Save (lornl llrcrtler.i. There are ninny more old bows be ing Bont to market this year .than last. This Indicates that farmers are Belling off their big, heavy bows and keeping young ones for coming breed ers, or are reducing their breeding herds. Whatever else you do, save a good bunch of breeders. It Is a mis take to sell too close, because of high prices. rrosresslve Farmer. Sonmless Milk Can. ' The best milk vessels are those that have no seams in them, sUico dirt and old enkes of milk' will get down In the senilis nnd develop bud germs In spite of anything reason able thnt enn he done to prevent it. If vessels must be used with seams in them, the seams should be as smooth as possible, to reduce the space whore dirt can lodge. Solder can be used to fill the seams smoothly. Progres sive Farmer. Pure Hrctl Poultry. To start with, pure bred poultry it is no't necessary to Invest a small for tune, as many believe. If you have a mixed flock nnd do not wish to dis pose of them at once nnd Btnrt with pure bred poultry, but want to Im prove the laying iiualltles of your mixed .stock, got a pure bred cock bird from some fancier who hns a good laying strain. Mate him with your mixed hens and the next genera tion will bo better layers. Remem ber the male bird Is half your flock. You can get a pure bred male bird that Is not good enough In color per haps to reproduce his own breed, but is in other respects a good bird and Just whnt you need to Introduce new blood Into your mixed flock. Farm ers' Home Journal. ' Separate Ilnosls. When housing birds for winter it should bo taken into consideration that the young birds require a little more attention than the old ones, and that the eame conveniences do not suit nil ages. Old Btock will get along well on almost any kind of a roost, but it Is not so with young birds. Their bones are composed mostly of animal matter and are eas ily bent and thus easily deformed. If a chick Is forced to sit all night on a little, nnrrow pole it will cause him to bend almost double In order to remain there nnd be comfortable, and ho will soon become crooked backed, have leg weakness, or have a crooked breast. Have separate roosts for the young and old stock. The young birds will choose the flat, wider pieces of board, and the old stock will naturally take the higher ones and better results will follow. Farmers' Home Journal. Kqulp the I'niin. ' The scarcity of help on farms will ultimately drive land owners to greater economy nnd to a more gen eral use of devices and conveniences which lighten the work. It is sur prising how many try to get along by muscle power alone, never trying out any other method, which might save half their work. An old farmer says that his neighbors called him lazy when he first brought a bay loader onto his farm, and when he rigged up a cable and used a trip hay fork to .unload his hay be had a ' good bunch of farmers around blm, "Just to see how it worked." The close figuring farmer counts all of these labor savers Just that much of his equipment, and it is only by us ing them that he Is enabled to meet present conditions. The walking stirring plow and walking cultivators are back numbers. Now the sulky or gang plow Is used, and three big, lusty horses will turn over three or four acres a day. A manufacturer has now gotten out a rotary harrow, which Is attached to the plow, and the land is turned and harrowed at one operation. I believe that if any man is Justified in borrowing money it is when he invests It in up-to-date tools and implements for more rapid and better wwk on the Zarni. In diana Farmer. ! Lambs Dying From Wool-nail. - " 1 u v . tHHiwa uj lug y I U 1 11 II1IO trouble, it is well to remember that this may and does arise from two separate causes. Firstly, when grass Is scarce and ewes are short cf milk, in the case of twin lambs, it is usually the bigger and stronger of the twins that dies This may appear strange, but it is easily explainable. When the milk is short, the stronger lamb drives off the weaker one from the dam, and by its persistent tugging at the empty udder for tht sustenance It falls to obtain, It takes into its stomach por tions of wool from about the udder of its dam, which forms into a ball in the stomach and causes death. In ' such cases the shepherd should lose no time in going over the flock and ' cnttlng away the wool from the vicin ity of the udders. Secondly, when the ewes are af fected with sheep ticks, the lambs by the upstroke of the heads in seeking for the teats dislodge the ticks and these fall into the coats of the lambs. i uk j are not accusionieo. to sucn visitors and seek to rid themselves by biting the ticks and In so doing . take Into Chelr stomachs portions of their own wool, death resulting. Thus In post mortems to elucidate causes of death It is necessary to note whether the wool-ball is composed of ewe or lamb wool, before effective measures of precaution and preven tion can be taken. V. R. Gilbert, in The Epitomise To Clonuse I'nniK Many ponds, small lakes, streams and brooks nnd even tho natural basins which serve to catch the winter rains to be utlllr.ed dining the ralu less season for slock wnter frequently become clogged with a vegetable growth which renders tho water nauseous In taste and repulsive In smell. In almost every case these conditions are produced by n small plant whose origin Is unknown to the farmer and the effect of which is serious. To drain the water off will not cause the destruction of the growth, for as soon as the water Is returned tho plants begin to grow again: A simple way and an Inexpen sive one, Is to draw a small bag filled with sulphate of copper (blue vltrol), back and forth through the water. It the pond is small, or the growth Is In a stream, tho sulphate can bo tied to the end of n pole. If the pond Is large the bag may be trolled be hind a boat. It frequently occurs thnt a viscid growth resembling moss in strings appears In water tanks and troughs at the wind mill or where a stream falls from a spring. The growth may be effectually killed by using copper sulphnte as described. Let It be borne in mind Hint copper sulphate Is poison nnd Bhoiild be used with care. A dollar's worth will clear several acres of a pond and a penny's worth a lank or water trough. Ice ponds mny bo cleared of the objection able moss In this way. C. M. Gln ther, in The Kpilomlst. A Study or I'liint Fond. The principal foods of plnnta are nitrogen, phosphoric acid mid potash, and it Is those substances in the man ure upon which plnuts principally feed. When fertilizers are applied the farmer gives his crops Identically the same principal foods that he sup. plies from barnyards, with the differ ence that In the use of fertilizers he knows Just how many pounds of ni trogen (or ammonia), phosphoric acid nnd potash he applies per ncr-, while the proportions of these substances In the manure nre unknown and much depends upon the kinds of foods from which the manure Is produced and the manner it has been cared for. Darnyard manure, while It pos sesses Just what may be needed, con tains some substnnces in greater pro portion than of others. Thus clover Is a plant that prefers lime in some form and requires very littlo ammo nia, while wheat does not require as much lime as the clover. The barn yard manure Is expected to furnish both subBtancesto each crop, and yet there might be a waste of ammonia from the manure applied to the clo ver. The custom has been to haul out the "manure nnd spread It for corn, with hopeful results and from the same heap the farmers would sprend the Bamo kind, of manure on the ground prepared for wheat. All this was proper enough In its way, for no ono can deny tho fact thnt barnyard manure possesses nearly all the re quirements of plants of every kind but why should there bo applied thnt which would he wasted becauso of not being put to proper use? Improvement Is taking place in the domain of agriculture, marching along steadily and swiftly, cutting down in Its path the follies of the past and adding more knowledge and experience to the farmers, and to nothing has more thoughtful atten tion been given than to the enrich ment of the soil supplying plants with the best available foods, accord ing to their Individual requirements. Not one kind of fertilizer fcr all kinds Of plants, but special fertilizer of the plant that needs It. The Epltomlst. Taking Cure of the Harness. "There Is nothing like leather." But there is nothing like knowing how to keep your leather goods in fine condition, too. Leather Is com posed of a mass of One tendrils, inti mately interlocked and entwined. When in good, pliable condition, each tendril Is capable of much Btretching.' It allowed to become dry and hard, when the leather Is subjected to a severe pull, tho tendrils break Instead of stretching. But this does not mean that leather boots or harness should be kept soaked with oil or dressing. Elbow grease applied In quantity is better. "All dressings should be applied sparingly," is the sound advice of a big saddlery con cern. Black oil should always be used on black harness and not neats foot oil, as the latter oil, it it is used, will draw out the black dye and leave the harness brown. The black har ness fats now on the market make ex cellent farm harness dressing. They contain the "nourishment" necessary for keeping the harness in good order. But first, all dirt should be washed off with lukewarm water and or dinary soap. The black fat should then be applied with a cloth, given a short time to penetrate the leather, and then rubbed dry with another cloth. Some make the mistake of oil ing without unbuckling the harness. The parts that need nourishment the most are under the buckles, where the metal causes hardness and brittle ness. It people would vary the boles of the harness occasionally it would last .much longer. An objection to neatstoot oil is that it inclines to wash off the bees wax from the stitches, leaving the bare thread, which then soon breaks. American Cultivator. The best cheese made in Switzer land is usually exported, and la sel dom to be had even In the famous ho tels of that country. BERNARD SHAW ON MAN'S COWARDICE. Characteristic Te'ilng Up cf Eng llth Middle-Class Clerks by tht Famous Irish Author. "Of nil tho qualities of man I find nothing so nstonlshlng' as his sheep Ishness, docility and cowardice. Whon these qunlltles are developed to tholr outmost by clvlHzation and poverty In the middle class you get the clerk. I have been a clerk on a stool In a very genteel office my self, and probnbly I would have been there yet If I had not broken loose In dedance of nil prudence and be come a professional man." That is part of an interesting artlclo by George Bernnrd Shaw, based on a chapter in his life and apparently intended to call nttontlon to li la greatness. But, on closer scru tiny, all of this Is seen to bo one of Mr. Shaw's characteristic showman's tricks for arousing his reader's In terest before preaching a serious doctrine. So, after lending up to a hard rap at tho poor mlddlo class parents who overestimate the dignity of clerk ships nnd underestimate the dignity of labor, Mr. Bhaw 'continues: "You cannot make an Arab a clerk; you cannot make a North American a clerk, but you can make nn Imperial Englishman a clerk quite easily. All you hnve to la to drop him Into a poor middle class family with a father who cannot af ford to keep him, give him capital to start life with or carry his educa tion beyond the elementnry stage, but who would yet be disgraced if the son became a worklngman. Given these circumstances, whnt can the poor wretch do but become a clerk? ""In a genteel modification of this course I became a clerk myself. My father was a corn merchant and mill owner, and, like ninety-nine men out of a hundred, pursued a routine he didn't know anything about and at tributed his difficulties vaguoly to want of capital. He landed in the Bankruptcy Court, and as a result I spent four and a half years in an office before I was twenty years old. "I may have had a comparatively easy time, but I didn't get much pay as a clerk, of course, I was always 'lenrnlng' even .though I reached a position of responsibility. One of the worst things about being a clerk, I found, was that I always dreamed myself back In the office during sleeping hours, my employer tluiB swindling me by annexing a por tion of my out-of-offlce time. "One of my clerkly acquaintances was an ancient bookkeeper long since dead whom I asked cne day If he Intended to make a bookkeeper ot his son. He was usually mild-mannered but suddenly he became vehe ment to the verge of fury and de clared that rather than Bee bis' son a clerk he would have let him die In the cradle. I wondered whether the're was any clerk alive who' really liked being a clerk and who would choose that occupation for his son. "When the bookkeeper died my employer offered me his Job, but I refused. Ho wanted my place for a relative." London Correspondence of the New York Times. Farming on tho Yukon, W. M. Swtnehart has compiled for publication the results of his experi ence In farming at Fort Selkirk, and these show that, taking one season with another, tbe crops raised and the prices received for tbe product are sufficient to cause the average farmer In the States to look to the North with envy. Oat hay, the chief crop produced, yields-about three tons to the acre, and sells readily in the spring at from $100 to $125 per ton. Demand has never been lacking for all the hay the farm produces, since the Dawson-White Horse stage line, on which from 256 to 400 horses are used every winter for several months, passes within a few miles of the farm. Potatoes yield from three to five tons to the acre and bring as much as twenty-five cents a pound. The average price for a series of years has been a fraction over twenty cents a pound. Rutabagas yield six tons to the acre, and sell for six cents a pound, or $720 an acre. Carrots yield three tons to the acre and sell for fifteen cents a pound, a return ot $900 per acre. Cabbages vary in pro duction according to season, ranging from three to eight tons to the acre and the price ranges from fifteen to twenty cents per pound. It is on exceptional season when the Swine hart farm does not net its owners an Income of $10,000. Seattle Post In telligencer. Not Hurt. A gentleman owning a sugar estate in Demerara went out to visit it or the first time. The day after his ar rival he stood watching the punts bringing. the cane home. A young negro boy who was driving the mules, wishing to Increase the speed ot these, struck one of them with his whip. (The mule promptly responded by launching out with his heels and dealt the boy a kick on the head which stretched him out on the ground, where be lay rubbing his woolly pate on the spot where tbe kick had been received. "Is he hurtT Is he hurt?" cried the planter in alarm. A full grown negro hearing the expressions of con cern sprang forward hastily, and, raising the mule's heels, shouted out: "No, boss! That mule him walk tendeh fo' a day or two, but him no hurt." Chambers' Journal. Tbe Russians as a nation probably Ztve more attention to the subject 'of dancing than any other. HEUIFF'S SALE. By virtue nf a writ, of Fieri Fa"la. eto , Is mill out of Hie Court of Oominon Plum of Jefferson county, Pa. , ami to mo dlreelod. I will exp ose to public silo or oiitury at the court uouso In (I rook vllld, IV, oil FRIDAY, APRIL 10th, 1908 At l.no o'clock p. tn nil tbo following de scribed run! ttuio, to wit: All the defendant's rlitht, tltlo, Interest mid rliilin of, In nnd to nil the following described ri'.il estutu, to-wlt: I'ihst. AJI those oortnln town lots situate In Ruse tnwosliln. Jefferson ciiiintv nnd atiitn of Pennsylvania, known in lull numlinri gl, z: nnu still tin illtlm t'l llin 'it and 21 In the iilot or nhin of Million' ml iiiumu i' inn iioron tu or llro iKvuie, M'liu three lot adlnttilnir o ieh other and I) itludod and describe I at follow, to wit: li;xlniilii at the southwest, cornor of tho mint, til inoe n irlli m dm ran unit alone a SI fo it street ii rent to tne corner or lot Z') in sua nu dlllo i: tlmnite tilon lln.i of lot No. 2), eolith lll'sj dnicrnos unit I.V) frot to nn iillnjr: thuni'B iiloiiKH:i,dalloysitit.li 2H' J deiireiin wixt 1m) font to nl I fool, alloy, thencoalonf said ut ley north ilt'i decree ml to the plnoo of he(ln nllC. ciiiit'iliiliiir In till gr.INi) square tent, tii'ire or loss, nnd Innin bid on tin we it hy n IW foot 4troiit,ou llin n irth by lot No. , on tlu ei-it V en ill 10 V . on the ninth bv tin a cv nnd In In i the eatne throe lots ot hurl conveyed hy rtioinn M ilmn an I wife ti M ithlu llrldirii nnd ll irli i hi HrltUn, It's wife, who in now the irosnnt grantor, thn title to till S'lmo bavins; income vested In her as the survivor of her husband, M Ht III us llrldita, doconsod. Uncord ed In Deed II ilc4(, iiie 2l. Huld I it.ii I under quod stale of cultivation and havlinr thereon il number of ft nit trooi mid u well of good ivniur. SrODNn. All that, cortiln tratt, plena or Frireol of bind slt,im,. In thn township of tue. count v of .lolTnrsnti and at'UB of Penn sylvania, hum led and dm irlhod at follows, to-wlt: llntlnnln at a u nt n iw or formerly of M. Ilotftior an I the Indium roil; thence lontli til's dnjroni oast 74 feet to a po.sti thence al.i land of eahl llelfnnr north 2') donrecM oast IM'i feet to an u'leyi thnncn tnitll e.:'4 dejrous oast IOJH:l-lo) feet, to a Hi reel i thettc i llliinn mid Bt reel mmtli iK'i drtKroefl west Wli foot to a poHt at the ltit"r- ROiMion oi Hunt Mtroot anil infiiiina roiioi thence north III:! foot to a Host. In thn linn of mild Indiana roadi thnncn wott ft feet to a iiosi; in nice nnrlli SUerons oait along mild Indiana road 'ill 11-19 'out to tho place of hit tflniilinf, conliiltiliiK iis.lis) 7-li) Ht. ft., more or lost. It Ileitis the taint piece of land thato wim convoyed by Thomas Milmn mid wlfn to the fluid Jeremiah Wllxon ht deed dated lit day of November, H7i. "Recorded In Pond hook no. sv, tiaire s i. nam mini navitiK theroon orectoif a fratno dwelling Iioiihh HtVi'j feet, one and ono-lialf itorles hluli: one frame dwolllntr house IHxlH feet, one and onu half etorlos Iilnh Willi addition l!x!i feet, one story blah, fruit trees and a wjll of guild water. DOlKOll, IrllKOII lllf O S "dl lllll ll'lll Ul ITO old an tho property nf VI. (). Korhomnyor, at t tie nuit or joremiaii wne in, tor use or i nom as Million, deceased, now for use of Ktnlly Wolchons, Harriot KnrutHon, Loiilna MIHlknn and Mary A. .looks, IpkhI lielrs and ropreeen tntivos of Thotna Malioti, deceased. Kl. Kit. No. 21). .iKNKt, UliJHK Htkwart. AI.SD-AII the defendants' rlirht, title, In terest mid claim of, In mid to all t hat certain ploco or parcel of land Ivliiif and being situ ated In tne tiimiiiith of Kcynildsville, -lotTor-son county, Pennsylvania, b iunded and de scribed as follows, to-wlt! O mnnenclnl at the northeast corner at a post on Mill alloy; thotice HOiithone hundred and llfl.y feet along lino of lot formerly owned by Joseph Htrouss to If 111 Htroet, thence west almu Mill otroot sixty feet to a post corner of lot owned hy Kobei-t Mulr: thence along Mnlr line one hundred and fifty foot to Mill alloy; thence along Mill alloy sixty foot to place of begin ning and containing lt,()li) wtiare foot, more or loss. Having erected thereon one dwelling house 2!x:ij foot, containing 7 moms; aim) barn and other necessary outbuildings. HelEod, taken in execution and to bo Hold ae the property of Joseph Kouiia and Andrea Kennn at tho milt ot M. M. Khhor. PI. Pit. No. 22. MliDoHAl.n. A LSD-All the defendants'' right. t itle, Intor est and claim of, In mid to all that rertalti lot, piece, parcel of ground ell unte In Handy Valley, Winslow towns'ilp, Jotfereon county, Pennsylvania, hounded anil described as fol lows: Beginning at ft post cornor on the lino of the public road loading from Palis ('reek to Uevnoldsvlllo; thence north one hundred and lltly 1 1 'Ol feet; thence west nlxly(iH)i foot; tlienco south to the aforesaid public road one hundred and fifty (I.V)) feel; thence oast Hlong said road sixty (DO) foot to the place of beginning, containing nine thousand FUiiro feet (U.V-iHi so. ft .) All tbo coal and minerals are reserved, with tho right of Ingress and regress iipiin and fro u the said Ian 1 for the purpose of examining and searching fiw and mining and minilfacturln Hie said coal and other minerals for market and taking, re moving and transporting the same. Having eroded thereon a two-story, five roomed frame dwelling house and necessary out buildings, tieized, taken In execution and to be sold as the property of Klla Knlne nnd Philip Kalno andHiith Knlueaiid Klla Kuino, minor child ren of Klla Knlne, at the siiltof the Heynolds vllle Building and Loan Association Lev. Pa. No-21. , Davis. ' A LTO All the defendant's -'ht, tltlo, In terest and cliiun ot, in nnu to a min cer tnln piece or parcel of land situate In War saw tuwnsliip, county of JnfTerson and state of Pennsylvania, bounded and (Inscribed as follows, to-wlt: Beginning at a post on the east line nf Warrant No. 379H: thence by land of Joseph Mcllracken south a-4 degrees oast 111 perches to a post; t hence by lands of Kw Ing helre south 89 degreos west 20 perchee to a nost: thence bv land formerly or 1 . H. L,tu:n estate north 3-4 degrees west in porches to a post; thence by same lands north HH degrees east 24 perches to place cf beginning contain ing two acres, more or l( ss, iioing same tanu conveyed to Mrs. Anna P.winff by Kehecca I.lli'li, et. al., by deed dated the 3rd day of Heptember IKSil. Bee deed liook No. 43, page rat. Having tnoreon erecteu a four roouieu irame uweiiiiig nouse, small Darn ana out' bulldlnas. Seized, taken In execution and to be sold as the property ot Mrs. Anna Ewlng at the suit me b. v. Kyle. PI. Pa. No. li. BK03IU8. TERM!. The following must be strictly complied with when property Is stricken down: I. Whon thn nlalntllT or other lien credit ors become the purchaser, the cost on the writ must ue paiu, ana a nsi oi nens, iuciuu Ing mortgage searches on the property sold, together with such leln creditor's rocolpt for the amount of the proceeds of the sale or such proportion thereof as he may claim must be furnished to the sherllf. See Pardon's duest, 9th, Ed., page 448. Smith's form, Page :n. 2, All bids must be paid In full. All sales not settled Imtnodlatley will be continued until two o'clock p. m.,of day of ale at which time all property not settled for will again be put up and sold at the expense and risk of tho person to whom first sold. All writs staid after being advertised, the cost of advertising must be paid. ;ll lNr SLIIEAFNOCKKH, March 0, IDWi. Hherlff Congress has directed that all rev enues received from forest reserves ahall be turned- Into the Treasury, which is a businesslike procedure. It has given the Forest Service $500,000 with which to develop the reserves and execute a policy which will work in the Interest of all the people, as serts the Washington Pout. The Pres ident has stoutly supported Forester Pinohot in elaborating a policy which will save the national forests to the people, and the country generally, w believe, will approve of .everything that has ibeen done toward that end. Says the Hartford Times: "Upon the health promoting Tirtues of fresh air too grent emphasis cannot be laid. No better prescription than fresh alt for a large number of classified ail ments Is known to the medical profes sion. It fresh air couldn't be bad fol the asking or hy opening the window It would be appreciated a greai deal more. There are many gospels and tbe gospel ot fresh air stamls high among them." According to the British Medical Journal, lying is often caused by in digestion. Then politics, suggests the Rochester Post Express, must be tie most dyspeptic of occupations. s ANNOUNCEMENTS. CONORESS For Representative in Congress W. o. SMITH Of Punxsulnwney. Rubloct. to the dn'lslnn of tho Rontibllcan niters of the 27th (iiigrossliinnl District at the general prlnriry election April II, 19US. For Congress J. N. LANG 0 AM Of Indiana. Subject to act Inn of tho Republicans of the 27th ('ougrossloniil Iilslrlct at the primary election Bat iinliiy, April II, l!"'s. For Congress GEORGE E. ARNOLD , Of Clarion. Sublect to nrtlon of the Keuiibllcnns nf the 27th ('oiigrcsslonal District at the primary election Haturduy, April 11, IU04, For Congress JOSEPH G. DEALE, of Leechhurg, subject to thn action of the Republican of thn 27 ill Congressional District at the Primary Fleet leu, Saturday, April 11, IM), from 2 to H p. in. STATE SENATOR For State Senntor S. TAYLOR NORTH Of Punxstitawnpy. Subject to action of tho Itoputillcans of the 871 h District (JolforHon and Indiana counties) at primary election Saturday, April II, 1908. For State Senator T. M. KURTZ Of Punxsutawney. Ruhloct to action of the Kenubtlcnn nf the 87th Senatorial District (Jetferson and Indi ana counties) at primary election Saturday, April II inns. For State Senator HENRY I. WILSON Of lllg Kun Borough. Suhlnct to the action of the henubllcnns of the 37 th Senalorlal District (Jefferson nnd In -dlatia counties) at I lie primary eloctlou Hat urduy, April 11, 1904. ASSEflBLY For Assembly HORACE O. MILLER Of Punxsutawney. eunjpci xo aciimi oi i ne nepumicnns oi .im fnrson county at primary election Saturday April II, litis. believing in the American doctrine as de fined by Abraham Lincoln, "a government PI inn poopin, mr inn peupio nnu uy inn people." I promise, if elected, to support the bill giving the peoulo tho right to vote on loom opium, nnu win oo tin in iny puwor w mage tue uiu iiocome a law. II (IK A(S U. MI1,1,EII For Assembly ROBERT H. LONGWELL Of Brock way vllle. Subject to the action of the Republican yotnrs of Jefferson county at the general primary election to be hold April II, IDos, For Assembly O. H. SMAIL Of Knox Township. Subject to the action of the Republican voters of JofTnrson county at tbo general primary election to be hold April II, W.H. If elected I will favor any measure giving to tho pooplo the constitutional right of ex pression on uny fundamental question, es pecially sujb as may be advocated by the Aull-Suloou League. O. il. Suaii.. For General Assembly JAMES O. MITCHELL Of Perry Township. Pubjoct to notion of Ihe Republicans nf JetTorson county lit the primary election Sat urday. April II, SHERIFF For Sheriff- A. E. GALBRAITH Of Ilrookvllle. Subject to action of the Republicans nf Jef fmson county at primary election Saturday, April 11. 1908. For Sheriff ANDREW JACOBS Of Oasklll Township. Subject to the action of t he Republicans of JefTorson county at the primary election Sat urday, April 11, 1V08. For Sheriff THOMAS A. MAYES Of llazen, Pa. Stock dealer and butcher. Rubloct to the action of the ReDubllcan of Jefferson county at the primary election Saturday, April 11, 190 For Sheriff J. D. WILKIN3 Of Warsaw Township Subject to action of Republicans of Jeffer son county at primary election Saturday, April 11, lliW, For Sheriff O. P. WALKER Of Punxsutawney Sublect to action of Republican of Jeffer son county at the primary election Saturday, April il, luus. COUNTY TREASURER For County Treasurer GRANT SCHEAFNOCKER Of Winslow Township. Subject to action of Republicans nf Jef ferson county at the primary election Satur day, April II, I'Mi. For County Treasurer W. C. MURRAY Of Reynoldsville. Subject to action of Republicans of Jeffer son county at primary election Saturday, April II, llk For County Treasurer W. G. BUFFIXGTON Of Brockwayvllle. Subject to action of Republicans of Jeffers. on county at primary election Saturday, April 11. 1908. For County Treasurer JAMES LOCKARD Of Punxsutawney. Subject to action of Republicans of Jeffer son county at primary election eaturday, April 11, laOJ. For County Treasurer W. H. BELL Of Reynoldsville. Subject to action of Republicans of Jeffer son county at primary election Saturday. April U, 1908. For County Treasurer . J. W. CDRRY Of Broogvllle. Subject to action of Repuollcans of Jeffem on county at primary eloctlou Saturdir. April U, 1WM. ' REOISTER AND RECORDER For Regiater'and Recorder IRA J. CAMPBELL Onrookvllle. Subject t) action of Republican of JofTer- son county al primary election Haturuny, April II, I out. For Register and Recorder HARRY E. DARR ' Of Ilrookvllle Sublect to action of Republicans nf Jeffer son county at primary election Saturday! April 11, 1111)8. For Register and Recorder . T. T. MILLIN Of Oliver Township Subject to action of Republicans of Jeffer- on county at primary election Saturdiy, April 1 il, I. us. For Register and Recorder W. H. LUCAS Of Rose Township. Subjnct to action of Republicans of JefTor son county at primary eloctlua Saturday, April II, IliiW. PROTHONOTARY. For Frothonotary BLAKE E. IRVIN Of Brookvlllo. Subject to action of hepubllcani of Jeffer son county at prlmaty election Saturday, April 11, mat. For Frothonotary J. G. ALLEN Of Aliens Mills Rubloct to action nf Rontibllcan of Jeffer son county at primary election Saturday April ii, twin. For Frothonotary HENRY W. MUNDORFf Of Punxsutawney Subject to action of Republicans of Jeffor- son county at the primary election Saturday, April II, , iwm. For Frothonotary DANIEL SEILER Of Sprankle Mills. Subject to action of the Republican of Jef ferson county at the primary election Satur day, April 11 1908. . COUNTY COMMISSIONER For County Commissioner J. S. COOPER . Of Ilrockway villa. Sublect to action of Republicans of Jeffej Baturd er- son county at primary election April ii, lists. For County Commissioner A. F. REITZ Of ReaverTownshlp. Subjoct to action of Republicans of Jeffer son county at primary election Saturday, April II, irfrl. For County Commissioner J.N.KELLY Of Ilrookvllle. Subject to action of Republican of Jeffer son county at primary election Saturday, April 11, 1111)8. For County Commissioner JOHN S. BARR Of Ilrookvllle. Subject to action of rtopuhlcans of Jeffer son county at ptimary election Saturday, April 11, 1'JtM. For County Commissioner FRANK McCLURE Of Reynoldsville. Subject to action of the Republicans of Jef ferson county at the primary election Satur day, April 11, 1908. For County Commissioner JAME3 INGLE3 Of McCalmon t Townsh Ip. Subject to action of tho Republicans of Jef ferson county at the primary election Satur day, April 11, im. ritOMIXENT PEOPLE. ' W. W. Astor increased his gift to the Oxford endowment fund to f 100, 000. Rear-Admiral Evans will relinquish J . ,L. k..tl.l.l. M Ja. CUII1IUKUU UL lUU UMlllOBUiy UOVfc 1U July. J. P. Morgan headed a syndicate that purchased a large nitrate field In Chile tor $12,500,000. The Hon. James Cully, son of Vis count Selby, was committed to Jail for contempt of court in abducting his daughter. Princo. Kunl, special envoy of the Emperor of Japan, arrived at Madrid, to confer on Queen Victoria a decora tion granted by the Mikado. General Hugh Cameron, the Kan sas hermit, has signified his intention of retiring from tbe woods and spend ing the remaining years ot his life la an automobile. J. C. S. Beckham, for eight years Governor of Kentucky, announced hia permanent and unconditional retire ment from politics at a banquet given him by 300 Democrats. f Dr. Jacoby, in an address before the Conference on Congestion, in New York City, said poor ventilation re sulting from crowded quarters bred and spread tuberculosis. M. D. Pokotiloff, Russian Minister to China, who was in this country In 1905 to aid in tbe negotiation ot the treaty of Portsmouth, which ended the Russo-Japanese War, died at Pekin. Brigadier-General Royal Thaxter Frank, U. 3. A., retired, died In his home In Washington, D. C, in his seventy-sixth year. He was gradu ated from the Military Academy la the class of '53. In a speech to Camp Fire Club of America, Gilford Pinchot, Chief For ester ot the Department of Agricul ture, declared that a great war is Im minent In this country, and that the forest rangers will be grouts. THE CHOPPING-BASIN. A labor-saving device U called th? chopplng-basin. ' It consists of a wooden bowl fitted with a drcular . , " ,v ..... j uc uses ivi y 1 paring left-over cold meats for hashes ' and stews. For croquette! and force meat balls a small grinder or mill is manufactured which Is a most use ful and economical addition to th kitchen shelf. New York World. The selection of forty-one enlisted men of the Army for commlaalcns as second lieutenants shows the New York Press that the door of every re cruiting office la the door to an h" able career for young American' good morals and sound physique.