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The Canton Independent-Sentinel from Canton, Pennsylvania • 5

Location:
Canton, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BUSINESS LOCALS. M. J. Brann visited Elmira Mon day. Miss T.nlii Saxon, of Newelltown, spent Monday afternoon in Canton.

Bailev. the monument man, Oha. E. Bullock. Notary Public.

Seed Buckwheat for sale. O. B. Williams. House to Rent.

John H. Brown, Cedar Ledge. For Sale. Wood aDd shavings for sale. Seasoned factory or slab wood.

spent the first of the week at East Point. Mr and Mrs. Thomas Powers PERSONAL MENTION John Innes, was is Harris-burg, Monday. Walter Brooks was in Elmira several days this week. Mr.

and Mrs. Charles McLaughlin spent Sundayjn Troy. Miss Blanche Davison, is visiting friends in Williamsport. Mr. and Mrs.

Lee Greenleaf spent Sunday with Towanda friends. Samuel Randall, of Grover, was of Canton's Saturday night visitors. BREATHE THE STRAINED AIR Modern School Building Are Equipped With the Most Up-to-Date Ventilating Appliance If the modern school buil! In Philadelphia are not up-to-dae In the matter of lighting and ventilatioK It is not because they are not built according to the very latest thought on these subjects. However, Dr. John B.

Todd of Syracuse, N. has found even In model schoolrooms, equipped with very complete ventilating devices, in winter time particularly, that the air is dusty, dry, by no means germ free and even fetid, having a characteristic schoolroom odor and fAiisin manv illnesses. spent Sunday and Monday in Elmira and Penn Yan. H. Sheldon Mfg.

Co For Sale. One four year old colt, afraid of Jack Brand, of Ralston, came up to Canton Tuesday morning to call on friends. N. Truax. of Ralston, was helping in The Sentinel office several days this week.

McCraney, McCraney, ci 01 ing. One two year old heiffer, fresh iu Decembr. Leon VVatkins. Found. A pair of glasses was left at the Canton Bakery on circus day.

Owner can have same by calling for them and paying for this ad. Lynn Mix will collect and receipt for all bills owing the Troy Street Moat Towanda, was a Canton visitor lues- dav To remedy this he has devised a very simple scheme of straining the air by means of screens of unbleached cotton, which frames, and consequently with the ordinary ventilation nhnr.ked schoolrooms, with their win George Evans broke his arm last Market, and will be found every even week, while cranking an auwmu bile. r.hnnnpl. cf Williamsport Miss Margaret Maley, of Grover, visited at D. N.

Fitzpatrick's in thiss place Sunday. William Inscho, of Elmira, spent several days last week with A. Stephenson, on Beech Flats. Miss Helen Beebe, a student of Mansfield Normal, is at her home in this place for the summer vacation. Miss Marguerite Allison, of Williamsport, is the guest of her sister, Mrs H.

T. Owen, at Lake Nepah- ing between the hours of 7 and 8:60 at G. E. Newman's drugstore. P.

J. Anderson Co, liai KneinMs visitor in Canton vvao cv Monday. a cifoupns and family motored Farm for Saie. Good buildings. J.

H. Brown. 30 acres. Customers Can Trust Us All Business done with this Bank held in strictest confidei ce One of the most rigid rules of this Bank is that all business transacted with its custom ers shall be held in strictest confidence. No person, save in proper authority, is allowed to view the account of any customer of this Bank.

No one need have knowledge of the fact, or know of your deposit. That is a matter of confidence strictly between yourself and this Bank. We appreciate the fact that few people de sire their transactions with the Bank to become public property hence the safe-guards placed around the business of our customers. If you are considering opening a Bank account, or if your present Banking connection is unsatisfactory, we invite an interview with our officers, who will cheerfully explain how we can fit our service to your individual needs. "THE OLD RELIABLE" The First Notional Bank to West Franklin Sunday, to visit dows practically open, he has found, can be kept at a temperature of 70, with zero weather outside, with the air having the humidity of but strained and pure and stimulating.

The teachers declare all stuffiness is gone; that there is no odor, no coughing and no schoolroom headache. In one room Dr. Todd UaJ fifty square feet of opening the pupils we're practically "out of doors" and it all worked like a charm. Since Dr. Todd's relatives Miss Eleanor Parsons has returned win.

Miss Dora Davison entertained a r.f vnnncr tieoDle at UMK For Rent. House onMain street, Canton. Thomas Brann. Rye Straw Wanted. Hand threshed rye straw at $18 to $15 per ton.

W. W. Gleckner Sons Company, Canton, Pa. Notice. Nepahwin Tuesday, in nonor 01 sixteenth birthday.

system can be used in the spring and autumn as well as the winter, and costs practically nothing, it would seem to be an ideal way of solving this vexed question schoolhouse ventilation. Alfred Thomas, Hugh McCullop, from a visit to relatives in nua-delphia. Miss Margaret King, of Troy, was a Sunday guest of relatives in this place. Frances ReillyTfTdental student, of Philadelphia, is visiting Mrs. Mary Preston.

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bonney, of Athens, were Canton visitors last Saturday evening. To farmers and general public My Robert Lentz and Anthony Brand, of Ralston, were Canton callers Sunday evening. barn will be open for horses and autos.

A competent man will be in charge at all times. Come and see ns. B. O. Houton, Proprietor of Packard House.

Mrs. R. J. Dunbar is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Charles M.

treason. at their cottage a Kennemin Beach, on the Maine coast. Mr. and Mrs. F.

W. Innes, of snent Sunday 1 Key to Miss Mary B. Snow, research secretary of the Intercollegiate Bureau of Occupation, told graduates of Welles-ley, Smith, Vassar, Wells and Barnard In New York the other day that stenography "is the key that opens every business door today." The women secretaries of Wall street, who are earning $5,000 a year, she said, worked up to their positions by way of stenography. Mice Toanptip Runvan. a teacher Typewriters For Sale.

Typewriters, rebuilt Remington, Smith-Premier and Monarch at factory closing out prices. Cash or monthly payments. Send for bargain list. Remington Typewriter Company, El JUica the public schools at BrookviUe, the summer vacation town with relatives. Perry, of Syracuse, N.

was "in town a couple of days the fore part of the week. with her parents in this place. Mica Mnrip Tj uther. of Duluth, mira, N. Y.

Trank Snpncer. of Elmira, is Grass for Sale. j.3 at" who is spending some weeks with Miss Ethel Andrus, visited Williamsport friends last Friday. I have about 80 or 40 acres of grass to visiting her sister, Mrs. Ernest Fitz- sell on the ground.

Land is smooth and level anu grass iu condition. Mrs. Burnap and daughter, Mrs. Did Not Retire. "What, made you retire from politics?" "I didn't retire," replied the statesman who is not working just now.

"The word 'retire' suggests voluntary repose. I lapsed into political unconsciousness by being sandbagged." water, at Beech lats, Donald Smead, of Williamsport is visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. Douglas, of this place.

tTntharine Owens, of Lewis Canton, Penn a Mrs. Beatty, of New York city, are spending the summer the guests of This is surely going to be sold, and I will make von a price that will please you if interested. Come and see it. C. Reynolds.

Dr. and Mrs. UomstocK, ai jriovei. iUlM burg, is the guest this week of Miss Miss Clara Righter, a missionary ately returned from China, spoke BARBERS' NOTICE. We, the undersii'ged barbers of Can Cashier Irene Andrews at the tirab.

L. T. McFadden, to an interested audience ai un- ton, will close our shops all day on Sat Charles Ferguson, of Philadel phia, is the guest of his sister, Mrs Baptist church last Sunday even ing. Measurement. "I had to pay $17 for a ticket to Chicago," said one woman.

"It seems expensive," commented the other. And there wasn more than a yard and a quarter of the ticket, at that." A. J. Leach, in tnis piact. urday, July 4, 1914, and will remain open until midnight Friday, July $.

Leishman Hawkins, H. A. Burrows, McCraney Loder. Mrs. Murray Bloom and Mrs.

ivr- aA Mrs F. S. Stull visited Nellie Owen and children, of bast Canton, spent Tuesday with Mr. and Dr. Davison's camp at Sunfish pond a couple of days last week.

Mrs. Wallace Williams, at oeecn Flats. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Morris are rejoicing over the arrival of a baby boy, born Tuesday morning.

Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Conderman, of Chicago, are visiting Mr.

and Mrs. Wallace Williams, at Beech Flats. They expect to sail from New York for a trip to Europe some time in Mr. and Mrs. Herrick Owen are spending a fortnight at the Mcau Fine Toggery for the 4th We can tone up your appearance in strialy-in-season apparel ot the better grade.

Get ready NOW. den cottage at iaKe wepanwiu. July. Mr. and Mrs.

Frank Crooks, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Crooks and James Crooks, of Williamsport, were in Canton Sunday, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. B.

J. Davison. Mrs Frank Whiting and son Ernest, of Barnsville, N. were visiting Canton friends last week. A.

J. Aronson, of Canistoe, N. visited his brother, Joe Aronson, in this place several days last week. Smart Suit Styles of of Mrs H. C.

Jones, Baltimore, who has been visiting her neice, Mrs. James U. McKay, left this week for the lake country of Mew i orK state, where she will spend the rest of the summer. Harry Earl Campbell, of Shunk, last week graduated from Bucknell University, with the degree of Ch. E.

Dr. S. S. Koser, and his wife, Dr. Williamee Koser, of Williamsport, were Canton visitors Saturday evening.

Micheal McCarty came down from the breezy heights of South Mountain, Tuesday, transact business in Canton. TProrl Rpnedict has gone to No Man's Land. The Island of Spitzenbergan, ly-nr-th nf Norwav. has been Eyes Examined Free I am prepared to examine and correct all eye defects by the latest and most scientific methods. When glasses are required, furnished at reasonable prices.

LEE GREENLtAF Jeweler and Optometrist Canton, Penn'a known to geographers for centuries, and the island is large enough for a kingdom, but has, until recently, been considered worthless, so worthless that no nation has claimed it, and it is to-day a land without a flag. nnrir.tr the last ten years immense Not only the season's finest models but the rarest of good styles claim prestige in our stocks. Prominent are the lighter featherweight" fabrics in readiness for comfort seekers. BLUE SERGES $12, 15, 18 and $20 NEAT GREYS AND BROWNS $12, 15, 18 and $20 Whalevville, Maryland, where he has a position with the McNerney uttT.iJ 7jr Html deposits of a very good quality oj coal has been discovered, and American, Norweigian and Russian capital, to the extent of several millions of dollars, is invested there. Coal mining is carried on for about there months in year, and when the Construction Company.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gleckner, W. C. Gleckner and Miss Laura Gleckner are occupying the Green-leaf cottage at Lake Nepahwin.

S. C. Rundell of Philipsburg, Montana, is visiting his mother and sister, Mrs. W. D.

Rundell, and Miss Laura Rundell, in this place. Celebrate With A New Straw Prices $1 00 to $3.00 You'll be proud to wear one of these hats. They're so distinctive in style so rich in quality. Braids and shapes to please everybody. long arctic night sets in uie mines are abandoned until the sun comes The People of Canton strain A convention consisting ot delegates from the three countries is now at work arranging ior a government for the island and it is likely that the sovengnity ot Nor way will be recognized and tne and Vicinity Are enabled to enjoy one of the greatest luxuries of the age since Flock's Famous Beer island turned over to the hardy Norsman to govern.

C. A. Wirth Injured in New York. Pnlin A. Wirth.

formerly of this Rev. P. J. Durkin, pastor of the Catholic churches at Canton and Troy, is attending retreat, at Hotel Oneonta, Harvey's Lake, in Luzerne county. Rev.

and Mrs. W. G. Hull attended the picnic and outing of the Elmira District Methodist preachers and their families, at EldridgePark, Elmira, on Tuesday. Byron Gleckner returned Monday from a week's fishing along the Lycoming and its tributaries.

The fishing is good, but the catching poor. Mr anrl Mrs. James Howe, Mr. Has been introduced and is sold place but now residing in New York city was seriously injured last Saturday while performing his duty Oxfords that Catch the Eye Whether you lean towards the English or the more conservative styles in oxfords, you can get satisfaction here. Models in light and dark tans, patents and gun metals shaped to fit your feet perfectly and to impart the utmost of comfort and service.

Crossetts" $4.00 and $4.50 Endwells" $3.00 and $3.50 at the No End to Summer Shirts Myriads of attractive patterns in cool, comfortable silks, madras and soisettes with attached and detached collars and soft pliable French cuffs. Prices 50c to $2.00 with the Bear Lithia bprings company on Eleventh Avenue. Mr. Wirth was standing near tne Dottom nf an flpvator shaft when some one on the floor above pushed a case of mineral water down the snait, striK-ing Wirth, badly bruising and crush and Mrs. Hugh Crawford, of Canton, Mrs M.

E. Mcintosh, ot Harbor Park Hotel, Canton, Pa. This popular malt beverage is renowned for its absolute purity, delicious flavor and beneficial effects, and is the most satisfying of all summer drinks. "It Stands On Top" Sold in Canton only at the Park Hotel, D. A.

Smith, Proprietor. Springs, Michigan, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. iranK rumerson, of Gleason, Sunday afternoon. Miss Elizabeth Davison returned ing his legs.

He was taken to ot. Francis Hospital on Thirty-fourth street, where it was predicted that he would entirely recover. A Fruit Freak. Charles Rundell recently showed us a monster strawberry, that was really ten strawberries in one. Ten berries of the usual size had grown on one stalk, and all had united to form one monstrous berry.

ht from school at Well Washable Ties at 25c C. F. BIDDLE CO. walv Hills. Mass.

Sunday morning she drove to Sunfish pond, where i uar fthpr has established his sum I mer eamD. Miss Pauline Newman is her guest..

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About The Canton Independent-Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
43,322
Years Available:
1875-1977