We have touched a few notes in our bargain giving and the result is this. We place on sale today a very excellent assortment of the left overs from our Fall and Winter Stock of Hosiery 50c. and 75c. per pair, to close them out quickly as we place them on our 50c Special price For small sizes in children's Sweaters were $1.00 counters at35cM 3 pair for $1.00 J a m e s R iMiller Compiinv of the negro race, died at his home in TOCHEAPENSTEELWORK | Dayton, O., last week of consumption. New Process of Electric Smelting to Cut Pig Iron Cost. House Passed Hepburn Rate Bill. Weddfhg of the President's Daughter—Surplus of Slocum Donations, inauguration of French President. ; Demogeot Won the Cuban Cup. By a new method that promises to revolutionize iron and steel industry, pig iron can be made for f 10 a ton, which is ?5 less than the cost under the system now generally in use, according to an announcement made a t Sault Ste. Marie, Canada. Electric smelting is part of the process, which has been developed by secret experiments at the expense and under the general direction of the Canadian government. The plants where the work was done are owned by the Lake Superior Corporation. Dr. Herault, a French expart, had charge of the tests. Canadians think it means the development In the near future of large ore fields In the vicinity of Lake Superior on the Ontario side. Benjamin F r a n k l i n . Before the last words have been spoken over the remains of Paul Jones we are called upon TO honor a memory Pithy Paragraphs Chronicling which the picturesque hero of the Bonhomme Richard helped, to perpetuate in the Week's Doings. ft singularly dramatic manner. But for Benjamin Franklin there would Lono Dispatches From Various Parts have been no American warship bearof the World Shorn of Their Padding ing the name Bonhomme Richard and and Only Facts Given in as Few probably no such naval battle as that Words as Possible For the Benefit which gave Jones his chief title to fame. The money to equip Jones' fleer of the Hurried Reader, came from a war chest which Franklin Patrick Doian, president of district palled into being in impoverished No. 5 of the United Mine Workers of France, and the sum used for that outAmerica, has taken a determined fit was only a trifle of the treasure seItand against a general coal strike. cured during our war Of independence It Is stated In Paris that the efforts from France as loans and contributo get Comtesse Boni De Castellane to tions. Franklin is also credited with abandon her action for divorce or con- having brought about the alliance with sent to a separation have been unsucFrance, without which the American cessful. colonies could never have gained the Professor Walter M. Wolfe, former Mormon apostle, told the senate conv lay over England. These two services mittee on elections there was more to the struggling republic—the gather polygamy in Utah now than when it Ing of treasure and the winning of a powerful ally—were performed by became a state. All amendments to the railroad rate Franklin after he had passed the age regulation bill were defeated in the of threescore and ten, since he was house of representatives and the meas- born Jan. l i 1700. ure was sent to the senate by a pracIt is small! wonder that the arrival of tically unanimous vote. Benjamin Franklin in Paris at the close of 1776 as a commissioner to the Saturday. John E. Madden paid $47,000 for court of France from the revolted colonies occasioned unusual excitement in Prince Wilboume at the Splan sale In 1 Chicago. The price is among the the Parisian world. He was known to highest ever paid for a horse in the French thinkers and men of letters an West. J the humorous philosopher of the new Senator LaFollette introduces in the • continent and the new race and to senate a strict anti-pass bill, making it ! lovers of liberty as one of the men who r to e S 01 118 ! «or Cpublic i ^ ? officials, ^ i P a SorS ! for ^ ^the w ilatter * to j* t ..the. risk the . . ofi the rope . * .had„ signed na<tr.M nt accept privileges. •*"* o f d e * a n c e t o Klng G e 0 r g e o f A jury has been secured at Omaha | England. There was no Washington for the trial of Pat Crowe on a charge , « " » l n **"» P u b I i c e*e o f E u r °P e > n o of robing Edward Cudahy of $25,000 , o n e m a n w h o s t o o d f o r t h a s t h e 8 n W " ln connection with the kidnaping of ing spirit of; the American Revolution Edward A.- Cudahy, Jr. ' beside whom the genial, astute and In an incisive report the Fowler j Cultured Frajnklin must appear as seccommittee of the New York Life In- ' 0 nd. And, after all that can be said of jjurande company placed many dam- ! Washington, to give him the full meed Aging facts at the doors of John A. ' o f his deserts few will hesitate to name McCall and Andrew Hamilton, Benjamin Franklin as the one other „. - , 'great figure of the Revolutionary pe• Man day. i Protection by means of high duties I * .. „ „ r u.^^. * ™„„„v is the policy of the Canadian tariff C S P e f t k i n S o f Washington and Franka recent writef m iiie commission which has just ettfrfude* , ^ ^tlanti^ its labors. Mr. tfViHiam Macdonald, says: "WaivHelen Kellar, the deaf, dumb and' \ tog *H ^comparisons between those two, blind girl, breaks down from over- , so eqt^al &a& so different, one may say study and is ordered by her physicians At least tbat there is no thdrd name to rest for months. , which- cottWt replace either of them; Paul Laurence Dunbar, negro poet a»ne &** could break the solifclde of and singer of the folk songs of his race, ' Washington' were there no FraakJii* died of consumption at his home in ' n o n e ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ g e t ^ s i d e FrankDayton, O., after a long illness. i ^ were ^ ^ ^ WasMngton.» m Money sent from America to Tews ^ m o v e m e n t l o t a n d e p e n d e n t n*in Russia through the medium cf the i tion on this continent, for constitutionpostoffice service is sent back on the j ground that the funds are for the use al government, for human liberty, Franklin may be sai<$ to have known of the revolutionists. New York Life Insurance company's no superior as a man of force and legal department Is ready to begin probably had no peer iviat Washington. suits against John A. McCall and An- He was a broader man then Washingdrew Hamilton to compel the restora- ton and, because of that, what nowation of much money. days is called a better "aal-xer." The humble people learned froaa- Mm, and Tuesday. the mighty were guided by bis^tart and Willemstad dispatches say that the censorship in Venezuela is now rigid illumined by his wisdom. The history of diplomacy, ^veo of and that President Castro declares he that faithful, skillful and invatoabJe will test the Monroe Doctrine. District Attorney Jerome engages kind which steers a ship of stateMathew C, Fleming, who was associat- through the storm of revolution* an>et ed with Inquisitor Hughes, to assist war, is dull reading for the masses. in prosecuting insurance grafters. The martial element treating of picturExperts of the National Civic Fed- esque figures, like "Mad Antho&y" eration commission are to begin an in- Wayne, "Light Horse Hurry" Lee.. vestigation of quasi-public utilities in Francis Marion and Israel Putnam apChicago and other cities this week. peals to the imagination and seems to' Comparison of the American and Prussian railroads, in favor generally be all there is worth while in the story/ SHORTER NEWS ITEMS. Cold weather Specials Gloves Toques Sweaters For three years he has been seriously i.nd for a year critically ill, but he kept at his work intermittently and wrote his last poem for his Christmas book, "Howdy, Honey, Howdy," just before Christmas. Mr, Dunbar was born in Dayton, June 27, 1872, and was first a newsboy and then an elevator boy and during his struggle for a livelihood practiced writing. Mr. Dunbar's first work to attract attention to hiffl was a class poem written for the Steel High school in 1891. His first of a total of 21 books was "Oak and Ivy." His poem best known was "When Malindy Sings," which was written to his mother, whose name is Malindy. Demogeot Won the Cuban Cup. Victor Demogeot, the winner at Ormond, Fla.. of the title of the world's speed king, has earned another triumph by winning at Havana the Cuban cup In the second Interna tional road race. The victory was gained In the same machine which, driven by Hemery, won the two great road events of last year, namely the Ardennes circuit In France and the Vanderbilt cup race on Long Island. Despite the drawbacks of three controls, sharp corners in the town oi Marianao, and close crowding by the excited populace at the curving points he made in the first half an average oi 61 4-5 miles an hour. The average oi House Passed Hepburn Rate Bill. miles per hour for the entire 217VL' miles was 59.77, which is within 1H Just enough business was allowed in the house on Thursday last miles of the Vajiderbilt cup race preceding the vote on the Hepburn average. railroad rate bill to permit delayed members to reach their seats before No Use For Gas Commission. the roll call, ordered the night before, The board of trustees of the vilbegan. Three hundred and forty-six lage of Potsdam, N. Y., sent a telemembers voted for the bill. Seven, all gram to State Senator Stevens thank Republicans, voted against it. Ap- ing Mm for the step be has taken tc plause greeted the announcement of repeal the gas commission law, which the result by the speaker, and the the trustees declare has proved to be house, which had given its undivided j a hindrance and oppression to the vilattention to the question of govern- j lage in seeking cheaper and better ment rate making for seven days, j electric lights. The village, at a turned its attention to other matters, j special election held last March, voted The pension appropriation bill, car- to build a municipal lighting plant. rying $139,000,000 for pensions an4 but after the passage of the law the of a $1,245,000 for pension administration, Potsdam Electric Light and Power of the latter, is made by commission- i a r e t t lrevolution. Then, too, there was Franklinv most amusing to read was taken up, debated and passed , company got a permanent injunction ers sent here in 1904 by the Prussian I abotrt and hear about, the poor printer without amendment. The feature of restraining the village from construct- government. Patrick Dolan, president of the who gained wealth and fame* the the bill, aside from the apivoyri^tioii ing the. proposed plant on the ground made, 1B a provision ma::i;:£ btaUto ( that the village had not procured the Pittsburg soft coal district, made a maker of "Poor Richard's Almanac," law of the famous order o: the presi- Consent of the commission. An ap- sensational attack on John Mitchell, the humorist whose wit was. % godsend head of the United Mine Workers, in to bis own VLSUI to succeeding; generadent declaring age conclusive evidence ' peal is now pending. which he said the union had never won tions. And there- w a s ""Franklin's of disability. ) a strike under his leadership. 8lelghride For Chinese Commissioners. stove,"' used to> this day lu wood burnViceroy Tuan Fang and Tai Hung Wedding of the President's Daughter. ing comua-unities, at least in; ai modified Wednesday. The wedding of Miss Alice Lee Chi, the imperial Chinese commissionSt. Clair McKelway, editor of the form,, and Franklin,, with Ms kite, Roosevelt, daughter of the president, ers, enjoyed the first sleighride of Brooklyn Eagle, was re-elected by the drawing; lightning from the- (floods. to Representative Nicholas Longworth, their lives at Ithaca, N. Y., after New York legislature as regent of the This eanly Beu Franklin lia* grown will take place at 12 o'clock noon on spending several hours visiting Cor- university for a term of 11 years. to be almost ai legendary eharcaeter iu Saturday, Feb. 17. The ceremony, nell- university. When the members of The senate passed Senator Tillman's Americam fiolklore. He did. s* many which will be performed in th^ his- the party awoke in their special train joint resolution directing a sweeping toric east room, will be solemnized side tracked at the railway station, six inquiry into railroad combinations and startling, things tliat it seems too much by the Right Rev. Henry Y. Satterlee, Inches of snow covered the ground. monopolies in restraint of trade and to believe that one man was behind Protestant Episcopal bishop of Wash- While en route for the campus on a commerce. them all. On this period of Franklin's trolley car the visitors took much Inington. George W. Beavers, former chief of career the historical; adnalist and sketch Late in the afternoon Mr. Longworth terest in passing sleighs and expressed writer have d*w«it fondly and with and his bride will leave Washington on a desire to ride in one. When the salaries division of the postoffice de- freedom, because- & i S a u, revealed iu partment, pleaded guilty to conspiracy program at the university was contrip to Florida, traveling in a special ; his autobiography,, that stops short be:ar. After the adjournment of con- cluded, late in the afternoon, the party and was sentenced to penitentiary for fore his great Iffe- work for t h e Ameri- • f e s s they* expect to make a trip to took a long drive into the country. two years. 1 China has ordered the immediate can people realiJsr begani, Stadies of Surope. execution of the leader of the Changpu Washington, and. Lincoln haws* started New Electric Surface Railroad. Received Yeur Invitation? The Rochester, Scottsville and mob and the severe pnmishment of the at the summit or climax and worked President Roosevelt-authorized this Others implicated in the attack on backward or downward, white- the restatement: "The President and Mrs. Caledonia Railroad company -was British missions. Terse has beeni largely true iu FrankRoosevelt ask the kind' consideration j incorporated at Albany with a capThe court of appeals upheld the in- Ira's case. It la as though oaoe- should of many friends who would under or- i ital of $500,000 to operate an electric dictments against Abraham H. Humdinary circumstances receive invita- j street surface railroad from Rochester forget 1861-65 aad, starting; with Old tions to Miss Roosevelt's wedding. to Caledonia, Livingston county. The mel, the wellknown New York lawyer, AJt>e, the rail, splitter and. sidle splitter, The capacity of the White House re- road will pass through Mortimer, West charging subornation of perjury in the m I860, follow t&e trail boi*tc through, quired that under existing circum- Henrietta and Scottsville. The direc- Dodge-Morse divorce case. legend and local! annals to- the log cabstances invitations be limited to the tors are Henry C: Brewster, John N. Thursday. in and the float boat. Both Lincoln. closest kinsfolk, the personal friends Beckley, Morton E. Lewis, George C. White House officials were informed and Franklin, lived two Iiwes, and tha of Miss Roosevelt and Mr. Longworth Buell, Edmund Lyon and Charles T. that the recipient of an invitation to marvel of It i» that Franitlin's second Chapin of Rochester and others. and certain classes of officials in Miss Roosevelt's wedding had sold the itte dawned at the age when most men. Washington No friends of the Presticket for $400. ident or Mrs. Roosevelt are being askPat Crowe Finally Identified. It was officially announced that the jfece falling lnao the sear and yellow ed unless they also come within one In the trial at Omaha, Neb., of Pat copper war had ended by the purchase of these classes, and even with these Crowe, charged with kidnaping Eddie by Amalgamated Copper interests of limitations fliH number of guests Cudahy, W. S. Glynn and his son, who all the property of the Heinzes in the A Uttle Bfirform,, bunk biff emwgh to, threatens to overtax I he capacity of kept a livery stable near the house in Butte camp. show whifito way tlte wind Mows-, ia the White Houne." which young Cudahy was confined Comtesse Boni De Castellane has during the time he was away from his been awarded domicile by the Paris Russia,, is tbe adopt!©** of the Gregorian friends, positively identified Crowe as calendar to supplant Julius Caesar's Surplus of Slocum Donations. court in the mansion on the Avenue Alter the Slocum disaster in July, the man who telephoned from his sta- Du Bois de Boulogne, and a separation caleiuJar^ which the Greek church has ble to the Cudahy residence instructpersistently elung to, although it is 1904, a committee of the St. Marks from her husband is expected. Evangelical Lutheran church, New ing Mr. Cudahy to look in his yard for A house resolution authorizes the thirteen days behind the- time of other the letter demanding the ransom. 1'ork city, wa.s appointed to receive desecretary of war to deliver to the cotmtrries. Evidently tfce czar now lations and distribute them to the Southern Historical society at Rich- means t o be right up to date In small Strike of 1,200 Miners. iufferers in n<v;lofaid. This commitmond, Va., all of the Confederate bat- things as well as great The twelve hundred miners and la- tle flags in his custody which have not tee received in all J2U.313.67. Of this amount there is left undistributed $9,- borers at the two collieries of the been identified as belonging to any or769.GG. The committee is unable to Jermyn Coal company at Rendham, ganization. Statistics show that the stature of return this balance to the donors for near Scranton, Pa., went on* strike women has increased two and one-half the reason that many contributions Tuesday. The men claim that the John A. McCall Seriously 111Inches in the past twenty^flve years were anonymous, and in other cases company has discriminated against The last rites of the Roman Catholic and that of men has decreased at the the full names and addresses of the them in a reduction of wages condonors were not given. The commit- trary to the award of the strike com- church have been administered to same rate. Pretty soon the swain will John A. McCall, former president of tee has now begun an action in the su- mission. the New York Life Insurance company, have to mount a horse block when he preme court asking that it be permitat Lakewood, N. J., where he has been wants to whisper glad tidings into tb* Threatened Coal Strike. ted to account and that, the court pay Uirl's ear. A meeting of the operators to dis- seriously ill for some time. His over the money in such manner as it condition was such that his. family was may deem proper. The action la novel cuss threatened coal strike will be held advised to be prepared for the worst. There Is a rise in the self esteem of in New York on Feb. 14 and on Feb. and the attorney general in made a turkeys when they find their measure party, as representing the unascertain- 16 there will be a joint conference of ed benefactors under a provision of miners and operators. Great Interest of feed increased as the days grow A phonographic attachment to the ataches to these meetings, as both the iaw to that effect. shorter, but when they get the ax the operators and miners are reported as common telephone has been perfected real reason of man's generosity apfirmly adhering to their respective po- ln Germany wkid* records the message Dunbar) Negro Poet, Dead. pears and puts a s w i f t end to conceit. sitions. so that It ea-u b« repeated at any time. Paul LHHi<'iif:e Dtmhar, the poet W. H. YanBareo Eat More Home Furnisher Factory Street Watertown of the most nutritious of flow foods— Uneoda Biscuit—the only perfect soda cracker. Then you will be able to Earn More because ft Well-nourished body has greater productive capacity. Thus you will also be able to Save More because for value received there is no food so economical as Uneeda Biscuit m& ^J In a dust tight, moisture proof package, NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY THE. SPIDER'S WEB. How to Make- a Substitute Tor iHt. Christmas Tree. The Christmas tree has by no means passed the day of its usefulness, a«d let us hope that it never may do so. but a variety is sometimes desirable at Christmas time as well as at other times, and to get it the spider's web may be substituted for the tree, says the Ripley (Ind.) Journal. The way of arranging it is to have a large spider made of wire and other material suspended from the celling or attached to the walk To this arc brought a number of reels or spindles, one or more for each person to be remembered. Each spindle should eontain a different colored string or rib bon, and these are then threaded in a bewildering maze through the fWniture, from, room to' room, up and down stairs, and then at the* far end of tbe ribbon is the present. To secure the present the child must follow the windings of the ribbon'wherever it may lead utitil1 the gift is arrived at and claimed. Such a plan is productive of much innocent amusement, and the surprise at the end of the ribbon is all the more appreciated for the search it has taken to find it. For Christmas: house parties, either for children or for grownups, the scheme1 will add ranch to the pleasure of the* occasion and will serve as a means of getting altf present better- acquainted; . When the sous audi daughters and grandchildren return to- the oM borne for the holiday season- a spider's web will add to* the merriment of tbe seaton. , At a Term of the County Cour? of Jefferson County, held at the Court House in the City of Water-town; New York, on the 19th day of February,, lff06. Present Hkm. Edgar C. Ehrerson, County Judge. Irr the matter of the application of OTive B. Farman and Ida May DeniSOTT, for the Discharge of a Certain Mortgage. Vwm reading antf filing the^ petition of Olive E. Farman and Ida May Detaisorr, duly verified, \whichv said : petition discharged a certain mortgage* (if record in the Clerk's Office of tlie County of Jefferson, purporting- Co b<* made by Horacof Wood a n * Emily D. Wood1, his wife to1 Charles T: DtaarcrkI'ee and William Q. Riddle, executors of «ne- last Will and Testament of John F. Duncklee, deceased, dated' October 3D; IS71 and recorded' im mid Clerk's Office November 4; l'87Tr in ILiber 97 of mortgages at page» 372P, to secure the payment of the suns isf $3^00.00, three years from th> efate thereof, wit* annual iiaterest thereon, whieh said mortgage appears- to be undischarged ^.nd a flen upon- the premises of said petitioners, situate' in the town of Ellisburg ,in' saaxT Cotm-' tiy; t h a t said mortgage has been1 F«iid by iJeing foreclosed; pursuant to the power of the sale therein conftafned j by advertisement b y Erastus; Kale, ; who subscjfbed said! notice of sale; that no assignment of said mortgage to Erastus Hate appeals upon the record ; that upon t h e said salie- t h e said Efcastius Hate bid in*, saikl' premises; that on anccount of certain iinregularifcaes im tie* said fiareclostiiire proceedings said sale w a s void and <ai no effect; that the pecitioniet'S' feave cause eo be pffrocured a discharge of said mortgage- executed by Edwin R. Maxson, executor of t h e last Will and Testament of Erasttrs Hale, brat the said mortgage cannot be discharged of record because there is no assignment to said Hale recorded; tbat both the said Charles T. Duncklee and William Q. Riddle, t h e executors of thelast Will and Testament of John F: Dnmcklee, deceased, departed this life more than five years ago, out of Jafr ferson County, New York; that no other executors nor an? administrator with the will of John F. Duncklee, deceased, annexed have been appointed, which will was probated in New York County and that such mortgage has not been assigned or transfewed except as hereinbefore stated. The People's , ' PRE-fNVENTQRY CLEARANCE SALE W# #tart now »ur a<nnuafl period ot sharp, deep, decisive, price cutting in our Ladies' and Gent's Departmena to get stocft at the very lowest possible level before inventory, All our ladies and Gent's* SultSj ^Goat*, and Pur* *r« to be d i s p o s e of at prices which ahow that cost or value ha* been- entirety lost sight of far our endeavor t o reduce stock at onCev •• - < *..,i«..n.», Prices have be»n reduced*ail the way from 25 to 50 p w cent on our farmer low figures- a shaving like t h l * iff well worth taki ng advantage of even* Bo- pur. chase for your future needs;. Gome and investigate: BIGGEST FURNITURE HOUSE NORTH OF THE CENTRAL Bedroom Furniture. Not alone in Brass and Steel and Iron bedsteads, but in the artistic designs from the newest woods-creations fit for a fairy p a l a c ^ a n d the prices quoted are Van Buren's No one else approaches them. Better in terest than any savings bank pays to those who purchase at this Introductory Utkie, Bedroom Suits from . . . . $io t o 1 0 J $20 suit now $10 00 22 suit now . 16;50 24 suit now IS 00 2fi suit now 19;50 28 suit now . 21.00 29 suit now 21.75 30 Mlit n o w 22.50 Odd dressers in white enamel, oak quartered oak. birdseye and mahogany. Combination dressers—One lot. of white dresser*, regular $15 value, now Jji.oo. This dresser has a bevel Plate mirror 22"x2>', There will be no more at this price after these are sold. One lot of oak chiffoniers regular $6 value now $3.75. Don't miss this bargain only a few left. Iron beds from $2.25* to $00 Excelsior soft top mattresses .-. $2.48 Excelsior soft top mattresses in two parts, $2.75 Sea weed combination, £3.75 Fiber mattress, two parts, soft top and bottom $4.75 Fiber mattress, one part, $4.00 Cotton mattress, two part3, .. . $5.00' Cotton feks $8 to IS We carry all the different makes of springs. Double woven wire- springonly $2.48, such as you would' pay $3 and $3.50 for anywhere else in the city. A double woven wire spring with cables underneath and on the sides. retails any where else for $4. our price $2.75. Nation fabric spring, Twentieth • Century spring. FosteT Ideal springs. We have all the different makes. W H. YanBnren Home Furnisher Factory Street Watertown L M. Smith & Co., The Peopte's, Woodruff Book Store. Ladte»* and Gent'* Clothier*. ROTBENBEBG & W O I F Yowcaro liave printed 1 letter- The? ibng evenings are here and' heads aadi envelops as cheap- gpoct Jrooks are the companions to ly as the bUsnk kind, if you. get. make*- iftem pas* quickiy. them at t?he- Heiald office. OUr -dock is very complete, includSUPREME' COOCT—Jefferson -County, ing.., aJI' t h e iatesb publications. Alton R. Ha$:«s vs. Isola Hayes. Action for.' ai divorce. If'ytfu can. gjiwe us a» iaea of the SUMMONS:. Mind, of reading you like, we are sure To the above- nmsaced Defendantt Y-ou are" hereby inimmoned'to answer to heia> you in making. 3 choice selec the complaint m the above entitled tlon. action, and to serve a copy of your answer on t h y plaintiff if attorneys within twenty days after the service of this summons - upon you, exclusive of the day of service; and,- in case of your failure to appear or answer, j judgment will be* taken against' you j by default for* tire relief demanded in I the complaint. e. BRADLEY, Manager. Trial" to 'be-herd in the County of | Jefferson. ! I PUBLIC SQUARE. Dated, Deeenrber 22, 1905. j FTEI^D & SWAN. | Plaiiitfff's Attorneys, | O: 8 P. O. Address, j 34-38 Sawings Bank Bldg.. \ Watertown, N. Y. i ,ni.r FURS To Isola Hayes, Defendant: ; The- foregoing' summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an order of Hon. E. C. Emerson, County Jiuiige of Jefferson County. State of' Ne-w York, dated February! 10, 1906, fllfed with -the complaint in i the office of the Clerk of the County] • SPECIAL PRICES of Jefferson, in the City of Watertown, Jefferson' County, New York. Dated' February 10, 1906. On Odd Fur Pieces to Close FIELD & SWAN, Plarntffrs Attorneys, O. & P. O. Address. ,54-38- Savings Bank Bldg. Watertown, N: Y. 0~ • • DAIRYMEN ATTENTION Cream* Sft»pa ratom atfe' an absolute-necessity to you and when buying buy the best sepajraifcor on the- market. Sharpies Tubmllair Separator is tho oneyO'Uwant, ses*d for catalog. Will be glad to send one on Now, on motion, of W. W. Kelley, attorney for the petitioners it is order- 10 days trial and prove whafe we ed that all persons interested in said say. Phone or call on mortgage be and they are hereby required to show cause at a term of this court appointed to be neld on the 24th day of February, 1906, at the Court House in the city of Watertown, New 1 Coffeen St., Watertown. N. V York, at 11 o'clock a. m. why said Loose Leaf Ledgers: mortgage should not be discharged All sizes and prices. We have them of record. It is further ordered that this order just suited to the needs of small Storebe published iu the Watertown Herald, keepers, Physicians, Lawyers. Dena newspaper published in the City of tists who save time in book-keeping For anything in the Watertown, in said County onco a'. drudgery. week for two successive weeks. \ Blank book line it will be for your Enter EMERSON, j Interest to consult us, D, S- MLLLER Co. Judge. | CO. GEO H. BALTZ. To close out the balance of our fur pieces, including muffs, scarfs, stokes, etc., we will close out the balance a t special discount prices. • • All heavy driving coats for men and women will be closed out at prices that will surely persuade you to buy. Both Phones A Postal Card To The Post-Standard Company, Syracuse, N. Y. will convince you of the merits of the only Syracuse paper that has full Assocated Press dispatches. The Dally Post-Standard also carries the most complete state news pages in Central New York. The r rice is right, only |3.00 a year on H.F. D. routes, and in villages where there is no Post-Standard agent Send a postol card for a.-full.week's free papers to The Post-Standan Company, Syracuse, N. Y.,
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