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LOCAL AFFAIRS A. E. Moore, who has been seri- 'atiberttBrmmta. ously ill, is reported to-day as im- Liberty National proving. Bank NKW Succoaaor to the ADVERTISEMENTS, -Master F. Biirrill National Bank George Mahoney cele- brated his eleventh birthday Monday J. A. Haynes. OF evening, entertaining a few friends. ELLSWORTH M. L. Adams. Refreshments were served. H. C. Jordan. The Ellsworth Bijou theatre high school basket- bail team dished Legal Notices. up a genuine sur- Consult Us prise for the Bar Freely Specimen ballots. Harbor high school The officers and directors of team in the game at Hancock hall this bank are at Union Trust Co. always your dis last Friday evening. The Ellsworth on all financial matters. Your affairs will Silvy & Linnehan. posal be held strictly con team showed a surprising improve- and our Classified Advertisements. fidential experience and advice may ment in speed and team prove helpful. Dunham Bros.. Boston. work, and won the Have OFFICERS game by a score of 20 to 16. you established your credit in this Orlando W, Foss. Pres., A. It was one of the best of the K. Farnsworth, Vice Pres., games community? Edw. F. Small. Cashier, F. J. season in Ellsworth. Dunleavy, Assistant Cashier, j SCHEDULE OK MAILS. Friends in Ellsworth were A bank Ellsvrorth Poatufflcf. shocked account is one of the best builders of I HECTORS to hear of Charles H. Burrill the death Monday night of C’has. K. Foster Mrs. Martin A. credit. A. B. Crabtree MAILS RECEIVED Garland, at her home Dr. Lewis Hodgkins at the Green A. E. Farnsworth From Lake fish hatchery, It is to Harvard C. Jordan West—6.,7 a. m.; 4.31 p. m. your financial to have a W. after an illness of a week of influ- advantage Orlando Foss From East—11.11 a. m.; 6.27 m Henry W. Sargent p. enza. in Account with this MAILS CLOSE AT POSTOFFICE. terminating pneumonia. Checking institution. Mr. Garland is himself Going West—10.40 a. m.; 6.00 p. m. dangerously Bank with us. ill. Mrs. Garland was Going East—6.16 a. m.; 4.00 p. m. thirty-ninf years of age. She was the daughter of John Gilbert Warren of and Registered mall should be at post- Otis, Capital, $100,000 and had many warm friends in Surplus profits', $150,000 office half an hour before mall closes. her home town and vicinity, and in Ellsworth IT PAYS TO TRADE She leaves two children, the elder AT THIS STORF about five There will be a Parish meeting of years. Friends the Unitarian society at the E. C. Os- in Ellsworth were grieved Union IkusT for to learn Company Agent Pictorial Review good studio, Friday evening, at 7.30 of the death on Saturday of Pattern* and Publications. o'clock. Mrs. Sarah E. Saunders. She died or Ell Quality Service in Old town, at the home sworth,Maine Miss Gladys Hooper, who has of her just daughter, Mrs. C. closed a successful term of school at Harry Mason, with whom she was the Gouldsboro, is the guest of Mrs. F. A. spending winter, after a short illness of Fleischer's Crochet and Patten. pneumonia. Knitting book of Sweaters Mrs. Saunders was of The seventy years or Coat's Ellsworth A. A. basket-ball age. She was Crochet Book of Yokes, each lOc dear to many friends, team and Hangor Rovers will at Ladies’ Fine I.isle play especially to those families to which Hose in grey only, pair 5f>c Hancock hall Friday evening. Game she had Tbi. brought comfort and efficient WHY BE A DRIFTER? Stocking would retail tor <1 It bought on called at 8.30. aid to-day’s market. in time of sickness or trouble New Si'k She Like a and Crepe de chene Camisoles at Cora Estelle, widow of Calen Mad- leaves three daughters, Mrs. flowing river, some people follow tlie lines of least resistance *1 docks, died yesterday at her hoifle in Mason, Mrs. Ida L. of '). SI.OS, $2,BO, $2.08, $3.08 Hickey Minne- anil spend all their cash for luxuries. $3.40, North Ellsworth, apolis, Minn., and Mrs. Laura surplus Drifting is but’ Ladies’ Sate’t Petticoat* in aged fifty-two Trevor easy black, Copenhagen, years. Mr. Maddocks of Lake, died in Febru- Long Minn.; also one broth- accomplishment requires determination. Decide to save"all can rose and grr o. A *2.50 vnlue for ary, 1918. er, Ivy of you $|.»s Young Boston. Start an account with the For one week Hancock }5auk. ".It. Any of our w ide 50 and 59 cent Eygonia lodge, F. and A. M., will County Savings work the Pageant of American Cretonnes, y -*J, only ;{<>e third degree to-morrow History” given by the Navy of Hancock Bank iioiipy and Toilet evening. Supper will be served at League the United County Savings Glycerine Soap. None better. States at the ball room of #•30- District Deputy Beazley is ex- the New Ellsworth, Extra U.ge cakes, Willard in Maine « for 50c pected to be present to inspect the Washington on February lodge. }-■ The historical scene represent- ing .viaine was arranged by Mrs. Dr. George S. Hagerthy will move John A. Peters, chairman of the his dental offices to the rooms over committee, and depicted the mar- Moore’s drug store early in March. riage of Baron de St. Castin and Dr. Arthur 11. Parcher will move his office Mathtlde, daughter of the chief of from the Manning block to the the SPECIAL NOTICE TO INSURERS rooms Tarratines, at Pentagoet (now vacated by Dr. Hagerthy. ( There is considerable discussion astinel in 1G87. The tableau was generally, regarding Fief Insitra The to the partnership of Fred C. and W. one of the best of the KS; abnormal cost of buildfng maferUl and evening, and labor.U°horRA£K Keplacement rnd V'\Ll costs have more than doubled. H. Scott, and news- the one Look over yyour insurance confectionery selected by the and come m and talk it has been Washington over with me. dealers, dissolved, W. H. Star as an illustration for its Scott, who was story W. recently appointed a of the pageant. Maine was also O. TAPLEY COMPANY mail rep- regular carrier, retiring from resented in the cast by Miss the firm. Lunn, Fred Scott will continue a step-daughter of Congressman the business. White. The The tuel moving picture reproduction situation is becoming se- of rious in Winston Churchill's great novel, Ellsworth, owing to the em- ALARM CLOCKS "The Crisis," is booked to be shown bargo placed upon freight and de- in Ellsworth March 23 and 24. The livery by the snow. Mr. Jones, of the “ "eW '0t °f ALARM CLOCKS in both picture will be of special interest C. W. Grindal estate, reports and lumfJuf dial"6" here, as the late vice-president Han- this morning the supply of furnace t0 the avui nibal Hamlin is one of the characters coal entirely exhausted. They have b"y best’ theseclocks represent the best on the for a market*8^8 fwink, coloring, package represented in it. fair supply of nut coal, but that is 10c now The woman’s club met being drawn upon heavily to Ltix, yesterday the Prices from S2.75 to package ..... 12 afternoon with Miss M. A. supply shortage of furnace $4.00 1 2c Clark. sizes. Kev. They have of coal or- Old It. B. Mathews gave a most in- plenty dered, and in transit, some DutehJCleanser, package 9c teresting and instructive talk on cur- of it near by, hut until rent events. There will be a social freight movement H. C. Kinso, can be resumed, it JORDAN, Jeweler package. meeting next afternoon with might as well be : 8c Tuesday in the mines. Mrs. O. W. Tea The wood situation is ELLSWORTH, Maine Lava bar Tapley. will be but Soap, ..... 