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% V H. ROY ALLEN, Editor and Publisher \WWP DEMOOEATIC IN POLITICS. PRICE FIVE CENTS V0L.il CAPE VINCENT, N._ X, THTOSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, L923 NO. 29 State News. —The 1924 meeting of the New York state grange wall be held at Buffalo on February 5, 6, 7 and 8. —The annual barnyard golf touma nient and rabbit supper at the Pres- byterian church, Mexico, has been set for September 21. » -r-The open season for speckled, brown and rainbow trout ended Fri- day and these fish are now protected by law until the first Saturday in April next. —Fred H. Bryant, well known Ma- lone attorney, is the new chairman of the Franklin County Republican -Com- mittee. He succeeds Joseph G. iGokey, of Tupper Lake, resigned.\ —The retail price of milk in Os- wego has been advanced one cent a quart, now selling at 13 cents. There is a possibility that 15-cent milk will prevail in that city within a few months. —The National Highways Protect- ive Society reported that 352 persons had been killed in automobile acci- dents in this state during August— 131 more than in the corresponding month last year. —The Asbestos Burial Casket com- pany, of Lawville, has been incorpor- ated with the secretary of state, at Albany. The company has a capital- ization of ?150,000, The incorporat- ors are all residents of Loiwville. —Bids on the construction of the 1,000,000' bushel state-owned grain elevator at Oswego port will be open- ed on- September li by Edward S. Walsh, state superintendent of public works, according to information re- ceived from Albany. —An examination of more than 3,- 000 head of cattle on the faaims of state institutions has just been com- pleted and shows that two-thirds of the animals are free from evidences of tuberculosis, it is announced by Commissioner Byrne A. Pyrke, of the Department of Farms and Markets. —Oh the last of his long distance hikes through New York state, Ed- ward Payson Weston, veteran pedes- trian, \will visit Ogdensburg. He has not definitely stated when he will visit the extreme northern section, but it is understood i t will be in Oc- tober. Weston is in his 85th year but says he feels fully capable of making 20 miles a day. —Miss Edith L. Allen, of Herkimer, bas been engaged by the board of supervisors of Lewis county as public health nurse of the southern portion of Lewis county and will have her headquarters at Port Leyden. Miss Allen is a graduate of the Homeo- pathic hospital, in Albany, class of 1919, and since that time has been employed in doing public health nurs- ing for the Albany guild. —iSinee the highways along the bor- der, which are most used by rum run- ners, became \passable for motor traffic early last May, federal prohi- bition agents working out of the Ma- lone headquarters under the direc- tion of Robert D. Angell, agent in charge of this district, have seized a total of 82 cars which were being used in transporting liquor from the Canadian side of the boundary line. These seizures have been made in a period of about three and one-half months. The total value of the 82 seized cars now in custody cannot be accurately stated, but an estimate of over $100,000 is believed to be approx- imately correct. Many of the cars are of expensive make and are near- ly new, while others have seen hard usage and are Of much less selling value. larveis NATURAL AND OTHERWISE By T. T. Maxey THE FIELD MUSEUM The exhibits at the World's Fair, Chicago, in 1S93, offered an exception- al opportunity for the founding of a museum as an everlasting memorial of this great international affair and to preserve its endless autiquitle^. To start and further this movement, Mar- shal!. Field, Chicago's merchant prince, donated $1,000,000, and the exhibits desired were selected and placed on display in the Art palace on the expo- sition grounds. When Mr. Field died In 1806 he left $4,000,000 additional for a building to be erected on a permanent site, and another $4,000,000' to ' provide for its maintenance. „Tho great, imposing, spacious-hailed palace of white Geor- gia marble—covering eleven acres of ground-, said to be the largest marble building in the world, which now stands in Grant park on the lake front In Chicago, the Field Museum of Na- tural History, Is the result. Inside, the world, it might be said, awaits_ your inspection. One room 1 holds the exhibits which show the ad- vances made by men of ancient times that led