fSigsfl

~34

Today's lournal. of Mr. Johnson was n member of the tremendous question concerning the relation r"7 «nf Obituary Edward Johnson, Jr. University Field Day, PERSONAL. -. The Grange between PERSONAL. Contents end California dabs of Los Angeles and of the capital and labor. All classes are Fair .Base Ball..The clubs looking to the of the because Kelfast Mr. son Cayamaca of San Grove, Montville, Aug. position Grange T|,e L.. Obituary of Edward Edward Johnson, Jr„ of the late Country^]end Diego, Held in Centennial M. A. Nevins of Boaton arrived Monday to 1 ; Its is Mrs. Isaac L. Wilband of East Boston is visit- ,,f Field Calif. His religious belief was that of the 18th. power just beginning to be recognised. fl“r j, The Grange Day. Edward and Georgiana (Miller) Johnson of viait Belfast frienda. friends in this Protestant The National Master is a fine ing city. Johnson- d Power Deal...The Belfast and Episcopal church, and he was a de- of yeara Waldo Pomona specimen of Boston, passed away quietly at the For a number Miaa Townaend ia the week Carnival.... Famiiy Re- vout and tireless worker in the of at the American manhood, a man of broad Lytle spending E. Q. Frost of Pittsfield was in this last \7rt summer “The parish St. held a Field Day in Auguat expert* city family residence, Homestead," Grange haa in Belmont and Searsmont. N»r,TFersonal. Johns, Los Angeles, of which church he was a in Center race, and was listened to with attention Tuesday on business. on Primrose Hill in this city, Au- Dome of Charles E. Ring Montville, deep Stands the Loss. .Wash- Saturday, William J. Havener t8' vestryman. The Rev. Lewis Gouverneur Mor- at the dia- md liberally applauded. At the close of his of Portland ia visiting at Fred A. Seward is spending his vacation t The .On the Cape gust 8th, after a long and painful illness, re* i the genial host and hostess placing hi,.,erings.■ the home Stevens.. ris, his former pastor and1 neighbor, who was to at- iddress I. P. Griffies sang “The that Lin- of Mrs. John Dolloff. from Mathews’ Mills in ingtt,n Frederick suiting from an affection of the stomach. For posal of the Grangers, and all whoehoaa Flag Houlton. .The Brooke { coln in Real Estate. the only recently settled over All Satnts Church, and the Loved,” accompanied by Miss Tibbetts. Ellery Bowden, of was in IP°fnV,r. past eight years Mr. Johnson had been a tend, the house, the spacioue grounds Esq., Winterport Jerry Ferguson, Jr, , N. Y.. is Family Reuniona. came to Belfast to C. B. was the ^“school resident of Los Worcester, Mass., officiate Between 9 end 10 o'clock Tues- Purington next speaker, but this city Ang. 14th on business. John and Talford Blg Roberts..The Angeles, Califohiia. During large grove. visiting Durham. Charles A. »t the were is he came to the front of l" funeral services, which held at men, women end the platform it be- Miss Bicknell of 1 orm). .Occupations in this period the population of that city has day morning, August 18thv Esley Rockland arrived Mrs, Clarence Adams of Tkt; ,4The at four o'clock on the after- l f»n to rain and were to leave for Camden, formerly R"'kl" more than it now Homestead," children in teams and autos arrived from every many obliged to visit Miss Louise Read. 'r m Gatherings..Pittsfield doubled, until numbers near- Saturday J. of Belfast, spent last Friday here with friends. Mal!‘ Potato Raisers Hit noon of 10th. The Na- 1 belter. He confined his remarks to the diffi- a half million In Monday, August honorary direction. Oliver Wilson of Evanston, 111,, John C. ly people. meeting such Mrs, PiUabury went to Rockland last Mrs. N. L. Rollerson of Aroostook..A Remi- bearers were Messrs. Ben Davis Field, Ben State culties that confront the rural schools, Montello, Mass., is *>e.r6.UfKissed in the various tional Master, C. S. Stetson *of Greene, basing for a brief visit changes municipal plants and Thursday with friends. at the S. Frank Ross Woodcock and hem on as a teacher and visiting G. Norton farm in South as Hazeltine, Captain and C. E. Purington of Bowdoinham, personal experience niscenco. public works this rapid growth required, Master, Miss Annie of Dr. McArthur 1 Knowlton Boston is the guest Belfast...... is Obituary. R. all of even- uperintendent in the districts. He Mr. Johnson had taken a Wellington White, representatives state Lecturer, came to Belfast Monday country i -■ The Churches.. Wed- very prominent part, of her mother, Mrs, Fred A, Knowlton. families which have been neighbors of that of and autoed to the aid that the farmer values his children as Misses Alberta Farnham and Louise Brown i he News of Brooks., and his death removes from Los Angeles a ing meeting. as Dr. and Mrs. E. Brand were 16th the deceased, on Primrose Hill, for upwards of the the I eighty the city resident and is looking for M. of Reading, Mass., guests over Sunday of Miss Esther Evans of the Maine.. citizen who had in his comparatively short At forenoon meeting following j hundred Like his father before * letter terms and teach- are guests of Mr. and Mrs. I. of Waldo. 1 Granges. years. him, to the roll call: Silver Har- schools, longer be.tter George Keating. \p»5 O' life of years much ranges responded thirty-seven accomplished 1 ■•! Belfast.. Lhe deceased dearly loved the sight of the Mystic, Bel- I rs, and he is sure to get them in the near fu- Mrs. C. C. Pineo and Miss Katherine Mrs. Leslie Wellman ! 1,, N-tWg for the welfare of his fellows, and whose fu- rest, Waldo; Honesty, Morrill; C. and daughter Velma of * ure. of American and in view of this, together left for a few visit in Rumtord are pg Question. .Meetings ture career of flag, nont; Union Harvest, Montville; Dirigo,Free- Quimby Saturday days' Falls guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. for the Better gave every promise being a $ ‘7’ 7 \ Change with the fact that he at one time served as an and Following thiBV address three cheers were Boston. A. Webber. u Corre- brilliant one. Mr. Johnson was descended in lom; Georges River, Liberty; Equity 1 a-hions. .County his casket was for the National and after Engineer in the U. S. Navy, Searsmont; Frederick ;iven Master, sing* Carroll Carter of Waldo County Prosper- the ninth generation from Captain Edward seaside, Belfast; Victor, | Lynn, Mass., arrived Satur- Miss Eda Woodbury is spending a few j colors. From the 1 ng “America” the crowd It was a days 'd tile of iraped with the national .South' Montville; Sunlight, dispersed. to visit his Hampden..The Johnson,who came to this country with Gover- Etitchie, Waldo; day parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. with her mother, Mrs. E. G. Woodbury, in Romance of the Apple. louse the remains were taken to the family I ;ood meeting. The social features that were | nor Winthrop in 1630, was a founder of the Knox; Tranquility, Lincolnville; Sheepscott, Carter. Northport. the Gay Pro- omb at where the committal o have followed were interferred | 1 Family.. Grove Cemetery, seriously u town of Woburn, Mass., and the author of the Mr, and Mrs. A. C. left on Maine Crop Reports.. rith a cold Hopkins Saturday Mrs. Hattie Pike of Auburn is visiting Mrs. lervice was held in the presence of the family Light, Monroe; by rain. w Week.. Recent the Evening Star, Troy; Morning an 7 ots of the “Wonder-Working Providence," first print- auto trip to include visits in Bucksport and C. S. Webber and other relatives in Belfast and _lU.ar.f.'w.rv PnliH. >nlv. ; Sunrise, Knox. Medomcook Valley of Wash- ed history of New England and one of the Bar Harbor, Northport. C >mnaents. .Congress Mr. Edward Johnson married in San Diego, ngton, Magnolia of Evanston, 111., Bowdoin- '' first books to be written on this continent. e The Bliss Business ! The Northport Carnival. H, M. St Clair, Jr., of who ’alif., November 25, 1903, Gertrude Ellen ] lam of Bowdoinham one of MasB- Beverley, Mass., Miss Abbie Batchelder of Boston is peniai"1 Edward Johnson added to his and Grange visiting Captain various had been the of Charles H. re- •Jukerck Clark of that city, who with their , ichusetts was guest Twombly, hpr parents, Capt. and Mrs. A. C. Batchelder, otner activities me ui represented. first annual carnival B -rn. .Married... .Died.. pruieasiun iana-Burvey- The given by the re- turned home * born June Friday. Court street. >nly child, Gertrude Louise, SO, 1905, The speakers’ stand was decorated in red, [Y'Y cl -port. StocktoiiSpringB i or, and in 1652 he was the first white man to t ently organized Northport Cottage Owners urvives him. He was a brother of Alfred vhite and blue and contained seats for the Self arrived Charles Parson and Elvin Ward of Thorndike ascend and survey the Merrimac River. It is £ ssociation, August 14th and 15th, Harvey Saturday morning from ; of although j Johnson of Boston, Ralph Miller Johnson , and the officer, Chas. to his with and Mrs. W. F. HHU-AST FAIR. to note here that his peakers presiding M, £ ui bu a Brooklyn, N. Y„ join wife at the Elwell spent Tuesday Mr, Maffit j interesting descendantj of omeming luipruuipiu anair, provea *Iew York and Louise Miller Johnson, wife j lowes. Master of Waldo Pomona. Lincolnville at Little River. in and namesake, Edward Johnson, Jr., made sur- ^ reat success, due to the public spirited and cottage Northport. U. S. N. Mrs. John- of the fair, was * 'apt, William Veazie Pratt, j land of seven a concert and selec- .r,, ring day ] veys along the same river in 1899-1900. The pieces gave ( nterprising summer residents of Bayside Misses Florence Brown and Wmnifred San- Dr. John F. Holmes and family of Boston are imited the attendance on was with him constantly during his long j ions the 1 three following generations of the family, during day. , rho had it in charge. The weather was fine born left Saturday to spend a week’s vacation visiting his mother, Mrs. George O. Holmes,and j had the as- a crowd llness, and during the last weeks State Master Stetson in his remarks ; h*1 was good present after Captain Edward, resided in Canterbury, opening j 'riday, a large crowd gathered on the grounds, in Boston and vicinity. other relatives. the new 6 istance of his brothers and sister and two { aid that he felt to first -ns promised by from which the obliged give place to. £ was jitra. Conn., place Rev. Alfred John- nd there much interest in the sports, Mr. and Mrs. C. Durham were J. E. of who Y to his needs. J. guests over Darling Winterport, represents -how of poultry is the of the * rained nurses in ministering 4 Lndroscoggin County as a Grange center, but ect son, great grandfather deceased, re- j 'irst on the program was the greased pig of Rev. and Mrs. Lutz at the Queen Ink Co., was in the character and his Sunday Harry their i City Printing r seen here. The ladies in to Of Mr. Johnson’s exeqp- Iso felt obliged to say that Waldo county took moved to Belfast 1805, accept a call as ( ontest. The little porker was turned loose summer home in Camden. city Tuesday on business. of their handi- 1 •lary life, both in its public and private rela- i he blue ribbon for out a crowd and d display the second Congregational minister of thu getting y rith a small army of men and after him boys Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Peterson of Warren Gordon of Thorndike attended the exhibits in the hall 1 ions, much might be said. He was the soul the fraternal He offered a Rock- tbese -ther During the century which has since in- nanifesting spirit. fi nd was finally captured by Russell Ryder. He ^ place. arrived to a few reunion of the 13th Maine associa- The ( f honor, in all his dealings, straight- \ ribute to the of those who land, Mass., Monday spend Regimental nention next week. tervened the has been upright memory forty ^ ras then at auction and for jye family prominent here. put up bought $5.75 weeks in Belfast and tion in Portland last week. i orward and direct, and singularly free from ears Eastern Star No. Searsport. new attractions prev- The late Edward father of the ago organized Grange, ^ Philo C. Blaisdell. Next was the *, Johnson, Sr., y rowing Mr. uile and vice of every kind. As a ] of Miss who is in and Mrs. E. M. Dolloff and Mr. and Mrs P. mong them the Ferris * public Camden. There are now 60,000 Grangers T over a mile course a Marjorie Carleton, employed Si deceased, though passing the winter months in ace, with turn, won by Fred Dollotf of Gardiner attended a 36 40 c fficial he was above reproach and independent j n Maine and their is valued at one Boston, is the guest of her parents, Postmas- family re- ; g pavillion, by feet, Boston, resided for the greater part of his property \ /alter Dickey with George Goodwin second, the of the union in Mcnroe last week. A shower in the after- ( f political parties. In awarding * nd a quarter million. It pays the farmer to ter and Mrs. Amos F. Carleton. ,r. life, during the summer, in Belfast, and was a ( ither contestants were Charles Ryder, John the of which went Miss ftred with the program, 1 irge contracts, placing f ttend the Grange. His direct message was j ombard and Clement. The first William Getchell of has his Velma «S. Mitchell left on the wi0U,. director in the Waldo Trust company, presi Roy prize Augusta joined boat# his his favor could not be te and were finish- nth position, bought, ] legislative work and this at present includes v 'as a tie the second a flash at Fairview on the shore Wednesday night for a visit with friends in ,e. ,. resting dent of the Belfast Savings bank, and held rack, light. In family cottage Allyn more than could his opinion as a consult- j he a more Boston and Mass. ... B. Chase of Dover was ny equal suffrage, good roads, just t »e dash on an course from and will two Franklin, a' A other positions of trust here. The mother of 100-yards up-hill spend weeks here. tCe f tastes and life he of Thorndike 1 ig engineer. In his daily iivision of the school tax and the conservation t tie steamboat wharf the jj amj ,j. Farwell the deceased was Georgians Parker Miller, trials were won by Mrs. Leslie C. Follett returned to her home Mr. and Mrs. Sidney P. Young and three sons ras and lovable. He was slow and de- f Maine’s water simple ( power. With co-operation q have returned to Greenville from a visit with gjj8f!i Attleboro, Mass., judges, daughter of Dr. Erasmus Darwin and Louisa eorge Fxench, George Blaisdell, William in Belmont, Mass., Saturday, after a brief visit 1 in his and a Belfast and Mr. Ross berate forming opinions positive t nd unity of effort the Grange will be mighty j Charles Brown and Emerson Law- Mr. and Mrs. O. Pendleton. Clarke Miller. Dr. Miller was for many years a LcKinnon, j with her mother, Mrs. Eli Cook. Emery nd in asserting and adhering to f actor in these laws. Each individual in persistent obtaining r f, who ran in the finals and Emerson I The summary: leading physician Dorchester, Mass. Lawry Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Cookson have re- Mrs. M. A, Pattershall and son Harland have 1 hem. His to his friends was strong. ( and should come into line and Purse the loyalty Grange Granger v as the winner in the fast time of 12 1-5 sec- £30 j' 1 and Face, $125. Edward Johnson, Jr., subject of this no- turned to from Windermere returned from a two months’ trip to Augusta. He had a sense of humor, which ush for what the State declared at its Bangor Park, dry j Grange Q the course. The a w Ahs F, J. Drysdale, Port- tice, was born in Boston, Mass., Dec. 4, 1876, nds, considering prize was ! where their vacation. Booihbay Harbor, and Portland. C id not desert him up to the last. His e nnual session. In this connection Mr. Stet- Unity, they spent of his j, andsome silver Ira M. Cobe. ! but spent much boyhood in Belfast, cup presented by Mr. and Severance t,- R Emerson, New- * lind was never clouded and he retained the g on told a new story. A Wm. H. Gilchrist of Knox Station attended Mrs.George ofSomerville, where he attended for a time the large manufacturing >] here were eight contestants in the woman’s 0 2 2 city schools, were recent of Mrs. t,. ill use of his faculties to within a few hours lant in Massachusetts the the reunion of the l-10-29th Maine regiments Mass., guests Sidney P, 5 school of j requires name, r ice and in the trials Miss Heloise KX-, V Dwinal, Bangor, 2 6 and the private Miss Esther C. I Kennedy, on Frye. f his letters, and in Portland 13th. Over two hundred were Young at her bungalow Patterson’s Point. 3 3 death, dictating important t ime late, and cause of tardiness, of all its < Aug. MacEvan, Bangor,. 3 He later at the Hale School and the 1 j [iss Alvina Haskins, Miss Catherine Lynch prepared affairs without assistance. Like W. Lancaster returned last lie J Cote, Water- rranging his € xuc mot uouan tub Charles Sunday |Cloll",' School, both in Boston, for the lufiiujcD. (.auoc, Q nd Miss Forrest qualified. Miss Kennedy 444 Hopkinson of his ancestors he was a man of from a to Massachusetts iany large ^ tie rest would ditto it. The common cause ^ 'on the finals and received the in Thomas S. Bridges of Bucksport, a former morning trip during i E Winchester.... 556 Massachusetts Institute of from prize, $5 Technology, :at.ure and of an unusual which he visited Charles E. Knowlion in Rut- possessed physique. v 'as, car late. One the first man About a dozen took in of Fort Fairfield School, has 2 24. which he graduated in the class of 1899, as a morning g old. boys part the principal High ^ /hen a student at the Institute of land. Technology v -rote “twins arrived at my house last fc Dot and shoe race, which was won Charles passed the examination for admission to the Purse $100. civil engineer. Immediately upon receiving his ! night,’» by ^ e was selected as one of the six pall-bearers nd 19 dittoed it without I 10 who received a of Maine Bar. Mrs. Jennie sons Haroia, v. is, Dexter,. Ill of Bachelor of Science, Mr. Johnson 1 reading. | taymond, years old, pair Hayes, bummer, jju, degree ho carried the casket containing the remains \ P Grant, Bangor,. ..223 Mr. Stetson made a strong for t snnis shoes. The forenoon ended with is Mark, and of Bath* t)j.r was given a summer vacation in Europe by appeal equal sports Mrs. John E. Barter of Roslindale, Mass., Erlden, daughter Helen, p.;• >j A L Tolman, Rock- f the late president of that institution, Gen- g uffrage. He said that the records show that t le fat men’s race, won by Hon. Leon F. au her former a at ire of her Mrs. L 3 3 3 his father, which was his only visit there, and j Hig- at l3le Haut, home, guest guests sister, Eugene u ral Walker, on their shoulders above the heads n [) cent of the male vote is hauled to the ins of Brewer. The prize was a humidor, i,’ ■'!!, W A Ritch.New- the only vacation he had since allowed per g the cottage of her sister, Sarah E. Barter of Spear. long f the crowd. his visit to 4 4 4 During only London, oles for a but women would not stand 1 he other contestants were Messrs. Hall, Wil- himself. Returning in the early autumn of ^ price, Rockland. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Black and daughter Mar ••! 6 5 5 his presence attracted ,ir ileton, Islesborj,.. 1899, commanding y 3r this, nor would they allow nullification of 1 am McKinnon and H. York. 11:99 he entered upon the practice of his pro- Rev. Rossbach and who had ;ha of Providence, R. I., are visiting Mr. and le attention of an officer of the Queen’s Adolph party, j iw. He appealed to the men to get out of and all veter- fession, in which he was constantly engaged The aftarnoon program with canoe been at Pitcher's Pond, for some VIrs. C. S. Webber in this city and Mrs. Abbie W .mi Army day, ^ uards, who him for a Canadian on a opened Rocky Point, taking t tie way of the wheels of progress. He spoke until the time of his last illness. He once r ices, single anu uuuuie, over a nine course were in Belfast on their return Jackson in Northport. lesatir. free. isit to the followed him, made his ac* weeks, Friday capital, Q f the of the good roads crossed the Isthmus of Panama when on his magnitude question, j a the single canoe Tuck of won Boston. {jr.; :.ir. but warm, and many and tried to induce him to enlist in Ellery Bangor to East Richard Foster Crocker, U. of M. ’14. will ^ uaintance ^ he State has miles to in order home from work he had been 26,000 keep and t ae silver with Mr. r. it Gov. Haines way engineering cup, Berganini second, eave for Fort where he has a if?’ of town. lat famous organization of stalwart men. Prof. Robert J. Sprague was the guest of today Kent, pos- with y e advised that the work be done for commer- A doing in connection the establishment of rj ime for the mile, 13 min. 13 secs. In the Mr. and Mrs. J. F. in in Mada- IK train and Hon. John ^ iumerous letters and newspaper Germy Bangor Friday tion as Instructor Agriculture at the clippings c ial interests before that of tourists. In the di- Haines the U. S. Coaling Station at La Paz, Lower c oubles, Ellery Tuck and A. S. Reed won in 9 and left Friday evening for down river.—Ban- I ctr and Governor v hich have been received here both during araska Training School. ision of the State school tax the city pupil gets gor Commercial. The was California. r jin., secs. Carl Brown and Russell Ryder ft,: dstand. racing h is illness, and since his death, bear ample 27J Miss Lana Pendleton has returned to Nor- £ ver $3 and the rural child gets less than $1. Are Mrs. J. D. Osgood and son William of and will be He had been connected with a number of ^ rere second, Redmond Berganini, third. The Salem, ifr, .nd 2.24 class, t to the high esteem in which he was wood, Mass., where she has employment, after jstimony r ot the country children of as much importance home of Walton. and had risen rize was a pair of hunting knives. Then Mass., are guests at the L. P. Bin xt issue. important engineering projects, eld in Southern California, the home of his j a vacation with her parents, Mr. and a s those of the city? Outside capitalists are who had been in spending in his and at the time of c ame the diving contest from the wharf, which J Mrs. Walton, visiting Salem, r, G Grange day and a cup rapidly profession, g Mrs. W. Pendleton. doption. y uying up Maine’s immense water power and them. George his death was a author- ras a close contest. John McCarty with 27 returned with Htb" the (.range registering the becoming recognized In his affiliations Mr. Johnson had political r mch of it is idle. The Grange stands for Frank B. Condon, who is spending the sum- as a consulting He had held va- lus points was the winner. The others and Rev. and Mrs. Arthur A. Blair, who have r £ Racing in the 2.17 and ity engineer. been a he had the c lways Republican though tate control of this, not State mer in Smithfield, and Harry Condon of Pitts- rious as follows: ownership. t heir scores were: E D. Bird 27, Walter Dick- ; and with relatives in Manches- positions, 1899-1900, Hydraulic of the in the been in Boston j. acking Progressive party recent -] he trial of the thrifty farmer in securing field, were in Belfast last week visiting their and with the Essex Co. of y 27, Earl Dickey 26, Robert Gallier 26, R. E ! ter and Peterboro, N. H., returned home Fri- Engineer Surveyor In his official he was g lections. capacity inde- c on the farm must find its relief sister. Miss Alice Condon. Li. ompetent help j lickerson 18 Silver cup for the winner. In boat. Lawrence. Mass.; 1900-1903, Hydrographer, all day morning by Base Ball. endent of parties. j electric He told of one farmer he S. Service in the U. S. power. t he diving contest for girls, Heloise Kennedy Mrs. Millard Moore and son Howard of Hydrographic Navy, Word has been received here that his sue- Mrs. N. Fessenden, who has been at Harbor- t visited who used this power in ecently every I ; ron the scoring 15. Wilkins Haverhill, Mass, are guests of Mrs. S. H. being engaged along the coast of Lower Cali- cup, Dorothy her son. Rev. T. W. Fessenden and essor on the Board of Public Works will be a side with AINE LEAGUE. ^ on his large farm and made good thing s street. Mrs. will visit fornia on board the U S. S. 19u3-1906, ray cored 12. There were but two entries in the Gillum, Union Moore Ranger; a former of the of Minneapolis, has returned to her the ^ apt. H. Z Osborne, president c f it. This condition, he will soon be lamily lev-. 12th, at South Brewer, in U. S. Reclamation Ser- said, ailing race—Snipe owned by Mr. Harrison relatives in Ellsworth, later. Engineer Charge, of Commerce of Los and home in Fort Fairfield. e: .1 fast a score of 10 to 6. ^ hamber Angeles, c ommon. The Grange should sign petitions by vice at III., and at San Francisco, c f Dark Harbor and Cero owned by Warren A. Mrs. Emma K. ot Sea Breeze, Chicago, for from the of Kochersperger fc. was won and ne present candidate Congress f or these laws, write letters and also Mrs. B. B. Foster Cumberland avenue game and Calif. In 1906 he from personal j teed of Saturday Cove. Snipe won, going B. and resigned government has had as house this week her Florida, and Mrs. Thomas Gregory jnth district. 1 to the election of their class west, guest k> he score by innings, )ok represen- c ver the ten mile course in 46 minutes and 45 service to engage in engineering work on the sister, Mrs. William H. Quimby of Belfast.— laughter Ruth of New York are in Belfast to fn- t .0 1 0 3 0 0 3 3 x—10 atives. g econds. were awarded. The sack race Press, 15th. Pacific Coast, under the firm name of Johnson Since the foregoing was in type we have re- Cups Portland August a few weeks with relatives. st .2 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 1-6 under the spend The Grange chorus, direction of won Charles who received & Lindley, Consulting Engineers, with head- c eived a copy of the following resolution, v ras by Raycroft, Ira B. Cobe and party of Northport, sever- Mrs. Blanche Miss Inez E. Crawford returned Tuesday e Easterns in the seventh * P. Griffies, with Moody John- a wrist watch. The other contest- quarters at Los Angeles, Calif. In 1911, upon a the Council of Los t he prize, officers of Lisbon and Mr. Ricker dopted by City Angeles, al municipal evening from a visit at the summer home of g a submarine mine in the 8th on, sang “The Reaper’s and Earl the death of General Adna R. he was organist, Song, £ nts were William Leonard, Moulton, were visitors 13th at Chaffee, ( California: of Poland Springs Aug. her brother, Prof. William C. Crawford of G' v r*r team 6 to on t be was then adjourned over the noon won out 3, chairman of the Los Edward a member of the meeting j lugene Powers. Bradley Kidder and Arthur the commission in appointed Angeles Aque- Whereas, Johnson, the office of highway Allston, Mass., at LaKe Side, Maine. ii'-r last afternoon. I ioard of Public Works, and formerly of the 1 our. ( !atell. The race was won Em- Thusday duct Investigation committee. He later be- three-legged by Augusta. [arbor Commission, an able and a conscien- The of the Lincolnville Band Misses Gladys and Bessie Smith returned he game was interestingly came a member of the Los Harbor guests honor, r jerson and Carl Brown in the fast time Angeles Lawry 1 ious official, whose services as a member Mrs. Charles Glasson of N. H., j city £ nd a few friends were entertained at dinner Newport, Wednesday night to their home in Frannkin, .