The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 05, 1886, Image 1

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    ai
= ( OLD SERIES, XL.
S {| NEW SERIES, XIX.
THE CENTRE REPORTER,
FRED, K URTZ, Eprror and Proe’s
i —————————————————
A number of New York strikers have
been indicted by the grand jury and put
under $1000 bail for trial.
Let the 8 hour strikers bear in mind,
that by cutting the figure through the
middie nanght remains on either side.
sn A A Sr ———
Hon. Thomas M. Marshall is not en-
chanted at the bill of fare the Republi
can bosses hold out for this year. He
denominates Mr. Beaver “as very small
notatoes.” but will be satisfied with his
nomination should Major Montooth be
put up with him; but Beaver and the
“old ticket,” or Beaver and Norris, the
pet of the machine, Mr. Marshall repu-
diates in advance.
In addition the other independent
leader, Charley Wolfe says the Republi-
can party is no good and he will vote
with it no longer.
Hon. Chas. 8. Wolfe has quit the Re-
publican party. In an interview with a
Pittsburg Dispatch reporter he said: “]
cannot vote the Republican ticket any
longer,” adding his reasons, which are
about the same as those which led to
the Independent movement. He furth-
or stated that he is not going over to the
Democratic party, but is “going to vote
the Prohibition ticket.” As to his atti-
tande toward Gen. Beaver, hesays: “Per-
sonally, to myself, not to Gen. Beaver, I
rogret that I cannot vote for him, to
show his friends and my friends, that I
have naught of personal enmity to him,”
hat Gen. Beaver will be nom-
nated in a manner which will not meet
with his approbation. interview
with the reporter is somewhat lengthy,
-—
*
v sey at
forcasting t
The
but the above are the sharp points.
- -
Archbishop Taschereau's edict com-
-
manding the Ron
not to join the Knights of
among
Yo
Labor has
cansed great agitation Roman
Catholic workmen in Ontario. The fol-
lowing is a statement from Archbishop
Lynch, the Archbishop of this Province:
“T of the Knights of La-
Lor was sent to Rome for the approval
f the Pope. It was returned with con-
demnation. An amended . ynstitution
of the Knights of Labor was then sent
to the Holy See and is still under con-
sideration. Meanwhile the church here,
while awaiting the decision from Rome,
he constitution
does not order any Catholics who may
have joined to resign, but simply forbids
any Catholic from becoming a member
until Rome finally decides for or against
the order.”
: —— —
Some of the disappointed applicants
for license, in this county, have held an
informal conference, with a view to car-
rv the matter of non-granting of licenses
to the Supreme Court. Having all the
requirements of the law, and in the ab-
sence of any charge for having violated
the liquor laws, it is contended the Court
had no right to refuse a license. The
object of the disappointed landlords is
to make a test case, and have the Su-
preme Court pass upon the d'scretion
and powers of the courts below upon the
subject of granting licenses.
This would be a proper move.
judges hold they have power to refuse
or grant, at discretion. Other judges
think where the applicant bas not vio-
jated the liquor laws and in other re-
spects fills the requirements of the li-
cense laws there is no discretion with
the court but to grant a license to the
applicant.
Some
i
The Curtin Investigating committee
began its proceedings in 8t. Louis on Fri-
day by sending in success'on for several
prominent business men with the view
of getting their opinion of the South-
western strike, then for Mr. Hoxie, Gen-
eral Manager of the Missouri Pacific,
and several of his chiefs of departments,
and lastly for the general officers of the
Knights of Labor. After being closed
with each of these three parties in turn
the Committee anounced that it would
begin to take testimony next morning
and afterwards would divide into two
sub-committees, each to proceed on its
own tour of investigation in different di-
rections.
76 AND 86,
1776~8trike for your homes and your
firesides.
1886-—8trike for 8 hours,
nsssosssisii i A ASA
The strike for eight hours was inaugu-
rated on Saturdy, 1, in all important ci-
ties, and has become a formidable move,
Eight hours’ work for eight hours’ pay
is founded upon some regson; but eight
hours’ work for ten hours’ pay may not
look as clear to those who have the pay-
ing to do. The number of workmen
over the country who have gone into the
strike for eight hours as a day's work’
runs into scores of thousands and is
likely to be the next excitement which
willibe general all over the country.
The Philad, Times remarks: There is
a pretty general movement in labor cir-
<les where labor is rated by the day, to
enforce the limitation of a day’s labor to
eight hours. The movement can’t be
universal because in many channels of
industry neither employers nor employ-
ed can afford to lessen the hours. Em-
ployers can’t pay more than they are
now paying in some industrial enter-
prises, and there are very many laborers
who cant earn in eight hours what they
need for the support of themselves and
their families. Any attempt, therefore,
to make the eight-hour rule general must
be a failure,
There are many channels of industry,
especially in the more skilled industry,
wherein it can be made optional with
workingmen to work eight hours or ten
hours, or more or less, as may be most
agreeable to either party or both; and
with them the question of dispute is
about wages. The natural desire of la-
bor is to command ten hours’ pay for
eight hours’ work, and the natural de-
sire of employers is to avoid an increase
of twenty per cent. in the cost of labor.
In some cases employers may be able to
pay it, and those with important con-
tracts in course of fulfillment may be
compelled to accept for the time any de-
mands made upon them; but it must be
obvious to all who disappointedly view
the industrial situation that there are
very few employers who can increrse
wages twenty per cent., or even half as
much, and hope to have any profit from
their business this year,
ern
GIGANTIC COMBINATIONS
WEALTHY CORPORATIONS,
A very interesting story is printed in
New York concerning organizations of
capitalists intending to antagozize the
The story runs that
from the day last summer when Mr. Jay
1 was forced to bow the knee to the
Knights and grant their demands for an
adjustment of grievences on the Wabash
OF
Knights of Labor.
1
Crouic
tem, capitalists and corporations have
8
been uniting to contest the demands of
labor. A great union of moneyed inter-
ests has been in thé? course of forma-
ti It is stated positively that the
Presidents of the street railroads in New
York have joined this organization of
zigantic capital, and 1
$1,000,000 to its fund.
Ml.
above
To this union i
said to be due the defeat of the strikers
on the Southwestern Gould system, the
defiant attitude of Mr. Hoxie, and the
defeat of the Third Avenue strikers in
New York the past week.
When Mr. Hoxie turned his back «
the Knights he knew $25
subscribed by the roads leading into
East St. Louis to defeat the strikers, Ie
knew that all the railroads in the eoun-
try had subscribed or were willing to
subscribe hundreds of thousands of dol-
lars to crush the Knights of Labor and
the labor unions of the country, The
big sugar refiners were the last to come
into this big Union and subscribe to the
big fund. They are more arrogant than
Hoxie, and declare absolutely that they
will shut down entirely rather than take
the strikers back at anything like the
former wages. The President of one of
the trunk lines said that his company
stood ready to subscribe £500,000 to the
fund at the first indication of trouble
from its employes. Whether Mr. Gould
is the General Master Workman of the
Knights of Capital cannot be learned,
but such is the report, This big fund
has enabled the corporations toscour the
country for non-union men, and it can
be stated positively that in the event of
a general tie-up of the railroads in any
of the large cities these men tand
ready to take the places of the strikers,
A huge organization of textile manu-
facturers has been discovered in New
England, and includes 49 large woolen
mills with the cotton mills, It has been
organized to protect its members from
striking workmen, and the discovery of
its existence caused the sudden collapse
of what threatened to be a serious strike
at the Whitten mills at Taunton, Mas-
sachusetts,
A second union embracing all the im-
portant cotton mills in the states of
Maine, New Hampsbire and Massachu-
setts was completed in Boston lately. The
society has taken the form of a mutoal
insurance company, organized on the ba-
sis of the respective pay-rolls of its mem-
bers. It is not a corporation and has no
stock. The yearly pay-rools of the Mas
sachusetts mills that have already joined
amount to $15,000,000, Every leading
cotton mill in the state has already join-
ed. The aims of the society are not in
any sense aggressive, and its purpose is
not to attack the Knights of Labor, but
simply to protect its members agalost
unjust persecution. The methods of
self-defense which the society will em-
ploy have not yet boen made public.
-— nian
THE WEST AND THE TARIFF,
The New York Star says a western
Congressman is roported as saying that
his constituents insist on having cheap
woolen clothing, cheap blankets, cheap
lumber, cheap nails, cheap tools
and implements, Without these, he as-
sorts, “We can't live, and we mean to
live-~don’t you forget that” He states
furthermore, that when the western
an} ryt Fad
BN DE iDEN
4
n
1,000 had been
permanently down in price, they
make short work of this tariff.”
The Star has more than once warned
the eastern protectionists of the intensi-
ty of feeling which exists against them
and their tariff law in the West. The
tures precisely the situation. The pro-
blem presented in the West is one of
living. It is apparent to any close ob-
under extraordinary
never again receive the
former times for their products,
being the fact, it is literally true that the
farmers of the Western States
live underthe existing tariff. Moreover,
the western Congressman spoke very far
within bounds when he said that hi
constituents would make short
with the tariff “when they once see that
their products are permanently down in
price.” Their products are not
down in price, but the farmers
know it. In thd six
march 31 England imported
high prices
This
work
on 3
already
months ending
from the
of wheat. In the corresponding six
months of the year before the Engl
importation from the United Btates was
10,264,000 hundredweights, At the
time the English importations
dia increased from 4
3 Rill
fron
{024.000 hundred-
believes that
d
11
The London Economist
these movements are permanent, an
that the United States before long wi
be displaced from its domi i
as a supplier of wheat
grower has discovered to 1
uct of his
i
a
knows that the prod
been permanently cheapened and
must be taxed less if he is to
make a living from his farm.
It is the consideration of thi
tion of things that has created
! sectional feeling
states, which is direct ¢
This part of the country
as the principal beneficiary of the
tection conspiracy, and inan
is true; for most of the rich mo
continue {0
A
+
i a si:
th
in
y tariil has
The
does not know that
in great distress by
tariff law, and that some of
facturers— notably the makers
n
to whom alone tl
good, are here. western
labor in the
the operation
the
Be
the conspiracy of which they
been members. What the wheat gn
sees is the reduced price which
ceives for his product and the
ending burden of tariff taxation
He is, therefore, n
pleasant mood toward the east, and w
can get no favors from hi He
not vote a dollar for ships, nor gu
forts. More than this, he wil
rise in his might, and in the words
western Congressman, “make ah
of this tariff.”
e ods—are beginning to rebel
bom
ig
s 2
ed upon him. ina
©"
JEFFERSON DAVIS STANDS UNDER!
THE STARS AND STRIPES
On the Spot Where He Stood 25 Years Ago)
and Recites Some Mournful Numbers
i
i
on the Dead Lost Cause, |
Montgomery, Ala, April 28, Mr. Jel
ferson Davis left his home at Beauvoir,
Miss., yesterday morning. Ie was
companied by his youngest daughter.
They were in a special car in charge of
a committee of citizens of Montgomery,
headed by Mayor Reese, who went to
escort them, The arrival at every sta-|
tion was the signal for a demonstation of
people. Many one-legged and one-arm-|
ed soldiers were waiting to see him, and,
all had shouts of welcome, Mr. Davis
stood or sat at the rear of the car.
ace
ty handshake to all,
The train reached here last night, The
scene has never been equaled, and eclips-
ed the inaugural reception in
Houses were illuminated, fire-works!
brightened the heavens, artillery boom-
ed and a dozen bands played, while the
shouts of thousandg mingled with the
roar and added to its volume,
To-day will be memorial in the histo-
ry of Alabama. Every locality was rep-
resented, and many adjacent towns and
villages poured their entire population
into the streets, Atlan early hour the
side-walks were so densely packed that
locomotion was difficult, The entire ci-
ty was gay decorated and on the City
Hall were United States flags floating
out of every window. Pictures of Con-
foderate Generals are fastened to outside
walls, while the names of General Rob-
ert E, Lee, Stonewall Jackson, Albert
Syndey Johnston, Robert E, Rhodes and
and many other Confederate Generals
fluttered to the breeze on streamers.
The Capitol was beautifully decorated,
and from the topmost point on the high
dome, towering far above evervthing in
the city, floated the stars and stripes.
The entire front was covered with
streamers and devices, while there were
suspended along the front columna im-
mense Federal flags, reaching down al
to most the heads of the por Sg More
Federal flags were floating in Montgom-
ory so-day an at any time singe 1860,
the arrival of the ion at
the Banitol Mayor Roeso ro to
{most type of Southern manhood.
Davis,
nfederate States of America.”
The scenes heretofore enacted were
gone over as Davis advanced, and it was
{8OmMe minutes before he could proceed.
{It was the first time thousands in the
ferowd had seen him since his arrival, it
| Jetfeason
ie
{¢ (
reach him at the hotel. The shouts fi-
[nally dying away, Mr. Davis, leaning on
this cane, with a Federal flag over him
{and Confederate veterans
i feel
ings,
i»
ill.
{of hig hearers, he sa
i
“My Frigxps: It wonld be vain if 1
ishould attempt to express to you the
gratification which 1 feel at this demon-
i But 1 know that it is not per
therefore I feel more deeply
is a sentiment far
myself. You have
errible ordeal of war,
not seek, When she
y grievous for farther
ight the peaceable so-
i 1 her, the
une ringing over the
rsle rose in her ma-
sires and beardless
It was that
alone approved
grateful 1
dearer
passed thro
which Ala
elt her wr
leration, she BO
n. ng denies
Well do 1 re
boys, &«
phrase, they
e¢ed-corn, ve
and fearless
and
their
vier
ense,
ar
gentle
mao
80 i Ox ed
cks and
than theboys
of a er's
tears,
mot!
: passed. Many
! ave found nameless graves,
but they are not dead. They live in
sir epirits stand out, the
olumn which march-
faltering step toward
i | liberty. [Appaluse]
attempt, as |
rES II
Wem Dave
thin
iit
goal of constitu i
It were in vain if 1 sl
slready said
Have gr
alls
vers
Your
ch
+
Then
had
n the
4
of
3
y his elognence could
hh far exceeded my me
in, that I was comin
r to a land where lil
sede % fa wu 11 1:3«
niimenss will 2
I have been pro
i not
i itherefore
irtfeit
old
oth-
houts were so
wi
-
:
i
is ackno
{rovernor
lon followed,
oT
ants
F600. 000
wisco Losses && 0,000,
Baltimore, April 30.—The most disas-
ty for many years broke out shortly after
7 o'clock [ast night in the five-story ware-
houge 318 West Baltimore street, occu
pied by 8. W. Floss Co, wholesale
dealers in notions and white goods, The
flames spread with almost incredible ras
pidity, and the entire fire department
was called upon, bat the brisk wind cars
ried the fire to adjoining buildings, and
they were badly damaged before water
could exert ita influence. Among the
firms burned out are Terry & Sone, straw
goods; M. Ring & Co., clothing; Cross &
Dunbraco, furniture; Imwald & Mehring,
carpets; Albert Bros, bardware; J, H.
&
Knapp & Co., book-binders. The total
nies,
FIRE IN BAN FRANCISCO,
San Francisco, Cal, April 80.—The
building occaopied by L. & E. Edmunds,
furpitore, and A. L. Bancroft & Co, sta
tioners, burned to-day. Loss, $510,000,
One man was killed and several others
reported missing,
AP Mp
A HEARTRENDING HOR
ROR.
A WOMAN DRUTALLY ASSAULTED BY A
HALF-WITTED MAN WHO DISEMBOWELS
HIS VICTIM,
Frantic Sorrow and Suicide of Ier Hus
band on Ilis Retwrn ~The Author of
the Crime Lynched,
Topeka, Kansas, April 28, —Last Sat
urday the wife of Jacob Freimate, a
homgsteader, in Seward connty, was as
saulted and murdered by Fritz Rubin, a
halfwitted German, who bad for some
time been enjoying the hospitality of the
Freimathe', he being homelos aud with.
out friends, During the absence of Mr.
Freimuth, Rabin gesanlied his benefac-
tress, then hound her hand and foot and
cut hor throat, He then took au rusty
| the front and said
“My Counrryumx: It is with profound
§
+
hoe, and while the woman was dyiog,
MAY. 5, 1886,
iment, Mrs. Freimath was en ciente and
{lated babe lay near the. mother’s body,
{ Mr. Freimath returned home next day,
{On discovering the body of his wife he
became agraving maniac. A neighborin
the sparsely settled country who hap
{pened to be passing, found Freimuth
{for fear of his fury. He drove to the
nearest settlement and told the story. A
party was at once organized and went to
unfortunate people were buried.
{murderer and found him in a small ra.
muth place, near the Cimarron river. A
fractious horse was secured and saddled.
One end of a long lariat was fastened
{around Rubin's neck and the other end
dle. The horse was then
started And
cracking of revolvers and rifles
eéxhavsted and the lifeless body of the
murderer was loosened as the men came
His head was almost gevered from
his body. The carcass was left lying on
the prairie uncovered for the coyotes,
/ out on A ‘strike. NM
Y
MANY FACTORIES IDLE IN
DUSTRIAL CFNTERS,
ni
3d
IN.
| The Eight-Hour De Ti cd M ade, Resisted
| and J of Toilers
Granted— Thousands
oyment,
Out of E ip
Chicago, May 2.—Whith the first of
{May came the demand for the 8-hour
{scheme to be put in operation, A num-
ber of firme acceded to the demand, but
there were many that resisted it. In a
few instances concessions were made on
both Business in railroad circles
and large manufacturing establishments
was virtually idle. Nothing
lon whatever, and the scene
that the laboring element
ing The
{are not prone to do mischief, and if were
t alone it is believed the existing state
lof affairs would be
s dea
was going
indicated
Ct
of Chicage
a holiday. strikers
1
amicably
Ninety factories are closed, so are many
{wholesale houses, and aboat every insti-
tution in the city where 50 men ere em-
ployed, and 40000 workmen are
settled,
idle,
of merchandise
were received daily were deserted all
iday. People are unable to account for
ithe rapidity of the uprising. It took all
il surprise, All who were asked to
rike did so without the remotest con-
isideration of results, To-morrow will
shut down.
| Monster mass roeetings at which 20,000
people were preseut were held last even-
ling in various parts of the city, Speech-
les, some inflamatory and some jodicious,
| were made. The purpose of the former
it necessary, and
ithe latter not to give in until employers
recognized the demands of their em-
iployea. The police anticipate a break of
isome kind and are preparing themselves
{for the ordeal. They believe that'45,000
imen, excited as they now are, will not
igive in without trouble of some kind oc-
earring, and the men say they will live
or die on the eight-hour rock, The mi-
litia are drilling in their armories, ready
t
o respond should a riot occur,
oo AFFAIRS AT THE QUAKER CITY.
Philadelphia, May 2.—The 8-hour agi-
tation yesterday resulted in a number of
strikes in this city, principally
among cabinet-makers, and the situa.
tion gives promise of fresh treubles to
morrow morning. The employes in the
Allison Car Wotks last evening decided
that unless their demands are acceded
on Monday all the men employed shonld
be ordered out and a general strike de-
clared. The employes of Watson Robin.
son's plaining mill at Germantown struck
yesterday for 8 hours work per day. The
wood-carvers have decided to co-operate
with the cabinet-makers in their stand
for 8 hours. About 80 carpenters em-
ployed on John Wanamakers's store at
Thirteenth and Chestnut streets struck
at noon yesterday for 9 hours work a
day at $2.75. At the meeting of the Car-
penters’ Union last evening it was stated
that Mr. Wanamaker had decided to
grant the concessions. -
UNITED AT 8ST. LOUIS,
8t. Louis, May 2.—About 15,000 work
ingmen assembled last night in Locas
Square to listen to the labor orators on
the eight hour question. The meeting
was held ander the auspices of the Cen-
tral Labor Union, and the unions were
counseled to enforce their demands at
all hazards, Many of the unions ap-
ared in uniform bearing torchlights.
he 8.hour movement among the trades
yesterday was not as oconoe ss the
men desired it should be, and the ac
tions of the employers have been some-
what erratic,
AT THE COUNTRY’S CAPITAL.
Washington, D. O,, May 2-The §
hour rule adopted by the various build-
ing trades-unions will go into effect in
this city to-morrow morning, and as
the master builders and contractors are
determined to resist the demand for
short hours, building operations will be
practioally | nded until a compro:
mise can effocted, “What we propose
s So. on Mondays said a N presentati
: wor en's organ
ork a. We will
NO. 18
| propose to strike,” Vrom present indi-
cations 10,000 men in 1 city will
out to-morrow on astrike {.r 5 hours as
{ a day's work.
