PARADISE FOR THE BIRDS | Temperate Zone for the Feathered Friends of Man. Up in the far country timber falls, od. official day set for it. The ground ls started. There are shifts and comes out of the south, is summer then with a leap. in the northland is that it is there that have gone a great many of the migrating birds which paid us a few days’ visit and passed on. For all its inhospitality to man, that country in summer is a paradise for birds. Its marshes are sgafe refuges from and four-footed enemies. There is ex: haustless material for nests. And out of the pools come myriads of insects, food that does not fail until the time for the southward bird movement ar rives. Some man has sald that no God north of latitude 58 He did not inquire as to what the birds might have thought of that.—Toledo Blade. there is Public Opinion, People say how strong public opin fon is; and, indeed, it is strong while ft is in its prime. In its childhood and old age it is as weak as any other organism I try to make my o work belong to the youth &~ public opinion. The history of the world is the record of the weakness, frailty and death of public opinion, as geol ogy is the record of the decay of thoss bodily organisms in which public fons have found material —Samuel Butler. wn opin expression Gladstone's Domestic Rule. Mr. Gladstone once that he had solved the domestic problem in this way: “W exer Mrs. Gladstone insists I submit; ani whenever | insist she submits” He didn't how- ever, whether they took turns about insisting and submitting Marriage is a faily when one of the parties insists on being the insister and doesn't take turns im submitting to the submitter NEVER HAD A CHILL After Taking ELIXIR BABEK “My little daughter, 10 years old, suffered pearly a year with chills and fever, most of the time under the doctor's care. 1 was discour aged and a friend advised me to try Elixir Babek. Igaveittohberand she has never had a chill since. It completely cured her.” Mra Oyrus Helms, 302 E 8t., N. E., Was! 1HDgto n. D. © Elixir Babek 0 cents, all druggists or by Parcels Post prepaid from Kloczewski & Co, Wasbington, D ; Anvil on the Scales. It is customary when a militant suf fragette is placed on trial in England for her friends to while away their time in court by bounding shoes, bags of flour and bales of pamphlets on the magistrate’s brow. This conduct is calculated to bias—if pot brain—the court, said 161 re Better to Admonish. It is better to admonish than to re proach; for the one is mild and friend ly, the other harsh and offensive; the one corrects the faulty, the other con- victs them —Epictetus. JOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU ry Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Walery Eyes and Granuiated Eyellds, No Smarnin ust Eve Comfort Write for Book of the Hre 7 mall Pree. Murise Eye ed Co., Chicagt Bright, I | Say! “Algy makes very sure of himself before he does any boasting.” “A safe blower, eh?” Mrs.S.A. Allen's Hair Color Restorer I Renews Your Youthful Appearance ves lrnmediate relter fur Bx hades of APATLED a Londerful *amedy for BCZ » WIURES 8 and any na a & Riv nty-five cents at all droggists. 2 a BS. Dept. D-1. THE COURTNEY DRUG COMPANY Baltimore, Md. reath of ten gives entive pelle inision MAS. rN ent sent Frae or. iH. Greens Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Oa WE WANT § STORES Therefor MOVING PITIRE 25 ory obo vi for Ahoy Grrr R EE ear aE ama ot tas tre Fie FT en KEYSTONE STATE ed From Here and There. gp ——————— TOLD IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS Charles E. Knecht Has Been Appointed Postmaster At Nazareth—Chapter Of National Child Life Asso- clation Formed At Bath. Charles E. Knecht has been pointed postmaster at Nazareth. ap While mining coal at Henry Clay Colliery, Shamokin, George Balsor was killed when the roof collapsed. Thomas G. Vincent, appointed postmaster $2500 a year, tary of who has been of Danville at will resign as prothono- Montour County, he says. washing ma- home WwW. D. Hill, his sixteen was scalded. Her bottom of a out at Sporting When chine Waughtel, months-old da condition is cr the fell at the of ughter itical While rier, Street, Harry T was delivering mail on West Chester, he by ala stone Lear, a le We was r-Car ta, struck thrown by in the face rege someone unknown and knocked down County Treasurer Wil of Yellow House, has Department tags liam D. Reeser asked the I Stats unters’ license to start the seas 9000 license tags © on Last year Walking John ( loco OVINE motive ‘arroll nachinis killed on atesville killed at ty-live years old Main st eral persons have place the last reet crossing, Co been ten years attend Mrs year-old tub of neconscious but her to her home after Returning : ing a wedding at Derisal dang! Mahanoy Cf her downward In a child ty sew found three : iace The when the physician life was saved was uo arrived, Child Life 8 A chapter of the National Association has been with these officers Robert ©. Stradley: Mrs. Jacoh H rresponding secretary and librarian, Mrs. Williar U. Helfrich: recording secretary, Mra Robert H. Heine farmed nt i President, Mra. vice-pr residen Seem: of ior class of the Quakertown held its class day presented a play in most of the took part Miss Esther Snyder read the clasg history and Harvey Bauman presented the last will and testament The class was composed by. Miss Ida Gordon. hool exer and which clings SONE At ment School dij enty-five graduates. inda Nichols won Sproul Swarthmore College scholar ship Edward J. Cattell, chief stat fstician of Philadelphia, made the prin- cipal address. . ania) of the Chester High as were awarded to sev Miss Esther Or the William CC the fortieth exercises commence ilom Charles E. Steel, of Mine raville, who was nominated as the candidate of the Washington Party for Congress with- sent a let G. E. Gang his name from the Steel Is recovering from a se vere attack of typhoid fever and was warned that the excitement of a cam palgn would endanger his life. {eflelman lected as acting postmaster of New Cumberland as a result of charges brought against Postmaster Herman Long by Gifford Pinchot. man was postmaster of New Cumber- land during Cleveland's second admin fstration. long was charged with the to Celiver twenty-five political advertisements of Pinchot's, ter to Chairman off, withdrawing ticket County Ex-Burgess G Was se iatter part of September or It is intended to invite Presi dent Woodrow Wilson, fallen easy prey to “pot” fishermen at because the water is being drawn off in order to repair the wickets, Many fish were caught in nets and even baskets and wash-bollers until the in- terference of the State official was asked and State police were put on the watch. The Hiawatha Hunting and Fishing Club, which owns 1500 acres of land in Monroe County, and is composed of more than 100 sportsmen in the Le high and Delaware Valley, held its annual meeting at Bethlehem. Dr. H. A. Brukhart, of Bethlehem, waa elected president. Other officers are: Vice burg; secretary, J. Hiram Schwartz, of Allentown; treasurer, Charles E Drumbore, of South Bethlehem. . NEW YORK-—Wheat No. 2 hard winter, 97%e¢ c. red, new, 903% July; Northern, Duluth, 1 Northern, Manitoba, f. 0. b. afloat. Corn—Spot weak; No. 2 yellow, 80'%4¢ e. i. ft. prompt. Butter—ILadles, current make, firets, 19% @ 20c; seconds, 19, Cheese—State, whole white or colored, average @ lie. Eggs Dressed poultry firm. ens, frozen, 14% @ 20c¢; turkeys, 25@ 26. Spot weaker. i. LN. Y.; shipment $1.00% $1.02% fresh 14% milk, fancy, Fresh gathered extras, 23@ 25¢, Western chick. fowls, 13% @ 19; PHILADELFPHIA--Whenat - fn export elevator, No. 2 red, spot June, 9835 @%9%c; No. 1 Northern luth, $1.01¢1.02. Corn—Carlots, new, No. 2 vellow, B0% @81; steamer, yellow, BO0@80%; do do, No. 3 yellow, 704 @ 80. Oats—No. 2 yellow, 47T@ 47 %¢c; ard white, 464 @47; No. 3 4534 @ 46; No. 4 white, 44@ 45. jutter— Western, solid-packed cream- fancy specials, 30c¢; extra, 28; ex tra firsts, 27; firsts, 26 26%; 23@ 25; nearby prints, fancy, 31; gee extra, 29@30; firsts, 36@37; onds, 23@25;: garlicky prints, 21@22 Eggs-——Nearby extra, 26c per dozen; firsts, $6.45 andard case; nearby current receipts, $6.18 extra $6.45 per standar ase; firsts, seconds, candied fresh per Carlots, and Du- stand. white, ery seconds, aver- Bec per st Western, firsts, §6.15; { recrated eggs, 26@ZI8 dozen. and large, roosters, pair, ducks, 33: medium, 10g 11; i do, 12g 14; per pair do, d« 18@ zz; do, old, G18. Wheat—No 1 red spot and June, 92¢;: Western, 92; July, Western, 88: August and Sep Western, B88 ontract. 7¢ BALTIMORE 87% tember, 877%. Corn { 16340 Oats Standard No. 3 white 4 Rye—W No. 3, 65@ 70; nearby, as to quality, 60g 70c. Ex- port Delivery—Western Rye, No. 2, 71@72¢c; No. 3, 68@69; No. 4, 66@6T. Hay--No. 1 timothy—§18.50@19.00; standard, $18.00@ 18.50; No. 2, $17.00Q 17.50; No. 3, $14.00@16.00. Light clover mixed--$17.00917.50 No. 1, 2IE50@ 17.00; NG, y. $12 00G 1 14.00; heavy, $15.00@156.50. Choice clover— No. 1. 8145001500; No. 2, $13.00Q 14.00; No $10.00G12.00. No estab lished grade, $10.00@12.00. Sample grade, as to kind, quality and condi tion, $8.00@ 10.00. Straw No. 1 straight No. 2, $1400G14.50; No. 1 tangled $11.50@ 12.00; No. 2, $11.00@ 11.50. No. 1, wheat—$850§9.00; No. 2, 37.009 £00, No. 1, oat—$1050811.00; No. 3, $0.50 10.00. Butter-—Fancy, 28@ 29%ec; @28: good, 25@26. prints blocks, 28¢G 30; ladles, 19@20; land and Pennsylvania rolls, 19; roils, 184 @19;- West Virginia rolls, 18, @ 15; ore-packed, 18% @ 19; Mary- and. Virginia and Pennsylvania dairy prints, 15; process, 21@23 Eggs-—Maryland, lec. Closing easier, spot, white, 453% €@ 46c; 5. @45% Rye, No. 2, No. 4, 67@68 estern 74Q@ 75 Bag lots rye—$15.00; » cholece, 27 29@31; Mary. Ohto Pennsylvania and nearby firsts, 20¢; Western firsts, 20; West Virginia firsts, 20; Southern firsts. 19. Recrated or rehandled eggs, 14 @1c higher. Live Poultry—Chickens—0Old hens, heavy, 18¢: old heng, small to medium, 18: old roosters, 10; spring, 1% Ibs and over, 32: do, smaller, 30. Ducks Old, 11@12¢; Muscovy, 10@11; spring, 8 lbs. and over, 18. Pigeons-—Young and old, per palr, Guinea fowl, each, 30ec. Ge «aC. Live Stock YORK-~Steers, $6.75@0.20; 0@ 7.75; cows, $3.756 6.80. Veals, , $8.00@11. bo: ere ITkD, $5.75@ $3.5005.25; $8.5009.75; NEW Calves $6.00@ 8.00; Sheep — Sheep, 250@3.26; lambs, $8.00. Hogs — Hogs, $7.26@7.50. @8.7 io culls, $8.50@8.76; CHICAGO $8.15@ 8.25; light, $8.00@8.26; mixed, heavy, $7.76@8.27%:; Cattle—Beeves, $7.35@9.35; steers, $6.80 8.15; stockers and feeders, $6.10 ®8.10; cows and heifers, $3.60@8.70; calves, $7.256@ 10.36. Sheep—Sheep, §5.30@6.40; yearlings, $6.20@ 7.50; iambs, §6.50@8.60; springs, $1.26@9.75. PITTS BURGH-Cattle—Cholce, $8.80 @8.90; prime, $8.60@8.80. Sheep—Prime wethers, $5.85@ 6.00; culls and commons, $2.00@ 3.50; lambs, $4.00 7.50; veals, calves, §10.00@ 10.75. Hogs—Prime beavies, $840; me diums, heavy and light Yorkers, $8.55; pigs, $8.26 8.50; roughs, $7.00G 7.75. Steam and gas engines and bollers were imported info Spain to the value of $380,000 during January and Feb ruary, 1914, against $300,000 and $180, 000, respectively, during similar peri ods in 1918 and 1912. —— WOMEN CAN ~ HARDLY BELIEVE How Mrs. Hurley Was Re stored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Eldon, No = “] was troubled with displacement, inflammation and female weakness. For two years 1 could not stend on my feet i long at a time and I could not walk two blocks without en- during cutting and drawing pains down my right side which increased every month. 1 have been at that time purple in the face and would walk the floor, I could not lie down or git still sometimes for a day and a night st a time. 1 was nervous, and had v ery little appe stite, no ambition, melancholy, and often felt as though I had not a friend in the world. After I had tried most every female remedy without suc cess, my mother-in-law advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I did so and gained in strength every day. I have now no trou. ble in any way and highly praise your medicine. It advertises itself. "Mra. 8. T. HurLey, Eldon, Missouri. The American Farmer. | REAL LIFE INT THE COUNTRY | All things recalled, wouldn't it be the part of statesmanship to do con- | | Fact le Shown by by Man's Eagerness » gresslonally for the American farmer? | Escape From Congestion of He's one-fourth of your population, | the Crowded City. the nation's best hope. The — American merchant borrows at five | per cent. The American stock gam- | bler, producing nothing, accomplish- ing nothing, a merest leech living by the toil of others, borrows for even | lées. The American farmer, with all | that can be said to his good and solv- ent advantage, must and does pay 8% per cent, And all the time the savings and postal banks are bulging with billions. If the government would make two blades of grass grow where but one has grown before--and publicly {it would pay—the wide-flung chance les open. Let it model action on French or German lines, and place the farmer on a borrowing par with the merchant, the manufacturer and the stock job ber. Let It evolve a system of farm loang which shall put those savings and postal bank billions at a per cent within the farmer's borrowing reach. Hearst's Magazine, ITCHING, BURNING ERUPTION Thomasviile, Ala-—~"] suffered with eczema on my bands and feet two or three years. About eleven years ago 1 became troubled with an itching, burn- ing eruption which came on my hands | and feet in little water blisters and in Boon to Mankind, about a day or two when 1 would let Tootle. the rer the water out or wash it out, using my | thority on floral hands, then places would fester \ and itch to beat the band. 1 could not do any work that was rough on my hands at all. It caused me great suf- fering and inconvenience, “1 tried everything or was told and never Heved until I beg using Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I would wash the parts in water with the Cuticura Soap and then when I dried them I would ap- ply the Cuticura Ointmen th face the daytime, and would get a Soft Piece apply the Ci hands and let it Slay night. A perfect cure No one will ever know get my hands and feet (Signed) Geo. C. Crook, Nov Cuticura Scap and Ointment throughout the world afiple of each free, with 32.p. Bkin Book. Address post card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”"—Adv. Why is it that railway in] presidents of banks and heads of great | enterprises who must perforce do business in cities, almost all try to have homes on farms in the country, | | where they develop soils, plant crops | | and breed animals? It is befause there | is wearisome monotony in piled up| brick and stone. There i8 confusion in crowded streets and clanging trol ley cars and hot smoky railways. These things man has made, and they are needful, but they are not life, much as the farm boy may imagine them to be. Life is in the open country. Life is in the growing grass, the waving fields of wheat, the springing corn. Life is {in the trees and birds, life is in the developing animals of the farm, Any man who works with the land who feeds a fleld and watches the re sult, gains a real fundamental know ledge of the underlying foundation on which rests all our ecivilizati It makes him & sober tful man, a reverent man, ments wisely a hopeful optimist is where things are born grow. On the farm is real life er's Gazette on man, a though experi Life and and if he and live Breed areca jowned au the present which nk Bu reclanguis Lerner smber the rem edy dia this was Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. For sale everywhere. the wRlermeion roang, It has helped thousands of women » been troubled with displace- ulceration, tumors, , backache, that be «aring down feeling, indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other means have failed. Why don’t you try it? Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. Lynn, Mass. ‘Make the Liver Do its Duty. imes in ten whe stomach and that 1 knew was really of ree 3 ammation, ean trae 3 Basing 168, pe riod; eo pair termelons) are ite inners 1 wits 8 pyer an 'y v i has ias Ii na Hen ana Lon sur- 1 {3 ft WAIK 118 Us at night a OV 61 in Aas CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS iy COM to Must Have Stirred Audience. Dan d the legi mats it was Daly once essaye¢ ’ az) Go Its duty Cures Con stipation, In- digestion, Sick Headache, and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature his earls had to the center of the shout The idie Thoughts. Why you watch slage nent tently? are ing that fiy so ring if men will king is dead; tango up and Wouldn't it Post ‘1 was nde ever he the walls fine?" Pittaburgh just w« able to that down | king!” be Vhen promptly POR« 4 the aseu but words failed him time came the moment like ’ Gra Was BO Then Yoice med for a New Modern Dancing The ledding Bxpert and Instrocior In New York | he City, writes “Ernr Sir 1 have uend ALLENS | Foor-Base, the antiseptic powder 10 be shaken Into the shoes, for the past ton years. [iiss blessing to sll who are compelisd to be on their feet. | dance eight of ten hours daily, and fied that Arisn's | Foor - Bang keeps my Toot cool, takes the friction | fro 1 the shoe, prevents coms and Sore, Aching feet I recommend It to all my pupil (Signed BE FLETCHER HALLAMORR | Sample Fuge. Address AllenS Gimsted le Roy XY. | malic agitated that at the top of his the king bellowed “Long live he's dead!” Dandruff is a disorder of the skin. One of the best remedies for it is Glenn’s Sulphur Soap It's a delightful toilet and bath ssp, —cleansing, heal- ing and purifying. Sold by Druggists Hits Hair and Whisker Dye, black or brown, 50c. Reasonable Guess. Church—They say the new | hasn't been seen before in 15 and it's egg-shaped Gotham -—Where do you suppose storage? comet Years it’s Wear Well fusband--1 that again say that Huerta legs Wife—They ce ftaluly | do last been? In cold the is on note papers m— his last But Not Toothicss. off your dog, for goodness “Call y use: he's deaf Le Rire. It is easy enough to be popular. Just | agree with everything the other fellow | says India is badl need of female doc ' tors Years of Experience Makes Perfect CASTORIA Mothers may try new remedies on themselves but Baby's life is too delicate, too precious to try any experiments. (Genuine CASTORIA NE yin 8 Always Bears the Signature of BECAUSE it has been made under his personal supervision for more than 30 years to the satisfaction of millions upon millions of Mothers. Sold only in one size bottle, never in bulk, or otherwise; to protect the babies. The Centaur Company,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers