, re- straint but when Powhatan died Opechaneanough begun plotting. On March 22; 1022, Opechancan- ough's warriors burst upon- the un- guarded plantations like a storm. From sunrise to. sunset they murdered and burned until the struggling little colony was almost erased from the map. It soon recovered from the disaster, how- ever, .and then the Virginians loosed their forces of vengeance. They de-. feated Ihe .Indians. For years the war went on inter- mittently Willi treachery and cruelty on both sides. Opec-haneanough was believed to have been killed. But the old fellow was very much alive. Twenty-two years later he was plotting again. Although be was then one hundred years old. be commanded his warriors to carry him into battle. Once more the savages swept down upon the - plantations and agaiu thev killed more than \00 whites. Finally they wore i'P.pul«\(l by Gov. William Berkeley anil ilielr chief taken prisoner and -was borne in triumph to .Taniesl own. There a. white guard deliberately fired upon the old chief, wounding liim fatally.' Hearing-the noise outside the lodge, made by the crowd that was trying to get a look at the dying, chieftain, Opechawnnough ordered his attendant to lift Ids eyelids. Tlie sight of the crowd filled him for a moment with unnatural strength. Ris- ing to his feet, he demanded that Gov- ernor Berkeley lie brought to him. Then in one final moment of majesty the old warrior confronted the gov- ernor wrathfully. \Had It been by fortune to take you prisoner, I would not have meanly exposed you as a show to my people,\ he exclaimed. Then he sank back and died. Microbe's Happy Hunting around. According to estimate the human body contains a microbe population equal to a thousand million times the whole human population of the earth. Keeping Out the Cats. The Leicester City bench yesterday decided that any person was legally entitled to place on his garden broken bottles to keep off dogs and cats. A summons for serious injury to a dog was dismissed;—Manchester (Eng.) Guardian. Relics of Confederacy. The cell table used by Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederate States of America, while confined as a prisoner in Fortress Monroe, follow- ing the close of the war, is in the collection of interesting relics in the Confederate museum in Kichmond. Eyes Scientifically Examined, Prescriptions Filled, Glasses Designed, Made, Fitted and Repaired. Geo. F. Hill 0PT0METEIST and OPTICIAN OTIS BUILDING Watertown, Hew York Let us have your Job Printing. Two Ways There are two ways of acquiring a re- serve, or interest fund: by inheriting.it , or by saving it. If your prospects for inheriting money are negligible, start to save systematically now by opening an account in. our 4 Per Cent Interest^Department 1816—1922 Largest National Bank in Northern New York WATERTOWN, N. V, JEFFERSON JEFPEHSO& COUNTY'S PIONEER BANK 1 ESTABLISHED t8|6^ I. S. f CIRI DIES PROMINENT WATERTOWN AT- TORNEY HAD BEEN ILL FOR ABOUT FIVE MONTHS. George S. MksCartin, of W;atei*owh, a prominent attorney .and former chairman of the Democratic commit- tee, died at Saranae Lake last Thurs- day niorninig, following an iMiness of about five months. I George S. MaCaiitin was born in W£iei*owh. August 2, 1878,-the son. of Judge JoW G MaCarfcm and Julia I Sterling MeCaa-tih. He received Ms preliminary education in the schools •in that city and in Pfirlliips Academy, at Andover, Mass., a preparatory j school for Yale. After completing' his course there he entered Yale, from which university he was graduated' in 1900 and then entered upon a law course in the New York Law School. He was graduated from that institu- tion in 1902 and the following year was admitted to the bar. Soon, after that he became a member of the law partnership of Brown, 'Carlisle & Mc- Oaiitin, of which, former Senator Elon E. Brown, who recently died suddenly was the senior member, and which firm succeeded .that of Brown, Car- lisle & Hugo. When the firm- of Brown, Carlisle & McCartm. was dissolved, M-r. Mc- iQflEYGOIWBUOILS IN G0NVERTIN8 RECEIVER The Late Geo. S. McCartm. Cartin formed a patmershaip with Olaude B. Alverson under the firm name of McCartin & Alverson. Later Mr. Alverson was elected district at- torney and A. Kaymond Cornwall was admitted to the finm which became McCartin, Alverson. & Cornwall and so remained until January 1, 1921, when Judge Alverson, who had been county judge for a year, was elevated to the supreme court bench and the firm was dissolved. Mr. McCartin then associated with Mm Attorney Howard B. Donaldson, who had studied in the offices- of Mc- Cartin, Alverson & Cornwall and who had been associated with that firm after his admission to the bar. This association has continued up to the time of Mr. McCarthys death. Attorney McCartin was one of the finest students that Jefferson county has ever produced and despite the fact that he was a young man, lie was for many years i - egarded by members of- the bar as one of the most schol- arly lawyers in this part of the state. Next to Judge Emerson he probably toad the broadest and most extensive knowledge and command of the law at his tongue's end of any lawyer in Northern New York, and consequent- ly he was frequently consulted by older attorneys when fine legal technique was demanded in some par- ticularly delicate, case. Politically, he was always a staunch and active supporter of the politics and principles of the Democratic party, of, which he was one of the most able of the upstate leaders. His advice in matters political as i n mat- ters legal was sought and gartefully accepted in the councils of the Demo- cratic party in both the county and the state and ibis strategy had many times been responsible for bringing victory to Democratic candidates and in making a good showing, where otherwise the i-esult would have been unworthy of much notice. Attorney McCartm bad many years been an. officer and leader of the Democratic party, when in 1918 he was mentioned for the secretaryship of the Democratic state committee, but did not accept the position. In September of the following year, when Delos Mr. Cosgrove resigned as chairman of the county committee Mr. McCartin was unanimously elected and served until the annual meeting of the committee a few weeks ago, when he resigned and was succeeded by Attorney T. Arthur Hendricks. The funeral was held from the home of Mrs. Marion A. Aekewnan, dn Watertown, where Mr.' McCartin had resided for many years, at 2:30 Sunday afternoon, the Rev. Francis \W. Bason, pastor of Trinity Episco- pal- .church, officiating. The bearers were Charles E. Norris, -of Carthage; <3eorge R. VahiNamee, Delos M. Cos- grove, John N. Carlisle, Supreme Court Justice_Glaude B. Alverson and Howard B. Donaldson. Burial was made in Brookside cemetery in the family plot where Mr. McCartin's parents are buried. Third Regenerative Circuit Ar- rangement Is by Electro- static Coupling. In making a receiving set over Into a regenerative circuit, the DeForest honeycomb coils are- very well adapted to a circuit arrangement as shown in Figure N. One coil is-used as a pri- mary, a second coil as a secondary, and a third as a tickler or plate'in- ductance. , When mounted in a set the second- ary Is placed in the center and the primary and tickler coils on the out- side in such a manner that the coUp- ling between the primary and the secondary can be varied, The greatest advantage derived from the use of honeycomb colls is the and a circuit of the general arrange ments of that shown In the diagram an amateur can get excellent results. Any of the standard variometers on the market can be used for the grid and plate variometers \A\ and \B.\ For those who wish to build, a set . of this tj-pe, a more detailed diagram of; connections Is shown in Figure P. The antenna series condenser is one ofi the 21-plate size. An \A\ battery -potentiometer is shown in the .slrcuit for those who wish to use a soft de- tector tube. ELECTRICAL SHOP AND RADIO Establishment That Does General Electrical Work Has Big Advan- . \ tage Over Others. One of the strongest arguments pos- sessed by the electrical store selling radio supplies is the expert service it can offer, says Burton Millar, in a comprehensive article in Itadio Mer- chandising. All sorts and descriptions of apparatus and parts can be put in stock by any store In any line of business and that is exactly what is being done in every city in the coun- try, but the establishment which makes a- specialty of doing general electrical work—wiring for light,, pow- fefek moalrr ^^ abiilty lo cover the entire range or wave length with very small dead-end losses. With the same receiving set the coils used for receiving long wave trans-Atlantic stations can be plugged out, a smaller set of colls plugged in, and amateur stations picked up ef- ficiently. This ability tends to make this par- ticular type of receiver the closest approach to a universal wave length receiver that can be made, \ •The regenerative circuit arrange- ments already shown feed back from the plate circuit to the grid circuit in one of two ways: First, conduc- tlvely, as In the circuit called the De- Forest TJltra-Audion circuit, and sec- ond, by inductive coupling as in the circuit which makes use of the tickler coll. There Is a third method of coupling—electrostatic, by which the circuits between which the energy is to be transferred are connected by condensers. In a circuit in which the energy Is small and the frequency Is high, that is, short wave length, the coupling condenser need be of only a very small capacity. The elements of a vacuum tube have a capacity with respect to each other. Some' of the most efficient of the short wave regenerative receiv- ers used today depend on the capacity between the elements of the vacuum tube to furnish the necessary electro- static capacity between the plate and the grid circuits to feed energy from one of these circuits to the other. ' Figure O shows a simple single tube regenerative receiver for short wave work that depends on the electro- static capacity between the elements of the tube for the coupling between the plate and grid circuits. A vario- meter \A\ lu the antenna circuit is used for tuning.' Another variometer \B\ in series with the plate is used for tuning the plate circuit to the same natural period as that of the received signal. This circuit is sometimes called the tuned plate circuit method of regeneration. There are two tuned oscillating cir- cuits In the receiver. One tuned cir- cuit consists of the variometer \A\ with the capacity of the grid to fila- ment of the tube across It. The other tuned circuit consists of the vario- meter, \B\ with the capacity of the plate to filament across ft. These two circuits are in turn electrostatically coupled to each other by the capacity between the grid and the plate. A receiver of the type shown in Figure O is very efficient, because there are no untuned circuits. In ad- dition the energy sent back from the plate circuit to the grid circuit com- pensates for the losses in the circuits. This results in very high amplifica- tions. Though the adjustment of a set of this type- is ralhcr critical, especially tlit Mii'«:i!t of induction In the plate •;. i,|it 'wo i-u.ubs lire necessary .. , • s r-;> r and the amount , .:i a good antenna er, etc., and carrying a stock of elec trical goods of every sort—has a dis- tinct advantage over the store which added a radio department to other lines of merchandise entirely differ- ent in character. It is virtually Important, however, that the availability of this expert service be broadcast to the field il- ls desired to reach. Publicity is the only thing that will do it. The public must be; told. Not once, but repeated- ly, and In every possible way. It Is not enough to have a card In the display window announcing: \Our electrical experts will be glad to give you any information or assistance In installing or operating your radio out- fit.\ Or to run an occasional small ad in the local newspapers. Or to have a car card In the local street cars. Or to distribute small folderp through the mails to a local list. All of these methods are good—If you keep persistently at it! There is no single quality of advertising so ab- solutely essential as persistence. If you do not concede this you are sim- ply ignoring the experience of all suc- cessful advertisers of all time. If the radio department is to be built up and made a substantial part of your store's business it is essential that the public be told where it can find this superior service, tested ap- paratus and expert counsel. TIPS TO THE RADIOIST A talk given recently at Sche- nectady by Dr. Marconi was en- joyed by a crowd of 3,000 per- sons who hud assembled lu Washington park, Albany, for the purpose. On the Pacific coast prefer- ence In time for broadcasting Is to be given to' the stations hav- ing the greatest efficiency and therefore able to serve the great- est number of people. Rubber Is very useful material In radio work. You will find rubber stoppers to bottles make excellent knobs or tips to electrodes; adjusting rods, etc., and that block or sheet rubber Is very useful as an insulator to many places; but if you have ever tried to cut rubber with a knife you will know how hard it Is to make a neat, smooth, straight cut. But if you use a sharp knife and keep the rub- ber wet with cold water, or cut it under water, you will find that it cuts like cheese. A radio university, placing higher education within the reach of all, Is now considered but a matter of time. The fu- ture educational possibilities of radio seem to be limited only by the co-operation of the peo- ple. USE MORE LIME. \Buy Lime\ is the appeal sent out to farmers of the county by W. I. Roe, Farm Bureau Manager. _A part of the tillable land in the county needs lime badly, he says, and points out that a isufficient application would increase yields more than enough, to pay for it. \For the last five years farmers have been operating closely 'because of low prices,\ declares Mr. Roe, .\•and have gone without many tilings in order to make both ends meet. This has resulted in a decrease in the use of lime, which did not seem 'ab- solutely needed. It is false economy,. however,, because lime pays for itself and its use is reflected in more profit' at harvest time.\ In order to-anake lime more easEy available to farmers the New York State Farm Bureau Federation is co- operating with lime manufactures, •railroad officials and distributors in a. campaign urging the use of lime, ac- cording to Mr. Roe. Officials of the State College of Agriculture and the .State Department of Farms and Mar- kets are .puiblishing facts and figures to show the value of lime as a build- er of yields. Homespun Yarn. Agrigraphs. And the maizewfield grew and ripened, Till it stood in al the isplendor Of its garments green and yellow, —Longfellow. It's good farm economics fa grow better products at less cost. If the relations between tenant and farm-owner are cordial, neither side worries about a long-term lease. A country child might like a real, live Christmas present this year in the form of a purebred calf or pig, or trio of chickens. The farmer who contracts for next spring's seed corn in the fall, prob- ably won't have to take up with an inferior variety of poor quality. Uncle Ab says: If most good farm- ers took as much- care of a crop after it was made as they did while making it, they would be still better fairmens. The best trees for the woodlot com- bine the qualities of useful wood, rapid growth; adaptability to soil and climate and freedom from insects and disease. How about the young trees that you have? The winter's fuel supply can ibe ,so cut as to have a larger percentage of good trees. AUTOISTS TAKJNG PLEDGE TO WAR ON CARELESSNESS. Take the pledge! Get on the safe- ty wagon! Officials of the American Automo- bile Association are asking their members throughout the country to sign the \Pledge of Carefulness\ is- sued by the Highway Education Board of Washington, in connection with the year's safety program. The pledge in part follows: \I pledge myself to be considerate of the rights of others while on the streets and highways; to learn and observe traffic rules and regulations to the best of my ability; to co-oper- ate in a campaign of carefulness, either as a pedestrian or as a driver of a vehicle and I will, iby precept and example, endeavor to assist oth- ers in making streets and highways Light kitchen walls help to make lighter housekeeping. Aunt Ada's Axioms: Better homes make better communities make a bet- ter nation. Plant peonies in the fall. Spring planting is likely .to injure the early- formed buds. If the sink is near the dining room wall, it will make the Temoval of dirty dishes from the dining room table less like a parade. The health fairy can't get in through a closed window in the sleeping room. But he'll come and bring friends if the windows are open, wide. Everyone likes roses. The demand for the rose bulletin issued by the State College, at Ithaca, shows it. A new edition has^'ust been reprinted. It is F 121. It is a woman, and only a woman—- a woman .all by herself, df she lakes, and without any man to help her— who can turn a house into a home— Frances Power Coblbe. If your non-leakalble fountain pen leaks ink on the floor, the stains may be bleached out with an oxalic-acid solution. (Consult H 137 for direc- tion's. It's a 'bulletin the State Col- lage, at Ithaca, will send for the ask- ing. STATE COLLEGE OFFERS WINTER SHORT COURSES. Circulars announcing the winter short .courses given by the state col* lege of agriculture at .Cornell, No- vember 8 to February 16, have been received at the Farm Bureau office, in Watertown, and are available for all who are interested. Every winter a number from Jef- ferson county have taken advantage of this opportunity to secure techmi-r cal information along lines they are interested in. Courses offered this season are general agriculture, dairy industry, poultry husbandaw, fruit growing, flower growing and vege- table gardening. Tuition is free. Liv- ing expenses, labaitory fees, and neces sary books and supplies will make the cost between $200 and .$300. WFkRE FORMALITY IS WAIVED Introductions Not Absolutely Demand- ed When Gentlemen Engage In Game of Crapo. f Abe Jackson, colored, was Indicted for stealing money from the station agent of a railroad. As the railroads were then under the control of the government, the trial was In a United States court. The station agent, who was white, testified that he did not know Jackson and had never seen him before the day of the theft. Jackson's defense was ingenious. He did not deny. that he got the money from the agent, but claimed that b6 won It. The presiding judge seemed astound- ed at'the defense, and asked: \Do you mean to tell me that you won this money from the agent shootlnc craps?\ \•Yes suh.\ ~ ' \Why the agent doesn't know you— never saw you before that day!\ \ 'Deed, jedge, you don't have to know folks tub shoot craps wif 'em I\ —Judge. WAS A FACT ACCOMPLISHED T —Miss Blanche Livermore, of Dex- ter, has .been appointed cierk and stenographer in the federal bureau of internal revenue office, at Watertown. A. condensed handbook on the sub- ject is \The Curing of Meat and Meat Products on the Farm.\ The State College, at Ithaca, will send it if you ask for F 110. —George R. Hanford, who died re- cently in Watertown, left an estate valued at ?6,500. ' —-The county alms house, at Ma- lone, was damaged recently to the ex- tent of $1,000 by fire. —-The Depauville grange will hold its annual fair and harvest supper on Saturday evening of this week. Married Men Will Be at No Loss to Understand That Further Argu- ment W»o Useless. A couple was. seated on the top of a Fifth avenue bus and their words r«acbed everyone around them. He ventured a timid suggestion that they get off at Forty-seventh street, She had decided upon a street- farther south and said so with finality. An argument followed, If a conversation can be called an argument in which one side has so much the best of It The people listening in frohi nearby seats were naturally interested in the outcome. As the bus slowed down for the Forty-second street crossing the wom- an remained seated, and the man re- newed his argument It was a word in the final veto, however, which es- pecially attracted the audience. Every married man present understood. \There is no use talking,\ the wom- an declared with finality. \1 have made up our minds.\—New York Times. AND THEY GET AWAY WITH IT Truly, the Female of the Species Is More Fortunate Than the Inferior Male. Two cases In Judge Chesebro's court. First, the graceless inale arrested for speeding after having Imbibed two glasses of claret, $250 or 180 days in jail. Second, the graceful maiden who drove her Cadillac Into a man, failed to stop .and render assistance, bumped Into a yellow oar and hit a Ford. And all without a drip of claret. Ten days In jail—suspended. The graceless male might have done a lot of damage, of course, but actual- ly his^guilt, was confined to \reckless driving.\ The graceful female did do a lot of damage. But, of course, she never meant to and she couldn't help It and she was nervous and there were tears In her eyes instead of claret on her breath, so there you are! Votes for women. The ladles, bless 'em !—Los Angeles Times. American ^Manners Different. The Englishman, the Frenchman and the American all think each other ex- tremely bad mannered. The French- man resents the manners of the Eng- lishman and tolerates the crudities oi the American.- The Englishman has n contempt for the manners of both the French and the American, and the American comes to Europe lmmblj thinking that his manners are probab- ly the worst and willing to learn, only to find that they are as good as the French or English manners, but very different.—Milwaukee Journal. Father Love vs. Mother's. Among sonvf fishes the- male as- sumes all the care and anxiety oi parenthood. And this is true of at least one or two families of birds The male ostrich hatches the eggs and looks after the little ones. Tlu greatest enemy of HIP eggs and younji of the stickleback lixli is the mofhe> herself. She not only 1ms no afffec lion for them whatever, but woalfi eat every one of Ihem If sheweren'l prevented from doing so by the fa lliei'. In very few species of fish dti the females care anything for eithe! the egps or the ymjnjt. Among fishes, therefore, the in- jsttaet to save the young Is not the wonderful mother instinct found In the human or other higher species, bul the father lnstjnct.—IDetroit News. —The ladies of the Adafiis Baptist church are preparing to hold a rum- mage sale on November 18. —Fifty new structures are being erected by a corps of carpenters at Electric Island, Henderson Harbor. -H. E. Harmon has been elected president of the \Brotherhood of the First Methodist Episcopal church, Watertown. -While eating oysters in a restau- rant, at Alexandria Bay, Liha Rube, of Hamimenton, N. J., found two pearls, the larger of which is esti- mated to be worth $50. -The jRev. Hezekiah L. Pyle, pas- tor of the Emmanuel Congregational church, Watertown, celebrated the 25th anniversary of his ordination to the Congregational .ministry last Sunday. -At a meeting of the New York State Circulation Managers' Associa- tion, hold in Wiatertown last week, 'Charles H. Congdon, editor of the Wa tertOwn Times, was elected first vice- president. •May Irwin has left her estate near Clayton to return to the stage and will have the role of Mistress of Ceremonies when the '49ers begins season at the Bunch and Judy theater, New York city, November 0. -Under the auspices of Media Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, ' of Watertown, the United States Marine Band, of Washington, D. -C, will give a conceit at .the Olympic Theater, in Watertown, on Wednes- day evening, November 1. —According to the .report of 'Frank Ti'sdale, superintendent of schools, Watertown, the September enroll- ment reached the highest point in its history at the beginning of this school semester. It showed a total .6,129 pupils against 5,843 of last September. —The solid wooden fa-amie of an old 'blacksmith shop at Pierrepont Manor with its peculiar wood fastening pins is all that remains of what was once the oldest structure there and one of the earliest landmarks of the county. The rem'ains of the structure will soon be razed to make way for a modem bungalow. —Members of Northern Frontier Chapter, United_ States JJaughters of 1812, were entertained\ S'aEuraay^ST\ the Navy Station, Backets Harbor, the Sackets Hairbor members of the chapter being in charge of the meet- ing. Lunch was served at 1 p. m., in the navy station, following which a business session was held. —Ernest J. Jones, well known race horse driver who has ridden on many North Country tracks, has (been engaged by T. G. Alvord to handle the Alvord racing stable and direct the stock faiun at Henderson; The Alvord stables will soon: be augmen- ted by three richly bred trotting colts purchased by agents of Mr. Alvord from Kentucky stables. —Sealed proposals will be receiveo. by the Clayton village board of trus- tees at the office of the board at 8 p. m., Monday, November 6, for the puaichase of $4,200 motor pumper bonds, six being of the denomination of $500, twelve of $100 on which bonds $1,400 shall mature on Octo- ber 24 of each of the years, 1923 to 1925 inclusive. The bonds will be sold at not less than par value. —A. rare gift was presented to the Masonic lodge of Carthage at its last regular meeting by Mors. C. W. Man- ning, of New York, who has just re- turned from a trip through Europe and parts of Asia Minor. .Mrs. Man- ninge presented the lodge with a beautiful and rare marble slab that was taken from the ruins in a temple dn Asia Minor. It was said that the marble was taken from a temple buried for centuries. It was only re- cently that a party of men. who were making a research of the country found the old temple. She presented it to the lodge in memory of her hus- band who at one time was a member of the local Masonic order. Brought Home to Him. \What is Duubson working on now? \A picture entitled. 'The Greal American DUSK-IT.\ \ \What gave him that Inspiration?\ \His cellar was robbed,\—Blrmlhg hum Age Herald. Hotlco of Annual IWoetluB of Board o< Supervisors. Notice i8 hereby given, as provided by law that the next annual meeting: of the Board of Supervisor!! of the county of Jefferson, N. T., will bo held in the official chambers Of said board in the county building- in Water- town. N. Y., bejriiining on Monday. November 18,1923, at noon. ,, Ail persons having- bills against the county of.Tefl'ereon are requested to file Bame vrith the eJerk at his office in county buildiosr Tra- tertown, N. Y., on or before the fourth day Of the annual meeting- of said Board of Super- visors, and m default thereof such bills will riot be audited, . ..... Any bill presented for audit authorized by a county official should in every case hare such authorization endorsed thereon. Bills against the several towns in tlie county should be (lied with the town clerk on or be fore Thursday, November 9th. as the abstract of town accounts as audited by the town boards on this date will be final. KTOHABD HOMHSH, Clerk, Board of Supervisors. Dated, Watertown, N, Y., Oct. 5,1921. Watertown, Chanmont & Cape Vin- cent Bus Line. Howard H* Vrooman, Prop. In Effect October 2, 1922 Leave Watertown: 7:30, 10 a; m.; 2, 6, 10 p. m. Leave Dexter: 7:65, 10*:25 a. m.; 2:26, 5:25, 10:25 p. m. Leave Limerick: 8, 10:30 a. m.; 2:30, 5:30, 10:30 p. m. Leave Chaumont: 8:15, 10:45 a, m. 2:46, 5:46, 10:46 p. m. Leave Three Mile Bay: 8:25, 10:55 a. m.; 2:55, 5:55, 10:55 p, mi. Arrive Cape Vincent: 8:50, 11:20 a. m.j 3:20, 6:20, 11:20 p. m, Leave Cape Vincent: 7, 9:30 a. m.; 12:30, 3:80, 7 p. m. Leave Three Mile Bay: 7:25, 9:55 a. m.; 12:55, 3:65, 7:25 p. m. Leave Chaumont: 7:36, 10:05 a. m.; 1:05, 4:05, 7:36 p. m. Leave Limerick: 7:50, 10;20 a. m.; 1:20, 4:20, 7:50 p. mi Leave Dexter: 7;65, 10!26 a. m.; 1:25, 4:25, 7:55 p; «i. Arrive Watertown: 8:20, 10^50 a. m.; 1:50, 4:50, 8:20 p . m. W. P. CUMMINGS funeral Director Clayton, New York Lady Assistant Automobile Equipment Tel, *1-L