-rs working well, the East- Commission, and on 1, 1913, he was did much c f 14 1-2 secs. The other starters were Ray- January c f the Aqueduct Investigating Board, and Miss Sadie Buck of Worcester, Mass., left a t a table set under the trees and Mass., after a ten days’ visit with Mr. and Mrs. Fox for but three hit8f one of the three members of the t 3 refute the unfounded criticisms against the long pre- c roftand Powers, Wadlin and Clement, O'Brien appointed after a few weeks 1 .os has to his re- g ided over the ladies of Waldo Pomona. Saturday by boat, spending M. L. Mitchell, Congress street. mers were lacing out a few Los Angeles Board of Public Works, by which Angeles Aqueduct, passed by e nd Raycroft, Kinley and Brown, Park and rard through his untimely death at his boy- of with Mr. and Mrs. James L. James at their .ugh not very well, ,j here was an abundance good food. The ( and Powers won bunching the affairs of the city of Los Angeles are ad- ^ ood home in Maine; and Hark, Day Higgins. ^Eugene Mrs. Eva A. Burke returned Saturday from Belfast, cottage in East Belfast. ^ 8 fternoon session was opened with selections race over a more by innings: ministered much as by a commission form of Whereas, this Council is deeply conscious of t he potato dozen or contest- Ryder's Cove, Islesboro, where she bad been R. Woodcock have left 0 0 0 4 x—6 1 he value of the services performed by Ed- t y the band and singing by the Grange chorus 8 nts. The semi finals in the tennis tourna- Mr. and Mrs, Frank 1 0 0 1 government. It was under this board that the the guests since Tuesday of the C. S. Gowens, .1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0—3 7ard Johnson in the service of the city, and in c f “The River of Miss Tibbetts for an in Northern Maine, which will Los which water to Time,” Gladys r lent resulted as follows: In the singles Chad- outing Cedarcroft. Angeles Aqueduct, brings the of its greatest enter- of t lorida, at their cottage, h' J pholding integrity c f North National Master include the ascent of Mt. Katahdin. Mrs. H. :th w,. the first game of the for and Palermo, organist. v rick defeated Burgess 3—6, 6—1, 6—3; Jones Friday, city domestic,irrigation power-plant { rise, namely, the Los Angeles Aqueduct: Hon. of Augusta was at Camp ^ was then introduced and was received Johnson arrived from Port- Byron Boyd i*8 betweer :.e Old Towns and Easterns from Owens River Therefore, be it resolved by this Council, that Wilson ^ efested Lothrop 3—6, 6—3, 6—4; Walden de- H. .last Thursday purposes, Owens Lake and last to one of his 1 t at the death of Ed- 5 Elm street. Quantabacook Sunday bring A- a express its deep regret ^ rith followed by three Baker 6—2. In the doubles landand is at their home, won by Old Town, with two hundred and miles away, and is the hearty applause, f eated 6—0, Slugg fifty ,ard Johnson, and that a copy of these resolu- and take home another. He met with a ; t c heers and a led Hon. L. C. Morse of and of Iowa left boys *tore the Umpire Al- and most remarkable structure of its a tiger, by 8 nd Gilchrist defeated Emery Jones 6—2, Frank H Lord and wife, City, la., game longest t ions be spread upon the minutes, and copy accident to his auto which detained him (n°anc-_-: 1 in after a visit of a few days with Mr. slight be!fast challenges thewin- kind in the was built. In his work on 1 e transmitted to the memb-.rs of the bereav- liberty. £ —4. The Belfast Band gave a fine concert yesterday world, Mrs. LaCordia Lord. Mr. Lord is at the until t: tnat as a mark Lord’s aunt, camp Monday. >1(1 Town series to a simi- * d family by the city clerk, and his address Mr. Wilson criticised in no uu- t t he the aqueduct, Mr. Johnson was obliged to take In evening. a native of Ellsworth, but left here when only ■ f to the said Edward the for ?: ■ respect Johnson, of -ide. Manager Darby says and difficult into c ertain terms public statement to The tennis tournament was finished Satur- six ot age. That was torty-two yeais ago, J. S. Fitzgerald Augusta, Me., gunner's frequently long trips the v Council do now adjourn. derogatory years c the results: Doubles: In and this was his first visit here since.—Ells- mate on the U. S. S. Nebraska, is visiting his team will come up with mountains and across the desert by automobile # Charles L. Wilde, t he farmers of Maine, said to have been made ay with following worth fcor,b a Clerk Los and beat American. is as the series is decided. and on foot. The exposure and fatigue which City Angeles. t y Dr. Harvey W. Wiley on a recent visit to ! t he semi-finals Burgess Lothrop shipmate,WalterH. Mitchell.who gun pointer Los Angeles, Calif., August 10,1914. 6-4. Russell and at the home of the latter's the same as at present— he was obliged to encounter on these expedi- ^ his State. He said he could speak of no great I Hojd and Gilchrest, 6-2, Mrs. Charles Lockett of Brooklyn, N. Y., is on the same ship, of Public Works also tofo- ear: The Los Angeles Board 6-2 6-3. In the on street. round and the third to be tions together with the improperly cooked ^ iroblems; it was those common to all sections I !ird beat Burgess and Lothrop the guest of Mrs, Harvey Self at the.Elwell parents Congress resolutions of condolence and ordered a with the dopted ^ f the country that were of vital interest. The f nals Gurgan and Folwell beat Russell and ! Mrs. Lockett is the con- regular teams, iood doubtless were contributory causes of his cottage, Northport. Miss E. Patterson and Mr. Charles r he on the Hall at half-mast Isaphine ichedult-ij games. flag City placed movements to elevate the Amer- IIIU U-6, U-U, lui me UUBU1I/W..DUIJ/ v.wjywj Mrs. Self the in a ladies' disease. In addition to the supervision of the ^ •hilanthropic tralto and soprano White of Worcester, Mass., arrived on last le^Urr' ^ or three days. Madden the third which ican farmer were all bosh. He could look after ingles. In the semi-finals beat Jones, in N. Y. Mr. Lockett is i straight"game work in the field, involved the expendi- quartette Brooklyn, Sunday morning’s boat and are guests of Mr. '■ beat Chadbourne * itn Brewer last 1 iis own interests. He referred to the curse -6, 6-3, 6-4. Burgess 3-6* this week. Saturday ture of twenty-four millions of dollars, he had LIGHT AND POWER DEAL. expected and Mrs. James F. Sheldon, Poor’s Mills. They rL, ? A ■: at with five hits and < f effect is near.as distance 6-3. Madden beat Burgess, 5-7, 6-0, 6,2. only under him an office force of from foreign wars,whose -1, a before re- seventy-five a from the will wreek at Peak's Ic-lar.d In the finals Judge E. P. Spofford^with nurse spend ^eight «-rr< But Belfast made that the Penobscot I as been eliminated, and said that the Jeff beat Macomber by default. j only to one hundred draughtsmen and clerks. The announcement Bay Grange the Massachusetts General Hospital, accompa- to Worcester. for the turning ■toatcly •: ;F the same the and s a will stand for The Jeff beat Madden 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 cup. J. H. McLellan, chap For a period of a little over a year, it had 1 llectric Co. had leased light power t body peace. Grange nied by Mrs. Spofford and his sister, Mrs. ;tUie its on with the of Portland, arrived home game Old Town the been difficult for him to on his work ow- \ rires of the Bangor & Aroostook Railroad in 1 ias always taken position all important The sports opened greased pig McGorrill, Tuesday. Miss Ethel L. Burr of Bangor, formerly as- against carry is 1 men each had We are to report that Judge was made last j ssues £.nd never been to retract. He ace and on the first run four a glad Spofford of the Waldo touched up for 14 hits.And ing to ill-health, though he did not call a halt 5 earsport and Stockton Springs obliged toward of his sistant superintendent County making fine progress recovery , Jtrea!‘- himself on State or National and it was declared a tie. In the second s-p; osed he a better hitting team until last November, when after consulting \ reek and at noon Aug. 12th this company be- c id not commit ag health.—Deer Isle Messenger, Hospital, spent Sunday at the Hurd farm, made a clean catch and be- 'Bti'- Hie Kcore to the concerns which lolitics but said that his hearers might put him ace C. O. Dickey the of Miss Maude B. Stew- by innings: the best physicians in Los Angeles he passed j £ an supplying electricity ] the on the Mauretania Northport, guest of the William Among passengers x— < own as “a ame the proprietor pig. aru. miss wuu uas ueeu a .0 4000001 5 several months alternating between rest and 1 ad been furnished by the railroad. The B. & Rational-Progressive-Conserva- which put into Halifax last week rather than ourr, .0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0-3 t ive.” As a he should advocate jennon won the tub race. Miss Heloise Ken- on to New York were returned to Mon- work, and tried without relief various forms i. has a complete power plant in Searsport Granger risk capture by going ; cation at Bayside, Bangor York second. The mile swim and A. H. Chatfield and valet, and Mrs. from Old Town, 7 to 5, in and to the various J leasures because they were right. He had been edy of New Mr. of treatment there and in San In £ nd has supplied light power and were on day. Diego. with Walter Mc- Gilbert and Miss Gilbert maid,who series for $200 a side, on for the Great Northern i n the West and was recently in Colorado and ms won by Walter Dickey, March he came to New York and Boston,where 1 ertilizer plants and their way to their summer homes here after a Chester B. Frost, who has been with the afternoon, the lullen second; the swimming race, half day Co.'s store house at Cape Jellison. as rith fraternal feeling extended greetings girl’s abroad. They had both an annoying and fa,,. he consulted the most eminent stomach spec- 1 'aper trip firm of Baeder, Adamson Co., in New York for Goodwin, who was awarded a -- 1 i’seball to have been all the railroad in « f that State to its sister in the East. All indi- lile, by Polly CALmug CA^v..w.v».. game ialists and diagnosticians, all of whom agreed rell as lighting property the fewr years, was recently transferred Jfi who came in second past 'ou-.h 1 iduali and individual Granges cannot think up. Miss Catherine Lynch local of the Amer- Brewer grounds, Tuesday that his trouble was not a serious one. In £ earsport and Stockton Springs. The lease of Willis G. Haseltine, agent to the Boston office of the same firm. He in a William Redmond a crowd was on hand to it is in- 1 like, but they can act together common eceiving $5 gold piece. ican Co., is having his annual vaca- f. " big spite of great suffering he accepted their ver- t he B. & A. lines does not, understood, Express spent the week-end in Belfast recently and y and build and fon the 100 swimming race and was * 11J the Easterns the “rub- The * nterests, help settle disputes up yards tion and with Mrs. Haseltine and their chil- play diet, and in May returned to Los Angeles, took c lude the power plant. Penobscot Bay is expected to be a frequent visitor in his for our a camera, and Charles Mahoney J'O a not decided 1 ,ot tear down public institutions, standing warded dren is in Dexter for two weeks. His place in side. It is the burden of his work and on ] Electric Co. brings its power from East Orland, mer home. up struggled the and W,’U be i or education, moral integrity, good will and limbed the greased pole quickest the office is taken clerk S. S. L.Shute; played. with it for a little over a month. Early in \ rhere it has a large development. express by of others. He re- the nail contest Mrsw Mr. and Mrs. D. Faunce who have to South _ espect for the rights ron $7. In driving Allie Knowlton takes Shute’s and Lee Woodcock, tf play the Easterns in July, however, his disease took a sudden and place, as too lax. of drove six nails in a been the season at Chase Pond J"'cr'iay> and and THE WAR NEWS. , gards our emigrant laws Among ,ake Smith Northport Robinson substitutes for Knowlton. spending ^ again today, Friday decided turn for the worse, and he went to he benefits with which the Grange is ardwood in 1 minute and 50 seconds, Camps, are in Belfast for a few weeks but the Old Towns on the to consult Dr. William public plank a Civil War veteran and a ^ play Rochester, Minn., Mayo, At this writing the censored war news is M. C. Dilworth. o be credited is rural delivery, a commissioner $2, and Miss Grace Clark, who was will return there for the fall fishing and shoot- 3treet grounds. a of international An ex- J rinning is in North- surgeon reputation. ortentious rather than positive. Various en- veteran printer, who rusticating ; •f inter-State commerce cnmmis- 6 seconds slower got $1. There were Mr. Woodcock reports the fishing never made the latter led to Agriculture, nly last and met ing. ploratory operation by are reported as preliminary to port, was in the city Saturday gagements 1 savings banka,and the our entries for the motor boat race over a better, and in proof thereof left at this office trouble was and his ioner,parcels post,postal of old friends. He he wouid Family Reunions. belief that the incurable, rhat may prove the greatest battle in history. many his says j armers’ credit system is near at hand. He crit- ourse of about six miles. The Tango, Nor- two handsome trout. family were told that he could nofbe expected iittle is holding her own. France is like to visit Machias, where he was a compositor I*, Belgium out of the won first time, 20 cised the farmer who stayed Grange lan White owner, prize, Hazeltine ferj; .ikle {wenty-first annual reunion to live more than a month longer,which proved dvancing her armies. Russia is putting a on the Machias Union and helped to get out Reginald arrived by Sunday’s boat, k j •ut gladly availed himself of what the Grange linutes and 35 secs.; Allie, P. C. Blaisdell, fam,|y will be held Labor Day, to be the fact. With the advice of his physi- soldiers into the field. There are no the first issue, May 25, 1853, but does not fee] joining Mrs. Hazeltine and children at the ItnJ, million He censured the middle* Paul Goodwin, third, and L ,,tl- at ^ tad accomplished. econd; Ariel, Capt. of his Mrs. B. P. the home of George D. cians he was brought to Belfast, where he ar- adications of the expected great naval battle, as though he could undertake the journey. His home mother, Hazeltine, aen as a class because of the increased cost of ^almond 1 'apt. Daggett, fourth. for a vacation visit. Mr. Hazel- * Street, Belfast, Maine, rived on July 19th, in the hope that the Maine ut Great Britain declares the Atlantic routes home for some years has been with a daughter Court street, v to 65 cent before and l? dishes >roduce from 35 per cent per The baseball game between the Baysides who has been in West tor and silver. climate *and the surroundings of his j outh to traffic and the ocean liners are resum- ! in Florence, Mass. tine, Wheeling, Va„ W, tk pen 1 t reached the consumer from the farmer. July )ark Harbors was close and interesting, the aid in his last comfortable. schedules. Last several years, will now be located in Spring- it,“e knight reunion will be Sep- might making days ng their Saturday night at The of Mr. and Mrs... st the wheat crop was estimated $597,- ormex winning by a score of 2 to 0. Marian, young daughter dle the first two weeks after his arrival an ultimatum to demand- field, Mass. It spacious and beautiful home During hpan sent Germany and of South who is ^ •00.00 and when this was prepared sold to atteries were McCarthy and Ryder; Roques Charles Millhouse Bend, Ind., it rs 0t»s. E. Robbins in Searsmont. he was carried daily by loving hands into the the withdrawal of German warships from ^ ng he consumer it had increased 500 per cent or Allen. the summer here, Betty, little daugh- Miss Helen Morrill, graduate nurse, of Ames- otl nd Pendleton. Umpire, spending *be lawn. Every one bring a beautiful garden of “The Homestead”, where he Orient and the evacuation of Kiauchau biy 13,116,661.00. He then gave an interesting The carnival closed with a concert by the ter of Mrs. Jerome Hanshue of Boston, Ruth bury. Mass., is the guest for two weeks of Mr. 0r*t. and the intervals frem he the until to plate. If stormy it will during pain enjoyed nd giving Germany Sunday, Aug. 23d, Aim a 1 iccount of carrying on a farm f business telfa9t band, a display of fireworks and a ball Dinsmore and Helen Wescott, spent the past and Mrs. M. C. Hill, Miller street. Miss Mor- flowers and the sunshine. The newspaper ac- with the demand. Otherwise, the ulti- omply and in this said that a Inn. week at The Pitcher's Pond, the rill is well remembered in Belfast, having had r^otices of1 itandpoint, Connection t the Northport Hermitage, other reunion, ,ee 2d page. counts of the present war in Europe also afford* latum states, Japan will take action. There | 'woman was worth more on the farm than a summer* home of Mr. and Mrs. William M. her early hospital training in the W aldo County and he read with no that will and and di ed him some diversion, expectation Germany yield To feel strong, have good appetite was cases farmer to Randall, who returned to this city with them hospital. She afterwards graduated from or, : nan,” In many the helps pay and use Bur- you’ll mseh finger interest every that could be rar in the East will follow. Japan gives as- ;estion, sleep soundly enjoy life, ;tl('Vrll»hen deep newspaper other Mr. Randall after a vacation of two a in and has been suc- burn or ecald- ;he State tax that the fellow. ock Blood Bitters, system tonic, Monday. hospital Amesbury very i and on that in that event the interests of protects thefcfamily * BeJlre' bought in Belfast, commented every urance VSI.:

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..i ^rgTROBERTS. Occupations Hi Maine. osKK»ma«gp momma*. iB Wlld0 FamV^<’minent Some Interesting Statistics bom the B-~«- [The AroMtook Republican ] 0lla Eltewherc. * "Lgy and of the vaults. Aroostook, admittedly tbe "Garden an ar- Spot of New England," where agricul- The Journal published to the According Report on Occupa- ture and flourishes as in no other Roberts, with his por- tions issued grows ptti"" of Chaa. A. Roberta 50.6 cent of the “““'""her per population 10 years more link in the ehain of wonderful pro- Tbe Vasaalboro, one of and over ft “'|ca|f of North age (603,893). In 1900 the ductiveness when the full returns of last ladies and lead- workers of yung 276,777 gainful the State season’s crops are analyzed. “ (.“active formed 39.9 cent of ■ valley when, nearly per the total popu- TEMPLE, BELFAST, According to General Agent Snow’s is the only guarantee that you have the t Kennebec lation and 48.9 cent of the _MASONIC ni»rritd Linneua Roberta and per popula- figures, Aroostook shipped out in June tion 10 years of age and over. l/Otton mills— MAINE FUIAIU kasw jjri ago-. jnoj8j be t0 teach school over the U. & A. 685,211 bushels of po- The male gainful workers in 1910 Weavers. 1,780 instrumental music. num- tatoes, making the total of the season GENUINE I"'1" l,,r, v.»al and bered or 78 8 Other occupations. 3,061 her not 242,175, per cent of all Maine, famous for potatoes which went out over that road 17,687,- I* by hia wife and two males 10 of Paper and pulp mills.. 2,794 w1Th survived years age and over, as com- in all of the United States but 023 bushels. In addition to the B. & A. Naval at Saw and planing mills. 1,537 only parts 1S at the Academy with or 78.6 pared 224,847, per cent in Shoe factories. 4,131 is in danger of road the shipments over the C. P. R. two the female all over the world, grave sisters; married, 1900. The gainful workers in Woolen and worsted mills— now form an factor in Hl'e*“d"four in the cultivation of quite important schools. 1910 numbered or 21.3 cent Weavers. loosing her prestige out ,n the Peoria 63,282, per of 1,469 the The CASTORIA carrying county’s crops. L,earoe— all females 10 years of age and as Other 2,215 this much needed vegetable. Potatoes over, occupations. Aroostook Valley road hauled to Wash- prepared by him fc«r over 30 years. compared with 51,930, or 18.6 cent Servants.. 1,916 threaten to with per grown in foreign countries bum junction this road nearly a in 1900. Soldiers, sailors, and marines. 1,731 _:n:__A L.if _l. a _ ii_n n in one Stonecutters. 1,579 make great inroads into the market that Sold only size bottle, never in bulk DISTRIBUTION OF WORKERS. R. a few years ago carried out over 3.- Teachers (school)... 860 be with Ameri- would otherwise supplied and has since The workers in 1910 FEMALES. 000,000 bushels, that time 305,457 gainful can-grown vegetables, and particularly were the increased its business in that line, and or to distributed among main branches Boarding and lodging house keepers. 1,316 with the State of Maine potatoes raised otherwise; the with the added link of the electric road, protect of occupations as follows: Agriculture, Bookkeepers, cashiers, and accountants. 1,929 in Aroostook county. Already the farm* and animal Clerks clerks in 935 the total number of bushels of potatoes forestry, husbandry, 82,247, (except stores). ers of Maine have felt the effect of the - Clerks in stores. 966 going out of the county by other roads babies. __ or 26.9 per cent; extraction of free of upon their minerals, Dressmakers and seamstresses (not in importation potatoes than the B. & A. must be in the 1,556, or 0.5 per cent; manufacturing and In 1913, the United neigh- factory). 3,904 farming operations. borhood of or a total The Centaur p™*. mechanical industries, 115,794, or 37.9 bushels of 6,000,000, output Company, Farmers and dairy farmers. 2,124 States produced 331,535,000 of nr nearly 24,000,000 bushels. The amount Der cent: transportation. 20.079 fi s st wardesses. Of these the State of Maine Housekeepers and 3,842 potatoes. used for seed stock, home per cent; trade, 26.275, or s.6 per cent; Laundresses (notin laundry). 1,490 alone raised She stood fourth consumption 28,160,000. and starch factories would not come far public service, 4,994, or 1.6 per cent; ! Mid wives and nurses ( not trained). 1,510 all the States of the Nation and among from a total of ■ and dealers... 3,000,000, giving grand professional service, 15,123, or 5 per Milliners millinery 1,293 Droduced nracticallv one-twelfth ot all and Musicians and teachers of music. 785 about 27,000,000 bushels of potatoes cent; domestic personal service, 28,- that were grown in the country. Saleswomen (stores). 1,620 raised in Aroostook last year ! 694, or 9.4 per cent; and clerical occupa- The of 25 cents a oushel has been Semiskilled operatives: duty The financial end? as a basis tions, 10,095, or 3.3 per cent. off They Taking Cotton mills— t^ken foreign-raised potatoes. the bushels and well in- are and at 24,000,000 sold, SEX OF Spinners. 1,296 raised in greater quantities WORKERS. than in the formed potato dealers say the average 1 Weavers. 2;232 less per acre abroad Of the expense has not been short of gainful workers in 1910, 242,- United States. The result has been just price $1.35 per and the returns to the hus- A 175, or 79.3 per cent were males and 63,- Other occupations. 1,928 what those who knew the situation fore- barrel, gross bandmen of Midas-touched >Aroostook 282, or 20.7 per cent females. In agri- Shoe factories.... 2,041 the first seven months Typewriter saw. Bargain During and Woolen and worsted mills— from their one crop, not to mention the A new Oliver Typewriter, direct [from the factory, never culture, forestry, animal husbandry, after the was removed, the impor- Weavers. 1,137 duty or the lumber the males numbered 79.619, or 96.8 per tation of was 20 times greater bay, oats, etc,, industry, A ROBERTS. j Other occupations. 1,209 potatoes and with all the latest will be sold at cent and the or 3.2 I is about $12,000,000. As the population used, improvements, females, 2,628, per Servants. 10,785 than during the corresponding seven Peoria, 111., Star.] cent. All persons in the jf the county is about 75,000 the above (1,556) engaged Sewers and sewing-machine operators months the year when they had a previous would to woman discount for cash. May be seen at .914, of Charles A. Rob- extraction of minerals were males. In (factory). 1.122 been protected by the duty of 25 cents a Sgures give every man, F“c' and chair- md child an income from Peoria county manufacturing and mechanical industries Stenographers and typewriters. 1,674 bushel. The following figures for 1912, average gross THE JOURNAL OFFICE. .• ity central committee, 93,343, or 80.6 per cent of the workers reachers (school). 6,013 will show the im- jne product of about $320. stood four the latest available, who always were males and or rrained nurses. 710 Of course there is an expense, an out- 22,451, 19.4 per cent mense number that have been And when the history of j Waitresses. 1,044 produced females. Males constituted 96.4 millions of ;o for fertilizer, draft horses, etc., but u ■ per in the countries of ... ;;, no greater tribute can Europe, cent of the when one season’s crop can produce so than this. For sixteen 20,679 persons engaged in j bushels of which have been sent to tte FAMILY GATHERINGS. nuch is it wonder that the t>een intimately associa- transportation, 87.4 per cent of the 26,- United States: wealth, any farmers in this Ceres-kissed can te of Peoria, He has been 275 persons engaged in trade, and 95.5 : 683,779 000 county PRESTON’S The Bills Association held its Austria-Hungary. lave with all con- r .' ..gaged in the strenuous per cent of the 4,994 persons engaged in BILLS. Russia.1,366,824,000 such modern homes, I and no man will annual reunion 12th at the own automobiles and live in & Transient Stable ce, yet public service. In professional service 15th Aug. Germany. 1,844,863,000 leniences, Livery, Boarding rts ever did a dishonor- the females outnumbered the males, the | tome of Peter Aagerson in Thomaston, France. 552,074,000 :he lap of luxury, as it were? Is it any Is situated on Washington street just off Main street. I have single and an unfair fight. 40 The program 213,783,000 vonder that the of the commercial JL females numbering 8,409, or 55.6 per ibout being present. Great Britian. eyes double hitches, buckboards, etc. Careful drivers if desired. Your r. e fought for the success music and out- 121,481,000 patron- cent Included a picnic dinner, Belgium. :enters are focussed upon us? Is it any friends. a man in (a large proportion being school house Many ioor Officers were elected as Netherlands. 121,870,000 vonder that other sections age issolicited. Telephones—stable 235-2, 61-13. Iy28 he holds, or has held, to teachers,) and the males 6,714, or 44.4 ! sports. agricultural H. A. of Lowell, of in the with envious Is W. G. PRESTON. jvancement of scores of per cent. This was also true of domes- Follows: Thompson The production potatoes ?aze upon us glances? Proprietor. Peter of was ^ u> his efforts, and yet in tic and personal service, where the fe- Mass., president; Aagerson United States for the same year t any wonder the county has been call- for himself and vice Mrs. B. F. ■ the of Ahing males numbered 20,863, of 72.7 per cent i rhomaston, president; 120,647,000 and in Canada 84,885,000 'd “Garden Spot New England?’’ Zealous in behalf of and the males or Jones, secretary-treasurer. bushels. ■~ only 7,831, 27.3 per : tiident and backward in The removal of the of 25 cents a cent. Of the persons pursuing clerical Simmons. The annual reunion of the duty Automobile is to recognition. Politics States to the Registrations. 5 or 54 were east bushels opened the United Charley Roberts. occupations, 449, per cent, Simmons family was held on the 1867 CROPS and or countries of the world, LET YOUR DECIDE was so acute and ac- males 4,646, 46 per cent females. shore of Sennebec Lake, Aug. 12th. potato-producing Over 13000 automobiles have been reg- i»iof fhe cost bushel for freight from V will tell you to use E. FRANK COE FERTILIZERS. Manufactured ) generally accepted as. the COLOR OR RACE OF WORKERS. and were among the di- per stered at the of State’s office They Boating fishing on the Secretary ;o to cities in the Best in the at Belfast, Maine. judge passing events. These officers were elected: European shipping points ;o date and over 300 that Equipped Factory Country ( iev 409 other colored. The proportion which There will be a lessened demand and a '.ms was an en- B. F. f.,.; untiring j the males of secretary-treasurer; Simmons, ^med before gainfully occupied formed reduced for his but there tZ everything Frank and Mrs. Ber- price product, all the males 10 of and over ihaplain*, Meservey the cus- ave exerted so wide and years age will be no change in the price to New Order •if class of the :ha Simmons, executive committee. England For Sale as he did, not only in the in each principal population tomer, for the “importer and the jobber was: For native whites of native ; arty, but oftimes in the par- Thorndike. The 15th annual reunion will take the profit and the farmer stands The public estimate entage, 77.9 per cent; for native whites >f the Thorndike family was held Aug. the loss.” of Protection E. F. Baldwin At Bargain Prices. .pressed by of foreign or mixed parentage, 70.3 per 2th at Villa the summer home of I John A. Maine Commissioner at the Grant Ridge, Roberts, ini Day banquet j for 88.6 Pascal at Ballard in- Fraternal and 1 cent; foreign-born whites, per Mr. and Mrs. C. L. )f who has thoroughly An Ideal and Progressive lying in extremis, when j Agriculture, cent: and for negroes, 96.9 per cent. the 40 declares that the (15) houses, all in city limits, ver of good government 3ark, Rock port. Among present vestigated this matter, for Men and Of the fe- the Social Insurance Order his 63,282 gainfully occupied j vas Eells of Rockport, termers of Maine will this year have centraily located, ranging in price g regret passing. Capt. Joseph FIFTEEN in Peoria owes males in 38,134 were native whites who has attended on record and i 1887. county 1910, iged nearly 90, nearly figgest crop of potatoes Women. Organized November, from $850 to $4,000, on easy terms. of native native whites as Gey Roberts a debt it parentage, 11,628 :very reunion. Officers were elected ivet, as a result of the removal of pro- No. was instituted in the Shore property and.several house lots from *9 of foreign or mixed parentage; 13,140 Allows: C. L. Pascal of Rockport, presi- action. they may find a lessened demand Be fast Lodge, 140, i of of Belfast December 28, 1889, and ex- c„ years age. He was whites, 206 negroes, and 174 B. of ind to sell them at a loss. It City $100 to $1,000, and cottage and shore foreign-born lent; Given Thorrdike Rockland, be forced to those :. August 10, 1862 His par- tends a cordial invitation wishing pro- otner colored. The proportion which the nee imis. oaiau uor-m s the the Underwood tariff bill has lots and one 5-acre lot with two s’ : a presiueiii, way at minimum cost to become members cottages New -j __ tection England family females formed of all __1 __t-vAfn gainfully occupied Mrs. at Luc laimci .j i- of health and : ong been prominent in tockport, secretary-treasurer; of this lodge. Any'.person good with 500 feet frontage, a very desirable the females 10 of and over in Mrs. and 45 will be ie > f Maine. His father years age Wooster of Rockport, ;o raiser of the State of Maine. habits between the ages of 18 losephine PERFECT HEALTH V location a residence. 