The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, June 02, 1898, Image 9

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    'Jvl-L. .a hr tba vladeva. f
lad aura ft lot fat .. ,
1,4 and cii " -- . i
wtectlen round abouL '
5To watch tor wanderer late, .
?gwlth their hm bout -e. -Si
abut Ut CnltoBl.,- .. f!
L,rt fearaome lay beyond n. . K'
P1":. .nd lurklnir wile.
P'.tL round my mother"! am lie; . .
fh. yeare came creeping, creeping.
p. thai would not bide and wait. ,
bitter weeping
C, came throtifc-h the arde gat. ...
no I etruggled with the tranfer.
and lerriuie anu ".
lb. baode that fain would hold
' 1
b. ika twIltirM dim
karl- day!- moment walt
Lve him aol" Ieth ova no answer.
epi to com. ' -- ; .
n0 I know that aafe no longer
l, the eot.age immm "-
Bh 1 walling watch bealde IU -. !
h tftiltenru n""-""-
.... .v.nda cloaed and weary,
te forgetting day or date, . - ,
am again how bright the heaven
net portal waa m. -
I. Leaser.
BIS FAITH IN BOOKS
NOW, BUI wain ( id no anapo at
all to spare the money for new
. ...1.1 V, mnw -nm fi.
I o Ctoinea, au " ""
Lb country, M 'oaoae be needed the
v for a new rabbit aog ana aome
in1 tackle, but the suit he wa wear-
Ldnnired to Sam, and Sam wanted It
felf, beln'e he'd been ootched on the
and bad to go to the county seat
et in court, and 1 felt sort o' sorry
Bill. There wasn't no pertio'Jar
Lou why 1 ahould-a, though, 'cause
ought to knowea more n ne ma.
L anyhow, when I waa goin' 'Jong
fh him over to the Eddy to help him
L out the new ault, I says to Bill:
Bill. I says, u I d only knowea
It you had any idee o' doin' it, I'd
Ire you some p'lnta tbat'd a sbetyou
Seems to me you ougnt a Knowea
ter, though. Jabe ought to knowed
ter, anyhow, I says.
Jabe did know better,' says Hill,
U told me not to do it, but consarn
I'd read It in the books, and 1 1 bought
books ought to knowed better than
le,' says Bill.
The books!' 1 says. "You loiierea
books, hey? Then it'aa blame won
you're got akin and bones enough
i to hang any clothes on at all,' I
b. The books knows a lot about it,
't they? Why, what does the books
about snakes and stick to it year in
1 year out? They stick to it that
lies don't throw their moutna wide
in and let tbelr young uns scamper
k-D their throaU to git away from
iger,' I says, 'and yit you've stood
1 seen 'em do it more n a hundred
les. But the books says snakes don't
it 'cause it's ag'in natur'. And the
bks snys that a hosshair won't turn
lo a live critter if you put it into
ter awhile and leave it there,' I says,
id yit you've put hosshairs in water
i seen 'cm git to be reg'lar wrlgglin'
kites, white ones and black ones and
ones, jest as the color o' the hosn
1 was, more times than you've got
pers and toes,' I says. 'The books?',
lays. The only thing I ever see In
t books that I knowed was right was
lat they tell you about cookin' a rab-
,' I snys. 'The books says that when
ki cook your rabbit you must first
Itch your rabbit. Now that's straight
the p'int and true as preachin',' I
'I don t see how the books bap-
bed to say it,' I says.
Then, ag'in, I oughtn't to felt sorry
Bill, neither, cause he hadn t no
Islness to be out huntln' rabbits at
kt time ' year. The law wasn't up
em yit, and Bill knowed It. Not
kt I'm so blame .considerate of the
Ime laws as game laws, fer game
s, 'mongst other things, is apt to
fed a feller into lyin', an' there ain't
kthln' worse fer a community than to
re lyic' git a holt on to it. I says to
111:
'Dnsh it all!' 1 says. 'If it hadn't
fne uothin' else to you, goin' agin the
me laws might a tempted you to
lake a liar of yourself!' .
I hen I told Bill what happened to
m Collins, only jest over vender in
trk state. Jim, he had a strawberry
tch, and folks heerd that he had
Ued u deer along in the spring o'
e year. The game constuble over
ere be heerd on it, too, and he dropa
pwn on Jim one day, unexpected
Jim, he says. ' I hear you've been
lin' a deer out o' season I'
Jim he thunk over it a minute, and
en lie says:
lie you much of a Jedge of straw-
frrv patches, squire? he says.
o. buvs the came constable. Mt
islnets here is with deer killln out o
ason,' says he. 'It hain't got nothin'
io with strawberry patches.' "'
"It haln'Vhey? soys Jim. I cuesa
you'd go over and ace how my three
fres of strawberries la' pawed and
inwea and clawed, you'd think they
something o do with your buBl-
!' says he. -' '' ' . v.' '
Ns!
Fm here,' says the gamt constable
-
ilier, Mo show you that you" hain't got
o right to kill. deer out o' season f
sy be. ' - ,'. " 1
And I'm here, by lrrayy!, buys Jim.
lo show you that deer halnt got no
fbu' u est my airawDrr)ea our o
onl' says he, (
"'What's that? aavs'the Am. lw
hap. Ij.'.i, ii i
That's what I aall'! .V.Tt-.i
Pt right hat deer to;et wjiittaw
Hrriei oat o. eaaon?. Jest g and
wm toy three-acre, patch. is clawed
F cnawea ana pawiav Maybe yott
Itt thkii oowa dont K, taya Btll.
JsjW N aaifbs tfclak Z Matin' ay
tows om my atrawberriea. I coulda't
blamt; yon it you did, fer that patch
looks) enough aa II I did. But 1 don't.'
saya JlJsu Cowa no? cattle didnt caaw
and elaw and paw them three acreao'
strawberry patch. No, sir! . Deer done
It. Jeat as aoon as the time was up
whan tie game law aajd deer .couldn't
be killed no more, deer begun to come
down from them wooda yonder and
aatnr on my atrawberriea. Shoo 'em'
off? aaya Jim. i 'Not ; much They
knowed we didn't dart kill ,'em, , and
every time we tried to shoo 'em off
they Jest bristled up and rnn us off the
patch and went on with their chawin'
and pawln' and clawinV , Why ain't
they here now? An accident happened
to on on 'em t'other day,' toys Jim.
That's why they ain't here now. I
guess they ain't quite so sure o them
selves as they was, and they're layin'
low,' says Jim.' ' 'Yes,' says he. 'One
o' them deer shot himself. Broke the
game law, by gravy, aud shot himself
out o season,' says Jim.
! "Trap gun,' Bays the ' game ' con-
. 1 1 ,rn 1 . ' 1 . ii ..
BiHUIC. 1U UUl VUU VU11 HU j
cideut, hey 7 tOuesa you 11 have to go
'long with me, James,' says'he,
" 'Not yit awhile!' snys Jim. 'There
wa'n't no trap gun. It was an accident,
I tell you, and the deer shot himself.
Shot himself dead. I was over in the
three-acre patch tryin' to red things
up and save a little o' next year's crop,'
suys Jim, 'when a deer come trottin'
down out'n the woods, drove me off,
and begun to chaw aud paw and claw.
It was enough to make me so mad that
nothin' could a-s topped me pltchln'
In and poundin' that deer all to pieces,'
says Jim, 'but I kep' my temper. I had
a gun in the bouse. ' I knowed that if
the deer had been a erow my fetchln'
out a gun without any load in it
wouldn't have skeert it a bit, 'cause a
crow kin tell a loaded gun from an un
loaded one a mile oft. But as the deer
wa'n't a crow, I went to the house and
got my old gun that I hadn't loaded la
five years, thinkin' that It I strutted out
In the patch with it on my shoulder it'd
make the deer think I didn't care for
the game law any more, and he'd skip.
I had strutted aa close as SO foot to the
deer, 'fore he seen me,' Buys Jim, 'he
was so busy chawin' and pawln' and
clawin' them strawberries. Then ho
looked up. lie didn't turn skeert a bit.
lie turned madder than a wild bull and
come for me a-tearln.' I whipped
round,' suys Jim, 'and broke for the
house, but the deer ketched me. Ho
ketched me about three inches below
where the hind gallus buttons fits into
the galluses, aud down I went,' says
Jim, 'and plowed as much as 20 foot
through that three-acre patch. The ol'
musket was shook loose from me by the
jar the deer give me.
H 1 guess maybe the butt end o' the
musket must a struck ag'in a tense post
that stood ahead of it some ten or a
dozen foot and sort o' rattled up the
lock. Anyhow,' nays Jim, 'I heerd a
roar that made the hull o' that three
acre strawberry patch raise up and
shake itself, and when 1 got up and
tried to view the lan'scape o'er there
seemed to be a smell o' powder hover
in' rouud, and the smoke was so thick
1 couldn't see anything for as much as
a minute. Then things sort o' cleared.
Over by the fence post the gun was
layin' us peaceful as a lamb, and down
iu the patch where the biggest clawin
in the patch was, laid the deer, jest as
peaceful as the gun was. There couldn't
be no two ways about it, squire,' says
Jim. 'Somebody must a loaded thut
gun unbeknownst to me, and tbo rash
and uufortuuate critter of a deer hud
bhot itself dead with it. Broke the
game law, by gravyl and shot himself
out o' season! Whut's the reason,' says
Jim, 'that your business hain't got
nothin' to do with struwberry patches,
squire?' says Jim.
" 'James,' says the game constable,
'Where's that deer?'
" 'Well, squire,' says Jim, 'as soon as
I see what had happened 1 run into the
house and told the folks. Then I run
down yonder to tell a neighbor. When
1 got buck home the deer wasn't layin'
in that three-acre strawberry patch no
more. I asked my neighbor, who knows
all about deer, whether he thought
otherdeerscould a come down outen the
woods and carried that dead deer back
with 'em, and he said, knowin' whut
he knowed about deer, 'specially deer
that hung around this district, that it
wouldn't surprise him a bit it they had.
So the deer ain't here. But I kin show
you the musket the deer shot himself
with, squire, in that three-acre straw
berry patch,' says Jim.,
"But the game constable he didn't
care to see the gun, and after warniu'
Jim about bo in' so careless with fire
arms after thut, he went home.
" 'And now, Dill,' 1 says, 'you see how
tlinm rrnniA lnt'B iil .lini PnUilm inin
. e
lyin',' I says,
" flint's
That's so,' Bays Bill. Thunder,'
says he, 'but that was an all whoppin'
whopper about thut deer, wasn't it?'
says he.
" 'About tho deer? I snys. 'Why, I
says, 'Jim was all rignt about the deer.
Jim didn't lie none about the deer,' I
says.. 'What lie told about the deer
was straight as a string.
" 'What,' says Bill. 'W here did the
game law make 'Jim a liar, then?'
says he .. ' ' - . . i
"Why, ,about the three-acre straw-'
berry patch,' I says. 'Jim Collins never
had as much even' as a quarter-acre
strawberry ' patch in lila .life,' I says.
'And' if jt hadn't baen far the game law
Jim wouldn't 'ft' been, tempted to say
he had,' I saya.' ' ' ,
"Bill he didn't say nothin', and we
went on, to tho Eddy and got to new
olothesri and when. Bill planked down
the seven, dqllurs and a quarter for 'em,
and I aee that the upshot 6f it would be
that I'd have Jobp lendin.' BUI my dog
au4 my riLsnia, tackle for, the next; tlx
months or rtore, 1 feitconsarned sorry,
'cause he1 had to spend that' money for
clothes, and 1 couldn't help sayin' ag'in :
."Dash-lll all, Bill, why didn't you W
me know that you bag an idea o! goin' j
tot aa.' doln lt T V give yon torn
p'lnta and the yt otT,' I aaya.
There's too many rabbi ta in the
aw amp, anyhow, bat that wa'n't no ex
cuse tor Bill, goin ont titer tome at
that time o year. But he went, and the
worst bt it wat he had the beat rabbit
dog in the whole Knob and ' Pooono
country with him. Where la he now?
Nobody knows. ' He started in the di
rection o. the aettla' aun, and the last
anybody sfee.of him he waa headed that
way yit Bill had gethered in a lot o
rabbfta and sot down on a log to eat a
bits and have a smoke. . While he waa
catin';an4 amokln' along come Jabe.
Jabe bad been choppin' out aome tam
arack and was goin' home.
" 'Set down,' aaya Bill, 'and have a
smoke.' u
"Jabe sot down, and they was enjoy
.'V theirsclves considerable, when ail
of a auddent the rabbit dog rlz up and
begun to growl and brussel. Bill and
Jabe they looked up, nnd there they
see a bear settln' on a knoll not more
than 30 paces away, takln' in the scene,
lookin' pleasant and showtn' no sign
but what he was glad to see Bill and
Jabe enjoyin' theirsclves, and actin' ns
if he might jine in with 'em it they
usked him. The dog waa the only thing
that seemed to pester the bear nnd
threaten to raise his dander. Jabe, he
knows beara considerable, and he says
to Bill:
" 'Bill,' he says, 'that bear seems to be
itoclnble and setch, but as you ain't
loaded for bear you better call your
dog nnd go along with me, he says,
"But Hill he felt huffy that the bear
should come a-nosln' round where he
wasn't wanted and intrudln' on their
picnic, and be waa for empty in' hlagun
into Bruin.
" 'lie's nigh enough for me to wing
him, even if my shot are small,' says
Bill. 'He'll run, anyhow, as soon as
he hears the gun. Bears is awful
cowards. I wus rendin' a book about
'em only yesterday,' says Bill,
" 'Bill,' says Jabe, 'you come along
with me, no matter what the book snys.
"But BUI he knowed, and he says:
"'Jest you hoM on, Jabe!' he says
'I'll give him a fine load of shot in bis
nose and then jest watch him run I
"The bear he jest kep' on settln' there,
lookin' pleasant at Bill and Jabe, but
glvin' the snappln' and snarlin' dog a
glare now nnd then. Bill he hauled up
and aimed at the bear. Jabe he walked
pretty fast to a tree that stood jest back
of him and got ready to shin tip it.
" 'Now watch hi in run! 'buys Hill, and
he banged away at the bear's nose.
"The bear did run, sure enough. But
somehow he didn't run the way Bill had
calc'lated on. lie run straight fur
BUI and the pleasant look wasn't on
his face no more. lie snorted and
howled. Bill dropped his gun and
tore up tho highest tree. Jabe be was
half way up his tree. Jilll got to the
branchca o' his'n jest as the bear got to
the bottom of It, and ns he grabbed a
branch it broke nnd down he come ker
llumnilx. lie struck sqtiure strnddle o'
the bear's bock. That s'prised the bear
so that it sort o' discumfudtlled him
and he give two or three cruzy whirbt
around and then away he went like
race horse straight for the thickest part
o' the swamp, Bill a hangm on to him
like grim deaths 'cause he was afeard
to git off. The dog was no skeert at the
first rush o' the bear that he dropped
his tail betwixt his logs, so Jabe says.
and struck a bee line to'urds the west.
with his eyes linngln' most on his nose,
and ho hain't never been seen nor heerd
on sciicc,
"Soon as Jabe Ree the bear prnncin'
away into the swamp with Bill he dim
down outen his tree. For somethln'
like ten minutes he heerd the laurels
a snappln' on' crackln' off In the
swamp.
'"If Bill is lmggin' onto thnt lenr all
this time,' says Julio, 'he enn'tbo muoh
loss than tore to shoe strlngH the way
them ennrly laurels must grab Into
him and snutch him.'
"By and by Jabe heerd some one give
a yoop from some'res out in tho swamp,
and ha hnd an idee It was Bill, and he
whooped back.
" 'Hello, Bill. he yooped. 'Is the bear
a runnln' jit?'
"But Bill didn't Ray, and by nnd by
he come creepln' nnd era wlln' outen the
laurels to the openln' where hlmand the
bear had started from. All the clothes
he hod on him wouldn't hardly make a
patchwork block for a bedquilt, and he
was stripped like a zebra from head to
foot where the sharp brush hnd dug
into him and the bear skun along with
him through the swamp,
" 'Did the bear throw you, Bill?' suys
Jabe.
" 'No,' says Bill. 'He scraped mo olT,
lie slid into a holler log mid scraped
me off, consarn him.
" 'But you mnde him run all rlfrlit,'
nays Jabe. 'iou said you would ond
you did. '
"Bill didn't say, nothin', but when
they got as nigh home ns the edge o' the
cleurifi Jabe he went in nnd borrowed
Sam's other suit so ns Bill could get the
rest o' tho way home, and that's the suit
Bill was wearin' when Rum got eotuhed
on the jury and had to havu it buck
ng'in.
'"And jest for that,' snys Bill, Tve
got to go without a new rabbit dog nml
a lot of fishln', things. .1 ulways was
down on this here oonsnrnen jury sys
tem, anyhow,' says he." X. V. Sun.
Im CarlBf for Plotaree..
To clean the glass over pictures, dip n
piece of chamois in alcohol, wring near
ly dry, ana wipe tnorouguiy, yet light
ly, , Polish with a piece of dry chamois.
The glided frames may also be cleaned
with the alqohol .It bllpalntings need
cleaning thoroughly dampen a toft
cloth In warm water in which some cos
tile, soap has heed' dissolved.'' Dry care
fully and then varnish 1 lightly - with
some thin, clear,' French "retouching"
varnish. It la well to consult the artist
In regard to the best varnish. Chicago
iriDuac' ii. t . i ; o
Flaaelar,tleekotas;.,ar Slave.
f In' lomi parts of Africa slaves are still
t tfejwabfofall financial .reckoning.
A War roroaat. i r
Now that' American warahipo are
tripping off their uperfluout wood and
ara blackening : toeir snowy aidea. t)
glanoe at the poufbilitiea la tlmeJy, re
membering always the absolute uncer
tainty of war. At first eight, aaya the
Toronto Globe, the comparison of forces
ia aU in favor of the United States, who
have a heavy armed fleet, a doaen crui
sers and a few torpedo vessels. Bpain
baa a lighter but possibly more active
armored fleet, an inferior force of crui
sers and a formidable flotilla ol tor
pedo boats and torpedo boat destroyers.
This last is an important factor, as
since the Maine affair the Americans
have evinced a deep and perhaps exag
gerated respect for that decidedly un
certain weapon, the torpedo. Spain can
kose Cuba, and the United States has
rich ooean-borne trade, largely coast
ing, thnt can be Injured. The Ameri
can coast cities are being rapidly forti
fied, and a few more wcaks should ren
der them able to beat off light raids.
Naturally the United States would try
to hit Spain in Cuba. Spain would try
to raid the American commerce. Spain's
position in her mismanaged island is
very vulnerable, aa she has to import
much of the food for her garrison from
abroad, and these supplies could be ma
terially intercepb-d. In addition, the
United States, even without being rash
enough to try a big invasion before the
Spanish fleet was cleared out of tho
way, could give mhch aid nnd comfort
to the insurgents by landing small par
ties. Spain, on her part, may be ex
pected to send every cruiser and pri
vateer she can fit out to infest the coast
of the United States, and as long as the
Cuban coaUng ports remuin Spanish
these craft should prove able to do much
damage. It certalply looks as if the
interest of the Spaniards would be to
stave off decisive actions with the heavy
American battleships aud to carry on
a delaying warfare as long as possible.
The menace of the torpedo fleet should
prove of material assistance to them
should such a course be resolved upon.
Should Cuba once be freed from the red
and yellow flag, the war would become
mere long-range sparring, lack of coal
preventing the combatants from get
ting at each other.
American inventors do not all know
that, under tho law which wont into ef
fect on January U UaiWd StuU's patents
are no longvr terminated by the expi
ration of prior foreign patent. Hither
to such was the case, and in order not
to decrease the period of their control
over tho home market our inventors
often neglected to protect their rights
abroad, and so lost a considerable part
of the possible rewards of their in
genuity. Under the present arrange
ment they can reap a harvest from for
eign fields without dnjigcr to that closer
to them.
A young man In Michignn just for
u Joke sflver plated some rents and
passed Uicm us dimes on uu unsuspect
ing groreryman. Ho hud pasned nearly
a dozen when the grocer discovered the
joke and complained to the authorities.
The young niuii was arrested for coun
terfeiting, and, although he fully ex
plained tho funny part to the court, he
was convicted, unu will spend tlio next
two years of his life in prison. It. is
dangerous to try any jokes on Uncle
Sauu
Brooklyn is provided with u useful
Institutions in the form of u free music
library containing S.niM) volumes, ex
clusive of works on the theory and prac
tice of music and musical biography.
The collection embraces carefully se
lected compositions for the piano, pi
uuo and violin, brass and reed instru
ments, songs, oratorios, operas and
vocal music generully. The library has
been running 15 yours, and bus a large
Mid increasing circulation,
Doctors Can't
Cure It!
Contagions blood poison is absolutely
beyond the skill of the doctor. They
may doso a pationt for years on their
mnrcurial ami pvUh remedies, but ho
will never be rid of th disna' ; on tho
other hand, lux condition will grow
sttmdily worse. 8. S. M. is the only ouro
for this terriblo affliction, bocinuo it i
the only remedy which goon diroot to
tho cause of the discuse und forces it
from the system.
I was ftflllctxd with Blond Pnlnon, and tlift
bout doctors did me no koimI, though I tnok
tlielr trpiitnu-iit faith-
fully. In tact. I HPiimed
lo nt vrurm nil t h
while. I to"k a 1 111 o h t
every so-railed lwnod
remedy. Imt they did not
wem to reach tho dls
ense, nnd liud no offeet
whatever. I was d t h
linnrU'iied, for It seemed
that 1 would iifvsr be
cured. At the advice ol
a friend I then tnok
u tt u it,,! tunfMti tnlm.
' nrnvp 1 onll tlntlfli th
inedlelnn, and It enred me completely, hulld
lint ut tnv health nnd Inerranlntf my nniM'tlto
AlthmiKli this wnK ten yenn ago, I hiivc nuvm
yet nau a siguoi inu uisciwr to rninrn.
W. R. Nbwsan.
Staunton, Va.
It la like solf-destructlon to continue
to take- potaah and mercury ; besides
totally destroying the digestion, they
dry up the' marrow in the bones, pro
ducing a stiffness and swelling of the
joints, causing the hair to rail oat, aim
completely wrecking the system.
for DIvaJ
;mmwu
thlapl. bJVamidy free) from , these
dangerous minerals, .t . '
Book-'on 'self-treatment tent free by I
Swift Speotfio Company; Atlanta;' Oa, ;
c b e
1 1 WHY !
int.
THERE YOU HAVE it
Clear as Mud.
writer " W " 01 ,0Ur ProvM up?
waiea. Pen-writwa oi? naaM? autaD
That's Why .
YOl' should nse
tliesmiu wnrlr '.7 rl" T- ""'
!!iKiliUin o,,. ..... '."'". ""-eaurfl
srsndiirrt.
linn L? ' " -:.,"
Is RlMuif nulls-
u-rs is Wj,jj
YOU SHOULD USE THE "ODELL "
.son,, for acta,,, and 8il,,pIbot ,f,
ODELL TYPE-WRITER CO.
ea.iMlra,H., -iM.AHO,
1 1. 1..
4-l.vvmo.
a r salary on Oommibsion.
00 yCH UHt AiMnmX .
. - 'Twuy tmpioymrm
m ytor mum, cl no umi
toe or to travtlf if , ,rff. ,
Jbr tr rtatnalt pcJijt end panicklarg.
AMERICA!' TEA CO.
Octnoit. Michigan
Rdurate Vour llowela With t narareta.
Candy rnthiirtie. cure combination fn
lUC.ttKV
If O P C full, druirn'su refund mo--'
A
Klondy ke- Yukon-A laska
International Exploration
CAPITAL STOCK, -
MIAltM OSK DOLLAR EACH.
YVU. 1'AU) ANII NON-AHHKSSAHI.K.
