7TV - fiwjfiffiMlli,,; OitTOV VOL. v v All MILFORD, PIKE COUNTY. PA., FRIDAY. APRIL 2i). 15)10. NO 2G Pike BRIEF MENTION Rumor say that Hotel - Sobanno In Dingman township baa been hot by Charles Schanno who baa been at Lakewood, N, J. for aoroe time with hii sister, and that ebe will also retnra here. She formerly owned the place and under ber management It acquired a wide rep station for the excellence of Ita cul vine No doubt thin will be fully maintained' and the house will en Joy a full alinre of popular Baron age. ., W. J. Nearpass who waa born at Mill Rift tbia county April lOih, 1832 and lived there a number of year, then removed, to Sandyston, N.- J. aod In 1870 went to Port Jervis, where for some time be waa in the coal business, died in that city Wed netday morning after a very brief tlinraa. His daughter is the wlte of ex eointy treasurer K B. Labar. The funeral will he held tomorrow at S p. ui. Wood ashes alionld not bn piled over or close around the body of a plant. Bow the ashes before tbe plants' afw set and rake or harrow them In tbe soil. Gapes in little chickers are morr or leaa prevalent this month. . It l better not to let them run on the' same" ground, that was' used lam year, especially if the chicks then Were affect cjd With tbe disease. Enumerator H. A. Oaillut has fin ished taking the censn in the Boro and deal res If any have been oroil ted ' thV- they ' will communicate with him that the work may be aa complete a pcasible. ' A severe storm last week in tbe middle west followed by frosts in j u red fruit to the extent of millions of dollars. It was particularly disaa trooa In Michigan, Iowa and Illinois, and already there are- prediction that price .Will be affected. It was the worst storm in a generation. A large force of workmen "is em ployed do tbe hour of Mrs. Harman now(ln, coarse of erection at Raj- , mondfkHl.'vif the former owner, who grazed hia sleep over tbe hills bo which the house' and a or rounding tmprovemeuts are placed, could view 4lhe premises he would realize tiiat barren land .way become invested with value for lta location. The house comraeVils,' an extended view of the val ey and w a large aud imposing structure. When furnished it will be couipUte in all Ma appointments, and, lighted with eject rloity, will atrid as a beacon for a largo terri tory lx hlt state and Mew Jersey. T. B. Morse and wife of' New York were lo town uver last Sunday. It waa erroneously stated last week that the accident to tbe large, auto cf the D. V. T. Co. happened on Marvin hill. In fact tbe ma chine ran off a, little fyor foot bank Dear the lino of J. C. Rose, and was not iu the least iujored nor were any Of tbe passenger. It waa one of those happenings which do not in any wise refloct on the management or the driver of tbe oar. '. Tbe supervisors of Delaware town- j snip are .wiaeuing tue river roaa i cave bank and points lower down This i easily done with a road ma china and shows that toe proper spir It is moving them. - Branchvllle N. J. will have its In surance rates out 23 because of Its satisfactory water system. . - In a few weeks train on the Penn sylvaois railroad will run to the new station in New York, supplant log tbet ferry -boat. The station haa Barea of 28 acrea with SI miles of ft rack's and 4 miles of passenger p'atforma. It will be the largest and flmas terminal statins in the world. Andrew Yetter of Blairstown, who is a large real eseate owner In Newtoo, baa Just sold five bouses in that - town, which accomodated 27 families aa tenauts. He owned before selling them IS house. There are 194 automobiles owned In Sussex, N. J. Wolter, who was convicted of mar der for killing a young girl to bis apartment in New York and burniug bar body on the fireplace baa been sentenced to be electrocu'el tha week beg inning June 6tb. Mia. O. a Van Wyok of Washing tofci D. C., waa a guest in town this week. , Svilllam Townaand of Boabklll, Wb6 toasted of killing two wild gee near that place, baa aettled with D. Y. B rod head for tt for two laaaa gaaa whose properly they ef Tho Honesdale Automobile Coin-! pany seems to bo do'ng a Rood bus!- j and the line is well DHtronized. It parallels the Erie but the service on the road Is so Iridiffrfient that passeu gers prefer the other method of transit. If a town cannot have a trolley road nn auto line is the uext best. i Mrs Wyess committed suicide at Matainoras Monday afternoon by eev ering nn artery in her wrist v. ill) a razor. She was found soon after committing the deed but bled to death before a physician arrived. A yoong lady In Philadelphia, cashier iu n store on a salary of til week, bought an automobile and enjoyed rldeiand gnodrliimeia. Now she is under arr.'sl for euibtzilesneni but then she had a good time while it lasted. The Massachusetts Legislature favors electing United. States Hons tore bv popular vote. BjnniMio, tbe famous Norwegian novelist, died in Paris Tuesday, aflei a long illness il paralysis. Paul Schanno of Riverside) Hotel in Wimin, who is vrrv ill with pneumonia, was visited this vwli by his brothers Leon and Charles i t Lakewood. N. J. Mrs. Louis .1. Husson of Dingmat; township is suffering with pneu monia. Twelve Mile Pond In Porter town ship and some. 3000 (teres of land surrounding have passed into control of sportsmen from Wilkes Bar re, Scranton, Eiston and Strcmdsborg fbey will establish a fish and game preserve and make it a summer out ing resort - '. ' : George A Daumann and Martha E. Fleg, both of this County, were married lust Saturday afternoon by Rev. C. A. While. Hon. A. . Mitchell Palmer M Strondsburg made a brief visit here last Saturday and now the light ol bla countenance shines benignantly On tbe faithtnl from uearly every shop window in town. Milford Auto Co has equipped its garage with gasoline lamps wbioh afford a fine light. The gas la snp plied through a very small hollow wire. Lewis Luckey of Matamoras ami Catharine Adler of New York were married last Friday by Rev. A. C. Corey. ' Three rafts it Is said have floated down the river this spring. H. W. Buchanan of Dicgraan tap. who returned home from New York last week where he wa9 under treat ment tor bis health, is improved and ia assured by physicians that he is on the road to recovery from bis long iltneas. This will be cheering newa to his many friends . Miss Bertha Fieg of Newark, N. J., visited ber parents near town last week In effect tbe 30th of April. 1910 tbe post office will be open for the delivery ot mail on Sundays from 8 30 until 8.45 p. m., (after the hour of publio worship.) H. S. ANGLE, Postmaster. President Taf t has nominated Gov Hughes of New York to be an asso ciate justice of the Supreme Coort f tbe Uuited States. He will not take Lis seat until next October. The ap pointment will give general satisfac tion for it waa feared by many tbata corporation lawyer would be named. Damaging frosts and snow did great injury to orop in'aome south ern states Monday. Iu Georgia, Mississippi and as fur south as Texas aerious effect will be felt. IoNew. foundlauil the lertiperatnre ranged to 85 above, when by all precedents it should have been below freezing. Five men, union tlu-m Henry Brink, who was tried end acquitted of tbe murder of Cooperman, were arreau-d lat eek in Montague, N. J., by C-h.Mirdeus for dvnamiting tbe Delamare. They were fined f 200 each. Some paid ti e fine aud others are working out the fine iu jiil Tbe family of John Haley will oc cupy the bouse nf W. H. Warner on High alreet this summer. Normal school oocrses have t-en made four yeara and the course of study haa teen changed Mechanics in town are very buy. New building coroui6nceJ and ihie lo ejurae of ererlion give employ- ineut to all here aud the demand U s great that out of town help is asked. Angelon Brother have a contract for painting and decorating Grey Tower and are In seed of good workmen to ait. The annual election foroffloor of Mlltord Water Co., will be held at the office of C. W. Bull Monday evening May 8. The annual meeting for election ot officers f ir MUford Bridge Company for the ensuing year will be held Monday May , at the office of J. H. Van Etten, Secretary, In Milford, at 2 p. m. Like true forestry enthusiasts. Mr Pincbot and Mr Roosevelt took to the woods for their Brat interview. Statesmen find a peculiar relax ion in base ball. Tbe umpire fre queutly enablea a man to forget all j hia enemies Uncle Sitm'a -purse la taking oa fleah very fast. , .