- ...... . 1- . ' : w ' " . k . .... INTERESTING PARAGRAPHS Of Local and General Interest, Gathered at Home or Clipped from our - Exchange!. CONDENSED FOR HURRIED READERS Daniol Logan of Narborth, Pa,, came to iMcUonuollsburg yoster day for a summer outiug among his mauy frieuds. Moucy to loan for clients in lots of not less than $i:00 on first mortgage or approved security. M. R. Shaffneh. McConuellsburg, Pa. II. C. Faust of Bethel, one of the Civil War veterans, was an early caller at thi9 office this morniug. "What I'd like to know, ' said a pious old lady, "is how we're ever going to get back tho forty days that are lent every spring. A Kentucky man has named his sixteenth child, recently born to him, Omega, hoping the Fates will let it be the last. To endeavor to move by tne same discourse hearers who dif fer in age, sex, position and edu cation is to attempt to open all locks with the same key. . Norwich, Conn., 'is disturbed by the discovery of an infant's body preserved in alcohol. Bod ies of grown folks walking round and preserved in the same spirit excite no comment. Wanted Two good salesmen who can furnish teams one for Cumberland county and one for Fulton. Good wages paid Address A. C. 133 S. Main St., Chambersburg, Pa. A. K. Bass, of Morgantown, Ind., had to get up ten or twehe times in the night, and had a sev ere backache and pains in the kid neys. Was cured by Foley's Kid ney Cure. Cast a worm among your fowls and see how eager the flock will go after it. Poultry will be just as energetic in searching for bugs and worms in the orchard. M. L). Mathias was in town last Saturday morning. He is laid up for repairs a few days.' While working up at Center ohurch a few days ago, ho cut hi ankle with a broad axe. Mary Baumgarduer, who had been spending a week out at Pleasant Ridge with her grand mother and Aunt Maggie, return ed home last Saturday, after hav ing had a very pleasant time. John Iloopengarduer lett a bunch of the finest wheat heads at tjhis office on Tuesday, that we have seen this year. They were gathered out of one of Anron Rich ard's tieldsdownontheNewtHoke farm. Already there are over 700 guests at the five principal sum mer hotels in the vicinity of Pen Mar. It is said ,bat there is now a total of 115,cottages erected on the mountain near Pen Mar and about 50 boarding houses. One of the- most ungracious things which a farmer can do is. to refer with contempt to the work of our experiment Htations, for these stations are doing an al most Invaluable work lor the ag ricultural interests of the whole country. The first Mormon church ever erected in Pennsylvania was com pleted last week near Tomstown, Franklin county. The Mormon Settlement numbers 18 active resident members who have been working zealously Bince the cor ner stone laying about a year ago. The richest old man in the world is he who comes down to old age'wiih the memory of a life well spent and the poorest is he, ... well supplied perhaps with mon ey, whose career has been an of fence to honesty and an insult to virtue. I. D. Thompson, who was at Scotland a few weeks ago and contracted for the painting of Industrial School buildings, left Mnndav morning with Charlie Stock arid Charlie Kelly to begin the work. Tins .work will tako severaj weeks of their time as all the woodwork both exterior aud Interior is to be repainted. , One of the most attractive and elaborate of the many new porch es' built in town this spring la that just being completed at the residence of Albert Stoneri Oar neighbor pever does thing by halves and thu now porch w III adJ U the general appeai auto i-f our : ''. neighborhood, F.MMAVILLE. (train cutting is over and our farmers are busy hauling In, and maMng hay. Jacob Uarlick wan the first to get dune harvest i ng. Miss Alice M.llott has return ed to Altoona. She was accom panied as far as Rverett by Tra Miller. Edward Lodge expects to spend the fall and winter at home. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Spade are happy over the arrival of an other big boy. Our prominent sawmill mar , Henry Coy is working for C. D Hixson. Miss Clara Garlbk is employed in the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Spade. People had better chain their dogs up. If they go one place they'll never get back. They make good meat. Mr.and Mrs. Wesley Kirkspeut Sunday with Mrs. Kirk's mother Mrs. Malissa Lodge. Jacob Spade returned from Union Saturday evening where he had been hauling in his grain. Emanuel Mills is making Jo.a bed Lodge's hay. G. L. Hanks is working for Emanuel Mills through harvest and haymaking. Treat Your Kidney, for Rheumatism. When you are suffering from rheumatism, the kidneys must be attended to at once so that they will eliminate the uric acid from the blood. Foley. s Kidney' Cure is the most effective remedy for this purpose. R. T. Hopkins, of Polar, Wis., says, "After un successfully doctoring three years for rheumatism with the best doctors, I tried Foley's Kid ney Cure and it cured me. I can not speak too highly of this great medicine." Sold atTrout's Drug Store. Have Your Oculist's Prescription For Glasses recorriod In our Ledger for handy reference. If you do not have a copy of your rem-i iptlon write for It. It will ho jrlmlly furnUlied to you f ree hy your t )ciillst or t ii'iun. Should you inUliiy or lose your piviierliitlon for glussei you will lind our "Oiuillst I'lesi i iptlon Ludjfur" invaluuhle. In this ledger we will make un acourute record ot your prescription and furnish you with a copy when wanted us often as desired free of all charges. In this connection we would say that we can till all prescriptions, how ever complicated, duplicate broken lenHes and by a well known system of analysis determine to. an absolute certainty whether or not the lenses are according to prescription. Mail us yonr broken glasses and we will re turn them to you again within three days. All Visitors Welcome. WM. H. LUDWIG, Jeweler and Silversmith, Chambersburg, Pa. RACKET REISNERS' Spring Announcement We now have in our spring line of Men's, Boys and Youths' Suits, which it will do vou good to see. We think it the Best Spring Line we have ever had all made in the best way, and Strictly Up-to-date STORE. Condition, not Theory. George H. Martin, Supervisor of Schools in Boston, was speak ing recently of the fruitlessness of certain seemingly good theor ies if the conditions are widely different from those upon which the theories are founded. In il lustration he said: "A teacher came to me once complaining about the burden of her work, believing I might be able to make it lighter for her. 1 gave her a copy of Dewey's 'Schools and Society,' and asked her to read it and report to me. In a few days she sent it back to me with a note saying that the plan of the book looked pleasant, hut sho believed it to bo only an iridescent dream. "She concluded tho note with: The conditions In my school are entirely different from what the book sets forth. I have to teach Tom Sullivan his grammar.' " In our last ud we mentioned Castor Machine oil at 2oc gallon and said it was the same Roods sold by other merchunts at .'JSc. We have now sold well on to 50 gallons, and are told by responsible farmers that it is better oil than they paid 35c a gallon for. 1 pint glass jars 45c; quarts, 48c; half gallon, 5c. Jar cups with rings 20c, the heaviest jar gums 6c, lighter ones 3o dozen. The heaviest milk cans on the market 8 gallon size and the one you have been paying $2.35 for -our price $1.95. Shoes! Shoes! Shoes! It Is Impossible for us to give you prices on these goods. We would like to have you call and see the largest and best line of shoes you have ever looked at, and at prices that cun't be matched in the county. We have the nicest line of buckets and granite ware we ever hud. We have the blue, green and white inside in preserving kettles and pans from 15 to 48c. Tin buckets 10 quarts to 14 quarts, 111 to 35c; also, coffee pots of same ware. Shirts and overalls all sizes and at all prices. Call and see our line, It wont cost you one cent. HULL & BENDER, Proprietors. Wool Carding and Trout's Drug Store ak the readers of this paper who are suffering with indigestion or dyspepsia to call on them at once and get a bottle of Kodol Dyspep sia Cure. If. you knew the value of this remedy as we know it, you would not suffer another day. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is a thor ough digestant and tissue-build-iug tonic as well. It Is endorsed personally by hundreds of people whom it has cured of indigestion, dy spepsia.palpitation of the heart and stomach trouble generally. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat. It is pleasant, pala table and strengthening. Sold at Trout's drug store. carpet weaving 5 The Prices are just all right and as low as any ono "can sell a,ua! quality fur- C Will 1 1 l) C.lll 'CU.ll ill l CI III' Ml l" i "Ml .-.n i). r "i SHOES which is larger and better this spring than ever before. We have several lines of Factory Goods which are Sold on a Guarantee, which means that you ar buying a certainty. The shoe must be good, or we make you safe, we will sell you a 8 Good Kangaroo Calf Shoe For $1.00, well worth 1.25 ; in fact, shoes at almost anv price. We have a nice lot ol SUMMER DRESS STUFFS which we want you to see. CI 1 f-"v-" w that cannot be reached on the present market. Mattings, Oil Cloths, window Shades, &c, all at right prices. Please call. Respectfully, G. W. REISNER & CO., McConnellsburg, Pa. H. H. HERTZLER still continues Carding aud Weaving at the WILLOW GUOVH MILLS ut IJurtil C'ulin3. Carpet Chain alwnys onliaud Wool put in to bats for Hans. I will take in Wool and work at tho following places, namely, f rank Hare's, Fort Littleton: Michael Luidig's, Dublin Mills; W. XX. Speer'H, Saluvia; C. W. Ly nun's, Crystal Springs; J. E. Jack Bon's, Akersvillo; Caleb Iiarton's, Ilustontown; A. N. V liter's, Waterfall; Harry Huston's, Clear Pudge; W, L. lierkstresser s Orchard Grove. Will Visit these places monthly during the suiisou. Thankful for past favors, I hope for a continuancn of tl same. H. H. Hertzler, Burnt Cabins, Pa. The Beit Hen. ' There is no way of knowing which of the hens are the best unless they are closely observed. Every hen that has a good record should he marked and retained not only for laying, but tor breed- . . i ing purposes. Tho egg record would be mucn hi?hfr and the Hock improved every year If the ; farmer would keep only the best hens from which to produce the layer for another ymr.' Unfur-; tunatnly with many, "a hen is a hen," but in fact thr I'm a wido difference in individual, and any particularity or point of exce' ieiice should be observed, so that all future btock may be better than the preceding. I t .i " ?ywy;wwmmwww y1 lV 1 " ' ' "' 1111 i'11""11 Gfie Man and the Machine Mr. Alexander T. Brown, inventor of the Smith Premier Tvnewriter. is unquestionably the foremost writing machine expert of the world. Besides, he is a practical and successful business man. He built the first Smith Premier Typewriter not only for handeome end ipeedy work, but to endure under the everet demand of actual busineu. The Smith Premier it free from the weakneuei of eccentric, impractical con itruction, and to-day embodiea the latest Remonstrated improvement of this typewriter expert. Mr. Brown, at Vice-Preiident of this Company, will condnue to devote hit entire time and inventive geniui to maintain the Smith Premier where it now itandi at the World's Best Typewriter Send to-day for our Utile book ex plaining exactly whjr the Smith Premier U beu. The Smith Premier Typewriter Company 23 South Eighth St.. Philadelphia, Pa. 8 O O o o o ?KXCOOOG0OCCOCXXXCC000 OCOCOC; vry n vrs vrv o CASH GIVEN AWAY to Users of In Addition to the Regular Free Premiums How WOUlti; Like a Check like This? We Have Awardid $20,000.00 ftS." Presidential Voie Contest ir Great World's Fair Contest m uill trt.f them in the 0 ti Jayiie's Carminative Balsam -ejv ATrli MM ITJ am -The SUneUrel Remedy for Summer ComtOoint. Crorapa. Colic, CHping Paine, W - W W VoanitiMT. alto tor Dyeentery. Dioirluaa or LooaeneM, Aalotk Choler. Cholere Morfcue. oTSoler. larfentwa. JAYNl'S CARMINATIVE BALSAM ba J UUMr, uaotejra marwum, who will inclou two-cent aiama M BALSAM rtTrTJr WTwlB m4 Free W frTo wUl 7 HrITT "TZZr ai Vaia nUlnlv to Insur your xettinz the ai TTraw jrwar iwoti . " . . . A4dmtt O. JATrteV 3Vn, PMiaoeipiua. Five Lion -Heads cut from Lion Coffee Packages and a a - cent stamp entitle you (in addition to the regular free premiums) to one vote. The 3-cent stamp cov ers our acknowledgment to you that your estimate is recorded. You can send as many estl mates as desired. Grand First Prize ot $5,000.00 will be awarded to the one who Is nearest correct on both our World's Fair and Presi dential Vote Contests. We alao offer 15.000.00 Special Caab Prliea to Orocere' Clarke. (Fartlculare la each ceae ot Lion CoHee.) What will be the total popular vote cast for President (votes fur an can didates combined) at the election November 8, 1904 ? In 1000 election, 13,959,653 people voted for 1'resident. For nearest correct esti mates received in Woolson Spice Com pany's office, Toledo. O.. on or before November 5. ltfCU. we will give first Driio for the nearest correct estimate, second prke to Ihv neat nearest, etc., etc., as follows: 1 nre. Pru. 1 Second Prlee . .999 f?9 3 Prltee-ieoo.OO eaea 6 Prliee yiiu.iKj . .l.OOO.Oe IO Prlaee IQO.OO 20 rrleee- SO.00 60 rrleee- 20 OO 2fiO Prlaae to.oo 1800 PrUea O.OO also rmr.i. TOTAL . 1 .OOO.OO . 1 .000.00 1 .000.00 1 .000.00 a, 000.00 . . . it. 000.00 tao.oocToo Clarke. (Fartlculare m each caae ot Lion CoHee.) How Would Your Name Look on One of These Checko? E.?bodv .... coffe.. If you will os. E'O.V rO-K .n WE GIVE DOTH FREE PREMIUMS AND CASH PRIZES . . , 1 Barflxiili.a In Puaru Per.kaara) Of complete ueiaucu rnnvMH" ... d ptaaat MntUa ibl aaate irkea tnmtttm aSeiiaeiiwii WOOLSON WCE CO., (CONTEST DEP'T.) TOLEDO, CI"." a e 1 3 ft 8 8- o o -w
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers