Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, June 27, 1907, Image 4

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    New Rotary
JWo have now so equipped
our factory as 10 produce an
abundant supply to meet th a
rraat demand for our high
aewinfma
ehlne aver offered at any
stitch and does everything any cthar sewing ma
(.l ina will, and dees It batter and easier.
Shipped OB 90 days Trial. Warranted for a
i»rm of years.
iWc Are The First
V, cffar the paopla tha naw typa Rotary Serwtng
:/ici.lna at laaa than $65.00 to $7i.00.
Hleh prices muat five way before oa.
You Must Have
our new, elaborate Sewlna Machine Book
and illustrated catalogue In two colore, about
4U large pages. llsl4 In, The finest sewing
niacHne book ener published. Fully describes
tha i.owest Rotary and other standard machines
it nrices aerer equated, b b fro* la »» Write
jTrrnrn To pAT£HT 000,1 w,m
i i 1 lill Tn may be secured by
»''I.I jl 1 M ■ our aid. Address,
LU iJ Jl II 1 THE PATENT RECORD,
< . Baltimore. Md.
>r;.|oijs to The ratest Record 11.00 per «nau*u
i
FCFIFIIS
I RHEUMATISM
112 LUMBIBO, SCIATICA
pEURALGIA and
| KIDNEY TROUBLE
B "S UROPS" taken Internally, rkls the blood
H of the poisouous matter and acids which
wS arc ihe direct causes of these diseases.
Rf Applied externally it affords almost In-
MB staut relief from pain, while a permanent
B cure Is being effected by purifying the
H blood, dissolving the poisonous sub
stance and removing it from the system.
1 OR. 8. D. BLAND
■ Of Brew ton, Ga.. writes:
H «'l had been aantterer for a number of years
B&j with l.r.rabAgo and KhcuuiAtlßin In my Arms
uiid leg:*, and tried all the remedies that 1 could
Mg gather from medio aI works. And also eoneulted
BB with a number of the beet nhyaldAiia.butfound
Hj nothing that gAve the relief obtained from
ra DROPS." 1 ahall prescribe It fa my praotlos
BE for rheumatism and kindred diseases."
[FREE
B If you are suffering with Rheumatism,
BB Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble or any kln
■ ''red disease, write to us for a trial bottle
K of "6-DROPS," and lest it yourself.
■ "■•DROPS" can be used any length of
H time without acquiring a "drug habit,"
■ as it is entirely free of opium, cocaine.
■ vUuguol, laudanum, tad other similar
■ ingredients.
K Uric Niu Bottle, "5-OHOPB" (#OO Deeae)
Kg if 1.00. Far Bale by ltrufl'ete.
■ BWANSOH RHEUMATIC OURf COMMIT, B
■ ll<9t, HO, 160 L»k« Street, Chk»c«* H
■lfr "i iii i Jh
i CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS S
M Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. JjJ
U"0 in time. "Swld by druggists.
■in 1111 ii n I ijp
P Amp, AN Y) 3
GAS or GASOLINE
ENGINES.
There Gas and Gasoline Engines and ONF.
"FAIRBANKS''
.
resemble it h« construction, others in name
HUT THERE IS ONLY ONE
FAIRBANKS ENGINE.
Engines that excel! in quality and moderate in cost
V riical from one to ten horse power. thref
horse power up-
THE FAIRBANKS COMPANY,
Vol Arch St., Philadelphia
CHARLES L. WING, Agent, Laporte
A Hint to tirange Speaker*. .
Robert J. Burdette, now pastor of j
a Baptist church in Los Angeles, Cal.. '
and always n humorist, is opposed to ;
the length of thd form of service for j
the presentation of children and says |
ili«t. as a rule, bethinks that the gerv- j
100 should not be lunger than the baby. '
Likewise grange speeches should not
l*t longer than tbe speaker can make
them Interesting.
l' The Question Box.
What Is the specific advantage to a j
j grange 1n becoming an Incorporated or- I
I ganiicatioti"
| The advantage of grange btcorporn- |
' tion Is that it gives the grange a bust- j
i ness standing, allowing it to buy. Sell. !
| contract- in fact, do business as an j
individual. The acts of its purchasing i
; agent tire binding on the grunge treas- j
| nry ftn<l not on the members. If a :
I purchasing agent of n grange makes a j
1 bargain, it tuny be repudiated by an in j
corporated grange and he held re ;
sponsible, but if given authority by an j
Incorporated grange the grange Is re
sponsible as > f'ar as its treasury goes
and no further that is, there is no In
dividual liability.
The granges of Orange county nave
organized the Dairyman's league. The
object Is to dispose of the products of
the dairy of its members to the best
| ndvantage, to make collections for the
1 same and to promote or defeat legisla- |
| tton affecting the dairy Interests. A I
I membership fee of 25 cents per cow |
is charged, but no subscriptions are j
i binding until the signatures represent j
| ing 50,000 cows have been secured, j
j The secretaries of subordinate granges j
i are to report to the chairman of the j
. niilk committee of the Orange County j
I Pomona grange as to the number of i
I signatures received. The board of I
managers are to endeavor to contract j
[ for the sale of the milk of the local I
I.ranches nt the same time. The grange j
' farmers of Orange county seem to be- !
' lleve that farmers have the same right j
' to unite for mutual protection as has |
any trade or profession.
The Question Box.
Can a demitted member be received into j
a new grange us a charter member?
A demit ted member can tie received I
| as a charter member by paying full j
fees. A demitted member may visit j
any grange while iu possession of the j
! annual word, but cannot receive the |
: annual word.
J Can delegates to the Now York state
grange bo eloet«d at the October meeting
of a Pomona grange?
! Delegates to state grange must l*>
elected In December except by special i
dispensation of the state master
FOLEYSHONEFHMB
Cures Cold si Prevents Pneumonia
•jo Cure C onsttpHcfon Forever. j
Tako Cascarets Canny Outiinrtic. 10c 0.*25 c j
if C. C fall to eyre, <fo;ugyiwU» refund mono** ;
. lii —ij—i ■
CapJisl and Suipluji. $4f?0,U00.00 i
:
It MaKes
No Difference |
where you live, you can avail
yourself of the security and j
profit an account in this Com
pany affords by doing your I
banking by mail —
We pay 3 per cent, compound j
interest on Savings.
Write for the booklet, j
"Banking by Mail." ,
LACKAWANNA
COMPANY
404 Lackawanna Avenue
SCR ANTON, PA.
1 V
SOUTH LONDON.
■fr Walter Resant Oltii Soma laUnd
ln| Skatobu of That Anolant Por
tion of the City.
' Besides being a novelist, Sir Walter !
I Bt-saut in a historian, particularly the
historian par excellence of London.
For the last few years lie has written ;
articles on historio Loudon for The
Pall Mall Magazine. The last series i
,to appear were on South London;
; these, like the others, are now present- :
jed in book form under their original ;
i title and with the elaborate and artistic
i illustrations which so enhanced their |
I value when thsy were printed in the ;
j magazine. The publishers of "South j
, Loudon" in this country are Frederick '
| A. Stokes Company.
"The chief difficulty in writing 'South 1
London,' " said Sir Waller in his pre- ;
"has been that of selection from ;
tlie great treasures which have accum- j
ulated about this strange spot. The j
contents of this volume do not form a I
; lenth part of what might be written on I
i the same plan, and still without includ- j
| iug the history proper of the borough." t
The author courteously acknowledges ;
his obligations to Use artist "Mr. Perry
Wadham, who has to faithfully and so !
cunningly carried out the task commit- J
ted to him."
My South London." says Sir Walter, i
"extends from Battersea iu the west to j
Greenwich in the east, and from the ;
river on the north to the first rising !
ground on he south. This rising j
j ground, a gentle ascent, the beginning
j of the Surrey hills, can still be observ- ;
ed on thp high roads of the south— i
1 Clapham. Brixton, Camberwell."
( At first Loudon had no communica- i
! tion with the rest of the world, < xcept i
by water. Then a causeway was built i
I across the Southwark marshes. The 1
' second road connected with the high '
j ro«fl to Dover; it is now called lli"h I
j .Street Borough. It formed an entirely ;
I open and broad communication; it be- |
> gan not far to the west of St. Saviour's j
i Church, opposite the Roman Trajectus, j
| the mediaeval ferry, now St. Mary \
j Overies Dock. Ferries were soon es- '
; tabllshed across the Thames, and at !
j length the marshes were drained. Pre- j
I historic remains prove that all this I
| was done during the atone age and !
j the bronze age.
| Centuries by. "High Street '
lof Southwark is now a crowded thor- j
i oughfare, because it is the main artery i
j of a town containing a population of i
I many hundreds of thousands. In the |
J last century it was quite as animated, '
j because it was one of the main arteries ,
! by which London was in communica- j
j tion with the country. An immense j
inu in tier of coaches, carts, wagons, i
i and 'caravans' passed every day up >
j and down the High Street, some j
i stopping or starting iu Southwark it- |
i self; some going over London Bridge j
: to their destination in the city."
! Among the relics of the bygone ftfes :
j stands to-d<iy the remains of the p Uaca j
'of the Bishop of Winchester. As <»ne :
;oT the Bishops of Winchester would :
I have made a very good modern Police j
j Court Judge and District Attorney j
j combined, it may'not be inappropriate !
I at this place to tell something about j
| the punishments of the tim* that were j
j ordered by the church. "There was j
! whipping, but not tne terrible, mur- j
j derous flogging of the eighteenth cen
i tury; tlieie were hangings, but not for 1
I everything. Mostly to the credit o.* I
1 *iie church, punishment was designed !
I lot to crush a man, but to shame him i
I Into repentance and to give him a j
j fhatice of retrieving his character. A j
I man might be set in the stocks or put i
in pillory, and so maJp to feel the hein
ousness of his offe..ie. This punish- j
ment was like that which was inflicted
on a schoolboy; the thing done, the boy '
Is taken back to favor. The eighteenth
century branded him, imprisoned him, i
transported him. made a brute of him, j
and then hanged him. Did a woman !
speak dospitefully of authority—pre- ;
sumptuous quean—set her up in the
cage beside the stoulpes of London i
Bridge, that every oue should see her i
j there aud should ask what she had j
done. After an hour or two take her '
down; bid her go home and keep hence
forth a quiet tongue in her head. This
leniency was only for offenses moral !
and against the law. For freedom of i
tiiought or doctrine there was Bishop '
Bonner's better way. And it was a ;
, way Inhuman, inflexible, unable to for- ;
give."
Sir Walter Besant, in showing how '
Lhe palace either contains or has at j
some time contained the work of nearly !
eve:y archbishop in succession, inoi- '
dentally remarks, in speaking of some I
of the improvements executed by the
various prelates, that the Chicheley ;
Tower commonly known as the "Lol- j
laids' Tower," "never had any connec- |
tion with Lollards, and that alt the talk i
about ihe unhappy Ixillard prisoners is j
without foundation."
And, in a word, which will explain '
why I have given an apparently dlspro- '
portionate space to Lambeth Palace, j
the author thus ends his chapter on the
royal houses of South Loudon; "Lain- !
beth Pulaee, the only palace iu the
whole of South I.ondon. is a monumen/ '
of English history from the twelfth
century downward. Kennington ap- ,
pears at intervals; Klthani is a holiday 1
house; Greenwich pruetically begins •
with the Tudorg. Lambeth, like West- j
minster or St. Paul's belongs to the
long history of the English people."
From the fragmentary "lives" of j
•Shakespeare we have learned consider- ,
able about the Globe Theatre, but iu ;
"South London" we find a great deal |
' more, and also much about the Bear ,
I Garden, Blackfrlars, and Paris Garden, ■
the Hope Theatre, the Swan Theatre, ]
and the Rose. It is all very interest- :
ing
And of the South Loudon of to-day, j
there is much that is of interest, much
j that is fascinating, albeit the tourist j
, to London can see it ail if he only takes
I the troutle.
I
I * iii |»«>ring Stvel.
The tempering of steel with uniform j
results is a feat hardly to be achieved
by the most expert artisan. A German
inventor had devised a process for ac
curately obtaining any desired degree
| of hardness, the variations being effect
ed by changes in the liquid used, and
depending on the fact that graded re
sults may be produced by the use of
milk in varying forms and dilutions—
that is by freah and skimmed milk,
sweet and sour whey, fresh and old
buttermilk, and different mixtures with
water. The various stages of acidifica
tion of milk are also said to give all
the effects of hardening in oil and otk
«. fat mixtures.
r if You
TOUGH.
your tongue to I
ALUM WuTA
and look in the glass—you will see the effect— |%J Vam I
You can't help puckering—it makes you pucker JE
By the use of so called cheap Baking /. f\ B
Powders you take this puckering, injurious Alum f\ J 112 I \ B
right into your system—you injure digestion, \yC J V B
AVOID ALVM I
Sap plainly- I
ROYAL POWDER I
Royal is made from pure, refine# Grape Cream of Tartar—Costs more I
Alum but you have the profit of quality, the profit of good health.
IHE 25 ci. FAmIlYDOcFor"
( BW CEDAR SPRINGS, MICH. EATON RAPIDS, MICH.
\ VITW ■fffl'HLXl'flUvA*'/ Mrs. Rose ChalTee, a business woman of Katon
\ Mrs Isaac Dunham, a well-known ladv of that Riiplds, writes : " Kor a lon« time my system was
VW Vt&y rm- X ' ptaoe writes: ■ I cannot praise Dr. A W Chase's ><< « terril.ly weakened state. Biliousness, severe
ML ! Kidney-l.iver fills to., much. They did for me I and kidney troubles made me so
JEmtVSwk. I . , , ... 1 miserable that I was hardly able to work. A
"** what doctors aud other mt.liciiies could not do. I | friul |j told mo of I'r. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills,
troubled with severe tlisordiM'H nf the kidneys a , u j j found them just as represented. They
. ... enlargement of the liver. My family doctor restored my health to me, and I think they are*
wJuTStK treated me the wholet>f l:ust wintrM-. hut did not help wonderful medicine."
Mcount of thdr tccuracy «n<f *i»pliclty. j JUO ver y much, so I gave him up and began using The marked success of Dr. A.TV. Chase s Kidney-
McCalPs Dr A C hase*s Kidney l.iver Tills. The result Liver Fills with Backache, Kidney Trouble, Con
year'* subscription(l2 numbert) conn ftO cent#. i vas simplv wonderful. lam 33 stipation, Headache and Stom*
I K , s^^ , &Hter nW «* M * ,faC ' tt 1 »ow strong and healthy au-nin ■ 111 AIIAO I! ' C JCh - Wuak,l< ' 9B Ulttko *
1,«4r Agent* Wanted. H.nd.nnw premlnm.w tlianks to I>r Chase's Kidney H HU 11 || U*\ 1 s\ fKn " ly r '"l , " !,lle -
Ukeral cub commtwion. Pattern C«i» lof us of 600 Liver Pills ill VI I VIIll Wla 25 cts. a box.
liars) sn4 Prsmiuni (showing 40* premium^
KIDNEY=LIVER PILLS.
heals lungs and stops the cough.
Let an EXPERT BUGGY MAKER I
Give you some IMCirvr CAPTC
Mr. F. L. Shaw, manag«r JL 1O IMJ JCi JT /\V AiJ
of our vehicle interests, bought
two buggies from the same house the ether d«T. One cost g 18.00 more than the other. Then he took the buggies
all tpart to see just why one was higher priced than the other. Here is what he found out :
Both buggies had exactly the same seat and back, same size body, same wheels, shafts and everything else, except
that the higher priced one had 14-oz. cloth trimmings instead of Keratol, found in the cheaper ; a leather boot, instead
of rubber ; a better axle, and the finish on the woodwork was slightly better, but not very much.
Read the difference—and learu how easily price can be raised without changing the grade, in a buggy.
SIDE BY SIDE:
Difference in Cost $3.80. Difference in Price to You SIB.OO.
—————— ■ • 11 What do they give for the
112 \ 112 | SIB.OO difference in price?
4 ™\ Z - * •k The actual difference in
exceed $3.80,
° nC costs - vou
On their Cheap Buggy On the Best They Make maki " 8 * nd se!lin S^ ete^ U S
_ ——— r , —*• —— - gies to the house Mr. Shaw
Seat aad back (u« fflnstrations). Same. .
Bo4r 23Inches wide, 54 inched lonr. Same. bought from, wal fooling the
Malleable sth wheel without nnti-rattler. Same.
Malleable bead block (considered poor). Same. house, or the house WSJ fool-
MaOeabla Bailey Loop (cheapest made). Same. ,
Common reaches. Same. Ulg you. In either case, you
Steel aocketa. Same.
Hickory and elm wbeela (low grade). Same. were paying 1 18.00 tor
Coamea axle. Long distances .
Wheels palated by dlppin*. Same. <I.BO worth.
S-oa. head Ualnc ia top. Same. **
Vhalta- (cheaprrade). Same. We tell you these things
Keratat bisraHs. 14 01. cloth. ...
Rabber beet. Leather Boot. because we beheve tn a square
Leather eaarter top Same.
Malab, aheap Slightly better. deal!
There isn't one purchaser of a buggy in ■ hundred—no, nor in a thousand—who can tell of his own knowledge
the cause for the difference in prices between one buggy and another.
-rtr- . " A WELL BRACED SEAT
We make our own buggies. • - ~ '
Wearethe only general merchandising concern in the world that does. 112 R R Fj
The prices to you en our different buggies are based on the Jas > M 11 • 1
manufacturing costs. /) / j.) lJ |
We make the same small percentage of profit on a £70.00 rig that
we do en a £40.00 outfit, and you get full value for every dollar you pay.
The difference in our buggies is not merely in the price. It's
in the quality.
If you are a judge of buggy values we ask you to compare our „ *
vehicles with any make yen know of, price for price. _______________
If yen are not an expert judge of buggy values, you are safe to order from us, for we give honest value foi
every dollar you spend. And we guarantee you satisfaction.
The thousands who have purchased vehicles of us write us of their parfect istisfacton and of £IO.OO to £50.00
WHAT OTHERS SAY wved on each onc *
lay jtri Wart Our New Vehicle Catalogue tells the truth without exaggeration. It
A. L.*T*ri.e«, Albion, In. describes in detail just the rig you want. Safe rig, safe price, safe house
t^romS^S^ m * tm " to deal with. Let us send you this vehicle catalogue, free. Remember,
CaaMer Saa* C&SbZ, Mont Mr. F. L. Shaw, an expert vehicle man, looks after your interest.
>ja.'saßfr'" I »
Montgomery Ward & Co., Chicago