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•Qtoiiy\}* *»*» *•?», H. R. Allen and C. E, Allen, Publishers DEMOCRATIC IN POLITICS. PRICE FIVE GENTS VOL, 56 CAPE VINOTT, X t, 18DAT, SEPTEMBER 13, 19:28 NO. 31 —\The Republicans of the town of Gouverneur have organized a Hoover- -Curtis club. ^—Thomas f. Dowd has been elect- ed grand knight of St. Lawrence Council, Knigbte of Columbus, of Massena. —The Clarkson College football team, of Potsdam, has commenced practice under the direction of CoacT C. B. Johnston. —Howard L. Cross, of Fayetteville has been re-elected president -of the; New York State Bay and Grain Dealer's Association.' —Attorney Frank L. Cubley, of Potsdam, has been appointed assist ant grand lecturer of the second Ma sonic district of St. Lawrence county —Joseph A. Wallace, head of the Wallace Billpostiing service and foi many years identified with the theatrical business 1 in Oswego, leift an estate that amounts to' more than $250,000. —At a special election, held re- cently ,the taxpayers of Pulaski car- ried a proposition to' raise $12,500 by tax to purchase a motor driven triple combination, pumping, chemi cal and hose car. —An official call has .been mailet to pastors and superintendents of more than six thousand Sunday schools in New York state inviting them to attend the seventy-third State Sunday School Convention ' scheduled for Schenectady, October 9- 12, 1928, and to -have delegates ap- pointed to represent their schools. —Petitions are being circulated throughout Chenango county raising objections to the new law passes bj the State Legislature allo\Ving ar open season on deer in every countj in the state. The petitions are being sponsored by members of the Lake Ludlow club and other sportsmen oi Chenango county who are interested in the preservation of the deer al- ready within the county limits. —Eighty-<nve-year-old twins is a rarity, but Herkimer county boast? such a pair in the Petrde twins, Al fred and Albert, the former from Middleville. and the latter 1 from Herkimer. Both met recently a't the home of-the Middleville young man and there celebrated their anniver- sary together. They were born Au- gust 13, 1843, at Locust Grove, neai Middleville, and have lived in thai vicinity since. PERSONAL LIBERTY. Carthage Republican-Tribune: Because prohibition of liquor by law involves the question of person- al liberty, some people are determin- ed to prove Mieir independence by drinking all the \stuff\ they can get —and many of them have paid the bill with their lives. Again the question of personal liberty bobs up in laws designated to free highways of criminally reckless and drunken drivers. Thousands of traffic officers patrol the roa'ds for this purpose and thousands of ar- rests are made every day, but until the law-abiding element co-operates with state authorities all this effort will come to- naught, and in the end vigilance committees may be organ- ized. Meanwhile personal liberty gives the right to cross the road be- tween cars, drive into the side of moving trains or step on the gas when rounding dangerous curves. Personal liberty plays another im- potftant part in the carrying of guns. Aim|munition manufacturers declare it is their right and privilege to make them and even make deadly and poisonous gas. One can't constitutionally dis- ci'iminate between illegal liquor, criminal car drivers, or gun-men from the personal liberty standpoint —but some day a long-suffering people will clean it all up. Subscribe for The Eagle. S1.50 n Year •TTK. KITCHEN CABINET ((c). 1928. Western Newspaper Union.) Every step mankind has. taken has been Spirit led. Every new discovery has been GocT.s revela- tion of Himself. With every new blaze of light man comes nearer' to the central power over the world.—Anon. ECONOMICAL DISHES As meat Is our most expensive item In the dinner menu, we like to serve as wholesome and appetizing food as\ possible within the limit of our budget for food, Here Is a good' dish worth try* ing: S h ephe.rd's Pie.—Take any bits of leftover meat: lamb, beef, pork or mutton, cut into neat pieces. Pry one onion, chopped fine, in butter, add some pepper finely minced for flavor, season with sal! and pepper and cook five mmuiesi Cover, with broth and simmer fifteen minutes; add a little French mustard- put the hash into a deep dish and' cover with mashed potato, set In the oven, brown lightly and serve. Cataline Hamburger.—Take one pound of chopped beef, seasoned and formed into cukes. Fry in butter and when cooked remove to a hot platter Put one. chopped onion in the sauce* pan, two ehbpped green peppers and let them fry in the fat, add one to- mato chopped, cool: five minutes and stir In a little French mustard; pouit over the steaks and serve. The cheaper cuts of meat, if proper- ly cooked, are more flavorful and nu- tritious than chops, steaks or legs of lamb. Doctor McCollum says there is no more reason for buying steaks. ehops and ham than there is for in- vesting in summer furs. In both cases we do it because It is the custom. A small amount of meat, such as a good cut from the shoulder, will, if browned and cooked with vegetables, make a most satisfactory meal. It is well known that the coarser and- cheaper cuts of meat are more rich in extractives than those of muscle not so much used, such as chops, steaks and tenderloins. Long slow cooking will soften the tough fiber of meat and result in a good-flavored dish. In many cases the use of steaks and chops are found in families where little thought is given to the food; it Is easier to cook a steak than to get a pot roast ready and see that It Is properly cooked. Homespun Yarn. Poultry is ready to be canned as soon as the animal heat has left it— about six to eight hours after killing. •Fresh grass or mildew stains on fabrics will disappear if washed in dear cold water. Don't use soap for them. Squeeze velveteen or corduroy dry after laundering and don't use a wringer which may cause permanent creases. Leaving the oven door ajar for half an hour after baking allows the moisture from cooking to escape and prevents a rusted oven. A cheap tin tray may be converted into a useful and decorative article for your dining room if i t is enamel- ed in a color which will harmonize with your china. Before buying the children's school shoes write for Cornell's bulletin 'Feet and Shoes\ and find oujfc what gives comtfor-t in a shoe. A postoar'd addressed to the office of publication, college of agriculture, Ithaca, N. Y., asking for E 149 will bring it. Schedule of Dates f Going Home from a Homecoming fj. \OPEN DAY AND NIGHT\ .FRANKLIN LUNCH 120 Frufciklin St. WATERTOWN Best place in city for home cooked meals—pastries. Tasty food at rea- sonable prices. Officially inspected and approved by Publicity Bureau Destiny Has been decided for many a man by just that one little amount he has set aside each day. When the big opportunity comes, will you be able to seize it ? Open an Account-To-day The Amount Doesn't Count- It's the Start—That's the Thing. The Jefferson County National Bank Watertown, N. Y. DANIEL B. SCHUYLER, President CHARLES A. DUNHAM, Cashier A supply of the 1928 syllabus of Ash and game laws ,issued by the Conservation Comimission, giving the opening and closing dates for the taking of fish and g-ame, h'ais arrived at the office of W. F. Blum, town !elerk. • Among the changes noted is that in the shooting of grouse or part- ridge.. A closed season has been decreed and there will be ho shooting ;of partridge this fall. Another change noted is that of allowing the taking of dogs afield for training during September and October, without, license, provided the owners carry no firearms. No in- jury shall be inflicted on gaime. A sketch of the open and closed seasons follow: • Beaver—No open season. Bear—October 15 to November IB. Deer—In the counties of Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Fulton, Hamilton, Herkimer, Jefferson, Lewis, Oneida, Oswego, Saratoga, St. 'Lawrence, Warren and Washington, October 15 to Novemjber 15. In the towns of Jackson, Salem, and White Creek, Washington county, Novemlber 7 to November 19. In Columbia, Delaware, Orange, Rensselaer, Sullivan and Ulster coun- ties Novemlber 1 to November 15. In Greene county November 1 to November 8. Only deer with horns not less than three inches in length may be taken. Only the owner or lessee of the land on which deer are taken, or members of his immediate family as denned in section 380, subdivision 28 of this chapter, may take deer in Dutchess county. In Dutchess county and other coun- ties in the state not specifically men- tioned above, deer may only be taken with shotguns. Note—lit is necessary that all per- sons hunting deer in this state have a special license to do so. Limit. A person may take one such wild deer in an- open season. Manner of taking. Wild deer may be taken only on land. No jacklighlt, spotlight,, deer trap or saltlick.shall be used, made or set in a forest in- hahdtated by dees, as defined in sub- division 24 of section 380, or the roads traversing the same; nor shall any deer be taken by aid' or use thereof. Deer shall not be hunted, pursued or killed by any dog of either sex. In the county of Dutch- ess only shotguns loaded with slugs or shot not. smaller than buckshot shall be used in taking such deer. Transportation. The taker may- transport, when accompanying the same, or he may transport by com- mon carrier except parcel post when shipping permits are attached pur- suant .to the provisions of subdivision 3, section 178 of this article, or possess for that purpose, one carcass of a deer or part thereof at any one time, provided that an either case evidence of sex has not been removed from such carcass or part thereof. The uhtanned hide of any deer shall not be dressed, trimmed or -cut in such a manner as to destroy evidence of sex, except in the actual process, of tanning, and if such evidence of sex has been removed such hides shall not be possessed* bought or sold or trafficed in. Fawns, elk, moose, caribou, and antelope most not b e taken at any time, except that elk, moose, caribou and antelope killed by the owner of and in a private park may be pos- sessed in this state, and further pro- vided that the provisions of section 372 in BO far as the\ same are ap- plicable are in all respects complied with-. Venison legally taken may be possessed from October 15 to Novem- ber 20. Under a license issued- by the de- partment venison may be possessed, from November 21 to February 1 by the owner for consumption only. Ap- plication for license must be made on or before November 20.. Fee $1. Land Turtles—No open season. Sable or Martin—'November 10 to March 15. Mink—November 10 to March 15. Muskrat—December 1 to March 31. Rabbits—Varying hares, October 15 to March 1. Cotton tails, October 15 to.January 31. Wolf or Coyote—'Not to be im- ported or possessed without license. Raccoon—November 10 to Febru- ary 10. •Skunk—November 10 to February 10. •Squirrels—Black and Gray—-Octo- ber 15 to November 15. iProgs—Bull—June 16 to October 31. Green-^May 25 to September 30. Duck, Goose, Brant—'September 24 to January 7. Wood Duck, Eider Duck and Swam —No open season. Grouse or Partridge—<No open sea- son. Hungarian or Gray-Legged Part- ridge—No open season. Pheasants—Last two Thursdays in October and first two Saturdays in 'i November. Quail—No open season* Yellowlegs—-September 24 to No vember 30. Wilson and. Jack Snipe-r-September 24 to January 7. Kitchen Table Tops. Table tops suffer more hard treat- ment than any other part of ' the kitchen equipment. Often they are regarded as the place for any sort of job—grinding meat in a food crop- per, cutting bread, shredding cab- bage, holding hot pans and irons, and even for cracMng nuts with a ham- mer. When the table shows the effects of such abuse the blame is often put on the make. iWith intelligent care, however, most tables will prove faithifnil ser- vants- for years. The New York state college of home economics advises suiting the treatment to the table. What would not hurt_ an enameled iron table top would prove injurious to a waxed linoleum perhaps. It is well to consider your chief uses for the kitchen table when, you decide on the kind of top to have. Enameled iron in white or tints, often called porcelain, is one of the most popular materials to-day for it is attractive in appearance, easily cleaned and. proof against a good deal of heat. However, it may be chipped by knocks or by screwing the food chooper tp it. Waxed linoleum, a substantial and inexpensive table cover, gives excel- lent wear unless it is cut or»burned. Zinc covered tables stand up well' under hot utensils but mlust be kept free from washing soda and acids. Both acids and alkalis react with zinc and rapidly destroy it. Tables with wooden or oilcloth tops suffer mainly from cuts and scorching from hot pans or the care- lessly left electric iron. Grease spots on wood also cause trouble. They may be removed only by vigorous scouring. New Breed Dorothy had always wanted a dog. and at last a kind and sympathetic uncle gave her one. There was a certain amount of dis- cussion among the family with regard to the animal's breed. The nni'le ile dared the dog was an alredaie. Meeting a friend of her father on.' evening while taking her pet Mr a wall;, Dorothy had au anxious mo nlcnt. \Whatever is it?\ the other had ashed. \A pup. Dorothy? What kind my dear?\ The li.lt.ie girl tried hard to remem- ber what her undo hud said. \He's H ne'er-dn well.\ she replied, after a long pause. Depended en the Gas It was his first week in the city, and the tilings Unit interested liira must were the motorcycles that whizzed by. so he bought a second- hand one and started out. Up one street and down another he went, go Ing faster and fusli-r, and waving to the people on tlie streets They won- dered, but got out of the way. Police- men rushed out nnd tried to stop him, but he hepl on. Ii> an hour or. so lie came to a halt, and an otiicer stepped up to him. \Why'didn't you slop when I ordered you to?\ \Stop!\ exclaimed the num. \1 wanted to, hut didn't know how I I had to go rill the pis gave out!\ Remarkable Fellow Teacher asked the Children Indl vldually to mime the prominent per- son they would most like to see. Some said the king, others Charlie Chaplin, and many of them mentioned famous athletes. After a time, one small boy shouted 'Please, miss. I'd rather see my fa ther's boss.\ \Well replied the teacher, \I should hardly think one would class him as a prominent man; but let us hear why you would like to see him.\ \Because was the answer, \I've heard father say that his boss bits got 200 hands.\—Montreal Star. Cleaned Up Yellow Fever The Rockefeller foundation in 1010 dispatched a commission to Guayaquil to confer with local and national offi- cials relative to active measures against the yellow fever plague A proposal was made in 1918. This- was accepted later by the Bcudorfan offi- cials and the propaganda was started shortly thereafter. The story has been told by scientists that a bucket and tank brigade was started and it was only a short rime when they cleaned up and drained the stagnant pools uo der the dlwtlon of (icncrul Gorgiis Educator's Repudiation of Hoo- ver Swings Many Votes to Smith. • The unqualified repudiation of Her- bert Hoover by Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia Univer- sity, and President of the Carnegie Endowment Foundation for Interna- tional Peace, has proved, political ob- servers say, one of the most stagger- ing blows suffered in the present cam- paign by the Republican forces. • Although many prominent Repub- licans have renounced allegiance to their party since Hoover's nomination, none, It is conceded, has influenced so many votes. ' A highly esteemed leader lu Repub- lican party affairs since 1SS7, Dr. But- ler has attended every Republican na- tional convention for 40 years. In 1912, following the death of Vice Pres- ident Sherman, who had been renomi- nated, Dr. Butler became the Repub- lican candidate for Vice President. He was one ot his party's most prominent candidates for the nomination tor Pres- ident in 192-1. The reaction to his ringing disavow- al of the'principles enunciated by Hoo- ver in his acceptance speech was im- mediate and nation-wide. His bold 'and unetniivocal declaration that he could not support a candidate who ad- mitted himself to be in favor of the \continuance of the present reign of. lawlessness, debauchery and Govern- ment-made crime\ brought thousands of letters of congratulation from other dissatisfled Republicans. In a scathing letter, addressed to tho editor of the New York Times, Dr. Butler declared .he wished to dis- sociate himself \quickly publicly and completely on positions on two of the three most Important questions now before the American people that were taken by Mr. Hoover in his speech of acceptance.\ Noted Authority Dr. Butler, who has long been in de- mand by learned bodies as a speaker on questions relating to internation- al relations and the promotion of world peace, ridiculed Hoover for his \wholly false argument\ that the squandering of enormous sums on na- val armament jvould cooperate in the maintenance of peace. \The contrary is now the well- demonstrated fact,\ asserted the edu- cator. \Mr. Hoover dismisses with a few perfunctory words the truly re- markable treaty just now to be signed by ourselves and all Hie great powers of the earth pledging renunciation of war as an instrument of national poli- cy.\ He added that Hoover's position was mere \swagger He criticized Hoover for \accepting the formula of that paid hand of agi- tators, lobbyists and persecutors which calls Itself the Anti-Saloon League,\ and asserted that it Is \quite obvious that Mr. Hoover has no con- ception of the real problem by which the country is faced.\ \That problem,\ averred Dr. Butler, \had not to do with liquor, not with social experiments, good, bad or in- different, but with the structure and functions of the Government of the United States.\ , Accusing the Republican candidate of \hypocrisy\ and \contradiction\ which \would be comic were it not so unspeakably tragic,\ the educator declared: \No one can be in favor of the principles upon which our Govern- ment rests, or of the Constitution it- self, and at the same time in favor of the Eighteenth Amendment, because the two are absolutely contradictory,\ \Literally millions of Republicans throughout the country,\ Dr. Butler asserted, are \in full agreement\ with him. Scarcity of the Meek When finally the meek Inherit the earth, it will take more than a quack lawyer to round rip even a dozen of the heirs.—Fort Wnyne News-Senti- nel. Tongue Worth Having \The average full-grown giraffe's tongue is two feet Ions,\ just the right length to lick the i«> cream out of a freezer can— net roil News. Bird's Two Names The whoop or whooper is the Amer- ican white crane or the Old world swan. Harvest Moon September 29 The harvest moon comes this year on September 29. It is always the full moon nearest the time of the autumnal equinox, when the sun is crossing the equator going south. This event occurs in i928 on Septem-. •ber 23 a t 1:06 a. m., central stand- ard time. The peculiarity that distinguishes the harvest moon from other full moons is the small delay in the time of its rising. Moonrise on the average is .50 minutes later from night to night. But for a few nights at the end of September the delay is less than a half hour in the latitude of New York. Thus we have moonlight, in the early evening for a greater' number of evenings -than usual. Farther north this effect is much more noticeable. In southern Alas,- ka the time of moonrise' is only about five minutes later from night t6 night for nearly a week. The moon has two conspicuous movements in the sky. With the rest of the celestial scenery it rises and sets daily, progressing steadily westward. In addition it is always moving backward, toward the east, among the constellations because of its monthly revolution around the earth. This motion displaces the moon its own diaimeter in an hour. If we had use for a moon day, it would be for this reason be .longer than the day by the sun, averaging 50 minutes more. How much the length of any par- ticular moon day departs from the average depends on the angle be- tween the moons paths among the s'tars and the eastern horizon. This angle varies. The most favorable arrangement for an unusually short delay in the time of moonrise from night to night is the smallest -pos- sible angle between the two. This occurs when the September full moon rises. Conditions are nearly fatyoiv able at the following full moon,, known as the -hunter's moon, which comes this year October 28. There is no ground for the belief on the part of some people that the harvest moon, is larger than other full moons. Whenever the moon at any time is seen near the horizon, either rising or setting, it always ap- pears to be much larger thaih when, it is high in\ the skiy. This is an il- lusion connected with the flattened appearance of the slcy, which seems farther away at the horizon than in the zenith. The same illusion is experienced in the case of the sun at its rising and setting'. Similarly a constellation, for example the Big- Dipper, looks larger when it is near the horizon. Actual- ly the moon fills a smaller angle when it is rising, for it is then 4,000 miles farther away from us than when it is overhead. CORPORATION BUREAU DOBS BIG BUSINESS. The biggest business ever done by the New York State Corporation Bureau, during an eight month period, is revealed in a report just issued by Robert Moses, Secretary of State, in whose department the bureau is located. During the first eight months of this year, a total of 18,409 stock companies have in- corporated in New York state, a gain of 903 companies over the same period in 192Y. Receipts during the past month reached the high figure of $717,695.69, with November 1925 the closest approach when bureau receipts reached $632,228.50. There were quite a number of million dol- lar companies incorporated last month. Television companies and compan- ies planning to produce talking movies are coming to the front in considerable numbers these days. There also appears to be a larger number of companies incorporating and entering the advertising busir ness. Real estate continues to lead, however, with 320 such companies incorporated in July and 300 in Au- gust. The demands of style are shown in the fact that during the last two months, about 150 garment making companies incorporated in this state alone. Many Ferns Between 7,000 and S,o;i» species of ferns have been recognized by botan ists. State Well Watered There are 3,,700 rivers and large creekli in Texas. Keeping on Safe Side Zou believe your children will care for you when you are old. Don't be- lieve It so much as to neglect to lay up considerable rainy-day money. I'm not a pessimist; only an observer.—B. W. Howe's Monthly. Agrigraphs. Without good farm land there can be no fat purses for farmers. Uncle Ajb says that the place in which you live is one of your monu-, ments; leave it good-looking. 'Some one at Clenison College has well said that the farmer who makes hay while the sun shines, also makes repairs while the rain falls. Dairy improvement associations have grown in number from 120 to 522 in the past 8 years, and in num- ber of cows tested from 40,000 to 142,084. Whether farming pays depends more on the farmer than on any- thing else. Some farmers could not make.a. success of farming- if the prices of farm products were doubled^ Three cows in the New York dairy improvement associations produced more than 100 pounds of butter fat during June. Two were Holsteins 1 , in Cattaraugus and Erie counties; third was an Ayrshire in Erie coun? If your farm tools are dull and you're not sure just how they should be sharpened write to the office of publication,'college of agriculture, Ithaca, New York, and ask for bul- letin 155, on grinding farm tools. HOOVER FARM STATEMENT CALLED \CLEVER DELUSION' 1 \A very pretty Christmas tree for the American farmer, covered with glistening tinsel and little Christmas bells, but without presents—in other words, a clever delusion.\ That is how Herbert Hoover's state- ment on Agriculture Is described by William Hirth, of Columbia, Mo., pub- lisher of the . Missouri Parmer, and chairman of the Corn Belt Committee. Mr. Hirth adds: \Mr. Hoover's message to Agricul- ture constitutes a lot of cleverly put together bunk that will not fool the thinking farmers of this country. When he admits that after eight years of uninterrupted power the Republi- can party has failed to meet what he now says Is the 'most urgent eco- nomic problem in our Nation' he is caught in his own bear trap—how can he confess this indictment against his party in one breath, and then have the nerve to ask the farmers for hia vote In the next?\ NORTH CAROLINA FOR SMITH, SAYS DANIELS RALEIGH, N. C—Declaring that Governor Smith's acceptance speech \rings true upon the fundamentals of Democracy,\ Josephug Daniels.. Sec- retary of the Navy during the Wil- son Administration, predicted that \North Carolina will continue In the Democratic column.\ TRY McCORMACK'S QUICK SHOE EEP AIR- ING We return them parcel post 108 ARCADE ST. WATERTOWN Subscribe for the Eagle. S150 a Year County News. —During the month of August building permits issued in the city of Watertown totalled $75,580. —Three cottages on the shore of Black River, . near Dexter, were destroyed by fire on Tuesday evening of last week. The origin of the fire is unknown. —The annual ou'timg of the Jeffer- son County Pish and Game Pro- tective Association will be held Sep- tember 20. A fine program of sports has been arranged for the occasion. —iln the horseshoe pitching contest at the recent state fair, A. J. Pooler, of Adams, won the second prize of $40. Walter Shaekleton, a W-year- old Delaware county boy, won first. —Eighteen young women entered the House of the Good Samaritan, at Watertown, last Wednesday to start training for nurses. The course con- sumes three years and nine months. —(Former Secretary of State Robt. Lansing, who has a sulmlmer home at Henderson, has donated $500 to the Universalist society, of that village, to apply on the debt of the parish house. —Papers were recently filed with the secretary of state, at Albany, in- corporating, the William C. Smith,. Inc., a real estate company, of Wa- tertown, The company has a capital- ization of $50,000. —It is thought that the Watertown fair will make a little money this year. The weather was ideal during the exhibition and the attendance was. large each day. The show, it is said, was the best in many years, —Esther Kendall and Isabel Webb, of Mannsville, who represented the Jefferson county 4-H cooking clubs at the state fair, where they gave a demonstration, each day, won second place. There were 19 contesting teams from all over the state. —The annual convention of the Jefferson County Sunday School As- sociation will be held, in Watertown on Tuesday and Wednesday, October 16 and 17. Dr. W. G. Landes, of Al- bany, general secretary of the.New York State Sunday School Associa- tion, will be present at the sessions, give addresses and conduct discus- sions. About 250 delegates- are ex- pected at the conference. —The annual outing and picnic of the Colon-Couch Post, No. 821, Am- erican Legion, of Clayton, will be held this year on Sunday, September 16, at Beadle's Point, on the Clayton- Cape Vincent highway. This year's event is expected to be the largest ever held as all ex-service men and Legion Posts of Jefferson county have been extended an invitation. Many notable Legionnaires will be present and deliver addresses. A program of sports on land and wator has been arranged and at noon din- ner will be served. Lei Us Do Your M Printing GIDAIRE Ghostly Lavmmowers Parish paper—It would he a great, help towards keeping the churchyard in good order If others would follow the example of those who clip the grass on their own graves.—Boston Transcript. The state college of home econ- omics recommends giving the little child his largest meal at noon. Any Car—Amy Model—Any Yeair UNIVERSAL TRUCK TIRE CO. 337 State St. Phoi* 1327 WATERTOWN, NEW YORK Have You Seen Them? Built by the world's largest manufacturer of electric refriger- . ators, automatically -maintains, alone or in combination with pre-cooling water a temperature at which the growth of bacteria is retarded. lit gives to the milk producer a convenient, efficient and •economical means of cooling milk to 40 or 50 degrees within a -short time -after milking, and holding it at that temperature .until it is delivered. It eliminates dependency upon ice sup- ply, saves labor, and assures, day in and day out, refrigeration which will retard the bacteria growth in milk and cream. Milk producers, in purchasing FRKJIDAIRE, are buying a product that is made and guaranteed by the FRIGIDAIRE CORPORATION, •the world's largest manufacturer of electric refrigeration equipment. The FRIGIDAIRE CORPORATION is a subsidiary of GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION. If desired, FRIGIDAIRE MILK Coolers, or the FRIGID- AIRE equipment necessary for installing -the FRKMDAIRE system in your own cooler, may be purchased on the General Motors Time Payment Plan. FRIGIDAIRE, GENERAL ELECTRIC ox SEItVEL Re- frigeration for the home saves food waste and is health in- surance. Not a luxury but a big profit making investment. I I I used for cooling milk is essentially the same as that now giving satisfactory Bervice in more than 550,000 homes and commercial institutions throughout the world. Northern New York Utilities, Inc. Watertown, New York Alexandria Bay Clayton Carthage Loivtiille We will be glad to tell you of these advanrages if you can call in, call up, or write.