up to the present civilization; another displays Egyptian antiquities without end; a third, bronze and an- cient glassware from Home. Another section contains displaj's representing the early races of North and South America and the Pacific Islands. A highly instructive exhibit is that which shows various birds, animals, fish and reptiles artistically grouped In their natural habitats. One hall is packed with exhibits from China. The habit of growth and structural makeup of many flowers and seeds Is shown in an extremely Interesting fashion. The display of woods from various parts of the world and the products' made from wood Is extensive. Numerous examples of meteorites and crystals, and models showing the workings of mines of many kinds, are shown. Eth- nological and geological collections from Africa, India, Japan and other far-away lands contain many curious objects. The entire world was searched and everything which the authorities\ con- sidered as worthy appears to have been brought to this central headquar- ters for the public to view and study. The carcass of a monstrous herbivor- ous dinosaur which roamed the earth centuries ago is perhaps the oldest in- habitant; the skeleton of a monster whale. Is perhaps the largest single ex- hibit; the smallest probably is the miniature seed of some wee plant; an Indian medicine wheel,, found on a mountain top, surrounded with an air of ceremony, perhaps of sacrifice, too, Its use conjectural, certainly is a most peculiar exhibit. At any rate, the generosity and fore- , sight of a wealthy public-spirited man has made It possible for future gen- erations to \seo the world\ in his home town—Chicago. (©, 1523, Western Newspaper Union.) Some winners use their fair prem- ium money to make still further im- provements in the winning exhibit^ Yea, I do long, myself, the fighting over, to labor in the fields and to turn over with hoe and pitchfork my beloved land.—Aristophanes. WHO SAID \POOR\ INDIAN ? The American Indian, who only a few years ago seemed doomed to ex- tinction, not only has refused to be- come extinct but actually, under the favorable conditions provided by the United States government, has been able to make increases in his num- bers. There are about 341,000 of them in this country at present, which represents an increase of ap- proximately 13,000 in ten years. And their death rate has been growing- smaller year by year. The Indian is ho longer poor unless he cares to be. Government statistics show a number of them to be immensely rich, due to the fact that the lands which they were, endowed by the government have yielded oil in tremendous quan- tities. But even without the oil the Indian has been able to accumulate and add to property year by year. To- day they own $35,000*000 worth of live stock, including more than a mil- lion, sheep, 250,000 head of cattle and about the same number of horses-and mules. ,So, thinking it over, isn't it about time we ceased referring to him as the \poor Indian?\ JEFF, CO. WILL BE HELD AT THREE MILE BAT ON THURSDAY OF THIS WEEK. The annual reunion of the Jefferson County Chautauqua Alumni will be •held at the Baptist church, in Three Mile Bay, on Thursday of this week. There will be two sessions, one in the morning and another in the after- noon. Dinner will be served at 12:80. Folio-wing is the program: Morning Session. Music, America; welcome, by the President; report of secretary; report •of treasurer; business session; elec- tion of officers; report of Northern N. Y. Federation delegate. Afternoon Session. Devotional\ exercises, Mrs. I. L. Hunt; hymn; roll call—Your Class Motto; history C. L. S. C, Mrs. E. T. Coltms;-4;ribute to departed members; song, Lucile Leiterman; reading; mu- sic; report of Chautauqua Assembly, •Mrs. G. C. Supple; hymn, The officers for 1923 are: Presi- dent, Mrs. Bessie L. Vincent, Three Mil Bay; vice-president, Mrs. W.\ H. Waite, Watertown; secretary, Mrs. •G. D. Mount, Three Mile Bay; treas- urer, Miss Emily A. Tolles, Water- town. WHY THE CURIOSITY? One of the great mysteries is why people like to gather in a crowd and W;.atch the pick and shovel brigade dig a hole in the ground. It's a curiosity that isn't limited to the big cities or to towns like Cape - Vincent. 'Go out into the country, start digging, and it'll be just a matter of minutes un- til the farmer will desert his plow or tie up his team and hurry across the field to watch. The crowd that gath- ers to watch the ditch digger is also ready to stop and gaze at the safe being hoisted out of a building, the fallen horse in the. street, the bootleg victim sleeping in the gutter, or sim- ilar sights. It lures them all—from rushing business man t o comer loaf-- er—rich, poor, highbrow and simple- ton. They're all afraid they'll miss something. They are never too busy to waste time.- Yet no one has yet been able to tell just what makes all humanity alike in this respect. NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN. Notwithstanding all that has been said relative to the advances in or- dinance equipment, an old breech loading gun was found at Fort St. Frederick, near Port Henry, and ac- cording to what experts say it is as modern as any used in the World War, even though it has been buried for about two hundred years. Every once in a While something happens or something is unearthed to prove there is nothing new under the sun. The find is accepted as the most im- portant recorded within the past fif- teen years. \ Cash In On Your Good Intentions Good Intentions Have Little If Any Market Value Exoept In the THOUSAND D0LLAE 0LTJB If you intended to save $1,000, as a member of the club, and died before you had accumulated the desired amount your family would get the amount you intend- ed to save-i-AND IN ADDITION they would receive the amount you had actually accumulated with interest compounded at 4 per cent. 1816—1923 Largest National Bank in Northern New York WATERTOW, N. Y, Egyptian Idea of Beauty. The Egyptians made the most ex- haustive researches Into the care and preservation of the skin. Their suc- cess In arresting the decomposition of Its tissues as evinced by the mum- mies of their pre-Christian era kings defies modern science. Just as the se- cret of mixing paints of the old Italian painters has never been duplicated by present-day artists and their mastery of color remains supreme, so the em- balming processes of the old Egyptians died with them; The ancient Egyptians painted their eyes with a long green line and be- lieved very strongly in applying to the eyes mesd'empt, which was considered to have the soothing and healing prop- erties of kohl, which is still used by eastern peoples—where, incidentally, ophthalmia is very prevalent. West Indian Women Work Hard. In the West Indies the women carry enormous loads of bananas, oranges, yams and brown sugar, climbing moun- tain roads at a steady gait of four miles an hour. These women count a 40-mlle walk a mere constitutional. They seem to love their tramp, sad gossip along tl$e road with as much enjoyment as many another woman finds in her Saturday night market chat. South American coffee and cotton planters say the women and children work better than men, though their labor is rewarded with a lower wage. Women barter in fruit, vegetables ana dress goods as \desk traders\ on the steamships which ply between West Indian islands. In Grenada they act as blacksmiths, shepherds, carpenters and carriers. MRS. A. C. LUDLUN, New P York J3n Bals'atn. Rockefeller Stables at the New York State Fair HERS BONUS i? T EVER NOTICE THIS? Did you ever pause in the post- office long enough to take a. squint at the waste basket, or the floor shortly after a number of people .have re- ceived their mail? If you have you were probably struck by the number of circular and form letters and hand bills that littered it up. In fact; you doubtless were struck with the fact that many of them had been thrown in the basket as soon as they were removed from the envelope, the recip- ient never even taking the trouble to give them a second glance. But did you also notice that you don't see anyone throwing- newspa- pers, and especially the home-town newspaper in the waste basket or on the floor? Did you notice that news- papers are always carried away in- stead of tossed away? Well, right there is a mighty good argument in favor of advertising in the newspa- per. The circular letter—a costly form of advertising—goes into the waste basket. The home town paper goes -into the home. Remember this, and spend your advertising money ac- cordingly. Homespun Yarn. In bringing up a child, think of its old age.—Jouibert. It is not too early to plan that fall- planted hedge and other shrubbery. The undernourished child will have the hardest time keeping tip school attendance this fall. A postal cai-d requesting H 114 ad- dressed to the state college of agri- culture at Ithaca will bring a free bulletin on jelly making. CANNON RANGE AND THE THREE-MILE LIMIT. The right of a nation to the water within three miles of its coast is not the simple fixed matter commonly believed. The \three-mile limit\ is more in the -nature of a popular superstition than a fixed principle of international law. Professor Ed- mund Samuel Corvvin analyzes the subject fully in The Forum for Sep- tember. As a matter of fact, he says the foundations of the Marine League doctrine are anything but secure. In the seventeenth century the Dutchman Bynkerschoek laid down the proposition that a nation was en- titled to dominion over the sea ad- joining its coast as far as a cannon shot could be fired,—which happened then to be three 'miles; whereas in 1918 cannon shot were fired seventy- two miles! Reviewing the opinions of writers of the first half of the nineteenth century in his book on \The Sovereignty of the Sea,\ Thomas Wemyss Fulton, a British wrile.- says: \Few accept the three-mile boundary as an alternative to the range of guns; most of the writers indeed do not mention it.\ Cause for Mind to Rejoice. I think every rightly constituted mind ought to rejoice, not so much in knowing anything clearly, as In feeling that there Is infinitely more which It cannot know.—Ruskln, DAZZLING AUTO HEADLIGHTS. Driving into the dazzling lights of an oncoming car is dangerous bus- iness—dangerous alike to the dazzler and the dazzled. And it is so un- necessary. 'To dim the lights of a car is so simple, and easy a task, that it seems that the danger involved by not doing so would compel the motorist approaching another car at night to take this simple precaution against the. possibility of accident to his own car as well as the cars of others. It should not take a law to bring about the dimming of headlights. Common decency demands that a motorist practice this simple rule of night driving etiquette, for it is etiquette, and good manners are just as essen- tial on the road as in the ballroom. ADVERTISING GOSPEL. 1.—Behold an advertiser wen forth to sow; 2.—And' when . he sowed, some seed •fell into hand-bills and dodgers, and Hie street cleaner came and gathered them up. 3.—Some fell amongst concert and theatre programes and the people being interested in the perform- ance and not- in bargains they were left on the seats or crumpl- ed and thrown on the floor. 4.—And some fell\ among fake schem- es and gift enterprises^ and pop- ular contempt sprang up and choked them. 5.—But some, fell into legitimate newspapers, which found their way into the homes of the people who had time to read them, and they brought forth fruit some one hundred fold, some sixty fold, some thirty fold. 6. Who hath ears to hear let him hear. SEPTEMBER 28—INDIAN DAY. Governor Smith, by proclamation, has designated Friday, September 28, as American-Indian Day and request- ed the people of the state to give \serious thought\ to a pi-oclamation issued by the American. Indian order asking that organizations, societies and schools of the state make provis- ion for appropriate exercises \which will bring to mind the historical features of American Indian life in the hope of furthering the progress of these true Americans.\ £< inK :.<-v m JEFFERSON COUNTY'S PIONBER BANK 1 ESTAWiSHED, 18(6 Love Humanity More. We do not realize how much good It does us to love animals.. One who does so usually loves humanity all the better for it. We make close friends of our pets; they are a source of comfort to us such as few things In life are. They deserve memorial. Literature is full of stories of faith- ful pets. Did you ever come home tired at night and find restfulness in the purr and grace of the family cat? Have you felt more like facing the troubles of the world when your dog frisked about your heels and barked his dfe light in your friendship? These are Items of life. They do not stir man -to evil They ijriw _Mm closer to tttpflghte # &**• B ** 8 to :WBrth Her Future Llfqi Planned. Some one asked Miriam what she was going to be when she grew up. Next day she remartaid, \I am going to keep house and lej the man work.\ Causes That \Produce Dreams. Many dreams are due to physical stimuli and surroundings—a curtain flapping in the wind near the bed, cov- ering that.is too heavy, a lump in the mattresses, noises in the street, etc. Other dreams are due to internal con- ditions, such as dreams of illness. It' often occurs that a man wb° does not know he has anything wrong with him will dream of being very ill and In a few days become ill of the same ail- ment of which he dreamed. That is said to be due to the fact that the sub- conscious elaborated and amplified the hidden latent disease which even phy- sicians might nothave been able to dis- cover. There is an old theory that dreams are due solely to the excessive or the Inadequate amount of blood that Is In the brain during sleep, but this theory,.according to a leading scientist, Is only partially true and does not oiler any real or valuable explanation of dreams. Success Implies Sense. Successful ^men as a rule are not superstitious. The man who has got to the top of the ladder Isn't afraid to walk under one.—Boston Evening Transcript. Keeps Flags Clean. To keep locomotive signal flags clean a tubular holder has been in- vented into which they are rolled when not in use by turning a knob. Beginning of Downfall. The darkest hour in the history of any young man Is when he sits down to study how to get money without hon- estly earning It,—Horace Greeley. Everybody Knows How/. \Have you ever noticed,\ asks the JIaryville, Mo., Democrat-Forum, \how everybody knows how everybody else should do something?\ Stray Bits of Wisdom. Blessed is the man who, having nothing to say, abstains from giving us wordy evidence of the fact.— George Bllot. Thought for the Day. If some people paid their bills as promptly as they want work done, much more work would be done at less cost. FIVE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS WILL BE SUBMITTED TO STATE VOTERS. Recognized as probably being the mpst important of the five proposes amendments to the state constitutipn to be voted upon this fall, the one em- powering the legislature to create a debt not to exceed $45,000,000 for a bonus to honorably discharged sol- diers, sailors and marines of the World war, who were residents of New York state when they enterd th military service, was given the first place on the ballot by Secretary of State James A. Hamilton. .Second on the ballot will be the Home Rule amendment authorizing every city to pass local laws in re- lation to its property affairs and gov- ernment, excepting the public school system, and restricting the legisla- ture, except in emergencies on mes- sage from the governor, to passing- general laws affecting all cities alike. Third position on the ballot re- lates to water power development on the forest preserve, authorizing the legislature to provide for the use of not more than three per cent of the forest preserve lands, for the develop- ment by the state of water power for public benefits. The proposed amendment relative to the debt limitations of cities and counties will be the fourth upon the ballot this fail. The fifth position will be given to the proposed amend- ment which, if passed, will give in- mates of soldiers' and sailors' homes the -right to vote under the absentee, voters' act. Sixth position on the ballot has been given by Secretary Hamilton to the one proposition submitted this fall, and which provides for the is- suance of not to exceed $50,000,000' in bonds for the construction of build- ings for insane and charitable insti- tutions. No Trespass Warning. On a farm in south Georgia is post- ed this sign: \Trespasser's will be persekuted to the full extent of 2 mean mongral dorgs which ain't never been ovarly soshibil with strangers and'l dulbbel barlet shotgun which ain't loaded •with no sofy pillers. .Dam, if I ain't tired of this hel raisin' on my prop=- uty.\ FACTS ABOUT \SEA ANIMALS\ Interesting Information Given, by Writer—Oysters and Their Enemies —Limpet's Homing'I nstlnot.. In \Animals of the Sea,\ F. Martin Duncan, F. Z. S., tells the reader that young oysters enjoy but 48 hours' free- dom as moving creatures; then they settle down for life. Among the oys- ter's enemies is the starfish. An in- vasion of \flve-fflngers\ will sometimes destroy a whole bed of oysters In a single night. Some most interesting points gleaned from this book Include: The female lobster has been known to produce 160,000 eggs at a time. Limpets go on traveling expeditions at night, but by a wonderful homing in- stinct, return to exactly the same spot on their \home\ rock. Whelks have from 220 to 250 teeth each, the winkle possesses a set of 3,500, but the dental outfit of the \Umbrella Shell\ is 750,- 000 teeth. The sea urchin has four different kinds of spines, each with a specialized function: weapons, poison- bearers, \chewers\ and cleaners. A giant clam will weigh 550 pounds. A 54-pound ling was found to possess 28,- 361,000 eggs. All Cut Up. \I Save been up and down the world a great deal,\ observed a knowing young man in a certain southern town, \and mixed with all kinds of people, and I have mighty little faith in preachers or any other kind of reform- ers. People are all alike, I know them, I've cut my eye teeth.\ Among those present happened to be an old Quaker, who remarked to the hlase young person; \Thee doesn't seem to have cut thy wisdom teeth yet.\ PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN HOW TO SAVE MONEY WHEN SHOPPING By MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN OftJ3#)W-MaSWW<H><HW<BSr^f3KB5 (©,'1322, Hiiriand H, Allen.) HOW TO BUY YOUR FACE VEIL Strangely enough, it was a man, a man milliner, who initiated me Into the knowledge of veil buying. \There is no detail of a woman's dress that, as a rule, she buys so unlntelllgently, and adjusts so clumsily as she does her face veil,\ lie discoursed, as he stood behind the triple mirror and watched the saleswoman drape one filmy cloud and then another across my hat brim. \And yet the whole effect of a smart street costume can be made or marred by this accessory. If a veil is dainty, delicate, and becoming, It can 'cover a multitude of sins,' \ he hinted, more purposefully than \gallant I must ad- mit. Perhaps a few suggestions about veils, as he gave them to me, may help you make your next one look bet- ter and last longer. If you are a large woman, with pro- nounced features, you may select veils with striking patterns and look very well in them. But haven't you often seen a smtill woman with delicate fea- tures almost hidden under the heavy patterns that would have been very becoming to her larger sister! If you have dainty, small features, you should choose a veil with a small, delicate design. And again, when you want a veil to go with a small, close-fitting hat, choose a slngle-mesh veil; while with a large hat, where the brim is further away from the features, the more fig- ured patterns are quite smart and at- tractive. Oare must \be used when selecting a veil that contains spots or large fig- ures that these are placed so they do not hurt the eyes. If the figures are placed far enough apart, the veil can always be adjusted so that the spots do not come directly In front of the eyes. If you want a filmy veil, you must expect to pay enough to get a really fine mesh. Those made out of stiff- ened cotton are cheaper, but the sticky dressing soon comes off, and then the veil easily crumples and tears. Some women plan to buy these cheaper veils, wear them a few times, and throw them away. But the better veils cost only about twice as much, while they wear three or four times as long, Having selected your veil carefully, learn to take care of It. Don't leave |t on your hat for days together. Pin- ning the veil over a pasteboard roll will keep It from getting stringy. ed str There are 5,500 noncommissioned officers In the American army. Three or four pints of water daily is not too much for a person to drink. In hot weather or when one is exer- cising, even more is needed. Candle ends are handy for smooth- ing flatirons, and for the cleaning of wrought iron. When thinly shaved with a knife they may be used for waxing floors. County News. —The Watertown city council has extended the parking limit in> restrict- zones from 15 to 30 minutes. -•Fred \Toby\ Taylor, formerly of this village, is spending 59 days in the county jail, at Watertown, for ' iking his wife. •The Rev. J. C. Barber, pastor of the Black River Baptist church, and Mrs. Barber celebrated their golden -edding anniversary Monday, —At Thousand Island Park, last Wednesday evening, the Thousand Island Park Club was organized with charter members. Dr. George B. Bielby, of Albany, was elected presi- dent. —iFr&rik Cross, Evans Mills butcher who is seventy-four years old, has killed as many if not more Jive stock than any other butcher in this section of the state he believes. By his own count he has killed 18,982 hogs and over 5,000 cattle. He lias been butch- ering since he was 14 and intends to continue for some years to come. —'Certificate showing that the Walsh & Perry company, doing a business in furniture and undertak- ing at Carthage, has changed its -naime to the Walsh Furniture Corp- oration has been filed with County Clerk Fred H. Moore. Mr. Perry died several months ago. (Eugene A. Walsh is president of the company and Joseph F. Main the secretary and treasurer. —County Clerk Fred H. Moore, Watertawm, has received the 1924 license plates for 15,000' pleasure automobiles in Jefferson county- next year. The plates for commercial and demonstration purposes will come later. The colors are to be grey and white, but otherwise there is no feature difference than those of 1923. These plates are made in Auburn prison for the state of New York. George Countryman, of Water- town, an employe of the New York Air Brake company, was aw&i-ded decreased earnings and full time loss- es totaling $2,044.80' at a hearing in compensation court, at Syracuse, recently before Commissioner James P. Richardson. Countryman was in- jured while at work in the plant of the New York Air Brake company, at Watertown, in 1918 and is pai-tly disabled. The case was contested for five years before the settlement was, reached yesterday. Although he is partly disabled final settlement was made. '—An order directing' the county clerk of Jefferson county to remit to the county clerk of New York county all of the records, papers and deposi- tions in the case of Wiltiaim Ran- dolph Hearst against the Dexter Sul- phite company and others, an action, brought to rescind a contract made in 1920 to purchase the defendant's paper mill at $3,-500,000, was filed in the county clerk's office recently. This is the result of a recent decision of the appellate division refusing to consolidate that action with the one brought by the Dexter company to compel him to complete his contract and have both cases tried as one in. Watertown. How Would You Like to Make More Money ? Most every young man and woman wants to amount to something and to make good money. But—you CAN'T if you stay in the rut where you are now. Always remember this—\THE WORLD MAKES WAY FOR THE DETERMINED MAN OR WOMAN.\ Learn SEORT HAND, BOOK KEEPING, BUSINESS MANAGE- MENT and take one of the splendid positions we have for - graduates of this school. You surely are not go- ing to let this chance slip through your fingers. Write NOW and find out all about it. Northern Business School W. J. Stillman, M. A., Prin. Smith Building Watertown, N. Y. The Editor's friend is the Chap who supports the Home Paper, which means that he Subscribes, Boosts and Advertises. With a Bunch of these Friends, the Editor enn get out a Live Sheet, while Without them he will not do So Good. Be an Editor's Friend, kind reader 1 >2« I W. P. €UMMINGS I Funeral Director I Clayton, New York % Lady Assistant 1 Automobile Equipment I Tel. 21-L Agrigraphs. Bush fruits that start early spring growth should be planted in the fall. Some western experiment stations find that silage of oats and vetch yields more milk, as part of the dairy ration, than corn silage yields. A farmer had better eat the bad eggs himself, if that's the only way to keep him from sending them to market; othex-wise Ms market be- comes even more spoiled than his eggs. The most important crop of the dairy farm is said to be that of the pasture.. Yet some dairymen have never done anything to improve it. E 46 i s a free bullletin on the subject. The state college at Ithaca will send it. Watertown, Chaumdnt and Cape Vin- cent Bus Line. H. H. Vrooman, Prop. In Effect June 10,1923 Standard Time Leave Watertown: 7, 8, 10 a. ra.; 12:30,2,5,6:05,10 p.m. Leave Dexter: 7:25, 8:25. 10:25 a. m.; 12:55, 2:25, 5:25, 6:30,10:25 p. m. Leave Limerick: 7:30, 8:30, 10:30 a. m.; 1, 2:30, 5:30, 6:35, 10:30 p. m. Leave Chauinont: 7:45, 8:45, 10:45 a. m.; 1:15, 2:45, 6:45, 6:50 10:46 ip. m. Leave Three Mile Bay: 7:66, 8:55, 10:55 a. m.; 1:25, 2:55, 5:65, 7, 10:55 p. m. Arrive Cape Vincent: 8:20, 9:20, 11:20 a. m.; 1:50, 3:20, 6:20, 11:20 p. •m. Leave Cape Vincent: 7, 9:80,10:50 a. m.;12:30, 3:30, 4:40, 7 p. m. Leave Three Mile Bay: 6:60, 7:25, 9:65, 11:15 a. m.; 12:65, 3:65, 5:05, 7:25 p. m. Leave Chauinont: 6, 7:35, 10:05, 11:25 a. in.; 1:05, 4:06, 5:15, 7:35 ,p. m. Leave Limerick: 6:15, 7:50, 10:20, 11:40 a. m.j 1:20, 4:20, 5:30,7:60p. an. Leave Dexter: 6:20, 7:55, 10:25, 11:45 a. m.; 1:25, 4:25, 6:35, 7:55 p. m. Arrive Watertown: 6:45, 8:20, 10:50 a. m.; 12:10, 1:50, 4:60, 6, 8:2U p. m. Extra trips Saturday and Sunday: Leaving Watertown 7 p. m. Leaving Cape Vincent 9:30 p. m. Connections with Steamer Waubic for Kingston at Cape Vincent. Steamer Waubic leaves Cape Vin- cent 9:40 a, m. and 4 p. m. Arrives Kingston 11:25 a. m. and 5:46 p, m. Get your job printing at this office.