Trout Season, In Good Frsburs. spite of the nee of rain Fish Commissioner Wii. tam KB. Meehan says ire mood for the trout sea Ha y 8 tinue until July 31 ‘According to all fishing this year will sald the commissioner exception Susquehanna County streams and several others, where the drought has affected the creeks, fishing will be unusually good. “It {8 probable that no fish will be caught. but be plenty from six to eight in in the waters Sem already been do sport "Hem streams, that th acoounts trout be excellent,” of ches treams have fis) I fis $s believe ' but i apt ERE out not ts (rox hie best fi 1 : Broadheads oR ontain " Higy # : i. ghiow wy S114 strean any wout The streams pr field, Fike pre my on Lycoming, Tilo all said Of + - 1" § Bil ) stocked Woman Led Hold-Up, Pitsburg. The police are work- ing von the theory that a woman th nk he Bankin x ompa one whe i ihe was the instigator of S45 ¥ " uj ¢ ny, g 1? rain Y» no . MoK ees Rocks Week 8Ko n 5 3 i 5 } ' Yates 3 Lil aT Vere d 3 1 wien McK ees Rooks tion bank ap The name i scknowledgs While tails.” said Me county know and of we det the nave tha may the assistance ¥now the names implicated and out, whose gun di eution was a woman garments, “From Of our inf veritable Amazon, tire hold-up and enough to notify Mriends to ith from the institut Fight Mine Fire, Cannonsburg Fla: bo consume Manifold 1, owned the Y Ohio Coal Company, here Sixty streams of water are fing poured down the shaft, but quent falls of slate and eavin bers rotard the f ti unteer firemen Union m strike, waiting for a their wage demands, are the hose lines 1 Dy progres on settlement manning State After 85,000,000, Demurrers brought by the Commonw coyer nearly $5,000,000 as of the Capitol to the actior 1 s ne ros 11 frauds, y next 13 ¥ i dE furnishing will probably be filed within two weeks. At a conference here by attorneys representing all defendants except T. Larry BHyre, who has filed a denial and ans the pleadings were discussed and rangements made for the def oy wer, ar- ense Announce November Wedding, York Miss Grace E._ Keller, school teacher, and Alfred D were secretly married last November in Williamsport Miss daughter of Mr. and Keller, and has taught a Horne Keller is the Mrs school Gaorie for the Drags Babe From Fire, Sayre. Leaving her house daughter to enjoy a gos neighbor, Mrs. Chester with a She knew the location of the her 18-months-old throdgh the smoke and flames she She found the covering of the cradle had burned and the gown of the infant was on fire She clutched the baby and ried back through fire air and her been burned t “hie The mothe; suffering baby d cradle daughter and hurs When baby had fainted ‘n the hospital, hurns The the thinking i was destroy- nome ig to the i the residences id R. C. Callear damaged Peter Wertz, president aters’ Trust Company of ral manager a » Carll ranch Standard Chain i ¥, { was found dead ir t athroom a! his home fail frye le Comp: here th was ie to h cart ure Deserts r LAIN The Altar, A Bride ha Hometowr Zook. morial i Gust Zook Memorial To (inst 5 & he to her room Auto For Schuylkill Sheriff, Potisville At a meeting County Commissioners : mommy of the coun fareg to purchase an aut Sheriff P. J. Murphy It the Sheriff's office will in save three-fourths expenses incurred of the il it Jd as eo OO of in Pays 8500 For Book, Lebanon book dealer, of paid Henry Hellm a suburb of this of iirty<Awo pages, mes 6 inches Myst » ary 2 + nd LE heyme SBprueche, William J. Campbell Philadelphia, hook a quarter the volume and AAR bry printed Benjamin : known ¥ copy bought it Quaker City ho is have a splendid collect] iin's works Heilman, wealthy miller and several in existence Carr 1 collector said to of Frank who is a farmer, secured at a sale Lancaster County did not the value the first, but recognizing than ordinary value, it was knock- and for that sum book Years ago He of in th book when he saw it that it had more he bid it up to $5, down to him Wilkes-Barre Mayor ity, In a published statement, out strongly in favor of the form of government for He says after a study of the he 4 that a board do better work The Kniffen, of on n is Co incad can coun janice body than a loaclares iF &f THE EARTH AND 1 ——————s Hn ALEYD Cop {4.000.000 my Williams, in the Indiana Disappearance For Two Months gly to B Oo Se dimmed a six earthward at the ule cribed turned to the ker for dawn was gervatory Profess in +} i pres more than at irs Frost 4 g independen » $ trum may show what | the comet Frost “It Is wns here appeared and apparently lost {s the bel wort hef i § i two da there, but is so « raed uot bright enough to be seen #508 Was Noted on Pravious Vis nD chief of the Washin Moore, fasued a peace of mind to folks who ing about a Halley's comet Her Moore has to say “Popular apprehension harm to the carth and during the impending vi comet to this portion of the universe fs unfounded The result gion between the earth and a comet would depend the masa of comet, the vel the bodies the angle impact A the present will be owing to a safety margl tracks of the earth and some 13.000.000 miles the comet through which will probably pass will only as an absolutely harmless lumin. ous gas or dust, and may electrical and magnetic effects can be detected instruments gton statement Heal possible of a enll “a unon the and in impossible city of of eoilision Case the comet The tall the be noticeable 3 * tha A source of possible morning outiines Tis cait inn its pos 30% comet and forty The comet iring the was ob- This was one hour minutes should } been vi past w but its appr scured by cloudy weather the firs me comet been sighted in this eit) On May 19 next the earth 1 igh its tail, and met will be visihi evening. It will the earth to re- or about seventy-five wert of the sun ave gible d1 oach the has afte that date of the leaving again f then be not % 5 FEY i GUINEA A FOWL. With the gradual disappearance of natural game is growing up a demand in cities for a mestic bird which all the quali ues of the game bird in color and tex tute of the flesh game that epicures ht in PROFITABLE birds there the do has and the We ha h delig refer to the guinea fowl heretofore be more fiere en kept as bird than because t i { was ti it any par lar profit breeding in The guinea, as we know ; of many vari all of whi originally come from Africa. Rom tinea f{ it cient the Ans acquainted there is the one reason that fowl of of the species found ir rn Africa, rather; the west large numbers i dent! » guinea of our farn al in shape YArds Guineas are fowls that do best when treated on the let-alone principle. The have a natural on to the field and seek their own food as care little in # If piv yo ¥ i ‘4 sUCa cCalion, war ¥ or ahrond AE anivna when they nairs have broken away tv plan and accept t ronnives feo requires fro: das 8 to son When th are “ene ey hatched thes wild will ru away and fi 3 lost if they are not confined in a pet i ai as become in w wiil find pen made will keer in t he Hey A NE enough so become they =» med t to the mother 3 Once their foster nguage the) will talk *« never y affectionate they her follow her a day ight with the hens a'l through the win bout, or 1 Indeed SIA the seasor BY en * on dos pum a asi - 1 4 1 yo HiNeas 1 Hit pre it aye ding t fields a g does a hel 43 " ba 4 r nests in the Hes th been house do and unless they have in a the hens the; dispositions customed to with wild sleeping hatched have such quently lay in hens. until about the time when the; and lay a clutch of eggs to hatch. The young are quite tender few days and should be fed 1 at in a short time become hardy, and after that will endure any kind of weather that may even sleeping out of doors in the coldest weather. The eggs are small, but of good flavor, there is no market demand for them, and, except for home con sumption or for use in hatching they are not valuable Guinea hens are not good mothers it must be a very favorable season it which a guinea hen will raise more 1 in very often first they come to tit but Tg 0 ATVI] J FETE RIXVEL, tt # ay ro¥it upted myself buying winter lettuce, Their combs wens wers glossy, their and innocent, and their appetites something fearful to witness, It me aljpost as much tos keep them as it would a drove of and 1 finally made up my mind I had better get kind of a on Bive { red, their feathers | BONES were gay COEt COWS, that some inch a feed slore or up i raising chicks ns Ming, though 1 In the latter part of Year, a came to my tiny little black chick- id and wanted to didn't like black chickens But the did not June of that cio ad rnow it Was Loy with three ne want them, but they were i bun- went out to them, 1 on the spot; and made the acquaint Minorca, those little chicks were d, 80 helpless and so Bry that my heart ought then is ance of the B In tw that the way I ICH 0 Gay FUnuing ail over my yar 13 and digging and scratct ng and taking Orightesi and mosgt s A arses 2 * ARG IROSL Incepencent way, and at four : Ana sing care of LBGIVes in the months they commenced they winter. And witli the sheen and of ked chick- Carriage the while ight and w Nore than t added anoth f my Main © Oo it, » weights » ees | light-weight ranger he Minorca nor the Leghorn well, but put and when if comes break the record of wore feathers they are as 1 said of knowing , is enough notice. — "armer sland confinement 1 On free ra u ge Lr > 2g VO BRES thing Least the eaters, be 10 make on H. HP OF GRIT Koen po JLry LACK Many who overlook of grit SLES the wit on nears rove importance of means digest A load gravel home would the is Lack and few the chickens’ health and on many 8 claime that the grit of the t, but the gravel is good enough grinding material It you have never tried it you will be surprised how will disappear when placed in a box where the hens can help themselved — Farmers’ Home Journal UWP poor of Layo Mny ER the increase farm it yield bes fast it BGG PRODUCTION Three things are essential to heavy egg production. Barly pullets, started laying early and kept at Green food, and animal or meat food ireen food can be supplied in winter in the form of cabbage leaves, mangels, steamed alfalfa or clover. No better meat can be found than green ground Commercial beef! scraps are good Farmers’ Home Journal it. very NOTES. T0 MARK LINE OF LINCOLN'S MARCH IN INDIAN WAR {| Mayor also | Legislature should pro- a form of of ive voars thas next 8 tow of _ . past five years. than a few of the young she hatchese 1.45 of warmth in good corn. Fine the # shay + 3 a As a rule they wander about through for cold days - pass | nw for Steel Trust Rajses Wages, Pitisburg.--An advance in the] pay of thousands of employes of the various subsidiary companies of the United States Steel Corporation equal to about six per cent is said to have practically been decided upon. The changes expected are principally for laborers and men get. ting less than $100 a month Body Rolls Out In Grave, York -—While the body of ¥. Randall was being lon the grave at York one of tore, allowing the coffin to ily to the bott the ooflin broke ape and the out. The mourns greatly aho by the accident, were ordered io turn to the vey ¢ Oi a, 64 church until the Sunday Rest For Steel Employes. Pittsburg. Not only on the Besge. mer & lake Erie allroad, as pre- ! : the in lines subsidiary to United States Steel Corporation Sunday work to be abolished, learned. The order just issued Sunday rest of practically all great steel company's employes in mills and raliroads is to include up- wards of 100,000, it is said. i ——-——- Thief Works Under Cover Of Noise, Chester. —While trains rumbled by the house burglars operated in the home of Jacob R. Buchanan, near rum Lynne Station, securing a large quantity of silverware and about $20 in money. Progressive Party Pre-empted, Harrisburg.~~The name of' the Progressive party was pre-empted for elections In Pennsylvania this fall by John R. Hart, Francia Woo, Fremont Bowman, Albert A Redifor and George D. Cox. Philadelphia Charters Tssued, The following Philadelphia char ters have been issued: Anderson £ Jansson Company, capital $10,00/ dozen other : 000; P. Mechan Company, capit $165,000. government commission 1? would not in the way but would resign once . e stand at been friction # % between ¢ Councils being passed an im. the Mayor's for oat the Councils olution ervinis over Entire Block Burned, Kittanning power the Kittann and the Street +41 buil house of ght Com- ¢ & Loech- Company a covering an entire destroyed by fire The ated at £200,000. BEx- ng gas necumulated in a genera- started the blaze The Electric Li Kittanni Rallway ' wr Ing ng WHs f OF Crosses Continent To Wed, Bethlehem — Traveling across the to become bride, Mies Hunt, dapghter of Mr. and Mrs. John E, Hunt, of this place n talented musician, was married at Spokane, Wash., to J. Fred Farqu- har, formerly of this city, but now of Moscow, Idaho. Mr. Farquhar is a gradoate of Lafayette College and a son of Professor T, M. Farquhar, superintendent of the Freeland pub. lie schools, ts Sik a ., rk Chester, While kindling a fire with headlight oll at her home Susie badly burned. Her clothing caught fire and she was enveloped in flames until a neighbor wrapped a plece of rarpet about her. The child was preparing dinner for her father, Samuel Hendrixson, who is very {ll Reading. ~—At the close of the fif. teenth annual! session of the Read. ing Classis of the Reformed Church, held in Grace (Alsace) Church, Rev M, 1. Herbine, of Reading, created a stir in submitting his report, He recounted the hard work of a coun try preacher, with little compensa tion, and sald that he was consider ing giving up the ministry for some o' her profession or business in whieh ‘here WAS hore chance of success The statement came Ag a surprise tc the classis, . Durllagton, Towa Frank O. Lowden, mer Burlington resident, Representative of Illinois, has ject of interest to Western Illinois and to this part of lowa nation of a sum of money he bas fur- thered the project of setting up per- olin took up Only the oldest which Abraham Line the Black Hawk war course of that not the is any memory of campaign, which outlined in history and the camping grounds planned by the martyr President The way led Mississippl River at a point near Bur- lington, then known as Flint Hills The march was made from Beards- town, Ill, to Oquawka, then known as the Yellow Banks on account of the peculiar coloringof the river shore line, From Oquawka the route was laid to the mouth of the Rock River. There were two expeditions in the Black Hawk war, one in 1831, when Black Hawk escaped from the pursu- ers and crossed the Mississippi, and the second in thefollowing year, when Black Hawk returned to the lllinois ghore with the determination to re- main, Lincoln was made captain of one of the companies which took up the cam. paign against the Indians. The expe- dition gave several names to the lo- calities along the route which are It ig interesting to note London Expected to Spend $135,000, 000 During Roosevelt's Visit, London. The first state ball of the Palace will take place at an earlier date than usual to enable invitations to be ex- tended to Mr. Roosevelt and his fam- fly. Bo manysplendid entertainments are projected by American hostesses estimated that some $15,000,000 will be spént in London in that way dur. ing the week's visit of the family, and that the comin season will be one of the ost brilliant on record, Black coming Hawk int 0 with Lincoln, when he was prominence, again visited Yellow Banks , after mak. ing a speech there, came to Burling. ton by boat Yellow Banks had be- come Oguawka and was a thriving i village The markers to be placed along the route will be of stone and with suit. able inscriptions, and a map of the march will be drawn and copies kept ton file among the public records at various points, and a a HISTORIC ELM SAVED. mon Given New Lease of Life. Cambridge, Muss After consider. table hard work on the part of the | Cambridge Park Department officials {the Washingion Elim on the Cam- { bridge Common has been put in ex- i cellent condition and probably will i live for many years to come, According to the report, just is. | sued, strenuous measures—-the same as were used on the historic tree-——are being used to save the trees bordering Decatur street, many of which have been badly eaten by the elm leaf bee- tie. On the Washington Elm much of the dead wood was removed, the tree was sprayed twice with arsenate of lead and watered twice a week from a perforated pipe, which was laid r year ago. It was also watered fre quently from a near-by hydrant High Price of Deel and Mutton Leads the Poor to Try Goat Meat, Brookiyn, N. Y.~ Brooklyn is ‘got. ting the goats” of a lot of people these days because of the high cost of living. With the prices of beef, mut. ton, lamb and pork soaring, the poor of the borough are turning to the meat of “Nannie” and “Billy” for food, For the first time in {ts history the flesh of goats is being offered for dale in the poorer quarters of the borough. The price is from five to seven cents a pound lower than lamb or mutton, lost. Indianapolis News. CHICKEN TALK. For a long time | have longed to re turn to the couniry, has deen closed, three years ago | commenced to raise chickens in peration on a city lot A friend said to me: determined to raise might as well ‘If you are chickens : ones.” bir raise ig gest 1 could fing —feathered elephants year | raised a hundred That my beautiful pullets exultantly ezgs a day all winter, but the plain truth of the matter is, 1 didn’t four or five But my flock was the got People would line up against my fence and watch my chickens, with the 1 felt flattered, but when it came ‘o kept my thoughts to myself. Once in a while an ardent chicken fancier would ask: “Do ibkey lay?” Remembering the one or two eggs answer: “Oh, yes, they lay:” and then silently ask the lord to forgive me. 1 loved my chickens and | could not hetray them. But night and day | struggled with the egg problem, and asked myself over and over again; What, in the name of heaven, alls them? 1 finally came to the conclusion that there must be something wrong with their internal machinery, but Wis did not dampen my ardor, and the next spring 1 raised another hun- dred. Put with the same old story. For all the winter eggs 1 got, I might as well have raised guinea pigs. | puzzled over poultry books. 1 bought every known kind of feed. I provided grit, and chopped raw meat, and dug up bugs and worms, and shout bank: Keep the old fighters apart and so Egg-shells are largely lime. The can't make good shells unless you furnish plenty of lime Milk has albumen in it. Hens need lots of albumen and that is what they find in milk. Give them some every The claim 20,000,000 is made that there are hens in New York State An increase of one egg On sunshiny days let the hens take But see that the wind ig on the right Hens are very to raw winds The poultry product of Minnesota last vear is sald to have amounted to over $30,000,000 and pouitry author the basis of com- sensitive It sometimes troubles young poultry keepers, who have never lived on the The spurs are a pretty good thing to go by. You do not see long spurs on roung hens, fce-cold water can not help chilling the hens. It must be warmed up somehow, and that takes vitality, Save the hen's strength of body dy warming the water. You can do It cheaper than the hen can. —— The Earliest Aeroplane. The earliest effort to construct a machine which, according to modern ideas, is entitled to be called an aero plane, was undoubtedly that of Wi lam Henson, in 1842. Prince Rupert and his fellowadven turers, with a oharter granted by Charles 11, were the ploneers of the now famous Hudson Bay Company. When a woman does ber way her husband likes it, it is a to the Dallas News, way she does it.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers