THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO. PA. HI HUB A Queer Community Not Af fected By Corn Invasion. FARA.ERS AR1E WEALTHY Descendants of Russians Who Have Vast Farms and Whose Only Com plaint Is About Need of Cars to Carry Away the Crops -Water in the Sands. Every one knows of Kansas us a Stato of corn. Its whoal-producing capacity Is of mure recent growth. From a triilo, it has within a divailo grown to enormous proportions. For merly the western third, approximate ly, of Kansas, was counted almost as ft part of the gre&t American desert. Only the short buffalo grass grew up on 1U Benil-orld soil. This grass Is so hort and brown that at a distance of a few yards a bunch of cattle will oem to be performing the Impossible feat of grazing upon the dry earth. Under the parching, hot sun the tree less plains stretched monotonously from horizon to 'horizon, tenanted a generation ago only by prairie dogs, owls and occasional droves of buffalo and antelope, with roving banfls of Indians, and now and then the emi grant trains of "prairie schooners" bound to make 'Tike's I'eak or bur.t." The Indians were driven away. Tho prairie dogs were exterminated ami BO, alas! were the buffalo. Gradually, westward across the plains, wheat displaced the buffalo, and then the corn displaced the wheat. Now. here In western Kansas, only recently de spa'retl of as "tho short-grass coun try," wheat Is king. Land that five years ago could be bought for $2 or less an acre Is now held nt $-10 or poro. At Hays City is situated the State agricultural experiment station, maintained wholly by Kansas, though mannged In harmony with the Na tional Department of Agriculture. Its area, ,."m acres, Is said to be the largest in the world. Its purpose Is to Introduce the Improved methods of farming that have made the desert bloom and tho farmers to have fat bank accounts or private hoards. Old Fort Hays, abandoned In IKS!), left Its name to this settlement. Here the Western trail, replaced by tho rails of th Union 1'aciiic, crossed Big Creek, In the summer a bed of sun caked mud, in the spring a raging tor rent. I.Ike the wild animals, hero tho passing white man came to drlnfc and here the Indian rode to kill. Hence the fort, and hence ultimately the town, the seat of Kills County, the one persistently Democratic county In Kansas. Why Democratic? Just because a large percentage of its settlers wore "agin the government." Whence they camo they had been of the op pressed. Therefore they were natur ally, in their new home, of the party of the opposition, Lute In the eigh teenth century Russia offered exemp tion from military service, together with religious freedom, to discontent ed peasants In what are now western provinces of Germany and Austria Hungary if they would settle and raise wheat in unoccupied land3 of the Czar. These terms, offered for etver, Induced a large movement of the population into southern Kusslu. But the Kusslnn word "forever" can be Interpreted to mean a "century." 3o the late Czar drafted conscripts among the third generation of those aemi-Kussianlzed peasants. The re sult was an emigration to the United States, and a part of the stream was directed to this county of western Kansas because wheat was tho cereal of their ancestral tradition, and wheat was the only crop that this semi-arid land would bear. To this, their third land of rest dence in modern history, these German-Russians brought their own cus toms, their own costumes, their own tongue and their Catholic religion. They retain them all. Some of the first comers are now grandparents, but It is the second generation that Is in the prime of working life and that is garnering the prosperity of which their fathers laid the founda tion in hardship. In the winter they live In their own towns, of which the ahurch and parochial school form the social center. Iu the summer they live and work on their farms, always Irlving to their towns, deser.ed throughout the week, for Sunday wor ship. Thus their gregarious instinct prevails, accompanied with religion and domestic morality. Their tongue, which the parochial schools help to preserve, although It may vanish in another generation. Is I strange survival of low Herman, jnly slightly tinctured with house Sold words of Russian. Into this had ieen injected fin American vocabu lary of terms used in their daily toil, such as the names of agricultural 1m jlemcnts, animals and money. The ,-esuK Is an odd Jargon, not old inough, as tho Pennsylvania Dutch, :o have a literature of Its own. The industry and thrift of these itrange people is Interwoven with nn jaherited distrust. They put little faith in banks or in interest bear ing Investments. I was told of one Russian farmer aear Hays City whose crop this year vtll pay him a net profit of .$7,000. Will he deposit or Invest that money? Not he. When he receives a check for Ills wheat from the elevator owner he turns it Into cash at the bank. That is bis only use for the bank. lie car ries his money home. Where he puts ,t there iu the secret of hlmsojf and his family. Many such farmers put their money in a strong box and bury It in the ground from whoso acres it has been wrung. As Kills County Ul produce nearly 5,000,000 buobols of wheat this year, one can only guess j nt the millions of Idle capital thus ; hoarded. Hut It needs no guess to know that tunny of these fanners aro rich as riches are counted In rural communities and that they are grow in'? richer. Only this wheat develop ment Is verv recent. In the second ltrynn campaign an effort was made to teach those Demo- i cratlc Kusso-Amerirans an object les- (need wile. sun upon free silver. Tor their wheat ' "Mine won't," replied tho other. "I checks tho local bank paid them ell- (idvtsrd hi in yesterday to give up tho ver dollars. They had grown actus- bouse and take a smaller and less ex tomod to paper money, which they pensive one. In which, with the serv knew was as good ns gold. They pro- lints we are nble to keep, we could be trsted against carting home loads of niore comfortable, and he Just looked silver for their loads of wheat. Thus nt me over the top of his paper and they were converted from "free sll- fatd he guessed he knew what we ver." though they persist lit remain- rould afford to do and what we inn Democrats. ' rouldn't. But I know he is running The soil of western Kansas that lehlnd." yields: from 1.1 to 2 5 bushels of whent ! "Suppose," said the elderly matron, to the acre (one bushel of wheat pay- ''you had drawn your chair up beside Ing the entire expense of the acre's his and said, as sweetly as you could: crop), Is from three to fifteen feet '(Jeorse, can you spare me a moment?' thick. Iteneath Is a stratum of sand What would he have done?" perhaps fifty feet thick, and beneath "Why, he'd have laid aside his paper th.it lies n bed of clay. It Is tho layer and said: 'Why. certainly, my dear; of sand that holds the hope of this -hat is it?" land for the future diversification of "Exactly. Now suppose you had agriculture as well as for a vast in- i0i,j t,im that his Judgment was always crease in the yield per acre of winter wneat. ror it is mis sano mat. con tains tho water, that will ere many years bo used for Irrigation, with re sults that nut even a land agent could now venture to put into figures. In these rolling prairies, a slight eleva tion of only a few feet will overlook a wide acreage. Sink a well, thirty, forty or fifty feet, and you strike abundant water. A centrifugal pump, belted to one of the traction engines that every farm must have, will bring tho water to the surface. Dig a ditch, with lateral little ditches running at right angles over a neighboring plot of ground, and lo! a miracle Is wrought. Where only wheat would prow before, the land will now grow almost anything from cabbages to sugar beets, from turnips to straw berries, from corn and alfalfa to peaches and apples. I saw such a well and pump nt this experiment sta tion, yielding 1200 gallons of water per minute. Whence comes the water in tho sub soil sand? Presumably It seeps through that' stratum clear from tho Rockies. It is one of Nature's won ders. P.ut this vast sand reservoir also retains, when once the hard soil above is broken, the water that soaks through from the spring rainfalls water that formerly ran off in surface drainage into the flooded creeks' and rivers. '1 nus art is to change the very face and product of tne old "short grass" country. Out in this land, the horse and bug gy Is the great means of transporta tion. The buggy is the vehicle of so cial communication. It is supplement ed by the telephone, connected with -niles of barbed wire fence as a con venient and efficient conductor of electricity, and by the rural mail car rier. Rut the horse and the buggy aro the yachts of the land. The cargo ships are the big grain wagons, that come trekking over the prairies to the elevators, erected at every railway station. When I visited Hays City, it was with a party of Washington correspondents. It Is an Indication of the traffic that whelms the transcon tinental railroads that drivers of grain wagons shouted after the procession of buggies carrying the visitors: "Say, you newspaper fellows, tell the folks East to send us more cars." A month earlier the cry had been for labor to gather the harvest. It is a wonderful spectacle to bo hold tho separation of the grain from the stalk. The reaper cuts high, be low the grain. Into great sacks, run ning north and south, the fallen straw is heaped. P.etween two of these stacks the giant separator Is placed, connected by a belt with the traction engine. The wheat Is fed Into the huge machine The grain as It comes out Is automatically weighed by the half bushel. The prevalent south wind whirls the clouds of dust away in the air. The residual straw falls to the ground In a conical heap. After the process these heaps of straw aro burned. At present they are an ab solute waste, although some traction engines are fitted to burn straw. But most of them use coal as fuel. The danger of fire Is very great. The ut most precautions are taken. Often a "lire guard" that is, a strip of fresh plowed ground girdles every wheat j stack. Kvery thing is intensely dry, j for at threshing time no rnln has fal ' Ion for weeks or months. To light I a cigar Is an indulgence in the grain i field as carefully guarded as the kind ling of n lantern in a powder maga zine E. C. Ilowlnnd, in Mail and Ex press. Impugned Antiquity. The Louvre Is passing through an anxious ordeal. Another of its treas ures of antiquity, and In its way the most important in the world, is at tacked. In lSiifi M. Clermont-Onn-neau, then dragoman of the French Consulate at Jerusalem, found In the ruins of iJhiban, to tho east of tho Dead Sea, a lettered monument, which the first experts of the day de clared to bo the triumphal stone of Mesa, King of Moab, reciting his tri umphs over the Jews and the wars between the two countries from the m 1 i ... t . ..1 . rr 1 . ume 01 j Ki rm ?r IllWUUllltril L til til Willi IV I'Cirj.iii, iuhd.1 nine, centuries before Christ, and as the oldest example extant of alpha betic writing Is the precursor of our own A II C. Kenan pronounced It the "corner Btone of Oriental epigraphy." It is Impugned by an Austrian savant, M. Loewy, deeply learned In Semltle philosophy; but, as is contended by M. Clermont-flanneau, who still sur vives, he is In no way nullified to pro nounce upon the authenticity of Semi tic monuments. London Globe. iVlArl AuKiO A HUoJJAND. . r.nlrt TnU In Ihe Vorlil for iht Wife WIki Knot Hon- to Ciin ilnt-t n ( iimnnlun. "Why is It?" asked the young wife, "that a man will never take his wile's Idvlce?" "He will, replied the more cxperl- j TACT IS llEn ONLY WEATON. bo true that you wanted to ask his ad vice about something. What would he have done?" : "I think he would have kissed me and asked me what worried me. He is al ways considerate when I am troubled." I "Quite right. Next suppose you had asked his advice about letting one ot the servants go. What then?" I "W-e-1-1, I think he'd have asked if I could run the house with only one servant." I "Then suppose you had said: 'Well, the house is pretty large, and it would be pretty hard; but if you advise it I'll try. When I picked out the house, I did not think" "But I didn't pick out tho house." "Of course not; but suppose you had made the error of Judgment yours nev ertheless, and said that you hadn't real ized how hard it would be to run It in proper style. Would he have suggested a smaller house?" I "He might have. Yes, I think he would. He grumbled once about get ting lost in it. He'd probably, have asked if I could manage with one serv ant in a smaller house." "And then suppose you had clapped your hands and exclaimed: 'Just the thing! How clever of you to think of it I Why, we can afford to keep both serv ants In a smaller house, too, and we can be as oomfortable as with six here.' Then suppose you had kissed him and said that he always did know Just what to do. What would have happened next?" I "Why, we'd be looking for another .house now." "On his advice or yours." "His. I suppose." "Really?" . "Well, I don't know. He'd think so, anyway." "Precisely, my dear, precisely. Your Idea, his advice. Always let him put the advice in words. There's nothing 'like understanding a man. Now, run home, dear, and let him advise you what to do." Brooklyn Eagle. Knorkril SDnele ly Flh. A huge tarpon leaped from the wa ter In Tirabalier bay, La., besldo tho canoe in which Albert Lefcrt was slow ly drifting, and so violently whacked htm in the breast with Its tall that he was knocked senseless and reeled over board, no was rescued ny some friends, but was so injured he was forced to take to his bed. Haanr Wouldn't l.ri Go : Chicago has a school for barbers Tramps and other unfortunates whocan not pay for a shave or a hair cut an operated on by the novices, while patroni ,who pay are attended by experts. Th , other day, while a tramp was being shaved, he was asked: "Does t tie razoi 'take hold well?" "Yts," responded th victim, "but it doesn't let go worth .cent." Color of Iron Or, The only metal that is found In more than one color Is iron, which appears In almost every shade. This is the season when the wise young man leaveth off his summer frivolity and looketh about for a f.is 1 1 4 comfortable parlor wherein to camp the long winter evenings. CASTOR 1 A for Infants find Children, ' The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ' Has He No Relatives Joseph King, who for more tlinti twenty-five years has heeti nn in mate of the Danville Hospital, died at that institution Saturday, appar ently without relatives and I'rieiul- ess. Supet intetident Meredith is endeavoring to find some relatives. he does not succeed the body will he sent lo the anoloinical board Philadelphia. During all the time that he has been an inmate, no one has asked to sec him. TrcRpass Notices Notices warning hunters to keep off the land are for sale nt this office. They contain t lie law and ate printed on cardboard. 4 for a quarter or 10 for 50 cents. 3t. Pennsylvania Railroad's Wiutcr Excursion Boute Book In pursuance of its annual custom, the Passenger Department of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company has just issued an attractive and comprehensive book descriptive of the leading Winter resorts of the vast and South, and giving the rates and various routes and com binations of routes of travel. Like all the publications of the Pennsyl vania Railroad Company, this 'Winter Kxcursion Hook" is a model of typographical and pictori al work. It is bound in a hand some and artistic cover in colors, and contains much valuable infor mation for Winter tourists and travelers in general. It can be had free of charge at the principal ticket offices ot Pennsylvania Railroad Company, or will be sent postpaid upon application to Geo. W. Isoyd, General Passenger Agent, Street Station, Philadelphia. Broad it. DECEMBER McCLURE'S- McClurc'i Magazine for December decided ly Christmasv, with its beautiful illustrations and amiable fiction j and is nil oglow with the spirit of truce-lime. For the strenuous reader, however, ihere are articles by Ida M. Tarheil, Ky Stannard linker and others. 1 I "When I-.l17al11.-th Went Home," by Filial Bown.an Ronald, is a tale of a lonely vouncr ife who almost deserts her husband and her Dakota home in a burst of nostalgia for the Chiistmastidu of her mother's house, but who is brought hack in time to her finer du'y. "The Celestial Garment" is a tender story by Mary Talbot Campbell of a child who gets her much longed-for and very neces sary party-dies ''from heaven, right through M ima's heait.'' The "Christmas Chimes," of Margaret Cameron, is a delightful comedy and love. "F.llie's Furnishing" is a new story by Helen Reimensuyder Manin, deal. ing with a little soul-struggle or two con. ccientious New Mennonites. In contrast with the tranquil sweetness of these stories are Colin McKay's "Coming on the Coast," full of the strain and struggle and hero:.m of Man battling the elements; and "The Call," by James Hopper, a strange, weird story of the Philippines. For those that like humor unalloyed there are O. I lenry's "I'imi enta Pancakes," and Sidney C. Kendall's "On the Trail of the Serpent." Amot g the articles and no matter how mnny good shoit stories there are. a number of McClure's alwas has stinpini? articles that one cannot tear to pieces are Miss Tarbell's resumption of her tranquil and damning expose of Standard Oil moral tur pitude; and Kay Stannard Baker's "Lone righter," a true story of men that fk'ht for honesty and cleanliness against the active ill-will of the dishonest and corrupt and the passive skepticism of the "good citizen." l.a targe begins his series on a "Hundred Masterpieces of Painting." by a solendid article on "Portraits of Civic Life;" and Clara Morris has a scintillatinc chat about Ellen Terry and Mrs. John Drew. THE DEOEMBER LIPPINOOTT'S mag azine. The Christmas number of "Linnincott's Magazine" is favored in becoming the medi um for one of the most catchey novels of the season. Its title is "The Fascinatine of Mr. Savage," and Helen Milecele is its author. In lew words, it deals with the rncv ad ventures of a young woman seeking a ri;h second husband. Her first had been killed in the lioer War, and she believes that her heart died with him. A good figure and five thousand dollars' insurance on her husband's life being her only assets, she loses no time in starting out to "float" herself, not in a bathing-suit or on a raft, but by way of a slow steamer of Europe. The wit ow makes tne mistake ol conhdinc her olan to her "deai est friend," and this almost Droves her undoing. The author's character work is acute and consistent, ond the magnetism of the widow is so powerful as to reach ihe heart ol the rehder and cieate hopes for her success. It iias Deen a long time since Mrs. A L Wister could be induced to give the reading woild one of her inimitable translations. "The Coat at the Furrier's" a story iu letters by I.udwig Fulua, is published in "l.ippin coti's" Christmas issue and carries wnh it ihe same old-time charm that her name im plies Guy YVetmore Carrol contributes a Christ mas love-story called "The Reward of Vir tue" which is bright ami sympathetic. "A Redwood Santa Claus." by Jeionie Case Bull, tells a story of a little boy's determine 1 efforts to have a Christmas-lrec. It is hotn patheiic nnd amus ng. Alfred Sutro has written many good Inles, but pone belter than "Tho Bread on the Waters." It is the story ol a misundei stood proposal of mar r age. A little Christmas sketch by Clinton Dangerfield called "Death and life" is a vision full of meaning. ''Hi- Hour of Great ness," by Elizabeth Kniglu Tompkins, a charming story of modern life, is reu'iai k..bly well written and absoibin-ly interestinc. 1 1 is Wife" is an entertain 11 shori story by Trynlje Dubois. A humorous contribution from Mary and Rosalie Diwsoii emiiled "Ihe I'astry-Knife Pass Over" closes ihe number. George Moore's "Avowals," a literary criticism 01 vaiuc, is conn meil In run IV Christmas verse is conninuted by l.izetie wool wortri Keese, Charles Hanson Towne husie M. Best, Minna Irving, Agnes Fee, anu jieien m. Kicnaruson; nnd ihe "Wal nuts nnd Wine" are Spicier than ever this month in honor ol ihe season of Ciood Cheer. .Ti TTTYTET U KU UlAilVl 13 STRONGER THAN IT5 .WEAKEST LINK IIS STRONGER THAN. HIS STOMACH D PIERCES GOLDEN MEDICAL1 DISCOVERY iMAKES WEAK I .STOMACHS STRONG DECEMBER URYMEN. The Jurymen for the iVoomhpr term of court were drawn by jury coiiiiiiiH siiniKTs Shult. ami H:iK'lllnicli nnl Hliorill' Knorr on Monlmv, Following is the list: (iitA.s'n anions ('. E. Ad uiiH, llriar Crook. Jlonry llarilo; (ireeii wood. John ('liumhcrlin, Madison. I. J. Clewtdl, Jtcrwiek. II. F. Fritz, .luckmiii. H. (1. (Ireenly, Madison. I'liilip iuuirl'mii, Cniiytighnm. It. A. liiidinir, Itloom. l-'.dwnrd M. Holmes, l'.looni. Henry Join', HorwU'k. Jim icm Kerrigan, ( 'otiyiihtim. Henry D. Keller, Fishing Creek. Emanuel Jia.arus, ltlooiiisliiirg. ( leorge L. M umey, Catawissii Twp Theodore Meriele, lilooinsbtirg. Daniel O'Neil, ltlooin. .1. It. Patterson, liloom. Josinh E, Roberts, Catawissii lloro. M. F. D. Scanlin. Iilooiu. Svlvester Sittler, Centre. E". E. Ktranh, ConyiiKliam. James Trump, Orange Twp. John Vnnee, Mt. Pleasant. Ueorge 1). Yost, Kenton lloro. TR A VH.KSE JI'KOHS First Week. E. W. Alexander, Kenton Koro. Miles II. Ketx, liloom. Churles Kurt, Krinr Creek. Lewis 1 '.fish line, Fishing Creek. Asa Deily, Hemlock, (i. B. Dennis, Outre. John Donahue, (Vntrnlin Koro. A, V. DeShopimrd, liloom. H. 1). lOdgur, liloom. Soely F'dwards, Kenton Twp. Eliiis l-'.rnest, Cleveland, Charles Flyer, Orange. W. 8. Fisher, Main. Jacob Fought, Pine. tieorge Feiistermncher, Kerwick. Katisloc Fister, Orange Koro. Albert (iihsotts, Kerwick. K. J. Harrison, F'ishing Creek. John Hampton, Catawissa Twp. S. M. Hess, Kloom. Eli Krtim, Montour. It. G. F. Kshinka, Krinr Creek. Charles Lee, Scott. ThomiiH J. MeCiuire, Onyiighuni. John U Mclleiiry, Stillwater. Frank Marteenn, Kerwick. W. I). Mover, liloom. V. Miller, Centre. Theodore Mendcnlmll, Pine. John K. Mordan, Mt. Pleasant. Emanuel .Mauser, Main, John Meiwch, Montour. C. K. Meyers, Kenton Twp. J. 1). Potter, Pine. V. F. Rhodes, Conynghimi. Frederick Rice, Roaring Creek. Jacob Rider, Pine. A. J. Rnbqins, Centre. F'reas Kingrosc, Soott. K. F". Rice, Scott. tieorge Ruckle, Centre. Vbea yoa purchase pres ent, select fomcthini pill last, or the etrson rcccfvloc ft Is Ukcly to sooa forrct the ftver. tie dciigm, bcaotifuUr iinished totctber with great wearing qaaliUes arc combined la the ft. Rogers Brosl SPOONS, FORKS KNIVES. Tbi M847 Rokm Brot." brand hai 'r"lw""" uht 1 i( ia wean." adiii uib py mn irsoiiiff acaicrv, OCOa to tur weftuiiiuiir !aiu3rica ClltlOffVC fo ffr. tMTHKATiOPUtVLTm CO., etMWt MERIDEN BRITANNIA CO. Merlden, Cone, 'liiitnii Slerlititf-, liloom. V. A" Snv'ier, Scolt. 1. A. Ttibbs. Hellion lloro. . I ). WoniiiT. Fishing Crn U. Illriiin W. Williams, I'.erwiek. too W. Vol lor, CiitnwisMi Koro, Irn ZcMol'l, Madison. 1 It AVI ItKK .11 ' l!i ills Second Week. V. A. lint I, lleiilon I'.oro. ( ', ). I lowers. Otitic isn I'.oro, J. S. I S i in, liloom. .Inseiih Crawford, Orange. David ( 'iiU'iiiiiii, liloom. It C Doillriok, llorwick. William Dildinc, Mndison. Eugene Doty, Kerwick. .1. Ilitrrv Dean, Kerwick. llonrv ll. Dclghmillcr, Hemlock. Peter' o. F.ddinger, Main. ! I). Ervin, Cntawlssii Koro. Allison Kssick, Mndison. 1. K. (lelger, Kloom. Samuel S. llorlaeher, Reaver. Fred llnitiiiiin, Kloom. Dillmnii Hess, Krinr Creek. A. K. Helirie, Mifllin. William Johnston, Millvlllc. J. H. Keim, Scolt. Harry E. Kearn, Stigarlonf. Marvin Kline, (Irecnwoml. Clarence l.enhart, Kerwick. Thomas K. Moore, Kloom. Franklin Meyer, Sugarloaf. P. W. Miller, Catawlssn Koro. J. W. Perry, Sugarloaf. Knrton T. Pursel, Kloom. T. C. Smith, Jackson. Knit is Sterling, Mndison. ( lilhert Shtinmn, Main. C. '. Schlieher, K.'aver. I. W. Smith, Milllin. L. O. Shult., Pine. Harry Townsend, Kloom. James Williams, Centre. TRIALUST For week beginning Monday, December 7l 1903. First week. 1. Susan Cooper now to use of Daniel F. Seyhcit vs. Margaret Aver.il, f.dward Avcrat nnd Archie Averal, doing business as Averal & Sons. 2. Mrs. John Keeler vs. James Tenning ton. 3. W. li. Houck vs. John Stokes and Mrs. Lewis Miller. 4. S. K. Carl vs. C. A. Small. 5. les-c C. Karns vs. Charles II. Hrittain. 6. William Kemp vs. Bloom Car Manfg. Company. -. I. O. Frey nnd G. W. Tarsnns, trading as I. O. Frey & Co. vs. is. G. Bnfogle. S. John T. Kiihard vs. Shepard K. Boone executor surviving rxeeutor of Aaron Boono deceased. 9. John T. Uii hard vs. Shepard R. Boone. 10. The Allison Company vs. The Leader Store Company l td. For week beginning Monday 14th, l'joj. Second week. 1. John A. Shutnan vs. The Lehigh and Wilkes-Barre Coal Company. 2. F. K Creasy vs. The N. & W. B. R R. Co nnd its successors The N. & W B. Rail way Company. 3 Harry Harman and Martha Harman his wife to the use of the said wife vs. The Pennsylvania Canal Compar.y. 4. Henry Hinderliier's executor vs Daniel Derr and Clinton Derr. 5. Henrietta Kramp vs. Harvey Chering ton. 6. Alfrrd II. Yetter and George Yctter vs. Jeremiah Longenberper. 7. Jt.hn Klingerman vs. Philadelphia A Reading Railway Company. 8. Nathan Houck vs. Philadelphia A Reading Railway Company. q. F. D. Tewksbury administrator vs. Philadelphia & Reading Ra.lway Company 10. Margaret M. Dalions vs. I'liiladclphil & Reading Railway Company. n. I'. II. Fisher vs. Philadelphia & Read ing Railway Company. 12. Thomas F.. Ilirder vs. C, W. Harder. 13. Jacob l.indermuth vs. The Catawissa Railway Company and its lessee the Phila delphia & Reading Railway Company, 14. Thomas M. Mensch vs.. Catawissa Railroad Company nnd its lessee The Phila delphia & Reading Railway Company. 15. Sarah A. Richard vs. Francis Richard. 16. Mary F. Mitchell administratrix C. T. A. of Catharine Shultz, deceased vs. Syl vester Mmllz. 17. Martin Snyder by his father and next friend W. 1.. Snyder vs. William Bahme. iS. William I.. Snyder vs. William Bahme 19. tlizabeth Bullock nnd William Hut lock her husband vs. The Borough of Cen tralia. 20. Columbia Biewing Company vs. A. O. Rooney 21. John W. Quincy & Co. vs. Catawissa Car and Foundry Company. 22. William II. Smith vs. William Kia; ston. MAN ACER WANTED- Trustworthy lady or gentleman to manage business in this County and adjoining terri tory for well and favorably known House of solid financial standing. f 20.00 straight cash salary and expenses, paid each Monday by. check direct from headquarters. Fx pense money advanced ; position peinianent Address Manager, 610 Monon Building Chicgo. III. 9-10 l8t k OA tfcat Artls, 99 Etc a warld.wt.fe the DlAkcrf 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers