The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 19, 1914, Image 8

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THE CENTRE REPORTER.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1914.
PALMER AND MoUORMICK,
Y
5
Mr,
His
Penrose's Immediate Attack Upon
Falmer Indioates Senator Fears
Undolog.
Senator Boies Penrose is an old
political observer, and he shows his
fear of the candidacy of A. Mitchell
Palmer for senator by his immediate
attack on him. Nothing could be
more complimentary to the eandidacy
of Mr. Palmer for the Benate and of
Vance McCormick for governor than
the instant outbreak of the Republi.
ean boss against them. He recognizes
the fact that he has a losing fight op
his bards, and has begun without de-
lay to do the best he can.
Io the selections of the conference
st Washipgtou there has been due re-
gard for the fitness of things. Mr
Palmer is a Natiopsl figure of note,
and his continued services in Wash-
jongton are needed, Mr. McCormick
is un ideal candidate for governor of
Pevnsylvania, where his ancestors
were among the pioneers. The warm
gupport of the President ia an ap-
preciation of the character and ser-
vices of the men, In all this there is
no disposition to shut anyone out, for
the primaries will be open, and if I’
should happen that any other men bs
chosen they will have the enthusiastic
support of the Democratic party.
By contrast is the difficulty of th:
Bull Moose in making a selection for
governor, There are tnany aspirants,
but none measures up to the require
ments of the gitustion. The selectior
of Giftord Pinchot as candidate for
genator, dictated by other considers-
tions than political strength, is »
handicap, and the wily leaders are
aware that unless they can get a mar
for governor who is stronger they wil
not be in the running at all. The ou
look is for Democratic success, and the
men 10 be chosen are certain to be of
character that will cause the people to
congratulate themeelves,
met ——
Forestry Facts,
I'he original forests of the Unite
States covered 45 per cent of the total
area of the country or 850 millio:
acres, and contaiped 5200 billion board
feet of lumber. The area varied fron
one per cent in North Dakota, thres
per cent in Kansas to 90 and 85 pe:
cent in most of the east and soutl
Atlantic states,
gu Tuve forests of the country now cove
but 550 million acres and contain Z500
billion board feet of timber, This i»
65 per of the original forest ares
aud but 48 per cent of the origins
stand,
Alsskas has
timber of good quality,
Bay Hd
comparatively litth
Dr. Fernow
Caonds’s timber supply
would ouly last the United Btates te:
years, The Ucited States uses 235
cubic feel of timber per capita, Norway
128, Japan 43, Germany 37 and Italy
18.
Ihe United States has 7.6 acres of
forest land per capita, Germany, .6
snd Great Britain, .07 acres,
we There are 100 million acres of wooo
land in the United States producing
pothing, the result of fire and destruce-
tive lumbering.
The United States is using he
timber three timea faster than she
grows it, the present tupoly will las
fifty-four years yet, What is she go-
iog to do then? Grow some. That's
all forestry ia, it is the scientific farm-
ing of our woods, When one crop is
ripe and cat, start another,
Will the price of timber go up?
Wheat brings what it costs to raise it,
Timber will have to be raised, and it
must in time go up to the price where
it pays to raise it,
Is the virgio timber ipexhaustible ?
If so then why is the output falling
off vo faut, in the face of high prices,
everywhere except in the Pacific const
states, the lasc stand of the virgh
forests of the United States. Over
haif of the virgin forests of the sodth
are cut,
Lat
——————
Portion of L, & T, Seid.
Tobe portion of the Lewisburg and
Tyrove Railroad lying between Heotis
sand Tyrone was sold io Robert KE, Mer.
shall snd by him transferred to the
Lewisburg and Tyrone Railway Come
pauy. ‘Ibis line was operated under »
lease by the Pennsy, snd in reality
was owned by that company. This is
& part of the line between Lewisburg
aud Tyrone built during the seventies,
and it is the open link in the system
between Lemont and SBeotia that is so
very much desired today by State (ol.
lege und all the others interested ip
the development of southern Centre
county. It ie generally supposed that
the L. & T, proper and the section re
ferred to sbove will be connected with
io a reasonable time.
