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The Perry County Times from New Bloomfield, Pennsylvania • 6

Location:
New Bloomfield, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PERRY COUNTY TIMES, NEW BLOOMPIELD, PA. H0U0AN FOWL IS ECONOMIC HANDY SOLDER OUTFIT oaai oms always jimi oiki ui.ii; lin. do or to have bettor than anything else; so to enliven a church social the entertainment committee asked each guest to wear an article to represent his or her favorite fad. There was the boy who had the stamp collecting fever at its height, he appeared with a stamp for a scarf pin, another glued on to a huge ring as a setting, four or five glued to hie coat lapel in lieu of a bouquet. The silk quilt worker had her frock plentifully patched with silk squares of the patterns she was making or desired to make and the would-be artist had water color and pen and ink sketches on her dress with a peaked hat made of water color paper which had marine scenes upon it.

a77c A Magazine Bazar. Money making schemes are always In demand for church fairs, and this one, suggested by Julia Benedict, iaeema to me to be practical and would have a touch of novelty so requisite in 'these days when there seems to be scarcely anything new. 1 would sug-'gost that each of the magazines represented should be written to (advertising manager) and see if a liberal commission would not be allowed on ail subscriptions taken, and no doubt they would be glad to furnish posters and placards that could be used in the decortalve part of the booths. They will also furnish subscriplion blanks. I have enlarged upon the idea, and individual committees must arrange to Buit their convenience.

Have "The Literary Digest" be the supper room, for to be a success a supper should be part of the plan, and then let "Good Housekeeping" have all sorts of things for the house, like dustless dusters, ironing holders, utility bags, broom bags, wash cloths, kitchen aprons, etc. The dustless dusters are made of either white or black cheese cloth dipped in a preparation made of t-qual parts of kerosene and paraffin oil. Dip them and hang out doors to dry at least twenty-four hours before they are to be folded and put up in manila envelopes. They should sell tor, twenty cents. "Tuble Talk" or "What to Eat" should have home made jellies, cakes, 1ies and candies for sale, and any other home made viands that will sell.

Take orders for cakes, to be delivered when needed. "The Woman's Home Companion" may have 'all sorts of sewing necessitiesneedle books, work baskets, "cases of scissors, work bags, etc. For the "Ladies' World" the dainty lingerie, so to every woman's heart, handkerchiefs, filmy tea aprons and any other feminine belongingB, such as boudoir cap's, satin garters, fancy bags and bed pillows of finest white material made up over pink and blue atin slips. "St. Nicldts" will have tor Christmas with "Mr.

and nta Claus" and their assistants to lake charp. Have evergreen tiers, plentifully bpdukled with cotton and uia mond dust, red candles and an abundance of tree ornaments. In fact, if it can be so arranged, it woald be a good plan to have some of the articles for sale attached to the tree. "Little 'Folks" or any preferred magazine devoted to wee children should be the booth devoted to infants' wear, wee hot water bottles, prettily covered with pink and blue outing flannel or eidei down ill have a ready sale as wel fine wash cloths of cheese cloth feather stitched in silk. Lace and net bags filled with rolls of cotton, each tied with baby ribbon should sell for fifty or seventy-five cents, and they are most attractive.

If a can of tal cum powder is put on the bags with the cotton "fluffs" they should sell for a dollar. These are new and practical. Have a tea room for the "Modern Priscilla," with girls in Puritan costumes to serve. Other magazines may be used if occasion demands. A Hobby Party.

We f.l! hobbies whether we ride the "horse" hard or not, there is PARISIAN GOWN I The airship (lend h.id a miniature flying machine I found at the toy counter) worn around hi neck and the golf suit. The sailor boy was in white duck with a "middy" cap and the young miss who was learning to cook carried a ring and chain from which dangled, spoons, egg beater, flour sifter, etc. It is needless to say that this was the merriest kind of a party, far different from the average church social. There was no lack of animated conversation and to make things more interesting when all sat down to refreshments, which were served at small tables, each one was asked to tell In two minutes the merits of his especial hobby. This meeting turned out to be quite an exchange not only of ideas, but of( materials, for every one found out what the oth-r fellow was interested in and some saved stamps and others silk pieces and others gave cherished recipes and all found even those whom they thought dull and stupid were most Interesting when led to talk upon what was uppermost Xo them.

A Bachelor Girl's "Shower." Just because we are not married Our lovers too long having tarried Is no reason we can see Why we should not showered be! After this convincing rhyme came an Invitation from "Polly" and her best girl chum who decided to keen house for the summer to come to their "moving in" party on the day and date given. i "Polly" said she didn't see why they should not have some of the fun experienced by engaged girls and brides and they needed just the self same things even though they were doomed (by choice) to single blessedness. It all turned out a very jolly affair. Picture were put up, dishs unpacked, washed and put on the shelves of the tiny china closet. The guests brought shelf paper, hammer and tacks, cans of delicacies for the "emergency" closet, broom bags and brooms and all sorts of articles that would go to make up a "miscellaneous shower." MME.

MERRI. New Silk Stockings Darned. To make silk stockings last from hree to four months longer than usual, darn the heel and toe before wearing. When the stocking begins to wear it will be the darning cotton that will be worn off. Pull it out and redarn.

"1 darn mine with a thick thread, four strands," writes a contributor to the Ladies' Home Journal. "By watching the.m carefully I can re-darn a pair of stockings twelve or four-'een times without having the stock-ngs show signs of wear. I also darn hem at the top, where the garter clasps. It keps the stocking from the running drop stitch." The Bride's Table. Place a lace doily in the center of the round table and fill a silver loving cup with pink La France roses.

At each plate have a silver candle with a pale pink rose shade. Make a very narrow wreath of smilax back of the plates, but do not mingle flowers with the smilax. Do not over-decorate with dishes, silver or china. If you do not care to have the various candles, then use a candelabra, and decorate at each plate with white marguerites and maidenhair ferns. GREATLY ADMIRED Not Only Is It Excellent Table Breed, but Is Also Good Layer of Eggs and Nonsitter, Of all the French breeds the Houdan is undoubtedly the most economic.

Not only is it a good tuble breed when judged by the quality of its flesh, but it is an excellent layer of good sized white eggs, and is a non-sitter. Newer breeds of fowls which have been introduced during recent years have rather overshadowed it, but few if any of these can lay claim to superiority over it in utility points. No doubt the crest had much to do with the decline suffered by the Houdan, many poultry keepers not caring for crested fowls, owing to the fact that in wet weather the head adornments got saturated and caused colds among the birds, but a lltle consideration for them in the way of shelter during periods of ruin would have minimized any prejudice against them concerning wet crests and colds. When the Houdan stood high in popular favor there were fewer or no scratching-ing sheds in existence, and they either had to face the weather, when such was inclement, or idle about the Interior of the roosting house, and no wonder many birds, and especially the crested ones, often got saturated with rain and caught cold and contracted roup. Today every well arranged poultry yard has its scratching-sheds or day shelters to which the fowls can resort in bad weather, and on that account the Houdan might be given a better position than it now occupies among utility poultry.

The crest of the Houdan Is tn advantage rather than a disadvantage, inasmuch as it guards the head of the bird against the severest frost during the winter time, and thus it improves the as a winter layer. Kightly bred, fed and sheltered the Houdan is a good winter egg producer. TO DESTROY NOXIOUS WEEDS Success of Rotation cf Cultivated Crops Depends Entirely Upon Persistency of Cultivation, A good system of rotation, that Includes cultivated crops, offers the best means of combating the common weeds: but its success Is almost en- Field Dodder. Mrely dependent upon the manner and persistency with which the soil is To intsuie reasonable success, the disk and the harrow should be used frequently while the weeas are still and the crops while growing should be given frequent cul- tivation. Fortunately, the same tillage opera i tions that are used In putting the soil in a condition to receive and conserve rainfall, to prepare the seed-bed and to liberate plant food, are likewise useful in combating weeds.

1 To Avoid the Runty Pig. Kuiity pigs stand a poor snow at the feeding trough with a bunch of their husky brothers and sisters. As they are crowded out of place naturally they do not get enough to tat to keep them growing, and they stay runty. A trough arranged with V-sbaped partitions set strongly in the trough would give the little fellows an equal show with the big ones, and the weaker ones would get their share of food. A handy man can make such a trough arrangement in an hour or so, and even the growth of his pigs would more than pay for his trouble.

Blanching Celery. With celery for early use this may begin as soon as the stalks are a foot high or even less. The first work is in getting the stalks in an erect position, gathering them together with the hand and packing a small quantity of earth around the base to hold them upright. In a few days a little more earth may be added, always doing the work while the plants are dry. being careful to hold the leaves or stalks together so that none of the earth will go between the stalks; also being careful not to put the earth abovo the growing heart of the plant.

Goose at Michaolmas. Eating goose at Michaelmas was a early custom in England as far back as the tenth year of the reign of Edward IV. 1-171 John de la Hayes was bound to render to William Barnaby, lord of Lasrtres, in the county of Hereford, for a part of the demesne land, one goose fit for the lord's dinner on the feast of St. Michael, the archangel. Valuable Weed Eradicator.

Probably no animal is. so valuable as a weed eradicator as the sheep. They not only eat a large variety cf weeds and grasses, but they masticate so thoroughly that almost all the seeds are destroyed or digested, and do not sprout from the manure. Dehorning Calves. It Is all right to dehorn calves as soon as the button starts either with caustic potash or any of the prepared dehorning compounds.

Sow to Discard. If the sow is in the habit of losi.ig her litter, it is the height of folly to continue breeding her. as she has some inherited ailment. Out of Fashion. Harrowing corn when small seems to be going out of fashion more and i more each year.

I Final Destiny the Wicked Br REV. WILLIAM EVANS. D. Director o( BibU Court. Moodr Bible Imtiuite Chicago 2:8 9.

This Is probably the hardest of all the doctrines of Christianity to be received If we ask the reason why. we receive varl--ous answers. Some would tell us that this doctrine Is unwelcome to many( because they feel themselves guilty, and their conscience tells them that unless they repent and turn to God this awful doom awaits them. Others believe that it is because the thought of future punishment strikes terror 10 people's hearts, and therefore this doctrine is repulsive to them. To others, the thought of future anguish seem utterly incompatible with the fatherly love of God.

Yet it is acknowledged to be a remarkable fact that both Jesus and John, who mere thau any one else in the New Testament rep resent the element of love in their 'ives and teaching, speak most of ttia luture anguish of the wicked 1. The wicked are baid to "die in their gins." John 8:21 "Then said Jesus again unto them. I go my way. and ye shall seek me. and shall die in your sins The "death" spoken of here does not mean cessation of existence any more than eternal life means the beginning of existence.

Eternal ilfe does not mean merely to live forever, but to live In a state of blessedness forever. Eternal life deals not so much with quantity as with quality of existence Even in this life dra'h can co-exist with life: "But the that livetd in pleasure is dead while she livetb i I Tim. Fph. 2:1 What men call life God calls death Rev. 21:8 describes what "death" means: "Hut the fearful, and the unbelieving fcli: have their part in the lake which burnetii with fire and brimstone: which is the second death" 2.

The wicked are not annihilated. The texts mcst strongly urged as tf aching the annihilation theory, if rightly interpreted, will be seen to refer to removal from off the earth, and not to future retribution Here ars the principal passages: Psa. 37:20 "But -Jie wicked shall perish, and the enemies of the Ixird shall be as the fat' of lambs: they shall consume; into smoke they shall ccm-urne away." This psalm is written for the encouragement of Israel, snd against her enemies and their power on the earth. This earthly power shall be utterly broken, and bo of no more account than the smoke of a burnt sacrifice feTbe great truth taught here is that the earth is the Inheritance of the saints, and that the wicked shall have no part in it. In speaking of the "everlasting punishment" with which the wicked will be visited, as recorde in 2 Thess.

1:9. the anuihilationist would Eay that reference is made to the "results or consequences" of that punishment and not to the punishment itself But the Scriptures state that it is the "punishment" itself, and not the consequences, that i3 everlasting 'iVkat r.ccd is thr of i resurrection if the wicked are to be annihilated at death, or why should they Itt raised from the dead If only to be at once extinguished forever? there Is no such thing as "unconscious" punishment. You cannot punish anything that is unconscious fan you punish a stone or a house? Punishment can take place only where there is consciousness on the part of the one suffering. 3. The wicked are to be punished.

This punishment is eternal We read of "eternal" or "everlasting" punishment, "everlasting" fire. It is objected that the word "eternal" or everlasting" does not mean "forever This may be true. But we are all willing to admit that when this word qualifies the condition of the righteous it means forever, without end. e. the righteous shall go "into life eternal." The same word, however, quali fies the pumsnment oi me wicneu.

"these shall go away into everlasting punishment." Fairness demand that we make the jcy of the righteous and the punishment of the wicked both qualified as they are by the same word of the same duration If there is any end to the reward of the righteous, there is also to the penalty of the wicked The one lasts as Ions as the other. It "destruction" means annihilation, then there is no need of the word "eternal" to qualify it Further the Scriptures present the punishment of the wicked not only as "eternal" (or age-long), but as enduring "for ever and ever," or "unto the ages of the ages" (Rev 14:11, R. Here is a picture of ages tumbling upon ages is eternal succession. 2. "Fire This is one of the most constant images under which the torment and misery of the wicked Is represented.

Fire Is a symbol of the divine judgment of wrath (Matt. In Matthew 3:10 the godless are represented as a tree hewn down and cast into the Are; in 3:12 the chaff (godless) is burned with unquenchable fire: In 13:42 the wicked are said to be cast into a furnace of fire. Is the "fire" spoken of here literal fire? It is an accepted law of language that a figure of speech is less intense than the reality. If "fire" is merely a figurative must stand for some great reality, and if the reality is more Intense than the figure, what an aw ful thing the punishment symbolized by Are irust be. The of IE TEXT Rum M.ll".HV4Ty Kit Will Prove Profitable to All Practical Farmers.

No Investment Can Be Made That Will Pay Perce of Profit Best for Beginner to Make His Start With Wire. (By K. B. TUTTI.K.) There is probably no investment the farmer can make that will pay the percentage of profit that a Boldering kit will. Reduced to Its lowest a coffer cau be bought for 25 cents, acid 5 cents', solder wire 10 cents.

It will Ina better, however, to buy two coffers, one and one-half or three-quarter pounds each, which should not cost more than 75 cents per pair. Using two one can be heating while the other is in use. The acid is muriatic In which dissolve a little zinc. For the beginner probably It will be found handier to use the solder in the form of a wire, though later a bar will be found to be convenient. Having secured the outfit the first thing is to "tin" the point.

To do this file the beveled surfaces down bright and heat in the stove (gas, gasoline, wood or coal) until it is hot enough to melt the solder. Then with a small, flat stick smear the surfaces with the acid and rub the end of the 'solder over them. If it does not melt freely get the coffer hotter. After tinning the point try not to get it so hot it will burn off; in case you do, however, retin by the same process. If the tinning is not on the solder will not pick up solder nor melt it freely.

For a starter let us try a leaky pan Sandpaper, or scrape clean around the hole and smear with acid. Take the coffer properly heated and set the point on the hole, applying the solder. Watch and see it run freely (you can tell at once if it fuses properly) and remove the coffer. If the coffer gets cold take the other one which should also be in the fire. The work may be done equally well inside the pan.

If the hole is too large cut a small piece of tin and put over the hole, having first used the acid on both patch and pan. Put the coffer on top of the patch and when sufficiently hot run the end of the solder wire around the patch. It should melt readily. Hold down with the coffer or stick until the solder runs. This briefly, is the problem of soldering.

Other applications will be readily solved once one is familiar with the tools. Most metals can be soldered, not. however, cast iron or aluminum. In the case of galvanized iron or zinc, use muriatic acid straight. As more skill is acquired you will be able to pick up solder on the point of the coffer when you can buy solder by the bar.

WORKING THE LISTED CORN Sled Shown in Illustration May Be Used for First Time Over Useful and Practical. The illustration shows a home-made sled which we use lor working listed corn the first time over. The runners are of 2 by 8 plank, six feet long. They are placed eight inches apart and a solid floor nailed over them. The floor is wide enough to reach to the middle cf the ridge on each side.

Six 2 by 4's Sled for Listed Corn. are then nailed from the base of the runners to the outer edge of the floor on either side. These are placed in a position at right angles with each oth er, says a writer in the Denver Weekly Post. This sled can be made in a few minutes and you will find it both useful and practical. Best Time to Sell.

It is generally conceded that the best time to sell chickens is from the first of January to the first of November. Every one seems to want to sell during November and December, and consequently the market is always overstocked at that time. Sprague says if possible chickens should be marketed before the first cf November, and if not they should be held until tsfter the holiday in order that the best prices may be secured. This court refers only to sending to an open nurket, and diet not apply to any private cus torn. Protect From Flies.

Remember that it takes as much energy and feed to fight flies as it dops to grow a calf. Then will it not pay to cut out the flies by giving the calves access to a dark stable or shed, and also apply a little "fly dope." You may rest assured that they will grow and lay on flesh twice as fast from now on if they are afforded a means of thus protecting themselves than they otherwise cculd possibly do. Bush Fruit Easy to Raise. Blackberries and raspberries will thrive on almost any soil and under a variety of conditions. It is comparatively easy to propagate them, so there is little excuse for not having a small garden patch of this fine fruit.

Keep Good Laying Hen. A good laying hen should never be sacrlticed so long as she can be used for breeding purposes and the selection of such hens for breeders would sooia result in the, improvement of the flock. Nearly in the center of the dam we' can see the famous Bpillway through which pass the surplus waters of the Chagres. It is a concrete lined channel 285 feet wide cut through a hill of rock and across it is built a curved dam of concrete on top of which is a row of regulating gates. Just below the spillway, out of our sight, is the hydroelectric station which supplies power for the operation of the entire canal and the lighting of the whole, zone.

Our channel through the lake for we still must follow a path Indicated by range towers on the shores is, now a thousand feet wide and lcdsi us somewhat tortuously through a' maze of islands. Look down as we near some of them and you will see below the surface the tops of giant trees. For we are sailing over what but a few months ago was the valley of the Chagres, dense with tropic: vegetation and dotted with native villages surrounded by banana and co-coanut plantations. Close to the shores the stoutest of the trees still Btretch their naked, dead limbs above the water, but before long these, too, will have rotted and fallen, leaving the luxuriant landscape unmarred. Passing over the sites of Eohio, Frijoles and Chagresito, we now come to the place where Tabernilla once stood, and here both lake and channel narrow down, the latter being first 800, then 700 and finally 500 feet wide.

On the hillsides to the right stand few abandoned houses, all that remains of Mamei, Juan Grande, Gor-gona and Matachin, busy places while the canal was building, now covered by- the spreading waters. Along the left shore of the channel runs the relocated Panama railway and here at Gam boa it crosses the Chagres river, which our vessel now leaves to enter the far famed Culebra cut. This great gash through the spine of the continent is 300 feet wide at the bottom, but, because of the tremendous earth slides which cost Uncle Sam so much money and time, its width at the top is astonishing, being half a mile just here opposite the town of Culebra. Beyond, on our left, towers Gold hill. 493 feet above the bottom of the canal.

Far up on its rocky slope we discern a streak of white paint which marks the level to which the French company carried its excavations. Nearly opposite is Contractor's hill, 364 feet high. As we move between these, the loftiest hills along the route, and pass the location of that notorious "cockroach," the Cucaracha slide, the Pedro Miguel lock stands before us, white in the noonday sun. This, a single flight lock, is 30 feet high, the highest on the canal. Again we are taken in tow by electric mules and in less than half an hour we have been lowered those 30 feet and steam into another artificial body of water, Miraflores lake, only a mile long.

At its southern end we pass the town ol Miraflores and enter the locks of the same name, a double flight that lets us down once more to sea level. The exciting part of the passage is over, but there is yet much of interest to see. Down the broad channel we look clear out onto the glittering waters of the Pacific ocean. Nearer at hand, on the left, Ancon hill raises its summit, and clustered on its slopes we see the many structures of the big hospital, the new administration buildings of the canal and the barracks of the marines. And now, steaming between fllled-in swamp lands, we come to Balboa, which the government has made into a fine naval station, with an immensa dry dock and extensive machine shops.

Stretching out from Balboa into the Pacific is a breakwater, two miles long, which protects the harbor from storms. At its outer end is a cluster of little islands, Naos, Perico, Culebra and Flamenco, and here we pass under the powerful guns that guard the Pacific end of the canal. They are mounted high up on the summits of these rock islets, rifled cannon, one shot from which would sink a battleship, and huge mortars whose shells can be dropped behind Tobago island 12 miles away in the direction of Japan. In ten hours we have crossed through the continent and now float on the broad Pacific. As we look back the picturesque city of Panama lies bathed in the light of the westering sun and on the side of Ancon hill shines the big white Tivoli hotel.

The sudden night of the tropics is soon to fall, and already, as far back as we can Bee along our route and beside the ocean channel, are twinkling the lights that Uncle Sam has set up to guide the world commerce through this most wonderful of canals which he has Colon, 'C. Z. I am going to take you through the completed Panama canal on the first vessel to pass across the isthmus from the Atlantic ocean to the Pacific. True, the canal Is not yet completed, and will not be for a year or so, but that shall not prevent our making the trip now on paper. Let us imagine ourselves, then, on an ocean liner approaching the Atian- lie or nortnern entrance or me great prepared to enjoy this initial trip and to wonder at the sights in store for us.

In that word "northern" lies the first surprise for many of the passengers who did not know that the canal runs not from east to west, but from northwest to southeast. This seeming anomaly is due to the fact that the Isthmus of Panama here trends almost east and west. It is still early when a watchful passenger shouts "Land," and all who are up rush to the port rail to gaze upon the hilly, jungly coast of the isthmus between Porto Bello and Colon. As the steamship plows swiftly through the waters as blue as ever were tiose of the Mediterranean a cheer goes up from the deck, for we have caught a glimpse of the Stars and Stripes fluttering above a fringe of cocoanut palms. That marks the location of one of the big forts built to protect the canal in time of war and is on Margarita island, virtually a part of the mainland.

Colon, flat and uupicturesque, now comes into view, and directly ahead of us an immense breakwater stretches a mile out from the shore on the right. At its land end, on Toro point, is another fort whose great guns are masked by the tropical foliage. Now we have virtually entered the canal, for the 500-foot channel extends far out from the shore line. At reduced speed we enter Colon harbor and the Bay of Limon and steam past the pretentious Washington hotel, Uncle Sam, proprietor; the docks of Colon, crowded with shipping from the United States, Europe and many a port of Latin America, and the American town of Cristobal on whose water front stands the statue of Co lumbus sent over long years ago bjl the Empress Eugenie. Skipping about the bay, looking like long, black water beetles, are the cayukas or native dugouts, and moving lazily before the sea breeze are the little sailing craft in which the queer San.

Bias Indians are bringing their products to market. Four miles and a half we steam through Limon bay and the shore narrow in on our 500-foot channel, still at tide level. Now look ahead three miles and get a glimpse of the Gatun locks, that tremendous flight of three water steps up which we are to be lifted. In a few minutes we reach the towering dividing wall of concrete, our own power is shut off and the ptortric locomotives on the lock walls take us In tow. Four of these powerful machines attach their hawsers to cur ship, two in front to pull it and two astern to keep it steady and to bring it to a stop When entirely within the lock chamber.

The immense gates close silently behind us and at once the water begins to flow into the chamber through culverts that have their openings in the concrete floor. Slowly the vessel rises until it is on a level with the second chamber, 28 1-3 feet above sea level, when the gate ahead is opened and the electric mules move forward, this time up a heavy grade by means of the center racks in the tracks. Tw ice this operation is repeated, and now we are at the summit, 85 feet above the sea. The last gate opens and the locomotives pull us into Gatun lake. As our propellers begin to turn again and we steam out into this im-ruense artificial lake, a marvelously beautiful landscape is spread before us.

The surface of the lake is dotted with islets, once the summits of Tiger hill, Lion hill and a dozen other eminences; on both sides are steep promontories, lovely little peninsulas and deep bays and inlets where the water has spread into the once Jungle-filled valleys. Before we get too far from the locks, let us step to the starboard raii and have a look at the Gatun dam, enormous stretch of rock, sand and clav that has formed Catun lake by ii pounding the waters of the Chagres river. It is in reality a low ridge, one aud a half miles loug, built across the valley, and when we are told that it is nearly half a mile wide at its base, 400 feet wide at the water surface and 100 feet wide at its crest, which is twenty feet above the level of the lake, how utterly ridiculous seem the fr of those alarmists who predicted trip dam would be pushed over by the -res in time of flood! Where She Counted. A Washington man and his wife, whose domestic complications are frequent, but not serious, had one evening called upon a married couple. On their way home the lady said "Now, in the case of the Barkers.

I should say it was an ideal marriage. Really; 1 believe they both think absolutely alike." "Charming people, charming people!" said hubby. "But about the thinking, Gladys, if you will notice he generally fciaXs first." 1 1 1 ill 1V11 1 ivDlVlMiit.V.tirfiW'Ms. Vni. 111 1 44r WhV All Eeen Used.

"The managers of the San Francisco exposition are up a tree in one respect." "What is that?" "They can't think up any new namu to apply to a midway." Woes of Women. "My ife is so mad "How now?" "Puffs went out of style and left her with about $50 worth of lovely hair oa hand." t'ourior-Joarnal. Kf MODEL OF CERISE FLOWERED CREPE AiD CHIFFOX.

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About The Perry County Times Archive

Pages Available:
32,571
Years Available:
1911-1975