V V. FULTON COUNTY NEWS. Published Every Thursday. B. W. PECK, Editor and Proprietor. AkCONNELLSBURG. PA. Thursday, May 29, 1902. Published Weekly. 1.00 per Annum in Advance. AIlVBKTISlNJ RATHI. I'rt miunre of d Unci 8 time II Hi. I'er miinirp fiH'ti iilm-viiirnl Inwrllon.... M. AM BUyrrllM-mrnM luserteU for lew thun throe moDllin cmirm-d by tho nqimre. 3 tiios. emuN. I yi fl'ourth oiu7nn Il.vro. I $M.m. One-hull uoluuin iMM. 40. cm. 1 Miui (me Column n.uu. (A.m. ih.n. Nothtnir Inserted for low than II. Prolewtlonal CurtlH one year V. THE TURNPIKE CASE. Supreme Court Refuses Appeal. J U 1) G F. OKLADYS () O N. Tho following is the opinion of the Superior Court in the pro ceedings to condemn that portion of the Chambersburg and Bed ford Turnpike Road in Bedford county. The opinion was filed April 21 and was delivered by Mr. Justice Orlady on behalf of the Court. The history of the Chambers burg and Bedford Turnpike Road began in an act of assembly of February 24, 1806, by which the Governor of the commonwealth was authorized to incorporate n company for making an artificial road from the bank of the river Susquehanna opposite the bor ough of Harrisburg to Pittsburg, which act was supplemented by one of March 9, 1914, by which the incorporation of five companies v.us provided for, and the section of which the turnpike in contro versy is a part, was styled the Chambersburg and Bedford Turnpike. By the act of March 20, 1821, the Governor was author ized to subscribe to this and other turnpike road companies, and by a schedule accompanying the act it appears that the construction of this section, fifty-five miles in length, represents original sub scriptions of $113,850 by the State aud $167,500 by individuals. The road was completed under these proceedings and has been in con tinuous use ever since under its corporate name. The present proceedings was begun October 8, 1900, under au thority of the act of June 2, 1887, P. L. 300, by a petition signed by 228 taxpayers of Bedford county, setting forth that the said turn pike, from the intersection of Juli ana and Pitt streets, near the Grand Central Hotel, in the bor ough of Bedford, eastward to the Fulton county line, a distance of nineteen miles, was in bad con dition, and that its bridges were of a dangerous character, and that for other reasons, it was for the best interest of the people of Bedford county that the portion of the turnpike road described should become a public road free from toll and toll-gates, and the signers thereof prayed the court to appoint a jury of view ,etc., to view aud condemn said tnrnpike road, between the joints named, and assess the damages to which the owner or owners of said road might be entitled. The proceed ing being in accordance with the provisions of the act, the court appointed a jury of view of five reputable citizens, a master and a stenographer, who acted and made a report to the court, which after argu tnent on exceptions filed thereto, was confirmed on July 17, 11)01, and from that decree this appeal was taken. Tho testimony taken is printed on 320 pages of appellant's paper book, and the first thirty assign' inents of ei ror are filed to the ac tion of tho master in admitting evidence by the petitioners. (The court then construes the provi sions of the act of 1887 as to the matter of this character and holds that no exceptions lie to the ad missibility of testimony and thus disposes of the thirty assign ments of error.) The assignments of error from thirty-one to forty-six Inclusive are founded upon exceptions taken to the instructions of the masters given to the viewers on matters of law. The measure of damages in a turnpike condemna tion proceeding has been consid ered by this court in Somerton TurupjUo 1(1 Pa. Supreme Court 400, in which caso tho recent do cisions of the Supremo Court are reviewed and followed. In that case wo hold that all that is taken from the compauy should bo paid for, no more and no loss, and all that is taken, not may, but must, be considered by tho jury of view ers in determining the reasonable damages for which tho county should pay in taking the property of the Turnpike Compauy for public uso. It is clearly decided that tho fair value of tho road bed and thefair value of tho franchises at the time of tho condemnation are to be determined from tho physical condition of tho property its substructure and superstruct ure aud approaches to bridges, together with the right or privi lege of tho company to collect toll from tho travelers, tho entire cor porate rights of tho Turnpike Company are taken and it is the value of the property to tho own er and not to the county taking it that is to be determined. Mont gomery vs. Schuylkill Bridge Co. 110 Pa. 54. The physical tangible property and the right to collect tolls on the part of the Turnpike Company ex clusive of this section of nineteen miles is not affected by this pro ceeding except as its value is de preciated by this condemnation. The part in Fulton county must necessarily be considered as an element of profit and los. The character of the travel on this turnpike was properly before the jury for consideration. The affairs of tho corporation were managed with reference to the en tire length of tho road. The value of its stock, its annual gross and uet earnings, expenses, and the structural couditiou of the road were shown by evidence adduced by the c mpany and the petition ers. The master rightly held that the original cost of construc tion is not material except as to the bearing it may have on tho question of values. "It is a ques tion of value. What is the road worth? Not what did it cost?" The juiy' should have taken iuto consideration the road as they found it, its road bed, culverts, and bridges together with tho ev idence relative thereto as these are elements to be considered by the jury in ascertaining the true value of the road. This instruc tion followed the rule laid down in Mifflin Bridge Co. vs Juniata Co. 144 Pa. 505, and other cses cited. The effort on the one side was to make the property a very val uable one, and on the other to show that it was of but little val ue. The jury decided that it was for the best interests of the peo ple of Bedford county that the designated part should be made free from tolls and toll-gates and assessed the damages sustained by the company at $5,087.50. The character and productive ness of the whole road and of the part affected by these proceed ings were snown in order to as sist the jury in determining the value of the part condemned as compared with the whole road. It was not conclusive proof but was tor tne consideration oi the jury along with the other evidence in the case, and as submitted by the master was not in conflict with Turnpike Road vs. Berks county, 106 Pa. 21. The returns made by the Turn pike Company to the auditor gen eral for ten years preceeding this condemnation were competent ev idence to show the value the Turn pike Company placed upon its own stock, a valuation made un der oath by its own officers. The property and the franchises are represented by its stock and the market value of the stock may be said to represent the market value of the property as nearly as it can be ascertained. It was clearly shown by the ev idence that the toll-houses were not within tho right of way so cured to it by the State and this coudemnatiou does not affect the title of the company to theso pro perties. They are not only out side of the strip of ground fifty feet wide, on which the road was built, but little to thern was ac quired by the company for its convenience by independent pur chase. The depreciation in value of these properties by reason of the condemnation was properly submitted to the jury and passed upon by the learned trial judge below in overruling tho excep tions filed to the report of the jury of view. But these properties were not procured by the aid of tho State as incident to the fran chises conferred on the company. They were obtaiuod by means al together indejw-adeut of any gov ernmental authority and tho title to them as related to tho turnpike is no more subject, m this case, to tho sovcreigu power of tho com monwealth, than that of any farm lying aloug its way. In making these privato purchases, the coin pauy,was not limited as to tho ex tent of its holdings. If it could hold one and a half acres iu a body, we see no legal reason why it might not hold ten or twenty. Iu either case it must all lie outside of tho roadway aud tho corporate privileges bestowed by tin com mon wealth. As already shown, the toll-houses could havo boon built within the fifty feet dedica ted to tho public use, but on the score of mere convenience and comfort and not from necessity, lots of larger dimensions were preferred outsido. Tho makers of tho act of 1H7 certainly never contemplated that it should effect auything but tho mere highway, and it only in order that its use might be transferred from, tho corporation to tho public. Kvery permanent structure standing uon tho road would, of course, pass with it. This proceeding is a mere withdrawal of tho privi leges derived from tho State and operates only on the company's franchises and the property ac quired thereunder through the State's authority, but if we would assume, as tho compauy does, that the lots in question might be taken under the act of 1887, what would then become of them ? Tho legislature cannot authorize the taking of privato property or pub lic property for that matter, for any other than a public use. Wad dell's Appeal, 84 Pa. 90. What public use would be made of theso lots and dwellings and where would the title rest? The county pays tho damages under the act of assembly. Could it take title to and hold them ? The turnpike itself passes by tho 11th section of the statute to the town ships aud boroughs in' which it lies. Upon consideration of the whole record tho assignments of error are all overruled and the decree of the court in confirming the re port of the jury of view is affirm ed. The Supremo Court has re fused the application on behalf of tho Turnpiko Company for the al lowance of an appeal from this decision. Traveling Is Dangerous. Constant motion jars the kid-1 neys which are kept in place in I the body by delicate attachments. This is the reason that travelers, trainmen, street car men, team sters, aud all who drive very m uch, suffer from kidney disease in some form. Foley's Kidney Cure strengthens thekidneysand cures all forms of kidney and bladder disease. Geo. II. Hausau, locomo tive engineer, Lima, O., writes, "Constant vibration of the engine caused me a great deal of trouble with my kidneys, and I got no re, lief until I used Foley's Kidney Cure." Alldealers. j Foley's Honey aud Tar is pecu i liarly adapted for asthma.bronchi- tis and hoarseness. All dealers. Hulked at the Ublnoccros. A five-year-old-boy who had for several mouths been a regular at tendant at Sunday school had many questions to ask of his mother as the recent circus pa rade passed. When the wagon containing tho rhineoceros came aloug the beast opened its mouth and he observed : "Mamma, did God make that ?" "Yes, dear," was the reply. "Well, I ain't going to Sunday school any more." Like A Drowning Man. "Five years ago a disease tho doctors called dyspepsia took such hold of me that I could scarcely go," writes Goo. S. Marsh, a well known attorney of Nocona, Tex. "I took quantises of pepsin and other mediciues but nothing help ed me. As a drowning man grabs at a straw I grabbed at Kndol. I felt an improvement atouco and after a few bottles am sound and well." Kodol Is tho only prepar ation which exactly reproduces the natual digestive juices and consequently istheonlyone which digests auy good fxjd and cures any form of stomach trouble. n A M N ER 8 A IVE tri mottt hoallna Mlv In th world. Tour Column. To show our nupreolat Ion of the my In tiloh the Kullon County New In licInK adopt ed Into the home of the people of Oil county,' we have moi npiiit thin eoluntn for tho FKKK use of out Kuhsorlhcrn.fornclvertlNlnii purposes, subject to Iho followlnu conditions: 1. It In free only to thoso who are pulil-up mib Rr!r!herH. i. duly personal property enn lie advertised. X Notices must not exceed 80 w run. '. All "IriMl" nolle, r excluded IV. Not free to merchants, or any one to adver tise goods sold under a mercantile llceuso. The primary object of this oolumn' In to af ford farmers, and folks who are not In publlo business, an opportunity to brlnir to publlo at teutlon products or stocks they may have to sell, or may want to buy. Now. this space Is yours: If you wnnltohuy a horse, If you want hired help, If you want to borrow money. If you want to sell a pltf. n huff ily, sonic hay. a r"o.c. or If you want to uttver Ike for a wife this column Is yours. The News Is reitd weekly by i-lKlit thousand people ami Is the best advertising medium In the county. A Lesson in Health. Healthy kidneys filter the im purities from tho blood, and un less thoy do this, good health is impossible. Foley's Kidney Cure makes sound kiduoys and will positively cure all forms of kidney and bladder disease. It strength ens tho whole system. Alldealers. Pussy's Queer I nmily. In a barn of W. II. Bunch, at Plainville, Ind., a maltose cut is raising a family of three of her own kitteus, two black kittens, two fox squinols and a wild rab bit. The mother of tho family is impartial iu her devotion to the young ones. The two squ in els are tho "black sheep" of the fam ily and they give tho old cat con siderable trouble by their f risk iness. If you have any papering to be done this spring,it will be to your interest to consult Thompson and Steach. An Appreciative l.lHtcner. "Yes," said the eminent pro fessor at a social gathering, ad dressing his remarks to a small man to whom he had been intro duced, "I ilatter myself that I rarely fail to read a face correct ly." "So?" queried the small man. "Yes. Now there is a lady," continued the professor, pointing to a 200 pound specimen of the fair sex, "the lines of whose cotiu tenauee areas clear as print to me. Tho chin shows firmness of dis position, amounting to obstiuaucy; the pointed nose.a vicious lempor meut ; the capacious mouth vol ubility; tho square chin denotes trouble for thoso who oppose her wishes ; her eyes show a hard ness of heart " "Wonderful, truly wonderful professor," interrupted the small mau. "You evidently know soraethiug of the lady, then ?" said the pro fes or. ' Sure." replied tho small mau; "She is my wife." Wunts Others to Know. "I havo used DeWitts Little Ear ly Risers for constipation and tor pid liver aud they are all right. I am glad to endorse them for I think when we find a good thing we ought to let others know it," writes Alfred Ileinze, Quincy, 111. They never gripo or distress. Sure, safe pills. There is a Difference. An exchange hits the truth when it says: "The young mau who knows how to lay otf corn and polatoe rows and to regulate the distance of tho same so as to get the largest crops, is worth a cow pen full of kid glove fellows who wants t!)kuow how to lead afash ioi.able waltz. Setting a plow right and adjusting the gears so that the harness will not iujuro tho horses, is worth a thousand fold more to the country than to know how to pose in the parlor: Yes, a girl who can bako a loaf of bread nml cook the meat aud pota toes just right is worth a whole seminary full of these softheaded sillyhoadod angels who sit iu the 'palah' and let nia do tho work" in the kitoh.-u. Burglars, presumably boys, broke iuto the store of David A. Sharrar, uear the Western Ma ryland depot in Waynesboro on Saturdiiy uight aud stole several dollars . from the cash drawer. Some tobacco and candy were taken also. There are no duos to the robbers. K mrt ra r n tn MAY bKuAIINj 4 AT UOHNSTON'S PI Beautiful Lawns, 6c, j& Handsome Batistes, 6 to 10c, : i and up to 25c. White Persian Lawns at 30c. Ufl.Uj Cuficc nl-iin m- fl i '.-H !) Hrocc O I iitrbi mt iinA Percales all patterns from MADRAS and SILK 81 An Elegant Line of Wash Silks at 50c. Come and see our line of MEN'S SHIRTS and hirtAaists Si $j also CLOTHING to SUST M'CONNELLSBURG SEE uuk urcniiw spring anil summer tarn wm m wm i u mm mi wj vm m u 1 9 T. J. WIENER, Hancock, - - Alaryland. Lui'kc Toes Vor Doctors. Dr.W.C.Urowuiug asked 100, 000 for twenty-one months' at- tendance on the late State Sena tor Christopher L. Magee. Pay ment was resisted by the execu tor of the estate. SamuelJ. Tildeu's physicians charged 14:1,000 for se.eii years' service. The sum of 14,800 was the foe for a post-mortem examination of the body of Vice President Wheel er, who died iu 1887. Jay Gould, who died iu 18!:5, leaviug an estate valued at7l!, 000,000, paid his doctor a regular salary of 15.000 a year, whether sick or well. For two mouths' attendance upon his daughter Mr. Gould paid 87,000. Emperor Frederick of Germa ny paid 100,000 for medical at tendance. A millionaire of Nice paid a doc tors fee of i.':,000. Sir William Jenner, Dr. Coull and Dr. Clark, famous London physicians, had au average year ly professional income each of $00,000. Three New York doctors made more than 100,000 yearly each; five more than r0,0(X), fifty more than 20,000. But the majority of medical men make less than 100 a month. Dr. Emma Wayne wants 100, 000 for. attending Francis Wheel er of Chicago, who is worth :l, 000,000. In all tho cases mentioned, ex cept those of President Garfield and Vice President Wheeler, tho patients were millionaires. President Gartield's physicians received 27,500 for service ren dered the distinguished patient at Elberou, N. J. In 17GH, wheu the Empress of Russia was stricken with small pox, her physician received (50, 000. When Edward VII was ill with fever he paid his doctor "i0,000 for four weeks' serv'ce. The Czar of Russia puid ij:0,0(0 for only two days' attendance from phyMciuus. Nawab Kanipiii paid l'0,000to an Anglo Indian surgeon for three months' treatment for rhou mu tism. Will Curd Consumption. A. A. Her rem, Fi uch , A i k. , w ri les "Foley's Honey and Tar is the best preparation for codghs.colds and lutig trouble. I kuow that it has cured consumption in tho first stigo.-i." AH d'HiLrs. i i H Pretty Dimities, 10 to 14c. ftj White Lawns, 8, 10, 12, 6 to 12 1-2 cents. I: i GINGHAMS, u at PRICES that FIT. i O 2. Honor Dcnr OU Mother. ' Honor your dear old mother. Timo has scattered the snowy ilakcs on her brow, but is she n Jt sweet aud beautiful yet? The lips are thin and shrunken but thoso are the lips which have kiss ed many a hot tear from tho child ishcheeks, aud they are the sweet est lips in the world. Her eyes are dim, yet they glow with the soft radiance of holy love, which can never fade." The sands of life are nearly ruuont, but feeble as J ' she is, she will go farther aud reach down lower for you than auy other upon life. You cannot walk iuto a midnight where she cannot see you ; you cannot mount a scaffold too high for her to reach that she may kiss and bless you in evidence of her deathless love. When the world shall despise and forsake you, when you arelett by tho wavsida to die unnoticed, that dear old mother will gather you in Vijm -PVn-iVOi- nK(rt onrl o nr 4-V rt triti ' " . Ll UOl J.OUU1U U. Ill j UUU UUUVliO JUU until you almost forget that your soul is disfigured with vices. Love her tenderly and cheer her de clining years, that dear old moth er. Don't Start Wrong. - Don't start the summer with a liugeriug cough or cold. We all know what a "summer cold" is. It's the hardest kind to cure. Of ten it "hangs on" through the en tiro season. Take it in hand right now. A few doses of One Minute Cough Cure will set you right. .Sure cure for coughs,colds,croup, grip, bronchitis, all throat and lung troubles. Absolutely safe. Acts ut ouce. Children like it. "Oue Minute Cough Cure is the best cough medicine I ever used," ,,?,-,. T says J.1I. bowles,Groveton, N.H. "I never found anything else that acted so safely and quickly." ' 1 J Venango county's youugest couple was married iu Franklin j Saturday, They were Edgar T. Yourg, of . Keno, aged 11, and i Winifred Y. Hunter, of Emlentou, I tiged 13. Tho ceremony was per- J formed by Jlev. .Mr. Hunter, a) l.r,lh..i-i,f Mm hrirln Tlmivirnnli . of the couplo believe in early mar riages. Tho groom's father and mother were married at the ages , . , . .,' of 14 aud 15 respectively, whilo tlio parents or tne brule were : married at the ages of 15 and 16. , , j ! . You never heard of any one u- . T1 , , ti ,m ,1 sing Foley's Honey and Tar and ; not being satisfied. All dealers, i - w-v JT n IH1 y i in r BUSINESS DIRECTORY. - llAMir.US. , R. M. DOWNES, First Cuahh Tonsorial Artist, MoCONN KLI.S IttJKG, PA . A Clean C'np nnfl TowpI with r noli Slmva. Kvery thtaK A mlsriitio. Hihzoro Slovlll.fMl. t""Shop In room Intel; occupli dliy 1".J llniko ISAAC IN. WATSON, . Tonsorial Artist. Strictly up to diue In nil stylus of hnlr out tin,?. tJ'ilt'U. ensy Hhuves. Iluy-mm, CmirtM, Wlteh-lmKOI. without extra clinrn. l-'ruh towol to rnoli ouKtomor. Lutost improved i,p pfirutii for Htcrllly.lriK toolH. Purlo oppo-,1. n Fullou lloii-o. I.AWVI.KS. M. R. SHAFFNER, Attorney at Law, Office on Square, McConnellsburtf, Pa. All Irtrul btnes and collodions ontntHtnil will reoelve oureful uud prom pi alteulior.. IIOTKLS. gARTON HOUSE, ioiiu'in iu'siiono, puop., HANCOCK, mi. tW ITnilor lh new triinnemenl has been refurnished and remodeled. Oood Kaitiplo room. Headquarter, ror eommerelnl men. Fulton County Telephone connected. Jlvety and Feed Stable In connection. ClUKCULS. ' PnKsiiYTrcnjAN. T!ev. W. A. Wrst, D. D., l'astur. 1 'reach! rir Km-v iris each altet-cuto Sabbuth ut lOUlO a. m. and every Sunday evening at 7:00. Services ut Green Hill on alternate Sabbaths at 10::i() a. tn. Sabbath school ut 9:15. Junior Christian En deavor at 2:00. Christiun Kndeavor at 6:00. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:00. Methodist Ki'iscopALllev. A. D. McCloskey, Pastor. Sunday school at 9:30 a. in. Preaching every other Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Suuduy, evening at 7:00. Epworth League at 0:00 p. in. Prayer meeting Thursday evening at 7:00. . Uniteu Pkkshvtfrian Hov. J. T Grove, Pastor. Sunduy sohtjol at l):.0 a. m. Preaching every Sunday illum ing at 10:30, and every other Sunday evening at":00. The alternate Sabbath evenings are used by the Voting Peo ple's Christian Union at 7:00 p. m, Praver meeting Wednesday evening at 7:00. EVANGKI-ioA u iUTH KUAN Rev. A. O. -Wolf, Pastor. Sunday school 9:15 a.m. Preaching every other Sunday morning at 10:30 and every other Sun day evening ut 7:00. Christian En deavor at 0:00 p. m. Prayer meeting on Wednesday evening at 7:00. Reform km Rev. C. M. Smith, Pas tor. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Preaching on alternate Sabbaths ot 10:00 a.' in. and 7:00 p. m. Christian Endeavor at 0:00 p. m. Prayer meet ing on Wednesday evening at 7:00. TKK.MS OI' COl HT. The first term of the Courts of Ful ton county iu tho year shall commence on the Tuesday following the second Monday of J anuary,at 10 o'clock a. m. The second term commences on tho third Monday of March, at 2 o'clock p. m. The third term on tho Tuesday next following the second Monduy of June, at 10 o'clock a. m. The fourth term on the first Monday of October, at 2 o'clock p. m. . llOKOl'GIl OI'I ICKUS. T, ,. . ,, Justice or the Peace Thomas 1. Sloan, L. H. Wible. bwrmSwI'scou.01'10" j Councilmon D. T. Fields, Leon a id ! cSerk-WHiiam S High Const able Wm.Baumgardiier. School Directors A. U. Nace. John A. Irwin, Thomas F. Sloan, F. M. Taylor, John Comerer, C. li. Stevens. GKNKRAl. DIKKCTOKV. President Judge lion. S.Mc. Swoon. Associate Judges-Lemuel Kirk, Da- via ivcis Prothonotary, A-c Frank P. Lync h. District Attorney George li. Dan iels. Treasurer George Ti. Mellott. Sheriff Daniel C Fleck. Deputy Sheriff Jury Commissioners C. II. E. Pium mer, Anthony Lynch. Auuitors Jotin S. Harris, W. C. j Davis, S L. Garland, j Commissioners II, K. Malot, A. V. j Kelly, John Fisher, i Clerk Frank Mason. ! County Surveyor Jonas Lake. I County Superintendent Clem Ches- nut. Attorneys VT. Scott Alexander, J. Nelson Sipes, Thomas F, Sloan, F. McN. Johnston, M. li. Shaftner, Geo. H. Daniels John P. Sipes, S. W. Kirk. SOCIKMKS, Odd Follows M'Cotinellshurg Lodge No. 744 meets every Friday evening in the Comerer Huilding in MeCounells burg. Fort Littleton Lodge No, 4H4 metis every Saturday evening in the Cron.er building at Fort Littleton. Wells Valley LortVo No. 007 n,e. is ?very ,,Sl!PV(1"y ''V,',"11" in ,,a I lows Hall at Wells Tannery, j Harrisonvili LoUKe No. 701 meets .very Saturday evening in Odd 1-Vl- lo;'fUtt"irtT u,,"ouvi-j- ! Waterfall Lodge No. 773 meets ev ery Saturday evening iu Odd Fellows' Hall ut Wuu-rfu.ll Mills. Warfordsburg Lodge No. (Kll meets in Warfordsburg every Suturduy evening. King I'ostG. A. K. No. .'Hi") meets in McConm-llfl-urg in Odd Fellows' Hell the lit t Sat uday in every month at 1 p. in.- Royal Ai-c:i'ium,Tiin(-niira Council. No. 121, m ey on ult?rnate Monday eveuinps in P. O. S of A. Hall, in ! McConuellsbui L'. j Washington Camp No. 407, P. O. S. A., of New Uivniula, meets every Sut l urday evening in P. O. S. of A. Hall. Washington camp, No. r:4, p. o.s. 1 of 4-, lliistoiitown, meets every bjuur- ; urduy evening in V. o. s. of A. Hall. i Jofm O. Tuylor Post G. A. It., No. 5H0, meets every Saturday, on or just preceding full moon in Lushley hall. ... . ii. ...i. HV i J, 111., R, .Mil v aiK'i, Womau's Relief Corps, No. 80, meets at sums ilute and place at 4 p.m. Geu. D, It. McKibbin Post No. 402, (1. A, m(.t4s tll0 8t),.nd and fourlu Ht"i-day in each month at Pluustwtti Ridge.
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