lh it Pa GHANGI ERS’ HEAD CRITICISES ROADS. : Williams Grove (Special) Master WF. Hil, the Grange in his address the Grang- pienic criticised the meth- ods of the State way Depart. ment in building roads He declared the highways are ‘mproper- ly constructed by the officials and a4 greater cost than necessary He advocated the building ‘of roads and the advancer lic schools, but urged provide the money ne lieve the people of affected from the burden now imposed upon them vited the people ro join and become identified with a ment to accomplish this through the Legislat: The speaker further urged pas of a bill giving trolleys of State at ers here, High State 1 il good nent of pub- th aat tn e e Stat assary and re- localities taxation He in grange HIVE ills he yf ‘he med ure sage ad ditional rights of way and compelling them to haul freight ings banks were also Hill On the met De par A ment State Is speak of portation the p blic part of it over our haul over seen n products tion origin are Postal irged SAV- by : Mr the ads and subject Mi RO r it Highwat hods of ment, Mr leading f of every $11 Ket CO1l niry among immovabl mend pari; In e ight mile, they an ment surfa few roa: edu ive of shoul township inf or takes any and tice a large cont the er with of per: Mil ract price - the mselveg obligated sum than was { "As it has been fully demon it ed that thes» road at this vast exper standing i thnk it is time some other plan in many the State this 29.000 per iid make five or six miles of gravel com- pact earth road, if the direction patent ing advice, would all Jogal uirements, could aintained good condition competent rection from the State Highway partment, and would be a road Jor many months ore ‘han the present kind ihe idea of Governor St ontinuous good “tate is worth t.0n ‘And ther that the Gr mon schools tem taxation real bear nearly all the government, and it fact that the taxes on about five times taxes on an ial valuation in sonal or corporate property cat on is not a local matter, and the State assumes to partially late the number of months of ac and also the teachers proper that it should expense of our public schools State could then with propriety force the compulsory education. This would make uniform educational op- portunities throughout the State. and would be a long step toward securng that Grange demand of ‘Greater Equalization in Taxation.'™ buil even $e not to part mile wo good and ME reat ¥ i Of or built engin M ngin De m in di- De- under in n 111 ever he uart to ACTOS cons.dera- roads the 1y of careful factor in tural ange fosters 1 nds , is our iT present efdtate expense is a tr real estate higher than com ays has te for of local ent per © regen 1 sd bear the The York (Special). -Beveral tramps are charged with setting fire to and burning a grain shed belonging to Mrs. Catherine Hoke, near this city, destroying several large wagons, eighty bushels of grain and a lot of hay. The loss of the building is about $800. The tramps had been sleeping in the building and had re- rently been deprived of thelr pleas. ant quarters. 1 MINE HORRORS OF STATE TO BE PROBED. (Special). A confer- ence dealing with mining conditions in the United States and the number fatalities resulting accidents is being held here, Victor Watteyne, chief of the Belgian Department of Mines, who arrived here from New York a guest of the United States Govern- ment, is conferring with Clarence Hall, of the United States Geologi- cal Survey, who in charge of the Government experimental station here, and J. W. Paul, chief of the Department Mines West Vir- ginia A Pittsburg great of from mine as is of of igation of the Monongah, k. Pa., and Fay- made Abont Desborrough, Meissner, of thorough invest! ecelit mine disa W. Va.: Jacobs Cree City, Pa., will September 1, Captain of England. and Herr Germany, th expert mining engi- neers, will join Mr Watteyne in the investigation, for whie appropriated $150,000 The abandoned Wy., where death, will efght he vestigat } t sters at x elite be uo Hanna, ’ mine at seven { me also be 1hout will 1 in this the in on BiG FIRE TACKY AT FRACRKVILLE. ille (Special) A arelessly thriry poolroon IOTHER 1 HELD AS ABDUCTOR. IDE ATTEMPT FAILS taken drained a constable le to pre. a passing the speed laws were endeavor gave the being risoner The that the of laudanum act, but was unab He summoned and the jail tie aw t vent ft iutomobile broken in man’s Nte to POT, ATO CROP NO FAILURE. John W. Wogan, York ial) the York (Spec of cultural Society of the heing a gerated The potato crop.’ an, is not a fatlure that potatoes have not yielded well in some parts of the county, bul are other sections where the has heen up to the standard the lower end of the dounty, ‘es ecially, the yield has been good There are many patches of fine president County Agri- , Says the re. York County potalo failure are greatly ex that 05s 4 ports crop says Mr. Wog It is true of the tubers is as high as some do not think the The price not going to be people assert I —— A 50 OH SA Warrant Out For Farmer's Slayer. York (Special) -—A warrant charg. ing Elias Bears with murder was is- sued in accordance with instructions given by District Attorney Ammon. Sears shot Lewis Barbour, a farmer, of near Delta, on August 15. The injured man died from the effects of the bullet wound in his head. GAVE His LIFE IN VAIN. Allentown (Special). Four-year. old Clarence Rinker, of S8herersville, gave up his life in a heroic effort to save his 17-year-old sister, Min- nie, who was fatally burned. The girl started a fire with kero- pene, when the can exploded, In an instant she was ablaze, and. in his attempt to smother the flamos the boy's clothing caught fire and he was literally roasted alive, although an older brother, who eame to the rescue, threw him ia & trough of water, . : WHEN THE HORSE FLAGS. If the horse flags, and his legs become unsteady, unhitch at once, put cold water on his head and on back of his neck and rub with coarse cloths. If near a drug store inject forty or more grains of quinina.. Sponge his mouth with cold water.— Indiana Farmer. LLAWNS. give a list suitable for I would name: TREES FOR SMAIL 1 have been asked to of trees of medium size planting on small lots, Cut-leaved birch, mountain agh, pur- ple-leaved beech; the and cornus florida, or white dogwood, The best general use are the Colorado blue, Norway From “The Making Home,” by Eben E Outirg Magazine flowered ns for spruces evergre three and of a Rexford, hemlock. Country in the COW E get the the WHAT THE Scmetimes we the re a she will give ghe ts that thing ter, go that be an actual ance duction of milk What io is feed the cow all and to advantage gers the story left is a pretiy feeding Farmers’ COW als If she assimilates a fact, but overdoin more is ther gk the Of such As the hinds SXCeEs to turn tell over Bix we are too much things Home Journa MOULTING is no when 1 y} Wel There Owl time vigor ficated as at f § & its moult in jaying a ule have properly fed During the Fowls that hardly stop a Eood ir it at avers selection conformation pended upon ong layer «1 fowl rat wit} mi<wirele fowl] such as Is r CRE tiem has #1 and riine prod ne a y ong Farmers FOR consider APPLES had OF Wih« ifa to the 1 have hogs I ori hard begin to drop + Then waste ral butter, 1 foe and Sever oCCurs t Pick up r apple ali the frail fattening 1 gov to be quite thrive and 40 well herefore, advise as thoroughls fruit from his understand why fruit rot instead thelr The hogs high qu ¥ prized tion consuming wast Ereatl many injurious root over the gro stirred, which Is the trees —W. H. Underwoo Indiana Farmer Alife high en il SV AR DOASID hard many ore to hogs is of very on pia POT our own io 0 8 ow and and keeg very FARM NOTES Do all the weeding row and horse hoe, and thers not be any need of scratching with the hand hoe, The average farmer does not enough and at the right time 1 cure the best results. A good horse and wagon, clothes, clean packages and manners naturally go with a retall trade In farm products The gscaree products are really better than some of the common ones: but it pays better to raise public feels a big demand ever it cannot easily got Cash both ways, fs the rule one Is a better trader than most, Credit is one of the thing; it is often better to give than to receive. Judging by the prices of high grade with the har will spray Oo pro- neat polite choice for what unless horse, the more money, The “Reds” seem to be giving the “Rocks” and “Dots” a clos: race for poultry popularity. The Maine potato growers agree that three essentials are sod land, plenty of fertilizer and clean cultiva. tion. If the plant breeders would give us an aMalfa as hardy as grass they will have earned their salaries many years in advance. A horse that is to be used for driv. ing or riding should carry no more extra flesh than is essential to plump muscles, and it should have sufficient exercise each day to harden its mus- cles and give it good wind, VENTILATION FOR POULTRY. Most farmers keep thelr barns, stables and poultry houses open In the summer time, yet bere and there we find exceptions, These excep tions oceur where the farmer thinks that a window open here and there is enough. Sometimes the sarel farmer has put screens on his wine tures as possible to reduce the num: In summer the doors and windows ber that have to be sereened. The same ventilation that weather {8 not enough in aot weather If the animals have to be kept in the stables. The decowipos: ‘tion of the urine in the manure goos on much more rapidly in warm we’ | than in cold and ‘his | makes cold air warm alr is true carbonic pcid iungs o he LO oat does ip weather than the purer that off from more likely the floor in war cold weather, as also thrown | animals is | above | in | and alr in cannot { animals moment th. Lhe m weathe it is a he is comparatively heavier an in winte wide open summer th be 1 are | less than | quite AR exter cow foe the late in and as da. onthe, ng wit LIOTTA : kept tions ia bulky hout t tion ] all condi of storage. but thal a wi #lore her Thes such ry lar piace igh them - d through the win food enol of fer months are not hol ide, their them spaceconsumers in 1 regard «he pumpkin ag wquiva to silage for feed, but when we the problem of feeding many it much easier build a that will hold several of | silage than to build a receptacle for several tons of pumpking. Moreo ithe king must enough to { prevent them from decaying, the air will get Into any receptacle in | which they can be placed With gilage the temperature makes little difference if it does not reach point where it freezes 1 have found in the feeding of pumpking we can feed about forty pounds cow to advantage, and | with some cows the milk production i will be greatly increased. 1 have, only low makes { age lent shape round stor COWS is to Ons var pum be cold Foow $5 { the effect of feeding pumpkins was to cause the cows to lay on fat and decrease thelr milk production. There are very few experiments to which we can point relative to the value of feoding pumpkins. In one experiment that I have in mind there wag a gain of six per cent. more milk when pumpking were fed than before they is no better .place to plant pumpkin seeds than in the corn field. The corn field, or a portion of it, ia just the place for them, Seeds placed In alternate hills of the same row of corn will give ample room for the growth of the vines, and they will usually bear well. The great advant. age about feeding pumpking is that the man who have no silos can feed them, and nearly all men who keep cows had no silos. Tas%a ner %a 0% 07a v7 sna s7e »T4 pe WORTH QUOTING 2 AP I I HC Davee Coa avers 08 With 100,000,000 bushels wheat ralged in the | yaar than to continue periLy Journal more nited States this last the bid fab their game, farmers oraaer on i Ppa boasts the filwa Eight billion doliarg is the hy 4 by the Baltimore American fe mate, of value of t eight Cans the Crops 190% bh bill are Amer ion reasons should 1 opt There farmers gun sm the al time is coming when war affair the brain alone, the emotions ’ spe's will le ly as blow pipe T be pestilence BOON lay will and of not Progressive Winnipeg. that largest and te nn WwW innig manufactur those ist} SHOW e “ fourth of Canada who gtudied the benevolen conditions which must future gee a repetition of St Louis or Chicago be fore the capital city of Manitoba In 19502 the city of Winnipeg population of 48411; at the present year the official were 118.000 in that same years ago the total assessa the city amounted in 1907 had jumped In the same space if &0Ono control of mic her had a open ing ofthe figures year five ble property of $28.615.810, and to $106,188.00 from $188.370,000 in 1902 to $698.607, ~Coment Age J. P. Morgan in Vienna. i : Freie Vienna, J Morgan was a busy sightseer in city on his recent visit. With Mrs Douglas and her daughter he visited all the great art collections Sunday called at Kreutzenstein castle, Presse.” Pierpont ess Kinsky. He was deeply interested in what he saw in the restored cas tle and listened with devotion when gan” The report also speaks of Mr Morgan's visit to the Lainzer Zoo, where he showed the greatest interest in the boars, “as he had never befora seen one.” A war document bearing the signa ture of George Washington has been found among the records in the Essex County (N. J.) Courthouse. Burma is making money out of pes nut growing. The peanut acreage increased from 3.800 acres in 1908 to £0008 acres in 10a What is Pe-ru-na. Are we claiming too much for Peruna when wo claim it to be an effective remedy for chronic catarrh? Have we abundant proof that Peruns 18 in reals ity such a catarrh remedy? Lot us seo what the United States Disponsatory says of the principal ing of Peruns, Take, for instance, the ingredient hydrastis canadensis, or golden The United States Dispensator redientis seal, Y BLys of this herbal remedy, that it is lar ely employed in the treatment of depraved mucous membranes lining organs of the human body. Another ingredient of Pe runs, daiis formosa, We various cory is classed in the United Btates Dispensatory as a tonic, Cedron seeds is another Ingredient of Perunz., The United States Dispe tory says of the action 6f cedr it is used as a bitter t treatment of mittent diseases quinine. Bend monials of what the runs as LRN 1 that mic in the ry, and in to us for a free peo 8 catarrh remedy. TANTS ¥ PAINT IT 1% iS PUREWHITE LEAD MADE 8Y Tidy T QUALITY LUND 4 man s # Capudine Cures Indigestion Pains, Disciplined Her, flow's This? ghtwadas Cured By Hypnotism Looked Like A Football tani ‘ : ny a has eal { atching a pped Mot ment, accomplished Friday on his thirteenth effo ) Street, of the from the Washingt an an a el- ap- th wae ert AM, Was ted 1R85 by 1 5 b fect not curious an of ball looked ose il seem- as large as three times, th the ed by increase At the art A Dea. As arew « ed to the strained eye a football Trying Hines managed OL ball Striking the ground in its di- rect descent, the sphere made a dent less than an deep New York World arent sphere al it like once 10 inch REM AINS THE SAME Well Brewed Postum Always atable, The flavour of Postum, when bolled according to directions, is always the samo-——mild, distinctive, and palata- ble. it contains no harmful subd stance like caffeine, the drug in coffee, and hence may be used with benefit at all times, “Believing that coffee was the cause of my torpid liver, sick head. ache and misery in many ways) writes an Ind lady, “I quit and bought a package of Postum about A year ago. “My husband and I have been so well pleased that we have continued to drink Postum ever since. We like the taste of Postum betler than coffee, as it has always the same pleasant flavour, while coffee changes its taste with about every new com- bination or blend. “Since using Postum I have had no more attacks of gall colie, the heaviness has left my chest, and the old, common, every-day headache is a thing unknown.” “There's a Rea- son.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Crook, Mich. Read “The Road to Waellville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new . one appears from time to time, They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. Pal
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers