! THE PATTON COURIER AIS. _- lb . ————————————————————— cea eet cg ————— me — - - —— SN ————— pt ———— EE ————— _-— ——— a z . (Continued From Page Three) Aly nad stepped hack into rhe room | frightened, but did not reply. Mr A i 3 Rareglonas, Lina rant | Byde & Langgans otic So Mr. Maclvor, on taking me in, had | Aimy, ‘however, broke promptly in: Jeune Joseph B= unt | Ribble ¥ estate no opportunity to ccinment on the “Special kindness. Since it suits Mangus, 8. e in S A red agile + s ; 3 Sako, ‘Mike ant | sonra, rie nies] Solas presence in “his” house of one Le | your taste to refer to such a thing Cea oe ands oasis nt Sieger, Jubn Gigi estate | had ordered our of it the previous | Maclvor,- you'll not- mind saying # pking, Yrs, ' [ inenalk, Louis . . real estate evening, though from his expression you mean that trip you made to Dmr QuE . B. right. ( i i : " McNally, Mrs, | AMUSE i Ci ariks, | he was not pleased. Julia grew very | row's Thursday night?” Thomass A Senin To | Fran, Wiliam ee. hi movies 3 uneasy, but Mr. Almy, placid aan Charles Maclvor sprang from. hie Ashbridge, F. . Single, Mike movies self-possessed, inquired politely what | ohair Foster, W. IL rr, ; George t| smim, 3. ovics was wanted. “That d—d sneak Case!” go the tS Harry ite pom MRE Foi movies “l ‘came to see my ccusin on per shouted, “So he’s a friend of yours SA t 5, Joseph ° re Camiriy | sonal matters,” said Maclvor, coldly too, is he, Julia?” €s ern x 3 oliver Amusement ‘0. ™ NO 8 I hi > 3 S George W | Park Amusement Co, os “By which,” Mr. Almy responded “He certainly is—a good on2# SOM = 2 rant | Fenn Theater en ..movies “you mean that bookplate you wart | 400 Julia, outraged. “You shan't IT a Hotel rests ¢ w ou vv} pla’ VN. yp $s that is grebard, Hos Festanrant | Pivoll Theater To Boro movies | i Ct hew's "Notes.” There It Is. | speak so of him! He was here today k d rywheres - pa heater Die Horo. Ce look at it. to offer me the aid refused me hy ( Take @ wonder ’ . dale erensane we NOV IES ‘alk a ae >, ¥ . ers ras tall sabia | ante Taken aback as Maclvor was by the men of my own family—and he a four of HH son hisfarm from usin; . | tvoli Theat ii Eiovies Anes this unexpected answer, he could n.1 stranger! He said he knew you, hag Tegaties using KR, Store Dawson, iis pos movies i restrain his eagerness to see (he seen you off and on all your life; be Colorado ug Store, Richwood, O. Zivillica, Carmello, vzy a Moose Theater TNE oro Foviss Miller : beokplate, He snatched it breathless. warned me against you! And be did ‘ ' Spangler prough, I an’ i : . 1 large size (four fimeg Cantelope, Jennie . BS Liberty Jheater crema NOVies | 2.1y from the Siler mans hana and right!” Yel owstone . postpai irect from p i ik D y y see 3 i ly you. SOLD ON LE = | gone view the blank back. In Stanctaciion. we | “He warned you against me, did California UARANTEE, The Sump ownship, Star Theater "movies it] the blank back. In stupefaction. he he? And he told the police | broke ringfield, Ohio. Bopp, John se Pro CavvRy W.N.U SERVICE. stared at it fully half a minute, thap |.’ , : id Out through Denver, Colo- ” Burnosky, John Grand Theater ToVies ! z 3 y a into Darrow’s late at night to stead, i rado Springs, Pikes Peak Eurosky, | Joseph CHAPTER XI—Continued of your experiences, Miss Grosvenor!" | turned on his cousin, white with rags 2 Baird, €, 0. Th movies Rivoli movies iter Te “One minute, please, Miss Grosven- or,” {interrupted Mr. Almy; “your cousin was not in business here. was (he? How would he have had to muke Palace | Rivoli The Theater “Albe y a ve Susquehanna Joseph NV. wu. Paul, movies movies Bantlera, L unt, A. Joseph . «movies umn eri i’ Tow nship. ee maim ————— deel Giobe The movies Shqueh 1s Empire’s Nero | Strum, Monae Wovies arrangemets for a short trip?’ . fiddle were no mora { | Vintondale ‘Borough. 2 " . Vintondale Amusement Co, .. ..movies “He was studying Spanish; he had ile saxophone and its | vaitn, va2Wer Yoder Towns : x a lesson every day But he said . . | Faith, ietor . musement par oD ay. ‘ cording to Sir Henry Birch, Nick restaurant Upper Yoder ahi: | lve ily t— q ord 8 glish divi Be. Mire nara campy, SIDE Mu Powuahly ont. wack readily—too readily!—that he telt ninent English divine, Morris, Walter : i restaurant | - West Taylor Township. sure he could go; and he and my - : A . ¢ Vest rro Schramko, Frank , ..amusement park oo gar: pleasure seeking, Arno, Mike restaurant | Jolinaaw, grandfather exchanged such a queer t Rome down into the Mainione, Testaurans | and’ AIT movies look; they never knew I saw it, they he declares, is trend- Raffa, Carmelo . curren TOStAUTANL { F udeville were se absorbed in themselves. Put cause it is taking the Wade, Inc Weston Brough. restaurant it was plain that they understood eople away from high Wilmore Borough. each other about some secret. My sniritualitv dde laycomb’s Gi - spirituality. Besides, eT grandfather had shown no special in- aces that hold the 3 terest in the notice about the aue- will cease to think of Johnstown tion until Clarihew’s ‘Notes’ was men- as a superman, and Johnstown tioned, and then so much, and suck of mind comes to pass Barry, Evans, Howard ..Johnstown determination to conceal it from me. on its myriad subjects Sa that I felt there was something ca will be broken once 2 iy Bhard town strange invelved, something ahem ry boldly proclaims. Dinquid, C RED RIVER FARM METHODS me, that the other two didn't want me¥to suspect. eature . Johnstown ARE AT TRANSITORY STAGE “Well, I was roused. I wondered if hey featuring in this eraanders Sanu Jopnstown things were possibly shaping to give on-dollar expense ac- Sanwie Fool Roo me a chs ance to find out about the lle Courier-Journal. arden Athletic Club Introduction of Wire Fences Marks secret .which had always surrounded to Gilmore,» Change From One Crop to my parentage; you know I had never » chronically tired te Jiorvaun ohmstewn iversified Products. been told anything about my father Kapron, De ick ohnstown — and mother—" epee ay yg Grand Forks, N. D.—Farm methods “By your grandfather?’ asked Mr. ire kind-hearted until 3 vey Tool Room, ohnstownl in the Red river valley are. at a | Almy. = in. Jills, Ernest oh ; ojnstown transitory stag and a token of the “Nor by Charles,” answered Julia: National Pool Room, 1 ohnstown f new era is the introduction of wire | “and I always thought he must have i a, se onnstown | fences. known something about them. He's Housl poly - oinstonn A decade or two ago wheat was the enough older than I am to remember Scott, V. . F. only crop produced, and a solid sea of Scott, V, F. or to have picked up something about sharp, A. J. : ohnstown § urain stretched from North Dakota to my mother.” Strand 3 ar arl st i rhs 2 § z "loo + . Strand Gilia d bent onstown Minnesota. Yields averaged 20 to 40 “Do you know how old you were Grant, Alexand Twp. bushels t the acre, the valley che < ind 9” Grant. 1 A ushe 0 the acre ind 4 Y when she died? i n Twp. § went down in history as the “bread “Four menths old. I was told that 3 , Twp . 1 oh GRYEES a Bron 28 Ashville | basket of the world,” a space un- by an old colored nurse of mine Daldachin : Joo . . heshoro fenced, where farms were broad and who had been in the family for dec- Decanio, I bountiful. ades, and who had waited on my opkins, J: ; hem i In the last eight years a tremendous mother; she also said my mother chunge has taken place. An avari- died of tuberculosis. Sha took care cious plant, the sow thistle, has swept of me only when I was very tiny, for the wheat fields, forcing average yield she ‘was sent home to Virginia for down to seven or eight bushels to the telling me as much as that. My sus acre picions about the book were nothing There was but one remedy, diversi- but suspicions; yet I was so disiressec fied farming and the productian of gpg vexed that 1 just made up my live stock. brought the wire ming to go to Richmond myself, snd fences into prominence. Farms were look at that beok, and see what was othing that has ever reduced in size amd fenced to control go interesting about it! of Bayer Aspirin as the stock. “So I went. TI wanted to avoid pain. Safe, or physi- The change now is at its height, | (ghee so I decided not to go to the se it, and endorse its with experimental f.rms throughout auction, but to the exhibition’ room Sure, or several mil- the valley, proving that a systew in- early in the day. And there, first have turned to some- cluding the raising of live stock and thing. I nearly ran straight into him! et real Bayer Aspirin production of feed. together with di- | ‘Guicicus! I was frightened! 3.4 e) with Bayer on the vercification and rotation of field | pope was a large showcase not “ar rd genuine printed in crops, will bring back the vitality of =o. where he was standing beside the soil and eradicate the thistle, the counter, so I waited behind tkat Lill other effects are attributed to until he should leave. I saw him fencing. Garden. have been planted looking at a book very carefully; 1 where tin cans ouce were piled, and couldn’t. of course, see what book farmers ure producing their own 4 was put I watched him closely. meat and milk and butter. and . . . I saw him trying to pry More than a score of creameries the bookplate off with his finger nail! : have been stirted in the valley, and s,4 then 1 heard him order the fans, it Loa a sugar beet factory is operating, US" | clerk to take a bid from him, for hough, W. B. .. ing oeets from 15.000 acres. Negotia- (Clarihew’s *Notes,” up to five hundred nh tions have been started for at least dollars, for he said he couldn't at- Adams, hii two -~anning factori s, and each year tend the auction.” Giles Floss brings the constant addition of miles “That was curious, after he went re Bards, J.P... and miles of fences. down especially to accommodate vom iester of Salicylicacld SfeCarmick, Duncan CHR SN i at grandfather,” remarked Mr. Almy. HR La a J Find Primitive Ideas “Not at all, if you knew him,” said Noftsinger, U. .real estate first time he had ever encountered | rest of the story you know, for Mr. face.” $e fulia, coolly. *He has many friends ir D T g T E dW. of Medicine Sound Richmond, really a large social circle. MPROVED Airum. Mortis er Washington.—Any custom that has le didn't want to go down solely on Roberts, Roy held its own for generations usually account. of that book, | assure yon. PY QUICKLY z I ar nelio, voy ih has something back of it, no matter | 4 fice hundred dollars! Judging arter’s Little Liver Pills BROKERS’ LICENSES. how little it appears to be supporied |... what jittle | know about some Purely Vegetable Laxative Smorin, | FO aa hour) (Bere 3 xe | by modern science, in the opinion of | . prices my grandfather paid ve fhe bomle free from restos & Hehe eet meeSchanse | fmol 8, Cumming, surgeon general of | «,; gijiilar hooks, it wasn't worth one 8 the symem pf Sonuting Kipilo, John . — real estate | the United States public health serv- mndred! He might well have been eo, Lang, G. M i td al el ice. a ure he would get it. Then he went by the entire family. ok Township. oul eatite “For a thousand years,” he says. | 1 ,nd I went and asked for the d 75¢ Red Packages. " rerndule Boreusn, |. '*'¢| “the Chinese have prescribed the | Lk ti examine it. And when I got it. SIEPILLIS Galler, 4, 0 oe arousal, heads of a powdered toad fish as a almost fainted. It didn’t have a real a Ob Cn “UF remedy for heart trouble, and mow | L..hlute in Kk at all!” oe — ’ Yennek, Julius xchang adrelin, the most up-to-date drug for “Ne.” said I, “it had a drawing that Juito Bites Kinney & sons 1 e} the irentment of heart disease, has | ., uid ddceive slmost anybody but an Martin Rea «| been found to exist in the head glands rise.” d Venomous Insects Marin Keay © Sera I e | of that fish “Tt was a wonderfully skillful piece NFORD’S Re Toh rei] estate “For generations the faet that towork.” said Julia It seemed very OF MYRRH Nedimyer, p, ty oe Yowushin. cal estate| American Indian hunters always chose (range ta me that anyone would to refund your mosey for the Forabaush Jouthmun , Borough. veil ‘odtute | the liver and the white men the meat ike a drawn bookpliate, unless for ff not aujts Stonycreek Township, when the animals they had trapped we special hock, in event, perhaps. — w "© “Johnstown. i “1 or killed were divided, was quoted as weident to the metal plate from PARKER’S Jo Gon 15st : | proof of their ignorance and primitive hich the regulur bookplates were AIR BALSAM. 1u23 te | development, : raved I wondered what there Restores Color and + | “Yet in the last tive years the great s al that very queer bookplate ARE Spence Hin Jsokios oa | nutritive value of liver has come to it made my two relatives so anxious Chem, Ws, | Pentord & Son garry He Lk] be recog mized and it is prescribed in voconceal it from me, I was dis MPOO—Ideal for use in mo te | dnses’of anemia.” teted ; 1 hadn't an idea what to do. conis by tor ore Co. il Le Maine Puilet Lays util 1 heard a voice asking for that | Works, Patchogue, N 4 bistute te . I aok. It was Mr. Burten's: | recog 4 Yolkless Triplets ized it at the auction. ft gave we URGH, NO. 24, 1928, | Orono, Maine.—I['resh esas all Vv iden. — : . [ hitched together in a string like *Chartes wasn't going to the sale; Gra ! real te Christmas tree ornaments startled | wime oné else was interested in the Is Need | Fea ee Lom, ~Accepl. Ae OE ‘| Clifton W. Meservey of Union, Maine, | ook I then and there resolved to - | fie, Howard J. tate | when he peered into one of his pul 0 to the auction in the faint hope | 3 olman, s. i i els’ nests. wt some one might outhid Charles. y Soap | Hower. te] There were three eggs, joined to- | 1 that event, | resolved to find out them soft and Howsn Bea, gether like Siamese twins. Collect: | “ho it was, and keep track of the ther hot or cold el aoa, on Sanase ively, they were nearly five luches | } ook uniil I could either learn the thoroughly. If Kantner, 51, © real estate | long. But the ambitious pullet, in truth about it or perhaps even buy use hot water Korns, P, laying her freak eggs, overlooked | iz, If Charles succeeded in getting bing in Cuticura | ' : ; ° | something, Not one of them had at ie book, I felt sure I'd have little g, especially at \ Levy's Loan Offi | yolk, chance of ever seeing it again. | Meet, & Juehner o mdse| ©. M. Wilbur, Maine extension | can't tell you how his attitude and o. Taleum 5c. Sold LE Toons 4, a ee poultry specialist, said that it was the | my grandfather's terrified me! ‘fhe ng Stick 25c. i FEL BE Teal etate| 8 case with Just these character- Burton got the book.” 4 lurk Realty Co. real estate. jorics, | “A vey clear, interesting account Penn Real Estate real estate said Mr. Almy “I'm much obliged to you, and I sha’'n’t trouble you further teday if I can help. it. use your telephone a moment, please?” May I just if you The door closed on him. My real chance to speak to Julia Grosvenor had come at last. “Yes,” I said quietly, and 1 know way, ton got that book; “Peter Bus and se do you. It was for your sake. It he didn’t understand at out of pure chivalry, vas to help you out of a difficulty all. He did *t because ne knew you were fn great need of just that service. i 1 Yau can see he has not Charles Maclvor Stood Before Us. broadcast his deed, source of information mond is the clerk And ever since that has been Julia either, Mr. from purchase, in ne end of hot water.” groaned—moved, Almy’s about Rich the galleries. Peter indeed, far beyond what I had expected. “What “Mr, price, hs Darrow to begin with, bore the blame in silence, s happened?” she gasped. was furious over the Peter Burton The lega: society which had ordered the book— for which —then refused niticn of him day caused which he entirely it, in Peter ostensibly bought It Then the shop on Mon- a great deal of comment, ignored. your recog: He is not in the best of spirits; but if I know Peter Burton—I have known him seven years—he is seeing this thing through without flinching. finish help hoping you'll Miss Grosvenor: tell us about the grandfather's suspicion, for suspicion over you. turn for the unswerving So I can’t your story, all you know mystery surrounding your death; clear yourself of does hang Oh, don’t make a poor re- confidence shown in you by this week of silence and suffering!” Julia's face “was breath came in gasps. could not speak; were again full “Oh,” she whispered blanched, when raised her eyes from the floor, of tears. her At first she she finally they huskily, “but you don’t know how poor my best re- turn would be—" ! and badly frightened, but attempring under bluster, ahead of me to conceal’ his fright “Thought you'd get again, did you?” “l don’t know what Charles,” said Julia. “Likely stery! Got the bookplate through your new confidante, Migs Fuller, did you? 1 don't think yon’d arouse all her sympathies if you told her your whole story.” “Miss Fuller brought me the bouk plate because she knew I had an in- terest in it,” cried Julia, arouse. “l have as much right to it as you have!” Charles opened his eyes. “‘AS much!” he echoed; *“‘as much!» He looked at her hard, studying her. “How much is that?’ She looked back at him innocent- A “1 know you mean. you and grandfather bett wanted that book, Clarihew's ‘Notes,”” she said quietly, “and 1 know I wasn’t allowed to go and get it, sc I suspect that there may be something about it you don't want me to know.” “What?” Her natural sincerity gave her away. “I don’t know,” she admitted. “You don’t know !” repeated Charlas, triumphantly. “You just implied it was the bookplate. Be careful, Julia: you're stumbling. What was it about the bockplate that interested you?’ I felt he was testing her to see how much she knew. [ glanced at Mr. Almy, imploring him silently to stop the questioning, but he did not see me, Julia looked at her cousin, af- fronted. “Perhaps i1 was the same thing that interested you, when you tried to pry it off the cover in the exhibition room at Richmond!” sh- flung at him. He almost sprang out of his seat. “You were here, were you?” he cried “Spying on me?” “I have much right in any ex- hibition room as any cne!” cried Julia. “Don’t dare speak to me that way! Why were you so interested in the bookplate yourself?” “You'll :ever know that!” her cousin. “And a lot of bookplate , has done you, Keep it!” He gave it one praising glance and flung table. “T will keep it,” returned Julia, calmly; ‘or, rather, Miss Fuller will. She has charge of it.” And she hand- ed it to me. His suspicions blazed up again. “You've been lying to me! That bookplate’s not all there! The idea of pretending you don't know what I'm talking about!” “If,” said Julia, reflectively, “taking all our circumstances into considera tion, part of the bcokplate is not there, according to your judgment, and if there is something secret about it which I must not know because it would be to my advantage and against yours, I guess that you were expecting to find down at Richmond some document which weuld give me a right to part of the estate!” “So this is why you've been fin cahoots with all that gang at Dar. row's—Burton, and his sister, and this woman, Anybody he stormed. “I haven't an idea what you mean!” cried Julia. “You've been as sneered good the hasn't {t? final ap- it on the else?” working against me, She was interrupted. A latch key | after the special kindness I showed sounded in the front deor. Charles | you!” The emphasis in his words Maclvor stood before us. was deadly. But before he could speak, Mr. Julia gave a start, and looked CREST RIEARRRS RST Carillon Playing 5 at Its Best in Belgium Belgium is the classic land of bells. To the Belgians belongs the honor of having first felt and as truly ingly, used bell musical sounds, they devised that colossal tones accord- mu- and, sical instrument and tower and belfry known as the carillon. is a set of from 15 to H0 The carillon or more bells, cast in sizes that sound each its own scale tone. played from a *arilloneur, Dr. Henry fry, call by a him, This battery keyboard room below the open or as Eames, of bells is placed in a laiticed bel- the French president of the Society of American Musicians, in Child Life is not writes, keyhoard Magazine, unlike The an electric switchboard, with its handles replac- ing the keys on an ordinary piano keyboard, and another set of pedal keys, like that on a pipe organ, to be played upon by the player's feet, This Don’t Blame the Women Nothing is going to stop the prodi- gality with which women spend time and money on cosmetics because not only women, but the men who admire them, are convinced that it is worth § all it costs.—Woman's panion, Home Com- arillon keyboard stands today practi- cally the same as it did in the Six- teenth century, when the most famous of all bell-casting and carillon-playing families—the Van den Gheyns of Bel- gium—brought the art of belfry play- ing to its highest point. The Ant- werp cathedral carillon has 65 bells, St. Rombold’s singing tower in Ma- lines has 44, Bruges 41, Ghent 39 and Louvain 40. Indian Names Indian place-names, it is pointed out, may refer to physical characteristics of the place, to incidents in the his- tory of the time, or to associations of a tribe with a region. Examples may be seen in Saskatchewan river (swift flowing), Battle river (place of numer- ous battles) and Ottawa river (river frequented by the Ottawa tribe). Another point is that Indian tribes generally had two names—the name they gave themselves and the name given them by their enemies—and in many cases the names which have been used by the white man have been ‘“epemy” names, This accounts for the very uncomplimentary names which some Indian tribes bear, suppose, by way of helping you?” “No,” interpesed Mr. Almy, suava ly, “Mr. Case did not mention tie circumstance.” Maclvor turned violently on his cousin. “Then you did! You're the one per- son who knew 1 was going, and you knew well why! For your own safety, you try to betray me, do you?” “Charles,” Julia denied, “I did not say one word about it!” “Do you expect me to believe that? Who did, then?” “l1 did,” said 1, boldly, “1 saw you at my desk, from where 1 was stand- ing in the north gallery I”? “Then it’s a conspiracy against me, in beha infuriat If of you, is it?’ shouted the ed Maclvor te his cousin. “Very well, then it's time for me to explain why 1 went to Darrow's. Here's the reason!” Heedl stretched to the one of and sng lower cried, a Julia, back hands. Mr, ject. It wa bases and a and Almy of ess of her cry, of her hand out to stop him, he dashed rear of the roem, threw open the glass-doored hookcases. itched a small object from a shelf. “That's what 1 nd flung overcome covered he while sank her went to it on the table, by his fury, her face with get!” picked up the small ob- S a cube-shaped brass box, the which were about an inch half square. He revolved it slowly in his hand, and we could see it from protruded nearly wide sl base. center screw t ter of a Lown, of was st the a from a tom, me, [ instar the bo the for clinchir which mind a strumer plate i | pattern | note! But J identify than Almy g and ter | slid readily Jeside as I saw— every angle. From the a thick black metal shaft an inch in length, out of _a )t about half the length of the this shaft, in the very of the top. was a flat black hat steod out perhaps a quar- n inch on the round base of its ink into the box. On the side box, just below the shaft, small black lever projecting small slet, And on the bot- he slowly turned it toward pattern of slots which itly recognized! Straight across ttom base they ran, in just mation I had seen elsewhere, for me that conviction instantly sprung to my Ss Mr. Almy picked up the in- it: 1 had seen it on the book- n miniature; I had seen the of these slots on my yellow top 18 had had little time to do more the instrument. Mr rasped the box in his left hand itatively pressed the shaft. It along the wide slot in “That D—d Sneak, Case!” He Shouted the top, and reaching thé other end stopped there, caught in place by the springing back of the small black lever in the small slot just below 3ut as he had pressed the shaft. be had held the bottom of the box te ward me, and from each slot | had seen a small sharp blade flash, all of them in one moment, describing a semifircle and disappearing again into the box as the lever sprang. And now Mr. Almy let go of the shaft and pressed the little lever. And as he did so, the actior of the instru ment was reversed: with lightning swiftness, the flashing little blades all sprang out again from their hiding place inside the box, describing u semicircle in the opposite direction to their first course, and vanished with a loud click that shaitered the silence In that strange old-fashioned room! (TO BE CONTINUED.) Region, Royal Gorge, Salt Lake City, American River Canyon to the Pacific Coast. Choice of routes returning, including the famous Golden State Route through the Apache Trail Country, Land of Romance. Very Low Round Trip Fare Stopover anywhere a For full particulars /4 mail this coupon EEE ES RCEESRERE Ew EEsEERRD ROCK ISLAND VACA TON TRAVEL SERVICE BUR 418-19-20 Park Bldg., Pitaburgh, Pa. Please send me your free book describing 0 Colorado O Yellowstone 0 Californie ] All-Expense Colorado Tours {check hack or books desired): also informtiom regarding low summer fares and train schedules Name _______.._ a ce Sse Address. iar — 20 Live Oppo tunity For aggressive salesmen and district ¢ rs, Start business of your t co-ope on, Good pay; no required. We can place you in * Home territory if desired. Call or PHILADELPHYA BRUSH CoO, 933 Fulion Bldg. Pittsburg gh, Pa. Automobile & Radio Jatteries le and Retail, made; low e. Whip-le sell- for less. From factory to yea, ex- pr pre aid. Send fc fr price list, THE PROGRE ISSIVE BATTERY MFG, COMPANY 2470 E. 98h Street Cleveland, Ohio. HARDY A NORTHERN ) CAL tr GROWN CABBAG E IFLOWER PL AN 18 Chemic: 1 Ds: rival fe ar- Jersey Gjary R31 yment, a itowery PORT B. ME FOMATO PLANTS, oper field grown, Great- ore nd Ne ¢ sprayed for 1,800, Satisfs ction Fé Hawesville, Ky, Full cut Strong Ma y rig All Tran er. Pa = Men and Women. Al Smith License I 8 1S sells Richly Auto If Art Co., 1 Search for lest storehouse of ite for regort, De nham Bldg., Denve mine, ‘Society, t Golg¢ Hh inaneing he AGENTS WANTED : each bottle 230% profit; 5» cents. COUGHL ANS PHAR- HAVEN, CONN. Document of Old Date John W. A. Green, regis of deeds of Exeter, N. H., has recetzed a deed dated April 11, 1760, which is the old- est document to be recorded during his term as register. The deed con- veys 30 acres of land in Hampton from Peter Johnson to Josiah Monl- ton for the sum of £2,755. It has the legal seal and reads in the thirty-third year of the reign of -Gegrge II, king. The document was found In tracing a title and it was discovered that it had never been recorded. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers