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The Record-Argus from Greenville, Pennsylvania • Page 2

Publication:
The Record-Argusi
Location:
Greenville, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 RECORD, OREENVILLH, WEDNESDAY, I RECORD, en Newsaper John L. Morrison and Publishers ASSOCIATED DAILIES. Plant: Advance Argus 236-238 Main Street. BIG STORM DELAYS TRAFFIC The storm of tlie past (wo days has boon hard on the railroads nearly all train- ruunine. iwo or tbree lioiirs late.

and lie-seiner r.u'ns were held Krie over VV.M hours Tuesday 011 of (lie grc.it drifts in that vicinit v. ROLLING." To the average person the making Ot pieces of steel weighing a ton or so each, or half that, is rough, work, but from an article which clip from the Phiatlephla Lodeor it appears that making watch is probably a less exacting. ss delicate OOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCXXX: joe than Hilling" which is- a land- 3 occupation in Greenville. Th Ledgei York THE DEATH ROLL, says i "InsiHvtoi Belknap. of the- Tint, States Intel-tate Commerce f'oiniuis- sion, lepo'tn 1 to the (Commission thai "Mrs.

Philip Miller the fatal railway accident in Piiilp ii ed POULTRY SHOW IN FULL BLAST The Greenville jioutryj show is now in full blast and there is a line display of chickens in the pens, ranging from'the Andalusians to the little bantams but including the'great stand-by breeds cspec ialiy. There is a great variety and splendid nf each va- iely and what mure could be expectedof a chicken show. Not the least interesting of the evhihils is the little pullet rescued by Michael MorrUsey some time a- 'o as it jumped (ill the pilot of a Pennsylvania train mi which it had ridden iinhudv kmiw how far. Inune I 1 1 .1 i. 1 1 Air-.

Aliller'- m.iide:] a.iuie Ite 1 1 i 'it (ler-nan in 1 New Yoil l.i-t summer which the death of twenty din- to a newly-discovered d. feui in steel whui lo called a fracture 01 sure. Tbi.s ik-i'i 1 the i 'tiedy, v.a.s the subject of discussion at -lie ru'-i-'iML- of the rail 1 of the ieau -i--o latlon "The jtliat rin, i i iie.ss was the la 1 i- if. is to Was no' i in by air or nny of tho due- 'n phospjioiiis i i other ioivic.ii ornani," raattei- not thoroughly punfii-d out' Ctf. the 1 ingots from tl-e rails aio foi 1.

The microscoue: re-. vealed a nn nodule. hard sub-; Stance, inund like- a very small i of sand, SOUK Lines: io larger than mustard imbedded in cniv then-- extended ladu so that, the Htile do- feet gradual! beeamec- almost (,, vls Shaped Thc-e radii increased as i 'e- tii ll they extended not reaching the sur- face of the rail, but corroding the terior until at MS: the- rail became too -Weak to vith-tind the load put upon it and btokf That describes the gradual disintegration of the Lehiph valley rail until it fractured and threw a oaded train, moving at htgh speed into an abyss. infe and segrating 'the particular kin'd Of rail which a disease of this kind Egg-laying Contest. Tin" nintli nf the Philadelphia North rgij-lying competition -hows th" sti-ady in number lit' laid aii'l number of pens active.

Tin' tn 1 has been as follows: Firs! ucck 1 i'or lOoO per pen. by and lli-- the nid-t IIP Mincicas the least. i 1 in thi- v.eelcs -ended. are I In- ligurcs: All i'lvniouili ii'ocUs L'o i -i-s per pen All 1 per pen 1-lau li; pen Al! l.e-hon'.s pel, pen lie Orpingtons nrc in the lead of pen-. Trmn nil over the inoi-j; i and institute bi'-i ing over, the school children are back' 1 'layton Wlijtenirin bus sold om- of i his phn-i's lo Mr.

from Chicago.I and runltur have returned from a trip to aliforiiia. Horn; To Mr. and Mrs. l.ouis Dur- riey. Oei-eirilirr a ff-n-ponml bov.

Miss Mary Hills returned to her up and other substituted for inf ate poi TOC the bath com- so to speak, in Ktcel rails lain construction. It is al- i ftn organic maggot. If un- or not stimulated by the use a rail is put it would jirob- inert But the constant the lails causes the nodule iKout at first minutes fibers, rease until at last they be-! Durce of real danger. Having therefore, the cause of Sit, it was not diftlcut to tell afacturers of steel rails what I idy should be. I will consist I purifying the bath as to for any iiialig-1 stance to remain in the bath, which are neces- "he purification of the steel INK ELECTIONS Merchants Trust president; J.

W. Vosler, aipent; W. D. Riefck, vice pres- Hum, treasurer; John J. i.wj;': asst.

treas. MjVs, are the three first named with J. A. Keck, L. Burnett, J.

Donaldson, V. II. M. Moss, Henry Lascllc, E. st Rcimold, Sr F.

Hazen, Roljcrt Pcttit, Win. W. G. S. Tcmpleto.n, officers ch'isen Hows: 4 Statje, president; Master, Vice president; C.

li. T. Ray Thornc, assist- r. 'Ic National Directors: A. G.

Chase, A. Davis, Till.Reiss, J. F. Mathers, "Japlin, A. D.

Robli and L. electiiij; A. president; and G. B. Chase, THE TRUE TEST.

Tried in Greenville, It Has Stood tho Test. Tho hardest te-t is the test i.l' time and I loan's Kidney I'ills stood ii well iii Kidney can hardly ask I'm- si router proof than I'ollowiim: Mr-, (i. Vermin. X. Mercer (freenville, says: "My hack Iron-j bled me for m'onths and I Vnmllv ed that my suffering was due- to mv kidneys.

I also had chills and headaches ami felt misera hie in every way. One. of my relatives had been cured of a similar complaint by Doau's Kidney I'ills, liml I decided to try this I procured a supply A. Alde'udcrl'er'- Iirui; Store. Halt' the contents of a box cured me.

I consider 1 loan's Kidney I'ills to be a kidney medicine worthv o'f (Statement AUK. A Permanent Cure. On Sept. LM. Mrs.

Veruon interviewed and she said: "Tin; cure ollVcted two years by Kidney I'ill- in my case has been permanent, it is a pleasure to aeaiu -rjve this remedy a word nf For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Po-tcr-Milhrirn i New Vorli. jiyenf.s for the I'niled h'eniember the take no other. Men Risk Too Much.

f.it, 1 in-, 1 foinpa ni'-s now art' 1 v'rry alum! 1 to iictive lui'ii (iv-i 1 years fur ill, 1 idiain-i's ari' that i liey have tin-ir urt'at'N' IH" uiir-r. ii' steps i.ri' talii'ii in time, this In- repaired. Mr. Kvi'i-ftt Nui'ly. ol San Antmiio, says i a IVITII let i-r: health I'ailrd alfely to overwork, and as 1 did nut better after a inonth.

I taking inol. It has ihi- a better appetite, helped me to sleep and built me up in enera! su that 1 now feel like mv former sell'. is a ph-asnre V.i'i rei-om- nieiid to needs a rene'wer. livery man, wi.iman and child who is in pour health, neah. and run- onidit To is ex- arliy tlii 1 thinu to build ihein up aad make them strung It is made fn'ii rod and tonic iron, od and is deliciuiis to take.

guarantee to do what- we say uid eive monee if it does ('. P. Aldendei-l'er, Pa. OLD ENGLISH INNS REMAIN These Charming Places on the Post Roads Have Changed Little In Many Years. A history of the coach roads out of London would be a history of England, and the stories of the Inns alone would make a fat volume.

They are still charming Inns, with the same oak rafters and oak wainscoting, the same stuffed trout and foxes in dusty glass cases. They are as they were when they sold brandy In casks that had been thrown shorewards off Brighton and washed into the hands of waiting smugglers; as they were when as day broke, a masked gentleman on a gray mare would rap gently with his whip on their green shutters. And, then the inns themselves, what could be more charming than their names? Such names as the Angel of the An. nunciation, at Stainefi on the last change into Windsor, which dates back to the days of the monasteries when the innkeeper of that tavern was a lay brother, and on the last stage to Box Hill, the Robin Hood Inn, which dates back to that man himself', and those other inns that, celebrate the stars of the animal kingdom in specific colors: The White Hart, at Henfield on the Brighton Road, the Dun Horse of Manning's Heath, the White Horse of Dorking, the Bull at Mockbridgc, the Bear at Esther, the Lion at Guilford, and at Wimbledon the Dog and Fox. Great men have stopped at tliese Inns, and while wo change horses the landlord will point out the windows of the rooms in which they first of Europe on his way to Brighton, Lord Nelson on his way to join his snip at Portsmouth, and Sheridan.

Pepys. Walpole, Dick Turpin, Capt. Henry Esmond, Mr. Pickwick, Sam Weller and David Coppe.rlield.—Rich- ard Harding Davis fn the Metropolitan. NESB1T Rhyming HUSBAND MAKES STATEMENT LAMB QUIT TAKING SNUFF Threw Box Away on Hampstead Health, but Was Searching for It Next Morning.

Hamstead Heath may yet contain a precious relic of Charles Lamb. "One summer's evening," writes Hone, was walking on Hampstead Heath with Charles Lamb, and we had talked ourselves into a philosophic contempt of our slavery to the habit of snuff taking, and with the firm resolution of never again taking a single pinch we threw our snuffboxes away from the hill on which we stood, far among the furze and brambles below, and went homo in triumph; I began to be very miserable, was wretched all night; in the morning I was walking on the same hill; I saw Charles Lamb below, searching among the bushes; he looked up laughing, and saying, "What, you are come to look for your snuffbox 'Oh, said taking a pinch out of a paper in my waistcoat pocket, 'I went for a halfpenny worth to the first shop that was Chronicle. 11 i.s v. ry I'icult lu make it rhyiav. If one is bill prolific of his UioiiKht and time; He simply needs rtnle a.

1 I'mil his mind iven't ikulse The ceiural subject scvni- Lon-vVllow, Tici- all rest Wlio s-taail am.mi,' our Krary a.s IjesL. They 11 Fed the selfsame mcth- O(l that n.siiii; here Ami thus they won l.css Clime for all their lyr- lc OTIC neeii not wait fnr in- aid; Tile muse i like win- Some, yet a ih-kle maid. Just ci-nler all your arid Hive your atti'li- Tion to tin- work you plan do nut chew your pen- Holdor. Perchance you'd write erotic hursts of vocal nipl- Ody that gush ferili hot- Tor as tin- tho'iKhls come wi'll- Inu- from your suhlim- true thus rill- Inir you until brim- over with your syllables. Whatever bo the snib- Ihat you may select You'll Cniil no troub- I.o it' yon write connectivity so that you till Your lines the same as this, And all your extra syl- T.abl.-s may then be dis- Cnrded.

Turkey's Mid-Europe Remnant The only remnant of Turkey left in, one may say, mid-Europe Is the Island of Ada Kaleb, on the Danube. It still belongs to Turkey, but is under the protection of Austria, and is an important point, which, In eventualities, would command the navigation of the river. The island was once a strong fortress, and is still garrisoned by a detachment of Austro-Hungarian soldiers, who have "look-outs" at each point of vantage. From the gate of the strongly fortified bastion one can see the citadel, with its bazaars and primitive cafes flanking the narrow streets. The mosque is richly draped with valuable carpets, but otherwise is a very plain building.

The sultan, to keep the Island inhabited by Turkish people, sends as a gift each year a shipload of coffea, tobacco, sugar, sweets, and various other commodities and they have the privilege of selling their coffee and sugar at Orsova, a few miles distant on the Hungarian shore, duty free to the extent of one pound in weight EAST PYMATTJNINO. l.iiile Aeie- McDonald, win. was iu-j SHEAKLEYVILLE. dUpo-e-l I'm- is heifer. I of l-'nuiklin, visited Mr-j.

Sam Land Cried, ho ill. isiMr. and Mrs. i larence Sheakley last some Matlcr, wlio-e tee. quite badlvj has to cut v.hile -aw mill, is ailing Mr.

Matter is also im- M'-s is frieiii jij Mr. and Mi's. David McOui-c; entertained a parly of friends hist Thursdav en i Luncheon was served and the eveninc; jileasantly spent with nuisie. and Annies. Misses l-'ern and Madye I'alvin, of supjier at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. .1. Atlantic visited in town during tin have ri-raiTed home after a tv.o davs' 1.1. Mrs. Tm'on.

of Xew was liauncey l-'ckenrmie, who has "''st of her son, 1'rnf. .1, ('. Amon, an.I Mrs. Milton Uickcrt visited the latter's mothev sister of Hear Sluirp-ville. recently.

Sherman of (Iranirevill visited fnther last week. Slavin and Nellie Tiradley were iiiie-ts at: the home of Mrs. Nlavi'n over Nuc.dav, The entertainment yiven S. Platt at the 1'. 1'.

church last Monday I'veiiinu wns attended by a hirue cruwd intiiei i il! spite ol tlu 1 Mi-s Anna lieckman has returned toj-lones is an old acijiiaintance, and niaiiv after a short visit with her I the evening's entertainment to sol 1 threat prevalent here. The Snn-liine baud will meet at tlii spi'iit Sunday wil li her daughter. I Notice of Dissolution of Partnership Notice is hereby jjiven that the I ncrship heretolore subsistintt lielwecn J. and L. Custiane-, doinc; business as "The Sugar has been dissolved by mutual consent.

All debts owin.u tn said partnership are receivable by said J. L. 10 whom all also claims ami demands against the same are to be presented for payment. I'. Costianes J.

L. The business will be continued by Costiaucs. T. Camp will start a beginner's class mi Friday January 12. lesson 7:45 to 8:45.

Assembly 'J to 12. ylkyitations Issued. fttpiis have been issued to the Carriage of Mr. Floyd W. to Miss Hallie which will take place 15th.

FOR side of house, corner College avenue and Main strecti Inquire 12 South street. FOR RENT liight room house on corner Hum and Kosedale. Inquire of Mrs. B. E.

Kellcy, 17 Main street. Rubber stamps. Advance Argus Co. A husband and three friends called al this office Monday nijj'ht and recounted a rather scnnstion.il occurrence in which they had iixurcd a tew minutes before. As no arrest have been made as yet the news does not seem to be of the and until the matter comes to a head the right louse the names of the parties most concerned is verv (piesu'on- able.

According to the yonnc, husband be has suspected his wife for lime and has been living apart from her. On Monday uicjit he was notihed by 'phone lhal she had been seen np the stairs into a business olTice in town.Then he and three friends went to the adjacent hallway and wailed. Soon a lady friend of the wife's came out of .1 nearby hotel and later went up ihe same stair and jusi. as she started to enter the ol- lici; tin: four men crowded in, too, and sinking a found the wife and the head of the establishment. Kxcept their p'resence there there was nothing to indicate any wroni; doinc; but the wife fainted and there was quite a scene, while one of the young men who assisted in the raid found a relative of his it is said, in the person of the second woman in the case.

The man in the case next day brought tluil there was anything wrong and that lhe presence of the two women there can and will be accounted for and will be if he is draped into the case. Expensive Slip. A well-dressed man was hurn'ing along the Rue de Passy, Paris, when he slipped, and falling forward dashed his elbow through the window of a wine shop. The proprietor rushed out to claim the price of his window and a large crowd gathered to see fair play. The man who had broken the window protested that he had no money.

"Search him!" shouted some one in the crowd. There were no policemen about, so the wineshop keeper and a few friends took the law into their own hands, searched the man's pockets and found a £20 note. The crowd advised the wineshop keeper to pay himself well for his broken window. He took £2 to pay for his broken glass, and the unpopular man who bad broken it went away with a torn coat and £18 change. The £20 note was a forgery.

institute, spent Siiiidav v.ith i Ills parents. The Scenery in the Pictures. I doinir now only up The dramas shown in the moving P' 1 io 'V' 1 1 liu Kr ut picture theaters are many of them visi 1 1 Mrs interesting no doubt instructive. IT lri lstl hlst The hero always goes broke in the Mrs. Hittle and daughter Leslie, of iiuiie ami i.estu» or nrst scene and accjuires untold wealth are visitiii- Mr.

and Mrs. H. I-). Lalcin a business visitor in I Traust'er Monday. HADLEY.

Leave your w- items at Jackson's nut later than Satur.lav Mr. and Mrs. Alph Martou. (if Dorset, are here i'or a few weeks with Mrs. before the film is run through, and most of us are glad to see photographs of success.

i There is Just one feature which excites our wonderment, and that is the scenery. Whether it is a hovel in which the 1 suffering heroine is forced to dwell, or a robbers' den in which she is held a prisoner until bravely rescued tty the dashing hero, or a lonely cabin on the plains, or a ranch house, or a miner's boarding house, or a bar room, i or a bank church, or a school house nient. it is an interior the walls are always the sume. They have the same with i Mi the same border of intermittent scroll twir 1 1 1 the landscape seen through The home of Henry lirostmever was the window is always two poplars and T.I i a fence. Kalph drey is coulined to Ids lioiue -Mrs.

I'arl Diner, Xottiimhani. Mr. any time. Mr. and Mrs.

K. M. Mci'racken and friends ar Krie. Mr. ISoylau is a mei'tillS' i.

F. at They will return bv wnv of PERRY. Mr. and Mrs. ('.

A. Kood returned lo their Inline in f'ardoe sifter a week's isit with .1. Morrison. Kalpli On- is on Ihe list. I'.

Ha.llev was a business visitor to Oil City last week. of Oil City, called on friends liere last week. A. A. Corll was a business visitor at Mercer, Tuesday.

Mr. and Mrs'. All'. and two sons, Dorset, are the guests of Mrs. A.

Donaldson. Flossie N'auirh returned to Oil Monday, after spending two weeks -wit'h her parents, and Mrs. S. ('. Vaughn.

Miss Jennie f'allisou returned to Slippery Kock, after spending several lays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I'sittisnn. Transfer. Wednesday.

was a social caller at vi ji.njio, -M i Miner, iii 's office, or a i 1 her jiarents, Mr. 7uid Mrs! ''i'-'-' 1 liodennu-yer ami daiijjh- Jse, or a depart- Koon. t''r, ICva, returned home Saturday, after an'interior the Vt f.ine up for visit wiHl near Fair- Slime llllrll Spring township, for iiirv commissionei- Shaiu-r, ot Butler, is the truest ot Rubber stamps. Advance Argus Co. Jfced the Whole World Over three generations Beecham's Pills are uni- looked upon as the best preventive and corrective disorders of the organs of digestion and elimination ever "yip- They give speedy relief from the headaches, sour indigestion due to biliousness or constipation.

PILLS They are too well known for that; and gentle, but sure action on the and stomach, too -well approved, i.t of sorts take at once this famous will endorse the good opinion of thou- rill'know why Beecham's Pills so deservedly Inequaled Reputation 25ci The direction! with every box point out the road to health. Evangelistic Meetings. The evangelistic meetings at the United Evangelical church arc growing in interest everyday livangclibt Collin is working his way to the hearts of the people by his apt way in presenting the truth and by his soul-thrilling singing. Come tonight at 7 PILES DEFY THE KNIFE. The Cause of Their Formation Still Remains.

One place where surgery fails to bring permanent relief Is In the treatment of piles, because even where the evil tumors are cut away, the cause of their formation still remains. That cause is poor circulation. Dr. Leonhardt's HEM-ROID is the tablet remedy that Is taken Inwardly and gets right to the inside cause. HEM-ROID is sold for $1 by Davis and Alexander.

and Alexander and all druggists. Money hack if it fails. Dr. Leonhardt Station Buffalo, N. Y.

W. AY. Emory has decided to extend the closing time of his great Clearance Sale frcri January 1C to January 31, FOR SALE solid oak case. quire 15 Elizabeth St. In The Paper Boat.

Bobby's Aunt Bess, had been telling him about her travels in Switzerland, describing particularly her visit to Lake Luzerne. "We got aboard the little newspaper boat that sails all over the lake, Hobby," she remarked. Bobby listened to this statement in round-eyed wonder, but made no comment. Later he said to his mother: "Mamma, do you know people go Bailing in paper boats on Lake Luzerne? Isn't it awful queer?" "Nonsense, Bobby. People couldn't sail in paper boats.

Where did you get such an absurd notion?" "Aunt Bess told me that she and Uncle Hill got aboard a little paper boat and sailed all over Lake Luzerne," insisted Bobby. Then Bobby's mother explained. saddened last Tuesday inondiifj upon the arrival of a tidefjraiii from Hot: We are a confiding people and arc in announcing; the death of I wirling to exercise the imagination, 1 1 is ol lost sou, l-h-nest, ajrcd -II years, but when a moving picture house asks us to believe that the mansion of a His body was shipped to this place, ar- rivine; here Thursday evening. Funeral Plutocrat and the cottago oi'a iV'o hand and the walls of a prison cell by Mnssellman, of' Sheakleyville. have the same decorative scheme, 0111 imagination IB wrenched.

It is also wrenched when we see The sympathy or' the entire commiiiiit is extended to the stricken family. He i liad been an engineer on a southern Burglar Dies From Fright. A man named Albert Bisam suddenly fell down dead yesterday on being surprised while committing a burglary. The concierge of a house in Vienna when returning to her dwelling found a young man engaged in searching a cupboard with his back toward the door. She shrieked: "What are you doing there?" whereupon the man threw up his hands and fell backward on the floor.

A post mortem established the fact that death was due to heart failure from correspondence London Standard. Love at Second Sight. "Was it a case of love at first sight?" "No, second sight. The first time he sa-w her he didn't know she was an, the starving hero trudging the barren for several years with liead- plainB with a clean shave and a white art Alabama, lie was a mem- iii i- ii I If t- I. 1 I j.

1. dollar as ornaments for his tattered raiment An Applied Theory. of the B. of L. 1C.

and of the fraternity. Interment was made in I lie lladlev cemetery. There will be preaching service in Mr. Shaimr, of Butler, is the guest of O. .1.

Kepler. There will be preiudiinn services in tho Presbyterian church, Sunday, by K'ev. Mr. of' 'sheak- rs. John C'olo is on the sick list.

Ouquesne Circle, 171, the P. If. has elected the following oflicers: President, Mrs. Nora vice A. V.

secretarv, S. A. A. F. Kcr; Kate Corll; guardian, McClure: sentinel, C.

L. 0 re- watchman, ,1. K. Bovd. SANDY LAKE TOWNSHIP.

you broken any of those resolutions you made Jan. 1 Paid Jones, who i.s attending school at college, was home to spend his vacation with his Mr. inn! Mrs. Oscar Fonuer, of Mead- "Yes," observed Gottit, "I believe C)VI 1 arbitration. bflinve ti, 0 "I Sheakleyville.

in arbitration. I believe that the strikers always demand about twice as much as they expect get, and that a friendly discussion would bring about a settlement of all such diffi culties. i. in a 1 onner ot Mead- Ihe presbyterian church next Sunday ville visitiue- the bitter's i at 1 i o'clock by Kev. Mussellmaii.

J-sivol ami Savol as well as a lull line of Fenner's Remedies, can be obtained at Jackson's drug store. Mr. ami Mrs. Cassidv. P.

P. Kelly an.I wife, o'f t'Hca, spent last Monday with the former's brother and family, Kellev. Barnes is wearii'iK sinilo in lr it I'llLiO iSIllJlQ A number of the school bunch ami says "it is a boy." oyerto the home of iss Alice The Oil Cninpanv drilled in Carey last Saturday evcniiiff, just east Then," put in Spunge, "suppofie I ot of ('lark's Milks, the oc- should strike you for ten dolars?" ()11 a surju-ise party for "You wouldn't get It," asserted rc and every- Dttlt. i wll l' uts irl around here Gottit. "AH right, I didn't expect it.

We'll ot to sleeping this arbitr-ate the strike an dP 1,1 take fhe dollars, according to your argu- ment." A Good Subject. "We want you to come to our mis- A. A. Case! has purchased the livery barn from G. F.

Clianev. A Splendid Calendar. Goldsmith, the clothier, is putting out a rj i new member of the church. i "I should love to come, but really The Choice of a Husband I haven't a thing to wear." 'is too important a matter for a woman nuvBii i a tiling io wear. unporimn, matter 101- a woman "Well," put in Mr.

Nurival. who bc ha by weakness, bad pened to overhear the invitation "it foul breath Avoi(1 these kill- seems to me you're Just the kind'of aM Ki Lifo Pil18 person the missionarv sn st 1 th flnc pure person the missionary society is trying to get in its work on." cheerful that win their use. Easy, safe Miller's Pharmacy, Harry' Frgdonin. now now 1 Rubber Advance Argus Co. i 11 i JIM i iii.

(he second well on M. 1,. Kelley's, which proved to be a small producer. They nave located another well on the Prank farm. There have .10 wells drilled in this new territory of which there liavo been three dusters, six gassers and one oil well.

-K. K. Bond, of Pittsburgh, i spending lew days with his parents, Mr. and J. A.

Hond. K. K. Hakor has been appointed mercantile appraiser of the county. Wo congratulate Mr.

Baker on his Cl IM IUUI nient. Kmsy is a dandy good fellow and is.one of those smiling democrats. Mrs. Hose, Hubert has gone, to Grovo' (--ity to take churge of a ward at tho George Junior H. P.

HeOraeken has rented his farm to Oscar Fonner, of Iteadvillo, who will Hike possession at oueo. Mr. McCraclcJ to Olty, whoro ho were has employment- with tho G. J. Hubber stamps.

ments now 7.50 off any Suit. Overcoat or Raincoat at T. C. Gibson Sons Big Clothes Store All Sales Strictly Cash. now Boys' garments now 6.00 Boys' garments now 5.0.0 Boys' garments now 3.50 Boys' garments now 5.65 3.75 2.65].

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About The Record-Argus Archive

Pages Available:
130,779
Years Available:
1874-1973