The patriot. (Indiana, Pa.) 1914-1955, August 26, 1916, The Patriot, Image 3

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    Sheriff's Sale
By virtue of certain writs of PL
Vend. Ex. and Lev. Fa., issued out of the
Court of Common Pleas and Orphans'
Court of Indiana county, and to me dir
ected. there will be exposed to public
vendue or outcry at the Court House,
Indiana, Pennsylvania, on
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 1,
1916,
the following - described real estate, to
wit:
AT 2sO'Clock P.M.
All the right, title,, interest and claim
of the defendants, -
MARY FORENCE WINEBERG, SAM
UEL. WINEBERG and SAMUEL WIN
EBERG, Administrator of LAW
RENCE MILLER WINEBERG,
of, in and to all that certain tract of
land situated in East Mahoning town
ship, Indiana county, Pennsylvania,
bounded and described as follows, to-wit:
Beginning at a stone in the original
line, the ace adjoining land of David
Pollock's heirs south two and one-half
degrees west one hundred and ten and
six-tenth perches to stones, thence ad
oining lands of said David Pollock's
heirs south eighty-seven and one-half
degrees east one hundred sixty-three
and six-tenth perches to stones; thence
adjoining lands of Miss M. M. Mclsaac
north two and one-half degrees east
one hundred and ten and six- tenth per
ches to a green sapling; thence adjoin
ing lands of Robert Pollock's heirs north
eighty-seven and one-half degrees west
one hundred sixty-three and six-tenth
perches to the place of beginning, con
taining 113 acres and 14 perches, be the
same more or less, excepting and res
erving unto the parties or the first part,
their heirs and assigns forever.
First. All the rights and privileges of
the Oakland Reformed Presbyterian
church or congregation in two acres of
the above described tract of land as ful
ly as said rights and privileges are ex
cepted and reserved in the deed for the
above described tract of land from David
Pollock, administrator of R. L. Pollock,
to J. L. Crocier said deed being dated
May 3, 1893, and recorded in Indiana
county in Deed Book "A", vol. 58, page
546.
Second. All the coal ,oil, gas and other
valuable substances situate and lying
under the surface of the said described
tract of land together with all rights
and privileges necessary to the develop
ment and removal from the said prem
ises of said coal, oil, gas or other val
uables so excepted and reserved, the said
rights and privileges to be exercised in
such manner as to do the least damage
to the surface of said land consistent
with the reasonable exercise of said
rights and privileges.
The above premises being the same
which became vested in Mary Florence
Wineberg and Lawrence Miller Wine
berg. two of the parties of the first part,
by deed from Mrs. Mary Mclsaac and
husband, dated May 2, 1904, and record
ed in Deed Book "A", vol. 86, page 566.
Taken in execution at suit or William
M. Hamill, Lev. Fa. No. 38, September
Term, 1916.
CF & B
ALSO—AII the right, title, interest
and claim of the defendant,
JOHN H. BUTERBAUGH
of, in and to all that tract of land sit
uated in Grant township, county of Indi
ana, Pennsylvania, bounded and descri
bed as follows: Beginning at a birch
on line of lands of Josiah Buterbaugh,
thence south seventy-seven degrees
east one hundred and fifteen perches to
white oak; thence south one-half degree
west seventy-six perches to a post;
thence north seventy-seven and one
half degrees west forty perches to stone
corner; thence south one and one-half
degrees west one hundred perches to a
post; thence north seventy-seven and
one-half degrees west eighty perches to
a chestnut; thence north two and one
half degrees east one hundred and seven
ty-six perches to birch, the place of be
ginning, containing one hundred and
three acres and twenty-eight perches,
more or less; having thereon erected
a two-story frame house, frame barn
and outbuildings and having thereon
growing a large apple orchard.
Being the same land title to which be
came vested in defendant by deed of
Peter Reithmiller and wife, dated Nov
ember 1, 1902, and recorded in Indiana
county in Deed Book "A", 81, page 656.
Excepting all the coal underlying the
above described tract of land with the
right to mine the same as excepted by
Peter Reithmiller in said deed of Nov
ember 1, 1902.
Taken in execution at suit of John
B. Siverd, Fi. Fa. No. 47, September
Term, 1916. JACK.
ALSO —All the right, title, interest
and claim of the defendant,
MRS. MORNA LAIRD, executrix of
John H. Laird, deceased, being also
widow and heir of deceased, and Wal
lace Laird, son and heir of said John
H. Laird, deceased, and of Mary J.
Laird, late wife of said deceased,
of. in and to all that certain piece, par
cel or lot of ground situate in the bor
ough of Blairsville, county of Indiana,
Pennsylvania, bounded and described as
follows, to-wit: Beginning at a post at
the corner of lot No. SO on Campbell
street: thence along said lot 150 feet to
Sugar alley; thence with said alley west
ward 45 1-2 feet: thence northwestward
by a line through the lot which is num
bered SI and a part of which is hereby
conveyed and also parallel with the line
first mentioned 150 feet to the place of
beginning, being the same lot of ground
the title to which became vested in the
said John H. Laird by deed from Charles
W. Johnston and others, bearing date
tb" 2*th day of March, 1907, and in the
s- 1 V J. L:«ird by descent from her
father, George 11. Johnston, deceased.
Taken in execution at suit of G. L.
Clawson. Lev. Fa. No. September
Tern: 1016. VTIGGINS.
NOTICE. —Any persi n purchasing at
the al> >ve sale will pie. -e take notice
that at least $lOO.OO (if the bid be so
much) will be required rs soon as the
property is knocked down unless the
purchaser is the only judgment creditor,
in which cafe an amount sufficient to
cover all costs will be required, and the
balance of the purchase money must be
paid in full or receipt given by the
judgment creditor on or before Monday
of the first week of Sept. court. In de
fault of payment the property* will again
be put up for sale at next adjourned
sale and the purchaser in default shall
make good any deficiency in re-sale. No
deed will be offered for acknowledg
ment unless purchase money be fully
paid. The sheriff reserves the right to
return his writ "property not sold for
non-payment of purchase money." Ad
journed sale will be held Sept. 8, 1916,
at 1:15 p. m., when purchasers, lien
creditors and persons interested may
be present to protect their respective
interests in case of re-sale.
H. A. BOGGS, Sheriff.
Sheriff's Office. Indiana, Pa., Aug. 9, 1916
Sheriff's Sales
Bv virtue of certain writs of Fi. Fa..
Vend. Ex. and Lev. Fa., issued out of
the Court of Common Pleas of Indiana
county, and to me directed, there will
be exposed to public vendue or outcry
at the Court House, Indiana, Pennsyl
vania, on
Friday, Sept* 8, 1916
AT 1:15 O'CLOCK, P M
the following described real estate, to
wit:
All the right, title, interest and claim
of the defendants,
CHARLES CICERO and FRANK
CICERO
of, in and to all those two certain
pieces, parcels or lots of ground situate
in the township of Pine, county of Indi
ana and State of Pennsylvania, bound-
1~" Fa C t SVersus "" I
- Fallacies .. ' ')!
-
TACT is a real state cf tkings . FALLACY is art appai<- j 1
ently genuine lui rcclly illogical statement or argument. :
WHEN, in 1908, the people cf Tear.e:see were told thst it !
" Prohibition was adopted tares would be -r|k~ _ _ « rr
lowered, the FALLACY was believed. In Tennessee ]£ 10,000 IVlen 3
joined the "dry" States. | out „£ £
IMMEDIATELY property wcrth CC,OO3,GCO was made use- *-? __ - _ .4-
less by the passage of the prohibition law, and 10,000 men HiITIDIOVIYUMII j* '
were thrown cut of employment—CO per cent, cf whom are ... t
still unemployed. Tanes were increased and, in March of '
1915, a committee cf the Lecture found a deficit of
$1,022,000 in the State's revenues.
TIT IZZX the last year cf liquor licenses in Tennessee, the U
—— eo.t cf criminal prosecutions in that State was $158,000. E|
g| — r rr r r.-\f L.nt yeer, aeceraing to figures submitted to the 1015 Legis- l~|
3 r 1 lature, Tennessee spent $213,000 in the prosecution of enm
/? i~—L~, cl:svrln~ an increase cf crime cf ever 100 per cent. In W
I The Zf'lt ooN \ cT-Yr Ce rate cf Tennessee spent $184,000 more in L=j
(.8 r rri- ri i:M in the prosecution cf criminals than it did l9OB, when ~
n IJ IS itiC | were legally licensed and regulated.
UM All CRIME '
AVD these FACTS were in direct refutation of the picas for I
t 1 1 T I- I rshibltien put forth >y agitators, who declared £hat the
I I 1 J ' - r-'ccn v.T3 the cause cf crime, and that once the saloon was
put" cvt cf business, crime wculd be lessened and less police
TPHE direct opposite has been the esse. Co mr.r.y have been
* the violations cf the prel-l-l-lcri law, and cj vi:.:- the _ r^rr^N.
methods to evade that law that m I.nshrL.lo, Memphis sr..l - '? \ \ "-T'r-i..,7
Chattanooga it was found that the psllsc f:rce must be csn- | /vrp
slderably increased to even partly enforce the law. An J fj ri-Jj 1
these added policemen brought rn increased cost—and in- "
creased criminal prosecution. Thus, it has ccme about that LttWS
State and Municipal expense in the matter cf cost cf crime I7 W Alt-iac*
has just about doubled eince tlie adoption of prohibition. , >VimO5V
And even this increase of police has been almost absolutely Doubled Crime
useless insofar as suppressing the mu.w.Luc.c c- .l 1 ~~v
operations. JiM ■
npHUS, it is shown that the FALLACIOUS promises held
I * out by the Prohibitionist are at c.rcct variance wit.", tiie 1
J FACTS that follow these promises. hi
D fcl
E Pennsylvania State Brewers 7 Association Fj
g 66 . g|
ed and described as follows: Beginning
at a post in the middle of the public
road, corner of lot belonging to Sara
Lipscher; thence along the middle of
said public road south 35 degrees 35
minutes east 53 feet to a post; thence
by other lot of party of the first part
south 49 degrees 56 minutes west 25»
feet to a point in line of Weaver Coal
Company; thence by land of the "Weaver
Coal Company north 85 degrees 25 min
utes west 42 feet to a post and corner:
thence by same north 4 degrees east
28 feet to a point; thence by lot of
Sarah Lipscher south 49 degrees 56 min
utes west 271 feet to-a post, the place
of beginning.
The second lot beginning at a post
in center of public road; thence by cen
ter of said public road south 35 degrees
35 minutes east 70 feet to a post: thence
by lot conveyed to George Casora south
49 degrees 56 minutes west 184 feet to
a point in line of Weaver Coal Com
pany;thence by line of Weaver Coal
Company north 85 degrees 25 minutes
west 98 feet to a point corner of the
above described lot; thence by the above
described lot south 49 degrees 56 min
utes west 259 feet to a post, the place
of beginning.
Being the same two lots of ground
conveyed to Frank Cicero and Charles
Cicero, by deed from Luigi Matagrano
and Marie Matagrano, dated February
16, 1906, and recorded in Deed Book,
Vol. 93, page 216. „
Excepting and reserving all the coal
underneath and all the minerals, also
excepting and reserving to party of the
first part, his heirs and assigns the
right to the free and uninterrupted use
of water from the spring on the second
lot contained in the above grant so long
as he, his heirs or assigns shall occupy
the three-cornered lot adjoining the se
cond lot above described. It is under
stood that the use of the water from
said spring is only for domestic pur
poses to the party occupying the lot
adjoining as aforesaid. Also, the right
of ingress and egress to and from said
spring. v.
All that certain piece, parcel or tract
of land situated in the township of Pine,
county of Indiana and State of Pennsyl
vania, bounded and described as follows,
to-wit: Beginning at a post in Leon
ard's Run on line of lands of Samuel
Misener, now Penn Mary Coal Company;
thence south 87 1-2 degrees east 37 per
ches, more or less, to a post; thence by
land formerly of George Roser, now coal
owned by Penn Mary Coal Company
and surface by Dennis Roser south 2 1-2
degrees west 55 perches, more or less,
to a hemlock: thence by meanderings
of Leonard's Run to beginning, con
taining eight acres, more or less.
Being the same tract of land which
became vested in Charles Cicero by deed
from L. H. Maloy and Rose, his wife,
dated November 28. 1911, and recorded
in Deed Book No. 126, page 160.
All that certain piece, parcel or lot
of ground situated in the township of
Pine, county of Indiana and State of
Pennsylvania, bounded and described as
follows, to-wit: Beginning at a post
corner of Roser property, in township
road; thence along center of said road
south 32 degrees east 206 feet to a post;
thence by same south 35 degrees 35 min
utes east 34 feet to a post; thence by
lot of Max Friedman south 49 degrees
56 minutes * west 202 feet to a post;
thence by land of Weaver Coal Com
pany 332 feet to a post, the place of
beginning.
Being the same lot of ground con
veyed to Frank Cicero and Charley Ci
cero. by deed of Sarah Lipscher and
Emil Lipscher. her husband, dated Jan
uary 11, 1907, and recorded in Deed
i Book No. 101, page 207.
' Excepting and reserving from the
above described lot of ground all the
coal underlying the same and all the
minerals and all the timber.
All that certain messuage, tenement or
parcel of ground situated in Mont
gomery township, Indiana county, Penn
sylvania, bounded and described as
i follows: On the north by street leading
1 to residence of A. B. Clark; on the east
j by Market street 80 feet; on the south
s by Lot No. 10 block 28. and on the west
by South Right-of-Way Hooverhurst
and Southwestern R. R.. and known as
Lot Nos. 11 and 12 Block No. 28 in the
plan of lots of the first party, duly re
; corded in the recorder's office.
Being the same two lots of ground
conveyed to Frank Cicero and Charles
I Cicero, by deed of the Wilgus Land
company, dated February 1, 1905 and
recorded in Deed Book "B," Vol. 89,
page 483.
Excepting and reserving the coal, coal
oil, gas, fire clay and all other minerals;
also, all the timber with the right of
removing the same, together with the
rights and privileges which are reser
ved in said deed of John W. Clark et
ux. to Wilgus Land company.
All that certain lot of ground situate
| in the village of Millford, South Ma
honing township, Indiana county, Penn-
sylvania, bounded and described as fol
lows: Beginning at a post on the north
line of High street, being the southwest
corner of Lot No. 14; thence by said
lot north 5 1-4 degrees east 150 feet to
a post on the south side of an alley 20
feet wide; thence by the south side of
said alley south 95 3-4 degrees west 50
feet to a post on the east side of an
alley 15 feet wide; thence by east line
of said alley south 5 1-4 degrees west
150 feet to a post on north side of said
High street, 40 feet wide; thence by
the north side of said street north 85
3-4 degrees 50 feet to a post, the place
of beginning.
Being Lot No. 13 in plot of lots laid
out by William M. Wilson and being
part of a larger tract of land, the title
to which by sundry good conveyances
and assurances in law duly had and
recovered became vested in William M.
Wilson. Coal and coal rights and privi
leges reserved as contained in deed of
William M. Wilson to Joseph Barbers,
recorded in Deed Book No. 91, page 59.
Being the same lot of ground which
became vested in Charles Cicero, by deed
from Jacob Wettling, sheriff, dated De
cember 4, 1908, and recorded in Deed
Book No. 92, page 86.
Taken in execution at suit of First
•National Bank of Cherry tree, Pa., Fi.
Fa. No. 54, September Term, 1916.
Banks.
ALSO —All the right, title, interest
and claim of the defendants,
J. E. PHILIPS and LIZZIE PHILIPS
of, in and to that certain tract of land
situate in the township of West Wheat
field, county of Indiana and State of
Pennsylvania, bounded and described as"
follows: Beginning at the stones on a
rock at lands now of Isaiah Brendlinger;
thence by said lands north 85 degrees
east 39.8 perches to stones at edge of
an old dam; thence north along public
road 29 degrees east 237.4 perches to a
corner at lands formerly of Joseph Mack
Jr.; thence north 26 degrees west 46
perches to a stone corner at lands for
merly of Elizabeth Shaffer; thence north
85 degrees west 51 1-2 perches to stone
corner; thence north 25 degrees west 9
perches to stone corner at lands of
Nipcamp; thence by said lands south i
17 1-2 degrees west 277.9 perches to the!
place of beginning, containing 105 acres,
more or less. Being same tract of land
which became vested in Lizzie Philips
et al. by will of John Maites, deceased. ;
Having thereon erected a two-story
frame house, log barn and other out- ■
buildings.
Taken in execution at suit of C.G.
Maites H. H. Maites, executors of
the last will and testament of John i
Mrtites, deceased, Fi. Fa. No. 56 Sep
tember Term, 1916. MACK. !
ALSO —All the right, title, interest
and claim of the defendant.
MIKE WAZDECKY (or MIKE HODES
KY)
of. in and to that certain piece, parcel
or lot of land situated in the township
of Pine, county of Indiana and State of;
Pennsylvania, bounded and described as
follows: Beginning- at a point between
lands of George Hoffman, deceased, of
which this was a part, and running
east 100 feet, bounded on the north by
lands of Penn Mary Coal company;
thence running south along* lands of
same; thence running west 100 feet to
a corner, bounded on south by lands of
George Hoffman, deceased; thence north
100 feet to place of beginning, contain
ing nine-fortieth acres, having thereon
erected a frame dwelling house and
outbuildings. Being the same lot which
became vested in Mike Wazdecky (or
Mike Hodesky) by deed from Joe* Rog
ers, recorded in Deed Book 145, page 132.
Taken in execution at suit of C. T.
Lewin, Alias Fi. Fa. No. 1, September
Term, 1916.
MACK.
ALSO—AII the right, title, interest
and claim of the defendant.
FRANK PALMER
of, in and to that certain lot of ground
situate in the township of Burrell, coun
ty of Indiana and State of Pennsylvan
ia, bounded and described as follows:
On the north by Church street, on the
east by lot No. 3, owned by Margaret
Wilk; on the west by lot No. 1, owned
by L. O. Johnston, and on the south by
a 15-foot alley, being lot No. 2 in Block
No. 5 of plot of lots as recorded in Deed
Book "B" 83 page 620; having thereon
erected a one story frame house.
Taken in execution at Suit of Davis A.
Palmer, Fi. Fa. No. 48, September Term
1916. MACK.
ALSO—AII the right, title, interest
and claim of the defendant,
J. K. MARSHALL,
of,in and to the following described lot
of ground situate in the township of
Montgomery, county of Indiana and
State of Pennsylvania, bounded and de
scribed as follows: Beginning at a post
corner of lot No. 0 and No. 1 south 3 de
grees 45 minutes west 142 feet to a
stake at alley; thence along Railroad
street south 73 degrees west 25 feet to a
stake; thence along alley 86 degrees 15
minutes west 276 feet to stake; thence
along lot No. 2 3 degrees 45 minutes
150 feet to Chestnut street; thence along
Chestnut street 86 degrees east 50 feet
to place of beginning, being lot No. 1 in
J. H. Smith addition to Gipsy. Except
ing and reserving coal and coal rights
as contained in deed to defendant, re
corded in Deed Book 98, page 550. Hav
ing thereon erected a two-story frame
house and other outbuildings. v
Taken in execution at suit of Wash
ington Camp No. 616 P. O. S. of A., Fi.
Fa. No. 63, September Term, 1916.
ELKIN & CREPS and MACK.
NOTICE—Any person purchasing at
the above sale will please take notice
that at least $lOO.OO (if the bid be so
much) will be required as soon as the
property is knocked down unless the
purchaser is the only judgment creditor,
in which case an amount sufficient td
cover all costs will be requirfed and the
balance of the purchase money must be
paid in full or receipt given by the judg
ment creditor on or before the second
Monday of Sept. court. No deed will be
offered for acknowledgment unless pur
chase money is fully paid. The sheriff
reserves the right to return his writ
"property not soid for non-payment of
purchase money."
H. A. BOGGS, Sheriff
Sheriff's Office, Indiana, Pa. Aug. 16,1916
BpMt the Difference.
In a jury trial in a small town the
gentlemen into whose hands the case
of the plaintiff and defendant was
placed were so stubbornly divided that
they were some twenty odd hours in
reaching a verdict As they left the
court, after having rendered the ver
dict, one of them was asked by a
friend what the trouble was. "Waal,"
he said, "six on 'em wanted to give the
plaintiff $4,000 and six on 'em wanted
to give him $3,000, so we split the dif
ference and give him $5OO." —Exchange.
Exhausted.
"Do you think your husband has de
rived any benefit »'rpra playing golf.
Mrs. NiblickV"
"Oh, yes; I'm sure he has! He used
to be frightfully irritable, but now I
never hear a cross word from him."
"Of course you don't. His vocabu
lary of expletives must be pretty well
used up by the time he gets home from
the links." —Exchange.
Hard to Deny.
As Miss Hypatia Squaretoes reached
the culminating point of her lecture
on "Woman's Rights and How to
Wield Them" she threw back her head
and stood before her audience in an at
titude of defiance.
"Talk of man!" she cried. "What
has man ever done for woman?"
"He's furnished the model she's try
ing her best to imitate!" boomed a
manly voice from the rear of the hall.
And then a palpitating silence reigned
for nearly a minute.
♦ "1:
THE PERFECT DUTIES.
i I ~ .
Gentleness and cheerfulness
come before all morality. They
are the perfect duties. If your
morals make you dreary they >
9 re wrong. I do not aay "Give
f them up," for they may be all
> ymm hmvrn, but wm«l (taa like
a vtee teat they apaM the ttoaa >
srf betta* and peepta. i
StwftwwVi ,
REACHES LIMIT IN MEANNESS
•Snoopy* Person Is a Pest In Any
Community, a*d a Sure Maker
of Trouble.
There are tew persona meaner
than those who try to get from a
child facts about the parents and home
■of the little one.
Some persons cultivate children for
this express purpose.
They encourage the youngsters to
talk about their home affairs, and pick
from them bits of Information they
.hope to use In future conversation
with the neighbors. And yet these
very people would be Indignant If you
should call them "snoopy."
The little ones feel flattered by the
attention they are given and readily
talk about what father or mother said
and what they did.
Often they repeat remarks which
have been made about the neighbors
—and invariably this causes trouble.
To stir up strife and ill feeling is
Just what the prying person wants,
and the children make the beet of
tools.
Children are likely to forget, or get
the wrong idea of what is said, and
give it a different interpretation from
what is meant
In this way parents are often cred
ited with statements which they did
not make and which would be decid
edly distasteful to those who might
hear about them.
The old saw, and fools al
ways tell the tsuth," cannot always be
relied upon.—Chicago American.
RULES TRUANCY IS A CRIME
Many Lawyers May Lose Shingles as
the Result of a New York
Court's Opinion.
The status of one who has spent a
term in a trunnt school is the same
as that of a criminal who has served
a sentence in prison, according to a
decision of the appellate division of
the supreme court, and on this ruling
lawyers, physicians and employees in
the civil service who in their youth
were detained in truant schools may
be debarred from the practice of their
professions or dismissed.
It is estimated that in New York
are several hundred lawyers *nd phy
sicians who at one time were inmates
of truant schools. Nearly every law
yer and physician who heard of the
decision recalled offhand from two
to a dozen colleagues who had had
that experience, and one eminent at
| torney was mentioned who delighted
r to boast that he had been committed
; to a state Institution as a truant.
Two years ago a man who had
! been practicing * "
- was disbarred because It was discov*
* ered he once had been a convict in
- the Elmira prison. An applicant for
* appointment to the police department
was rejected twice under civil service
\ rules because when a boy he had been
> arrested for playing baseball, although
; sentence had been suspended,—New
York Telegram.
f
i Kitchener Wheat
j Some years ago Lord Kitchener's
3 name was given to a kind of wheat
\ that was introduced by him »nto South
t Africa. The story is told In the Dally
f London Chronicle. While Kitchener
was in India some of the acqualnt
j ances he had made in South Africa
wrote to him that their wheat was juf
fering from rust and that they had
heard that Tibetan wheat was immune
; from this disease. Could he send
» them a few bushels? He sent the
3 wheat and that was an end of the
t matter, as he thought.
Some years afterward he was at
Nairobi, and saw a few acres of
growing wheat, named Kitchener
wheat He learned that the seed had
[ I come from a part of South Africa,
j 2.(100 miles distant —the offspring of
? the marriage of his Tibetan wheat
1 with a native variety. "So," said Lord
Kitchener, "just as my grandfather,
. j Doctor Chevallier, gave his name to a
famous barley, mine is now attached
to a special kind of wheat."
Sweets in the Field.
The change of food that one makes
I when first going into the woods is apt
! to produce digestive disturbances, but
even when the system has recovered
■ from these there is almost sure to be
1 a sense of something missing in the
1 diet. Sugar and acid are both lacking
in most cases, and are missed. Sugar
is a fuel for the human engine, and
the wise camper will take it along in
the form of sweet chocolate, Jelly pow
, der, or some such form. Our troops
in Cuba in '9B clamored for candy.
Davis tells of one husky doughboy
who'd "sell his soul for a chocolate
caramel." The recent punitive expe
dition into Mexico has developed the
same clamor for sweets, much to the
surprise of the dally press.
In making up grub lists have plenty
of coffee. The allowance at home
may be only one cup a day, but in the
i woods half a dozen may be consumed.
—Outing.
Cat Calls Help for Kitten.
John McNulty, a fireman in the fed
eral building, was annoyed by the
meowing of a cat the other evening.
The next morning he found Minne
haha, the post office pet clawing at
the cracks of the door of one of the
big vaults In the basement McNulty
hastily opened the door, and was
startled to see a kitten Jump from
within.
It was one of Minnehaha's kittens,
which wandered into the vault just
before it was closed, and the mother
cat traced it to the vault door and
1 called for help.—Wilmington (DeL)
Dispatch to New York Sua.
COMING BACK
UNITED DOCTORS SPECIALIST
WILL AGAIN BE AT
INDIANA, Pennsylvania
New Indiana house
Thursday, September 14
HOURS-io A. M. to 8 P. M.
Remarkable Success of Talented Phy
sician in the Treatment of
Chronjc Diseases
Offer Services Free of Charge
The TTnited Doctors Specialist, li
censed by the State of Pennsylvania
lor the treatment of all diseases, in
chronic diseases df men, *vo:nen and
children, offer to all who call on this
trip consultation, examination, advice
lree, making no charge whatever, ex
cept the actual cost of treatment. All
that is asked in return lor these valu
able services is that every per&on
treated will state the result obtained
to their friends and thus prove to the
sick and afflicted in every city and lo
cality, that at last treatments have
been discovered that are reasonably
ture and ceriain in their effect.
The United Doctors are experts in
the treatment of chronic diseases and
so great and wonderful have been
their results that in many cases it is
hard to find the dividing line between
skill aad miracle.
Diseases of the stomach, intestiues.
liver, bleed, skin, ner es, heart, spleen,
rheumatism, sciatica, tapeworm, leg
ulcers, weak lungs and those afflicted
with long-standing, deep-seated, chron
ic diseases, that have baffled the skill
of the family physician, should not fail
to call. Deafness often has been cured
in sixty days.
Acceding to their system no more
operation for appendicitis, gall stones,
tumors, goiter, piles, etc., as all cases
accepted will be treated without oper
ation or hypodermic injection, as they
were among the first in America to
earn the name of "Bloodless Surgeons"
by doing away with the kntfe, with
blood and with all pain in the success
ful treatment of these dangerous dis
eases.
No matter what o»r ailment may
be, no matter what others may have
told >ou, no matter what experience
you may have had with other physi
cians, it will be to your advantage to
see them at once. Have it forever set
tled in your mind. Jf your case is in
curable they wi»l give you such advice
as may relieve and stay the disease.
Do not put off this duty you owe your
self or friends or relatives who are 1
suffering because of jcur sickness, as
a visit at this time may help you.
Worn-out and run down men or wom
en, no matter what your ailment may
be, call, it costs you nothing.
Kemember, this free offer is for this
visit only.
Manied ladies come with their hus
bands and minors with their parents,
'-aboratorios, Milwaul ee, Wisconsin.
Etiquette.
The very high souuding word eti
quette had a very humble origin, for
etiquette meant simply a labeL It de
rived its present meaning from the
fact that a Scotch gardener who had
laid out the grounds at Versailles for
Louis XIV. was much annoyed at the
courtiers walking over his newly made
paths and at length had labels placed
to indicate where they might walk. At
first these labels were Ignored, but a
hint from high quarters that in future
the walks of the courtiers must be
within the "etiquettes" or labels was
promptly attended to. To keep within
the "etiquettes" came to mean to do
the correct' thing.
Time For Everything.
A celebrated author thus sketched
out his daily program to an intervlew
; er: Itise at 11, breakfast at 12; atten
i tion to mail; a few afternoon calls; a
ride in the park; dinner; the theater
, and then to bed.
"But when do you do your literary
work?" he was asked.
"Why, the next day, of course," was
the reply.—Pickings.
Guatemala's Marimba.
The marimba. Guatemala's national
musical Instrument, Is a huge affair
on the xylophone principle, played by
striking its vari-sized keys with pad
ded drumsticks. Guatemalan Indians,
who have quite as much power and en
durance as the average truck horse,
carry these from town to town on their
backs.
To Eat One*« Boots.
The expression "to eat one's boots"
has foundation In fact.
Don Carlos, the son of Philip 11. of
Spain, once punished his shoemaker by
forcing him to eat a pair of ill fitting
boots the unfortunate man had made
for his royal patron.
History does not mention whether
the shoemaker ever made another pair.
♦ "7.".77...7
COMMON SENSE.
It teem* to be a more impor
tant factor in the sum e# do
mestic happiness that a bm
and hie wife agree an wfcat
they oan afford rather than that
they agree on the beet poetry.