2 miles each class of the Hattie B issued for $1000 and for summer schoul teacher and re- principal population Deborah Nash of Camden, Mrs. —--- eligible. Certificates $500, a full of vim and vigor is He at all times. am! in the schools of that was; For native wli.es of native par- Jlmer and Mrs. Sarah Perrin of Roek- §■ body $2000. Information gladly given from Belfast and 1 mile from campground ; A REMINISCENE. AB every man's desire. EBEN M. SANBORN. Fin. Sec'y. itii tins sketch was educated. 18.9 per cent; for native whites committee. ;fll; on shore road. farms near at entage, j and, executive — Several city > When and 18 IDA A. MAHONEY, Cor. Sec’y. -19 y ears of age, he went of foreign nr mixed narentaere. 26.3 Der y<»u’re feeling fagged, ^B 6m it td Lli? of a Massachusetts men and women \ Wherein the Indomitable Pluck H mind and muscles won't big bargains. occupation cent; for foreign-born whites, 26.4 per Hall. Voyage | respond the Burlington railroad, 12th at the ! tone on « Ei Also for the Mutual Life cent; and for negroes, 37.1 per cent. igured prominently August of Captain and Crew Alone Made It JH up agent Fidelity fth- went to Elmwood, where of the Hall linth annual reunion family, Ins. of one of the best mi .ear and a when he AGE OF WORKERS. Successful. ■ “L F.” Atwood’s Medicine H Co, Philadelphia, half, leld at Penobscot View Grange hall, i,- •ecarne superintendent of wM —famous for over 60 years— K: GENTLY ASSISTING NATURE contracts and dividend paying policies writ- The gainfully occupied males in 1910 Dlen Cove. About 125 were present, A subscriber to our recent men- that The railroad referring be • breath bad in the point. were distributed to age periods showed two fS It can’t excelled. Those who find their ten. Call and see me and talk these things tr he became station according rhe necrology report only ;ion of hermaphrodite brigs says: “They Medicine ^B agent J “I have taken‘L. F.’Atwood’s a bad taste in the month, a as follows: 10 to 13 684: 14 to 15 Officers were than J|B B|| morning, am Build- :■ r. years, leaths the past year. would endure more and last longer and find it can’t be excelled as a general over. I always glad to give prices. jainoi. years. S ^B a mean in the 16 to 20 years, 21 Wooster of to their It is a fine medicine and I coated tongue, feeling r.venfion in 1898 he was years, 3,026; 23,342; dected as follows: Orris my other class of vessel, owing fB family remedy. Hie taken to rent and collections made on shall a good word for it. You will do well to Pinklets, ings lie. ticket for pro- j to 44 years and age unknown, 127,683; Leonard H. Rhodes rot or over-burdened jB always speak ^B head, try publican Bamden, president; being over-sparred are welcome to make use of this testi- to assume and The ^B new laxative. commission. ediately began and 45 years over, 87,440. pro- if Boston and George E. Hall of Glou- with large sails, although they had plenty ■ monial.” (signed) O. Harrison a -.•ion in The kad- which these symptoms one politics. portion which the gainfully occupied vice Frank H. Ingra- if canvas for their tonnage, but the head Write us for FREE Sample NOW. Constipation, Main street office in Howes’ block up '• :ester, presidents; 'HH'; ||||n it means the fact that the new formed of all males in each Parks H The Rig Bottle—35c. AtYnur Dealer's. IS3) denote, is dangerous because males age j iam of Rockland, secretary; Mrs. sails hadn’t so much hoist, their flight of stairs and formerly occupied by- pe markable judgment and square F.” Medicine Co. Portland, that materials which should was: For those 10 to 13 years of J Buker of treasurer; Mrs. Har- while the of poisonous and more to him. It was period Rockland, :opsail being double, drop from the are & Knowlton. 3t30eow j for those 14 to 15 have been expelled body Wyman Pi- should age, 2.7 per cent; years •iet West of Somerville, Mass., histor- the foresail was limited owing to the an of this type retained. It is a condition winch, M. R. KNOWLTON. of 23 for those 16 to 20 was under the and the fore being a -me of the men displaced j age, per cent; an. The entertainment shortness of the fore-mast, 21 if not corrected, becomes chronic. |tf\ :r grievances at his door years of age, 71.1 per cent; for those lirection of Mrs. Sarah Hall Herrick of and aft mainsail, the largest sail of the Even chronic constipation can be cor- !• ii him, but as each suc- to 44 years of age, 96.5 per cent—that River and included solos by didn’t extend but a few feet on iis Fall piano outfit, in the diet and me around his majorities all 4 men in 100 had THE rected by carq persistent is, but every gainful Miss Beatrice Wood of Charlestown, ooom beyond the taffrail.” laxative. NOTICE j gher and higher. and for those 45 of treatment with a gentle years vocal solo Mrs. Ross Hall May- The writer made one from ...I fi 1 „.... 4 I nnfnrfnn. 11 occupations; Mass; by voyage tiie affairs of the office of X.11V3 ..1 age and over, 84.5 per cent. lard of Boston and Mrs. Herrick of Fall Me., to Port Morant, Jamaica, Huberts betrayed Bangor, so relict M.D. special The females in 1910 Bernice Wood the ately common, gives temporary O. S.VICKERY, no reflection on other gainfully occupied cornet soio by Miss in mid-winter, before Civil War, j River; just but in the end constipation. were to is ; R. Anson with aggravates I that his office was a distributed according age perio if Charlestown; by Mrs. in the Abner Taylor, loaded PRACTICE LIMITED TO y poem brig Pinklets are dainty, sugar-coated pills, ,:'i with benefit as follows: 10 to 13 years, 172; 14 to 15 of Rockland and a vocal duet by feet of lumber in the hold and might copy Brie 100.000 than a mustard seed and 21 to ! The hardly larger 1,544; 16 to 20 years, 12,597; Vlrs. and Mrs, Herrick. feet on deck. The second night or years, Maynard 30.000 act causing no nausea Ear, Nose, Throat, -Lirvivad his widow and and and Matinicus she was they gently, Eye, by 44 years age unknown, 34,492; j family goes, August 26th, to out in a northwest gale of wind and are a l- berts, employed in the griping. They aid digestion 45 years and over, 14,477. The propor- to attend the dedication of the tablet thrown on her beam ends, but after cut- when and Refracticn. gi eer, and Wolcott Rob- ; who good after-dinner pill, especially tion which the gainfully occupied females erected in memory of Ebenezer Hall, the lashings of our deck load she Light Draft, the needs \ l eoria High school. An ting more food has been taken than formed of all females in each age Indians in 1794. If when it was found that she had and was buried at Elni- period was killed there by righted, clear away the t'ne months of July and August I be of the body require. They During r-' -d at in 1889 to ! was: Fcr those 10 to 13 years of age, that is the dedication will a and it took 1,500 strokes Good l Service, a Quincy day stormy sprung lead, congestion. "With in corner Church and those 14 to 15 of her free waste and prevent will be my office, I bis marriage was a for- 0.7 per cent; for years i neld the succeeding Friday. of the pumps an hour to keep the result is well little which a. m. to 11.30 a. borne for those 16 to 20 and Better. persistence, Streets, from 10 life of the family age, 12.1 per cent; the rest of the passage. The captain Nothing correct chronic con- Hridge all he worth, they really his political fights years of age, 39 per cent; for those 21 PITTSFIELD PERSONALS. mate relieved each other at the wheel, m., 12 m. to 3.00 p. m., and by appoint- t: his ... friend and helper in ; to 44 of 27.1 per cent; and most of the to Jamaica, etipation. years age, steering trip Your sells Pinklets or they will ment. Tel. 149-13. 45 of and 14.7 which I druggist for those years age over, and Mrs H. E. Condon arrived while the second mate, position on of 2o ( rvive: Ellen and Mr. be sent, postpaid, receipt price, From 4 p. m. until 9. a. m. at Camp cent. and the crew of six men forward, ! .Mrs. J. E. Bear of Farm- per home from Ocean Park. held, UBGBLUnJ.DOW.A0d. bottle, the IJr. 'Williams Friday cents per by Tel. 23-2. u were when we were bend Quantabacook. Searsmont. Lawrence of Yates City. NUMBER OF CHILDREN AT WORK. of Brooks kept busy pumping Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. M. Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah Crowell which ^. mber of Baker camp were not handling sails, notwithstanding Maine. for booklet and free ^ In Maine in 1910 there 3,710 on friends this week. Brooks, today sample. of aave been calling we made the in | lodge Knights Pyth- males and females 10 to 15 of passage twenty-five days, member of the Peoria 1,716 years at Port ( in Cornforth left last wtek to join delivering our cargo Morant, and, ! and of the age engaged gainful occupations; or, Harry the Marquette who is their cottage as we thought, found and stopped "GEOrt. JOHNSON, al Herts had erect- stated otherwise, 9.6 per cent of the his mother, occupying Salesmen recently leak after the cargo was out. Proceeding Tobacco scent avenue. males and 4.5 per cent of the females 10 at Ocean Park. SPECIAL TO WOMEN to we chartered to load logwood to 15 years of age were gainful work- is her annua) Kingston WANTED. and Miss Elsie Haskell taking and at Black River for New The most economical, cleansing ers. In 1900 there were 3,979 males and duties at the pimento at vacation from her postoffice we reached after a 60 $100 monthly. Expenses. Experience oi all is Law, en- York, which port germicidal antiseptics Attorney Reckoning. 10 to 15 of 2,013 females years age at Ocean Park. Advertise and take orders, and is days passage, and that we ever reached EARNunnecessary. gaged in gainful occupations, which was from merchants for Smoking and Chewing BELFAST, MAINE. i i in New York Sun.] of E. Frost were was due to the nerve and persistence 10.8 per cent of all males and 5.7 per Friends Clarence glad port Tobacco, Cigarettes, Cigars, etc. Send a 2c. I. who sit aloof on thrones, from him when he was of our who insisted that “he was cent of all females 10 to 15 years of age. to received a call skipper, stamp for full particulars. red Old Practice in all Courts. Probate practice chancelleries apart, in town and Sunday. not born to be drowned by Neptune, HEMET TOBACCO CO„ | PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS IN MAINE. Saturday of State with subtle art, even if he did hold out mermaids as an 10w 27 New York, .N Y. specaltv. 2tf what wretched Walter ind son of in, groans The principal occupations followed by Mr. and Mrs. Cargill inducement to a sailor man to change sur- what unrecorded bones were over Sunday soluble Powder to the males and the females, respectively, Allston, Mass., guests roundings.” This return trip was made A Antiseptic ■llow graves, what bitter of William in Maine in 1910 were as follows: in the home Cargill. in late winter. We had been on short al- be dissolved in water as needed. w MALES. who has been lowance of food and water for several d or the orphaned heart— Mrs. Woodward, As a medicinal antiseptic for douches R*/( Betsey south of home of her sor, When in the Gulf Stream Rockland-Belfast or Barbers, hairdressers,and manicurists... 1,?93 visiting at the Henry days. in treating catarrh, inflammation has returned. Hatteras, in a southeast gale with part TRUCKING. and this might not be!- Woodward, in Camden, ulceration of nose, throat, and that of our sails gone, we sprung another leak AUTO SERVICE I am to do all kinds of trucking *r lust, festering jealousy, Haseltine and feminine ills it has no equal. prepared Mr. and Mrs. J. S. daugh- which on the and our caused by and a Leave carnage stalks abroad. gained pumps, only Furniture piano moving specialty. Brick and stone masons. 1,608 Edith Haseltine, Frank Hasel- of For ten the Lydia E. Pinkham the corner of Main and CroB* nous on the wind! ter, Miss chance was to get rid of our deck load years orders at stable, bugle and contractors. 866 and Mr. and Mrs. Leave Belfast, Windsor Hotel, 8,00 a. m.; Paxtine atten- have shall Builders building tine, Walter Haseltine. which took about six re- Medicine Co. has recommended streets, and they will receive prompt stayed it, they logwood hours, 00 m. Cuntain. masters, mates, and pilots. 1,246 of Mass., 2 p. with tn n. connection E. Haseltine Worcester, the to less than the m. correspondence Telephone 9,221 Ralph ducing leak capacity Arrive Rockland, 9 30 a. m.; 3 30 p. in their private w at Lake Sebasti- n_i.i_j d p. r> i,in the courts of God? Carpenters. j are an outing the The next a passing its W. W. RLAZO, Clergymen. 946 I enjoying of pumps. day women, which proves superiority. »** —- 4 00 m. 126 Waldo Beelfast Clerks (except clerks in stores). 2,882 i VCOOC1 IIU YC-IU ---"O 10,00 a. no.; p. Women who have been cured say 14 Avenue, us with Arrive Belfast, 11.30 a. m.; 5.30 p. m. American Dairies. Clerks in stores. 2,542 distress, and furnished pro- it is “worth its weight in gold.” At Commercial travelers. 1,239 I OAK HILL. (Swanville.) visions. $1 50 ROUND TRIP, $2.50 druggists. 50c. large box, or by mail. Deliverymen.. 1.592 man than our FARE, ’A reduced duties of the A less nervy skipper Toilet Co,. Bostons Mass. h. u. noTises Draymen, teamsters, and expressmen.... 3,629 i a of oxen to The Paxton F. J. Webb sold yoke Roy would have abandoned the Abner Taylor MAY BE RESERVED IN ADVANCE I tariff American dai- Electricians and electrical engineers. 1,042 j SEATS of Waterville Aug. 8th. and as he was to do by CLEANING. nsiderable part of their 1,996 Libby there then, begged Engineers (stationary). hands. But there was no such word wholesale price of cream Farm laborers... 24,290 I Miss Cecil Patterson of Lynn, Mass., all S7EAMPRESSING as abandon in the he was fa- id to 22 cents.Milk has Farmers and dairy farmers. 44,643 her uncle, J. O. Patterson. language MAINE TRANSPORTATION COMPANY is visiting that in a l: Firemen locomotive and fire de- miliar with. The result being A per hundred to $1.35. (except WILLIAM B. WILLIAMSON, Gen'l Manager and REPAIRING. 1,267 Mr. and Mrs. Mark Peavey of few we the Highlands, took Orders Solicited is partment).—. Belfast, days sighted wholesale nrice of butter AUGUSTA, MAINE. CUSTOM CLGTHES TO ORDER Fishermen and oysterroen... 4,499 were of Mrs. W. R. Pea- a Hook who when he came than a Canadian Sunday guests Sandy pilot, year ago. Foremen and overseers (manufacturing) 1,880 down to fitted stove building sand and A vey. on board we could have kneeled For wood, Alining the benefit. Am- Insurance agents and officials..... 717 At Street. Tel. 216-13 and as the strain of winter of hard wood 52High bers are not cream, Laborers: Miss Ruth of Brooks was the worshipped, and a small quantity buying Quimby | and mountainous seas endured for gravel, (fcr cheaper.—Nashua Cotton mills.. 1,004 of Mrs. James Webster the ! gales any guest past had worn us out. e. hT boyington. lumber. GILES G. ABBOTT, General and not specified. 14,235 week. sixty days completely and mills. 3,149 Those were the when New England Paper pulp days Tel 137-2 Lincolnville Avenue. Saw and planing mills. 4,206 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Thompson and ! furnished men for sea service, forward “notice.- 'ropriation For Eye-Sight Specialist 26tf Bangor. Steam railroad... 3,111 children of Poor’s Mills were guests of and aft, that could be depended upon to 855 Guaranteed work in Chir.rody, Manlcur- Lawyers, judges, and justices. James Webster Aug. 9th. perform their duty promptly under the OF THE 'A. D. C., Aug. 4. Through Lumbermen, raftsmen, and woodchop* conditions without talk ng and Shampooing. Also Facial Work. 1 Mrs. Edward worst kind of any Rep. Guernsey Bangor is pere. 3,998 Capt. and Harvey and Norton in the OPTICAL CO., and back.—Capt. George L. BOYINGTON Full line of all kinds of Hair Work at uiy of a public building with Machinists millwrights. 3,419 Mrs. Bullard of Bangor were guests of DOAK & PATTERSON Mail carriers... 824 6th Marine Journal. parlors over Shlro’s Store, Phoenix Row. "oils. The House late Mon- Mrs. Ann Webb Aug. and called on 44 South Main Street. Winterport. Maine a Managers and superintendents (manu- here. liassed the Senate bill au- other friends while and Arthur W. EVIE HOLMES. facturing. 822 Constipation Causes Sickness. MONDAYS AND TUESDAYS. Carleton Doak of Belfast 32uMISS WOU additional and it now OFFICE DAYS, Manufacturers and officials. 2,400 Mr. and Mrs. Albert Toothaker and Don’t permit yourself to become constipated, Patterson of Castine wish to announce that Resident for his signature. Painters, glaziers, and varnisherB (build- Mr. and Mrs. Irving Toothaker and Mas- as system immediately begins to absorb have formed a for the gen- *"ou|d be available within a ing). 3.041 your they partnership ter Kendell Fifield, attended the centen- from the waste matter. Use under the firm name of Physicians and surgeons. 1,212 poison backed-up SALE eral practice of law, For Sale in nial at Searsmont, Aug. 11th. FOR with offices at Bel- Plumbers and gas and steam fitters. 1,163 Dr. King’s New Life Pills and keep well. There DOAK & PATTERSON, Searsport 1,369 W. Scott’s farm were fast and Castine. Corner of Main and Nichols streets a two- Quarry operatives... Geo. buildings is no better illness. Just Second hand furniture suitable for safeguard against office will be on busi- an ideal summer resi- Retail dealers.. 9,836 struck- by lightning about 4 a. m. Aug, The Belfast open every story nine-room house, Ictren take one dose to-night. 26c. at your Druggist. ness Castine office will be open on dence. on the or to Cry Sailors and deck hands. 1.515 8th and destroyed with cottage Apply to day—the Apply premises totally by fire, and Saturdays and at other times by A. F. WHITTIER. * FLETCHER’S Salesmen (stores). 4,000 all the contents. was a Fridays 1.166 nearly There 31tf No. 43 High Street. appointment. 8m27 Searsport, Me., Aug. 11,1914. 4w33p Sawyers... insurance on the Bucklen’s Arnica Salve for Skin Eruptions. Special I storia Semi-skilled operatives: small buildings. 000,000 barrels for the entire United PURE BLOOD MAKES The Reunion of the zoth Maine The Repuoucan journal re- States, a record breaker, and at the HEALTHY PEOPLE cent annual meeting of the International The 29th annual reunion of the 28th If nine BELFAST. THURSDAY. AUGUST 20,1914 Apple Shippers association in Boston no Hood’s Sarsaparilla removes Regimental association waa held in Memorial A business were boils and other erup- hail, Belfast, Tuesday, Aug. 11,1914. PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY BY contracts for shipments reported. scrofula sores, (//ud/el Z^add and it drives out of the session was held at 10.80 a. m.. called to order Last year was a poor export year tions, because CT^omfiany, Pub. Co. blood the humors that cause them. the President, D. O. Bowen. A report of The Republican Jour. only 2,000,000 barrels of apples went by cannot be successfully the Secretary- Treasurer was read and accepted. abroad. In 1912, when there was a big Eruptions announce /deal ; treated with external applications, The following officers were elected for the annua/ barrels were exported. H. M. CHARLES A. PII^BURY. crop, 3,000,000 because these cannot purify the ensuing year: D. O. Bowen, President; \ ^“Aanager send Exporters had planned to 4,000,000 blood. Chase, Secretary and Treasurer; executive barrels abroad this year. The North- Hood’s makes rich, committee, J. W. Black. L. C. Morse and J. W. ADVERTISING Terms. For one square, one Sarsaparilla ///a/e (d/ene (//uld on L. C. inch length in column, 25 cents for one week western growers said that if early ending red blood, perfects the digestion, Ferguson; comm.ttee resolutions, ey/ insertion. and I. A. Conant. and 25 cents for each subsequent of thewar did not reopen'the foreign mar- and builds up the whole system. In- Morse, J. W. Black, Terms. In $2.00 a was served at 12 o’clock Subscription advance, kets would be forced to leave much sist on having Get it now. A bountiful dinner for six months; 60 cents for three they Hood’s^ year; $1.00 the ladies of Thos. H. Marshall Circle. a months. of their fruit on the trees and it was pre- by //e man/d OBITUARY. The afternoon session was opened with /jZ/uli-n^ /./f^u^ud/ dicted that 1st as fine by Sept. apples A. Hasaan. "The Star prayer by Comrade W. V The honors of the war thus as ever will be offered on I European any grown Lindley H. Mosher died at 5 a. m„ Aug. 12th, Spangled Banner” was sung by the audience one each. On the far are with little Belgium. pushcarts at cent at his home in Unity from heart failure. For with Miss Caroline G. Hatch at the piano. The ///jacd/anf/; ante 1 other hand California and Florida lemon several days he had been affected at times, address of welcome was given by L. C. Put- not be or While it may permissable pos- to and A fine growers may profit greatly by the clos- although not confined the bouse, only nam and the response by L. C. Morse. the it sible to “go behind returns,” a his death he appeared upon the rendered Mrs. Belle J. Palmer. ing of the seas and there is SBid to be the day before poem was by > where would be pertinent to enquire Cy- a street as active as ever. He was born in Unity Remarks were made by J. W. Black, Daniel possibility that lemons may sell for $20 rus the contributor to the son of Elisha and Uartha Comrades Maddocks, Wiley, Cook, W. Davis, largest advanced last week a Sept. 23. 1838, Dickey, box. $2.50 — They of —— 1 ■■ the Pattangall campaign fund last Sep- (Stephens) Mosher. His paternal grandfather, Conant, Bowen and H. W. Burrili, formerly I box, making a box of best cost $7.25 from in 1—i settled in the wilderness in now of Hartford. Conn., which _ tember, got tbe money. Was it brewer Elisha Mosher, Sr, Searsport, first hands. done the is now the town of taking up a he told of the good work being by MONROE. or or both? what Belgrade, of distiller, in his The News Brooks. land near the site of the rail- Veterans ard Sons of Veterans present The Churches. Mr. and Mra. The Boston American, a Democratic tract of present Ephraim HMkelj held in and where he resided with his home a in The Republican campaign, which claims the cir- way station, city. Mrs. Walter H. has been seri- ing cottage Northport fc. newspaper largest "Just Young quite last read a poem ... .Mies last week because of the death family during his active life. His days J. W, Black (original) service at North Belfast as usual March of'Bangor i6 abeyance culation of any paper in New England, Preaching ously inuisposed. nasso/1 mith his ann Hliflhn in TInitv. a Post Office," which appeared in The tion here with her the White was this Keep next afternoon at 2.30 o’clock, followed friend v in House, opened denounced Sunday Mrs. Mittie Gowen has from a in a recent editorial vigorously had week. Some very interesting re- returned few State where hp died at the age of 88 years. He Journal last school. Spearin-Mrs. Lizzie week and meetings all over the bill by Sunday weeks' visit in Waterville. Webber, the who voted for the Eli- were made A. T. Gay of A. E. Congressmen a family of five sons and three daughters. marks by Capt. ing house for Mr. and Mrs.. will be addressed by speakers of national Scientiata hold service* in the Panama canal free tolls, L. H. Mosher’s Clark S. of V., Belfast, and Mra. Fletch- The Christian tooa a in new repealing sha Mosher, the younger, Mr. Camp, Mrs. A. B. Payson is from trip their auo t, We are not informed as to at recovering nicely reputation. a be- the of the Circle, words of wel- their hall, 127 Main street, Sunday morning * charging them with “miserable father, was born in Belgrade in 1800. At er, President gave her recent surgical operation. dren.... Mr. A. L. Durham the for Waldo county. and evening at 7.30 appointments In con- with 17 cents come. 11 o'clock Wednesday bath room in his trayal of party and country.” age of 26 he started in life only Mrs. Susan Lord was with the E. C. Holbrook put house were read and ac- to which all are welcome. on foot to Vassal- The following resolutions o’clock, who has been a The North American Review says of clusion it says: in .his pocket. He travelled family at Bayside last week. spending fe« «... where he obtained work on a farm and cepted. services next Sunday at Mason's Mills cousin, Mrs. Bertha Roosevelt’s retirement from The Out- We should rid ourselves of these men, boro, The Mrs. Rose about the house but Nealle; of honor on the death of the Mary keeps her '* for cannot be trusted to preserve at the end of six years had saved $700. He Resolutions will be held at 10.30 a. m., followed by the home in Hampden.. \t “The alliance was formed upon a they her health is this look: interests at since very poor summer. their country’s rights and then came to bought a piece of land members of the 26th Maine Regiment and at Trinity Reformed church Jenkins and daughter a ,]- was Unity, Sunday school, false in and fated the Rjicpificp nf a fpw nettv It is hot and in now and theory journalism nnlitical iobs. One of the in 1913: school. dusty the country Belfast were in town and settled there as a farmer. our last meeting August, ■ t 2.30 p. m., folio ved bv Sunday So:,.;:, Mr. Roosevelt has The men whom the of their dis- the and wells are 11 from the beginning. , people and he was a friend That this association extends to all springs going dry. L. F. from kindest husbands fathers, Resolved, The school convention Simpson Bdfa.-i tricts to retire from life are who have fallen Waldo County Sunday not nrnfited from the use of a personal ought public in the families of our comrades Ernest Gould and wife are to make ter Maud to all especially the poor, who always found church W ednesday. preparing last Sunday, Congressman Thomas C. Thacher of the the wayside during the year, our sincere will meet in the Baptist and the Outlook has suffered ir- friend. He was a lead- by meir nome at tne William Uouia nomesteaa. has been organ, Cape Cod district of Massachusetts, him a kind and helpful sympathy in their bereavements and that our Sept. 2nd. The State workers, Rev.J. J. Hull | very poorly affairs and held all of hands shall be to aid friends are to reparably.” Congressman Daniel J. McGillicuddy of ing spirit in local public hearts and always open of the adult department and Sec’y Wesley J. Mrs. Lizzie Chase and daughter Marie are at sorry hear He died in his and assist them in every way possible. Wildes has Maine and E. E. Reed and the important town offices. be the A. E. Chase homestead for a few week?. I returned t. Congressmen That this association anew Weir of Portland will present. 15th this Do was a Resolved, pledge Mrs. Marshall Rand ha Bradstreet’s of August gives R. E. Stevens of New Hampshire. 80th year. His wife, Martha Stevens, is the bul- to each other that loyalty which The services for the week at the Baptist Electus Oakes and wife have settled down to not them at the and visit her mother... crumb of comfort to those who are la- forget polls. daughter of Benjamin R. Sally (Rich) wark of our country, and that we stand to- It chun h will be as follows: prayer meeting this, housekeeping at the John Dow Jones home- In this connection it be recalled both of whom were natives of Gor- gether as in days gone by, trusting in the hope cir.ity. Many of the w. the increasing cost of the nec- may Stephens, Sunday stead. menting tnat we all be mustered out at Thursday, evening: morning service, and had their may honorably Mrs. Razorotf and two i;,. life: that the Democratic platform of 1912 ham, Me., accompanied parents and re- Chris- cessaries of the end of a long and faithful service at 10.45 a. m.; Sunday School at noon; Miss Christine Lane is her friend ! when children. Elisha and Martha visiting Island, who have been b move- declared “We favor the to Unity ceive that welcome plaudit, Well done good service at What resembles a psychological that, exemp- tian Endeavor meeting and evening Mrs. Cunningham in Swanville this name- and faithful servant. Agnes ningham’s for the past ment to advance of commodities tion from of (Stephens) Mosher raised two children, prices toll American ships engaged L C. Morse, 7.30 p. m. week, war levels has caused H. and Judith C., who married to popular ideas of in the coastwise trade through ly: Lindley J. W. Black, passing the week at the Methodist Fred Moulton and who lost extensive on criticism and demand for legal regula- Alfred Clark. Lindley H. Mosher began his I. A. Conant. The services for family, recently repairs the and that in the campaign there is a that canal,” will be as follows: This, Thursday, their buildings by fire, are living in the Sharon Fogg is building a new tion, but growing feeling studies in the district school, advanced in his in honor of our church Woodrow the candi- Resolutions flag: some of the advances, particularly on Wilson, Democratic chorus at Roberts’ house has raised the main h. studies attending Freedom Academy, and we have heard and read of the prayer meeting; young people’s temporarily. have been by Resolved, That domestic products, vastly date for advocated and to n in u tv, Friday* Sunday, at 10.45. morning Samuel White have rtla- president, specially his education at Oak Grove Semi- the prof osition to change our old flag The Congregational Church will be opened and that a natural reaction completed overdone, Yet the stars the bars. at service visiting at Mel Grant’- free tolls for American shipping. Vassalboro. When a young man he add to worship; Sunday school 12; evening next when we shall expect Rev. Mr. will come nary, 26th Sunday, shortly. Resolved, That we, members of the Mrs. John McKeen ar when president he urged and secured taught one term of school, but his principal oc- this sit- at 7.30 p. m. Carne back from his vacation. Maine Regiment Association, deplore John at In that j Church McKeen.... Miss i- While the customs receipts New the repeal of the free tolls bill by Con- cupation up to 1873 was farming. year uation now being advanced by oar Southern The First Congregational Church, Mrs. Charles S. Atherton of Lowell, Mas?., home for her vacation store in brethren, and with all the loyalty that we Rev. Haraden York last week were reported as nearly gress, although opposed by Speaker he opened a general Unity village, street, opposite Court House, with her children, is visiting her sister, Mrs. now have or ever had, we oppose this change visiting her sister, Mrs he carried on a successful business up Summer services: Sunday, norma', they were not from imports but Champ Clark and Underwood, the Demo- where and proclaim to all the patriotic citizens of S. Pearl, pastor. Albert Roberts, at the Austin farm. to the time of his death. In 1860 Mr, Mosher this that such a change would be trea- 10.45, morning worship and sermon, subject, for withdrawals from bond, and the ad. cratic leader in the House. Senator country Willis Morse and wife of Lowell, Mass., have FAMILY C M Miss S. Ranlett of Freedom,who son now as much as in 1861-5. Trifles.” meeting thiB, married Emily “Supreme Prayer with Milton Leonard ministration at Washington is consider- Johnson of Maine, knowing that he was That we our united sup- passed a short vacation children: Martha Resolved, pledge to 8 o'clock. survives him with their three with all its Thursday, evening from 7.30 Haseltine. The a: how to meet the inevitable deficiency against the interests of his con- port to the old flag, unchanged, and family at their Sprout Hill farm. ing voting R. and Gorham C., all of 137 Haseltine family was h,- E George Unity. splendor and all its glories for the past The services of the Episcopal Mission will in revenue. It is estimated that a “war stituents, stood with the President for Wrilliam Polleys of Baring, Maine, has re- on the shore of Lake Martha married Charles E. Stephens and years. 23d at 4 o’clock p. m in of those be held Sunday, Aug. Miss bers attending. The h. tax” of $100,000,000 will and both he and McGillicuddy E. Mr. Resolved, That we cherish none turned home after a visit with his sister, approximately repeal, George married Mary Wellington. church vestry, if pleasant. Rev. J. W. Haseltine of Pi ideas that were tnrust upon us by the late the North Edna of the A. E. Chase Co. be and while no definite plans voted for the Wilson-Underwood tariff, a interest in af- Polleys was served. The mei. necessary, Mosher displayed deep public Civil War, but hope and pray for peace and Jones of Camden, Me. will officiate. If Henry w hom are port 100 Years Old Now.” Strange accounts may run before settlement must be and has been a Saturday. They good quantities Roberts Simonton and was the last of a family will be filled up and a great a graduate of Burdett College is in of .V to have an tenting spaces them and it to the full. A heavy thun- charge there was not some one in these offices had. The association also proposed Institution for enjoyed of ten children. Clark died July 24, of folks enjoy these unrivalled op- stenographer in the Hingham Marden who has ch committee to Capt. company der shower in the afternoon a stop to the with the advertising and industrial help the 1909. Doctor Ellis, who is a put Mr. Henry of Pitt sufficiently acquainted geogra- 1912, and since that time Miss Ann, the portunities. Associated with the leader, Savings since create new industries in town; good roads and daugh-^ in ball game, much to the regret of every one. are upric1 to know that Sears- an Maine, is an instructor gentlemen phy of this section ter of her late brother Thaddeus Simonton Rev. J. M. Frost, D. D. will be every day native of Belfast, to use the far schools committees to work hand in hand a There will be no school next Sunday, trying good the University of Texas. He is Sunday port is not in “the southern part of Wal- has cared for her. Two sons and a grandson, able evangelist, a Bible expositor and lecturer, English in with the town authorities for greater efficiency High School class of but the members will meet at the cemetery Maine William W. and Donald Simonton a Deaconess and one preacher. graduate of the Hingham do county,” and the Register on town im- A., Harry special as us- EMERGENCY SHE 1 n these matters, and a committee of Maine, where he and have the memorial exercises there were devoted to the de- 1£09, and the University would have informed them that Sears- Clark, who always m tTrnT1\r> O AW A T o In the work for town upbuilding in He ual. Friends from away are requested to send provement. her She L>A received his bachelor’s degree 1909, Washington, A up Feb. and to ceased, survive to revere memory. of port was incorporated 3, 1845, and improvement the association proposes of flowers.... Rev. John Sanders Dover, Me., sed the emergency as as obtained the degree of Doctor Philosophy was a strong Spiritualist, and long O. Whittemore and Russell A. its centennial is crme off. t ake in all citizens who are interested in mak- Mrs. J. of his family and his eldest brother, Oscar, authorize the Preside ways at at Harvard in 1913, after three years grad- able spent the summer season Temple of are the of to American r ing their home town bigger and busier, and a Whittemore Bangor, guests Doctor are visiting relatives in town-Mr. S. E. ships Mrs. Clark were uate work in After Sept. 6th, fleets sail the m of Heights, where Mr. and pio- M. Blackwell. English. is may The Uni- 1 is those Mrs. H. Whitten of Portland arrived Saturday and 1 department journalism, arge membership expected. Among Uni- will reside 2814 Rio Grande American Hag while neer cottage owners. She attended the and Mrs. Ellis versity of Oregon, recently sent out to a who are members of the association are Page & Miss Florence Cross of Morrill and Miss with his wife (nee Miss Hope Nickerson) at at war. anu ana scour tarian church and was a woman of strong street, Austin, Texas. W. are The conference hundred of the most news- Bryer, West & Element, Treat & Lowe, A. Winnie Dodge of Freedom guests of Mr. Maple Terrace. ..Mr. Stanley Cunningham,who prominent of literary ability, fond of society, Senate by a vote of i- Shnw. C. R. Hill. C. C. Moody. Lillian M. character, Loren Cross. has been friends in town, went to in the least one in and Mrs. Miss Guida Allen and Mr. visiting mined t«> papers country (at one of the best of wives and mothers, and un- Ames-Allen. opposition Carleton. F. W. Haley, E. S. S. Walls of Vinal- in Stockton Springs Saturday to visit his uncle have admitted to the each of the and to Wharff, Raymond kind-hearted. She was Hon. and Mrs. Frederick Maurice J. Ames were united marriage forty-eight States) usually generous and built ves> W. F. Optical Co.; on and Mr. Leroy Nickeison.Miss all foreign Hopkins, Arey, Boyington cf the W. C. haven are at their attractive cottage the evening, August 12th, by Rev. family, e ach of the thirty Schools of Journalism, a charter member and president Wednesday ister within two years and H. E. Christine Lane was the of Mrs. G. T. W. T. Hall, J. W. Cyr, Kneeland, water front and are entertaining A. B. Cneney McAllister. The ceremcnj waa guest as to what each editor or T. U. and %as interested in the Belfast Home Ambrore B. The bill authorize* an enquiry was chosen and C. the week-Miss a Joshua Treat, Jr., secretary of Boston. the Methodist parsonage in Nickerson past Kenney, cretion, to suspend the best for A Women. Every good cause found in performed at j teacher considered country committee on ged at Mrs. T. D. Nickerson’s is sick, all watch etl. R. Hill and Joshua Treat, Jr., by- will be held Mrs. Frank B. Knowlton of Belfast.who with Rncksnort and the single ring service was guest very quiring her an active friend. The funeral in the trade with which he was familiar. The the last we heard from her. foreign paper laws, MiBS Louise Knowltoo,is at their one of the young but a little better at the Main street entrance to her late home her daughter, used. The bride is popular United States and r* the of has been the teach- Nickerson has a friend replies, which registered opinions Rev. recently returned from Boston, where ladies of Bucksport. She ....Miss Sadie May and measurement of NORTH ISLESBORO Thursday, morning at 10 o'clock, C. B, cottage, the few most cases the this, er of the west side primary for past whose name we did not learn.... officers of th< newspapermen, in in she went to meet her sister-in-law, Mrs, Ed- visiting her | istry by city Misses Ida and Edna Henderson of Dorches- Ames and the interment will be an efficient and very popu officiating, terms and proved will be resumed on the church editors or editors of great me- ward N. Winslow. They made the trip to Bay- the of George We expect work exchange ter, Mass., were recent guests of Mrs. Helen the family lot in Camden. lar teacher. She is daughter car.- Mrs. Winslow is the son of Mr. and Mrs. this week_One day last week some one dailies.concentrated on twenty- a side in the latter’s touring Allen. Mr. Ames of tropolitan Ryder....Miss Marian Gurney gave delight- —a*- men of Beware weeks in and Belfast. Ames, and is one of the young set a fire in the field back of Fred of the smaller papers from the At- 13th in honor of her friend will spend some Bayside Harry carelessly nine ful party Aug. a esteemed citizen, died the Bucksport are justly proud. Coni'1"1 Payson Chase, highly » also a at the which people and had it not been for the Catarrh that The Davis of California guest B. Co. Curtis’ buildings lantic to the Pacific, a number of these Helen Cherington of Atlantic. yonng in East Jaekson. He George He is in the employ of the R Dunning Miss Ber- 10th at his home and prompt action of as mercury will sure!, Aug. Knowlton cottage. as bookkeeper. The couple were forethought to five votes. We folks the time playing games on the of Bingor who saw the smoke and knowing receiving from two spent went to the barn to tie up his cattle and being automobile for Ala- nice Moore, smell and completely unattended and left by 1 W. after which ice cream, cake and candy Mr. Curtis and family were away investigated tern when entering it are advised a note from Eric lawn, a time his wife went to look for SMITHTON (Freedom) where will spend their by gone long moosook lake, they and summoned assistance, the buildings must Such articles-i were served. Those present were Elsa Bates, is with the will make their home in faces. the head of the of him and found him lying dead on the barn Herbert Knowlton quite ^sick ty- honeymoon. They been The fire had nearly f Allen, department Harold have destroyed. cept on prescriptions Emily Farrow, Ada Ladd, Jack Brewer, at Mrs. Wentworth’s. A trained Bangor. men could be found to » in the University of Oregon, floor. He had left the supper table apparent- phoid fever reached them before as the damage they journalism ■ ■!■ Doris Coombs Helen Coombs. him.... Mr. it.... Mrs. Lee Merrithew of Sears- can Gurney, anjl as usual. He was about 72 years old nurse from Lewiston is caring for extinguish good you posse that The Journal was the twenty- ly as well Cattle. R. N. among Jenkins from Boston is spending his vacation Some Big port was the guest of her father, Mr, Catarrh Cure, manuf. and had long been a resident of Jackson, a cost: nine thus as best, and The Shoe Situation. at Bartlett’s-Mrs. Perley Thurston’s Brown, Sunday. dt Co.', Toledo, O papers designated for Jqs. of Kennebunk is the member of the Congregational church and aunt are visiting her....J. W. Edwin I. Littlefield taken internally, action we think we are in mother of cattle in justified regarding in sum- F. & Mrs. Busher and Mrs. owner of probably the largest yoke mucous surfaces Quiet conditions prevail footwear, many years, a member of Archon Lodge, Deane took hiB sisters, and Aroostook Potatoes. and this as s marked over. The attention in his new auto New England. They weigh 5,000 pounds Catarrh Cure ,, very compliment. mer business being about of the board of selectmen. He Nutter, to Windermere Aug. Hall’s A. M„ and are red seven years old. He is taxed interim! of retailers is now directed to mark Taylor spent Sunday with her Durhams, as ine. It is.taken generally two 13th_Myra five olds weigh Potatoes are doing very finely, developing i are until these are leaves to mourn their loss his wife, sons, Wentworth is for seven pairs. Two years F. J. Cheney 1 Growers and shippers of apples down sales and completed brother, John Taylor—John well as could be wished. The rattle and rumble , by for fall and all residents tf Wentworth- 4 full blooded, Herefords. Another all jobbers do not look for many orders one daughter and two brothers, visiting his mother, Florence 200, being of the barrel will began in earnest in Sold by Druggists, much concerned over the conditions seven 4,300, red Durhams. potato I'1' winter lines. Manufacturers are reported to distant relatives Mr, and Mrs. J. W. Libby of Unity called on pair, years old, weigh Fairfield Review, Take Hall’s Family j Jackson, besides many more them at fairs. about a f jrtnight.—Fort brought about by the European war. have sufficient business in hand to keep their friends here Aug. 12th. He will exhibit in Review Aug, loth. and friends. The crop this year is estimated at 60,- plants operation.—Dun's ^ Vi——— "V ————- -2 traduce new end desirable good* never before III aaasBagsjsi~—assagaisjua— The of Veterans will make on ox- daughkseu shown in Belfast, and many other things enter curaiou to Cos tine next ||| Tuesday. into this epecial sale. Call and see whet good Thsrd ||: WJI1 bo o social at ths Methodist things you can boy for little money... .Charles church next WE’RE a Tuesday evening. R. Coombs, who for 18 years has conducted Is to Mr. J. E. Sullivan of Rockland in employed with five-perfect little successful undertaking business in Belfast, $5.00 $8.00 born 1 ae telegraph operator in the Western Union announces that.be is prepared to answer calls a office. toes and good diges- or pink from Searsport and Swanviile, day night, Worth on a Suit of Clothes ? See of us without extra charge, and with a competent Saving the three reel feature The Wreck, a tion. But how many assistant and the use of telephone and auto- great railroad picture, at the Colonial tonight, of either in later Wrr is the of and Flour, Thursday. can boast mobile can assure prompt and considerate at- •putting up prices Sugar tention.The Old Corner Drug Store will our is Don’t forget the five reel feature'HThe Count life. but Red Tag, clean up sale putting down pay you $1 for your old fountain pen provided on of Monte Cristo’’, featuring James O’Neill, at on ever Lower Prices Ford Cars cure your in- buy an Ink-Tite fountain there. Let the good clothes lower than before. 11 the Colonial next and We can’t you pen prices Friday Saturday. Mat- them show There will boa meeting to Effective 1914, to August inee Saturday at 2.30. but we can cure you.... For three days more the following reductions August ], 1, 1915, I I digestion form a Farmers Union in Belfast at Victor and against any reductions The McLain family reunion was held Aug. guaranteed pjf foot trouble if you Grange hall, Searamont, at 2 p. m., and Equity in our bummer Suits will be in force. Every- All cars 14th at the home of Frank Rail in North Seare- your I during that time. fully equipped Srange hall, Belfast, at 8 p. m., Monday Aug. |!]5| mont. A bountiful dinner was served to 33 us fit to a must go at the following prices: f. o. b. Detroit. will let you pair 24th. The speaker will be C. E. Embree, the thing ||j| guests and several others came the during State and. farmer should be Runabout, $440 afternoon. of the famous organiser, every $25 and $22.50 Suits, Red Tag Price now .$16.50 E|(|| present es they will hear something of interest Op Window. $18 Suits, Red Tag Price now. 12.50 Touring Car, 490 The The popular Urban to them... .See advt. of well trained setter dog .•»••• ■ Red now 10.50 morn and $15.00 Suits, Price E>jj| Stock Company will play a return engagement GBOUHP GRIPPER —•••shawl A.lw tkenn Jena nf tVlA crmnrl $16.50 Tag Town Car, 690 12.50 and " « .$8.75 an! 6.95 at the Colonial, for one night only, Wednesday, semi-annual clearance sale mtMTfie Home of $10.00 |||j| I •* (In the United States of America only) will 9.00 5.95 ||j| Aug. 26th, when they present “The Open i Good Values/' 12 Main street. See advt. for the 8.00 and the that won the $5,000 “ to Share in Profits Window,” play prize I bargains offered ...If you consider $5 to $8 7.50 and 6.50 3.95 Buyers offered the Allied Moving Picture Manu- should Ijjjl by worth saving on a suit of clothes you Widow Jones Knee Pants Suits, $5.00 to $6.00 value, now. 3.95 All retail buyers of new Ford cars from August 1, IIII facturers for the best original play submitted Main Street call on Harry W. Clark & Co., the $3.00 and $3.50 Knee Pants Suits now. 1.95 to 1, 1915, will share in the of 1914. Over 800 j 1014, August profits pjl to them before May 1, plays whose red sale continues only to the xtent of to SC Clothiers, tag Best 50c. Men’s Summer Underwear now .35 j on the company $40 $60 per car, were received the and this was ac- Ijljj by judges more. Prices are on some each car PROVIDED: we sell and deliver I three days quoted 25c. Men’s Summer Jnderwear now .19 they buy, jjjfl as the best written and most interest- cepted others in the same When 600.000 new Ford cars during period. Iff I goods; proportion.... Ladies’ Hose .09 tjjat It will be nearly a year before this play 15c. Men’s. Boys’ and now. Ask us for ing. in Belfast don't forget to call at The Dinsmore particulars. |i55y •* now. p;j in form. In the mean-. Union Suits .69 can be produced picture a of $1.00 if Store and secure foot-ease by buying pair time tne uroan aiuui ^wbomd tue cauubivc shoes. Especially you Shirts now. .69 Ford Motor I I the Ground Gripper shoes, the comfort-giving $1.00 Negligee Company this in which Miss rights to present great play, with fallen on Ford effective are troubled ehoeB_Lower prices cars, NEARLY EVERYTHING ELSE IN SAME PROPORTION. Marion will appear. Johnquest retail buyers of new cars up B. O. Norton, Agent, Belfast, Maine arches, or out-growing to August 1,1915, p| West Belfast. The community received to that time to share in the profits of the com- news of the death of Gilbert of to each car Don’t this to save money. sad last Saturday joints. Ground Grippers pany to the extent $40 $60 they neglect opportunity | Ellis. He lived many years in the neigh- buy, provided they sell and deliver 300,000 new The cash we must have at these of for are so constructed as to prices: borhood aud was Master Equity Grange cars during that period, should make an in- quite a number of years. Mr. Percy Edgeccmb. give relief (without plates). creased demand for these popular cars. For John and Tolford Andrew Drury, Mr. Ingalls and Mrs. Leslie call on B. O. j Durham, Albert K. Fogg A. further particulars Norton, agent, - of Belfast. funeral afternoon Men’s Women s corner HARRY W. CLARK phe News and Carroll S. Parker came in Sunday fiom Miller attended the Monday $5.50, Belfast....An 8-room house with bath, & Co., all extend their to Camp Quantabacook, where they had spent six at Morrill, and sympathy $5.00. These comtort-giv- of Miller and High streets, to let. Apply to n that roast beef ard report wife and children.Mrs. Susie The Main Street Belfast. happy weeks. the bereaved are sold L. L. Robbins, 14 Miller street... .Jones & Clothiers, ve been cut out of the menu at the ing shoes only by Bicknell, Ruth and Winthrop Sargent of members of the First Associa- Miss Frances A. * Snow, Safety Sargent, teacher of the first at Geo. B. House. Lawrence, Mass are visiting Dyer.s tion, understand the plumbing and of the North thoroughly Mate council, Daughters of the grade Primary school, will be of Boston is her _Mrs. Cora Ingalls visiting heating laws and are able to give a broad will hold their promoted to the second grade to succeed Miss B. ution meeting brother, Leslie P. Miller....B. Toothaker, SKeS^immoreoftom^ guarantee of satisfaction to their customers. Julia M. 23 and 24, Leary, who resigned on account of Morris and Katherine New- ji. Cora Ingalls Laura Their prices are low also....Pongee automo- jj illness, and Mrs. Grace Emmons of City Maine Hills. Norman A. Read point comb spent the week-end at Temple Heights bile coat lost. Finder plea=e rerurn to Jour- I will succeed Miss Morris and Biekn 11 of Rockland spent Sargent. at the Toothaker cottage-J. H. nal office and receive reward. I Field in ■ \\ ilson, Quantabacook. Those who knew Isle au Haut in the days when L. P. Miller attended the Grange Day I there were n.i rnnrls «n e Grove, Montville, Tuesday. EAST BELFAST. ,.f the Mission will Ring’s Swanville Episcopal and paths over the and the under- J lawn ledges through Mrs. Herbert L. Seekins J. P. of Waldoboro has been in Belfast Searsport party Thursday, August Hillcrest. Moody At Miss Edith Skelton was a week-end guest of brush; and those who later have ridden over trees n.e of Miss Maude Gammans, entertained for Mrs. Leslie C. a id vicinity contracting for Christmas services as Undertaker very pleasantly in Brooksville. AT YOUR REQUEST. My the road that takes cne relatives 3 5 m. completely around this at Hillcrest last a id has a number for the Boston eet from to p. Follett of Belmont, Mass located large call at hour. Bv the use ! Mrs. Atkins and are a will be subject to your any picturesque isle, will be interested to learn that divided their n larket. are not admitted to the New daughter spending j Friday afternoon. The guests They the Belfast Shoe Worker’s a section of at the Towle State road is now under construc- a de- few days cottage. and automobile, I can assure you the attention between sewing and cards, and \ ork market for fear of the insect pests. of telephone : by the Belfast accompanied tion. The filling is composed of mussel shells veranda, Mr. Devivia of York is at the Arthur afternoon was spent on the Next the steamer Golden Rod will f{ew same prompt and considerate attention that has Augusta to take part in the and which lightful Sunday clay flats, is said to give the road time to the guests a Stantial cottage for a two weeks' vacation. that the fog lifted in give n iake another of those popular excursions to vitation of the union of bed a characterized my work in Belfast for thirty-two years, good hard surface. view which is always jj; glimpse of the beautiful ( rescent Beach by way of electric cars from Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Copp of Prospect were The Tarring Case. Herbert Littlefield of that and at no extra charge. so much enjoyed from vantage point, q amden, leaving Lewis’ wharf, Belfast, at 8.30 week-end guests of friends in this vicinity. j u of Mr. and Mrs. el daughter Monroe was before the were served Municipal court Aug. Later, delicious refreshments by a m., touching at the Campground and Tem- Misses Ethel and Edith McFadden of Ban- and I am will leave next With competent assistant, large stock, hworth, early 12th, on complaint of Charles of that about the Fogg the hostess to the guests grouped p le Heights and arriving at Camden at 10.45 a. are of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shaw. nd to enter the St. gor guests or 34tf : Joseph town, who charged him with one a was at service, day night. being of fire in the living room. It regretted n will leave Camden at 4 p. m. your Coombs open Returning, Mrs. Charles is visiting at the Mis.es Gertrude half dozen n en who tar to him to ac- Sylvester applied at mid- of those invited were unable j. are for the round 50 cents. that some trip home of her Mr. and Mrs. IsaacMason V. will return to resume their a parents, ;ley night few’ weeks Littlefield denied a after- ago. cept, hut all present had delightful The next band concert will be tomorrow, Mr. and Robert Gross and of having anything to do with the affair and said to have a Mrs. daughter noon. of which they hope permanent f if If it will he riday, evening, pleasant. stormy, Moosehead Lake arrived Monday to visit rel- ton does most of the work on was abed at the time. Judge Knowlton de- of two Me. work the R. souvenir if the photographers b postponed to next Tuesday evening. Fol- CHAS. COOMBS, Belfast, cided atives. •m in Thorndike with a 20 horse that there was not enough evidence to successful. proves j, wing is the program: His plow turns 5 feet hold him and he was discharged. A short time Miss Marguerite Lord has returned to her engine. 1 First Band, Atkission Local News. In a recent [arch, Regiment — had The Journal's after a visit with Miss .t each round. He is now hauling ago Fogg Guy Twombly of Monroe ar- Overture, Sweet Old Songs, Dalby home in Fairfield Lucy was a [edley on note from D. 0. Bowen, Esq reminder -• d hay at a load. He can haul rested the same charge, who denied all ^ ocal Solo, Silver Threads Among the Gold. Leavitt. of of the that he had been the Morrill correspondent Mr. Charles Hammons. By request, BUY YOUR III i. tu'..- at a load. knowledge affair, but was held under Mrs. M. C. Knowlton left last Thursday for take S larch. The Homecoming, Pauli bonds for the The Journal for 33 years, and we pleas- •ii letters answer to the roll call I LIVE STOCK Letters. The following of the regiment to in Northport, guests of Mrs. Anna Stephenson. COMPANY, follows: Frederick Patterson of Camden, N. J 2m32 Peabody, Mass. mcalled for in the Belfast post of- and more than 125 partook of the dinner _The remains of H. Mosher of who was visiting in Waldo; Joshua Allen of Lindley week 18: Ladies— noon the Ladies Circle. ending August served at by Unity were brought here and buried in Pleas- Montville, removal of gal1, bladder, etc.; who FRANK A. ark (2 letters) Lillian Curtis, Mrs. Comrade Burrill of Hartford. Conn., ant Hill 15th-The Ladies NYE, Menikie who underwent a Cemetery Aug. Chryshomski, very address here last «'rs. Mary A. L. Cain. Miss Gladys delivered the Memorial Circle met with Mrs. Charles Auf. critical surgical and is now out of Sampson A. Miss Roberta operation in which Undertakerand Licensed Charles Stecher, made some interesting remarks, First. 13th... .Our for the first time in many and Beatrice Anikie of Islesbcro, year, village i.taa danger, to the work Safety Surnson, Minnie Smith, Miss he a fitting tribute being some one who thinks Embalmer. abdominal paid years is visited nightly by -!• Gentlemen—Arthur L. operation. of Veterans. He invited phenson. done by the Sons they have an undoubted right to enter the gar CORONER FOR WALDO COUNTY. A Picnic at Warren’s Landing, The of the Belfast Firm is a Member of the letters), W. L. Reynolds, James Sul- Bap- Commander Albert T. Gay Invitation this dens and help themselves to everything that By and 60 MAIN Everett L. tist school had their annual last initiation of 34 members of SEARSPORT ST., BELFAST rnine, Thornton. I Sunday picnic camp to attend the the garden affords. .Fred N. Flye has bought a First Association. Telephone connections at both places. Saturday at Warren’s Landing, Islesboro. The the Sons of Veterans in Hartford, in January. Safety Langtry Crockett of Thomaston, Re- new Ford car. All calls answered promptly. 33tf J cloudy morning kept many from attending He also spoke of the good work being accom- ai.didate for the State Senate from and heat- and only about 35 gathered at the Eastern in that city by the Citizens’ corps. The We thoroughly understand the plumbing j ty, a native of and a cara- plished WEST FRANKFORT. Prospect wharf to take the steamer Anna have been had not Steamship attendance would larger a of work is done from u1 ikor of more than local note, address- j laws. We know when piece Mr. and Mrs. McGray and family TO LET which left about ten o’clock. to attend gone to the cen- ing 61: Belle, Arriving some who planned a with ing at the Republican headquarters Massachusetts are spending few weeks the on the in cemouiuiu. vuver ill. are able to a broad at Warren’s Landing party gathered tenniai CeieDrauon That is how we give guaran- cottage at the ty last Friday night. The doctor is right. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thayer.... Mr. and Mrs. battery. bluff by the lime kilns and ate their dinner Neal of that town, who died only a few weeks AshoreHas three sleeping rooms, a living room earr.est and and held to our customers. Our are John Rainey and two children of Prospect aggressive speaker tee of satisfaction prices ana a Kitchen, also a large and after having their pictures taken by one at the age of 103, was a member of the 26th piazza. attention of his audience and was ago Visited Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grant last week Apply to of the to the beach, where the and the oldest person in SearBmont. 14-11 r:- ■' party adjourned Maine, low also. Telephone is not all cut. On LOUVILLE J. applauded. An informal reception ... .The hay in this vicinity POTTLE, Belfast. Me. children ball and went in and 1 v- •: played wading of bad weather the farmers have refreshments were served. Judge Church Fair. The annual mid-summer sale account the older ones went on strolls along the shore made slow .Miss Velma Grant will address the club tomorrow, and entertainment by the North Church Circle, very progress... and the blueberries some finding very plentiful & has returned home from Mrs. Harold Indiij, evening. at the church afternoon, JONES SNOW, Moody's lunch voted given Wednesday "wanted- filled their boxes. All that War- where she last week... .The a financial in Monroe, spent B. Steward was the hostess "or August 12th, was success, netting ren’s Landing was an ideal place for a picnic and 60 8t. in the was a seven or more room tenement The sale at Mrs. M. Plumbing,Heating Supplies, High Sunday meeting ^eld chapel largely thimble party last Saturday after- it is to make there about $60. opened 2.30, and hoped another trip on as usual.... Herbert Tozier has moved with barn for a small to of the Circle, and Mrs C. W. attended family. Apply ’*isb Ethel L. Burr of who afternoon C. Hill, president Bangor, Labor Day. In the the party was into W. S. York’s house....Mr. Fred Black of K. E. at the work Mrs. YOUNG. -ueft for the week-end. The I who came on Atkins, presiding fancy table; guests increased by two the steamer has made a short visit with his Tel. 134-14 30tl Mrs. A. P. at -<* who had met Miss Burr while Abbie Roix and Mansfield the at last 'ram was well rendered, the talent responding Massachuset^ | Tremont. The Anna Belle called at the Land- Tie campmeeting Northpart opened father, Hollis M. Black. I fast two as tables; Mrs. Frank Wiley and Miss week. years ago assistant j ing on her afternoon trip down and the party candy Monday and will continue through the ;o encores, and the supper was all that one t at the Waldo Julia Perry at the food table and Mrs. Frank County hospital, went over to Castine, Brooksville and Baga- Roosevelt was in Maine Tuesday and ad- :ould wish. The sales in the afternoon were LISTEN-MR j and Mrs. Clyde B. Holmes at the Col. The show’er drove the guests in- 1 which was one of the most en- Limeburner duce Landing, dressed a meeting in Lewiston that afternoon. and home Opportunity is knocking at your door, so why booth. At 4 o’clock a en- very good made candies, ice cream, a pleasant afternoon was spent the ice cream pleasing not let him in way of an age ey with our joyable parts of excursion, and arrived at Vera Cruz have by a duet Three of the naval vessels were was |e work. Iced tea and cookies were 1 tertainment was given, including piano stc., disposed of. A large crowd company. A Massachusetts Stock Company 30 back at belfast about 6 o’clock. to Stoddard and Mrs. Thomas E. been ordered elsewhere—the Des Moines years in the Accident and Health business. the close of the afternoon Miss Amy served with supper and many of the summer by New Some one will be as our in A Shower in Winterport. Mrs. Albertie solo Miss Katherine Hilton Lobos Island and the and the appointed agent Bowker; a violin by let visitors took a part in the program. Thus your town, so why the opportunity slip a most matrimonial Miss Helen Jersey to Guantanamo. George gave enjoyable of Chicago, accompanied by Sleeper i There will be a meeting to forth a Farm- through your fingers? Write fi r particulars passed another successful fair. and terms to C. I). DEN trunk shower Aug. 13th from three to six p. of Wellesley; reading by Miss Katherine The clerks in James H. Howes store had a I ers’ Union in Belfast, at NETT; for Miss 4w34p No, 15 Cross St., Bangor, Me. Colonial Theatre m. at her home Sophia B. Chase of Durgin Kittredge, and soprano solo by Mrs. most eijoyable picnic last Monday night on Mrs. Rhoda A. Page, widow of Jacob Page, Victor Hall, Searsmont, 2 p.m Winterport, whose approaching marriage to the Adver- in honor of Mrs. Eva C. Grange Bowker. During program Living the Gun Club shore, flied at 4 30 a. m Aug. 17th, of heart failure. Mr I.Ip.llisnn will t.akt* nlac** in Spntpm- tisements were interspersed, posed by the Brown and Mrs. Georgia Hoffses, who left Hall Mrs. had a severe illness last winter and and [quity Grange Belfast.8 p.m. The of honor arrived at four Page WANTED ber. guest and the as follows: vacations. The menu in- Keturn j young people of parish, Ivory Tuesday for their Engagement had never recovered her health. She was invited to investigate the contents of the Facial cake, punch and coffee and fully 1914 -OF- j Soap, Miss Margaret Craig; Woodbury’s cluded sandwiches, Monday, Aug. 24, SETTER DOG : well trained. Give I trunk, which was filled to overflowing with and Mrs. Thomas E. the a bonfire was was born in Islesboro, a of John and Soap, Mr. Bowker; Camp- after repast, huge enjoyed. daughter Speaker, C. E. E-MBREE, the State organize] full price, etc. useful senti- 1 description, dainty and gifts. Verses, witty, Tomato MiBS Edythe Atkins, Mrs. and Mrs. Howes joined in the festivities. Ann Hutchins, and was 73 year3 old. Before from the Department, Augusta. | bell's Soup, Mr. Agricultural R. O. Hex No. 9, .Maine. and wishes a nurse in the farmer should be as they wil Rockport, I mental reminiscent, best and W. F. Schoppe, Mrs. Clyde B. Holmes; Fairy and the clerks present were Misses Russell, | her marriage she was an army Every present hear of to them. ! were written for the all Civil War and had a certificate which she something importance Hie Urban Slock Co. prophesy, occasion, Soap, Verna Jellison; Arrow Brand Collars and Hichborn, Matthews, Darby, Tibbetts and Mis. causing much merriment. In the dining E. Bowker: Mellen’s Davis and the guests of honor. prized highly. After her marriage nearly all B. B. Popular with the Cuffs, Thomas Food, John GREENLAW, People” room, where the refreshments were served, Cuticura Mrs. her life was spent in Belfast, and with her hus- Little Frank Varney; Soap, A letter was received Tuesday from Miss CABINET the decorations were white streamers suspend- Mrs. M. C. band she had lived 23 on the farm on MAKER, FEATURING Thomas E. Bowker; Liptoa’s Tea, Melvina V. Parker, dated at London, August years Farm for Sale. ed from the ceiling to the table with oxeyed Bertha Willi ims Talc Powder, the Poor’s Mills road, which she sold shortly Hill, Mias Wiley: 7th, saying that they, the family of Herbert daisies for a centerpiece, and in 1)ther rooms Brown. after her husband’s death and moved to the 47'Northport Avenue, MISS MARION [ Katherine B. Turner of Cambridge and the Misses Fran- beautiful flowers of the summer season on the Patterson The celebrated Robbins-Frank JOHNQUES the Robbins of Charles Bruce house road, justly Berr; Belfast, Maine. -IN- ces and Isabel Lawrence, had ar- were very profuse. Mrs. George was assisted where she died. Mrs. Page was a woman of H three miles out at Telephone 211-12 3m32 rived safely in London from Paris and had en- eagan plac e; only, | in serving refreshments by her daughter, Mrs, sterling character, a kind neighbor, and was passage for borne Sept. 1st, if they could among neighbors; 120 acres splen W. H. and Mrs. C. C. Mist HEALTH PAST NETT gaged all who knew her. Her near splendid the Kelly, Moody, one. respected by only open an earlier Mrs. Pierre diet is of utmost to not find Tortoue of and Elizabeth Fernald, Miss Margaret Powers, Careful importance relative is a Mrs. Addie S. Condon of did soil; lots timber wood; building: TO LET Shore has also received a letter sister, men and women past fifty years of age; of North from, Those present were Mrs. C. M. Chase, Miss K Belfast, who was with her sister when she ! alone worth over $5,000.00. Make offer WINDOW it keeps up their strength, and the oil- her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T.- George Dodworth House with barn, 41 Miller Croxford, Mrs. D. H. Smith, Mrs. Chas. Crock- died. Everything was done that could be done food in Scott’s Emulsion is a nourishing who are at Hotel Cecil, London, saying that 32tf F. E. ELKINS. Belfast, Me. Ellen until death at % Naillil Remitrom ett, Mrs. Littlefield, Mrs. Mary Haley a curative medicine and a that to relieve her of her sufferings Street. Inquire __ food, sustaining their party is safe; the banks are open ■ Mrs. Emma Philbrook, Mrs. Laura Cole, Mrs tonic to the functions. came. The funeral services were held at 3 p. regulate and they anticipate no danger. CIT Y DRUG STORE. °NE Emma Rowe, Mrs. Flora Gilman, Mrs. S. L It contains the medicinal fats of pure m. Tuesday, Rev. H. B. Sellers of ^he M. E NIGHT ONLY cod liver oil dnd science that New Advertisements. The Progressive Danielson, Mrs. E. L. Nickerson, Mrs. C. E proves they church officiating. Interment was in Grove To Let furnish twice as much as other Store, Masonic Temple, is to have a school Bowden, Mrs. A. E. Fernald, Mrs. W. B energy cemetery. LOST foods—then too, it creates pure blood, sale Saturday, Monday and room house with bath, Belches, Mrs. J. O. Moody, Mrs. E. Bowden Friday, Tuesday, Eight 26 sharpens the appetite, relieves rheuma- 24th and when On August 10th between Belfast and Rock- Wefloesflay, Aopst Mrs. C. C. Mrs. W. H. Kelly, Mrs. C. R August 21st, 22nd, 25tb, every You have noticed that the Pearl Brook 5 ard corner Miller and High streets Moody, the and alleviates tism, strengthens a automobile coat. Please return bqdy mother who has children to get for cents are darker than other land pongee Prices. Hill, Mrs. J, H. Thayer, Mrs. A. J. Lockhart, the ailments due to ready 10 cigars cigars, Popular declining years. Inquire of L. L. ROBBINS, The Journal and receive reward. school will have an opportunity to save money That means clear Havana to office SEATS ON SALE MONDAY. Mrs. J. H. Freeman, Misses Elizabeth Fernald Scott’s is free from wines, alcohol or quality. Imported on necessary. This sale is to in- t34f 14 Miller Street. lw ^_♦ Margaret Powers and Juanita Hill. harmful drugs. Beware of substitutes. everything cars are dark but mild and aromatic. * ■ in the dangerous—the almost certainly WALUU I;uu«» “whitewash- MOKE flOUNY r Question. of NO « The Shipping disastrous —expedient [ffiMrtffl* Sentinel.] ing” and employing foreign ships npw IN FOUR DATS CORNS COM* OUT, Me., Aug. 12. Business ^ BLUNDER ON BLUNDER ? under foreign flags. Even when these Belfast, FREE BOX FOR KVKRYBODT. conditions in Waldo county this year are bill before Con- vessels are partially owned by Ameri- and The emergency shipping the booming, men are fully employed enough cans the risk will be great and possi- know* that for sore, painful, gress is doubtful and dangerous Everybody there u no of lack of prosper- that would ble serious to con- complaint without adding amendments consequences very swollen feet there Ih nothin* ao good aa Exo ity. and template. enable “whitewashed” foreign-built For Feet. The American Agricultural Chemical run without The great vivid lesson of all this panic steamships, of Exo For of has had* a large foreign-officered laws of and to the American people But now in every package Feet, company Searsport with the inspection emergency increase in which is the mixing compliance hundreds of is a 10 cent of Exo Foi business, States, to be smuggled into and their lawmakers is that at druggists, package The Coe-Mor- the United American and selling of fertilizers. or Atlantic Pacific American ships, officered by Corn*, which ia free It costa you nothing. a fertiliz- the general coastwise timer company of Belfast, also citizens of nationality, on the fourth coastwise trade. They would compete unquestioned Use it for three nights; night er has this season nearly to be should have been in existence long before company, there with ships that are required lift out the corn and throw it in the fire. doubled its over 1913. war began. They output American-owned, Amer- this all-devouring* la a in Belfast for the American-built, task of Exo For Corns, if purchased separately, The largest plant examined and could have been procured. The re- ican-officered, and rigidly with a 25 cent box of Exo For Feet it ia manufacture of ready made clothing bs to safe an American ocean fleet was dime; certified our government creating the business in its history by and far less formidable at the outset than free. ports biggest and efficient carrying of freight pas- during the first six months of 1914. The Toll Rates the which has been so conspicu- task, smaller manufactories are constantly war can of creating the vast man- hysteria of explain ously achieved, WHITE’S CORNER. (Wlnterport.) for more help and appear to ^Only^he industries of America. In- advertising such amendments as have been pressed ufacturing be Belfast has one new It is race is an ad- prospering. attention of the Senate. stinctively the American a business. upon the a" Miss Gladys King of Orrington visited clothing concern doing large steamship venturous, seafaring, seafighting race, com- inconceivable that European Louise the week. The shoe manufacturing business New toll that unless you talk to the to oner them. race of brilliant maritime traditions in Miss Libby past telephone regulations provide | managers would dare pares with past years and is in the or war. We have the greatest of and Avis favorably There are enough American ships peace Mrs. Edna Harquail daughter said to be better in Belfast the present person asned for there will be NO CHARGE FOR THE TOLL CALL. 1 as the two last week. trade—never so many now, grand empires, facing mightiest visited in Bangor several days season other shoe centers of coastwise of than in most of coastwise vessels lying of oceans. The sea wsb the heritage and hundreds MisseB and Rosa Bean of Ban- New England. our fathers to their sons. In losing it, Vergie is their Mrs. M. A. Haley, The Belfast Sash and Blind factory we have been cheated of our birthright. gor visited aunt, a reduced rate was when the number called was reached idThe adoption of amendments admitting having a fine business. Formerly charged even 1 The whole nation now sees that the last week. these “whitewashed” foreign-huiltcraft The Lubec Sardine company is canning the asked for was absent or not to talk. that defeat a narrow or by vic- of Orono | though person ready to the coastwise trade would signify by majority Mr. and Mtb. B. C. Ames all the hsh that can be obtained and is has ious in Washington of the Wellman and fam- the administration at Washington filibustering were guests of A. R. a addition to its plant. calls for bills which Presidents Mc- building large N. B. The above does not apply to two-number toll points to which design,tt lost its senses. For these foreign-built great shipping ily Aug. 9th. The Mt. Waldo Granite Works, the aboard Roosevelt and Taft successively craft, with nothing American Kinley, Linnell of only granite works in Waldo county, is ed persons are not accepted. would drive real and strenuously championed waB a real Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Bangor them except the flag, hiB Mrs. employing more men than in 1913 and com- national misfortune. If tbose bills had spent the week-end with mother, American ships out of coastwrise expect to increase further the number of have driven Am- been enacted there would now be Amer- A. G. Larby. merce, exactly as they its employes. commerce, ican lines to South America of Brad- erican ships out of over-seas steamship Mr. and Mrs. Almon Ritchie In general, Waldo county is in a pros- last of our and the Orient, passenger and freight of Mr. and Mfs. make a call now to some one and, destroying the vestige ford were recent guests perous condition. Within the last few Why not who would like to hear our lines—American lines to Europe and Afri- merchant marine, would destroy E. E. Ritchie. years its farmers have greatly increased to build ships ca, to Australia. There would have been considerable from No talk—no shipyards and thus ability boat the potato acreage with you today? charge. an abundance of American ships all ready Miss Louise Libby left by Aug. either for peace or for war- profit to themselves. The acreage for sufficiently to our home from Europe, 8th for a two weeks’ visit with relatives Is not the Democratic party bring people 1914 is with the promise of an to save all this and suffering, in Massachusetts. large, Wouldn't it be worth the price? for the coming congressional anxiety I excellent yield. The apple and hay crops handicapped burden o and to all the reduced I without the added carry necessarily Walter Smith and familv of Newburg ! will be above the average. Building campaign the Re- commerce of a world war.— 1 this folly of which widespread and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Durgin of Dor- in Belfast continue along the stupendous and Boston operations are sure to take quick Transcript. chester, Mass., were guests of Mr. and I high which has been en- publicans Herald. average plane If don’t know the rate, ask the Toll Operator. No for a call for rat- sham ?—The Boston Mrs. C. W. Nealey, Aug. 6th. I for the five or six years. A you charge advantage Never can tell when mash fineer ore joyed past you'll in the a_.w increase ih the Toll to to the actual cost of a •• ! sillier a cut, uruise, uuru ui bvoiu. Mrs. Pearl Williams entertained the very large deposits If you want Operator report you completed call, pie. indicates Thousands rely on Dr. Thomas’ Elec- Clara local banks during the past year A DAY OF RETRIBUTION. pared. following guests last week: Misses her when you ive the order for the call." Your Bells it. 25c and 50c. the truth of a in the financial notify has j ic Oil. druggist and Elizabeth Reed and Eva and Pearl paragraph the Marine Journal long — institution What all of Fort Fairfield. statement of a local banking the inevitable consequence Hockunhull, whinh Hunlovoa thaf “Our trrnwth and foretold, as OF VETERANS. has now come to MEETINGS of a great foreign war, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Bartlett of Dor- prosperity are in harmony with the in- The American people, depending who had been in town and thrift of the pass. Sixteenth Maine. A. P. Bailey of chester, Mass., creasing prosperity peo- is more than a for the transporta- ! on A toll call satisfactory letter or a and in upon foreign ships of the for two weeks, were passpngers the ple of our surrounding countVy.” telegram, their and Portland was elected president tion nf nine-tenths of import Association at boat Aug. 8th for their return trip. Deposits in this bank have increased a comment 16th Maine Regiment is more because the commerce, see tnar in the last three some instances economical, you get message and export the annual reunion in Madison, Aug. and half-million dollars the withdrawal of foreign Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Clements paralyzed by 12th. About 300 veterans attended. Barbara four of years. owners and whose govern- I daughter spent days the answer for one ships whose the town’s business price. and last In the afternoon last week on an automobile trip through OF HAMPDEN. ments think first of themselves, automobiles THE BATTLE men gave the use of their parts of Piscataquis and Penobscot coun- and least of n? At 6 a ban- and I for a ride by the visitors. The British, French, German ties. Chapter of Interest In History of Steam- of was served in I. 0. 0. F. hall by the liners, that in time quet and L. E. of Maine. other European Woman’s Relief Corps. Exercises after- Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Bussey boating In Gulf to and fro between this port of West NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE peace ply in charge of Col. A. P. Farn- White and family Winterport T. K. author of Steamboat- are a part of the terward, Wasgatt, and foreign countries, consisted of and Mr. and Mrs. G. H. York were de- of which is to ot their re- ham of Portland, prayer by ing "in the Gulf Maine, ap- military or naval strength entertained Mr. and Mrs. men E. W. Webber, readings by Mrs. Mattie lightfully by is to have in the section de- nations. Their officers and 9th. pear shortly, spective and Lieut. Frank of Port- R. L. Clements, Sunday, Aug. river an interest- ANE TELEGRAPH COMPANY of the naval reserve. Pratt Wiggin voted to the Penobscot are reckoned a part E. E. Florence L. of the battle of are recalled, to land, solos by Gould, Mrs. Luella Ritchie of Newburg and ing account Hampden, When war comes they Arlen re- of and their own Walker and Miss McKinney, Mrs. S. C. Thompson of Washington, D. printed by permission Harper& Bros., fight for their own flag C. O. Small, George D. illustrated of and their rulers do not marks bv Judge C., both former residents of this town, and beautifully by pictures people, and they of Rev. R. A. Rich and at as it not be to Bisbee Rumford, were recent guests of Mrs. G. H. York Long Wharf Hampden appeared care a cent, and need expected and Gen. Mr. to Ameri- R. G. Henderson, greetings by for a few and while here called in 1882. In that year Wasgatt care a cent, for what happens days A. B. Farnham. Other officers elected other friends. moved the old storehouse in on to the can trade as a result. upon were H. Chamberlain of This was a well of American com- W. Farmington mam land. building HL_ The destruction vice The of the is ex- on the will be and Seth Alden of Livermore, pres- sympathy community known landmark to passengers due to this European war, Patterson merce, Mildred Wadsworth, secretary- tended to Mr. and Mrs. Alton river. to have large idents; u sufficient in amount paid sus- have and di- a Couit held at within and treasurer; Charles Deering of Gardiner, of West Winterport in the loss they Another interesting picture will be To feel strong, good appetite | At Pnbate Belfast, SS.—In Court ot Pr. ships for many ard use Bur- for the County <>f Waldo, on the lltli day of fast, on tin* 11 tli ot subsidies to American Mass.. R. tained fire 7th. were liv- town hall as it gestion. sleep soundly enjoy life, | WALDO day Joel B. Hinds of Worcester, by Aug. They that of the old Hampden a. I). 1914. I .lolin P. did not the subsidies, dock Blood Bitters, the family system tonic. I August, Hlanchard, executor of years. We pay of Roderick Powers of in a rented house, but lost practically time of the capture of the We Brown Vienna, ing appeared at the B. BLANCH ARH, executor of the last Marietta Park, late of Searspoi: and now we do not have ships. and I Price, $1.00 I Fort Fairfield and Isaac J. Mark of South all of their house furnishings clothing, 1 the town in 1814; oneof Gen. will of Marietta Park, late of Sear-port, in ty, deceased, having presented we cannot sell them. September, JOHN of have and and as have a of six small said of deceased, account administration ot goods for the Portland, directors. they family Blake’s house, and possibly one of Gen. County Waldo, having pre- condition sented a th t the actual mar- lowance. What a mortifying Maine. The 40th annual re- children their misfortune is severely felt. which was petition playing this is—a mor- Third I John Crosby’s home, occupied ket value of the of said estate, the United States of America property Ordered, that notice thereof union of the 3d Maine Regiment Asso- at the I the British officers while they remain- interested in the succession thereto and condition which the Marine Jour- Miss Viola Conant is hostess by persons weeks successively, in The Hep tifying was held at 12th. In tlie amount ot the tax thereon maybe deter- It is not ciation Togus Aug. Conant at Swan Lake for a par- ed in Hampden. a newspaper published in He!! nal has consistently predicted. cottage PROBATE mined by the Judge of Probate ■ of the Administration the also a fine of NOTICES.! that all persons interested may We told you front Building of most of them former Mr. Wasgatt has portrait altogether pleasant to say, Wil- ty young ladies, of Ordeied, that the said petitioner give notice to bate Court, to he held at Heliasi. and veterans were welcomed by Capt. w'ho was in command of we have told the truth classmates at Hebron Academy. They Capt. Morris, all persons interested by causing a copy this of September next, and show »• so.” But of the to save Court Held at Belfast, within and liam J. Gillespie, commissary and the Adams, and who blew her up At, a Probate order to he three weeks successively have, the said account who would not listen are Mrs. Cora Jones of Old Orchard on the 11th of published why the lawmakers for Gov. John T. the for the County of V'aldo, day | in The Republican Journal, a lieyvspaper pub- ed. home, acting Richards, the Misses Henrietta of Sears- her from British. I) 1014. must now see it. Gilkey August, A. lished at Belfast, that they may appear at a Pro- JAMES LI ..... who had a sore throat. The Governor and ! The author first steamboating Administration Carrie of New Gloucester, bigan KillNK N. WALNUTT of Searsport, bate Court, to be held at « elfasr, within and foi A true Attest: This present National port, Fogg river copy. other officials were however, and on the Portland & Kennebec last will of Wal- on the Htli of A. I). to but everything present, Chisie of Warren and Marion and inl863, C4111executrix of the doseph said County, day .September, Am hi n W. Li has done nothing help, The to Young with in said of Wal- of the clock before and shoyv. lhe bill reviewed the parade. response Harbor. line. After that, he was connected mitt, late ol ^ear-port, County 15*14, at ten noon, American shipping, Olive Tracy of Winter a the of said to harm, was by C. A. Sanford line from 1864 do, deceased, having presented petition pray- cause.il any they have, yvhy prayer in to Capt. Gillespie’s greeting the Independent sell and certain real should not he II7 A LPO SS.—In Court of |'n which it has introduced Congress lawn under the of the ing for a license t" convey petitioner granted. Coombs of Bath, of the Regi- A party auspices to 1880: Boston & Maine R. R. Special tor tlie JA.uKh Vr last, on the 11 Hi ■ to foreign ships un- president esiate described in said petition purposes LIBBY. Judge. day freer registry The reunion was C. T. U. of Monroe was S. S. executor it n give sub- mental Association. W. recently St. John 1881-1882; Plymouth Rock nanieu uierem. A true copy. Attest Fitzroy Kelley, the is a wretched r \\ VV. late ot il. der American flag held in the old canteen building. War held on the grounds ai the home Y. Excursion Co., 1884; That the said petitioner give notice to Art111 Lkokarr, Register. Kelley, Wmterp. scheme of bun- spacious Co., 1883; N. Ordered, deceased, having presented •• a miserable con- 300 all interested by causing a copy of this terfuge, were sung a male of Hon. C. M. Conant. Fully people New & Arcadia S. Co., 1885- persons account of admlnistialien m few, if any, songs by quartet, England S- order to be three weeks successively combe legislation. Very were and it was a published At a Probate Court held at Belfast, yvtthm and allowance. the sisting of J. Francis McNichol, Myron present very enjoyable Bangor & Rockland Daily Line, 1887; Journal, a newspaper pub- will be brought under 6; in The Republican for the ot Waldo on the second Tues- foreign ships Willis R. Partridge and event. A Pand furnished music and the Erie R. R. that may at a Pro- County Ordered, That notice thereof of for men D. Haskell, New York S. S. Co., 1889-90: lished at Belfast, they appear .1.... V mnut A It Hi I American flag because it, a short Ice bale ( ourt, to be held at Belfast, within and tor v.eeks successively, in flie Krpa ! Harry Chamberlain. Among the special children presented program. 1891-1900: Vermont R. R., 1901 to tie the last to and register foreign Cent, said County, on the 8th day of September. A. i>. \ certain instrument, purporting a newspaper published in !*>■ !!;>>t. will not dare buy was T. Stevens of cream, cake and home-made were of William II. Such white- guests Maj. Greenlief candy to date. 1914, at ten of the clock t etore noon, and show A will and testament Wight, ii at aii persons interested may under its provisions. were ___ in said of deceas- ships hero of the 5th Maine Battery. on sale and over $18 realized. Many cause, if any they have, why the prayer ol said late of Belfast, County Waldo, Date Court io be held at 1 *elt American in name only, Augusta, OF for sii. washed” craft, are to Mr. and Mrs. Conant THE HISTORY AND ROMANCE should not be granted. ed, having been presented probate ‘of September next, and ot Frances S. Hesseltine of Melrose, thanks due petitioner be as outlaws Capt. JaMEs LIBBY, Judge. That notice be to all persons they have, why the said acenm would regarded only an IOr me use OI men iiuiue anu me asaioi- APPLE. Oidered. given the Mass., the first speaker, read origi- THE Attest: of tins order to be allowed. seas. The authorizing A true copy. interested by causing a copy the provision were ance rendered them. VV. Leonard, in The Re- JAMES l.l the nal poem. Other speakers Capt. by ARTHUR Register. published three weeks successively to requirement -» l* 111- V -*uv •! President suspend Dr. William 0. Cobb of Gardi- Governor Curtis Guild of Mas- publican Journal, published at Cedust. that they shall be Gillespie, Former < n that the officers of such ships :it n Probate Court, t<» be held at Ain m i: W. l.i of the Sons of Veter- an address before a court held at Belfast, within and may appear das- ner, commander ; sachusetts delivered At Probate and for said comity, on the citizens is an outrage—a NORTH 1SLESRORO. on tlie 11th of Belfast, within American => tor the County of Waldo, nay who ans of Maine; Gen. Patrick Hayes of the international Appie oui^ci «-aoy second Tuesday of September next, at ten of the blow at the real Americans August A..1). i914. 1X7 a MM) SS.—In Court ot h tardly Winslow S. Oakman, Gen. eiation in Boston last week on “The His- clock befoie noon, and show cause, if any they our all over the world Chelsea, Capt. of Freedom, ill said Ccunty. be YY fast, oil* the : Ills day are following flag he had at- Raymond Wyman of Forest Hills, of the He HUSSEY have, why tin* same should not proved, ap- these Smith, who remarked that and Romance Apple.” widow of Jehu late of Fieedom, Harry K. Hangs, adimnistiatoi — can be no doubt that tory HATTIE McDonald, proved and ahowed. and there and How- Mass., arrived last week. tree in Leonard A. Luideen. iale ot la how to tended 38 of the 40 reunions, said that the first apple planted in said County of Waldo, deceased, having pre- JAMES LlliBY, Judge. men and their friends will know County, having :*r» ->• the veteran on Governor’s Island sented a petition praying that an a'lowauce may A true Attest: deceased, ard Owen of Augusta, jour- Miss Zuba Veazie of Mass., America was that copy. final ol adnnmstrai resent it. Somerville, be made to In r out ol tin* personal estate ot said arttii'it W. Leonard, Register. laceount nalist. Coi. Hesseltine was elected He then out that where or German pres- is in town for a few weeks. in 1632. pointed for allowance. A British, or French, deceased. W. H. Watson of Skowhegan, and other could not grow to name ident; corn vegetables Ordered,That the said petitioner give notice That notice the; steamer, with her real port paint- York and child of At a Probate Court, held at Belfast, within and Ordered, first vice Howard Owen of Mrs. Josephine Lynn, of the nature of the soil, apple sons interested a copy of this in The h president; because all pel by causing for the County of Waldo, on the second lues- weeks successively. a ea out, ami are relatives in town. then to he tlnee weeks successively «i in Augusta, second vice William Mass., visiting trees flourish. Mr. Guild order published of A. I>. 1914. a newspaper putdish- substituted, ,nying president; might a l day August. hastily trees from in 1 lie Republican Journal, newspaper pub- ty. that all persons interested Philadelphia H. McDavidof secretary-treas- the of at a to be the American without Augusta, Miss Helen Cherrington of Atlantic, traced history apple lished at Belfast, that they may appear Pro- certain instrument, purporting I Piobate Court, to he held at ><■ a newly bought flag, corre- the stone and for ot Harms K. make, would be urer; Allen Partridge of Augusta, is the guest of Miss Marian Gur- the oldest civilization through bate (’ourt, to be held at Belfast, wit Inn A Iasi will and testament I day of September next, and an American citizen on board, Mass., a. I>. in said ot Waldo, de- and J. Edwin the time. He gave many said County, on the 8th day ot September, late of Frankfort, County have, why the said ace court sponding secretary; Nye age to present and "how been for they condemned as a fraud by any prize ney. 1914, at ton ol the clock before noon, ceased, having presented probate. hi allowed. of For the first time stories and incidents in which the apple of said — Fairfield, chaplain. the I : in Christendom. The Marine Journal. 1 and children of cause, if any tlit*v have, why prayer Ordered, That notice be given to all persons .1A M ES a woman at a of the Mrs. Thomas Sprague was the bottom of war and love and to be presided portion | at petitioner should not be granted. interested by causing a copy of this order A true copy, Attest: as are the recent ; real James LIlBY, Judge. m he Re- •> I afternoon session, Mrs. McDavid, Somerville, Mass., among often a cure for sickness. The origin published three weeks successively J A RTHl n YV. I.hi SHIPS. second vice called to arrivals in town. has been was where A true copy. Attest: publican Journal, published at Belfast, that tin y BEWARE OF “WHITEWASHED” president, being of the apple.it proved, W. Leonard, Register. held at Bel- Arthur at a Probate Court,to he ■ tablet in it. From there it may appear IX’ A LUO SS.—Ill Court Of I’p 1. Wilson means so do the chair, A bronze memory Veazie and child and Mr. the Bible put spread witlun ami for said County, on ihe second President well; Mrs. Clarence fast, of An.: Britain with the ten of the clock YY fast, oil the 1 1 th dav framed the of Mrs. Sarah S. the faithful over and to a Court held at Belfast, within and of September next, at his lieutenants who hurriedly Sampson, Maurice Veazie are guests of Capt. and Europe At Probate Tuesday 1*. Mitchell. ( unis B. Mi tele to it to of on the lltli day of before noon, and snow cause if any they have, measure which has nur3e of the regiment, was presented Mrs. Veazie. Romans. The Puritans brought for the County Waldo, executors of the last emergency shipping Marceilus the same should not be proved, approved Sawyer, the association Louie Jones of Buf- then it went west with August, A. 1>. 1914. why late o? in said the House in Washington. They by New England, and allowed. Mitchell, Unity, passed of Boston is a of the HUSSEY of Freedom, in said County, _ their second as falo. The was made by Leslie Williams having the Mermans to Utah, where some JAMES LIBBY, Judge. having presented mean hut they have blundered, presentation ot John McDonald late of treedom, estate well, vacation with HATTIEwidow Attest: of administration of said Howard of Worcester. The tab- two weeks’ his parents, best are grown today. And finally deceased, having pre- A true copy. blundered in Mexico, from inexperi- George apples in said County of Waldo, w. Leonard. Reeistei. they and Mrs. Charles which of Pro- Arthur Ordered, that notice therein The solemn let will be placed on her monument in Capt. Williams; it was taken to the Philippines, sented a petition praying that the Judge ence and misinformation. entitled to said es- weeks m The Kep of the The members is an enormous crop. bate may determine who are successively of the leaders Arlington Cemetery. by Miss Beulah who has been teach- country exporting shares therein accord- newspaper in Hellas', protests Republican Bates, tate and their retpestive within and published vote against any Thus the tree has gone everywhere At a Probate Court held at Belfast, that all persons interested may from great commercial States, protested proposed ing in Machias, arrived Aug. 8th to apple ing to law. of House, and has circled the for the Ccuntyot Waldo, on the lltli day bate to he held at Be bill as a “subterfuge” abandonment of the Togus Soldiers’ with the white man That the said gives notice to Court, who described the spend a few weeks with her mother, Mrs. ; Ordered, petitioner A. I) 1914. of next, and u a copy of this August, day September are Un- Home, and recommended monthly pay- world. all persons interested by causing acn and a abundantly justified. Elizabeth Bates. __ m 4 ION K. JACKSON of Aurora. Iowa, guar- they have, why the said peril, order to be published three weeks successively LB is amended or re- ment of pensions. A dianof Koselyn May Jackson, minor child allowed. less the bill radically matron The Woman’s Home Com- The Republican Journal, a newspaper published I Miss Mertie L. Pendleton, at September a 1 rebate Emma Jackson, late of Belfast, in said Conn JAMES the Senate there is danger that at Belfast, that, they may appear at of jected by IN THE Will is is a “Fashion Forecast Number.” and tor said f Waldo, deceased, having presented a peti A true copy. Attest: States will A CHANGE FOK THE BETTER Good Farm, Fairfield, spending panion Court, to be held at Belfast, within ty Lmo within a month the United fashion for a license to sell and convey Arthur YV. of her vacation with her Grace Margaret Gould,the editor, County, on the 8th dayot September, A.D. 1914, tion praying in conflict. NEW FALL FASHIONS. part parents, real estate described in said and become involved Europe’s of her staff of writers at ten of the clock before noon, and show cause, certain petition Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pendleton. with the assistance named. law and abso- the ot said peti- for tile purposes therein Court of 1’i. International practice the fashion news in if any they have, why prayer notice to 117 a i.DO ss— in and artists, presents Ordered. That the said petitioner give •' the evasive transfer of for- the Woman’s Home was as tioner should not be granted. YY fast, on the 11:1 day lutely forbid In September 9th observed Cradle Roll so that readers can follow all interested by causing a copy of this Aug. a way JAMES LIBBY, Judge. persons Wilson administrator merchant to another national which is a fashion forecast the school. Fifteen chil- practical to be three weeks successively m Ellis, eign ships Companion, day by Sunday her and make definite order published Annie \\ ilson Kllis.late of Be!*., up suggestions A true copy. Attest: .. a after the actual outbreak of hostil- Grace Margaret Gould, the well from 6 months to 3 of The Republican Journal, newspaper published number, dren years age feature of Arthur W. Leonard, Register. a Probate ty. deceased, having piesented flag use of them. Another strong at Belfast, That they may appear at The American advocated known fashion a great on the with their and for said account of administration oi ities. delegates editor, presents were seated platform the issue is the first of a series Court, to be held at Belfast, witlun an in the of news and which September held at Bel- Kill of A. O. 1914, low a nee. and accented such agreement array suggestions mothers, while remarks appropriate to a minister’s SS—In Court ot Probate, County,on the day September of articles reporting experi- 1814. before and show cause, of 1909. A law has she with the were made the fast, on the 11th day of August, at teu ot the clock noon, Ordered, that notice thereoi London conference introduces foljowing general the occasion by pastor, women. The first article is WALDO will of said ences with S. trustee under the last if any have.whv the prayer petition- in The statute books for on the new fall fashions: Howard Fletcher, they weeks successively, been upon the nation’s comment Rev. H. C. Hull, and a solo, "Irish Lul- Who in the of In said i..'1 entitled “The Woman Came of Susan A Wetherbee, late Belfast, er snouid not be granted.. a new spaper published in Be two American reg- “Good friends a for the better was Mis9 Ins second JAMES LIBBY, Judge. m. nearly years allowing change laby” rendered by Cowan, It is an account of a woman County, deceased, having presented that all persons interested to all the fashions! Night.” of administration of said estate A true Attest: be held at Bella'' for the overseas trade efficient, has taken place in a summer visitor in town. A of when she was in and final account copy. pate Court, to istry bouquet who went to her pastor Arthur W. Leonard. Register. and show ships less than “The American woman this fall will sweet was the mothers for allowance. of September next, seaworthy foreign-built peas presented serious and the story reveals the three the said aceoun: sh<< trouble, notice thereof be given, have, why 1 owned and controlled be to wear fit her Eoloist also receiv- Ordered, That I five years old, by permitted clothe^that as a souvenir and the and in The Journal, t.(j. JAMES immense responsibility opportunities weeks successively, Republican At a Probate Court, held at Belfast, wltnin and American citizens. Not one ship of any and take real steps like a sensi- ed in in said Comity, A true copy. Attest: figure, one. of for service in their communi- a newspaper published Belfast, for the of Waldo, ou the 11th day of under in ministers attend at a Pro- County ARTHUR Y\ EKo> kind has hoisted the American flag ble human as she has honestly an that all nelsons interested may A. D. 1914. p being, ties. Another interesting article is on the 8th August, to bate Court, to be held at Belfast, the terms of this free ship policy which, her heart longed to do, appearances PROSPECT FERRY. been done at it P. MITCHELL, Curtis B. Mitchell and account of wnat has been day of September next, and show cause, any normal trade conditions, has been the notwithstanding. should not be i Alice Verne Sawyer, executors ot the estate IXJALDO SS.—In Court ol rn under contrary toward making they have, why the said account IUCY v If what Freiburg, Germany of Curtis E Mitclmii, late of Unity, in said YY fast, un the 11 th dav of to be wholly ineffective. any “Let me tell you just exactly was a week-end visitor at the use of allowed. a proved Willis Flynn childbirth possible by Judge. County of Waldo, deceased, having piesented liaui W. Clark, adimnistratoi are now admitted to painless JAMES LIBBY, estate of 1 vessels has jcaiwhiu o. not for a distribution ot said John L. Maxwell, late foreign happened! avciy two drugs which are injurious. A true petition praying such a as woman has become a to whom the same belongs deceased, having pi- American registry under plan “The spineless articles are: “What Is ^Attest: ^ among the persons county, Other mi inini act will tired has Isaiah Bowdoin of visit- special according to law. llllill iiucoimi the President proposes, the very stately creature. That feeling Derby, Conn., Youth ?” notice to Youth ?—What After by of Probate, held at uei- Ordered, That the said petitioner give for allowance. an that the and loose and careless has made ed relatives here last week. 1.1)0 SS.—In Court ot this of itself be acknowledgment retired, Trine: “Better 1«14 Rob- all interested by causing a copy notice tliei Ralph Waldo Babies,” fast,on the ltth day of August, persons Ordered, That motive of the transfer is a desire to es- for lithe and careful. WA the will an- order to be published three weeks successively m The »> way Locke of Boston visited his Anna Steese Richardson; and “Capi- ert F. Juintoii, administrator, with Week.- successively, “white- the Charles by in The Journal, a newspaper publish- in I'1' and a thus “The slouch has retreated, as it is ou the estate of Susan A. Wetherbee, Republican a newspaper published cape capture, ship Edmund nexed, *.- here Aug. 8th and 9th. talizing Common Sense,” by eu «ii neimsi, umi mrv umj 7 inteiesb outlaw all over a to while family ol in said County, deceased, having ty. that an peisons will be held an nature of slouch retreat, late Belfast, tvulim aud lor said 1 washed” very Stover. final account oi au Court, to be bold at lielfast. <>urt. to be la id at liable has West presented his second and a.I>. 1 «M4< Probate the world. It will be particularly the new trim and erect, Mrs. Emma Moulton of Newton, for allowance. County, on the bin day of September, of next, and ~i style, ministration of said estate and show, day September and if our her Mrs. at ten of the clock before noon, the said accot to attack and confiscation, marched in to victory. Mass., is visiting sister, Mary thereof be given, three of said they have, why Ordered, that notice cause, if have, why the prayer to defend it in 4*n//\ivmn uru have httplf hnilPS thlS Journal. any they all0Wed- Government endeavors Harriman. weeks successively, in The Republican should not be granted. I N HUMPHREYS’ m said County, petitionerH JAMES soundest of in- season. are to have arms H newspaper published in Belfast, jamES LIBBY, Judge. defiance of the principles They again, of vis- A true copy. Attest: Miss Gladys Bridges Brooklyn, that all persons mieiesicu A true Attest: 1.1 ternational law and morality we shall defined ones, I mean. u\y on the 8th copy. Aimil 11 W. clearly ited MrB. Gerry Harding several days bate Court, to be held at Belfast, Arthur w. Leonard, Keglstei. us. into their own. Oil cause if any find the whole world arrayed against “Hips are coming Witch Hazel day of September next, and show _11 u.. .9 T’k/* last week. should not te are to be fashionable. they have, why the said account NOTH E. They (COMPOUND) held at Bel and sister allowed. II7ALDO SS.—In C ourt of Probate, II ■ v States is no means so helpless “And the waist line is to put in an ap- Mr. and Mrs. Burr Godsoe 1914. hereby give ml ice that United by Fop Piles or Hemorrhoids, Judge. Vf -fast, on the lull dav of August. itXECUTHU'KS’ the waist visitors at JAMES LIHB1’, of appointed executrices ot as the Washington authorities apparently pearance again. The dear old line, of Bangor were week-end George F, Harriman, executor on the estate External or Blind oi A true copy. Attest: ( min- tameut of of the Internal, A. Harriman, late of Belfast, in said There are excellent American which brings back memories tight, Capt. W. K. Harriman’s. Arthur VV. Leonard, Register. Mary TIP*'5 imagine. or deceased, having presented his first and final IIaTTIK EDGECOMH many of them and the encircling arms of Bleeding, Itching Burning ty, al- nellast, coastwise steamships, _ prim basque, of Boston account of administration of said estate for our Mr. and Mrs. George Gruby relief The subscriber lie.rt- with accommodations, in affectionate husbands. One brings NOTICE. the of Waldo, decea'- passenger at their sum- application Has been ap- lowance. .. in County in news all I spent several days recently | gives notice that lie duly notice thereof be given, three tlu- which can be employed “But the best of 25c. and a EXECUTOR’Sby and Ordered, That having demands against Atlantic ports, perhaps Two sizes, $1.00, executor of tile last will testament Journal, t « refu- are to mer home, Sunnyside. pointed weeks successively in The llepubliean ceased are t osired to present an to bring American am keeping for the last. Women in said emergency all or mailed. of a newspaper published in Belfast, County, inent, and all indebted thereto resources of the ! Little minc- of the Deacon- druggists at a Pro- *• gees from Europe. The walk, really walk, again Miss Orianna Harding WARREN A. SHELDON, late of Searsmont, that all persons interested may attend make payment immediately t* of Oil to on the 8th liners in that serv- and curious are no ess Mass., is spending Send Free Semple deceased, and given bate Court, to be lie la at Belfast, day ton, Helfast, Me., our authorized six American already ing steps odd, jumps Home, Brookline, in the County of Waldo, if it- de- of next, and show cause, any they u, EDi rii can be utilized to their utmost ca- the substitutes for walk- her vacation with her mother, MrB. Jes- bonds as the law directs. All persons having September BJ~ M' ice longer pitiful are de- the said account should not be al- ETHEL E. mands the estate of said deceased have, why succeeding voyages. ing. sie against and all Mass., July 14, 1914 pacity by quickly Harding. sired to present the same lor settlement, lowed. Medford, and can “Skirts are to be wider. The slit has to make pay- JAMES LIBBY, Judge. Certain swift cruisers transports and Maria Indebted thereto are requested Mrs. Noah Pettee daughter A Attest: __ be Becured from the Navy gone. And after all, when come to ment immediately. true copy. RATKIX’S NOT I * 1 temporarily you and little P. FRENCH. ARTHUR vv. Leonard, Kegister. 4 DM IN 1ST of Sen- a task to and Mrs. Willis Flynn daughter ALTON notice tl under the timely bill think of it, it was pretty hard 1914. scriber hereby gives Department of Unionville are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Searsmont, Me., August 11, administratrix ot ator Weeks which the Senate yesterday to combine self-respect and a slit skirt.” The sub- duly appoioted 1 NOTICE. late ■? the car- Edward Avery. that she has VIOLA J. PATTERSON, without opposition. For Homeo. Medicine Co., ISO Wiillan The subscrib- scrlber hereby gives notice passed Humphreys NOTICE. ADMINISTKATKlX’S of the es- ot Waldo, dec* of and cotton a larger fleet notice that he lias been duly been duly appointed administratrix In the County rying grain The Great Age of Trees. St., New York. er hereby gives law directs, and steamers is available ADMINISTRATOR’S of the estate of tate of bonds as the of Am“ricar. cargo administrator P. Bowker of said o'" appofntSd ANN THOMPSON, late of Bearsmont, Gertrude with actual mar- late of Winterport, LUCY whom a ccnian' than persons unfamiliar IA of some of the conifer- DAVID V. PORTER, and and attorney upon CASTOR The age Countv of Waldo, deceased, given he made. have known—and all these great of deceased, and given in the vice of anv notice may itime trade Tnfanta and Children. one of the marvels of time. in the County Waldo, law direcs. All persons ^living au.m for ous trees is law directs. Al. persons having bonds as the All Having demauds should be utilized first. Sick Animals bonds as the the estate of said deceased persons American ships tree felled in California, while still estate of said deceased are demands agaiust of said deceased are desired to 1" A big treatment of diseases of Horses, demands against the the same for settlement, t have a right to the opportunity, to be The the same for settlement, and are desired to present for settlement and ah indebted They You Han and sound, was found 1,335 desired to”present are to make be hon- The Kind Always Bought strong and Fowls, is in to make and all indebted thereto requested make ,, fl and their employment will both the Cattle, Sheep, Dogs given all indebted thereto are requested pay- quested to paymeut years old; it wsb an old tree before immediately. lnmicd^i', est and Dr. Manual, mailed ment Immediately. payment ( u(,¥ EL, A CLARK. sagacious. time of Alfred the Great. A pine tree, Humphreys’Veterinary amoS E. CARLETON. Roxbury, Mass., August 11,1914 Not until it is absolutely demonstrated free. Veterinary Remedies, Searsmont. Me., August 11,1914. felled in British Columbia, was 140 years Humphreys’ Belfast, Me., August 11.1»14. that all our own real American ships New York. aye old when .Columbus discovered America. 166 William 6t., insufficient should the first step be taken 4 U—Gay Family. ^00 ofjhe cams to the original emigrant, John G‘y'(i30 and settled in Dedham, Mass. Their 4th i»er,C8 widow Baidwick. aon, '",1 married p June 26, 1647, Lydia Their oldest son, Eleaxer ^'fPedham. married Nut- Iune 19, 1677, Mary t,or" the yd. (1( their children sixth, Jonah, tijfj [721, married Sarah Wellington •"“* bcrn ‘ugh. Mass., 1745. They had in all pf -hiidren, all born in Attleborough. t0 Medunkook, Me., soon after war. Jonah, their young- ^'/'''’“tionsryR'" jpe '.‘pilU1 1765, married Mary Thomas of 4 1788 He built the first frame l*'-- and was killed at the raising of i»-' ..ember 19. 1802. His wife died 1 )seir children were: 1-89 married Samuel Went- I1- Dorn 1 j ear: I torth- 791 married Judith Say ward, ; ,7:'nm worId except fragmentary principal h married H. C. Tilton; were united and their allies. Nancy, one of the best fortified towns in the east ’‘":h M born ISIS, Of Waalf gllsh and French troops against the Germans "• Wis. In there were 1 nuiulac. ern section of France, was In the zone of conflict Much of the heaviest fighting was done Belgium, though in married Lot V. Bart- n 1812, and the Russians were also preparing to Invade the many rumors of desperate fighting on the sea. German losses In the vicinity of Liege were heavy, commands 1,1. -ii 1823, married Benj. Whit- Italser’s territory from the east Grand Duke Nicholas the Russian army. 4 MS’l 1 married Sarah T. horn 1825, 4. Flora M. RECENT DEATHS. Comments. CONGRESS DEMANDS PROBE. FIELD,ORCHARD, GARDEN and FLORlCfLTURE WILL BE REPRESENTED ^ Andrew and Emma Cushman Political Notes and died 1832. Woodbury’s f rf, 1827, children: Five Resolutions Introduced for married 1st, Henry Fisher died August 8th Calling The Women’s is an horn 1934, Mary 1, Bertha. George PUNISHMENT FOR Department to View a Beautiful A DEMOCRAT DEMANDS on Reasons for Food Opportunity Hen Gilmore; died 1898. manied at his home in Winterport, aged 78 years. Information Soaring 1 „h;irl»n- 2, Andrew, Miss Howes of Mont- ville. He had been in poor health for some DEMOCRACY. Prices. Scene of Specimens of Woman’s Industry and Hand Work, married Eliza Bassick. Espec- :r, 1816. 3, Roland. time and during the last week had failed William R. one of the most Geo. C. Hard- Hearst, Washington, Aug. 12. The rise in ni 1818, married Leona. He was a man of estimable ially fins this Year. 4, rapidly. men in 5, Linwood, the of all for powerful newspaper America, foodstuffs soon to take pre- Good- worth, having respect his promises 1822, married Elizabeth James. said the many to be the most power- 6, many excellent qualities. Mr. Fisher by cedence in Congress over any other ques- 4 “• ifornia. Samuel and Millie Cushman Place’s children: MIDWAY LIVELIER was a veteran of the Civil war and was ful man in the world, has THAN EVER ,rn 1824, married John newspaper tion which the War has K' April, 1, Clarice. European brought 1909. first of Company H, 16th Maine been a Democrat. like ENORIIOUS FERRIS WHEELS MERRY-GO-ROUNDS d.ed June, 2, Inez, sergeant life-long He, the front. married saw service to MOTOR DRonE AND MIDWAY burn January, 1829, Elncra. Volunteers. The regiment of this OTHNR ATTRACTIONS 3, most patriotic citizens country, have been introduced in died 1907. 4, Charles. in many important battles and was the Resolutions married N. S. believes that Free Trade in the United rn August 1832, 5, Emma, Died in hero of the first day at Gettys- lower branch for ■ infancy. regiment the calling investigation 1905. ch. 6, Vera. burg. Mr. Fisher was wounded several States is a tremendous error and that its died in the West. into the Four resolutions of EXCITING RACES! 1S34, Albert f. and Mary J. Stillman chil- not He was taken subject. married Gay’s times, but seriously. being forced upon the people by a Con- urn February, 1836, dren: this character were read in Congress 1906. prisoner at the end of the first day at died January, 1, born and died in New York. gress of the minority is a crime. He de- MANY FREE INCLUDING AN BALLOON Rodger, at which time the HIIU » ATTRACTIONS, AEROPLANE, m 1838, married Gettysburg, regiment J COttlUUJI September 2, Elwood Albert born in lllion, N. Y 1904, mands that be for was torn into small bits and distri- Democracy punished PEhRY’S SHAM BATTLE IN ETC. i now of Belfast, Maine. Hag A fifth, introduced today by Representa- ASCENSIONS, FIREWORKS, children: men he > incy Boggs Gay’s buted among the to prevent its be- this criminal error, and speaks in The last of the name of to be ment on- tive Howard ot Georgia, calls for the rn October 20, 1828, married Gay the This bit of ing captured by enemy. forceful terms. He Says: “The election the lied from injuries received in ed in this imperfect and brief history, which general inquiry both by Department flag has always been kept and cherished Season’s Ticket sale at Allan Trask’s Jewelry Store n 10, 1883. a this year will not be a party matter. It of Commerce and the Department of $2.00^ April covers a period of 300 years and represents very dearly by him. He was taken pris- on Main Street, and at the Fair Office, .i 1830; died 1854. will be a matter. It will be Justice. 39 Hammond Street, a week before the Fair. Tickets for Grand Stand can also be Chand- people of strong personalities, industrious, oner twice and was in southern prisons patriotic pro- rn, 1834, married Alden At the of Justice today it cured at the above named places. I and who have never nine months Mr. Fisher is the of American citizens to Department home-loving—a people altogether. duty loyal was stated that there was no law to 2111*171 voH hv twd Hancrhtprs! Miss Marv 4* who was lost at for- son, Geo., sea) shirked their responsibilities wherever consider only the welfare of our people reach dealers in the necessaries of life Robbins children: j E. who has tenderly cared for Reduced Rates on all Railroads Whatever You Do Don’t Miss This Fair ! Nancy Gay’s vm Fisher, lunv uas ^iiaucu iucui, auu cavu "*'***J- i and our and to remove a who had unless they were >rn* February, 1841, married j nim during his sickness, and Mrs. Eu- country, party put up prices relatives and friends meet at Ritchie in a to which the the which is a menace to national operating combination, *oma ,an* gene Hathaway of Monroe: by three | prosperity a Antitrust act would He was a hall, Waldo, Maine, for reunion, Sherman apply. A. S. President and -r: December, 1843. Grange | ions, Sumner of Winterport, Sidney of and There should be no divi- FIELD, Manage 1 progress. and whose The belief was that publicity t Maine Cavalry, Co. C, when incidents in the lives of those Ariz., and Arthur G., of West expressed Ray, sion the on minor matters and an aroused would do and over 70 engagements. a among people public opinion names appear on these pages are told in way Lynn, Mass.; and by three sisters, Mrs. Sarah Neal Gay’s children: to endanger the fall election.” more to prevent an artificial increase in that binds with a tie of love far -ui.-an of Top3ham, Mrs. Cornelia > married together Rogers >rn September4,1854, This is the and exhortation of prices on necessaries than anything else. ever to do. Rankin of Winterport and Mrs. Julia advice Died 1897. stronger than any pen can hope Resolutions before Congress from four Rlummer of Park, Cal. The W. who is a an born August, 1857, married A. T. Gay, Historian. Huntington R. Hearst, Democrat, members of the uneral was held in the Methodist church Pennsylvania delegation, 3 Union St., Belfast, Maine. American, and a keen observer, and is Representatives Donohoe, Kelley, Moore anna Curtis Gay’s children: ruesday, Rev. A. J. Lockhart officiating. to attack his own when it; and Farr, call tor an inquiry into the born 1827. PROBATE COURT. Howard lodge, F, & A. M., of which ready party born 1830. advance in prices of necessaries. Ann, irder the deceased was a member, at- errs in its duty to the people. rn 1832. Died 1890. That an arbitrary, and ofttimesfictir SUESINE SILK The term of the Waldo County ended and their burial service was read. 4 \. born 1834. August tious price for grains and breadstuffs is born 1835. Probate Court was held the 11th, Judge WHOM WOULD R OSEVELT CHOOSE? on the on Chase, a well known and imposed people by speculators nd Lot V. Bartlett’s children: Payson highly of was the James of Unity presiding: resident of died sud- In New York State Colonel Roosevelt the Chicago Board Trade, born 1841. Died 1893. He Libby •espected Jackson, -39 Cents- •• today by Representa- .i 26th Co. U. S. for of will were al- afternoon, Aug. 10th, fall- is the voters of the opinion expressed the Maine, 1, Petitions probate lenly Monday urging Progressive who is the late of while at work in his barn. He tive Kelley, considering prac- lowed in estates of Nettie Rowe, ng dead as well as all other to Bessie party, voters, sup- ticability of the Government prohibiting COME IN AND SEE V., born 1843, married Brooks; James W. Carver, late of Lin- lad been subject to a heart trouble for port the candidates most deserving of the shipment of American meats to for- colnville; Martha E. Hutchins, late of iome years but was apparently in* his •rn 1851, married George O. their in the election markets. Freedom. lsual health. He was about 70-years old. support gubernatorial eign Their children: Our of breadstuff for the 11 for license to sell real estate He was the son of Hon. Sanborn Chase, in order that win. imports SUESINE SILK \\ born 1876, married Elsie Petitions good government may months the latest of Chester B. >ne of the settlers of ending May, 1914, fig- were allowed in estates pioneer Jackson, He and as the 1| personally, Progressive ures available, amounted to $36,540,651, born 1878, married Nettie Phil- Stevenson, late of Belfast; Maud E. uid had iong been prominent in the local —It is so beautiful and so attractive leader, indorses Mr. Hinman for the Re- I as against $16,821,646 for the same late of Freedom; Hazel F. ictivities of the community. He was an Reynolds, ending May, 1913. Our exports turn 1880, married Eben F.Litile- of Monroe. nterested and loyal member of the publican nomination for governor and, if period that no woman who sees it can escape j; Gilbert, minor, of breadstuffs were valued at $151 939, Petitions in regard to collateral in- grange and of Arkon lodge of Masons of one is to be guided by the trend of his em- rn married Annette Shu- 206 for the 11 months May, 1914, is we want 1882, in estates of While a resident of ending its charm, That why heritance tax were allow ed Cast Dixmont. will himself vote for phatic endorsement, as against $199,565,491 for the same late of Knox; Curtis E. lackson he was as well known in Brooks, T. born 1884, married Evelyn P. Sarah A. Elliott, Mr. Hinman. in 1913. VOU to see it. of vhere he had business and social affilia- period irison Mitchell, late Unity. our ex- death is If Colonel Roosevelt were to' vote in European countries absorbed ,t. burn married Winnifred Petitions for administration were al- ions. His deeply regretted, 1885, ports of breadstuffs to the value of $99,- Juba-. of Fred L. Curtis, late rhe funeral services were held at his Maine in for whom would he The minute at Suesine, ■; lowed in estates September, The United States for | you glance Ik. d Eliza Bassick children: iome Rev. F. Dolliff 500,000. imposed Gay’s of Stockton Springs; Lucy Ann Thomp- 1 Wednesday, S. cast his ballot? Think he would lozier. you pre- the 11 months ending May, 1914, meat will “What material ...rried rrank of Searsmont. ifficiating, you say; lovely son, late fer Halbert Gardner to William T. and to the value of $33,- f Petition for was allowed in dairy products ■- guardian for a i: married E. A. Sprague. Mrs. Fremont Arey died last Saturday 307,698. Our exports ot meat and dairy | for a delightful dance?frock, estate of Carrie E. Jones, insane, of Haines, Emerson to Hinds, Wheeler to [• Rose Gay Sprague’s children: it her home on Sea street after a brief products amounted to $132,686,390 for to Merrill to and costume!” Brooks. llness. Funeral services were held at Sewall, Thompson Peters, 1914 and for the of 11 walking dress, calling was allowed : $137,968,097 period irried Charlotte Braley. Petition for distribution ( Goodrich to Callihan? And iome Monday. Mrs. Arey was a woman Guernsey, months ending May, 1913. European irried Estin Braley. in estate of Sarah A. late and are Barker, of; a member of the countries took our meat and you right. .r.d children: if beautiful character, just.look over the other names on the Re- dairy prod- George C. Harding’s Troy. 1837. Died in Galves- laptist church, and devoted to her home. and i ucts in the 11 months ending May, 1914, born, Accounts were allowed in estates of I ; publican, Progressive ticket in the Rich, it is o, Tf-lv58. She leaves, besides the husband, one sis- to the value of approximately $82,000,000. elegant, inexpensive, just Albert W. late of Free-1 uuuni^ aiiu a a xv jfuuiscu xur wuuiu yv u born married Leonora Cunningham, er and one brother. The deceased was 1841, Horace M. the fabric for indoors and out; for r.;. ,i< of Co. H. 8th dom, first and final; Bryant, | should vote if are to follow Colonel First Sergeant J 5 years old.—Camden Herald. you in the war of the Rebil- late of Thorndike, first and final; Sarah THE BLISS BUSINESS COLLEGE. S. V. J Roosevelt’s advice. If the Colonel is a and evening. a C. Barker, late of Troy, final; Daniel, H. died 12th in daytime Charles Leighton Aug. he must be a .. born 1849, married Augustus late of final; Sarah A. El- | great leader, great adviser, Shaw, Troy, he hospital at Togus. He was born in Bliss Business College,Lewiston,Maine, iton. late of first and and will do well if follow his be one of the insti- It is the best and liott, Knox, final; Henry j datinicus about 68 years ago, and was you you has grown to largest certainly very ■ born 1864, ertie, F. Parsons, late of Thorndike, first and ; advice. tutions of its kind in New England. The Leonora Harding’s children: I in engineer by occupat-'on. He enlisted most beautiful silk that we Albert Gammans, late of Belfast, toial enrollment for the last year was finest and at the age of 18 years, final; n Co. E, 2d Me. Cav„ Nov. 23, 1861, F. late of _1 —__ A_ 1 1 or? A whom were married Leslie P. Loud, first and final; Charles Foss, j ON THE DEFENSIVE. 522 students, 90 per cent of 1 ever seen for 39c. a i first and Ethel B. Hillman, the combined course of i| have yard. :carried Mary Swett. Brooks, final; ( be U. S. navy, from which he was dis- The Democratic National Committee taking study, il-.-. iarried Elizabeth H. Timm. late of first and final. which two school years for Troy, j harged Jan. 26, 1865. He was admitted is out sheets to news- requires Come in and see Suesine Silk. iizabeth Goodale Gay’s children: Warrants and inventories were return- i sending big printed Out of the number o the Branch from Portland, Feb. 26, graduation. great :..v ><»r i» 1848. ed in estates of Charles Augustus Grant, ; papers for the benefit, as the committee of the graduating class for the past year rn from I 904. 1850, died drowning. M. _ late of Stockton Springs; Wallace ; states, of editors. The benefit con- ; not a single one to date is unemployed. :n 1852, married James Austin. Grant, late of Stockton Springs; Joseph i Mrs. Ann Bacheller, one of .the oldest The Bliss system of actual business, J. Me. -.!. i John K. Levenseller’s children. sists almost entirely of columns of mat- MARCELLUS DOW, Brooks, late of Henrietta! ] adies in died at is the result of years of of urn 1849, married Sarah Chase. H. Overlock, Liberty; town, Sunday morning which study A. ter intended to prove that the country ! -'m-.born 1856. i T. Nichols, late of Searsport. he home of her daughter, Mrs. P. its author, F. H. Bliss, published at Sag ; a short ill- is born 1860, died 1902. Petitions for probate of will were pre- ; Mero, Chestnut street, after now very prosperous. If John Jones1 inaw, Mich., is in use from the At- j It- ... ----- rn died 1864. H. leaves two sons and one in the 1863, sented in estates of William Wight, less. She daugh- has hired an extra milker to help take lantic to the Pacific Ocean largest .'. Chase's children: ia«; wx were held Tues- late ox £>eixasi; i_/anuD xv. aar, er. Funeral services business colleges of each State. The -Ku^a. l...-rried care of his herd this summer, the fact is George Aurington. I Frankfort; Julia A. Bailey, late of Knox; j lay afternoon, conducted by Rev. L. D. system of shorthand is used in 2, kittiv, iarried Norton, are liv- Gregg Alphonso Keziah Farrar, late of Lincolnville; Re- Uvans. She was 90 years old.—Camden printed in this Democratic mailing j the shorthand department and statistics ^!i. .v. fin, Mass. j BY THE GRIP Efon R becca Warren, late of Unity; Ira D. ierald. sheet; if Brown and Johnsonhave em- show that out of fifteen hundred cities POISONED Quarries, and James L. Chase’s children: __ j | ] ! in its and no of born 1860. late of Montville. a more men in their shorthand public pri- Th« is respecter persons. -iinan, Cram, Pierce, a native of Cam- ployed half-dozen teaching grip from Factory born married Wood. Accounts were in estates of I Henry Knight vate 947 of these are teaching or station of life is exempt 1868, Emily presented 28th. the fact is for the benefit I schools, No ago died in Santa Cruz, Calif., July mill, printed but it ■ !u: born 1872, married Gertie Eaton. Curtis E. Mitchell, late of Unity, second [ len, Gregg. it. The grip is not a fatal disease Locations r- ie went to Waterville when a boy and if someone has a Sarah Crockett Gay’s children: and final; Frank W. Kelley, late of Win- of editors: deposited j Stenotypy, which is machine short- leaves its victim in such debilitatcdj rn married Warren Juhn- •emoved to California 25 years ago. He foremost medi- 1851, second and final; Annie Wilson five hundred dollars in a savings bank in hand, is taught in this department, Bliss condition that one .of our Mill H terport, was in the grocery business it is Sites, Ijarms,Sites late of first and final; Benj. engaged the oily school east of writers has been led to say, Ellis, Belfast, time of his death. He was Kansas, the fact is and mailed ; College being cal i., n. bom 1853, married Mary Hinck- here at the printed a at number of who J. Blood, late of Knox, first and final; their Manchester, N. H., in position pres- astonishing the people *8Cu 15 old. A wife, two daughters to editors all over the country for for for Summer Hotels i:y Staples. A. late of years !j ent to teach this which is the have been in health years born married Ida Leonard Burdeen, Prospect, him. benefit. Just how this information can subject, crippled 1868, Penney. late ind a sister survive modern It is a common thing -nri! first and A. Harriman, latest to efficiency. after an attack.” rn 1864, married Willis White. final; Mary benefit anyone but editors, all intelligent j acquisition from first and Marietta Park, A handsome new illustrated catalog to hear date various ailments and ;’sv »mi l'homas Cushman’s children: of Belfast, final; OPENS AUG. 28 men are at a loss to understand. In this i people Camps DTNA CAMrMEETING and a of influenza. Fnm;;, married Andrew Woodbury, late of Searsport, first and final; John be has been published copy an attack of great country there must some busi- just have had 1889. L. late of Frankfort, first and | same will be sent for inspection The condition of those who ON THE LINE OF THE r,,’- Maxwell, The 38th annual session of the First ness success or we would all starve j gladly for LOCATED rried Samuel Place. late of Frank- men and women who are one that calls for a tonic Patrick H. Kane, to a I to the young the grip is Levenseller’s chil- final; Maine State Spiritualists’ Campmeeting within a month, and the pointing Pills are Sarah Chase first and final. desirous of bettering their conditions. the blood. Dr. Williams’ Pink fcr. fort, vill Aug. 28th and continue ten hundred or a thousand big mills working need as Petitions for license to sell real estate begin Attention is called to their advertise- esDecially adapted to meet this RAILROAD 1 Trains wil. at the a full force on full time does not prove MAINE CENTRAL rn 1893. of lays. stop grounds ( column of this and enrich the blood, tone were presented in estates Roselyn May inclusive. is with us. uent in another paper. toey purify rn 1895. ■ Vug. 24th to 8th, that prosperity Democracy of Belfast; Fred L. Cur- Sept. the nerves and give vigor, strength to those desiring to ’s’ Swett children: Jackson, minor, to is on the defensive; if it were not it up give opportunity Mary Harding’s The coming campmeeting promises the debilitated start s late of Stockton Springs; Joseph and health to system. make a in location for a new -rn 1900. tis, >e the in the history of the fa- would not be wasting time and ink for change of greatest left mo without any vitality tm.rn 1902. Wallnutt, late Searsport. the benefit of when millions are “The grip in life. nous campground. Many improvements editors, one who has found re- rn 1904. Petitions for distribution were pre- ; lave been made during the year that add out of work and thousands are in hard whatever,1 rsays F born 1906. in estates of Sarah C. Elwell, late “ami I lost all appetite and ambition. sented the of the straits. The men who are out of work lief ■ nuch to appearance grounds and was fre- Water Powers ! H- tt’s children: Curtis E. Mitchell, late of wag reduced in weight Undeveloped of Waldo; j the convenience of visitors. don't by being told that I irried Chas. French. ind gain anything conlined to bed for two days or Unity. Dr. B. Warne. president of the some men across the continent will be ; euently Lin wood, died age 13. to collateral inherit- George friends thought I was going Unlimited Raw Material Petition in regard who for what want is a more. My •; lied in infancy, National Spiritualist Association, paid harvesting; they I owe recovery to ance tax was in estate of : into consumption. my r, born 1870. presented las lectured all over the United States, for themselves. Democracy should | AND r'' job Pink l’uls and cheerfully 1- Marietta late of Searsport. Dr Williams’ ; -rn 1880. Park, vill on Sept. 4, 5 and 6. the defensive atttude and lend the j of this was speak drop them.” The details rn lp«3. Petitions for administration pre- the world-fa- a hand. recommend Land JSS' Mrs. Mary S. Vanderbilt, unemployed helping on t.ic Good Farming iora Cushman children: estates of A. case an 1 a chapter proper .treat Gay’s sented in Harry Dillaway, and will be _—-- ■ nous will speak pres- ts will -rn 1870. Hattie E. psychic meet of the grip an I n alter-e late of Wimerport; Thomas, whole Other AWAIT DEVELOPMENT. late et the teridays. prominent OF MISTAKEN IDENTITY, in the booklet “Building Ip late of Belfast; Viola J. Patterson, be Frederick Nicholson of A CASE be foii'i'1 burn married Mary J. Still* ipeakers will j will locations 1873, -» a. ~ D Pn tlnl* olor\ f\f Rnof-rvn Blood” which Communications regarding 1 of Belfast. the " .iukee. a «««» tlin frnm nut nf town I the I’r. dhaais Medicine Co., Holt of quest by are invited and will receive attentions 1-. born July 4,1880. ind Mrs. Nettie Harding Somer- celebration N. MAINE CROP REPORTS. who attended the centennial Schenectady, to of the use, born 1883, died 1884. ------Y._ when addressed any agent pi' ville, Mass. last week were Col. and K.born 1886. as dur- in Searsmont or to iP Mr. Cutter will officiate soloist their I MAINE CENTRAL, ■1 Horatio Meara’ children: Bureau of Cr. p Estimates, in Co-operation Mrs. Levi M. Poor and grandson, ng the campmeeting, will give an enter- .. born married Morse of Pas- and Mrs. C. L. Burns of 1876, with Weather Bureau, United States De- on and also Sylvester Poor, j INDUSTRIAL BUREAU Calif. tainment Tuesday evening W. and Miss Blanche Farm for Sale.! J*. concerts. Augusta, Irving Joy | ■ of take in the Overlock’s ] James Vickery's children: partment Agriculture. part of Mass. An incident of — * Milford, Better ■ Sully MAINE CtNTRAL A born married Esther Hen* 1 irchestra will furnish music for the RAILROAD, 1885, 1 forecast.bu. 600,000 Col. poor’s visit was a case of mistaken Nothing i ■ CORN—August in hall. Robbins-Frank Berry R. I Society — celebrated ... evidence, July 1 forecast.bu. 626,000 lancing parties identity. In viewing the large assem- bread and butter The justly k': 'i James Austin’s children: 13 694 0 0 Reduced rates on all railroads and by than PORTLAND, MAINE. Final, av. 6 years, 1909 bu, he is said to have caught sight on three miles out only, an horn 1874. forecast.bu. Co. have been blage the bread is made Heagan place; [“fry. ALL WHEAT-August 1 77,000 the Eastern Steamship crowd of a when born married Everett the outer edge of the famil- May, 1876, l forecast.bu. 6.600,000 'ranted as usual. Excursion trains on Tell Flour. 120 acres splen- OATS—August iar and feeling sure that the owner from William among splendid neighbors; July 1 forecast.bu. 5,639,000 'he two will be run from Dover face, born 1880. Sundays the face was one of his boyhood more wholesome, of timber and wood; buildings Pearl, Final, av. 6 years, 1909-13.bu. 5,029,000 will be left at of Nothing did soil; lots 0., bom 1886. ind Foxcroft. Baggage his little to BARLEY—August 1 forecast.bu. 147,000 friends he sent grandson or a better food for offer i.‘Gay's children: the Campgrounds by delivering checks either, worth over $5,000.00. Make July 1 forecast.bu. 140,000 the gentleman to him. On the ar- alone FOR SALE E. born 1849. Children: to the master on the trains. bring children, because Gay, Final, av. 6 years. 1909-13.bu. 118,000 baggage rival of the latter the colonel took his growing F. E. ELKINS. Belfast, Me. Nelson C. Etna Hotel, under new manage- s made from I 32tf .J BUCKWHEAT—August 1 forecast.bu 882,000 Damp hand and him cordially and William Tell ^ Mixed With Lime. as also will the board- greeted ^ood Ashes JUllian. Final, av. 5 years, 1909 13 .bu. 423,000 ment, will be open, his most Wheat, 7*Uo. beamed upon him with winning Ohio Red Winter »e co n a- Hand POTATOES—August 1 forecast...bu.29,200,000 house. of de- For and other particulars, address J’Lene. mg smile. They talked about the weather, richest in nutritive value. goods every price July 1 forecast...bu.27,085,000 matters scription. Furni- Lillian and Irene died 1206 within the occasion and several o|her car- Final, av. 6 years, 1909-13.bu.26,077.000 What Your Vote Means. Milled by a special process. ture. bedding, J. F. SULLIVAN, time rv a vr rm_\ A —.. — a 1 tnno 1 JOB Aflfl the colonel, unable to contain stoves, etc. ijjj8 and finally William Tell goes f arther More pets, ih,ri’ L* Gay, born 1863. Died 1877. 1909-13.tons. said: ‘‘You don’t Antique furniture Fertilizer Final, av. 6-years, 1,299,000 A vote for Governor Haines is a vote for himself ;any longer, to the sack in addition to Successor to Knox Co., born 1860, married HenryThemas 96 The loaves a specialty. If you PASTURE—Condition August 1,1914. and better enforcement; remember me, do yon? stranger to T., born 1863, married, first Edith 90 iimtinued prohibition wonderfulbreadmakingquahties. have anything Box Me. Condition August 1,10-year av. Curtis is a vote for rumoc- he did not, and then the me s 8w27p 552, Rockland, Gun of Vermont. vote for legalized allowed that sell drop second, Mary CABBAGES—ConditionAugust 1,1914 a vote for Gardner is half a vote against to the other out in card and —e cad. S born married N. G, Allen, racy; colonel, in order help _«5l posta you 1866, Condition August 1, 8 year av. and half a vote for licensed rum.— apromg d £9 prohibition his of that it was not Henry Thomas' children: APPLES—Condition August 1, 1914.. 79 lapse memory,said Corner Cross and Federal Btr ts, Beiiast, Lisbon Enterprise, that the other should fail to Condition 1, av. 67 remarkable August 10-year not been in Sears- TO LET PEARS—Condition August 1, 1914..., 78 recall him as he had of Belfast. he Married Harold Shorey av. 75 mont for a time; but was hardly Condition August 1, 6-year long [ Furnished room. M SALE prepared for the stranger s reply, which For Rent was that he himself was a new man in at Office in Hay ford Block, up one flijht, ver Inquire Children A John Broadwood & Sons, London, Piano, town as he had but recently come Qd Warren Johnson's children: Cry the desirable. Also store on Beaver Street. In at to Searsmont from Salem, Mass., and MARKET. 120 High Str eet. L, married James H. Morse, FOR FLETCHER’S built in 1785. Inquire FOR SALE BY YOUR CROCER uire at PERRY’S elle, married John Berry. tf33 NO. 40 CEDAR STREET. bought a farm. W., married Blanche Bucher. CASTORIA IJ 0 o ___ lift. L. M. partridge on their trip to join SF.ARSPORT. friend* in Old Town, with whom they return to Massachusetts in the Brand* automobile Mrs. of Stockton, the only 11. A. Cook of Dexter spent the week-end in Bnnde is a native Stoves child of the late Charles Griffin, West Main town. Clarion I 3 DAYS Heating he to where died, ONLY street, who Belfast, was in town last moved MORE: B. H. Mudgett of Belfast are famous There is no everywhere. many years ago. week on business. , —OF THE about their sturdiness of con- The Entertainment,” called on “Bartlett and Gaffney Henry W. Burriil of Hartford, Ct, question their unusual given in Denslow hall on the evening of Aug- friends in town Sunday. struction, heating ust 12th, under the suapices of the ladies’ Mrs. William T. Wheaton are visit- Mr. and power. “Kitchen Orchestra”, waa very amusing, keep- in Patten. ing relatives ing the audience in laughter throughout The cen- Clarion Mr. and Mrs. John Innis attended the The line is complete—a ’-trick and the “rendering of Semi-Annual Clearance piano Grand playing” Sale tennial in Searstnont last wees. for wood tune* by means of metal disks upon a marble for every need, burning — wonder- and Mrs. F. C. Edwards left last week slab” were re«ll#quite astonishingly at Mr. or for store, coal burning, house, the "chalk creations” were to visit relatives in Bucksport. ful features, white hall or excellent Stockton speaks a good word for j Capt. W. D. Harriman of Prospect Ferry camp. this number of the “Eastern-Empire Lyceum ! called on friendB in town Monday. dealers in section Bureau” of Bcston. and Syracuse. The door I and family have moved into Clarion every Ralph Sargent receipts amounted to about $29, sixty per cent ; avenue. over 6000 on Clarion OF house Pike HOME VALUES” S. ShBte are enthusiastic “THE C. the going to the artists, Messrs. Bartlett and is the of Eben E. Sawyer of New York guest quality. Gaffney. j and mother. Mrs. W. B. Sawyer, Norris street. his THE PERFECT CLARION The following shipping report was telephon- j Of Summer Clothing with Furnishings W. Black Sunday Mr. and Mrs. J. spent ed from Cape Jellison piers Monday afternoon-' in Bucksport. Me. ar- are a few of the Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Montgomery WOOD & BISHOP CO., Bangor, August 12th, steamer City of Philadelphia ! Here Good Values we are of Brooklyn, N. Y., ■ ■ and sailed at night William A. Blanchard rived, light, to load paper for the last three of this sale : in town. sch. Offering days arrived Tuesday to spend his vacation with cargo for Boston. August 12th, , W. A. Belfast, Maine. Hazel Dell sailed with lumber for Boston, and Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Prescott of Malden, Sold by HALL, ( and Mon- sch. Churchman arrived to take lum- Mass., were visitors in town Sunday George j on her. sch, Ent* rprise sailed with j day. weeks with Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Sargent STOCKTON SPRINGS. August 12th, Men’s and Men s Please Notice These for Harbor, and schooner Mar- : Prices edgings Bar Young Eugene T. Savage and Frank Hight of Ban- Prospect street. o a week garet Ford arrived with a cargo of water pipes , in town over with their fam- and Mrs. R. W. Fowler, who have been The fog and haze of the past disap- = gor were Sunday Capt. steamer m and Mon- from Camden, N. J. August 14th, ilies. guests of Mr. and Mrs. George L. Merrill, peared Saturday night and Sunday Millinocket arrived with a general cargo from SUITS 3 On in Rock* Men’s week Main street, returned to their home day were lovely days. § Miss Blair of Boston was in town last j Lizzie Lane arrived, Furnishing New and sch light, m York, a ■ and Mrs. H. G. Curtis, Water ville Center, New York, Thursday.l j Mrs. Hollins, the guest of Mrs. J. F. Ryder j assortment of • visiting Mr. I to load lumber. August 15th, steamer City of An especially good J. Treat of Boston for a left for Boston, en j sr 3 street. Capt. and Mrs. Sidney fortnight Tuesday loaded and sailed with Philadelphia arrived, and sizes to select from. o m is the Charles F. Treat of Newburg, N. Y., route to her Massachusetts home. patterns UNION SUITS Mahlon Havener of Worcester. Mass j and Mrs. ; paper for Boston, and steamer Millinocket of and ® m Mrs. L. U. Havener, main were in town last week, guests Capt. Miss Ethel Colcord, East Main street, is now New York. for guest of Mr. and j sailed with paper for $20.00 Suits to be sold 0) $1.00 Porous Knit Union Suits. 69c on street. not $14.00 30 Forest W. Treat Water improving in health, although yet 1 street. Mrs. steadily a most Last Thursday enjoyable birthday . “ r+- “ “ Marie her be is the Mrs. P. o. Blanchard and daughters, usually strong. May gain rapid. Eliza 18.00 12.50 .50 Shirt and Mrs. Amos A. Dow of Thomaston picnic party was given Mrs. G. Trundy j of Mr. and Nichols on Water and Clara, who have been guests Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nickerson of Monroe were she is with “ “ o H guest of .Mrs. ^Charles M. j at “The Camps,” where summering . on Steamboat avenue, re- of Mr. and Mrs. Nick- 16.50 11.50 C 7 Drawers, 35c Mrs. W. R. Gilkey week-end guests l*eroy her grandson, Mr. Earle Trundy and family, Streep to their home in Brooklyn, N left after- “ “ TO ® the turned Saturday e son. Church street. They Sunday at his new on that beautifully situated . John Doane of Kansas City, Mo., is guest cottage 15.00 10.50 * .50 B.V.D. Shirt & Drawers. r. noon for home. the waters of U) 38c W. R. on Steamboat shore lot, washed by sparkling of Capt. and Mrs. Gilkey . “ “ Mrs. T. H. of arrived Mrs, has reached M. Izah Sanborn Bangor Fort Point Cove. Trundy 12.00 8.00 < .50 Bal. Shirt and avenue. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Thatcher, Miss Edith j g Drawers, 35c j Wednesday afternoon to remain the guest of her 68th mile stone along life’s highway, and 62 | 3 G. of the B. & A. roundhouse Miss Elizabeth Thatcher, Mrs. Wy- “ “ .. 2 Edwin Young Thatcher, from the c in the Misses Hichborn, Church street, for an in- assembled—going village by 10.00 7.00 o is his vacation Betts and Mrs. Jane Rob- j guests j at Mack’s Point, spending man, Mrs. Eleanor Silas Adams for definite time. buckboard and automobiles (Mrs. j TO Belfast. erts of Bangor are guestB at the BrookBide LOT OF $ ^ her chauffeur witn load after SEE OUR SPECIAL c is Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lowell and little daugh- kindly sending | » in P. Curtis of Everett, Mass., j Mr. Joseph August. her and a delicious dinner was -I Si Special Bargains of arrived to load in car) homestead on ter Charlotte Bucksport Friday SUITS MARKED AT with his family at the Curtis N. | 0 Mr. Charles B. Norris of Grand Island, visit his maternal aunt and husband, Mr. and spread on the tables upon the green, many 3 Main street. the summer at the the while others served TJ B„ who has been spending Mrs. Leroy Nickerson, Church street, for a sitting with hostess, 5 who had been visit- and $5.95 Hats on S3 H- and Miss Elizabeth Frame, Norris homestead on Norris street, left lues- ; few days. the viands. Aariid laughter and good cheer $3.95 Caps, left last wee* < o Mr, and Mrs. John Frame, to visit his sister, Mrs. all sides the meal closed with the toast of ing day for Laconia, N. H., Madeline Nash of Rip Ij Miss Cambridge, Mass., ® $3.00 Crofut and Knapp Hats,$2.25 for Boston. A. and relatives in Milford, Mass., Van Winkle, “Here’sto your health and your 5' T- Quimby the guest of Miss Ruth Hichborn for a week Harold Marshall, who has been spending a jefore returning to his home. family’s health: may they live long and pros- TO TO Hat Guaranteed) at the summer home of her parents. Dr. and (Every returned to Bos- offered Miss Melvina A. Patterson to Suits F*- O two weeks’ vacation in town, per!” by Steamer Penobscot, Capt. Harding, arrived Mrs. Herman G. Hichborn, East Main street Boys’Knickerbocker \ the in Dr. ton the hostess. Following repast,trips 2.50 South worth Hats now Sunday. 14th from Newport News with 3,800 tons left for home last Friday. 1.65 Aug. to Fort Point were en- Schwartz & ¥S Mass., is visit- j Hichborn’s motor-boat The Celebrated Jaffee Paul C. Wood of Springfield, jf coal to the Penobscot Coal & Wharf Co., at station at “ Willie Clark, assistant agent Milo, of the while others 2.00 Mrs. E. C. Carver, on : oyed by many company, Soft Hats 1.25 ing his grandmother, Hack’s Point, finished discharging Aug. 17th, in town for a the of Suits. No better made. a after being week, guest in over the blue | indulged canoeing charming | “ “ street. for TO Navy ind started for Bath repairs. his grandmother, Mrs. Ellen G. Clark, and his £ 1.50 .98 waters of the Cove, and the devotees of “auc- marked to $3.50 James H. Carr, who has been steward of the Miss Maria $5.00 Suits Amos A. Dow of Thomaston was a great-aunt, Griffin, Maple street, in the fascin^ions of “ from Capt. tion-bridge” engaged “ “ U. S. collier Vulcan, arrived Saturday rptlirnpH Mnnrinv In his rfntipR j 3.00 1.00 .75 veek-end guest of his sister, Mrs. C. M. Nich- that game until the hour for bidding the hos- 4.00 Norfolk, Va. for “ “ >Is, on W'ater street, and left Saturday Norman D. and Harold Griffin are at home tess good-bye arrived, when the happy guests 3.00 2.25 h 1.00 Southworth ,69 A. G. arrived steamer Caps Sch.Lizzie Lane, Capt. Closson, Mew York to take command of the from Massachusetts for visits with their par turned homeward, after a long-to-be remem- j “ “ 2 3 Jellison last week and is loading lum- Co. ^ Several 1.75 “ at Cape Jgeechee of the Texas Steamship jnts, Mr. and Mrs. Levi G. Griffin, Maple street bered day of pleasure. gifts, among 2.50 o ® .50 I j Caps 35 ber for Boston. Did schoolmates and many old friends are glad them a silk unbrella, a long chain of jet beads, Marian Bertha Clarke of New York, in her All this Summer’s Suits. 2 7 Miss Elnora P. of Laconia. N. H., is :o greet them in their native town. a necklace of heliotrope beads, a pair of silk I ALL STRAW HATS Quimby ilever and character read- ; on merrymaking plays were the of and Mrs. James B. Parse 1 Richard arrived from Lewis- gloves and an envelope containing money, ! guest Capt. ’-The of Aunt Mary,” one Heagan Friday own ngs, Rejuvenation left Mrs. as reminders of her A few odd lots at almost your AT HALF PRICE. Steamboat avenue. ;on and is the of Mr. and Mrs. Simeon F. with Trundy j price >f the best sketches of the day, will guest comedy her O. E. S. sisters 16th from I Church street. old associates numerous friends among Barge Herndon arrived August ae at the church, Friday, Aug. Hilis, Many j Congregational her of coal to the welcome him in his and other neighbors who had constituted who cannot attend this take of our Ma i Newport News with 2,906 tons under the of the Ladies’ Guild. gladly boyhood’s home, j To those sale, advantage !Sth, auspices re- I regretting his present poor health. al fresco birthday party. Many happy Penobscot Coal Co. Vdmission, 25 cents; reserved seats, 35 cents, leeply All orders will be delivered Parcel turns of her birth anniversary are cordially Order Department. by Post Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Black of Everett, < n sale at Mrs. C. E. Adams’ store August 26th. j Mr. and Mrs. William Morrison, Church wished for this cheerful companion by will have have as C. H. always FREE. 67-2. Mass were in town last week to attend the j iss Marguerite E. Butman charge itreet, present guests Mrs. Bry- Telephone j her numerous friends outside her guests of Merithew reunion. < f the musical program. tnt, sister-in-law of Mrs. Morrison, en route last week. 0 join her husband in Erie, Penn., and Mrs. Nahum Mosmar. and son Herbert of Atlan- j * IBERTY. Bryant’s mother, Mrs. Carrie of Cutler, D. SOUTH of Mr. Libby RALPH tic. Mass., were in town Sunday, guests to Mr. MONTV1LLE. WORTH, Mrs. Harry Grant left last week join idaine. CENTER onH Mrc A I. Mnsman. Mrs. is at Dr. Bel- irant in Tennessee for a brief stay... C. Perley Allen Tapley’s hospital, a company of village attended 12 WAIN STREET, BELFAST, MAINE a of friends the Brier Quite people where he was for Dr. William J. Garvey, and party 1. Hurd was a week-end guest at fast, operated upon appen- ^ he 11th, held in Par.; the la- Ella S. fair, August by as well. Ar- from Troy, N. Y., are guests of Mrs. omestead in Belfast last week.... Mr. ard dicitis. He is reported doing lies' of the church. A Cong'l very pleasant thur Gil and of Dan forth, Maine, Dollivei on Main street. lrs. James Lovett of Winterport are guests patrick family | ccasion is all reported by going down, espec- her Mr. and Mrs. Volnev 13th from f his Mrs. Walter Knowlton....Mrs. are visiting parents, jMORRILL. KNOX. BELFAST PRICE CURf Barge jBoylston arrived August aunt, to of the served at the ally partake supper, James H. Mrs. C. K. held its annual with 900 tons ot fertilizer to the A. Sherman of Beverly, Mass., is passing Thompson.... Bartlett, The Morrill Sunday school A very thunder shower over Weymouth Iverett tome of Mr, and Mrs. John Blanchard. heavy passed Corrected Weekly for The Miss Bartlett were in oieeks in town with her parents, Mr. Richards and Margaret at Tilden last Thursday. The th's last no A. C. Co. of Mack’s Point. ^p cnic pond vicinity Friday night, but did PRODUCE MARKET. PAM Stockton wonders what will be the. outcome of Mrs. 150 Cram.... Miss of Bar Waterville last week, guests Elizabeth was an ideal day and more than of and Mrs. George Higgins (day picnic damage except burning out the fuse in some obi,1.50. 2.60 Mr. and Mrs, Frank E. Morrow Camden f this direful war all Apples,per Hay, a embracing Europe! It and Miss E. Bartlett-Mr. and Mrs* friends a delight- ! Harbor, who has been passing month in Mary gscholars anc, their passed long of the telephones... Miss Mildred Webb was dried, per lb., 7 Hides. were in town Sunday, guests of Mrs. H. B. 1 3 too for re- stupendous comprehension. One Cornelius Whitcomb of Belfast are visiting base ball and ; Beans, 2 7oa3 00 Lamb. town, the guest of her brother, Dr. Ells, |ful day. boating,swinging,playing the guest of Miss Lulu Bailey in Thorndike the pea, Whittier, Reservoir street. 1 said: is the Beans, \ E., 3 .50 I-imb 8;. Mr.and Mrs. Walter isiting gentleman “Germany their daughter, Mrs. T. S. Erskine.Miss Dr. T. N. Pearson,! turned home last week... gsociability....The Supt. past week-Mr. and Mrs. A. S. spent reatest nation of She be Bailey Butter, 28a32 Mutton A. B. McGown of Worcester, Mass., spent are * Europe! may Marian G. Richards w ill entertain the Girls’ an abundant treat of watermelons, I Cargill and son Neal of Arlington, Mass., ^furnished the week-end in Myra Emer- Beef, sides, 9a 11 Oats. at c but the cost of her defeat will be Rockport_Mrs. Sunday with his family, who are summering Miss rushed, Crochet and Needlework Club Friday.... Mr. and and also employed a number 9 Potatoe. guests of Postmaster G. H. Cargill.... ^peanuts candy son and Clara, and Nettie and Vir- Beet,forequarters. E to daughter, their bungalow on Pleasant Point. in town taggering humanity.” and Mrs. James J. Clement spent Saturday automobiles to convey the children from I Barley, bu. 60 Round i Fannie Gilman, who has been visiting of ginia Mannuccia called on Mrs. Jennie Richard- and I Cheese, 22 Straw. Mr. L. C. Havener of ar- 10th.... Mr. and Sunday in Northport.... Mr. Mrs. homes to and from the pond. Last Worcester, Mass., returned to Pittsfield Aug. Camp- j The death of Josiah G. Lambert, the oldest their son and Mrs. Annie Aborn last week_Jerre Chicken. 25 Turkey. rived and with his at the to attend the Turner and son of Middleboro, Mass, are the school their Supt. a vote of I Saturday is family bell went to Pittsfield Monday c f our merchants, occurred Sunday night, com- Sunday gave Webb went to Boston, last Saturday for an CalfSkins. 18Tallow. friends and relatives here-A very kindness and also extended I Duck. 20 Veal. Pendleton homestead on Main street. Endeavor convention held there.... j ig as a surprise to the as he had visiting thanks for his great B. has Christian community, operation-O. Woodbury bought a 2S was to about young Eg*rs, Wool, ut of Pittsfield was an auto t een absent from his Main pleasant party given thirty a vote of tnanks to Messrs. Coombs and Sleeper' J Rev. and Mrs. C. H. McElhiney returned last Dr. W. L. Cargill street place of busi- Ford car-Mr. and Mrs. James Paulson and Fowl, 18 Wood. !: at hall Carrie ess two people Grange Wednesday evening, so the use of their cottage^ I Saturday from Princeton,where McElhiney visitor in town Aug. 10th....Mrs. Ayer, only weeks, although suffering from who kindly gave family returned to their home in Mansfield, Geese, 18 Wood Mp. were Mrs. Hulda to make a two weeks’ vacation at a n incurable disease Aug. 12th. The patronesses and boats, and helped I ! officiated at the Mixter-Eaton wedding. who has been passing for several years. An grounds Mass., last Saturday-Mr. and Mrs. Bert RETAIL PRICE. Rl \ to Mrs. Everett Bennett and Mrs. for the children.... 1 he her home here, returned Saturday Howard, 0 bituary will appear later in these columns. Ramsay, the day a pleasant one Aborn and Arthur Dickinson motored to Beef, Corned, 18 Lime, Mr. and Mrs. James Woods and were daughter as Chester Cushman. Ice cream and cake of Mrs. Helen Mears was held at the I Butter Salt, 14 lb., 18a22 Oat V K. I., where Ehe has a position funeral WTndermere Sunday and also called on Mr. and Catherine of Dorchester, Mass., are guests of teacher-j Mrs. Walter F. Kimball and Miss Watts and her Corn, 103 On u | Benner of Bridgewater, daughter, served... Mrs. Aoby daughter, church last Sunday afternoon, Rev. Fred Mr. and Mrs. Lester | H.j Mrs. I, C. Spencer and Mr. and Mrs. Belle Cracked k- Mr. and Mrs. John on Main street. ranees, of are Corn, '.WfOil. Davis week of Mrs. Rhoda Brookline, Mass., arrived Monday Mrs. Frank Rainolds of \Vaterville, visiting Mrs. Mears will be Mass., were guests last Morgan officiating. Mis* Clara Emerson returned to Corn Meal. 98 Pollock Boston steamer for Crosby.... Albert G. Njrris, who spent the summer at for Belfast,where y their annual visit with Miss Etta Thompson, missed. She had lived in Morrill ad her 22 Pork, Benner. They left Saturday greatly | Bangor last Saturday to resume her studies at Cheese, the Norris Norris returned their Irs. Kimball’s sisters, Misses Lillian A. and and there is hardly a Cotton Seed, 1 85 Pla>t> homestead, street, will pass a week before resuming 1 fe, was a skilful nurse, they [abel j the Gilman Business College. Codtish, 10 M to his home in Mass. who F. Simmons, School street. SWANVILlE center sometime has been dry, Rye Tuesday Cambridge, duties in Bridgewater... T. P. Mathews, j Many h ime around here but j >rmer Mrs. Eliza Webber of Monroe spent the past W. j associates gladly extend a welcome to me large ai- Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. and has been the of his uncle, Thomas ; by her ministrations. | Clover Seed, 20a 22 Sugar Weymouth guest with Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Laur- helped When baby suffers with ezcema or some itch- week, lem in their birth-town. week Briggs.... of beautiful (5 00a6 75 I Miss Bessie E. were in in returned home last tendance and the abundance ing skin trouble, use Doan’s Ointment. A Flour, Salt, daughter, Weymouth Pitcher, Belfast, and children of Belfast were j iston Nichols esteem in little of it a H. G. Seed, 3 50 Swet Searsmont last week to attend the centennial. of Melrose High- Mrs. Silas of were evidences of the goes long way and it is safe for _Mrs Lillian Edmonds j Adams Portland arrived E. Lit- dowers Lard 15 V\ hea August week-end guests of her sister, Mrs. H. children. 50c a box at all stores. a two weeks' vacation j 2th in her which she was held....Mrs. Emma Sawyer Miss Ethel M, Nichols, who had been attend- lands, Mass., is passing automobile to visit hercousin, Mrs. Saunders and I tlefield... .Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Mrs. Lottie her mother, Mrs. E. G. Norton, f Ibert C. from visited her mother, BO KIN a summer school in Boston, is the guest of in town with Colcord, East Main street, and her called at Mrs. Augusta ing two daughters of Lowell, Mass., C. R. Roundy ....Mr- and Mrs. Charles H. White of Au-i u ncle and and j Murch, the past ten days-Mrs. her mother, Mrs. C. M. Nichols, on Water wife, Capt. Mrs. Frank A. Pat- Garrie and went through SHIP NEWS. were Cunningham's Sunday Miss Hutchins from Freeman. In and Mrs. Maud Hamblin, j erson, for a week. Mrs. Adams is from Camden and Lucy Waldo, Augu^ street. gusta daughter, remember- It was their home and .Mr. the house. formerly of Mrs. s Mrs. Lewis Freeman, a son. last week of Mrs. E, G. Norton... e 1 here as Miss Orilla Vermont were recent guests Roundy guests j Patterson, the fond and Mrs. Guilford. In Nehemiah Roulstone, who lias been only holds memories_Mr. Perley Jones and son, AMERICAN PORTS. Penobscot, passing Mrs. Chadwick of Belfast were guests c hild of the late f M r. Geo. Hatch.... M rs. and John Capt. Elias Patterson. Wel- are visit- ather, and Mrs. Arthur P Guilford, his vacation with bis mother, Mrs. Flora Roul- Me Keen and son of Woburn, Mass., of New 12. sch Charles A E. G. Norton last week. They were \ c )me to Stockton! Mrs. Bean and son, and Miss Roundy Bing- York, Aug Ar, Leighton In Penobscot. af Mrs. in town.... Mrs. Thurza Jackson, H returned to Boston ng relatives t-rs. Klinck, Long Cove, 13, ar, sch Edward Cole, stone.on Reservoir street, Mrs. Greeley of California, i ham visited Mrs. Jones’ sister, Bertha Mrs. Alvah Leighton, a son. accompanied by _.•_ at Mr. is Bath; sld, sch C B Clark, 14, ar, sch vho is making her home Thompson’s, Mr. K. G. Blood Bangor; Robbins In Swanville, .A Sunday. the summer in the east after the week.... via New who is passing Mrs Hartshorn, past Andrew Nebinger, Bangor, Rochelle; Laura a son. ^ id Mrs. Pierce D. Lancaster of ill....Cant. White of Sedgwick and in front j Robbins, McCan* and Miss Kathleen Mrs. Laid- Pride’s Cross- juite an artesian well bored I schs Annie B Cove; Miss Frances an absence of 25 years.... Mr. and recently had 15, ar, Mitchell, Long Sargent. In Gouldsboro, J and two sons of were g, Mass., upon the arrival 7th of a ;. B. Jewett Winterport Handers is James Roth ar, schs Ab- McCann of are of Mr. and Mrs. were auto visitors August of his and Mr. Elmer well, do; 16, Wesley Mrs. Lester Sargent, a son. Bangor guests law and Mrs. John Sanford White. buildings, j ost welcome little Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. bott, Stockton via Huntington, L I; Mary E I In at summer on the west- daughter, Gertrude Pen- juests one bored-The Cross family Whitten. Thumaston, Benson their cottage one dav last week. I now having | N ar, stm Milli- In Belfast of Morse, Apple River, S; 17, | and Mrs Emil a so: (j leton, in their home! Felicitations are also ...R. L. Clements and family Winterport hall in Whitten, ern shore. reunion will be held at the Grange nockett, Stockton; bark Mannie Swan, Fernan- Mrs. Fred Bar- j e xtended to the paternal grandparents, Mr vere guests Sunday of Mr. and services sch James H Perth for Morrill, Thursday Sept 3rd... Funeral , dina; sld, Hoyt, Amboy V.AkRIlD B. and rHORNDIKE. a id Mrs. of his Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Sargent daugh- Edward M. Lancaster (at present len... .Bertrand Jewett is the guest of Mr. Gilbert Belfast. The service at the Center Church last Sun- were held over the remains are two ^ at j Boston, Aug 12. Ar, sch Governor Powers, ter of West Newton, Mass., spending ving Pride’s Crossing) on the of incle, H. P. White, for a week or more. Hatch last Ames-Allan. In Rucks- consisted of by the choir, coming Ellis at the home of Mrs. Alvesta Moss ar, schs Warren B Potter, lay afternoon singing »eir first Point, Miss; 14, grandchild, by their many Stockton Fred H. Morgan Morris Ames and Miss Gun reading and prayer by Rev. W. Car- Monday at 3. E. M„ Rev. Rockland; Catawamteak, Rockport, Me; Mar> icripture ^ lends and home CENTER BELMONT. sch H Mc- Bucksport. intro- associates. E^Lynch, Stonington; 17, ar, Robert who also a fine solo. He then Two deer were seem a breakfast off Dearborn-Webster. In \ ion, sang making officiating. Curdy, San Juan, P R; sld, schs Mary E Lynch, N McDonald, Dr. and Mrs. 12, Ilarland Dearborn of S..i S luced his friend, the Rev. Charles- M. E. Brandeof Reading, Mass., >f H. P. Farrow’s garden early last Friday Stonington, Me; Annie and Reuben, do; Cath- ° Miss Clara F. Webster of V E of church at Harrington Maine, « ith Mr. and Mrs. were erine (from Bangor) Provincetown; 18, sld, N aastor Baptist j George I. Keating of Bel- norning, and the following morning they causes headache, indigestion, Smalley-Norton. In Roc- L Constipation sch Stockton. from the sub- f, >st, were of a For a mild, opening Pochasset, of Mr. McDonald spoke eloquently guests Miss Leora Partrtdge, n W, A. Bullard’s gard n....Charlie King, dizziness, drowsiness. tow- Edward Austin Smalley F 25c a box at Philadelphia, Aug 12. Sld, tug Carlisle, L of our Saviour.” The Sunday C tiurch W. S. medicine, use Doan’s Regulets. and Miss Crockett N«" iect, “The truth street, last Thursday. Dr. >oy who has been stopping with Foss, Herndon, for Searsport, and Eagle Agnes Monday ing barges In Eilsw E of the service a id all stores. stm Young-Clough. p ichool was held at the close Mrs. Erande again called and las to Brewer to visit his mother. Hill and Temple, for Portland; 15, ar, A upon Capt, gone 8, Albert Young and Miss L- I We are Carolyn, Searsport; 16, ar, sch Stanley M Sea- with a good attendance of young.folks. of Ellsworth. Mr. Carson is interesting i Pleased to note that ( Tampico, Aug. 11. Ar, sch Elisha Atkins, a 1 jj I :he men and women and doing good Baltimore. lilBL) G young [ N g Wiscasset, Me, Aug 11, Ar, schr Emma S work amoug them.... Mrs. Bertha (Hubbard); \V G Port Reading. who has been the I j Briggs, Bachelder. n Camden, Hatch of Lawrence, Mass., 16. sch Blanche C. Pen- J § Norfolk, Aug Sld, 90 Mrs. E. H. is now visit- C THE PROGRESSIVE stm Bachelder, aged years. of Mr.-'and Ward, I ~ STORE._I St Georges, Bermuda; 17, sld, ;uest dleton, In » 31 1 Clark. Belfast, Augu .Mr. and Mrs. Geo. C Warren, Bangor. ng Mrs. Elvira Stevens... ---g George G. Clark, aged 82 years. 10 in | Georgetown, S C, Aug 12. Ar, schr Ella M with friends, and Miss Paine and ijj | DoLLIVKR. In Rockland, 3. Higgins ni Port in j Willey, Royal. of Hiram and Goidi leveral of her nurses, took an early start Jacksonville, Fla, Aug 11. Sld, bark Krem- daughter pen” ; In iv»onroe, A1 "fountain Jellison. auu ! nice auto last morning Sale in, Barbados. 4 their Sunday ( Get for School ™ Jellison, aged 79 years ami Hilo, Aug 16. Sld, stm Texan, Delaware ed the with Mr. si c Mis. A. S. Higgins. I ; Ready ] Mkars. In Morrill, Au. day via P n ima Canal, I « ^ Breakwater, 02 7 morr Hunt Miss Paine back | Mears, aged years, WE’LL PAY Mrs. Flora accompanied MONDAY and TUESDAY, pj ; Bangor, Aug 12, Sld, schs Telumab, New the FRIDAY, SATURDAY, Mosher. In Unity, Augu- to and will resume her duties at York; Elsie A Bayles, New Rochelle; Storm Bangor j J | ()) Mosher, aged 75 years, 10 in Fickett ! Kit Carson, New Haven; W D Man- Paine Hospital....Mr. and Mrs. Leroy j | AUGUST 21, 24 and 25. 3 Petrel, do; Moore In Sailors Snug H 22, Boston; 14, ar, schs Charles A Campbell, 12th in Belfast.. -Mrs. Louise E | ^ gan, gust 7, Leonard Moore, form passed August | ft ! Annie P Chase, Southwest Harbor; YOU for school lo Norfolk; ville, aged 78 years. $1.00 and Miss Doris Bartlett were recent I mother who has children to get readv SAVE " schs Georeietta Lawrence, New Haven; Hasty A chance for every sld, Rage. In Belfast, Augu Willis in Hamp- t Gold Hunter, 15, ar, sch Eagle, Boston; FOR YOUR guests of Dr. and Mrs. Hasty i| this to jj ’// | Boston; » H. Rage, aged 72 years. for school. We do sch Ann McCann, Boston; 16, ar, sch of Lincolnville is visit- t on necessary to fit your children ^ sld, Mary ROBERTS. In Rockland, Au den.... Frank J. Higgins I everything ar, stm | MONEY | § j George E Walcott, Newport News; 17, widow of Edwin R. relatives here. He was the guest of Mr. schs Adelia T | (Arey), ing not before in Belfast. « LV Stoddard, Norfolk; 18, ar, ill introduce to some new goods shown j | haven, aged 02 years, 9 mont; Mrs. S. 18th and 19th.... , you I New York; Izetta, Boston; sld, stm Old Fountain Pen and A. Higgins Aug. likes wool and [J Carleton, | Stanwood. In Ellsworth. took Mr. and Mrs. cotton goods, looks 8 LV Stoddard, Norfolk. of substantial —- Edward Shibles Knox \ HEATHER PLAIDS—a plaid | —— Provided You Buy a Crocker | M I Searsport, Aug 12. Ar, stm Massasoit, Bos- I Robert Patterson and Mrs. ! Fred Patterson, j 10 % off. « ton; barge Boylston, Weym>uth, Mass; sld, I suitable for wear at all seasons. Regular 12Jc. Special ))) J PROSPECT FERRY. Ellen Shibles on an auto ride to Temple (| I stmrs Carolyn, Baltimore; Massasoit, east- I “INK-TITE” 27 in. excellent for Rompers. ! stm Penobscot, Norfolk. I Mrs. Ella llarriman visit** Heights,where they were guests for the day of I ROUGH AND TUMBLE CLOTH, wide, 8 ward; 14, ar, | 0 Stockton, 12. Sld, schs George Church- John Glidden in Frankfort Rich and Miss Ahnie. I j Aug Mrs. Ophelia daughter, off. ar, sch | 1 Fountain Pen Here 10 °7c man, New York; Hazel Dell, Boston; week_Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Robert Patterson has been passing the sum- Blouses, Russian Suits, regular 12Jc. Special jj l w_a. _I M !• 1A ar atmr | j | to were week-end visitors with one Pen taken in for at the old home- on New York; sch Lizzie Lane, (Only exchange mer with his brother Fred CLOT H to close at 14c. Millinocket, | S GALETEA £hS load lumber; 15, ar, stmr City of Philadelphia, Mr. Janies returned to Bang- each new pen purchased.) stead and he started on bis homeward journey | NIGHT GOWNS, Boston; aid stmr Millinocket, New York; 16, Janies for a week’s * Mr. SHORT SKIRTS, PRINCESS SLIPS, 0JP remaining Crocker “Ink-Tite” Pen is guar- to Farmington, Calif., Monday morning..,. DRAWERS, Btmr City of Philadelphia, Boston. Every j |In aid, 1). Harriman and son Evand» are their S 17. sch Pendleton SisterB, | teed to be a FAR BETTER PEN than you and J. G. Cilley guests of daughter, (in Calais, Aug Ar, 1 all at 'I M. B. Grant and Mrs. J. A. 1 Brooks. ■ etc., special prices. Philadelphia. j have ever known. Mrs. Caro Roberts, in £p "• so come see what things FOREIGN PORTS. Point last Sunday-Mrs. into this sale, and good j| v■•* Exchange your old Pen NOW, DON’T Many other things enter special entertained the H. II. Club PALERMO. | SJI Parrsboro. N S, Aug 7. Ar. schr American WAIT. { TERMS CASH. were served and The North Palemo annual picnic will be held i can buy at little money, Team, Wolfville for Eatonville. freshments j ycu | Ar, sch White Miss Oria* if stormy, next fair day, under the Sal Halifax, Aug 10. previously, afternoon passed.... Aug. 26th; 11 j Wings, Perth Amboy. returned to Boston Aug. 12th auspices of Ladies’ Improvement Society. A 10. schr James OLD CORNER DRUG S10RE j Liverpool, N S, Aug Ar, duties in the Deaconess hoM 4; attendance is desired. Dinner on the ■ Clarks Harbor. v>s large I Slater, I Henry Clifford o' Stockton ESTABLISHED 1850. H. COOMBS N 13. Ar, schr Bnna P Pen- information can be bad H. CO.,Ma8°n^,W«Si5h8t' jf St John,. B, Aug grounds. further | ! here last Sunday. Any Calais. ■ 11 dleton, I Main and High Sts., Belfast by communicating with Mrs. Nettie Batchelder or Mrs. Mamie Greely, R. F. D. 2. ! %

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