——
rr
$20
Sm—
THE DAY AT CINCINNATI
Cincinnati, May 2.—The great farni.
ture factories, employ S00 work-
men, were quiet yesterday, nearly every
16
} Si
ng
ing
tm dal
indef
one being closed for an nite time,
for
Phoenix Works is the
by
hey haying conceded all that
was asked. Although a formal strike
| was inangurafed at most st there
was nothing approaching disorder al ary
place. The men in 1 peveral
branches of industry wade det
{ #thorter hours and
t however, has heen
i the movement in all cases coming
| the shop organizations on their own
sponeit and as individual
| tions,
{to await a settlement of the struggle
The
y establishment not affected the
sr
1008,
oti er
mnre wage
given by the
from
Pion
ity organizi
N IN Xi
~The labor demos.
| stration in this eity and
! ‘ : . :
been uppermost in the minds of the citi-
zens of the two cities for t few
weeks, and in the last few days the inter-
est has become more intense. As the
day set for the grand demand for 8 hours
work approached, there has baen a con.
centration of that interest, and not only
have the citizens pr liveliest
concern, but all parts the municipal
governments have been aronsed. Inthe
evening John Sw ldregeed a crowd
of 15,000 in Union Square,
Brooklyn ave
x mart
if past
rirayed the
f
of
inton
SHITTY 3 ea —
Yilue A : 3 indy
\ I SE J } TO.
Boston, May 2.~In this
Trades-Union of Carpznters, the
hood of Carpenters and Joir
the
ica, g
ters and Joine
Drother-
ers cf Amer-
ty of Carpen-
ombers Un-
v4
A “ # ~ ¢
Amalgamated
TS,
} y 00K) men in
demand 8 hours
3
a de
[pie
: ov
the I
H—=have
strike if th
"yay
L HI804
age
a demand for the ad
hour system Fur
yesterday decided to sh
unless the employes shoald
igl hours work.
led the
i.zchange
‘a WOrks
» pay
pasand
Liere
a
BL
}
-
Shamokin, sy 2.~The miners st
Hickory ridge have
agreed to accept 8
bours pay for 8 hours work which they
nandod hould constitut 8 da
work. Them at Green Ridge =
Hickory Bwamp mines will probably ask
the same terms on Monday, The miners
in the Shamokin region in general have
deferred demanding 8 hours work nntil
those in Luzerne county comp their
organ four
1, When a general {
eight hours work will in,
Gen &
§
- 3
n na
igle
matic]
eIniba
D2 mo
ii
do do
"ON
bh |
May 2.—The furniture man-
ufactu ing refused fo grant their
employes demands for a redaction
i 10 hours to Shours,
a general strike was inaugurated yester-
day. Nearly every forniture factor;
Pittsburg and Allegheny City is close
and over 800 men are idle. The stone-
cutters in the two cities are also out on
nine hours a day, but will retarn to work
on Monday, the employers generally occn-
ceding the demands. The carpenters
will strike to-morrow,
inaday's |}
ASKING FOR NINE HOURS.
dochester, N, Y., May 2.—The cigar.
makers in this city commenced to work
on the S-honr plan yesterday. The
manufacturers do not ebject as the men
are paid by the piece. Carpenters, ma-
sons and bricklayers have demanded
that 9 hours be considered a day's work,
the carpenters asking $2.50 for nine hours
work. It is thought the men will reach
an agreement with the contractors with-
out a strike,
nA A is
~1{ a piece of charcoal is laid on a
burn the pain will submde immediately,
and if left on the burn for an boar, wii
cure it. This seems almost incredible,
but as a piece of charcoal’ is readily pro.
cured it should be kept in every honse,
for immediate use, and its efficacy tested.
Dr. Richmond's Samaritan Nervine
will cleanse the stomach, tone the vital
organs, give a parfect digestion, parily
the blood, clear up the complexion, and
fproduce a state of mental and physiosl
electricity, which gives symmetry of
form, bright eyes, white skin, glossy
hair and a uine type of female loves
liness, which no cosmetic can+ compare
with, $150 at druggists.
- Some time in June the new mem-
bers of the Lock Haven Salvation Army
wiil be immersed in the river, A grand
banquet will be prepared and a big time
is expected on the occasion.
doctor bills can be saved if peo-
ple will place confidence in the fact that
most of the ills flesh is heir to can be
cured by Keller's y. Pas
rify the blood. See adv.
~eln some sections of Huantingdon
county the farmers are plowing their
a i cate Jaret of SIE
ou ow to
such an extent that this course was nec
essary, *
What is more disagreeable to a lad
than to know that her hair has he
lost ita color, bat is full of dandroff? Yet
sach was the case with mine until I used
Parker's Hair Balsam. My hair is now
black and perfectly clean and glossy.
+ wmweThe village of Fairview, in Erie
Shanty, was nearly swept by fire on
&
# A