General Offices : 5, 7, i & 11 Bnmdwaj, N' e w York.
( 'omhtnot ( ,viU,t S,vu,r
Lanjf Pnijitu! !
The imttet (Initil lo the
(!mtfnt Xiuiiher! !
Your liiiilti'd nieniia. when loluil with ..tl..
ern.wlllH ire for you all thr iiilvmilnirea n
lurKv ninoiint of cupitnl coiunmudH when In
vented uniler our co-operative liin
The Greatest Amount of Benefits -the Minimum Amount of Risks.
Ilnve you miidenuy money ho.t year? If mi, we enn oiler you u opp.irluuity to do n Kre,it
ul lii-tler In the coiiiIiik ycur. Ilnve you failed to miiV.- nnd Inv a.i.lea .nmlii.- I I,.... I..
Kin the new year hy iimkiiiKnn Investment in
per aliare, mid nre -old in lot of lmrc mid iipwanla. A ipiiek iluelsion, a wise Miove In the
prop,-r direction, will always prove lienrlleinl. start the new year right liv wiulinK vour ur
phm lininey-ii Iiiiiulred doling, llfly ilollnis, twenty, ten or even live ilollnri. .mi... 1.. )..
Co. nnd receive l.y return mail your shareH of
have lahored on and tollcii, your money him lieen innkliiK money for voii.niid while vou have
nut t;oiie to AliiHkn nor devoti-d your time nml Inhor to other proiuihiiiK veimires, y.u have
riu en nil 111c lieuclltaniul have enjoyed lleeei-r.
Send your money hy check, molicy order, cxpreHu money order or reui-tered lctti-r to
International Exploration and Investment Co.,
1
! V 1
KeHponHibln iipftitH wiin
$125 Per Month.
WB WANT A KEW
TltAVl:i.l4J.
I.M'AI..
'II'TV.
;i:i:it i
oUtPIT FREE. Apply at
A. II. Henderson & Co., Geneva, N. Y
.......
IMI'OWTKI) STUCK
SHlillS.
STENOGRAPHY,
at 1 or pcrxouully. Our Hyateui of teaching Riven netual
dally experience in every brunch of bunliiesn including
rjuDklog. MerchundlHlng. Commission, Insurance1 Transporta
tion, eta Preparatory UepurUnetit for hiki kwnnl Hliuleiitd v,i
trulnhir Pracilcnl work and alwnyM necur MituniioiiH for wonliiy
o, our zuBiui-ia unu aorinnnu 1 oiir.scH. MiulcutH
enter any dujr No vin-atioiiR K.xnenscn miMlerum Ton t iiirnnr no-..n iin,....! ...
polm lo l.iniviMpu u..k.u.iu H.k..H 1.
" 11 - " o n uiouiH
... uo uu, .u uiuuius ucri is equal 10 a year
REWARD
flaW Vay Tc-leeraph operator whli
tilth we
rnrnoeient nfudBtiintH without chitrire. Refer to prominent patrnnn In everv pnrt of the wnr',1
1 be neit best thine to itltehillnv the MOST CELKIiHATKU HUSINKSS .SCIHKll. in Amer . -'i
1 H. Hike our INSTRUCTION HY MAIL. If vou are i.nenmln.e.l n 1 , . .' ...1' .:'
end ten two-cent mumps for five eioiv Iriinna (n
Address intention thiiwn CLEMENT C. GAINES. President. Pougmkeepie. New York.
WAR WITH
lis to Tut
will contain all important war
.a . -a. . . .
A
K
N
E
W
. Special dispatcUes up to honour 01 puuiuiauoii. .
Careful attention will be eriven to Farm and I amily lopics,
Foreign Correspondence, Market Reports, and all geuernl "own
of the World and Nation.
' VWe furnish Tho New -York Weekly Tribune and your favorite
home paper,
THE POST
UOTH ono Tear for 81.85.
Monrl Ail nrdArn
ike
Alaaka Wbraot.
8t yOar share ot
i I T J tae great lortane.
t he reallaMi train the wondikrlul diMimin
I already made and to he made In thb New Klon-
dlkeAbwka Hdorador THE WASHINli
, TVS MLI KIKLItS EXPU)KATION fOM
I PA NY under Ita charwler la authortxed lo proa-
' uU, I, -1,1 . . . I . I ... i. . . .
t-v.- w.m v.uirrr jttiiim Planus ana i rug,
ertlea la the Wondortul I acl.U f Klondike
and Alaaka. .Imnwliw fenunes avr alrewly
beaa reallirdand nilllloi.a more II lw niadr
tlieru. Will yo all. w thin K,.l.l,n t),nrtuiilty
-yo by? A few dollara lnVrstrl In
In tuh tindertaklii); imiy bp the foundation t
your fortune. The r'l.h to hp i,iiderUiiid Dir.
esltai linnimlintp action. Thp flr.t iu the
Held the first In fortune. No si., h iiMrtunil.v
kaa ever liivn pirwnted lo the ikm.iiIo of the
preavut KcUuratluu ia ollcntl in the Klon
dike Ali.U (ild Kiflda. All .l,nrnh..l.l.v...
get their lull proMrtion of nil i.r.,tlt-. Nodl;.
deads are iiiiulr n n,M-k h iuiiiii, uo.nl.l.
Send your nnlcrx'tielii-iiic (liu- l,nt for ea h
ahnre of fully Mtid iiiniid inuwiwaMililr !oi V-il.-ired
to the WASHINGTON i.iil.H KJ i:i.l-s
KXl'UlKATION OlMl'ANV, 'liiroliiu, V.i.
lllKtoll.
Tho fllo in,- Tneniua denl. ra in aiiilicf for
the Klondike nn. 1 Alnkn trwle nre StiH-kludrt-era
in the mnr nn.l will inf. rm you resnril.
inil tho relinhiliiy of it-, ortl.t-rs : Monty .V
Uunn, irM'rrie; A. F. llo.kn. II
.Morrl(iro( o., lry (5.M..I. nn.l clcthiliK ; V.
(). Howliui.'. ul tiller, Huko HVIilz, TimiN
Tnrouia ilnrdware l o.
tu-iH-lyr.
ewvitatt.
r 'nl.H. im Vork N v
RPIMAI weaknemenallvcarwlb
OIIIMlaj Dr. MlkV Nurre VliuUri.
((nd
rATFOLKSWUS ca
BPa fll nounitii per aaonlh. JbJ VJL
rtaMea. HM1K. VltEK. Ad.lna UL
and Investment Company,
INCORPORATED
- $1,000,000,000.
, VY rncfc MQTS I Mfl
-wwwi w iiv i rv i n u
to aend toroiir iriMiectuaitnil neuimiut vour
nt'lf with the eoniliiiicl u.lvnuUiirea We offer.
The enormoUH prodtH to he derived from the
devrlopiniMit of Ahixkn K"hl Ix io inir proM.rtlei
! hut one of the inuiiy fenlure. we can offer
von. We Invent nml nuike money or you
wherever money inn hi- made.
Let your few dnlliirn he the nueleii. of coin
liiK fortune.
our Mock. Our slum- nre l.l nt imr nt at.0.1
atnrk. Ik-fore Ikiik vmi may llml lht W,iv vo.i
1 r.niiKlwiiv, .New York, X. V.
toil in wry cjty nml town.
$125 Per Month.
MOKli MEN,
Salesmen lie Hi! mil
once for territory, of :--
SPKCIALTIHS
Uookkocp'infr, etc., thor
oughly timcht BY MAIL
.... ...7 ""J 1
- ieni o-m-nerM in uisgubl
Such Licoplu' ul.
in uny outer achoul.
to any ono for first Information of a vacant x.:,v.
for a Hookkcepcr, Stenographer, Teacher, di r..
RucceBSfully fill, luslness bouses supplied w:
Mialle War Ms
IN THE GREAT
NATIONAL
FAMILY
NEWSPAPER
Fuirjiubeil by Speciul Conespomleuts
nt t lie front.
letlf Tilt
news of the daily edition. I
. a 1.1! i. -
tbTHK POST. Middleburgh, Pa.
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