{ title: 'Watertown Daily Times. volume 2 (Watertown, N.Y.) 1894-current, May 12, 1920, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1920-05-12/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1920-05-12/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1920-05-12/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1920-05-12/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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|g] nere AmawE To GET FAPE af Elana | tutes for wood to. be. converted into For paper making. It is only [ wwrepstition of a Commonpliice stale § 'sbe pulp. wood In sufficient quiitities to. supply the newspapers \C $ i t dhs a &e bt Netger <r [ [bee +a f tl, . 0% tow fud usted ental) \x Ne # 'the govern Red ac of a in Ampricanisation york ute whose. forebears bare been tountry apd who sinder one and ity and 655mm; train Tthe o Ent Smilth {of\ ths: aye that the day is rapidly hike wher no longer will ond. The. scarcity is already jpaaly felt: by: cour | locaF xo.. chtermm‘ news. § Times 4014 wimt. of th i,. Go to Alas dor would; say, Watch us n our paper mills in the atiinexbaumtible for- borin. But. the ship passage In & Jmem hak: : W. ~All of e'oannot. forever ppiy.produced. ~jn the north» ties, wefthi as a grt maire . We lil be come ust yout; the. materiain e far away placek.\. . aats will' ase now milirials, 'The, 03 'pay mirsaiy \begun. n a¥i to “max!“ & Mfiy.wm & A, Tegard ' fo th f pagar {M grass, andin oui it is possible to mow | of It with # speofal treoted* mowing machine, 10 # - : The Bureau of Sclertce at cently estimated that -an 006,000 -aetes.. of bamboo £ ply a pubp mill of 20: tons fly campailty© for three years of 300. lip ays €ach without taking in- tne . growth of bumboo ._Working on &l ; bakia, which is ¢ Tearlble, such an: £ mB of Ass (count to out bamboo tands »In 'Bétiah ne fntands aftora -& stibl« #uppites of * Suth kon gral. The Phil | For for and alxty years In order to ¥naul» an opening for the paper in | Mtudtry- here? ° It tooks much as - if Ae lalands would not have to walt a[ Song for the American nianufactur l now. The isNands are remoté, '€6 bd muro. © Shipping would be & problem. . But the exigen «Aeg.of the aftuation make it neges »ery to submit to | thee incomvan Fences: - The iriands , of the South provide cheap labor in mggfl 18 - and for the k\ mbout ¢] dfote@ Alint . the « Obe 0. aL * Burion, hihager 61 the Dally Mail wad tof the ather tra In- Spring 'and not {forth. with 11m aggressiveness of their natures and Invent new | ma- terials and opor up new fources of gobply which wilf give Ther 'f papér they want. : They sr6é Fis proscbing the zero hour as regards the paper supply at the present time,. \ That explains all this restlexgness, They gre adl but @t the, boint, of; \something which wE , apiv® ho situation. Ff avery paper mill | Politics, is fighting for A treaty.or one with reservations is blind also to that other fact that many of the moit Inflientis) ~Deifgs in America were to be compelled to stop making news print from pulp «{ whod a week from; fiext Saturday, on- Tthat day we would bave some sort of &a aubstitute, g{be no one knowes, but the nmateria: vould be produced when the bail g- rang.. bragging, either. Even Mr Burton of London, England that it is the truth,: +c R HOW ELLE: AND YOUNG AUTHORS The New York and Boston papérs -of Inat night déwoted many columns of news matter and editorial to 'the passing of Mr. William Desh Howells. The one fact that emphbaiizes Itself fpore thap all others in the enumer ation 'of \his characteristics ar set {forth in the obituaries is that which ralates to his kindness to young writ- ers. Of ill recent American authors he showed the most fntersat in the striggling writer who sought rcoog= nition. <u Henator Henry Cabot Lodgt Mr. Owen Wister in interviews pay mbzi'to to bir memory both as an author and as & most buman editor C° who. treated them kindly in their younger days, mnd if five scofe and. more other AmerJcan vritefuirho|' hare attained distinction were to ex- press thempoires as to Mv.William Dean Howells they also woulddwail upon bis Xthimess to\ thein when they were He helped Ham- 167, and It was tha favorite & 'spproach of the writers of years ago to launch their book If who will. ever forget Mr. Pau Jaurence Dunbar, the colored poet whose gomlius Hashed acrous. the aky 'for a brled period a gcork of 'years *|ago, during tat short career that \2 | wae out of by an carly desth, 2 conidered the graitest Lt: arary ctitio of hfs day and gdnera< tlog, did not hesitate to endorse the vegas of~thir «olgred slerator opet: atys and give hloi the approval which 3 .. | opened tine door of Stenature to him. , | Amprican lleratoure was extricied by \ | that endorsement which brought out _| th® rotile: of this o | SENATOR UNDERWOOD Arnon. a winkes much | Birman, P i lonté that Semator Oscar W. Under i | waod tgmmmunvaap-tar ro thy] td to excom buf | Commoner tried hard. He travelad te ybifa\? [a [AB the way from Nebraska to Als stow tha. tras that goer bama -ard told the poople that it was | pulp. & tggwmqunnguo ot them to reslect one as Kas, an ¥etas Mn Underwood. But they did not follow hts suggestion; They vot« ad jorst as they did when Captain Hobson undertook to defest Under wood for the senate several years a | #80. . . | tion. 'For hiro ahd all other good citizens . to lift ng their clube when there ap- |are of too mumerous & company to iit the planta, L Feallly become a * y ‘ -A he refer in his letter to the Multno® p hat r-and cvdll then ® \calls Theis. all th the & A that. crate Just what It woulg | th And this; is not \KFankee Pomeroy form 4 =e gres 1504 and. Garland, ho helped Irving Bache far Ar + youns poet. ed zs * INATED. primary raturns from Alabama, today indi an fail= \Tho od, Willism J. 8 pass his dofea The Democratic pm} Ts confront Hiv nay have been wet but It to stir up -| much | feeling in the t north ls now take: the position thit iba litb amendment is passed und should stand, and that is all chit &ny prohibittortst can- ask; even of one who was wot before the amendment wont int) the constitu- Nr. Bryin canfiot expect to make | progreas by camping on the trail of an who was wet before the It is well wvery 16th axdendment pasied. pears a man advocating the repeal | of the Ith amendment, but those who ware \wet\ in that other day aunihfBBate writh good purpose at this time. Underwood is a good senator. He is one of the three or four con: spicuous figures in the senate. He whould be permitted to remain there. Mr. Bryan fights to betier purpose when | ho - crosses | swordi@ with . Rdwards or some of those Edwards backers rho defiantly put forward a expdidGiate to batter down and, render at nothing the prohibition laws for which wo kave fought so long. a UP To THE \GREAT MAJORITY. -- Party\ *. Mr. Wilson has split wide open that. fgrfit majority party\ to which 'mah countsye Democrats by his state- ant that the treaty and covenant be Unrkedinm. the exact form in which Koy wore framed in Faris, The . w i“ i init as pfrememationk of.. Aking. . 1t was then 'said iy sew a pa the *lonk* controversy; of apbraitting a of\ tions \he now snaps the whi . The president's 3 be disconcerting to bere of-hia own party. FE6 loss of the fact that the Democrats of reservations, mild or . otherw He does not consider that Mr, hf view thit the American peopled ¥a the covenant, and that-they are not compelled to accept it in the Wilson LEK, JACK§ON AND ARLINGTON. The is- figuratively up in. arms becaure Lee and Jacksonhave Ae-the arrows go heen excluded from the list of Amer-[From a hickory bow ican herces carved on the marblelL 'member how ye lumns of the memorial amphithea~ tra In Arlington national cemetery, near Washington. The When the dewdrops glowed organisations are fling protests, th their congressman. The South. 'etnore are angry at théir felJow citf xen, Mr. Secretary Daniels, for it. Leem» he was presont at the com- mesting at which it was v6t-| Say, Shep. do ye see ed to exclude'these two Confederate| g | generals. . Secretary of War faw | I» said'to have presided at that com- g pog milteo mesting, and the propos! wibleé with a Howells endorsembnt. | to exclude the two Southerners went l 1g run away through without much prot@st, - \I1 raises the old quastion: How | An' come back an' told a yaru, An' when Pm took mo deeds of those who tought to- d the union? The fast that they were iincere and bore detract from oltense. Téko tho caro of General Les ant Ynatont to his wife, Mary Les, from ber grandmother, Martha{l 'member when 'Wakbington. Lee was a colons! 'the Ledatal anfiy when the waropeh- | ed Interview with oid General Seo 'who sought to dissuade hime from his 1 ; |eoupme and in house became tho headquarters union gonerals. Later it was tum: ed into & hospital. portion of the grounds was laid off as a cemetery for thos@ solders who foll in engagoments near Wash- ington, Strange to soldier to be burled there was a [D Confederate. halla. He was an exceptional gen- eral, a refined, tender, manly man, but it is n6t well to elthay justify or wlority 'his deed of turning agminst the States. That is the thing that would be done if his name wore placed in a matfonal halt of fame. may be said of Stonewall} | Jackson. a general so great that Englistmen erected a monument to his memory | in the- city of Richmond. bit it is far from wise to bold up his career as that of &a national hero., Civil war. That would not be well for the nation. These desd would then have died in vain. It is far from justified action to bring Up that struggle and its lessons ks, time give us hay ut {tbat there may . Ory out \No change!\ _ . “am enate were in the main in As gt strong factor\ in 5 an am Wo of the country have a right to revise the treaty and ary more than Mr. Wilson wi the, % And -in bis reference he |OF 'g' alonal elections. ra Rtker| Up A ' ure we to go in glorifying the TO 'To It was his home. . Ho than lived az Arlington, Ste' out his reslgmation. He op | Yo rouldn't 'a' died for me. As the Lord has shown. Greater love bas none Tham bas be «ho would dio fer a he eral troops. - The | h Subsequently a It hardiy seems right to jostify u the | a goremment of the United he Arlington ampbhithcatre (dr it is Tho same ! f We must not forget entirely the con- stantly, but the itory must ever be told in history as the warning lesson to all future rensrations which might produce those who would have some Idea of again @ltomapting to disrupt the union of the states. agro Speaking of saving daylight, the only good, legitimate argument in favor of it is that if any part of the present generation shows a disposi- tion to save anything they should be given encouragement. Let's see, didn't we once get all excited over how a Oollareand-cuffs silU-stockinged A. B. C. conferepcse at Niagara Falls was going to settle that Mexican prow a fow years ago? Isn't it .queer? - The public is always complaining that a candidate iz using too mulh money and the rty workers are shouting that he isn't using enough. - If this bo the, Maying time instead\ F be thawing weathat. Wol 0 av ~ mames . Ray an. tfinfil'u‘m CGoliman. All trip tickets \deaued | ark's unsanfier ust. ©. ential; spats, as applied to dif ences between hacieng you can. fool a gir! on mast hing 'cept what's the style, wy department is scrapping felt over the honors. | ebs's backers will not 'have to Wirry for fear he'll break down hile on the mtump. , Effie Kaiser's latest pose is th 'laxdodger and strange to say he ot away . Painting the town red is pow ca pastime. + OP Crochéty Shep 'TGan't hardly step! Down the ol\ cow-run Foward the risin' sun An' up to the mullen ground, i Ake at'monds sowed 8 Whore & cow had faid In some frosty glade That ol\ thorn-tree \ whet how we laid ¥faichin' a woodchuck hole! Krom school that day You wont an' bid undef the barn. < ~men dogs uot|*Fon my soul' the seriousness oftheir | Hore's the swimmin'hole' I 'mefmbar how you an' I By that willer clump Would run an' jump t | Down into the watorsky Custis | Karwallop' An' then in [1 was drowndin' an' 'gun to «Bout. \You drove in In An' swum like sin. An'-by thunder'-ye dragged me the drawing room of that colonialf ., d houso'still standing ho had the eate} ! | 4 [Hit you with an ex* Gingerbread an' berawas' that | liitle | [1g . 3 * ger long Howay | m from the drawing room b8 Thay® was nevor a day | posed sccemion but thought should follow Virginia. He started South with his family soon there aler, and Arlington was immediate | yer poor sou] may gain or} an' the Lord} Ax the end. say. the frat fof promise. During tn? Tendant send you any fstters?\ \Yon. sit,\ answered the fatr Mac. \Dd he said an inquiring guest 'The nestling church at Ovingdean And there was nobody within The sunlight slanted igome day thecoal will all give out-) \kets Cissued to the Fl wry 00 R ,. as applied to footweai; non- essential.\ mg Abe Mattin is'right when he W is usual after every war, the # with it. | \ kgpeaking of egnservation of pxjint read piper, why not cut out tha R&YY knows compelled to accept it In the form in: inguiry at once? . which it was first considered by He made many concessions to: foreign commissioners. Why. nbt concessions now to the American 'people? \ ' . Ho argued at first that it was not) ; r a political fight. Now 'he says m3 sc toin, wip! tha ltreatment“: party must save th@\ Yer cup is purty nigh filled. world. speaks of the \great majority part | meaning of course .that party\. the mustered a muoflq ig the last mfi'é g the pastur® lot. ' |Gome, Shep. limp 'long with me. . Way back in the time ¥e was in yer prinfe How supple ye used to be' tente ~* R age -gee whis' rheumatiz, they siy ye got 11 go to some spot u 61 'd bound over the fields completo. stan' an' warm my feet. thete on the rooky knoll? ay in its shade the hlug heech:tree. wit _out . *. guers not-no sires»' of friend y its saduess an' pain --Irving Bacbolier (in May Every- body's Magazine. glora. (Gome is the * whict in the old Gays \used to stand at tike ortreme southern portion of Pine Plains. the camp ground whore in other days thw North Country clllzens gathered by the tens of thou- -mandms ostemsibly to worship, but in |a -raally for love making. histoxio old Freeman gone. This famou old tavern is clued and rumor |6 that it will be \tom down the com|ig summer This mammoth old boatiery hugging the rim of Pine Plains and facing the gullen Kamargo River was the scene of gweat revoiry in former days. Dances were held regular in the huge hallroom, to which came the entieze north cougar. ald ang young. widows, cripples® and ard €00 couples, dances which lasted jt for ssveral dayp and nights gutst the old Preman House hee more murders, gunfights and aheriff\s raids than all the other North Country hotls combined and s empty, grim and aldraat. Grass is growing up through 60 the brosd board weranda and a thou: mnd long tailed rats scurry across tho bundred empty rooms. Nghthll every door laich starts up an Enotssant rattle, an uncanny bair raising sound sugiestive of \hants\ but no doubt causts) by the vibration of the thundering Kamargo as it goes iunxbling dors its rock-strow n bed. Im the old dags much of Pine Plains was unoiained land &nd the where're his fancy willed. and oked out a precarious liviag, trading hores and prosing off the farm country around the borde: Kgown locally as t forty thieves theas nestors wore lorwor of the surreaunding and many of the band served peni sentences Now all are scat tomed and gone and the grangor has thrown away the locks and chains thet used to ador thoe stabile and granary doork. YWhow EU'ncle Sam aaw {t to comvert Ewolve thousand acres yet Roday it ® neager squasited 'The Passing of a +4 ' Sebi 6 e sfonat huckleberry pickers @ villages used to here and there among the 20,000 more of sandy land; gonsvare the pife Lorests. Gone are.the-weather- bestorm shacks which used to nestle among the shgitered nooks of the brooding m shitks where'lived the nester who tolled not netther Aid he spin. Gone is the old toll gate that used to stand nei the headwater of Cold Spring gull on the old Plank road. Tha old - Plink_rorad is gone, swallowed up intmo Grande or back in Rip-roaring | to be killed. | the shifting sands. Only a desply | « rutted. sand 'road warks its form?“ roue,. a desolate and tangy & over\ which now and ano heavily laden whiskey caravan its way on nights of darkmess, ower the ime road where 0 ngo went creeping the o% teams of.the old tile opium smug t or camp meaed theo Piains valet Now: Home of Foxand , bs y ple C Headed Ghiils. Only Remnant of Its Ancient *~ __. By H. G. WIESON. with Pine Plains, ever the land of mys- ftery ang komance, .4s rapidly pass- 'Hpg away into the limo; The great ohatge: from piactically public lands to a milltary \reservation coup! with prohibition wrought its down- fal} arrd the old time riotous, law * less Pins Pisins of history is no at of | more, _ Gone are the 40 thieves; gone are the nondescript hoss traders; gone arg the liger heer signs that used: to wimg from cich squat, shambling Gone are the profes gt at ed ed - | bu i whose be scattered ates, the TOR inky It $ ground,. Soon the fouse will be orphans, 500 No Just at counts Romance No More-Wild Ma; camp the nester was move, -sorely against his will, how- ever, &n the saying goes ed Pine Pisinier always On€ mark the location where the nester As a military camp Pine Plains waw always tary men asd but made sof the same. remarked that Pine day rivaled Cape Cod only for deso lation, - However, expectation - of | hordea of thirsty son caused a mushroom saloons, amusement \all around the borders of the reser: wation; and up to the eqpming of NA-, j tionwide prohibition it did. not re- quire much imagination for the tour- ist to believe he was down along the camp f resorts are now all closed and the i handsome barkeops, some ' gamblers and blond, zig- strident women are gone. As group was.of a later day, however, ly lost its picturesque when the neater was forced to move. Uncle Sam's domain it forced old time professional out of busimess. was largely public property the pick- era came each season from north, south. cast and west, men, women ined horses and packs of cringing. cur dogs. Fhese nomadic, dirty fac- ed people pitched their tenta in vil- lage around the springs of pure, cold water that spring from the shifting sands; and plyed their trade picking and selling the huckleberry, black and blue, © everywhero. As this was in the good old days before women suffrage held sway.the actual work of \picking bor- riles was dons by the women and children. while father lolled ben Buyers camo daily to the tented vil- tages, some wilh money. kome with pork and potatoes to barter for the succulent little blueberry | Each vil- Hage had its bough-canopled dance pavilion aind by night revelry beld sway. * berries galage but they are ered by the consumer who from the surrounding tawnas for the day. Imily throughout tho borry season thero are iacusands of final vers. limosines and big, bull, tourin'® amupe \a b £ £4 'Pine Plains; || Jo Owl | spas I 53, 4 *} % <4 s Threé' C Glory. Plains land- into a manoeuver forced -to that once & in heart least. The little smoked, begrim- cabing were torn down and moy- away and today only ® few Hlac shes and stunted crab apple trees his carefree life. in disfavor among mili- | General Wood Plains on a rainy soldiers eagh sea- growth of various : , romdhouses and spring UR resorts to of the gold fever days. Thesd i spbinx-faced | bejeweled and this may be said that Pine Plains real- background As no one is allowed to camp fin the berry | picker When the Plains ng children, herds of bony. spay- which grew so plentiful he shade of the whispering 90pm Pine Plaga» still produces buckle ow gath- rives out cars, parked hit or miss along the sand roads while ownrre pick the bervies thai were one time bought from the professional. But It's only for the day and as Egyptian dark nese seilles downs over the brood: ing, somnolent wastes the last car gachiga away and all is all. ors does the nickaring of the boned horses and the discordant rking of the mautles curs break the ullneas of the velvet night. No more doe» the squeaking sound of the blind player's fddlo, the sing«ong calls of \mll a man left\ and the gur gle. gurgle of «hiskey waft out from the bort; pickera' camp IL. How d - P milt trom nuts?\ .* , * is,. - NIOMG *: Do spruce' freee - shed theip ”aw/9932 em s t n , 0s i% C . Hdw do: ggglmlgt extract thg\ ; ~ $207 e Itt, What change in the oricieg nast has clvitization made? ~- Answers in'- formorrow's nature * notes. - _ { ANSWERS To rREVious Tions: _ - CV% 1. What disadvantages do the carly } - nest-builders suffer? Theé first nestbuilders in spring, lke thefirst settlers near hostile tribes, suffer the most casualties, a large proportion of the nests of Aprij and May are destroyed; their ene n mies have been many months with. little use has been {out eggs, and their appetites are keen for them. Et is a time, too, when other food is scarce, and the crows and squirrels are hard put, It. How does the color of the sun. rige foretell the weather? Thero is one redness In the east in ho morning that means storm, an. other that means wind. The former is broad, deep and angry} the clouda ook like.a buge bed of burrting coals just raked open; the latter iw softer, more vapory and more widely ex. tended. When the transformation extends unti; nearly the whole sky flushes, even the west glowing slisht. ly, the sign is always to be inter- proted as meaning fair weather Are - grasshoppers Immune from frost? The grass hatches out under the snow, and why should not the grass hopper? At any fate, a few suct. hardy specimens may be found in the latter part of our milder win- tera wherever the sun has uncovered a sheltered bit of grass for a few days, even after a night of ten or - twelve degrees of frost. 'Take them in the shade, .and let them freeze stiff as pokers, and when thawed out again they will hop briskly. (Rights reserved by Houghton Mf fiin Company.) Money for Luxurigs. Saranac Lake Enterprise: . In view of the economic condition of the countBy it i% & crime for pec» ple to spend money for unnecessary luxurtes. Such expenditures by mil lions of people do the double damage of creating unusual demands for labor for the manufacture of luxuries and goods for immediate consump tion, and create & scarolty of labo: for necessities and products needed for constructive and more pertman: ent operations | People ara atoms mizing- -becauso thoy aro tompolled to do so-high pricer in the medicine which will gure high prices. same sweet-scented alr ang the same ico cold. gushing springs. Tho birds sing just as swoetly and the land scape is atfill painted In ® glory of coloring never to be imitated by the brusb of an artist There is the same olg Hog's Back, and the sams old Hickleberry CRarlie still goes teetering here and thers among the sand dunes in pursult of the clustve little berry that mado him famous The same old. bairy. wild man stil} gamBols down tho syivan glades and the same old, throes, beadlsas ghosts front of the beisted traveler | But for all of theso famffiar setting» the old Pine Plains, the romantic land of inapiration fo? Action writers \the {land where they rairzed chlidren, bue kleberries and hell,\ {s no more and for tho most part is given over to Trup ihe Pine Plains (bare ibe the yapping fox and the.melaschol; , great horned owt ~ Short Stories. Mae Smythe was suing for breach orosm-ezanmi- atton sho was asked, \\Did the de ss Toving worda?\ \Did hal 111 say the course of robaflion eJected bY | iof tte always called mo hix dear. sa to aren one i | most a ur ont vt that it be a ~whiaskey\ party and the 8 nhs 'other is that it bo & prohiBition party. The Alabama fight brought this out. The retum of Senator Underwood dots not necesmrily mean sven the Alabama wing becomes a whiskey Party- he did not mako noize enough about ad ended by telling me he batonged to mo.\ And when the court bad the letters romd i was found he bad od dressed | her Smythe.\ them \Vory truly yolursi\--Life.. as \My dear Misa and that be had signed A lawyez gave a dinner party, aft er which the gentlemen retired to smoke and chat. sot up. took down a aword which formed part of a trophy and, brand: All at ance tro shing it in the air exclaimed \Ab gentlemen, I shall never for get _the dmy when I drew this blade for the first tima.\ * \Pray. where did you draw it\\ \At a raffle,\ was the lawyer's sim: ple rejoinder. -Philadelphia Inquirer. The Bee in Ghurch. Was fragrant at a hive in May: 'To preach, or praise, or pray through the door, And through the panes of painted glas®, © l When | stolo in, aloue. once more | To fee! the ages pass. | Then, through the dim gray husk _ there droned An echoing plain-song on the air. As if somme ghostly priest intoned. An old Gregorian there ~ Saint Chrysostom could never lend More boney to the Heavenly - Spring Than seemed to murmur and ascend On that invisible wing. So small ho was, I scarce could ses My girdled brown hicrophant; But only a Franciscan bee In such a bass could chant\ His golden Latin rolled and boomed; {t swayed the altarfiowers anew, Till all that hive of warship bloonaed \With dreams of sun and dew, Ah, sweet Franciscan of the May. Dear Chaplain of the fairy queen, You sent a singing heart away 'That day, from Ovingdean. . SeAlfred Noyes, in McClure's Mag agine. Dose t & Qealogy and Finance. -Vet; as we fear the worst, fe are convinced 'beyond & doubt, *-| Ameride réjoices that thero were no i l , . j s . wil tanish first < tl .T§;l!hlnxt0n~§x_n§3 . To the Rent Gougers, s THe owner or a CoTTAGE, A BAR., 2 Cows, 6 PGS, % ChickEms. Aa Garg DEr AnD a FLiNCEE the Food Profiteers and the Raili'éad Strikers. By Webster _o me mams > REX == evan wour' l. ANSWER THES halk \os tV, - atfil flt meross the sandy rosd& in' & ar, porn Taken 'from ' l Files 10 ar & m1 Pr. J. R. Sturte among the visitor Charles 8, L spent yesterday { friends. © Utaytonwn-the$ and Mra. James | ed to this village residence in Wat Frank S. Mo: New York last ev just graduated fr college of Pharm ed the state ean was with Camp sears provious tc with objects to mineral lands, m fllfl‘flmfl! #I stone and miners bian Tale Co, wi terday. The loc is to bo tn Hon. Charles ] sent the Repub New York at th vention of the leaguo to be hel 19 Mr Kuoapp the knowledgo a