- Pefhap all this bribery baa some- tiling to do with the high cost of liv nig. Matamoras people' are opening a ne.v street to reacn tne uemeiery lately laid put near the boro. High prices of living are affecting many people and some are obliged to curtail in the matter of buying because of a scarcity of money. 'What will we do with bitn?" in quires, the Charleston News and Courier, referring to Mr. Roosevelt. What, rather, will he do with nsT Delaware has refused topardoD one of the "Gas" Addloks bribe givers, which goes to show that she is deter mined that the passing of Addtcklsin shall atey passed. Now that "what ia whisky" has been settled by President Taft, bow about a commission beaded by Prof. Ross, and composed wholly of per sons, with no newspaper experience, to decide what ia newa? Municipal grafters sometimes do as much towards making living ex penses as the trusts. Insurgent, spare that tariff!!' Touch not a alngle grab, exolaima Father Bereno Payne. . Senators Hale and Aldrich have signified their intentiona of retiring from the Senate next March at the expiration of their preaent terms. These two Senators bave dominated the Senate for aeveral years, but it ia thought that Cummins, of Iowa, La Follette, of Wisconsin snd Beveridge of Indiana, will be the trio to direct the future actions of the Senate. The Senate Will therefore be In the bands of tbe Republican insurgents, to a large extent. The meanest man in Pittsburg ia the banker briber, who falsely made oath that bis father, now dead, started bim aa a grafter. A little row among Republicans is always productive of a big Jollifica tion among Democrats, aod then they get up a atill bigger row, aa Mr. Taft aays. Annent tbe appointment of Gover nor Hnghes to tbe Supreme Court bench, Bryan aays ''he is a corpora tion man and may be expected to favor all legalized -robbery.'' Socb has not been hia reputation while in office. Port Jervis school autboritlea bave decided to eliminate orations and essays by members of tbe graduating class at commencement and In their place to substitute an address by some speaker of note. An extensive cave in of aand and dirt caused by tbe rain lai't Monday night has blocked tbe eaatern end of tbe Erie tunnel at Otiavilie. Tbe banka are some 76 feet high and the soil of a loose and shifting character. Joseph Schanno baa changed tbe name of his famed Cheatnut Grove liou) in Dlngmaa township to Schanno House. T. C. Broadbead and wile of Del ware Water Gan came op tbe river last week in a motor boat to Port Jervia, and tbe ascent aa far as this place waa made also by another party in a like style of or ft. Eliza Quick, wife of Frank Van Leaven, died In Matamoras Tuesday evening aged about aixty years. M. M. Van Etten of Palo Alto, Cat. ia visiting relatives in tows. Tbe great Increase In value of land in Long Island, formerly used ex tensively for trucking purporaea, baa sent many application for farms in I New Jersey. Tue low cost ot farms ; there and the increased transDarta- ,cU1le. by wy ot th, tuoDeIt Daturaly ha, started an influx of peo ple , y, dlrec,loo. With Intensive ' farming such aa was of neoaasity practiced on tbe Island there farm will soon be made very productive and probable. 6ubCTibe for tbe Press. NEWS FROM WASHINGTON The past week has furnished noth ing startling from a legislative or an exf outlve point o' view at the capital of the Uuited States. But there is not the slightest abatement of inter est in tbe political situation which Is seriously discussed wherever men of Information and prominence in polit ical affairs come together The elec tion of Havens, Democrat In New York, to succeed Perkins, Republi can, deceased, and this election re versing a 10,000 Republican mrjority fry a 6,000 Democratic majority, practically changing 16,000 votes, is regarded as exlemely significant of general dlssatlsfactisn with tbe nat ional political situation and program. As far as oan be discerned, the dis satisfaction is mainly with the tariff bill of the special session and (he President's persistent approval ot It. It seen.8 to be in vain that Senator A'drich and Representative Payne and tbe President point to the fact that the revenues of the government are Increasing and that there is fair prosperity under the present tariff. Tbe election in New York coming so quickly upon tbe heels of FWa vic tory in Massachusetts, is regarded as Indicative of a nation-wide move ment whloh some say only Roosevelt oan stem. Others ask, "Will Roose velt be able to stem it? Will he not rather join it?'' Time alone can tell. It is oertain that the country is fol lowing the triumphant procession of Roosevelt in Europe more closely than the standpat attitude of the President in Washington.1 During the week the tpisode of the visit of tbe editor of the New York Amerioan, William Randolph Hearst, to Washington, his long in terview with, the President and his subsequent eulogy of Taft given out to the press, haa been tnnch com mented on. He was received at the Capitol by members and Senators with it appears almost as much en thusiasm as was Bryan a few days before. There are those who say that Mr. Hearst is playing for the presidential nomination in 1912. Much litlereal and significance is attached to the announcement by Senators Aldrich and Hale that their Senatorial terms will by their own volition end on the 4th of March next. These Senators are tbe bead of the little ooterie in tbe Senate that haa very completely ruled in that highest legislative body for a long term of years. - Mr. Hale is seventy- four years old and Mr. Aldrich sixty- sight. They belong rather to a past political era than that ol tbe present. Tney ere both in a degree provincial Mown. East" statesmen and are not to accord with the broader, more modern and more progreaaive senti ment of the nation. The oncoming younger class of statesmen aa repre sented by Cummins, Beveridge, La- Follette and Dol liver, more nearly repreaent tbe feeling ol tbe oatiou with reference to domeatio and for eign policies. FOR RENT! ONE of the finest store rooms in Milford, Corner Broad and Catharine Street from April 1st. Also two cottages ; one 6 rooms, water in both. Enquire of Milford, Pa. A. D. BROWN LICENSE TRANSFER Nolle Is hereby alien that ao sppHca tion will be mad to the J udgv of the Court of Quarter Beaslou of Pike County on May fi , 1910. for th transfer of tbe re tail liquor license of Percy Lyman for hotel In Milford Borough; to Albert Cot- tertll. JOHS C WESTBROOK, JK , April S7, M10. . Clerk Aliens Cannot Hunt Tbe Court of Allegheny County holds that tbe Act of May 8th. 190 prohibiting the killing of game by un naturalized foreign boro residents, and providing tbat possession by a foreigner of a shot gun or rifle out side a building shall be conclusive proof of violation thereof, punishable by oon 0o tion and fine or Imprison meut, is inteodad to create two dis tinct offences; first, bunting game by aliens: and, second, having pot-na-ioo of a shot gua or rifle, and does not offend against tbe due prooew of law clause of the 14h Amendment of the Federal Constitution. The edge of tbe cold wave which struck tbe West aod South reached here yesterday. Blosaoms are far ad j make rich red blood; give clear akin, deceased to i idi.k Mjj or and Edwin suffering, try them. Only 00?. Per var eed and a too severe drop might rosy cheeks, fire complexion, health. ' N. Stcn. land in Milford lo xnship feet saiinfaciion guaranteed by Al Ii jreit Inj-iy. 'Try them. SIC at All DruggnU. U 11 seres, Dr tv.Limuiel farm tWiO Draisls. NOTES FROM SANDYST0N In inv items of a former date I stated that about 80 of the pupils were not attending school. A school official asserts that I am 20",; too high, and if that is true, what is nnr truar t officer doing. Sowing of oats continues Some tave finished, while others are jot ting the ground ready. This week ' will probably see the finish of that orop. Some time ago our Committee oi - dered a new set of guide boards, nnil the contractor is at work putting them np. They look brighter, but should have been much larger. While the P. O. Dept. prefer that senders of letters have a "return'1 on their envelopea scarcely one in ten put it un. And for that reason many letters wrongly directed never find their destination and they event ually are sent to the Dead Letter Office. The contracts for building the Mnc- adeni road from Tut Ill's Corner to Ijayton will be opened on May 12th, and the work will oommenco earlv in June is the latest. If this is Inl and I have no reason to doubt I' why expend a lot ol money on repair Ing this piece of road. Our enumerator is making good profrcss in his work, but does not Snd many who have filled the hlar.ks sent them in advance. Borne of the questions are rotisid cred Impertinent but must be an swered all the same. Tbe suit for ejectment between John Henry and Asher Snook, both of Branchvllle, excited a good deal of in.'erest here. The land in dispute is valueless, but both were bound to try It out, and when tbe end cam tbe Court daelded that the disputed land did not belong to either. When a hotel violates the law in tbe sale of intoxicating drink, the law should luterfere If the ca.-o can be clearly proven, but when malic ia the prlnoipal factor in the case the ' wm.l .hillLI ha t,,.IA..1 In l...w.in.r the complaint, the complainant pay Ing all costs. The Borden Milk Company Is now pulling about 150 cans of milk ucros tbe mountain. One double team pulls 69 cans, an 1 thai with tbe addition of the weight of the wagon makes a big load. The two companies running a tele phone line through this valley should see to it that their poles are put in position. Every here and tbere is one sus pended by the wires. A party ol Hv3 cyollsls passed through Layton on Saturday with Dingmans Choice their ohJcotiVH point. They were Mr. and Mrs. I . S. Freeman, Miss Katharine Clark I P. H. F. Smith and L. C. C'o'e, a 1 of Morrlstowo, N. J. Hotels buying their bottled drinks are required by tbe Newton bottler; to charge five cents for the bottle, if taken away, and to refund It whe i the bottle is returned. Go along any of our reads, and you will find score of bottles and they have lost a good many dollars in past yeara. Aaron Losey of this town Is lyu.g critically ill at the home of Joshua Shay and grave fears are entertained of recovery. Don't it make you mad when isbing to nse the telephone to heur the click of listener taking down their receiver to listen to what you have to say. It Is a shame that cne can have no privacy when talking over tbe phone. What a lot ot tronble can be mad by a anit In Court Innocent partii are compelled to atteDd as witne.-si-s and at an exense unlocked f it, D(j often the case is not noticed. Trout fishing is next in order, but tbe tales of big strings are not told as yet. Occasionally one of those big stories Is told, but the one telling the story is too well known and tbat ends the spread of that "whop per." TtiA li cr In fwtuinltr nllAnitinff tn . . , . . hr tiiislnaa u-hen one of nnr mcr. chants shiped 40 crates r f t-ggs, and did not aend all he had taken in at that, tbe pat week. The Call Of The Blood for Doriflcatlon. finds voice to piui puts, boils, sallow complexion, a Jaun diced look, moth paichesand blotches on the skin, all signs of liver trou - ble. But Dr. King's New Life I'ilis A GENEROUS GIFT. As an expression of her interest In the Htnta's work for the tuberculous poor, Mrs. B. l' Jones, widow of the Pittsburgh steel inainifiicturer, has off -red Health Commissioner Dixon her inaKthhYcnt ootli.e and grounds at Cresson. It lies close by the tract of laud given the Common wen It h by Andrew Carnegie for Its Western Snaatorium far tuberculosis. Tho cottngu which Is said to have origiunlly cost ah.int $1ft,(00, is largo eiiouiili lo rteooniodato at least 20 tuberculous patients and no lime will lie lost In getting it ready for such occupancy. As the cottage is in g.xid repair tills will not lake long so that the bciu fits of the high altl tudo and healthy climate of Cresson will soon be enj ytd by a number of poor suffirer.i. In the meantime the Sanatorium buildings on the Car ne,ilo tract will be rapidly pushed forward. The lot on which the i!J story Jones' cottaga stands is about 100 ft front a'lil H0 It. di:up. There are in nil thirteen tied rooms In the build ing, most of them large and c imfort able, with big liny windows into which the sun may pour Its healing rays. Wide porches almost surround the cottngu. Ilerotlin pntionts may sit iu their rest chairs injoying the pure lu-untiiu air and having a view ot a surrounding country whose ecuino beauty is unsurpassed. Mrs. Jones' lift to Ilia Common wealth, like Unit of Mr. Carnegie, is particularly cr.ilifying in that it s! i o.vs the coinpli te conliiience thai exists in tint Htate's campaigh against tubeictilnsia. Saved From The Grave ' I had about given up hope,, alter nearly f ur years of suffering from a severe lung trouble," writes Mrs M L I)ix, ofClniksville Tenn, "(Mien the pain in my chest would lie almost iinbearntilo and I could not do nnj work, but Dr. King's Now Discov ery bus mdn mu feel like a new per son. Its thii best medicine made for the thro t and luos Ohstinatc eoliths, Mtilborn colds, hay fever, In grippe, n-.llin.il, croup, bronchitis and hciuorrhaKO-s, honrsor.ess and Whooping roiiiili, yiold quickly to this wonderlul medicine Try it. GOo and 81.00. Trial bottles fieo. Guaran teed by All Drulsts. Lobster Palaces In the current number of Collier's Weekly is an article under the above cap:ion ilesmiliing the gay resorts In New Yoik whero the rich disairt themselves in tho evenings and dis play their diamonds and dress, or lack of it, Willie they feed. Amonp them one is noted tho Cafe lie I' Op era where no one not in evening dress was allowed on the tlrst floor. It was the first to start the innova tion and seemed Kipolar with alarrc clnn of those women who are rone to wear abbreviated garments above the wairt line, it s ems however for Mime reason to have fallen into financial difficulties according to an article in tha Times, which says it was surndsed that former BoesCrok er had invested largely in the enter prise-lut in an interview with our townsman Kdwurd Cahill he asserted tbat he, and cot Crokur, was the on fort in ate or. o v.bo bad tied uu in tne g;itti-r;.g menagerie. Mr. C ini;l : ti. . -u.e. cf the Mace and tie art:' !! mv- I: has gone into the hands f n receiver. Wby it wa not su 'C. -y',u U not s ated, but it c- rtiin'y ' u'd rot I iveb i n Luau.-i' of its lark of loli-tei ;uu diameter il the accoun'n are true. Worse Than Bullets. bullet h ice of en c.iu.ed less i-tir erim; lo s idi. is I nn the ci zeu.a L. Vi ll.riiorin, Iiirliiu t n, Me. got i in the ar.ny, and si.fr. red w it U, fi-r.y vears. ' L;.t liu.-Ufu'a Arnica Sasve cured me v. hen a'i i !o failed,'1 he writes (Jrc,i!it healer for Sores Ul cers, lioiV; Burn.-, Cu's, Wounds, liruise and i'ilis. 2 ut All Drug gists. Real Estate Transfers Francis Mjrc:er and wiftilo I'ro- tier .VJercier, r. llerierafid r.ui; : 1' ' K ii ie M. K"rn. 3 a -r. s ! 'a a"- I' 00, and ri-ervst'i-tj as t" -iip-fit aid nisio-ei j.oce . I or.-i l r. Auiiii-t i A. J y uf.d oipera, beirh rr--i.r.ck own to 1-,11 a. " ..exi. tow. i Frederick A. Ka--ill to Mrynave IiroVtl tl.il they wonderfully 'Augusta Hall, tsii.e :td flOOO. ! strt-ngthBii the M-rves. Luihl up the l Isabella N. W. Fnzcr and others system and rc.stor health ami good .children and heirs of IVrslfor Fraitr ! spirit after an attack of Grip If OBITUARY Cl.AKA CIIOI tMI ADAMS) Clara Crouch, widow of tho Into W. E. Adams died at lior homo In Delaware township last Sunday even ing after a long Illness, lined about aovt'iilf yeara. She .was born at New Castle Knglanil and rnmu to America W illi her parents when she) was about fourteen yeais old. Kir awhllo she resided in New York hut lor the pist thirty years shu his llvrd at Hunting Toers She was active in church alTalrs, was of a cheerful disposition, finely educnt ed, attractive in manners and gained many warm friends. She ia survived by three wins, Waiter of Delaware township with whom sIih lived, Arthur M of ISuslikill ami William of New York. The funer al was held Wednesday. WANTED! SALESMEN to represent na in the aiilo of cur High Grade Goods Don't delay, apply at once. St en I v employment j liberal terms. Kxpor. enoe not necessary. ALLKN NURSEHY CO, Rochester, N. Y. A National Exposition. There continues to be considerable interest in the question of an Inter national exposition to celebrate tho completion of the intaroceanlc cunul af I'Hninin. New Oilcans. San Diego, San Francisco. Los Angeles and Washington are all reaching nut for the exposition. Considerable riv alry Is already apjiarent nod theso five cities am looking toward Con gress for moDcy. Congress has hail much experience with expositions at Philadelphia, Chicago, ht. 1iuis, Buffalo, New Orleaus aud Souttlo. All these were in a sensu provincial expositions. It is time and meet that wo should Imve a distinctively National exposition. The city of Washington has readied that degree of expansion and prominence tbat even if it were not tho capital of tho country, il would be entitled to celo brate an event ho emphatically national, it is time tout tho 1 Euro pean and Asiatlo world, and I may say the American wotld also, whould learn that then: Is a Capitol nf the United States. The government at the capitol should cclcliralu the most stupendous accoiiiplhlitneui in the completion ol tbe greatest work ever undertaken by man. There is but one logtcul place for such a -celebration. It can be held at Washington at one half tha expen-ic, nut only to the nation, but to the hundreds of thousands ttiut will visit it, as com pared with the cither cilif-s mentioned The foreign countries that will send exhibits of art and manufactures to the Kxxsitioii can do it more effec tively and economically by landing them at Washington than by sending them across the continent to Sun Francisco or Los Angeles, or by tha Gulf to New Orleans. To Kindle a Fire Back in the olden times fat pi no ktots were plenty, which when spilt up in small pieces made a qmek ami excellent kindling for linn, and many an elderly man and wciuuu will recall the fine light made by such knots In lh large open the pluce. In fact they wero largely ! ow.d In plane of tallow candle! la ' thono day to aff.ud I'sM Inr reading. I '''" knots are gone ui.d suVlitu'es, like shavings, finely tp'it wood, nnd paper bave taken thulr plica. n other go'il 11' h'er wii'-r.? the wood may bo irccu or we! e.in be inielu economically as f jll.r.'. s, Mid Is Kifa and l.ni.dy : Kill an old can of nnv ki.id witlt a-bes, then pour in solli -hnt koro sene tusatuistn the ushes, nnd put the can in a ! plsco au.iy fr ml tl.-e. A ttilis,i'H ii lo I ii pic iiiy P kaep a finite till the v.'s d is caught, and it is worth nil the patent lire kiiid.ers. Thai" Is ahsolu'ciy no l.ii.giir. Hod l y tcepiii.r a supply al ways n ado up the children will not l: tempted to cse the kerosi nu can wi'h Ilia too often fatil result. Ths Demon Of The Air is the germ cf Lulirippu, that, breath il in, brings flattering to thou s'.ds. Iu afti r t fleets are weakness, norvot-nr. es, lack of appetite, energy ami ambition, with 'disordered liver and kidneys. The g--cute-t osl then is L'wtrio Bitter., tl e splendid tonic. ' b o id purilier and regulator of Ktoui- co u.rM Ki.li.ty. Thousands s A- V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers