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The News from Frederick, Maryland • Page 3

Publication:
The Newsi
Location:
Frederick, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE DAILY NEWS, FREDERICK, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 19O7. 3 In England and France the Sale of Alum Baking Powder is prohibited bylaw because of the in- jurious'effects that follow its use. The law in the District of Columbia also prohibits Alum You may live where as yet you have no protection against Alum The only sure protection against Alum in your Baking Powder is to ROYAL is made from Absolutely pure Cream of pure Grape product. Aids digestion--adds to the healthfulness of food. THE SOCIAL POUND PAKTY A very delightful pound party was hell Wednesday evening, February 20.

at the home of Mr. and Mra O. W. Fisher at Utlca A large crowd was present and indulged in various games until a late hoar, when they were invited to the dining room, where a table spread with cakes and ooofsotioos of various kinds waited them. Among those present were Mlesea -SEella Fisher, Oarrf Valentine.

Nellie Fuher, Ina Hann, Bath Haon, Maty Hann, Messrs. Howard Boy Hankey, Ernest Loog, Qao. D. Speak. J.

M. Havner. Geo. E. Ratmbarg Jamrs Null.

Leslie Liday, Mi Hard Stall, of OreagerstawD; Gny Freshonr, of Loyf Hiss Oora Smith of Thnrmont. tgg of Hagersiawc Missst Morel Hnmerlchr, Beiva Hnmerfok. L'zzie Hesnoofr, Eertha HeeBong, Messrs. P. Laathermaa, Willtam Baer, Baymoud Honok, of LBW- ietown; Mr.

W. 0. Powell of Oa toot in Misses N. E. Michael, M.

E. Oadrow. Carrie Dudrow, Jannia Gaver, Maod Gaver. Blanchs bnook, Keliie Utter- baok. Mamie Waobter, Blanche Waoh- ter, Amanda Waohter, Lilils 2fnassl), Messrs Pnttnan, Gartie Utter back, Ernest Utterbaok, Raymoaa Leahart, Olaracsa Lsnhars.

Gariaad Taylor, Lnther Waohter, Harvby Lewis Heard, Norman Datrow. nf Mills; Misses Zaah Warreafelz. Tina Raajsbnrg, Messrs. NorntaD Hsrper, Boss Warrenfellz Guy of HansonTiUe; Hiss Annie Beiiler. of 31s.

Pleasant; Misses Mattie Holtz Emma 8n- sle Haugb, Nora Hongo, UeBsrr. Ohag. Zimmerman. Oharlea Hoagb. Aastin Waohter, Wllbers SmiEb.

of ObatJes- ville; Miss Eleanor SponsaUer. Messra Jeise BpoDseller. Osoar sailer, of Harmony Grove; M.smg Olara Oiem. Ada Olem, Msus. Hirara Eanisbcrg, Wllbert Olem.

Harry Olem, cf Walk- ersrllle; Mesirn Baymood S'laak, F. Stoner, of Wo; dsboro; Mr. J. Stoner. of Graoetam; Mr.

William Dover. Brncevlllt; Mhs Margaret Bbipley, Oarrye Shipley, Messrs. Frank Shiplt-y. Tolbert Hanok. of Mrs G.

W. Taylor, of Usioa MiUs. BIRTHDAY SOCIAL. A most delightful birthday soaial given at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

Basil F. Boston, near Eempiowo, on Friday evening. March 1. in honor of the eighteenth birthday of their daughter. Miss Annie, who was the recipient of many hand ssma presents as tokens of the love and esteem of her many friends.

The evening was spent in music and games oatil eleven o'olook, when the dining-room doors were thrown open and all were invited to partake of refreshments, consisting of ice cream, lemonade, bananas, oranges, confections, At a lite hoar ail departed for their well pletsed, ard wishing MUs Annie many more sash happy ocouions Taose present were Mr Jesse Baxtcn, Mr. and Mrs Basil F. Bnxtan. Mr. and Mrs Garrison Xcx ley and son.

Windsor, Mrs. Emory Purdam, Mrs. Sylvester Watktns and children. Body. Konnan and Addie Watkins, Mr.

Bradley Brsndeutinrg. Mr. James D. Boyer, Miisss Algie Beyer. Mlta Watkins, Mam Baker.

Belinda Pool, Anna Gccrgii Purdnao, Fay Brandenbarff. Ethel Boliison, Jennie Moxluy, HUda Bsnnetts, Lottie Bardatt, Ella Bardeit, Emma Eanioa ind Delia Lewio. Ennioe Wat Lillie Moxiey, Messrs. Lanls Jonep, William Bnxtoo. Walter Bcxtoo.

Urbert Hiette, Leoter Moxiey. Howard. William and Oharles Moxley. Ray Wat- Wni, Graf ton ClagaUr, Ray Moxiey. ttaarcs Emory Pardom, Roy Moxiey, O.

T. Mcx ey. Blaoe Pool, VVII.TIXG r.vr.jv A very pleasant eveninR was Friday, March 1, at tha horns i-I Nannie Moxiey, at No 4 event being a qaiUing The house bmatifally Rs eshments ssrved late All present erjiyed ihe event. Tacse were JClssM aad Anoie Mrs. Mary Baxtos, Sallie aod Annie Spurrier.

Mrs. Hallis Bnxton, Mrs. Mattle Gfttrel), Kin Moxiey, Wagoer. UAKCE. Oa Saturday eight, March 2, a very deughtlul aauoe was heta at tus resi- QBi.ce of Mr.

and am. Jjhc A. Blaofr, near flat. Any. it was aae of tha besc in the vioinity tnis eeaaou, and was greasly enjoyea by every one present.

Musio was inrntshad by Messrs. Toomas Long ana Ohanus CiarK. Taose wert: air. ana Mrs. Bars Biaok, Mr.

ana Mrs. Looaa Lacg, Misses Uarrie Jfiaiue, Famine Warner, Graoe and Mggie Wagacr, May Myers, Blanche JtSibuK, Messrd. Jaooo and Janzt Piatne, John Boston, Mery Booue, Gleacoy Baker, Harry Newcomer, WiUie ana UiUtoii black, Ndaou Myers. BIRTHDAY PAR1Y. Mr.

and Mrs. Ltudy Pentz tendered son, Master Arthur Feaiz, a birth day party on last Saturday attornoon toe name of Mr. Jie. How aid Y'joug, Seooud street. Tua time very jpant in games a ad amusemauta, after wtoioti CQOIUB relresn meuEa wt.ro served An Ags Machinery.

In the int'tiittg of snost of cur household goods machinery has done avray vr'tti the craftsman. Tr-je it is that some mr.ster isinrt plnns tbe design in the luutern tluit bec-oiuss the father of liions-'fii'Os. Imt If these things been made by huimji hands TVC should have had not one but a thousand master-; of their trade iustc.id of rce only and an aniij- of 1110:1 iloing soiiie monotonous routine job for their bre.ul. The whole svstfcin a premium on dullness and mediocrity. It mar be argued that this machinery more or less makes for cheapness.

on that account a man can become pcs-essed of more goods than he -would have bad without it, but a man's life hardly in the abtiiKlance things that he hath, and it is ihe cards that a few g'Kid are worth a hopr of Iad. Wlien come to think that in the making almost every- thius we alumst everything in the house upon which we s'ep. sit or lie. uiaf-hinerr has had a hand to the ousting i.f some craftsman, the enormity of our wickedness becomes clear. --Reginald Xcwtoa Weekes in Nineteenth Ccntrrv.

A Friend In Need. Iiiiinediatoly ai'ter the earthquake in California in 1000 relief stations were established in San Francisco and Oakland. Supplies poured in from neighboring ranches, other towns and other states, but almost all that needed to be cooked before it could be eaten, and of course in many instances homeless wanderers were in immediate need of food. The volunteer cooks did the best they could. They boiled great kettles of soup, caldrons of coffee and oceans of tea, but it was impossible to cook rapidly enough to supply all comers.

Late one afternoon when the cooked food supply was running low and a long Hue of hungry persons still waited to be fed a wagon halted before one of these stations, and a bluff old ranchman' addressed the lady in charge. "Say," said he, "I've brought you 300 dozen of the best eggs in the state, but yon won't need to cook them. They're already cooked. I've been boiling eggs since 8 o'clock this morning," A Crimean Incident. Many arc Hie deeds of heroism recorded in Kvclyn Wood's story of liis rise "From Midshipman to Field Marshal." hut more tbriliing than incident of the fighting in the Cri- Earthquake Pranks.

Hindustan has had many important geological changes effected by la 1762 Chiftagong was violently shaken, the earth opening in many places and throwing up water and mud of sulphurous smell. Then sixty square miles of coast sxiddeuly aud permanently subsided, one of the MUST mountains enrirelj- disappeared, and another saiik so low that only the summit remained. At the same tiiae a corresponding rise of ground took place at liatnrce. an island farther along the coast. Again, at Cutch.

in 1819 the fort aud village of Sindrce were submerged, and about five miles distaut a long elevated mound was raised, measuring some fifty miles by sixteen in places, out of what had been a perfectly level plain. Two Definitions. In illustrating a point a lecturer told of some woman who spoke of her worse half as "a model husband." "Tes." commented an oid Irishman who knew the husband better than she did. "he is ail of that. But look at the dictionary sea what a 'model" mean 1 is defi'ied as a Tuiniatv.rc injitatiou the real The lecturer 'f ilu- same Irishman's wprH repartee.

Said he. "It i ill. 1 riirht off of what "lxrk oui; was the xrarpinj; (hat sboutod f-ne day. and at the which referred to a i cerinia uiorsar which bad been shelling 13it-m, every one in hearins shelter. Ail succeeded in tjjc trencher except roung HJewiit II.

M. S. Qiieen. Him the spent shell ranclit linger the knees and to ihe lien. he called to Steh.

ni; 3-nvc to die!" The -)f the ihirk-en inch shell Tras inn did hesitate a -n. tryr be sbont- ril and. frr-ra trench, hegnn I'lCZiii" vriih nil 3iis ic li at the bii5 mats ff iron. At that instant it burst. an3 neither man xras a fragment seen a sain.

letter 10 Prof. Amon Bargee. Frederick. Md. Dear Sir: We shanld like to set year nd a worfcoa this question and atd straw ar-1 care, and are fed in tbres wayf; ft -st on a oariaio pro- portioa of uillfc and cookid cjrnmeaJ; sfcocd bog-, on tbe same, hlf warei; third on ihe Fame, ball water and Hoar loo? will it taka.

how Xl lte profli Heat and Cold. nl ro.i»rns that we feel 1b.nl nro when 5n i Jl 1 than ibr.t nrr She skin. a jx.nT heat. an object -re Iban itself, wbi'e a higher i i IvfCT heat 'icnce a oace. are arid instance tban tbe skiu skin.

of coid 5s feK at Aod a tlmitar qiection is That same farmer la galqg to three birca same and be sayi three yon take paiat that F.m painter scrstofcep head a f'wrslca'fs and 'Til Io it for $50" paintei: "173 Third 48." Will JSty eaca to paint, or oce two. or 03e all three, or oobdy and wbai'Jl they make oa the Tfii't hew goec some pg Bot there a way to rfckoc: $5 a The is to knowicjj how many to bzy. Taere'i a oat of buy the paint, Davos Nn malter how maoi cae fas rs- mriii wbai'a noihtDg truly 29 F. W. DtvoK Co, P.

S. P. L. Haigstt Oo. sell oar paint.

EAT BARK FOR Harrowing Details of the Great Famine In China. MANY STARVING TO DEATH. Submerged Grainfields Have Reduced 4,000,000 People In the Celestial Empire to Utter Destitution Scenes In the Camps of the Refugees. Slowly the details of the famine now raging in China are becoming known to the outside world-- a famine which Is the -worst the Chinese have suffered in the last forty years and which has afliicted a population equal to that of Mexico, occupying a territory nearly as large as that of the state of Xew York, says the Xew York Tribune-- for in the orient news travels tardily. The farther west one goes from the shores of the Yellow sea the more nearly stagnant become the facilities of communication.

And while America and Europe now know something of the particulars of the famine, the bulk of the population in certain ulterior provinces of China, say the missionaries. are still ignorant of the fact that 15,000,000 of their fellow countrymen have been overwhelmed with floods and that of these 4,000.000, a multitude equal to the population of Xew York city, have been reduced to utter destitution. Great as has been the loss of life and property attending the disaster, it does not appall the naiiad as much as do the crimes that have followed, to the wake of the calamity. The slow agonies of starvation have driven vast numbers of persons to sell their children into slavery for a few mouthfuls of food, and when there was nothing else to eat, when even the hark of the trees and the dead roots of the grass had been devoured, many are said to have turned cannibals. In a letter which was received recently by a Chinese merchant in Pell street Xew York city, from his father in the famine district the desperation of the people was told as follows: "After the floods came, our houses, our harvests, our animals were gone.

Our family joined with two others and, seeking high land, sought the city of Nanking. It was a hundred miles to go, and we had only one cart between us, in which we put the old people and the babies. We men took turns pulling the cart "We- had a little rice, which we hid under the old people in the cart for fear robbers would steal it. "We ate only at night, nibbling the dry grains of rice. In the daytime our eating might be detected, and we dared not cook the rice lest the fire would attract the notice of others.

"VFhen we were asked how we kept alive we would answer, 'Grass "Along the road to Nanking the trees had been turned into stumps, their bark and branches having heen eaten by refugees. The dead lay in heaps. most of the bodies robbed of their clothing by wicked men, who do not fear for the life hereafter. We heard stories all the time that some of those who traveled the road with us lived on human flesh, and we were often accused of this atrocity because none saw us eat. Of onr little party al! except your father and a neighbor, a young boy.

died. We left the bodies by the way, those of your mother, sister and aunt anioncr them. We were too weak to bury them iu the frozen jroimcl. At Nanking we found your ancle, who gave us the money yon sent from New York. Beauty and grace adorn thce.

my son." Of the 4.000.000 starving people about one-lifth have gathered around the walls of nine cities-- Tsingkiangpu, Husiau. Yangchow. Yaowan. Hsuchoa, Suchieu. Ihsien.

Chinkiang and Nan- king. Here they are living from band to mouth, subsisting oa what charity may dole out to them. Until the Chinese government gave aid to these unfortunates and established soup and gruel stations their plight was desperate. Little food was given them by the city authorities, some of whom seem to regard the starving hordes as only a pest. When American missionaries approached a high official of one City to ask how they might help in relieving the famine sufferers encamped outside the gates he replied: "We need no aid.

We have the cemeteries all ready for them." Contributions are now pouring in from ail parts of the world for the relief of the Chinese famine sufferers. America having given about S70.00U. According to representatives of ibv Christian Herald, however, which has alivntly raised the sura of S35.000 to be sjHrnt missionaries for the purchase of Jhc distress is increasing not- aH Iriainnitarian efforts. Assistance has reached only an ex- tnenu-Iy sruaiJ fraction of the total miml-07 of dfsiitnte persons. Practi- nolbiRir has done for tbe the interior country district 1 Tho of refugees near the arc fcjcrcasSne in size so fast thai UK- liitlf fo-vi nvaHaWf can bare- i' the hosts alive.

of his visit to one of WjKinni T. Ellis, a i.ew«s- writes: "A moth- trail, with her six Irr i her tattered i i i i out on a company of In ine who are a mm" sicht than the anionc whicS 'Vy They had fe-1 "ue jvnion Jhin. walery rice for thorn nil. and 'low they in the old for the next vei5ly.fi to pass before they can 1-c fed asrain. atd even then some ly In stronger ones may push tbein aside and steal their turn.

"lucldeuis pile upon Incidents. Every one of tliest- Hit.OOO refugees Incarnates story of a home abandoned, of toilsome Journeys to tlie southern district In the hope of finding a pit- tauce of food to allay that awful gnawing of hunger, of the eager huut for a sheltering nook lu a doorway, of being driven from spot to spot until ut last a few feet of bare earth are secured among the graves with the other refugees. A space no bigger than a Chinese grave suffices for an entire family, of the daily and nightly huddling together in one mass for the sake of human warmth, of the search lor dry grass with which to make a tiuy fire, of the morning straggle for a portion of the government rice and of that indescribable, terrible, primitive duel between life and starvation which the Chinese so dauntlessly endure." It is in these camps that thousands of children are being sold into slavery by parents who would prolong their lives in this awful way. A girl usually sells for $1, a boy for $1.50. Instances have been known where a father, after taking tbe money for the sale of a daughter, would buy food for the whole family, and, having for once provided his own with a good meal, he would kill the daughter he had sold, along with the other members of the family, and then commit suicide.

It also happens not infrequently that when a missionary does some favor for a mother or father the parent will try to make return for the kindness by offering a child as a gift. The famine district embraces all or part of five provinces, of which the three most affected are Honaii, Kiang- su and Anhui. All are north of the Yangtse river and consist for the most part of low, level lands covered by little farms, whose average size is not more than an acre. Here lived about persons, nearly all of whom are dependent on crops of rice, wheat and maize. Hardly had these harvests been gathered last autumn when a rain began which the missionaries likened to the downpour from which the ark of Noah alone survived.

For forty days and nights the rain continued, filling the rivers to overflowing, flooding the lowlands, submerging the harvested crops and in many places sweeping away the mud huts in which practically all of the peasants live. As much of the flooded land is lower than the rivers, vast lakes have formed, which will remain until they evaporate with the heat of summer. Jap Children Choose Washington. According to the Kobe Herald, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln rank even Admiral Togo as popular heroes in Japan. The Herald says that Dr.

Yamakawa, formerly president of Tokyo university, offered to present a picture of a famous man or to--the '-Iriye-primary "scbool, Hiogo, and asked that a vote of the children be taken to choose tbe subject of the portrait. The 343 boys and girls of the school were asked to write down the name of their favorite great man or woman. Washington and Lincoln came out at the head of the list, with 69 and 53 votes respectively, while Togo came third with only 28, and Ninomiya Sontoku, a famous ancient Japanese philanthropist, came next. The fifth man chosen was another American, Benjamin Franklin, who received 21 votes; then followed after him, with one exception, Florence Nightingale, four other Japanese, then Admiral Nelson, then six Japanese, then Bismarck with 5 votes, two more Japanese and Napoleon with 4 votes. Among tbe scattering were President Roosevelt Galilei.

Columbus. Socrates and, strange to relate, Peter the Great and Admiral Makaroff of Russia. Fountein In Garden. Changes will be iu Newport gardens ncnt summer, and particular interest is felt in the fountain that William Starrs Welis will have built on his grounds, says the New York It is to resoinlile na egg in from four sources the wat3r will frnsh. It will Ie by electricity.

current will be governed in snirh that at intervals there will of en flame. This twtsity foot fountain will bs sur- roniulej hedge, and nil will be in clanip of In the- basin will be plant-: fish. Pweliers along BeJlevne are wondering if they to wear smoke-1 when the Wells -spr-nr is with light A Nation's Need. rrr.n is worth Oh. say TWi-Tt Won't jnmrbo'Iy shots- ihe world IP in this nation what FT'pcTriKTt nil JV" Js not? Yl TTO ha-1 In our pride all'i riot jry to hids Irs; had scad An-3 Sr-j'y a billionaire.

not ot there. Or if 3id tcil Xcr -us "i-- as if j.nsjrcs^-J th- man ot-r rni. T.iat r-r-CT f-r A'r-k' That rv.7.5! s-icik! 1 back nr.r place take a scat -h'-rc Intwcn stove nr.d street! 3'v Th.it point; JBM. It's i TT.V, Positive A soda cracker should be the most nutritious and wholesome of all foods made from wheat-Comparative But ordinary soda crackers absorb moisture, collect dust and become stale and soggy long before they reach your table, There is however, one Superlative soda cracker--at once so pure, so clean, so crisp and nourishing that it stands alone in its supreme excellence--the name is Uneeda Biscuit 5 In a Just tight, moisture proof package. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Queer Timekeepers.

To ascertain the time at night the Apache Indians employ a gourd on which the stars of the heavens are marked. As the constellations rise in the sky the Indian refers to his gourd and finds out the hour. By turning the gourd around he can tell the order in which the constellations may be expected to appear. The hill people of Assam reckon time and distance by the number of quids of betel nuts chewed. It will be remembered how.

according to "Washington Irving, Governor Wouter van Twlller dismissed the Dutch colonial assembly invariably at the last puff of his third pipe of tobacco. A Montagnis Indian of Canada will set up a tail stick in the snow when traveling ahead of friends who are to follow. He marks with his foot the line of shadow cast, and by the ctiange in the angie of tbo shadow the -oncoming party can tell on arriving at the spot about how far ahead the leader is. Doubtless the first timekeeper was the stomach, which notified its owner when the hour 'for a meal arrived. Battles Decided by a Single Shot.

There are certainly three instances "on record of a siege or battle having 'been decided by a single shot. First in order of importance vras the shot fired by one of hi. own men which killed Charles XII. in the trenches of the fortress of Fried richstein, which immediately led to thi raising of the second siege of Fried richshall. This is perhaps the most im portant musket shot in th history of the world.

Next comes tin. discharge of the mortar fired by Lon Cochrace during the defense of Port Trinidad in 1808. This shot foiled French surprise and saved the fortress Lastly, there was the single discharge of grapeshot which saved tbe fortress and town of Haddington iu 1548. The French invaders had actually forced their way into the outworks'of the cas tie when the one well directed shoi created such havoc in their densely packed ranks that there ensued an im mediate panic, which ended in flight. Paper MEAT Sacks safe tad sure to prevent if the simple directions on i are followed.

As soon as your meat Is smoked, to the early Sprloc. blow or tfcipper fly pots tnaaaDDeanace. place your meat in tfee following i directions plainly printed on each one, and Ton rest assured ihat yon win not be bothered wla in In TOUT less" Paper Meat mida ttam a The Advantage of an Accident. "The small size of the screw," says a noted shipbuilder, not due to the perception of any in ventofof its greater effect as com pared with a larger one. but purely accident.

Many years ago screws to steamers -were made as large as possi hie, it being the theory that the great er the diameter the higher the speed A vessel was spnt'to sea with a screw so large that it was deemed best cast each blade in two parts aad ther weld them together. During a storm all three blades of the propeller brok at the welding, reducing tbe diamete by more than two-thirds. To the sur prise of the captain the vessel shot for at a speed such as had neve been attained before. Engineers ther experimented with small propellers and discovered that they -were muct more effective than large ones. Had 1 not been for that accident we migh bare cone on using large bladec screws to the present day." Beware of for Uatarrtt ttiat Contain Mercwr.

as merrnry snrely far of 1 iln- 3 is niftiri'- I i i T' r- "IT? To F'T i.ji 0 its FT )-T t'- nenrl Tf i.p r.c.'ii-ie; hard. a our Xvn'- smell wbole trt- thrtracb the mneons surfaces- Sncb arnciw oerw be exrepf on src-rrlptJons Irons Phr- jJcJar s. tbe dmuwcre do hi tenfold to TCTI posylhle dertre from. taavofaetared by J. Co Toledo.

O- contclcs co mrr- CVTV and t-ken IntemalJr. dJirwctly ntnn the blood and TOTirons of tbe fvftfm. In Hull's Catarrh Cure be rou cet the swretae. It Is Inter- Ohio. bTF J.

Cbe- A Co, free. Sold br sll Price. 75c bottle. Take Family Pills for coastlpailoa. W'l-n't 9r.r"^?-ii-.

trv to do 5s In a ri hMght Wii! bOAt of sicht? P. Sai Mr. U.f of war! --TV. J. In Kcv York World.

How t3 Benslo Toctmtlovo TooneJn hsaUhaud itrturlh. do at Mrs. X. F. Howan.

nrs: of Klectric Bitters cured me of cbroa'c aad ach trouble, complicated wltb cneb nn- heaUf'T of tbe blood thtt mr sMa 1 practlcal'T 2O yoTjneer tban before Bloers. I now do all mr work with ease aad atsM In mr stors" fiaar- at llodera Pbaraaer Drac Store. Price 5Oe P. BEAUTIFUL FACE Snut v.v.iv fcr ParticaitrJ aal tbe rrarrfr tbe tmtttnon. Skla taaeiteciwox Maka Srw Btoedaai bcata.

BEAUTYSK1N CHEMtCA Ptoce. caa be lor several years. They an -three skts to salt all stars of meat, and MB at 1,4 ana Scents apiece, according to stoe. Tte Scent SIM takes tbe hams and afcf- from 190 to to bow toe meat to trtmroM: uiillttaja OBBiaua fram 2W to 330 pooadi aoA ftaa aaaitt 4T cent size A fair trial will folly sustain i sacks, and feel -where once become a necessity. your rroeer for aeim.

Jrice 4 and cents apiece, aecordtaf ataa. KASCFACTCltlD XT Great Southern Ptg. 4 FREDERICK. HP. FLORAL SPOONS.

Illaitratlont repreieutloir IB ibe ihapa of a butbday, Scaveolv or. Faaoy Tea 85000 They are made with a final dadga OB etoh tpooa ipprcprlata 10 eaoa moath lo ibe Tear, aa follows: Wild Fobroaty-- OttcaltoD. Matoa Violet. April-- Earter Lily May-- LUy of The Valley. Jaoe-- Rose.

Jniy DatpT. Wafr LUly. September-- Poppy. Ootob- r-- November ObryaaatBeBU mber -Holly. DOLL, Watobmaktr.

Jeweler aad Oattotaa. NAT. BANK Bt IL FKIDEK1CK. HA. C.

P. K. WE KEEP ROCERIE9 MOV1O tbat oar stock win be fresh and eleaa. Ma xii parcnaaer It Is freah aad atoetataly at Premier Oati wlta rder, Coortmy aad qntek daUrery taroarata. BK8AST 4 KHOTT, Next to CStr Hatei WO MACHINE-MADE BBItt, Ot Portlaad Anchor EoMndale Oeoeot.

Oom Pip', Tin OSaj Brick. Ballding sofl Oresbed Stoat. Hard aad Soft Goal. Dyeaadte aad Powder. Prompt dsilTwy of orders of MarylaridBriekafi.

Supply On P. R. between Foarth sad Fifth fta. Both FOR SALE. Tiro.

4X miles fros Frederick, ntt orebar all of fralt. 40O r. od 6. ilecrrte a bariata ersoa to Iran at lowest Property sterrwfcere for salt. L.

M. NIXOORFF, ti CMtt Cwtnl iNEWSPAFERr iNEWSPAFERr.

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