Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 22, 1909, Image 5

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    FUES FROM AND TO FIELD
Aviaist Received Tremendous Ova
tion After Daring Feat — Minister
~ Wu Would Fly—Wright Makes Four
K Flights at College Park, Md.
Paris, Oct. 19.—~Count de Lambert,
French aviator, made a remarkable
flight in a Wright biplane. From the
Juvisy aviation field he flew to Paris,
circled about the Eifel tower, at times
reaching a height of about 1000 feet,
and returned to Juvisy.
The count received a tremendous
evation when he had landed.
The aeronaut left the aerodrome al
Juvisy, traveling at a height of about
260 feet, and headed northward.
Half an hour later the people of
Paris were amazed to see the biplane
approaching the city, high in the alr,
from the southwest.
As the machine neared the Siene it
ascended higher and higher, finally
passing above the Eiffel tower at an
estimated distance of 300 feet or 1500
feet from the ground. It then described
& wide curve and headed southward
again.
Fatal Accident at Aviation Field.
Juvisy, Oct. 19.—A few minutes be
fore Count de Lambert returned to the
field here from his flight to Paris Al
fred M. Blanc attempted his first flight
in a Bleriot machine. Shortly after as-
cending, the monoplane, as the result
of a false shift of the rudder, turned
into the tribune and fell, mortally
wounding a woman and injuring & doz.
en other persons.
WRIGHT MAKES 4 FLIGHTS
Stays Up Eighteen Minutes With a
Passenger.
College Park, Md., Oct. 19.—Wilbur
Wright made four flights, one of which
was the longest, in point of time, that
has been made at College Park. On
this long flight Mr. Wright took with
him Lieutenant Lahm and stayed in
the air eighteen minutes and thirty-
seven seconds, according to the offi.
celal stop watch. The first flight lasted
eleven minutes and forty-seven sec-
onde. Lieutenant Humphreys was the
passenger.
Wu Would Make Dash Into Sky.
Washington, Oct. 19.—Minister Wu
Tiny Fang wants to fly. This is the
latest desire of the Chinese statesman,
who is making a spectacular exit from
Washington.
“It must be grand to soar high above
the heads of thousands of men and
women,” exclaimed Dr. Wu, “and it
will be a sad disappointment if I leave
the United States without taking a
trip.”
It is expected now that Minister Wu
will take a dash into the sky with
Wright before he departs.
MILLION TO WIN BALLOT
Lady Francis Cook Willing to Give
Fortune For Woman Suffrage.
New York, Oct. 19.—Lady Francis
Cook, better known in this country as
“Tennessee” Claflin, who arrived here
from England, says that she Is ready,
if need be, to spend $1,000,000, all her
fortune, to win votes for women. She
will place the money, she says, with
New York bankers.
“I am going right to Taft,” Lady
Cook continued, “to see if I cannot
get him to do what Lincoln did, but by
peaceful measures. I shall call the
president's attention to the fourteenth
amendment of the constitution. The
eonstitttion says that only idiots, the
insane and convicts may not vote, and
1 want to know if that bars women.”
TO IMPROVE JURIES
Wilkes-Barre Judges Ask Clergymen to
Supply Names.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Oct. 19.—In the
effort to improve the class of jurors
mow being used in the courts of this
county the judges sent letters to the
various clergymen throughout the
county, asking them to furnish a list
of the citizens in their parishes whom
they believe will make honest and
creditable jurors. In placing the
choice of these jurors in the hands of
the clergymen the judges are certain
that politics will not play a part In
their selection.
Skeleton of Girl Found In the Woods.
New York, Oct. 19.—The bleached
skeleton of a young woman, partly
eovered by shreds of linen which once
were part of her clothing, was found
in a lonely stretch of woodland near
Islip, Long Island. The coroner found
nothing by which the identity of the
young woman could be established.
Close to the skull was a thick mass of
blonde hair, tied with fragments of a
big bow of ribbon. The teeth were well
eared for, with several gold fillings.
It was evident that the victim had
been dead for about a year.
——————————————s.
Toadstools Poison Family; Two Dead.
~ Bridgeport, Conn., Oct. 19. — Mrs.
Sansone, forty years old, and her
child are seriously {ll from eating
toadstoois gathered by the father, who
mistook them for mushrooms.
Army Lieutenant Elopes With Nurse.
Obama, Neb. Oct. 18.—Lieutenant
v. U. 8. A, hee disappeared
Tort Crook, Neb.. leaving behind a
wile and two children. and taking with |
| him. it is said, Mrs. Helen Bucklin, a |
trained nurse connected with the post, |
fo
Tom
Four Perish In Barn Fire.
Wichita. Kan., Oct. 19. — Four men |
were burned to death and one man |
was fatally burned in a hay barn fie |
here, Thirty horses burned to death.
The fire is believed to have been of
incendiary origin.
ROOSEVELT IN PERIL
Charged by ar Elephant After His |
First Kill.
Nairobi, British East Africa, Oet.
19.—Mr. Cresswell, a government engi
neer in the public works department at
Myoi, came into Nairobi and brought
word that Mr. Roosevelt had a very
narrow escape when shooting his first
elephant bull. When shooting elephant !
it is often necessary to creep into the
herd and shoot the selected bull at a
range of fifteen to thirty vards.
Mr. Roosevelt, accompanied by Mr.
Cunningham, the big game hunter and
guide, followed this procedure and kill-
ed his elephant at the second shot.
Suddenly, before Mr. Roosevelt could
load, another elephant bull charged
him at close range from the herd. Both
Mr. Cunningham and Mr. Roosevel
got behind trees, and Mr. Cunningham
fired and turned the bull from Mr.
Roosevelt just in time.
RAPS ROOSEVELT POLICY
Joaquin Miller Holds Strenuous Life
Responsible For Evils.
San Francisco, Oct. 19. — Joaquin
Miller, poet of the Sierras, in an ad
dress to San Quentin prison convicts
declared that President Roosevelt and
his policy of a strenuous life are re
sponsible for more evils and crime in
this country than any other cause.
After warning the convicts against
the evils of lying, Joaquin sald:
“There is something wrong with the
way people in this country live. They
are too strenuous, too active, too high
aroused. Roosevelt, as the head of |
this great nation, rushed the people |
into all sorts of crime. His strenuous |
theory of life is crimeful. He has in. |
fected us with a sort of insane activ
ity. It is a mania peculiar to uz, and
Roosevelt is responsible for much |
of it.” i
i
i
DRILLING FOR COAL |
Boring Operations For Anthracite Com |
menced Near Stroudsburg, Pa. |
Stroudsburg, Ps. Oct. 19.—In the
hope of striking coal boring operations
werecommenced in Monroe county two
miles from Stroudsburg. The drill was
driven in Lee farm, and the search
will be continued to a depth of some
1200 feet. There have been a number
of drillings for coal in Monroe town.
ship, many people contending that the
anthracite coat beds continued in that
direction, but up to the present none
of the efforts to locate coal in paying
quantities have been successful.
Tire Themselves Getting Ready.
Washington Irving tells a story of a
man who tried to jump over a hill
He went back so far to get his start
for the great leap and ran so hard that
he was completely exhausted when be
came to the bill and bad to lie down
and rest. Then he got up and walked
over the hill. A great many people
exhaust themselves getting ready to
do their work. They are always pre-
paring. They spend their lives get-
ting ready to do something which they
never do. It is an excellent thing to
keep improving oneself, to keep grow-
ing, but there must be a time to begin
the great work of life. 1 know a man
who is almost forty years old who has
not yet decided what he is going to
do. He bas graduated from college
and taken a number of postgraduate
courses, but all along general ling
He has pot yet begun to speciall
This man fully believes he is going to
do grent things yet. I hope he may.—
Success Magazine, =
The Paper They Were Written On.
The average author would probably
laugh at the statement that at ome
time in the world's history mapu-
scripts, simply as such, irrespective of
the nature of the text. were immense-
ly valuable. In ancient times manu-
scripts were Important articles from a
commercial point of view. They were
excessively scarce and were preserved
with the utmost care. Even the usur-
ers were glad to lend money on them
when the owners were obliged to offer
them in pawn. It is related in an
ancient tome that a student of Pavia,
who was reduced by his debaucheries,
raised a8 new fortune by leaving in
pawn a manuscript of a body of law,
and a grammarian who was ruined by
a fire rebuilt his house with two small
volumes of Cicero through the ready
aid of the pawnbroker.
A Pianc Club.
Mrs. Hutton—We are organizing a
piano club, Mr. Flatleigh. Will you
join us? Flatleigh — With pleasure,
Mrs. Hutton. What pianist do you
propose to club first?—Chicago Newt
Better Left Unsaid. :
Hostess—It's beginning to rain.
You'll get wet. [I think you'd better
stay to dinner. Departing Guest—Oh,
‘dear, no! It's not raining so badly as
all that.—Sydney Bulletin.
His Role. z
“That man made an immense for-
tune out of a simple little invention.
“Indeed! What did be invent?”
“Invent? Nothing. you dub! He was
the promoter!” ~Cleveland Leader.
Declares His Personal Diary Was
“Doctored” by Order of Cook, and
That Picture of Summit of Mountain
“Faked.”
Edward N. Barrill, the guide who
tccompanied Dr. Frederick A. Cook
on the attempted ascent of Mount Mc-
Kinley, in Alaska, in 1906, and who
has been quoted in news dispatched
during the past few days as saying
Dr. Cook did not reach the summit of
the mountain, is quoted extensively in
the New York Globe in a long state-
ment, which begins: “I, Edwin N. Bar-
rill, being first duly sworn, do on oath
depose and say,” ete.
The Globe's published affidavit of
Barrill then goes into detail about the
various stages of the trip, in which
the guide absolutely denies that Dr.
Cook ever reached a height of even
10,000 feet, whereas Dr. Cook in his
book describing the ascent says the
mountain is over 20,000 feet high. Bar-
rill says that the illustration in Dr.
Cook's book labeled “The Summit of
Mount McKinley,” was photographed,
according to the affidavit, at a point
fourteen miles from the summit.
The photograph shows Barrill him-
self waving an American flag. The al-
titude of the spot shown, according to
the guide's sworn statament, was “ac-
cording to Dr. Cook him-eif” not over
9000 feet. Barrill says it did not ex-
ceed 8000 feet. {
Concerning his entries in his diary,
Barrill says: “As shown by my diary,
we took to the ice on Sept. 9. From
and including the 9th down to and in-
cluding the 18th of Sevtember, all
writings in my diary are by me, but
were made under the direction of Dr.
Cook. 1 also changed the dates dur
ing this tim» under his direction. The
figures 12,000 on the date of Sept. 12
were changed by me at the dictation
of Dr. Cook. On Sept. 12 Dr. Cook
directed me to stop keeping my diary
and leave the pages therein blank. 1
cannot now remember the exact dates
or figures which I had in my diary be-
fore 1 was so directed to change them,
but I know the elevation under what
now appears Sept. 12 was not to ex-
coed 9000, and I think it was 8000.”
Crane Resigns by Request.
Charles R. Crane, of Chicago, min-
{ster designate to China, was practi
cally deposed by a demand from Sec-
retary Knox for his resignation.
The history of this extraordinary af-
fair, which began about a week ago
with the announcement that Minister
Crane had been stopped at San Fran-
cisco at the moment of embarkation
for his post by a demand from Secre-
tary Knox for his return to Washing-
ton, reached at least its first crisis
when the secretary in a formal state-
ment announced that Mr. Crane's
resignation had been invited, and the
minister designate replied in an
equally formal statement that while
his resignation already had been ten-
dered to the president, he felt himself
very unjustly treated. Moreover, Mr.
Crane in his statement reflected very
severely upon the officials of the state
department, charging that not only
had they refrained from giving him the
ingtructions usually issued to a min-
ister or ambassador about to leave for
his post, but that he had been denied
access to them even after he had
made repeated appointments with
them.
He enters a sweeping denial of the
charge that he “gave out” a newspa-
per story which is said to be the cause
of his deposition, and places squarely
upon the shoulders of President Taft
the responsibility for the various ut-
terances he has made regarding con-
ditions in the Far East which have
aroused the ire of Secretary Knox, and
for final action upon his resignation.
Storm Again Brings Death In South.
With the known death list reachin~
a total of thirty-seven lives, and with
thirteen others reported dead, with
scares seriously injured and many oth-
ers painfully bruised and scarred, and
with the property damage running into
a million dollars or more, the havoc
and destruction of the storm, which
swept middl. and west Tennessee, Ala-
bama. Georgia and portions of Arkan-
sas and South Carolina early Friday
morning, grows hourly as reports are
received from remote points and as
wire communication is gradually re-
sumed to a normal condition.
The storm was the worst that has
visited this section of the south in
years. Halves of counties were laid
waste, towns were destroyed, planta-
tions were greatly damaged, and from
all sections of the storm swept area
come reports of loss of life.
Suicide Ends Daring Hold-Up.
A fashionably dressed bandit, who
robbed the savings bank of D. M. Ers-
kine & Company, in Highland Park,
Iii, an aristocratic suburb of Chi
cago, on the Lake Shore railroad,
committed suicide by shooting himself
in the mouth when driven to bay by
the Highland Park marshal and a
posse of citizens.
A companion of the robber, who had
driven him to the bank in an automo-
‘bile, was captured immediately follow
Ing the robbery, forcing the principal
55
SEE
il
i
g
iif
EE
Duffy, cashier of the bank; Miss
lie Fitzgerald, the bookkeeper,
seph F. Richards, the receiving teller,
into the cashier's cage just after
closing of business for the day.
Lived 18 Hours Under Capsized
After living in the forepeak
rapeized vessel in Tangier sound, near
Crisfield, Md., for eighteen hours,
James O'Donnell, one of a crew of six
thought to have been drowned after
ihe rescue of the other five members
of the crew, was rescued when the
boat was turned over. O'Donnell owes
hig life to the fact that when the ves-
sel turned over in the gale, consider
able cir was compressed into the hull,
and tais enabled him to breathe and
remain alive, although trapped like a
rat.
The accident occurred just off Deals
Island. Ome of the heavy rollers hit
the little vessel, and in a few moments
it capsized. All of those on board,
with the exception of O'Donnell, were
able to jump off before the boat over-
turned. O'Donnell was in the fore-
peak, and when the vessel captized
found himself in prison.
Sunday Captain Webster and some
of the crew went out to his vessel to
see about the damage and attempted
to turn her over. After hard work
they finally succeeded, and to their
astonishment they found O'Donnell in
the forepeak of the boat. He was in a
very weak condition when rescued and
could have held out very little longer.
U. 8. Diplomat Found Dying in Street.
Ex-Judge William I. Buchanan, for-
merly American minister to Panama
and later special envoy to Venezuela,
died in London. Sunday night a po-
liceman who was patrolling Park lane
found a man in evening dress cling.
ing to the railings outside of No. 10.
He was unable to speak and was evi-
dently very ill. The policeman took
him to St. George's hospital, where he
died before the doctors could aid him.
| Death was caused by heart disease.
The body was taken to a mortuary,
where it was identified by the man-
ager of Claridge’'s hotel, where Mr.
Buchanan frequently stayed. He went
out to dine apparently well. There is
no suspicion whatever of violence.
Stole Dead Woman's Ring; Swallows It
Upon the charge of the larceny of
a diamond ring from a dead woman's
finger, Miss Margaret Landers, aged
twenty-three years, of Lynn, Mass,
was arrested. Although she denied
her guilt a. first, she admitted the
theft later, and to the astonishment of
the authorities declared that, fearing
detection, she had swallowed the ring.
Early in the morning Miss Landers
went to thr home of James Geary,
where the body of Mrs. Geary was
lying in a casket. Miss Landers was a
friend of the family, and was left alone
with the body for a few moments.
Later the diamond ring. which is val-
ued at $150, was missed.
Conficcated Two Car Loads of Eggs.
Two solid car loads of eggs that
weresent from Tampa, Fia., to Cuba
to take advantage of the almost pro-
hibitive price charged for the product
there, were stopped at Knights Key
at the time of the storm this week,
confiscated by the railroad authorities
and turned over to the several thou-
sand workmen who had lost all of their
supplies. Eggs are now selling at $2
per dozen in Cuba.
Death of Cow Led to Suicide.
Grief over the recent death of a
favorite cow is believed to have been
the motive which caused Dr. J. F. Sid-
dall, eighty years of age, of Oberlin,
O., to end his life by drowning him-
self in a ciscern. Mrs. Siddall said that
her husband had been mourning the
loss of the cow and that the family
became so alarmed over his condition
that he was watched.
Woman Dies In Church,
As the sorvices were about to be-
gin at St. Paul's Methodist church at
Lancaster, Pa., Mrs. George W. Kil-
lian, sixty years of age, the wife of a
prominent carriage manufacturer, was
attacked with paralysis, dying in her
pew a few minutes later. On account
of the excitement the congregation
had to be dismissed.
Negroes May Govern Ohio Town.
The negro voters of the college
town of Oxford, near Hamilton, O.,
who number 100 out of the less than
400 voters of the community, put in
the fleld a complete ticket of candi-
dates for the public offices. As there
are three white tickets, the town faces
the possibility of being governed by
negroes.
ExSenator Lindsay Dead.
Former United States Senator Wil-
liam Lindsay, aged seventy-two years,
died at his home at Frankfort, Ky.
Mr. Lindsay was formerly chief jus-
tice of the Kentucky court of appeals
and had served as state senator and
representative before going to the
United States senate.
David Q. Eggleston, secretary of the
commonwealth of Virginia {or the past
eight years, is dead at Richmond, aged
fifty-two years.
At St. Johnsbury. Vt, L. E. Hull,
aged fifty-six yews, was found dead
in bed by his wife, who had dreamed
she saw him dead.
Tacoma, Wash, has adopted the
commission form of government four
to one; the new charter provides for
a mayor, four councilmen and a con-
troller.
Special Golf Links Laid Out on 100,000
Acre Ranch For the President—Wild
Cat Hunt Will Be One of the Diver.
sions.
Gregory, Tex., Oct. 19.—A wild cat
hunt, a day's tarpon fishing, motor
boating and automobiling, jackrabbit
chasing and golf are a few of the
diversions in which President Taft is
expected to indulge in the course of
his four days’ rest at his brother's
ranch here.
At the Charles P. Taft ranch the
president will be among those who ap
preciate his need of rest and recrea-
tion. No local committeeman will be
allowed within the precincts of the
100,000 acre ranch, unless possibly on
the last day, when the president may
consent to deliver a little speech at
Corpus Christi.
The president's brother has provid-
ed a big, strong horse for his guest,
and the president will do considerable
riding. They do their wild cat hunt
ing in the evening or along about
dusk, when the creatures venture from
the woods in search of prey. Charles
P. Taft has several fine hounds that
are all trained for wildcats, and local
hunters stand ready to assure the
president that the glory of the great
African game killer will be obscured
at least for one day if he will consent
to join in the chase. Ducks and geese
also have begun to come in from the
north, and the president may try his
luck with them. The golf links on
the Taft ranch have been laid out es-
pecially for the president's visit.
Charles P. Taft, his wife and their
daughter, Miss Louise, were at the
station to greet the president when his
train pulled in. Secretary of War Dick-
guest at the ranch during the presi
dent's stay.
Falls City got the first presidential
baby kiss of the Taft trip. The presi-
dent had managed to cover about 8000
of the 18,000 miles of his jaunt with.
out kissing a single kid, but at Falls
City he was cornered. Mrs. E. 8.
Wcolsey passed her four-months-old
baby up over the rear platform railing
and the president took it in his arms.
Having surrendered to that extent,
there was no escape. With all of Falls
City cheering, the president planted a
gentle kiss on the child's cheek. What
further evidence is needed of Taft's
candidacy for re-election?
CONDENSED NCWS ITEMS.
Wednesday, October 13.
King Leopold of Belgium has deco
sated Walter McEwan, the American
painter, with the Order of Leopold IL
Four people were killed, one man
was fatally injured and a score of oth-
ers were less seriously hurt in a col
Missouri, Kansas & Texas railway.
a small band of robbers forced their
way into the vault of the State bank
at Lewisville, Tex., secured $6500 in
money, overlooked $9000 more and
made their escape.
Thursday, October 14.
In the midst of a erowd of pwwsen-
gers Edwin Clark, of Brooklyn, drop-
ped dead of apoplexy in the Cortland
stret ferry house in New York.
Dr. Charles Thompson McCaughan,
aged ninety-five years, a pioneer Unit-
ed Presbyterian minister, the oldest
graduate of Miami university, died at
Winterset, Ia.
eight persons were injured when an
engine and two cars of the Austin &
Northwestern railway plunged into a
burning bridge over Watters creek,
near McNeil, Tex.
In a pistol duel between Editor John
F. Pulliam and John W. Rcbards in
Pulliam’s office at Harrodsburg, Ky.,
Robards was fatally wounded and Pul-
Ham may have to have his arm ampu-
tated as a result of a bullet which
crushed the bone.
Friday, October 15.
An unnamed donor has pledged
$150,000 to the proposed $600,000 en-
dowment fund for Wooster university,
at Ironton, O.
Tory Baffa, self-confessed murderer
of Guiseppe Fillipelli in Chicago sev-
eral months ago, was sentenced to Im-
prisonment for life.
Edgar Singer, a mail handler, em-
ployed by the Chicago Great Western
railroad, was arrested at Chicago by
postoffice inspectors on a charge of
rifling mail pouches.
Noland C. Gertner, who is under in-
dictment at Kingston, O., upon the
charge of enbezzling funds from the
Scioto Valier bank ranging from $150,
000 to $176,000, is under arrest at Kan-
sas City, Mo.
inson made the trip from San Antonio | ana
with the president, and he will be a | {ri 0
—
Saturday, October 16.
The last of a number of paper mills
at Rockton, Ill, near Beloit, Wis., war
destroyed by fire, entailing a loss of
$80,000.
Mrs. 8. W. Block, wife of a dry
goods merchant of Galveston, Tex.,
committed suicide in the Jewish hos-
pital at Cincinnati by hanging herself
with a towel.
Colonel Henry R. Harris, ex-con-
gressman and third assistant postmas-
ter general during the first Cleveland
administration, died at his home at
Odessadale, Ga., after a lingering ill-
ness.
Mrs. H. C. Edwards, wife of an Oak-
land dentist, and C. N. Anargyros, an
Oakland cigarette manufacturer, were
killed and seven oth.rs were injured
in an automobile accident in a suburb
of Oakland, Cal
Monday, October 18.
Three men blew the safe in the bank
at Avon, Minn., and secured $1700.
A twovearold son of William B.
Enck died of ptomaine poisoning at
Akron, Pa. after grest sulering.
The drowning of nine-year-old How-
ard Hollenbach, of Northampton, had
the effect of reuniting his separated
narents.
New Advertisements.
XECUTOR’S NOTICE. —Letters testa-
upon
GETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY,
Solizitors,
54-41.3t
BY FOR ADOPTION.—A fami-
ly desiring to adopt a boy, 6 weeks old,
healthy, with grey eyes and brown hair ean do so
by applying to the undersigned,
MISS EMILY NATT,
Secretary “hildren's Aid Society,
Bellefonte, Pa.
PHOLSTERING.—Have
Cline, Mattresses or an
line to repair? If have, eall
on Commercial ‘phone,
about it.
ou
. M: Bidwell
He will come to see you
5-21-1y*
OMES FOR SALE.—Two nice homes
in Milesburg borough for sale on easy
terms. One $700, one $500. Much better induce.
ments for eash,
L. C. BULLOCK, JR.
54-33-41 Overseer of Poor.
WILLARD'S STORE
GENT'S FURNISHINGS, HATS, CAPS, ETC.
1 deal in only the best articles and latest
styles, but sell at lower prices than those
lislon near Greenville, Tex. on the |
Using six charges of nitro-glycerine, :
Fireman O. J. Sutton was kiiled and |
ing shoddy and o r 1
SATE Moddy, and eapel Finda.
i D. I. WILLA
West High St. 5481y Bellefonte,
Automobiles.
{AUTOMO BILES
AGENT FOR THE FOLLOWING :
FRANKLIN,
PEERLESS,
THOMAS,
BUICK,
OLDSMOBILE.
A number of good second hand cars
tor sale,
JOHN SEBRING, JR.,
S8-tL, BELLEFONTE, PA.
SOT YTTYYTTYYTT YT YT YYyY
A DA A. DA. BA. BM
Lumber.
BUILDING MATERIAL
When you are ready for it,
you will get it here. On
Lumber,
Mill Work,
Roofing,
Shingles,
and Glass.
get
orders of all who know of them.
AN ESTIMATE?
52-5 1y ———
Bellefonte Lumber Co.
Lime.
54-4-1y
LIME. LIME.
———
High Grade Commercial and Building Lime.
Hydra One e (H-O) Hydrated Lime.
Ground Lime for tural
Crushed Limestone for Concrete
Graded Limestone for Road Making.
Works st Bellefonte, Tyrone, Union Furnace and Frankstown, Pa.
Address all communications and orders to
AMERICAN LIME & STONE COMPANY,
Tyrone, Pa.
ork.