——— A ————
Bheatz a Second,
From the Altoona Tribune, |
Lalo the event that Governor Htuart
declines to consider the Republican
nomination for governor, we know
another Philadelphian who has a
slaivliws record, His name Is Jobn
O. Bheatz, former state treasurer, now
state senator,
—————— A ——————
Home people never succeed because
they have too little confidence in
themselves and too much in others,
#
Prof. Shaw of the University of California
Uives Impressions of the Western Cost
State.
Editor Reporter :
Unclosed find check to pay for my
subscription to the Centre Reporter.
From the enclosed address slip I believe
that I am in arrears since March, 1913.
and am sending money to cover last
year’s subscription and a subscription
for the ensuing year.
When I left the east I promised to
give you some information concerning
the conditions in this state. During the
past year, I have been over a great deal
of the state, visiting every section ex-
cept the Imperial Valley and the Owens
Valley. It is impossible for one who
has never been here to appreciate the
tremendous difference in ° climate,
character of the country, and crops. that
are found in the state. California has
an area of about 165,000 square miles.
This does not mean that there is any
where near that area that is available
for agricultural purposes, however, as at
least half of the state is occupied by
mountain ranges some of which are too
rough for agriculture and others are too
dry to produce anything but sparse
growth of sage brush. All agricultural
operations are found in the valleys, in
the most cases representing the bottoms
of ancient lake beds or arms of the sea.
The largest of these is the valley of the
San Joaquin and Sacramento Rivers, ex-
tending from Red Bluff on the north to
below Bakersfield on the south, a
distance of over 400 miles. This valley
has a width ranging from 40 to 60 miles.
In the southern part of the state there
is a broad stretch of approximately
level country extending from the ocean
east to Redlands and from Pasadena
south a distance of about forty miles,
with a southern extension from five to
ten miles wide along the ocean south to
San Diego. These are the two largest
compact areas of agricultural land. In
the Imperial Valley there is a large area
of triangular shape, with its base on the
Mexican line extending north about 100
miles, a portion of which is irrigated and
farmed. Throughout the Coast Range
mountains there are numberless valleys
most of them relatively small, although
some may be sixty to seventy miles long
and five to ten miles wide, all of which
are adapted to farming. In addition to
these areas, there are a number of small-
er valleys of from 100 to 400 square
miles each, lying in the Sierra Nevada
mountain region and a region of hilly
country along the west coast north of
San Francisco that is adapted to fruit
growing and dairying.
With the exception of the last named
re ion, and a few of the Sierra Valleys,
it is necessary in almost every case to
bave water for irrigation, in order to be
successful with crops. The rainfall
varies very greatly, but, in most of the
valleys that have been mentioned, will
be less than twenty inches per year.
Most of the rain fall is during the
months of December, January, February
and March, with the balance of the year
almost wholly dry. During the summer
months, from June to September, it is
most unusual indeed to have rain in any
of the larger valleys.
The temperature ranges are
wide, and vary with elevation.
suminer's temperature in the Sacra-
mento and San Joaquin Valleys fre-
juently went weil above 100 degrees,
aud 115 and 120 degrees were frequent.
ly reached. The temperature along the
Paciic Coast is uniformly very much
lower, ranging about 60 and 80 degrees
during the summer, It was rather op-
pressive to work during the week in the
Sacramento Valley, with the tempera-
ture ranging about 100 degrees and
then, on ny way back to Berkeley, to
tind ss soon as we passed through the
Carquinez Straits a decided change in
temperature, with the thermometer
about 70 when I would reach home.
About San Francisco, it is necessary to
Carty an overcoat almost any day in the
year. The evenings are almost uniforms-
ily cool. I have often feit foolish when
I started out of Berkeley with an over-
coat to spend the biggest share of the
week in toe interior valleys, where or-
dinary coats were decidedly too much
clothes.
When an easterner thinks of orange
growing, he thinks instinctively of the
Los Angeles section but as a matter of
{act oranges are grown in not only that
section, but also in the San Joaquin and
Sacramento Valleys, as far north as
Red Bluff, being produced along the
east and west side of the valley, be-
tween elevations of 500 and 1500 feet
above sea level. In this belt frosts are
rather rare, although below 500 feet or
above 1500 feet during the winter,
frosts are liable to be sufficiently severe
to seriously injure, or even kill, the
trees,
Land prices are uniformly high.
There is very little desirable land open
to settlement under the homestead acts,
and the land that has been taken up is
being held at figures that are fully as
high as their productivity warrants,
Land that has water for irrigation can
rarely be purchased for less than $100
per acre, and frequently is held for as
much as 250 or more, in the regions
where citrus fruits caonot be grown,
and usually for $400 to $1000 per acre
where oranges and lemons do well,
Alfalfa land is frequently held as
high as $300 or $400 per acre, al-
though I do not believe that one can
profitably grow alfalfa on land valued
at much over $200. The most striking
instance of land values that | struck in
all my travelings last summer were in
Humboldt county, on the northwest
const, where land used for pasture and
hay had a value of $300 and was giving
an income that paid a good interest on
that valuation. Climatic conditions
were such that the grass grew quite
uxuriantly throughout ten months of
the year and cattle were kept on pasture
during that entire time. The grass,
supplemented by some alfalfa hay or
sugar beets, enables the cattle to pro-
duce large quantities of milk and the
average butter fat production of al the
cows of that county good, bad and in-
different, is somew in the neighbor«
hood of 230 pounds per year, while the
average production of cows for the
United States is somewhere about 160
or 170 pounds. I do not know what it
is that enables cattle to produce the
unntities of rich milk that they do in
t section, but the results aro astonish-
ing and prove that the land is ss valu.
able as he owners claim
very
Last
fterenting things that eastern as can
sce in this western country, but feel
Shalt 1 din Dot justified it up soy
With best wishes, 1 am nn
Very truly yours,
Cuas, F. suaw,
Tapped the Church Sleepers.
Nowadays uo protest is made or any
potion taken against the sleepy man or
wouian who falls into a doze in the
aidet of minister's sermon. In
Kugland 300 years ago the gullty of-
ter would have been severely
the head by men espe-
yv appointed tg the task of keeplug
» congregation awake, For instance,
parish in Shropshire, 28 shill-
ings a yeur wis regularly paid to a
poor man te go about the church dur-
ing the sermon and keep the people
awike. He carried a thin, long wand
hand, which be could conve
stretch out over considerable
ul rap offenders on the Head
the shoulders. With women
as always instructed to be gen-
*, to tap softly, but persistently, un-
¢r was broken. For wo-
lenrned, were not so
men on being aroused
mfortable nap, and, If gentle
ere not employed, were likely
get up gud leave, causing no little
the
HE ol over
he slumti
Wis
ng
Newton's “Observatory.”
‘here is an interesting mystery as-
ated with 35 St. Mary's street, once
wine of Sir Isase Newton, which
w property market. On
¢ used to be a curious
le almost entirely of
many years this was
Jdleved to have been Bir
n's observatory. Fanny
¢ father, the noted musi-
harles Burney, Was at one
plier of the house, occas
the erection as a study,
moirs of her father she
it ns Newton's observatory.
1bt was cast upon the story
bs in his “Curiosities of
Iie asserts that the obsery-
ullt by a subsequent ten-
11a) It has been fur
that this Frenchman not
room, but also equipped
ns instruments and then,
it was the observatory
harged a fee for admis
Westminster Gazettes,
He Were Knighted,
wus known as Professor
genial, nice old fel-
in fact, he was a re-
ontrast to most of these
t old gentiemen and would
luce Into his lecture inter.
: concerning the manners
ns of the countries he had
VOrY
particular moming his sub-
nish history, and he felt it
ry to flluminate his dis-
t you know, gentlemen,”
nn man attains to emi
in he is knighted, but then
not ns ‘sir,’ bot as don." ™
pose, sir,” gravely sald
1 who always insisted on
“if they knighted you,
ne a Don-Key ™—Lon-
Profitable Beauty,
beauty of beauties” Mme
onid sometimes become a
the poor, and it was good
r. At the Easter fetes of
rated in the Church of St
: priest asked Mme. Recamier
g tor, She accepted.
ned emigrant, M. de Thiard,
cavalier, The task was no
To walk around the church
he enormous crowd oocupled
1 hour. Anether hour was
n counting the receipts, which
20,000 francs. From each
a cry of admiration at the
18 beauty of the young collee-
she advanced step by step
throu the church these cries were
translated into pleces of gold for the
poor and many pleces of verse to offer
to the fair collector.~*A Great Oo
quette.”
allen
ol to
velo
As
Laughing.
Laughing is a series of short expirs-
tory Lilasts which, acting upon the vocal
chords. held tense for the purpose,
cause certain sounds of various pitch.
The differences In the sound of the
langhter of different individoals is
largely due to the varying vibrations of
the Iaryng and pharynx. It has been
noted that many in a family “have the
possibly because of simi
lar throat formations, It glso is an imi
tative process.—New York World,
same lavngh”
A Tale of Tips
When Guizot, the great French his
torian, was staying at Windsor castle
in 1840 he wrote to his daughter that
he had won over £20 at the Ascot
meeting: “Twenty-three sovereigns for
me, which will balance the £20 I had
to spend in fees to the servants at
Windsor castle.”
Selfish Rejoioing.
“1 rejoice that the world is filled with
sunshine,” said the fat man.
“Ah, you are an optimist” remarked
the thin man,
“No.” replied the fat man, “I am an
awning manufacturer.” Cincinnati En
quirer,
a—-
Hopeless,
“He's no good at an argument, is he?
Not at all convincing ?™ :
Well, 1 should say not. Why, that
man couldn't convince a woman that
she was pretty "Cleveland Leader,
Nell-8he's n woman of Hberal :
len't she? Relle-~Well, I notice
always giving others a plece of
mind. — Philadelphia Recogd.
——————
A man who dares waste one hour
time has not discovered the value
Hfe Charles Darwin,
Don't ACOUSS & man of dumb
who hes sense to
math shat,
Mechanism
Comparatively few people thoroughly
realize what a delicate and sensitive
structure the human ear really is. That
which we ordinarily designate so ls,
after all, only the outer porch of a
series of winding passages which, like
the lobbles of a great building, lead
from the world without to the world
within, Certain of these passages cor-
tain liquid, and their membranes are
stretched like parchment curtains
across the corridor of different places
and can be thrown into vibrations or
made to tremble like the head of a
dram or as the surface of a tambou-
rine does when struck with a stick or
with the fingers. Between two or three
parchment-like curtains a chaln of very
small bones extends, which serves to
tighten or relax these membranes and
to communicate vibrations to them. In
the innermost place of all a row of
white threads, called nerves, stretches
Hke the strings of a plano from the
last point to which the tremblings or
thrillings reach and pass inward #0
the bralm.
Keeps Tab on the Shipowners.
The captaing’ register at Lloyd's, the
great English Insurance concern, has
aptly been described as the blograph-
fecal dictionary of the whole of the
certificated commanders of the British
mercantile marine. In the register are
entered the date and place of the
worthy skipper's birth, the record of
his progress at sea, the ships he has
commanded and the ships, If he has
been unfortunate, that he has lost
There is also another register, a con-
fidentinl Index of British shipowners
and the history of their ships, the num-
ber of shares held by the owners, the
trade of the ships during the year, the
accidents which have befallen them
and other Important information. If a
firm loses ship after ship, If the en
tries “foundered,” “wrecked” and
“missing” appear in succession against
the names of their vessels, here is a
moral to be drawn by the broker and
underwriter,
Medical Ethics In China.
In an article in the Journal of Race
Development on the practice of med!
cine in China, Dr. C W. Young of the
Union Medical college of Peking
quotes this from a work on medical
ethics:
“When a patient is severely {ll freat
bim as thou wouldest wish to be treat.
od thyself. If thou art called to a con-
tation go at once, and do not delay.
If he ask thee for medicine give it to
him at once, and do not ask If he be
rich or poor. Use thy heart always to
gave life and to please all. Bo will
thine own happiness be exalted. In
the midst of the darkness of the world
be sure there is some one who Is pro
tecting thee When thou art called to
an acute and thinkest with all
thy might of nothing but making mon
ey out of the patient. if thy heart be
not filled with love of thy neighbor, be
sure that in the world there Is some
one who will punish thee”
ness
Early New York.
New York city bad become one of
the most important places on the coast
before 1750 its great advantages
were its fine harbor and the noble riv
er which emptied into It. The other
towns on the coast were shut off from
the far west hy the Appalachian
mountains or the Allegheniesx, which
follow the Atlantic coast at a distance
of 100 to 200 miles from it from Geor
gla to Maine, But the Hudson river
broke through this barrier and gave
New York egsy access to Canada and
the profitable Indian trade. In 1005
the city contalued about 4.300 inbab
ftants, about one-third being slaves
It extended from the Battery to a pal
lsaded wall, where Wall street now
rune, All above Wall street was In
the country. The population grew to
about 8500 in 1730 and about 12.000 in
1750.
Test For Silk Goods.
There Is a simple method of finding
out whether a plece of silk goods has
been adulterated or weighted, as the
manufacturers call it. with tin, and
that Is to cut off a small sample and
burn it. Pure silk is animal matter,
just as feathers or halr. made, as every
one knows, by the silkworm. Now, if
pure silk Is burned it will instantly
curl up into a crisp mass, just as a
burnt hair or feather will do, but if
the silk goods has been adulterated
with from 60 to 75 per cent of tin it
will not do this. It will leave an ash
in the semblance of the fabric, much
as a burned plece of newspaper will
leave an ash that still shows the print
ing. The harder and more firm this
ash the more tin there was In the silk.
~New York American.
Painless and Portraits.
“A famous artist has it so much eas
fer than an unknown painter.”
“How so?
“The unknown painter has to make
his portraits look like the people he
paints. The people a famous artis!
paints are willing to try to look lke
their portraits.” Pittsburgh Post,
An Oversight.
“I want to pay this biIL"” he sald at
the hotel Lar. “but | think you have
made a slight error here in my favor.
I've been reading over the extras, and
§ cannot find that you have charged
#nything for telling me you thought it
might rain.”
Secured.
Bellboy~Guy in 18 wants to know
where the fire escapes are! Clerk
Well, show him-—he's paid in advance’
The Word Cocoanut.
It realy should be “coconut” but
custom compels the inclusion of that
superfluous “a.” The term coco or Co
con by which the nuts are known Is
sald by several authorities to be of
Portuguese origin, and the derivation
is quite out of the ordinary, Accord
ing to Bauhin, cocon or coquhien is de
rived from the three holes at the end
of the nut, giving it the resemblance
of a specles of monkey. Another writ
er, Piso, would have us believe the
the nut, it being llkened unto the
volce of an ape. The
monkey is macaco or
haps the best explanation
Per-
offered
MACHO,
for the three ¢yes of the nut certainly
convey the Impression of a hideous
laugh. For the unnecessary “a” the
caroless proofreader, who
name in its present form to creep into
Johnson's dietlonary, although
learned doctor had used the
spelling. ~London Telegraph,
Good Discipline,
“Our American militia is the best
the world,” sald the
Descendants of the Sligners.
“How strict it is! During the
riding one hot day
Iitia a private was 3
on a trolley car with
unbuttoned, This caused a
on the smokers’
seat behind to say:
all?
“But here a gentleman on the
interfered, saying to the sergeant:
a cigar in mouth? I'm
Fitzhugh Calhoun.’
your
with a white military
over and murmured
Brewstec
to remind you, sir, tha
geant in the presence
military offense hs
Washington Star.
Hens That Swim.
“ Colonel
~Can a hen swim?
“Yes,” says Maggie,
cant nod of the head.
“What! Do
swim?
“Yes,” with repeated nod.
The infant mistress is appealed to re
garding the instruction imparted to the
class.
“Maggie,” says
“surely you are not th
say a hen can swim?"
With persistent n«
“Yes.”
Head master enttrs room. In-
spector calls his attention to Maggie's
repeated answer
Head Master (to
mean to say a hen can swim?
“Yea™
“Did you ever see a hen swim?”
“Yes: n water hen”
Inspector confesses he has still some-
thing to learn. —J.ond
A ——
IT SAVES YUU MONEY.
with a
witli a
you say a hen c¢
the infant mistress,
king. Do you
wd
th
the
Maggie) Do
you
gays M
aERie
i Answers
Or, Howards Dyspepein Fpes fic; Regular
Frioe 50 , Furey and Biteer
R8¢,
The especial half price sale «f Dr,
Howard's specific for the cure of con-
dipstion and dyepepeia by Murrs:
stud Bitner means the saving of a few
dollare on every family’s yearly bil
for medicines.
Esch 50 cent bottle ( Murray and
Bitner reils 1t for 250. ) contains sixty
doses of a medicine that is pleasant 1«
take and which can be depended upor
to cure the worst case of coustipstion
dyspepein or liver trouble.
This remedy is not an ordinary
medicive, Itis the favorite formuls
of a well known physician, and bas
the endorsement of bundreds of emi
gence in their profession, who pre
scribe it in all cases of constipation,
dyepepeis or liver trouble, knowing
from experience that it wili make »
complete and Inslir g cure,
pp
Any womsn can manage 8 map, if
«he can only prevent him from know
fog it.
Fries
CCOvuRT PROCLAMATION,
Whereas the Honorable Ellis 1. Orvis, Pres:
dent Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of the
Forty-ninth Judicial District, consisting of the
county of Centre, having sued his precept
beart date the Sist day of December, 1913,
to me directed for holding a Court of Common
Pleas, Orphans Court, Cour! of Quarter Sessions
of the Peace, Oyer and Terminer and General
Jail Delivery, in Bellefonte, for the county of
Centre, and to commenos on the
FOURTH MONDAY OF FEBRUARY,
being the 28rd day of February, 1914, and to
continue two weeks,
Notice is hereby given to the Coroner, Justices
of the Peace, Aldermen, and Constables of said
county of Centre, that they be then and there in
their proper persons at i0 o'clock in the forenoon
of the 23rd, with their records, inquisitions, ex-
aminstions, and their «wn remembrances, to do
those things which 10 their office apperiains 10 be
done and those who are bound in recognizmnoes,
3 J Gert against the prisoners thal are or
ibe in jail of Centre county, be then and
there to prosecute against them as shall be just
dayol) under thy hans 8% Denstunie, he md
AnGAry, in year our Lord, wi
the one hundred and thirty-eighth year of the
Independence of the United States of America,
ARTHUR B. LEE,
Sheriff's Office, shen,
Bellefonte, January 28, 1914,
EE —
AGENT WANTED We have just received in.
that the First National Noiseries of
RBoohester, N. Y., wants lady or tiemen rep
rescnatives in this section 10 sell all kinds of
Roses, Bhruts, Trees and Seeds. They inform wa
that wi 1 previous ERT. it is pose bie
, Any one out
for terms aud enclose
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
Tonic and alterative. Increases strength. !
Restores healthy functions. No alcohol
Sold for 60 years.
Ask Your Doctor. AT
he
Ans
COURT ©}
{431
COMMON
RO. 11
PLEA
FEB!
y ho NOTICE ~
IN i}
NY ¥
the Bh day
Hayes 1 reneny
erring that she
FE, ONE Jear old,
i and wi
one year old
Mi Das pound
Miers, two will be
Ors Mock and well
Ig ain iH
aile Wood sows
sae Also farm
WE harrow, Hex
bie sow
god as 1
oeRLher team Barts
AR HOMAN,
KuCiloneen
AY. MARCH 11, 12 o'clock, two and
wes west Of Uetiire Hall, by Chas, 8
Faria stocs t3d fev ve * y g ps
AIG MOCK ALG Impleenis
THURSDAY, MARCH 12, ten o'clock, ene hall
mile west Jf Penne Cave, by Emaune! Fungend
t horwes, thirteen cows, 8 tal #4 heifers, jot
os, | it Plymouth Bock chickens,
Mies UwClion eaxibe, thresher and ¢ HOW.
T, thampion hay press, Ross fodder shreds
« WOOO saw, Deis, and Sx ures, eversthine
compiete, Also all the arming Impicioents and
tools, and sotoe household goods,
MONDAY, MARCH 16, all day sale, onehs.
mile wouin-cast of Linden Hall hy 8. EK. Sharer:
Farin stock a 4 implements. LF, Mays, auc
voueer, >
hoster white
ITO
sient
EGG oe uy
Johns « set
BOR MOL wh Hu
COLIRIR, vi Ont
spre
Wise and Hubler,
WEDNES
hail
Burris
is
si $5
hoe,
TUESDAY MARCH 17, at 014 Port, by Wiliam
Braalord. Large tay stock and implements,
L. F. Mayes, auct.,
THURSDAY, MARCH 19, ten o'clock, two and
one Dail wiles east of Centre Hall, by Henry §
Homan © I bree work Horm s, two Site colts. Sine
good mich cows, botstein heifers, 8 shit +
Duilis, 5 young catile, 12 ewes, tam, 2 rood sows
boar, Jot of shouts, also a fall lise of Impicments,
Wels, ete. LF. Mayes, auctioneer.
FRIDAY, MARCH 20, ten o'clock, three mi‘es
want of Uetitre Mail, by W, K Tete and G.
Kaleton : 7 norses, 11 cows, § young cate short
horn bail, about 2 hogs © aise fuli Hoe of rin.
ing implements. Hairy Grove, secuonser.
BATURDAY, MARCH 21, ene tv'cloe
Lingie larm, one and one-half miles west og —_
tre Hall by John D. Moore: 1 home, § cows. 5
Jong Sntile, brousd _—. ? shouts Ales some
ATTIGE Hn planets, soe household
Harry urove, avet oneer, oid goods.
MONDAY, MARCH 25, ten o'¢ Tosser.
ville, vy Acam F. Heckman ; Thar aly ie
COWS, We Ven § vaitle, 1.0 sheep, sud somo
hogs. Also a fuil line of farmi Tm ples
and a ..0t of ng mpl =
WEDNESDAY, MARCH =
one ball mile east of Old Part, by Jobs
PRT
re, ol Inrmin eR
eto. H. FV. Grove, auc. " r ny hh
THURNKDAY, MARCH 26. one o'clock, mils
wate Old Fort on Comming homestead by
Mrs, Reboes 2 Cannings Woll | Lot of hotsehold
12 o'clock sharp,
George W,
FRIDAY, MARCH 27, all day, W
linden ‘Hall. Term sock and
, hear
vinous,
MONDAY, MARCH 80, ton o'clock, om the
Grove farm on Sinking Creek two miles west of
| Spring Mills, by George A. Hettinger: Four
BOTs, one colt, cows, thitteen you
Lon thle, thin, hee. Tw. Brod BOWE, Bik, oy ni
Jin ng implements,
TUESDAY, MARCH 31, one mile ast of OM
ort, by Wi F, Colyer; Stock of all kinds,