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H. ROY ALLEN, Editor and Publisher DEMOCRAT 10 IN POLITICS. PRICE FIVE CENTS VOL 50 CAPE VINCENT, N. Y., NOVEMBER 9, 1922 NO. 38 —The Masonic temple at Middle^ town was burned recently, with a loss of $150,000. —Oneida Methodists have started a drive for $150^000 which-is to erect a new church. —Chenango county has. 6,000 less population than in 1860, according to census figures. —The village of Oliittenango is again agitating the proposition to put in water works. —More than $15,000,000 i s collected annually by professional alms-seekers. in Greater New York. . . T^There are to^lbe b'ttlt nine pancels/ •offend - sold in Cortland county, for delinquent taxes this year. —At least $1,200 was cleared from the i-ecent fair and carnival held at Croghan for the benefit of St. -Stephen'sjcemeteuy. —A Boonville banker has a diary that says that village was covered with two feet of snow twenty-seven , years ago October 25. • —'New York State pays $150 a day for the care, maintenance and educa- tion of blind babies and small child- - ren whose parents are unable to meet the tuition. —During the month of October thirty arrests were made an Ogdens- iburg, sixteen of which were for public intoxication. The amount of fines collected was $285. —The Boonville .Dairy company, Inc., has sold to the Empire State Dairy company, Inc., of 'Brooklyn, property in the village of Boonville, for a consideration of about $17,500. —iGeorge F. Johnson, the shoe man, has given the city of Binghamton property valued at $190,000, near the center of the city, for a park. He took that way to celebrate his birth- day. —By installing water meters at some of the largest users, the Earl- ville Water Board discovered that the milk shipping plant was using over 1,000,000 gallons a week, twice the consumption of all the users living within the corporation. —Christian Endeavor societies are being organized in New York State at the rate of two a day, according to William H. Brown of Rochester, pres- ident of the state union. There are now 2,500 societies in the state-, 597 having (been organized during the last year. —A milestone, one of 240 to be .placed along >the line extending from the North Sea to the Swiss boundary and representing the furthest advance of the German army during the World war, will be provided by the National Guard of the State of New York, according to an announcement made by Adjutant General J. Leslie Kincaid. —Bible reading in the Syracuse public schools is being delayed by the inability of school officials to obtain a Bible reading text -, book which is -now in •use. It will probably be after November 15 before Bible reading is started and then it is expected the Catholic clergy will ask an injunc- tion to prevent the Scripture being read in the public schools. —The state .motion picture regulat- ion commission will soon- appoint eight inspectors or (reviewers of motion picture films. The applicants for these positions will be obliged to pass a civil service examination before being eligible for appointment. The date for filing applications has ex- pired and the state civil service com- mission will shortly set a date for the examination's. The eight inspectors will be named by the motion picture commission at salaries ranging from $1,600 to $2y500. The minimum age shall be 25 years and good eyesight is essential. STORIES OF QRE AT INDIANS By Elmo Scott Watson i-opyriETlu, 3922, Western Newspaper L-U'^M PHILIP OF POKANOKET, \TER. ROR OF NEW ENGLAND\ S HOULD the apologist for the In- dian try to justify the red 'man's cruelty by citing cases of white bar- barity, he need' only refer to the case of ICIng Philip of Pokanoket, chief of the Wampanoags. Wheii he was killed the colonists treated- his body as though It; were the carcass of a wild beast. They beheaded and quartered _him, They exhibited the head* on a gibbet at Plymouth for 20 years and they nailed the quarters on trees. One of his hands, mutilated by a -bursting •pistoli^jvas* given, to Alderman, his. stayer..** King Philip (Metncomet) was the second sou of friendly old Massasoit •but he had no love for the white men. He saw that unless their expansion .vas stopped his own race was doomed. So he began uniting the tribes of New England against them. The colonists suspected that he was preparing for war but he succeeded In deceiving them until June, 1075, when his warriors, contrary to his orders, attacked Swansea, Mass. Concealment' being ho longer possible, I'fillip plunged Into the conflict with suvage\ fury. The next .tli£ge months his warriors and their allies, the Narrngansetts, de- stroyed 12 of the 90 towns in New England. The \Terror of New England\ readied the peak of his career at the Battle of Bloody Brook near Deerfield where he killed 00 colonists. After that the star of the Wampanoag began to wane. Wetumoo, Jiix sister-in-law, the \Sqaw Sachem of Pocnsset,\ who had led 300 warriors into I he field' to aid Philip, was killed by the colonists who cut off her head and set It up on a pole at Taunton, Mnss. Then the chief's wife and _soji were captured and sold into slavery in the West In- dies. \My hen it breaks' now, 1 am ready to die,\ said the great chief. By now he, with only a few faithful followers, was fieeing iroiiL-place to place like a hunted wild animal. One of his warriors sugg^ed surrender, and Philip Instantly IcIJled him with one blow of his tomahawk. Alder-, man, the slain warrior's brother, im- mediately deserted to the English and offered to lead Captain Church to Phil- ip's hiding place. On August 12, 1676, the English sur- rounded the swamp where the Warn- paining had taken refuge. As they closed in they sighted their tjuarry speeding along a path, one of-the few avenues of escape from the swamp. Suddenly AJdarmi.iii. i'oso up before -the fleeing chief. He 'fired and King Phil- ip fell with two wounds in his breast. Alderman's gun had been double charged—one bullet for his brother and one for himself! Riches From Inventions. Sir Henry Bessemer, who invented the steel-making process, was a poor boy who went to London from a coun- try town to seek his fortune. Cyrus McC'ormlck, who creuted the reaper and self-binding harvester, died worth, $20,000;000. W. L. Bundy was a watch- maker. He Invented the time clock which keeps tatr on employees In fac- tories and places of business, and It made him rich. For a wall mop, a pad of wool or cotton cloth tied over a broom is just the thing. Would Result In Tragedy. A story in a popular magazine says: \Her complexion was like velvet over which cream had been poured.\ This may pass in these times as graphic writing, but if a young man attempted to plant a kiss on that, kind of a com- plexion he would skate otf and sprain his chin.—New Orleans States. Eyes Scientifically Examined, Prescriptions • Filled, Glasses Designed, Made, Fitted and Repaired. Geo. F. Hill OPT0JEETEIST and OPTICIAN OWIS BIIIIDING Watertown, New 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 m our 4 Per Cent Interest Department 1816—1922 Largest National Bank in Northern New .York WATERTOWN, N. Y, JE1FERS0N COUNTY NATIONAL BANK JEFFEBSOJll CMUtfTY'S PIONEER BANK \ \ \ E'ST»m.J5HEP .1,81* GO. INS SCYTHE TREE OF CIVIL WAR DIS- TINCTION AWARDED FIRST MONEY. The picture prize contest for the most, important historical tree in •the (State of New York,. conducted by The New York State College of For- estry/has been decided and'the prize won by Alva H. Pulver, of Sodus, N. Y. The prize is $10. The tree which won the prize of $10 for Mr.'Pulver is located oh the ifianm of Clarence Sehaffer in Sene- ca county. It is a Balm' of Gilead tree ;and is know ih the neighbor- 'hood as 't'he old scythe tree.\ The story in connection with the 'tree iollows: In 1861, when he learned jFort Sumter had been fired on, Jas, Wybua-n Johnson, of the town of Wa- terloo, N. Y., came in fi-om the field bringing his scythe, which was plac- ed in a small Balm of Gilead tree near the. house. With the \final re- mark, \leave the scythe in the tree untill I return,\ he enlisted, in the union service. The parents^of young Johnson for, a time heard friom their boy and then a silence c.ame, extending from month to month. The war records 'shows that the young man was mor tally wounded in North Carolina, dy- ing in a hospital there, and was bur- ied in the South in 186'4. Im the yeans of the war the scythe was re- ligiously confined to the tree and it was .some time afterward before the family finally learned of their son's fate. In the meantime the six-inch •sapling began to grow - about' the blade of the scythe. It finally\ held the- scythe securely and the inroads :of elements loosened the handle which dropped away. At the pres- ent time only about six inches of the blade potrudes f-itom the side of the tree.' I<n the photo this may- be seen on the right side of the tree.. The G. A. R. Post of Waterloo maintains a flag on the tree i n mem- ory of Johnson from year to year. As soon as one is frayed it is replac- ed by a new one. Each Memorial day the Post conducts it's annual services under the spreading branch- es of the tree, which now has a span of about ninety feet and is fully one hundred,\ feet high. . Agrigraphs. But let the good old corn adorn The hills o,ur fathers trod; Still let us, for His golden corn-, Send up our thanks to -God! —-Whittier. Cutting out dead canes in benry patches and burning them cremates insects. Uncle Ab says: The longer I live the more I see we're all part of a large family, and that a hurt to one, hurts all. Let the farmer forevermore be hon- ored in his calling; for they who la- bor in the earth are the chosen people of God.—Thomas Jefferson. With the acute fuel problem, it is well to turn dead apple trees and limbs into firewood; there should be a sale for wood in the nearby town- for fireplaces. ' Reports from Washington show that 159,820 American farmers selec- ted seed corn last fall. (Would there have been only 159,819 if it hadn't been for you 1 Are you making the most of your farm ? \How to Plan the Fawn Lay- out\ is a bulletin the state college of agriculture at Ithaca has just issued. It might help you. Ask for E -55. Business methods are as essential to success in dairying as in any other manufacturing eterprise. Dairy im- provement association members real- ize that testing isn't a novelty, but a necessity. •——7- : ' ' '\ • Musical Comedy To Be presented at the Strand Theater.on Thursday and Friday Evenings. PROGRAM Ohio River Steamer,'Wancy Lee ACT I~On Deck. fe^ y ACT 11,-In the Cabin. \ Cast L Captain Codd •;...!. Philip Merchant Sambo ,. Paul Grandjean Dinah.,.. '. ,; v .. Winifred Wiley Miss Bon Ton ,...'.....',.. Dorie Merchant Miss Construe i. Marguerite Cody Hiram ; , .Walter Blum Mirandy MrS; Norman Hinkley Mrs. Winton Mrs. Walter Blum Mrs. Daniels...,, '..'.. Pearl Brownlee Mr. Winton ; Everett Bobbins Mr. Daniels ',.; , .Milton Wheeler Algy. '.....\.... .T. Ned Allen Musical Numbers Act I I How-Do-Do, Captain, Dinah, Sambo and-Fotks on Deck I Waht a Gibson Man, - ' Miss Construe I'se Looking for a Good Man < - Dinah Mr, Gallagher and Mr. Shean, Messrs. Robbins & Allen The Hinkey Dee, - Marie>Cody and Clown Girls ' 'Till My Luck Comes Rolling Along, Everett Robbins and Chorus Dixie Doodle, ' - Marie Cody and U. S. A, Chorus Cow Bells, - - ' Cora Wiley Sea Saw, Misses Davis and Messrs. Robbins & Allen Act II Hello, I've Been Looking for You, Everett Robbins arid Young-Ladies Specialty Dance, Mary Davis & Everett Robjbins So Long Oo Long, Marguerite Cody &. Japanese Girls Miss Up-To-Date, Dorie Merchant & Society Chorus Sweet Long Ago, Marguerite Cody & Old Fashioned Maidens Dutch Dance, - - - Davis Sisters Dainty Little Ingenue, Dorie Merchant and Young MerT& Maidens Orange Day in California, Marie Cody & Junior Chorus^ Great To Be Home, ( - - - All On Deck So Long Everyone, • - - Entire Cast Pianists—Miss Louise Merchant, Mrs. Ruth Roat Heifer Excelsior Orchestra Choruses • Misses,,Estel!a and. Violet Gadjh^y, ,Marjp.rje_Flgke. Elsie Robbins, Margaret Gordon, BethAinsworth, Reba Peo, Lucille Steblin. Messrs. Frank Bennett, Edward Kilborne, Harland Kesler, Harold Lanhan, Sidney Gordon, Merrill Wheeler Benefit St John's Church Choir Admission 40c Reserved Seats 55c Homespun Yarn. The tea kettle will repay good care; it should be washed at least once a day, inside and out. Keeping the cloths Used to oil furniture in a covered earthenware or tin container reduces the danger of fire. When there's a big apple crop— and other times—^give the children apples instead of cookies when they're hungry btweeta meals. Aunt Ada's Axioms: Having hus- band help with the dishes -once i n a wbile and making it his regular job are two different things. WEIGHT OF, CAR WILL DETER- MINE FEE WHICH. THE OWNER WILL PAY. AH license plates for 192_3 have been received at the county clerk's : offiee in Watertawn, and will be is sued commencing November 15, 1922, but cannot be used until January 1, 1923. The colors of the „plates are purple .and white. All license plates expire December 81, 1922. Tbe county clerk will deliver with-the li- cense plates a certificate of registra- tion, thus doing away with the delay sometimes experienced jn getting these certificates f*om Albany. All cars will be licensed by weight. Transfer rff the ownership ,of the cars will be taken care of at the clerk's office and it wall be mnneces sary as heretofore, to .send to Albany to transfer^wnership. This applies only to cars originally registered in Jefferson county. It will how be pos sibie t o ascertain the name of the owner of any Jefferson county car at the clerk's office. All owners of Jef^ ferson county cars must apply at the county clerk's office for license plates and they will be unable to procure •plates from any other source. If the car weighs 3,500 .pounds or less the fee is 50 cents for each 100 pounds or major fraction thereof. If the car weighs more than 3,500 pounds the fee is 75 cents for each 100 pounds or major fraction thereof. The minimum fee for four cylinder oars is $8 and the minimum fee for six, eight and twelve cylinder cars is 0. ' ' If the combined weight of a truck and carrying capacity is two tons ov less the fee is $16. If the com- bined weight of truck and carrying capacity is more than two tons the fee is $8 for each ton or fractional part thereof. There is no change in the registra- tion fee for omnibuses or trailers. The fee'for the registration of motor cycles is ?5. The fee for the trans- fer of a car or truck is $2 and for a motor cycle $1. If a car, omnibus, trailer or motor' cycle is registered for the first time in New York state on or after July 1, the fee is one half the amount of ihe_fe.e-ior_a_XuH .year. \ It is desired that applicants apply at the county clerk's office for 1923 license plates as soon after November 15 as possible. In this, way, delay and crowding -will be avoided. It is advisable that applicants bring their 1922 certificates of registration when they apply for new license plates. Applicants must know the name and candle power of their headlights be- fore a license can be issued. In the fall, try planting pansy seed shallow, and sweet peas deep for aiext spring's blooming. And so may iris be transplanted in the autumn. There is no happiness in life, there is no misery, like that growing out of the dispositions which- consecrate or desecrate a home.—Chajpin. -Cheese is a hearty food, and gener- ally shouldn't be eaten at the end of a big' meal. Used as a meat substitute and properly cooked, it is an excellent food. Subscribe for the Eagle 'King Takes No Chanpe3. King Alfonso of Spain has given not a few evidences of being a fairly sen- sible monarch. He furnished^ the latest at Deauville, where he has been a regular watcher of the reckless gam- bling in the baccarat rooms without ever joining In the play. He explained his abstention by saying: \I am not rich enough to piny baccarat.\ Whcth- i er his plea of comparative poverty was well grounded or not, it is likely tfyit, as he looks about Europe and notes the' 'thrones tjiat are without the kings who once sat on them, his bump of cttution Is developed to a point 'where he realizes the dangers that beset a king who is too ready to tfke a chance.—Christian Science Monitor. - « His Lack. \Loofcy yur, Gap!\ Indignantly cried Mrs. Johnson. \I've been trying to get a sensible answer out of you for right smart of a while, and all you say is 'Bus?' What's the matter with you, anyhow? Hain't you got no sense ?\ , \Not a*—p'tu 1—-durn bit!\ replied Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge. \I've been trying tor three, four hour's to Agger out a right good name for that there new dog of mine, and kain't think of a thing.\—' insas City Star. UNCLE HANK Wh«n a man makes a fool out of himself, he is seldom liqndicapped by. lack Of material. v 67 Public Square, : Watertown, N. Y. Opposite the Fountain. The Season's Most Beautiful Coats Featured This Week Slender lengths, novel sleeves, and a lavish use of furs make the new coats more fash* ionable, more beautiful and more flattering in general appearance than they have been m several years. Full length coals and capes in the favored soft pile fabrics, luxuriously trimmed with Wolf, Fox, Beaver, Squirrel, Caracul and Haceoon! Draped models, Moused niodels, or straight lines and loose backs. Colors, Navy, Black, Brown, and Reindeer. ' . $29.50, $49.50, to $125.00 New Autumn Dresses Smart—Modish—Inexpensive. A remarkable collection of new styles, including cir- ..qular Jacquette, and \Basque effects. Materials—Silks, Canton, Crepe, \Jacquard Crepe, Satin Back Crepe. Twill Cord and Tricotine. Trimmings embrace beads, embroidery, fancy buckles and ornaments. At $19.SO, $35.00, $29.50 to ST5.00. There is an air about Long's raiment which it is difficult to define, It lies not alone in clever designing, nor perfect workmanship, nor even in the superb choice of materials, but rather in a combination of all three, a combination that meets the eye with ease, and is not hurtful on, the purse. Tr;jt Long's FIRST—It Pays THE MISSING MESSENGER TT WAS on June 14, 1904, that Kent •*• Loomis, brother of F. B. Loomis, the assistant secretary of state, sailed . from New York on board the \Kaiser Wllhelm II, bearing with him the text of a treaty between the United States : and Abyssinias^-a treaty concerning which there had been much conjecture and speculation on the part of certain European powers. Uhd,er ordinary circumstnnces Loom- , is would have taken his wife and child with him; on this occasion, he con- sidered it best to leave them behind in Parkersburg, W. V., both on aeeoun* of the fact that he was oh a diplo- jnatle mission and because he Intended to participate In some big-game hunt- ing after delivering the treaty to King Menelik. Nothing unusual occurred on the trip -until the morning of June 20, the day oh which the steamer was due to dock at Plymouth, England. It was then noted that I^oomfs' seat at the captain's table was 'empty and a steward was dispatched to find out If he were ill. A few minutes later the steward returned with the news that Loomis' berth had not been occupied and an Immediate search of the ship was. ordered—but without bringing re- light the slightest trace of the repre- sentative of the American government. Several passengers volunteered the Information that they had seen Loomis^, on deck shortly after mid- night and William B. Ellis, cabin- mate and traveling companion of the missing passenger, declared that his friend's absence from the cabin had not alarmed him b*cause of the fact that Loomis had come in at a fairly late hour on several previous evenings. British officials at Plymouth and the French officers at Cherbourg repeated the search of the steamer, but in vain. Nothing wns missing from the cabin save the suit which Loomis was wear- ing at the time and even the flat dis- patch box which contained the text of the treaty was found concealed be- neath a pile of clothing in one corher of Lqomls' trunk. Investigation de- veloped the* fact, however, that the State department messenger had been In the habit of carrying this box In his pocket and had laid It aside on the previous evening only because it made an unseemly bulge in the dress clothes which he had donned in honor of the captain's dinner. During the next few weeks rumors of all kinds filled the press on both sides of the AtlanUc. Loomis had gone suddenly mad and had been placed In a sanatorium. He Jiad slipped oft the steamer at Plymouth disguised as a second-class passenger. He was the victim of a clique' of International spies who, balked in their attempt to secure possession of the text of the treaty, were holding him for ransom. He was still confined in the.hold of the Kaiser Wllhelm—and so on to the limit o'£ the luiighiations of those who like to use fact \as a basis for fiction. But ail these reports were set at rest when, on the morning of July 10 —just thirty-two days after Loomis had sailed from New York—n body was washed up at Wiiwen Point, about .fifteen miles from Plymouth. Believing that tbe body was that of a common sailor, the local police were about to Inter it without further cere- mony, when, from the wnteh-poeke! of the trousers there dropped a water soaked bit of pasteboard, upon, which was barely di-ccrnihle the name. \Kent J. Loomis.\ Careful oxiiniiiiiitlon , of the body developed the fact Hint, under the right ear. there wns a elrc-ulnr wounci which appeared to have been inlllcteo before death and » post-mortem ex- amination of the lungs of the dead m:m showed conclusively that death had been due to the blow which had resulted. In this wound, rather than to drowning. The physicians were di- vided in their opinion as to whether the blow hud been delivered by an in- strument similar to a blackjack or whether Loomis might have fallen and struck his head against a projecting portion of the ironwork on the steam- er. Examination of the ICuiser Wll- helm's log showed, however, that the sea had been extremely calm on the night that Loomis came to Ills death and that there had not been enough roll to cause anyone to lose his foot- ing. Besides, there was the evidence of the manner In which the body was clothed. The coat was missing, the collar had been torn partly away and there were other signs of rough treat- ment before Loomis had struck the water. • It was therefore practically certain that the messenger had been mur- dered. But who hud killed him—and why? Had he been struck down on account of the money he was carrying or because of. the treaty? Was his death a forecast of the World war which was to follow twelve ' years later? These and all the other questions which surrounded the mystery remain as one of the unsolved riddles of diplomatic intrigue. —A town basketball team, has been organized at Alexandria Bay. —Helen Barton has been installed as noble grand of the Orleans Kebekah lodge, at LatPaiigeville. . —The -societies -of the- Methodist church,\ at Browmville, are raising -funds'for the purchase of a, piano. —Stuart D. Lansing has been elec- ted president of the Jefferson County .National Bank, n>£ Watertown, to suc- ceed Robert J. Buck, resigned. —The village of Alexandria 'Bay has purchased an Aheriis^Fox triple combination motor pumper. It has a .capacity of 1,000 gallons ipei' minute and cost $13,600'. —Mr. and Mrs. Riley M. Allen and Mr. and Mrs. Charles. Kent and -daughter, Miss Helen, of Clayton, have gone to California, where they will spend the winter. —Two Watertown banking institu- tions,, the Watertown National Bank and the City National Bank, are to consolidate under the name of the Watertown National Bank. —The new hospitarT at Carthage, •under the direction of Mass Rilla L. McNeil, -was opened tost Plriday. Miss McNeil is a graduate of the Sisters' .hospital, Watertown. —Robert Daley, Glenn Fuller, Eos- well VanLuven and Lee Fitzgerald, of Watertowm, left that city last Wed- nesday by automobile for Long Beach California. The young men intend to make California their future hotne. —The Herrings Hotel, conducted by Frank Menard, at Herrings, was bung- larized Friday morning shortly after 3:30 and overcoats, clothing, canned fruits and vegetables, cigairs, cigar- ettes and tobaccos to the amount of nearly $1^000 were stolen. —During the .month of October there were 67 births in Watertown, according to reports of vital statistics filed with Registrar Miss Minnie E. Carnes. A total of 43 deaths occur- red in the city during the month and 28 marriage licenses were issued. -J. Victor Baron, genera! -manager of the Sherman paper company, of Great Bend and Felts Mills, and a director in the Jefferson County Na- tional bank, of Watertown, has been elected president of the Carthage Sulphite Pulp & OPaper company, to succeed the late James A. Ouitterson. —At a meeting of the Jefferson county organization of the Amnerdcan Legion, held at Carthage, it was the sentiment of those present that for- mer service men of this county suffer- ing from tuberculosis should .not be sent to government hospitals at New Haven, Brooklyn and other places-, -but should be given treatment at the Jefferson county tuberculosis sana- torium, Saranac Lake or other places in_the North Country. —At a recent meeting of -the Thous- - and Island Park Association the following officers were elected: Presi- dent, Harvey W. Kreuzburg, Cincin- nati, O.; vice-president, Olive B. Kreuzburg, Cincinnati; treasurer, Harvey W. Kreuzburg; secretai-y, Adelbert Thiebeaiu, Thousand Island Park; trustees, Harvey W. Kreuz- burg and Olive B. Kreuzburg, Cin- cinnati; Howard J. Lefevre, Beaver Falls; Adelbert Thiebeau, Thousand Island Park; Robert D. Grant, Clay- ton. nOhest consultation 'clinics under the direction of the Jefferson County Tubwculosis Committee will be held at Carthage on Thursday, Nov. 9th, and at Adams on Friday, Nov. 10th. The examining physicians will be Dr. Lont, from Saranac Lake, and Dr. Bmanc, from the Forresters Sana- torium. Persons having a persistent cough after an attack of influenia or pneumonia, or who are experienceing a loss of weight and appetite, or a run down tired feeling without ap- parent cause, are invited to attend. However, a person will only be ad- mitted by a card signed by his family doctor. Print BUI Cut $2,000,000. The government printing office, the largest printing establishment in the world, used 50,000,000 pounds of pa- per during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1921. The sheets, laid flat, would cover 36 square miles; piled in the form of octavo books, they would ex- tend 500 miles into the heavens. To- tal expenditures were $11,111,111, com- pared with $13,000,000 fof the previous year, the Scientific American states. jphe oflice prints, besides the speeches of legislators, numerous government publications, congressional documents, and stationery. —The H. fe. Babcock company) of Watertown, have received an order for 260 bodies for Lincoln automobil- es, which will keep the Babcock plant running fnll force until the coming My. Watertown, Chaumont & 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: 7:55, 10:25 a, m.; 2:25, 5^, 10:26 p. m. Leave Limerick: 8, 10:30 a. m.; 2:30, 5:30, 10:30 p. m. ' Leave Chaumont: 8:15, 10:46 a. m. 2:45, 5:46, 10:46 p. m. Leave Three Mile, Bay: 8:25, 10:65 a m.; 2:55, 5:66, 10:55 p. m. Arrive Cape Vincent: 8:50, 11:20 a. m.; 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: 7s25, 9:55 a. m.j 12:65, 3:55, 7:25 p. m. Leave Chauimont: 7:35, 10:06 a. m.J 1:05, 4:06, i:35 p. m. Leave Limerick: 7:50, 10:20 a. m,; 1:20, 4:20, 7:50 p. m. Leave Dexter: 7:56, 10:26 a. m.; 1:25, 4:25, 7:55 p. m. Arrive Watertown: 8:20, 10:50 a. m.; 1:60, 4:66, 8:20 p. m. W. P. CUMMI^eS Funeral Director Claytott, New York Lady Assistant Automobile Equipment Tel. 31-L Subscribe for the Eagle. $1,50 a year