7c served. little better. Men have been kept busy breaking out their wood- Pink can \\ illiam 1). Thomas, formerly of Salmon, ..... roads, and deliveries are almost im- i 23c Ellsworth, died February 7, in Le- possible, owing to the blocked con- land. Wash. He leaves two Fancy Barbados Molasses, sisters, (litions of the main roads. No local gal' $1.15 Mrs. John W. Jordan of Ellsworth freight has been received in Ells- National Boiled and Mrs. R. F. Nagle of Dorchester, worth Oats, pkg since a week ago 1 29c Mass. He left Ellsworth some yesterday. years A freight came dawn from ago, but is remembered Bangor Liquid Veneer, 4 oz bottle .... by to-day, but with not friends pleasan^r so much as a 22c here who regret to hear of pound of ..The “ sugar for Ellsworth. Secret Is “ The Out.. his death. food 12.W ... supply is already low in the 45c A large section of the root of the stores, and if the present storm de- boat sheds at We Slice the Price—Not the the Ellsworth Foundry velops serious proportions, the food Quality & Machine The Works collapsed beneath shortage will become acute. ground-hog bought snowshoes thegreat weight of the snow last Fri- and skis for his whole day afternoon, doing considerable A Campaign for tile Blind. family at Silvy & damage. The old Wiswell black- A State-wide campaign to raise on smith shop near the Osgood funds by Linnehan’s Candlemas and CosK ond Carry" Grocer, Ellsworth. stable, subscription to needed en- Day, they now used as an ice-house, also col- largement of the Maine Institute for are lapsed, from the same cause. the Blind the time of their lives. 3 will be conducted during having the The meeting of the Thursday club week from March 8 to 15. The will be held this week with Mrs. R. proposed enlargement involves the H. Mathews, after which the meeting expenditure of $150,000, toward for which the State Sporting Goods, Hardware, Automobile Accessories and the organization of a missionary legislature appro- Sundries, society, postponed from last Thurs- priated $37,500, leaving the balance to be Paints, Oils and Varnishes FARMS WANTED day, will be held. All ladies of the raised from private sources. Willis A. Congregational church interested in Ricker of Castine repre- 1 fun ?ents having calls for farms on Mt. Desert Island forming a missionary society are in- Hancock county in the State vited to attend. committee for the campaign. The am- around inota from Frenchman’s bay. Parties having The ladies who have sent their Hancock county is set at names to Mrs. Harry Haynes, and all $4,252.50, divided as follows: Am- farms, small or he able to find a custom- large, may others who are interested in the herst, 12.75; Aurora, $7.50; Bar & nInc. er Harbor. Silvy Linnehan, by writing me. course of home nursing to be given $1,560; Bluehill, $120; at once in Ellsworth, will meet in the Brooklin, $42.75; Brooksville, ELLSWORTH, MAINE grand jury room at the courthouse, 534.50; Bucksport, $202.50; Cas- CHARLES B. PINEO afternoon tine, $90; Thursday at 4.30. It is Cranberry Isles, $12 00- The New Hardware Store in the Whiting Block bar hoped there will be applicants Dedham, $19.50; Deer Isle, $69: HARBOR, L- MAINE Eastbrook, enough to hold two classes, one in $12.75; Ellsworth’, the afternoon and one in the eve- 5753.75; Franklin. 52.50; Goulds- horo, ning.The expense of the entire course $51; Hancock, $53.25; La- noine, of fifteen lessons will be from $2 50 $27.75; Long Island. $3.75- to $3. Vlariaville, $9; Northeast Harbor, J. A. THOMPSON 8142.50; Orland, $48.75; Otis, $9- Penobscot, $41.25; Prospect Harbor, 119 IVIAIISJ STREET CEDAR WANTED Seal M5; Harbor, $101.25; Sedg- F"ir©, rvierin© and Automobile Insurance We wick, $40.50; Sargentville, $13 50- are in the market for Cedar for railroad ties, 5omesville, $163.50; Representing Sorrento’, TH© «_i and $27.75; Southwest Ecj 11: © fc> I © Fire and Marine Insurance posts. Will in the round, or hewn two MAGIC WATER Harbor, $82 50-’ Co. buy Stonington, $87; Sullivan. $60; Sur- OF HARTFORD, CONN. sides. If is for •y, $28.50; Swans you have any cedar, it will pay you to see good washing Island, $27.75- and lYemont, $50.25; Trenton, $50 25- us now. We are clothes, will re- paying top market price. ferona, $12; Waltham, $12; Winter move mildew, iron larbor, $75. C. C. BURRILL & SON and rust, ink, grease S<‘al Cove. —Established 1867— fruit MOOR & FOSTER stains from the Byron Campbell and wife, Center, ire receiving AND Block finest fahtics with- congratulations on the FIRE AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE °g£g_Mannmg Ellsworth, Maine >irth of a daughter, born Feb. 11. out if No mails some of injury arrived here from Feb. 5 representing the leading companies of this ai d foreign countiie used o Feb. 10, owing to the big storm according Feb. 13. N to direction. Edward H. Baker Exposition Mrs. Lucy Pervear has gone to Portland IT WILL ALSO few York, for a visit. : Gradual! Optometrist and Registered Eye Specialist ^^•llding Main© A severe has MARCH 1-16 drought prevailed At Office Over Moore’a Drug 8 tore tere all winter. REMOVE Many hav6 been every day until further notice. ibliged to Maine’s Greatest and One of New Finest bring water from the Telephone, 146-11. England’s all stains from lond. If you have no special trouble ex- Feb. 16. N. cept THE PORTLAND bath tubs, lav- failing sight, try my 65.50 war- --o- ranted frame, with first quality lensea. ataries, closets COMING EVENTS. floors. sinks, Friday evening. Feb. 27, at Meth- ntsi Manufactured >dist EMBROIDERY SHOPPING AUTO CIL vestry—Birthday social. SHOW the by the Mrs. Harriet C. Surpassing Successes of Previous Years Friday evening, Feb. 27, at Paul Plain and Davis begs to an- tevere Sewing nounce to the MAGIC WATER CO. ME. hall, Boston—Annual Ells- Knitting people of Hancock coun- PLEASURE CARS TRUCKS AUGUSTA, clone at reasonable that Is | j TRACTORS | ACCESSORIES worth reunion. prices ty she at their service to shop OKOEOD8 LOCAL DEALERS: for DECOKATIOSS-SKH fc.NTKKTAINMKNT FWTUKES Thursday evening. March 11, at any goods not procurable in their J. A. Haynes, A. H. Joy, P. E. Kearns, £.8. Means lewall hall, 177 Huntington avenue, MRS. BLANCHARD own locality. References. loston—Bluehill reunion. 50 WASHING TON ST., KLLS WORTH Address: Hotel Brunswick, Boston. 2. u. S' rresi- MUTUAL BENEFIT COLUMN. Woman Emperor, ient. 3. Of Troy. (Iliad.) 4. "Aunt Madge.” Edited by A Chinese Philosopher. 5. Italian HEAStTBURN Timely Help Patriot. 6. Discoverer of North MOTTO:—HELPFUL AND HOPEFUL. S. heaviness after meals are The face is often the first Pole. 7. Egyptian Queen. Greek Philosopher. 9. French this column are star. .eying manifestations The purposes of a decline in Case. 10. succinctly stated in the title and motto to betray Celebrated English acii ivsptpsia. —it is for the mutual benefit, and aims Nurse Executed by Germans. 11. for feel to be helpful and hopeful. Being When you U. S. Author. 12. German Author. it is for the common strength. the common good 13. of Palmyra. 14. Ex- use—a public servant, a purveyor of rundown and face Queen and a medium your 15. Famous Friends. 16. CASTORIA information suggestions, plorer. For jnjfrpts and Children. for the interchange of ideas, in this ca- need for Asiatic Conqueror. 17. U. S. it solicits communications, and is colorless, the leasr.r.t to tal.e, neutralize Statesman. IS. Colonist. fiacityts success depends largely on the sup- English _ id. -j and help restore port given it in this respect. Com- <11. S.) 19. U. S. Statesman. 20. ,3~d munications must be signed, but the Singer. Mothers Know digestion. name of writer will not be printed ex- That I find so many are interested in KXZE BY SCOTT & BOWNE cept by permission. Communications scorn i will be subject to approval or rejection these tests that we will have iT T.T3 OF SCOTT'S EMULSION the editor of the column, but none I9-3A by another of the series later. will be rejected without good reason. Genuine Castoria Address all communications to The -o- American. Ellsworth, Me. North Brooklin. ohol-3 PER CE*T, emulsion! 1 j The death of Capt. Reuben is evident. Those AVc IVopatatow* Always 48,000 TROUBLES. plainly Steward, formerly of Brooklin. at his Oh. I have troubles. know home in Jonesport, causes sadness sinulnt^meFoodtyKc^ Drug Stores Sell It yes, my who have tried Scott’s i tir o ihcSicirachsandBcwri** My <’art and grief and woe. here. Bears tli ^ to the thin and Five million people My conflicts and my struggles. its power strengthen A large cow moose, " with hunger, searching hard use it to KILL COI My ups and downs, you know! enrich the blood and gaunt hgg3SB3p8S body, con- But somehow, when they’re darkest. for food and water, has been ; Thereby Signature are back in the spicuous in the part of the town HILLS And when the clouds gray, put the color Cheerfulness and I think of other people's. iowards Sedgwick. Coming out of Restlonl^ face. Don’t be pale-faced- the woods she James neither Oriam,Moq>fotoen* And they seem to pass away! pursued >ahcoiic one evening on the highway, Mineral. Not CASCARAtr# QUININE Oh. yes. I have my sorrows. take Scott’s Emulsion. Young heartache care; and another time Leslie Young and My and''my The Norwegian cod-liver oil used 1 My dark and grave to-morrows. in Scott’s Emulsion is super-refined* Stanley Dorlty met her and had to i^TauoSimutnnSk My grief and my despair! in our own American Laboratories. jump quickly out of the road to es- fiR0MU>r Its purity and quality is unsurpassed. But. somehow, when they’re saddest cape being run over by her. Weak j Standard cold remedy for 20 years Scott &Bowne, Bloomfield, N.J. 19-25 and nearly exhausted with' feet and —in tablet form—safe, sure, no The thought comes unto me, up a cold in 24 How much worse thirtgs have hap- ankles swollen, she moved with diffi- w opiates—breaks hours—relieve* grip in 3 days. culty. and was so tame that children back if it fails. The Pierpont's Second Reader Money flee! played around her. box has a Red And then my troubles The Young Reader genuine Feb. 17. k^top with Mr. Hill’s To go with the Spelling Book “Xenophon." East Boston. Feb. 1920. By John Plerpont —.— o- 9, Introduction to the At All Drag Stor— Compiler of The Franklin. Dear Aunt Madge: National Reader." "The National Read- I read in your column last week the er” and The American First Class Clifford, fifteen-year-old son of Prints as well as models poem "The Fox and the Hen.” also a Baak.” Capt. C. E. Dyer, has sawed twenty- used to enlarge his ideas were one cords of wood since the middle KILLS PAIN request to learn something: more about of visible objects. resutUniimercf^"1^-iSSSSSsl. it. 1 have a clipping: cut from a news- of December. For Over Edition some which I think Twentieth Miss Frances Dyer, who has been paper years ago raeSimilcSi^L0* IN 5 MINUTES in Vermont, has a may help you. and will gladly send it. George F. Coolidge. 323 Pearl St. Leaching accepted • We had a copy of "The Young Reader” (List of publishers as given below.) position in a school at Grantwood, Entered according to act of Congress in my childhood home in dear old V. J. Agony of Rheumatism and Gout. Neu- in the year 1835. by Carter Hendee & Years The entertainment the ralgia. Lumbago, Chest Colds and Maine, and I well remember the quaint Co., in the Clerk's Office of the District by gram- Thirty mar school in Sore Throat Ended in Half the old pictures, and some of the stories— Court of Massachusetts.” pupils No. 2. reflected credit on Time It Takes Other Remedies. “The White Old Hen” the best. the pupils and teacher. The book must have belonged to my The "Young Reader” from which 1 Miss Longfellow. mother, as it was before I was old have copied is six inches by four The funeral of Mrs. Malvina Mustarlne won't blister—It !s always enough to attend school that I learned inches, with agreenish cover, so bodly Brown was held at her home Tues- for use—it’s grandmother's old- ready to worn I cannot make out the illustra- Jay forenoon. Rev. J. E. Blake oflicl- fashioned mustard plaster with other read the stories, and I am sure it up-to-date pain killers added. was never used in school. A short tion and only a word here tfnd there of tting. A daughter. Mrs. Mary The best and Exact of CASTORIAtm< ct«rr*un •o*mnv. «*• »©•« cm. quickest remedy in the time ago I inquired for it in a second- a quotation "Friends, fortune, fame, Havey and her son Lloyd of Massa- Copy Vfrappcr. world for lameness, sore stiff muscles, chusetts, were here. neck, cramps in lee. earache, backache, hand book store in Boston. They did etc.” headache and toothache. not have a copy on hand, but thought Some of the favorites in our family Feb. 23. B. Bogy’s Mtostarine—ask for It name. % by they might get me one. It would cost were "Honesty the Best Policy” (While -o- Is made of real, honest, yellow mus- from the farm, and his Reach. tard—not cheap substitutes, use it freely about $3 So you see it is quite valu- nuts and apples to draw the pain from those sore feet— able. after all these years! I did not "Young Reader" stuffed his pockets) Capt. Irving Barbour and wife, It* 9 great for chilblains, too. and for Otis. North Brooksville. leave my order, but may yet. as I "The boys and the Frogs.” a foble. who have been home a few days, frosted feet. Ask for and get Muatarlnt Miss Madelle Grant, an Otis girl Since the death of Mr. Carson Mrs. ftlwayg in the box. would pay twice that to have the little "The Lark." (prose) "The Liar not Be- have returned to New York, where yellow nd Anton E. Sniegoski. were mar- i Carson and daughter are at Vinton book I used and wondered over as a lieved. when he Speaks the Truth," Capt. Barbour took charge of a ed in Washington. D. C.. January ! Gray's. STOPS PA\r* child. (prose), "The Fox and the Crane,"”The racht going South. 1. They will reside in Washing-I Schools closed Friday. An enter- kj A reader of The American for 38 Fox and the Hen,” (with an illustra- The friends of Mrs. S. R. Johnson C years. >n. where Mrs. has been i tainment. under the direction of ! and were Sniegoski Mrs. From the clipping sent. I am glad tion which shows the hen high up saddened by her death at the ■ the govenrnient employ the past I Perkins and Mrs. Hopkins, was B to have a clew for “F. L.” tc follow- the fox talking to her, also the “door home of her son Frank in New Lon- IMUSTARlNt C&NNOT ftUSTtn ear. Her many triends here ex- given. in which he came in at.” the "barrel, don, Conn. She leaves two Ed- : tit? search for the old reading sons, »nd congratulations. book. A friend from the Inter- bird--cage. riddle, shovel, tub. piggin. ward of West Stonington and Frank. E. J. Murphy, manager of the South Bluehill. national Sunshine writes the corn bag.” If the moral is not self- Miss Mildred Torey of Deer Isles Society , lurphy I-umber Co., expects to close Schools closed Feb. 5, after a suc- name of the book is "The evident, it is printed at the end, and is with her grandmother, Mrs. Au- v j Young is business affairs here soon, and cessful term, taught by Mrs the illustrations seem to illus- gustine who is in 1 George Reader,” by John Pierpoint, wTho. ac- really Torey, poor health. ,, Whai the Kaiser ith his young son Justin, will go to Bickford. Perfect in attendance: cording to Mrs. of trate. The “Young Reader” was also Feb. 19. L. Morgan Hyde H lew Hampshire. Loring Friend. Everett Gray. Albert Park, the book in 1830. It published in Boston, Portland, Me., -o- compiled Feb. 16. “Davis." Collins. Clarence Friend Louis Talcl wTas A later edition Philadelphia, Charleston, S. C., Au- Trenton. Roosevelt very popular. Bickford Charles Eaton. Kenneth was published by David H. Williams, gusta. Ga., Louisville, Ky.. Mobile, Ala- Mrs. E. B. Hodgkins received word Subscribe for The American Eaton Virgil Eaton, Robert Thomas. Boston, in 1835. This wras the fif- New Orleans. La. last week of the death of her young- THE FULL ACCOUNT $1.50 Per Yeas Feb. 16. 0. teenth edition. My sincere thanks are given these est sister, Mrs. Parmenter. at her of Roosevelt’s et the reception two friends of the column and whom home in Denver. Colo. Another sis- : of de- ter, Mrs. various courts Europe, Dear Aunt Madge: I now w’elcome as members for the Anna Anderson, has been with her her scribing intimately his remark- The American reached me on Friday pains they have taken to give us this during long illness. Mrs. Parmenter able interviews with the Kaiser, when I was housed by the storm, and I interesting informotion about “The was a daughter of the late knew at once wrhere Young Reader.” Think of there Almira and John Davis. are told in Roosevelt’s own to find “The Charles and Reuben Davis are Young Reader.” treasured for its age having been editions of it printed broth- words exclusively in ers. Mrs. Anderson and contents, although those who from Maine to Louisiana! is expected home soon. taught our family to love it have all -o- SCRIBNER’S passed on. Four years ago I visited a Answers to famous persons—1. North Hard "Work. Tires brother in Caldwell, Kansas, in Decem- laimoine. who MAGAZINE ber. and one night it seemed growing George Ashmore, is employed in the has cold fast and George quoted mill, built a camp and send moved his muscles and At your dealers or SI.01) Finding it colder grew and colder. S PILLS family from East La- nerves, ULp.CHICHESTER TIIE DIAMOND BRAND. A moine. now to SCRIBNER’S MAGA- He took his axe upon his shoulder.” Ladles! Ask your Draultl fe etc.” He could have recited the entire thl-ches-tcr‘» Diamond Hrt n Leroy Stover and Caroline Lin- then them New York for j (Mils in Re4 and Hold SJCtaK and to ZINE, City, ! of the Best whip poem “Honesty Policy” boxes, sealed vjth Blue Hr bon. scott were married by Rev. W. H. three numbers containing without a halt. I am quite sure. I Take no other- Buy of yoi Rice Feb. 14, at the j Draatat. AjklnrClIM lll.s-TtK'S Baptist parson- with coffee, with, its ! have copied everything which 1 think DIAMOND BR AND HILLS, f. »! age. Their friends extend hearty Roosevelt’s Own Letters will interest you. and am very glad to years known as Best. Safest. Always Reliable congratulations. caffeine, makes do so. H. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Feb. 16. Y. dru£ a had matter worse. East I-amoine. Roy Smith and wife, who have been in Mochias for some time, have returned home.

Forrest West, w ho met with an ac- cident while working at the mill at East Surry, breaking several ribs, is home. Postum Cereal Miss Alice Abbott of Boston is vis- iting her mother, Mrs. Cyrus Abbott Feb. 17. a is a drink for workers that contains no Penobscot. dru£, The students of Clark high school held an but furnishes a entertainment and social at finely fla- the town hall Thursday evening. Mrs. Harold Perkins and children vored full-bodied went to West Penobscot Saturday for beverage, a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. and robust, to Mark C. Devereux. pleasind Feb. 16. “Woodlocke.” former coffee drinkers.

Destructive Civil War. Civil v.'ar in Two sizes At England lasted from grocers j 16^2 to 1600—eighteen years—being sold at 25

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Warts Are Contagious. Warts are contagious, as is proved by experiments on their own fingers j made by Drs. Cdo J. Wile and Lyle j : B. Kingery of the University of Mich- | igan Medical school. These physicians seem to have proved that warts are caused by some sort of a virus that passes easily through a filter and therefore through the sound human tkin.

Never Touched Him! \yu»~- Stop A bullet, traveling straight for the |i heart of a Toledo policeman hit the officers badge, shattered It, ripped his coat and went off at an angle without touching his body. this! Deserves Well of Posterity. In 1764, on the 21st of October, James Hiilhouse was born In New Haven, Conn. He represented Con- necticut in the United State senate. The At elm trees which line the New first signs of a cold or grip Haven streets, and give the town Its name of Elm city, were planted by Hiilhouse, take

Dyspepsia is America's curse. Tc 1 restore digestion, normal weight, gooc COLD TABLETS health and purify the blood, use Bur- IANES dock Blood Bitters. Sold at all drug r stores. Price, $1.25.—Advt. GUARANTEED m OF EiOHT I WHERE MOLE BEATS MONKEY PILIPINAS GET -- COMPLETE CODE j Simian Is Comparatively Helpless In YEARS MISERY ballot the Water, as Are Many of on the Wall before the Land Birda. Handwriting Ufed Lydia E Pink’narn’! OF Vegetable Compound INDIGESTION Have you ever noticed a gull drop- AMER. SISTERS pine on the sea—how it spreads Its and Recovered. Ob* Box of "FRUIT.A-TIVES’’ or wines high so that the feathers shall Liver Tablets’* Brought Relief Senora not be wetted? If a gull's wing feath- N. J. — de Newark, “The doctor said 1 Veyra Describes ers get wet It cannot rise until they trouble and had an organic treated me Status of dry. says a writer In London Tlt-Bifs. nr 1 111111111111 for several week,. Women in the Throw n mouse Into the water. It At times I could noi can swint a walk at all and i . little, but as soon as Its fur Is soaked down It sufferer with m j goes, and back drowns. and limbs so 1 Th' Filipino So. too. in the case of a rab- often woman Is destined te had to stay in bit. As soon as Its fur is wet l>e In the world s It Is bed. I suffered oil spotlight more than done for. ever before and on for ns a result of the news eight Just A mole ran swim years. received like anything, hut Finally 1 by cable from to the n monkey Is very in the heard that Lydia E. errect that the helpless water. Philippine senate ha Almost all land birds Pinkham’s V e g e- drown very rap- passed the equal I table Compound was suffrage bill giving idly If unlucky enough to fall into the women full a good medicine and political rights with men water. They strike out with their I legs tried it with his would Indicate move splen- that the Flllplnn round and round in a circle, but eiiecu new uo aia my nouse- may beat her American cannot get off the and I sisters to the water. work ray washing. have recom- ballot WILLIAM prophecy come true. This famous doctor's for box. GALE SHEPHERD Lions and are prescription internal mended your Vegetable Compound anc tigers very good swim- yy T bp Old and external nse has over 100 years of success in of Blood Medicine and three of FIHpIna has many admirers who Chatham, Columbia Co., N. Y. mers. and do not share the common treatments your my Sore friends are them to ad van predict she will I was bothered cats’ hatred for the water. Coughs, Colds, Throat, Cramps, Chills, Bronchi tie, taking tap \ make good If she gets with Constipation, But of all Tonailitii, You ran usemy name fora test:mor.: " the the cat the Sprains, Strains, etc. — — vote. Just as she has made '-ivor Trouble and Indigestion for tribe, South American Soothing healing satisfying. —Mrs. Theresa 75 good in Covei.tr.’, Burnctl the very tnree and tried all jaguar Is the finest performer in the St., Newark, N. J. Imp.,riant role she has oc- years ; kinds of In water. It seems oftea to plunge in for eupled the family and business life medicine with no relief. mere Joy of a swim. of the I was so bad I You are invited to write for free a 'vir ; Philippines ever since the In would hare a dull, A rabbit, os we have said, drowns troductlon of in the I s_‘ No other medicine has been so Christianity In the Is- heavy feeling pit of my as suc- soon as Its fur Is soaked through, Caring for Food Chopper. cessful in relieving woman's lands three centuriea stomach about World's Finest Church. sufferin ago. ; generally three or yet Its My food E. curiously enough near relative, chopper always left two November Id is the as hLydia Pinkham’s Vegetable America s advent In four hours after anniversary of the Philippines eating. the hare, swims quite well, will dark, ugly marks on tile drainbnard Compound. Women may receive free ngid Hhe dedication of St. Peter s in Rome discovered a I saw advertised in the advice wonderfully “Troy Times" often cross a river when hunted. "hen I used It. Finally I reported to •nJ l.’lpful by writing the Lyd a interesting n KEG. This largest Christian house responsive little and Hears are E. Binkham Medicine Muss. being, the wo ‘Fruit-a-tives’ sent to R. W. good swimmers, even those adhesive plaster. I covered the Co., Lynn, Filipino of worship was hegtin about 1450. In Such u tters are received and answered man. writes one Seymour’s store in that usually live fur from sheets clamps with small of the American concerning drug Chatham large strips ad- 1548 was in v men and of Michelangelo putt charge, by only held in strict and two 50c. wafer, and the common rat Is no hesive piaster, and l And that it bought boxes. Before not who redesigned the dome. The height confidence. I had mean performer. only prevents the marks, but stands I.nished one box, I was relieved | to the top of tills dome is 4f!& feet, and NOT THE ONLY ONE and One of the best of animal swimmers any amount of — Good now have no more trouble. I washing. the bunding is one of the most impos- Is the horse. Horses have been known can eat i | Housekeeping. in the world. anything des-.’e. to ing There Are Other Ellsworth swim a river nearly a mile wide People I would advise anyone in the same j Situated. simply to get back to their old stables. Similarly condition as I was, to take ‘Fruit- | Deer, too. can all swim well. There Tor'.. .Vs in vai Life. Get Out of the Rut Occasionally. a-tives’ it is a ; God-seu t, and I would are cases The three U. s There is (’an there be any stronger prool j of caribou having swum rnr. through llfe- sometimes no iiarm. and not be without ‘Fruit 1 offered than the evidence of Ells- i-tives’ in the across lakes ten miles wide when at twenty-live y< of romance often a bucketful of joy, in Just being worth residents? After house”. at vou tf- a.-, real you have | escaping from forest tires. forty-five of rent and 111 foolish for a spell. And many a read the following, quietly answer WILLIAM GALE SHEPHERD. sixty-llve of your rheumatism.— time it loosens up the strings of the the question. • Union. heart 50c. a 6 for Schenectady to be extravagant, even, like the E 1. Clark. 17 Union St.. Ells- box, $2.00, trial size 25c. Atdealersor from country boy at the circus who said: worth. says: “Some years ago I FRUIT-A-TIVES Here's a Genius. ‘Tve got 15 cents, and I'm to wa- troubled with kidney complaint, Limited, OGDENSBURG, N. Y. Adv.—"I ofTer my "services to the Hardened m Life’s Crucible goin’ it ail on i h,. i severe Public as No men are spend peanuts, and I don’t shooting pains across Literary Writer on all sub- living: more worthy to the mail of my back The he trusted than give a dura who knows it, nuther.” kidney jects. whether solium or joyful!. Alsoe, those who toll up front secretions were unnatural and ir- none less Ellsworth American I Obituarst. giving Departed Friends poverty; inclined to take or -o-1— regular in passage. I started to use Glorious welcome to the touch aught which they have not Subscribe for the Doan's Kidney Pills and I Subscribe for the Hairafter.”_ hon- could see Boston estly earned.—Lincoln. I V. receiving great relief. I have Transcript. Ellsworth American sin.- had return attacks and have nse.i Doan's Kidney Pills with very good results." NEARLY FIVE YEARS LATER Mr lark said: "I have had no trouble with my kidneys since I re. mmended Doan's Kidney Pills before. I have unlimited faith in th medicine and endorse it again.'' Pi SOc. at all dealers. Don't ly sk for a kidney remedy—get Be Kidney Pills—the same that The World’s Tire M Clark had. Foster-MIlburn Co Largest Factory Mfrs. Buffalo. N. Y. be- Building 30x3,30x31 and 31x4-inchTires Of Course I’ll Take

Owners of small cars can enjoy the same Celery King high relative value in Tires that The king ol tonic laxativea. Goodyear I lake it every season sad »o do mother gives utmost satisfaction to owners of and the childreo. big, it motor purifiea the blocd, clean the akin costly carriages. «nd cheaci that awey wornout feeling. MRS. J AIM c. C Ur. w a DE VEYRA. cup tonight juit like you make can take of that lea You’ll like it. A Filipina who is doing important They advantage tremendous work for her people in the amount of equipment,skill and care . employed by Goodyear to build tires of he FUlplna “Mothering the only extraordinary f’hrlstian people In the far east, she worth in the 30x3-, 30x316-, and 31x4- ioldx a place of authority, love nml re inch sizes. Ends is u indigestion 'Pert In family and social life that relieves stomach misery, sour atom* ach, not accorded to women In countries belching and all stomach disease or can or secure these tires without money back% Large box of tablet* M neighboring the Islands, in India. They waiting, eenta. l)ruggi»u in all town*. China or Japan.” despite the enormous demand, because, Subscribe for the A Filipina who is doing an hnpor her in the Unit in addition to its Ellsworth American ant work for people larger sizes, Goodyear builds ed States is Mrs. Jaime C de Veyra. from an of 20,000 a in the world’s MAW WOMEN USE wife of the resident commissioner average day 'he Philippines. Not only has she fre GLYCERINE largest tire devoted to the three MIXTURE. •inently addressed the wives of mem factory rs of Congress in Washington as tc sizes Ellsworth woijien will be surprised mentioned. • ondit’ons in the new Philippines, but at the INSTANT pleasant action of she hr.s visited various cities, speaking simile glycerine, buckthorn bark, If own a before women’s clubs. The senora you Ford,Chevrolet, Dort, Maxwell, stc as mixed In Adler-i-ka. One vear-i in giving her talks, one of the or spoonful any other car one of these relieves ANY CASE gas on uuiurif jl gowns of her home land, a using sizes, go stomach or sour stomach. Because lelicute pineapple fabric, hand-woven to the nearest Goodyear Service Station like a Adler-i-ka acts on BOTH upper and ind han !-embroidered. shaped lowcl bowel. It often cures constipa- z&uzy wi nged butterfly. Dealer for Goodyear Tires and tion Goodyear and prevents appendicitis. One “In mauy ways the path of the wo- lady Tourist Tubes. reports herself CURED of a bad tien of the Philippines is easy," says Heavy case of bowel trouble and constipa- Senora de Veyra. “Laws made by her Bon. Chas. E. Alexander, druggist. iave combined the best of American ind Spanish precedent®, and she has ft •ome into her own with far less strug- BANISH CATARRH gle than either her American or her Spanish sisters. Married women may hold property in se.eralty. They are Breathe Hyomsi for Two Minutes and guardians of their own children. These >ire vesred rights and cannot be tukeu Stuffed up Head Will Go. jwuy from her. “Professional opportunities are as If you want to safe relief from get men the land catarrh. cold good for women as for in in the head or from an ir- 30 x Goodyear Double-Cure Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes are thick, strong tubes that f ritating cough in the shortest time come. The is 3% $ ^ /A00 from which 1 Filipina reinforce risk a wreathe Hyomei. Fabric, All-Weather Tread.. casings properly. Why good casing with a custom the dictator in the home. tube? It will dean out your head in two by cheap Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes cost little more minutes and allow you to breathe She is usually the keeper of the family 30::3Vfe Goodyear Single-Cure *i « notrarown. •over” witli real tact She has four Authorized Service Station V., n \ ’.s ?»•, to pre- children. An evidence of her enter pl,r « 'licgi Hi I.nseball illa- prise was her action last year in mas hmr.d. The .-.niekorbi vllllt. found- tering shorthand so she might he “us* -For— *,J " In IS-i.V Is said ful to her husband at home in rhe eve <" have u be n the tirst baseball or- nfngs in case he wishes to dictate MCRANG’S GARAGE Sanction. few letters or a Speech.” Ellsworth, 3ar Harbor West Sullivan arid Sedgwick, Maine MAINE. STATU OF VALUES IT MORE FOR SARK. STATE OF MAINE. HANCOCK *8 all „„ To persons interested |n THAN A FORTUNE Ellaworth ©tth*,.r American At a probate court held at the estates hereinafter named 01 £l)c i0llsu)ovtl) Hancock on BROOD SOW—DUE TO FARROW in and for saiu County of At a Probate Court held at in the Eilawrmv. Y. W. C. A. GALLS Power Gains Kightwn Pounds— first of March. Irvins Stackpole, R. F. the third day of February, year in and for the County of Hancoi'k°rth PVB ISHKD of our Lord one thousand nine hundred Rheumatism After D. 3. Ellsworth. Me. the tenth day of February in EVERY WEDNESDVY AFTERNOOX Disappears and twenty. year of our Lord one thousand Taking Tanlac. A certain instrument purporting: hundred and twenty and of the last will by adiA,?,?* “I consider what Tanlac has dane IX>ST. ! to be a copy inent from the third day of said ELLSWORH, MAINE of GrlHln Miller, BIG and testament Taylor ruary A. D. 1920 term of sald CONVENTION a for me to be worth more than for- late of in the county of JJr BY THIS DEPARTMENT PASS-BOOK Cincinnati, The following matters of Halt- SAVINGS Hamilton, and state of , deceased, having Vil1 | tune," said George Power, the Burr'.ll National for the action HAN JOCK COUNTY PUBLISHING^!*. I No. 1227 issued by and of the thereof in said state presented thereuno,!1 fax. N. S., while talking to the Tan- Hank Nttlona! Bank). probate hereinafter indicated, IT IS (now liberty of Ohio, duly authenticated, hating HEItPmr few Finder win leave same at bank. ORDEKED: W. H. Titcs. Editor and Manager. Women to Gath- lac representative a days ago. please been to the Judge of Probate notice thereof 2#X) Expected Edward F. Cashier. presented That be given to an ! Small, I for our said of Hancock for the Mr. Power lives at 20 *4 Rotterberg County persons interested, by causing a SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. er in Cleveland the Week of Halifax, has lived in Nova Scotia I purpose of being allowed, filed and re- of this order to be published St.. our said thri* iu Advance) cord* d in the Probate-Court of weeks suceeasively In The (Strictly all his life and is a well known em- FEMALE HELP WANTED. for letters of Ellsworth 1920. for Na- County of Hancock;-and American, a newaaper published One Six month*..75 April 13-20, I ployee of the Nova Scotia Tram and administration with the will annexed Ellsworth, in said county, year.*1.50 of said that tw ... M to be issued to Rufus King at a Four month!?.50 Three months Power Co. may appear probate court to h* Cincinnati, the executor named in said at on tional Convention. HOTEL HELP WANTED held Ellsw'orth the second dav nt Single Copies. "I've actually gained eighteen to act as executor. ) will having declined March A. D. 1920. at ten of thl — and I Ordered. That notice thereof be I pounds since taking Tanlac help needed daily year around. clock in the forenoon .and be hoard ADVERTISING RATES ON APPLICATION. for flrst-clasK given to all Interested therein. u ; feel better In every way than I have HOTELAll kinds of hotel work persons thereon If they see cause. hotels !n a so the publishing a copy of this order ! reliable Maine, leading by Edward C. Hodman, late of the city communication* -hou'i he nl- MEETING POSTPONED in twenty-eight long years, and the season. 1 three weeks successively in the Ells- Bn*ineM | j summer hotels and camps during county and state of New York. dl'. orders what's more I have hundreds I Those to secure reliable hotel worth American, a newspaper printed iressed to, and all checks |and money spent wishing posi- ceased. Final account of George m TWO YEARS BY WAR ! tions sbouui always call or write to the at Ellsworth, in said County or Han- executor, filed for to The Hancock Cou.ntt Tcn- and hundreds of dollars on medi- Hodman, settlement made payable Mains Hotbi. Aukncy. new quarters, 47 Mam cock. prior to the second day of March. Kathleen U Coombs, late of cines and never got a particle of We know the A. D. 1920. that appear Winter taisHiNG Co., Ellsworth. Maine._ street. Established 3H years. they may Harbor, in said county, deceased. First con- 1 atm Fares at a Probate Court then to be held at Member- good until I found Tanlac,” hotels proprietors personally. paid and final account of Harry L. Delegate* Will Discuss New Ellsworth, in and for said County of Crabtree 1980 tinued Mr. Power. I to any point from Bangor. administrator, filed for settlement WEDNESDAY, FE ^RDABY S', Hancock, at ten o'clock in the fore- A. Carver, late of ship Basis for Students and Question in both 1 Fred Hog Island “I had rheumatism my noon, and show cause. If any they deceased. •CAN YOU BRAID YOUR HAIR?” IF in said county, First and Of Future for Work. from the knees down, and in ! have, against the same. account of H. Support legs can obtain and final Ralph Condon Peters has intro- bo, you pleasant. easy K. CI.ARK. for Congressman damp weather I just had to stay at work braided MERTRAIfD executor, filed settlement. Many Other Things. well-paid making ruga late of to author- work. ankles both- for us in own home. When Judge of Probate. Robert Kaighn. Philadelphia. duced in the House a bill home from My right your deceased. writing for further particulars, send A true copy. Pennsylvania, Petition filed in ered me too. and I don't believe any- | Walter 3. Mclnnes and Ellen K. ize the coinage of 50-cent pieces Asso- a small sample mat to show the quality Attest ROBERT P. KING. by Mo The Yoon# Women’s Christian 1 tines executors of the last body in the world ever suffered from of and sewing you are capable will and commemoration of the one hun- braiding Register. testament of said deceased, ciation of the United States of America rheumatism as bad as I did for it of doing. Pinkham Associates. Inc., that the amount of the Inheritance tax on anniversary of the admission will meet In national convention In 309 Anderson St.. Portland. Maine. STATE OF M \l \E. th# dredth was just a sharp shooting pain that estate of said deceased be determined He has the week of 13 to down HANCOCK ss. the of Probate. of Maine into the Union. Cleveland, O., April would go through my knees, held at Ellsworth by Judge MEN OR WOMEN TO TAKE ORDERS At a Probate Court Josephine E. Carpenter, late of of the the convention my legs and into my ankles like friends and for the In and for said County of Hancock, on Bar been assured by the secretary 20, having postponed among neighbors Harbor. In said county, deceased pe. was a knife genuine full lines the third day of February in the from the spring of 1918 In order to somebody sticking guaranteed hosiery, tit ion filed by Agnes Carpenter and treasury and the director of the mint for men. women and children. Elimi- of our Lord one thousand nine through me. and I would be in such year Edith Carpenter Macy. executrixes of comply with a government request that nates darning. We pay 50c. an hour hundred and twenty. will it. which the last will and testament of said that they approve agony that I would turn as white as for time or $24 for full time. Ex- A certain instrument to I expense and travel be reduced to a spare purporting deceased, that the amount of the in- favorable re- Write. Inter- be a of the last will and testa- practically insures its a sheet. When these attacks came perience unnecessary. copy heritance tax on the estate of said do | minimum during the war. national Stocking Mill. Norristown. Pa. ment of Grace M. Miller, late of Cin- and its enact- on me 1 wouldn't be able to sleep a ceased, be determined by the Judge of port by committee, The on conventions and cinnati. in the county of Hamilton and department wink but would roll and tumble all probate. These coins will furnish in- state of Ohio, deceased, and of the pro- Augustine G. Parker, late of ment. I conferences of the National Y. W. C. NOTICE. bate thereof in said state of Ohio, Brook- night long, and my joints would duly lir., in said county, deceased Ftrsl of the Maine cen- authenticated, having been presented teresting souvenirs A., of which Mrs. Harry Emerson Fos- swell and knees would be as stiff I hereby give my son. Austin Y. and final account of Haroid D. | my to the of Probate foe our sa*d Bowers, Frazier. commorant of Ellsworth, Judge administrator, filed for settlement. tennial. and will be eagerly sought dick is chairman, estimates an attend* as a board and I couldn't walk a of for Maine, his time during the remainder County Hancock the purpose of William O. Emery, late of allowed, filed and recorded in the Sullivan, mnee of 2,000 women, representing all step for two or three days at a time of his minority;! will pay none of his being in said county, deceased. First and tor. j Probate Court of our sab! of at bills nor collect any of his on County final account of Elisabeth H. departments of Y. W. C. A. work— I and would be laid up home flat on earnings Hancock, and for letters of adminis- Emory, or after this date. administratrix, filed for. sett lenient. my back with knees so stiff I tration with the annexed be board members, secretaries, students, my CHARLES C. FRAZIER. will to Is- Bernice A. Graves. Malcolm \V There was flutter of excitement sued to Ilufus of said Cincinnati, Girl from In- couldn't bend them at all. New York. Feb. 16. 1920. King Gravis, Alice V. Graves, Arnold K. dub girls. Reserves, girls the executor named in said will among the in Ellsworth "I noticed where Tanlac was having Graves, l-awris N. Graves. Raleigh P. politicians dustrial Service women from being declined to act as executor. Centers, Grav'-s and G. Graves, minors, was discovered that recommended by here in FREE TO LADIES. SEND US THE ORDERED. That notice thereof be Monday, when it the International Institutes for people right of Mount Desert, in said county. Pe- j foreign names of live of your lady friends and given to all persons interested there- Halifax, so I decided to try it. And tition filed by Alice T. Graves, guar- a law passed by the last legislature bom women, members from town we will mail you absolutely free a use- in by publishing a copy of this or- city, I dian. for license to sell certain r* al of. wouldn't take anything in the ful novelty. Send stamp to cover der tnre«- weeks in The that in city elections, certifi- and Associations successively fate of said minors, situated In Mount requires country world for the it has done me. mailing. Write quick. Burnart Nov- Ellsworth American. a good newspaper Desert and Bar Harbor, and nn»r*. of candidates Each Association In the Cnlted elty Company. Bath. Maine. at in said of fully cates of nomination If anybody don't believe that I am a printed Ellsworth, County described in said petition. Hancock, to the second dav of fourteen before States will be entitled to one voting well man. and that the prior Pearl S. Grlndle. of Sedgwick, in said must be filed days rheumatism March. A.D.1920.that may appear 1 they county. First and final account < f Ida for one hundred voting has left me and that I never at a Probate Court then to held at election, instead of seven days as delegate every entirely ; be L. filed for settle- the Ellsworth, in and for said County of Dodge, guardian, j members in the Association. feel even a trace of it. just tell them NATIONAL SURETY CO. ment. heretofore. And the Ellsworth city Hancock, at ten o’clock In the fore- to see Eugene Hale, late of Ellsworth, in Two of the most Important questions me. My appetite has picked noon, and show cause, if The NEW YORK | any they said county, deceased. First «ount election onily a week away! and I have in i have, the same. which will come up before the conven up gained weight, and against of Clarence Hale and Frederick Hale, of feel BERTRAND E. CLARK. law hadescaped the notice anyone tlon will be the basis and better in every way and can executors, filed for settlement. membership Judge of Probate. Rhoda A. Hamilton, late of Eil*- nomination sleep fine at night. Tunlac is the ASSETS DEC. 31. 1919. A true interested, and papers the question of support. Of old bus! copy. worlh. In said county, deceased pe- reatest thing I have ever seen, and Real estate. $81,065.22 Attest: ROBERT P. KING. were not filed until last Saturday ness to be considered the most Impor- tition that James E. Young or s.»me 1 want you to publish this statement Mortgage loans. 61.881.00 Register. other suitable person be appointed ad- The in office was not tant question will be the the of -odd night. party membership for I want everybody to know what Collateral loans. ministrator of estate de- STATE OF MAINE. ceased. presented by said James L for if there were basis for student associations, the this medicine will do." and worrying greatly, Stocks bonds. 14.121.585.08 COUNTY OF HANCOCK ss Young, son of said deceased. granting of charter privi- Tanlac is To the Honorable Justice of the Su- late no election, the present administra- membership sold in Ellsworth by E. Cash in office ami bank. 2.840.556.68 Clarence M. Hooper, Sedg- ! preme Judicial Court next to be held mid deceas 1 La*t lege to the Chicago Young Women’s G. Moore and by the leading Agent’s balance. 2.412.276.85 wick. in county, tion would hold over. But other druggist at Ellsworth within and for the account of Julian II. Hooper, admin- Christian Association and a reeorumen in town. Bills every receivable. 4.500.00 | County of Hancock on the fourth istrator. filed for settlement. cities are in the same predicament as datlon providing an Increase In mem Interest ami rents. 128.575.61 Tuesday of April. A. D. 1920. Kezla It. Jones, of Brooks'itie. in in of the Mary Hannah Gray, of said Ells- said county. First and final a.count Ellsworth, and anticipation bershlp of the National Board of tb« All other assets. 905.162.80 Sirriol.'! Diet. worth. libels and gives information of Fred J. Perkins, guardian. 1 for that the will that she is the wife of Winfield Scott probability legislature Association will also be presented. Gross assets. | The late pope is < pre- Both political parties held cau- Total liabilities and aur- cruelty; that his habits are gross and sented by Judith M. Parker, widow of The convention will be in sessioi. International confirmed habits of cuses in Ellsworth last week, the Courtesy. $19,308,922.06 intoxication from mu id deceased. and the use of intoxicating liquors. That Rloomfleid Reed, late of Southwest re- morning evening, the afternoon Foreign ves.-els entering United democrats on Wednesday and the there is no collusion between them in said d- ■ ased. « ft * 1. !•, It. to Harbor, county. and being given over to sectional meetings- -States ports are to obtain a divorce. K publicans Thursday, nominated obliged display W nlerJimn, \ > Final account of Ferdinand Meed, Wherefore she full tickets. Mayor A. C. held In various churches. Attendance only the ting of the country to which ASSETS DEC. 31. 1919. prays that a divorce administrator, filed for sett!* m-nt Hagerthy may be decreed to her; that she late of Kir Har- at these will be Real estate. $">1,207.88 may George Edwin Kirk, was renominated by the republicans, meetings determined they helong. It Is how- be allowed to resume her maiden A cer- customary, Mortgage loans. 463.212.00 name. bor. in said county, deceased and thirteenth Mary Hannah \Vhittaker; that she t<> be th* thus for the time by group membership and also by ac ever. for steamers to carry the Unit- Collateral loans 134.250.00 may tain instrument purporting recover her costs of this libel, and that last will and testament of said de- heads the republican ticket. Fred B. ti Titles. Stocks and bonds. 4.909.425.81 she ed States tine -it the fort peak when may be allowed reasonable uli- c-HSed. together with petition f<*r pro- re- Cash in office and bank. 705,637.21 Marden was renominated by the Mrs. W. P Harford of Omaha, Neb. bate thereof and for the appointment ■titering United Stales ports but this Agent's balance. 459.216.02 And publicans for street commissioner. will at Interest and your libelant alleges that the of the executor without giving bond, preside the opening session :s a matter rents. 61.671.19 lib. ie.- IS out of will be merely of international All other the *State of Maine, presented by Edward Kirk, the execu- Mayor Hagerthy opposed by been elected assets. 169.917.12 thnt the residence having as president the ’ourteey and Is not of the libelee is not tor therein named. Frank L. Heath, and Perley J. Phil- compulsory. known to the libelant, and cannot be late of K Haworth, last convention of the Young Women's Cross assets. $6,954,537.23 Abhy S. Robinson. lips is the democratic nominee for ascertained by reasonable diligence, in said deceased. A rtain Christian Deduct items not admitted, 24 2.867.33 and county, Association, held In Los An she pray* that this court will or- instrument to be ti last street commissioner. The nominees First in purporting In 1915. Opera England. this IM..1 l,y pul.ll.-BtIon will and testament of said d< -ased tor aldermen are as follows: geies Admitted assets. $6,711,669.90 in Th-' Ellsworth The In 165f, there was produced “The American. together with petition for probate Republicans—Ward 1, Carlton S. committee on business to roue LIABILITIES. DEC. 31. 1919 MARY HANNAH GRAY. thereof and for the of the of •, appointment before the convention Siege Khodes: Made a Representa- Net losses. .Subscribed and sworn to this tth executrix without bond, pre- Donnell; ward 2. Frank R. Moore; has for Its chair unpaid 531.285.92 of day9 giving tion hv the Art Unearned February. A. D. 1920 sented Alice H. Scott, executrix woman Mrs. John of Perspectives in premiums. 3.207.044.00 by ward 3. Eugene A. Carlisle; ward 4. French anu Includes All other Before me. therein named. Scenes and the liabilities. 4 63.000.00 Asa C. Flood; ward 5, Charles F. among its members Mrs John D story sung in recitative Cash capital. 500.000.00 FRED E. MASON. Lewis K. Sawyer, late of Tr-mont. in a Surplus over all Justice of the Peace, said deceased. Petition that Fuller. Rockefeller. Jr., Miss Eliza Outlet, sis- Mustek," which writer in the Dic- liabilities. 2.010.339.98 county, Heber O, or some other suita- Democrats — Ward 1. Clifford of National Sawyer ter of Nicholas Murray Butler, presi tionary Biography charac- Total liabilities and surplus. STATE OF MAINE. ble person be appointed administrator Earle Smith; ward 2, Edward F. dent terized as “in some the most $6,711,669.90 bh of the estate of said deceased without of Columbia University Mim. respects _ HANCOCK bond, lb her G. Small, ward 3. Russell J. Smith; SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT. giving presented by Martha McCook, Miss Mabel epoch-making play in the language." PROBATE 1V9TICBS. son of said ward 4. Charles W. ward Crafty, In Vacation. Sawyer, and heir-at-law Sweeney; it was the first Notice is hereby given that the fol- dec*- used. general secretary for the National virtually opera pro- Ellsworth, February 3. A. 1920 5. Frank J. Dunleavy. lowing appointments have been made 14, Holsle M. Atkins, a minor, of Cran- Board of Y W duced in by the Probate Upon the foregoing libel .Ordered' The full tickets in the the C. A., and Mrs Wll England. Court within and for berry Isles, in said county. Petition appear the of Klv* notice to the Ham all of New County Hancock. State of Maine: Jh,V „t£*„,ib#,,ant filed by Charles W. Bracy. guardian, specimen ballots on 6 Adams Brown, York said libel lee to apear before the printed pages William Baker Jus- for license to sell certain r« state Thompson, late of tice of our .Supreme Judicial and 7. city. of Hudson. In the State of de- Court, of said minor, situated in said Cran- Beginning Pittsburgh. Michigan, to be holden at Ellsworth, within and -o- ceased. Gamaliel berry Isb s and more dcs r.i ed in November 25 is the Ingham Thompson. County Of Hancock, fully anniversary of Royal Wheeler and Vor on the said petition. EELS WORTH FALLS. Thompson William Jourth Tuesday of April. A. D. the raising of the English over the Royal Thompson of Hudson, 1920, by Lucy s. Temple, late of Bin ting Michigan, publishing anattested copy of said li- ksport, appointed executors of the last will bel in said county. deceased. Petition ruins of Fort in 1754. The and this order thereon, three -Mrs. w arren joraan oi Brewer Doquesue and testament of said filed by Theodore H. Smith, adminis- TOWN GIRLS TO deceased; date of weeks successively in the Ellsworth was for real place then named Pittsburgh, in qualification January 6. A. D. 1920. a trator. license to sell certain spent a part of last week here. Mr. American, newspaper printed in EUs- in Notbeing residents of the State of ™th In estate of said deceased, situated Jordan was here over honor of Britain's famous prime minis- our county of Hancock, the said Sunday. Maine, they Have appointed Edmond J. ast Ruck sport. and more fully publication to be thirty at The many friends of William D. ter. It owes its great growth to its Walsh of Ellsworth, in the of least days described In said petition. County prior to the fourth of Hancock. State of Maine, as their Tuesday Rufus O. of Castln- in Thomas, a former resident here, but ! HAVE Y. W. C. A. proximity to coal uud iron fields of April next, that she may there and Parker, late agent in said State of Maine, as the then in our said county, deceased. Petition that for some years a resident of Leland, vast said Court appear and magnitude. law directs. answer to said libel Alice I». Coombs or some other suitable Wash., were sorry to learn of his Mary O. Fuller, late of person be of Boston. LI* ERE R. DEASY. appointed administrator Massachusetts, deceased. Caroline W. the estate or said nted death recently. Justice of the Sup. Jud. Court. deceased, pr-c*. Association Maintains 52 Town Fuller of Brookline. Massachusetts, A true by George W. a son of said de- Charles E. Keisor died Good Advice ap- copy of the libel and order of Parker, Saturday pointed executrix of the last will and court thereon. ceased. afternoon at the hospital in Bangor, testament of said deceased; date of Secretaries—Wants to Ex- The man who doesn't worry when Attest. T. F. MAHONEY. V»rltT, IHIP U where he qualification 3. A. D. had been for treatment for February 1920. Clerk. Desert. in said county. deceased ** *r8t 'le ought to is as bad as the one whe Not a resident some at the being of the State of and final account of Elston A Carter, months, age of forty- pand Work at Once. she vorries when he shouldn’t. Worrying Maine, has appointed George F. executor, filed for settlement four years. Mr. Keisor was the son Bartlett of Sorrento, in the of is County COUNTY Frank L. late of Southwest of Mr. and Mrs. John Keisor. He bad for the health, but probably nol Hancock. State of Maine, as her agent OF HANCOCK ss Gilley, the war girt* all over the Harbor, in said deceas<- Pe- "During in said State of Maine, as the law di- February 12. A. D. 1920. countv. leaves, besides his parents, a widow is bad as letting things drift. In cast tition some world had their first lesson In rects. Taken this 12th day of that Philip F M. Gilley nation n reoruary.February, A. other ad- and five children—John. Charles, if rain, run for an umbrella. Instead William C. Townsend, late of U O” exoculi°n dated suitable person be appoint'd wide and world wide thinking." sav( Orland, January ministrator of the ♦•state of said de- Silas, Alice and Delia Keisor; also if in said county, deceased. William A. : v '“mw1 uu a judgmentJudgment Miss Mabel saying “Don’t Worry” the best ad rendered *?£■the “SX?! .a ceased. presented Maud H Gilley, two Rend, director of Town and Peavey of said Orland. ex- by Ellsworth municipal by sisters. Mrs. William J. Allen appointed ‘•W at a widow of said deceased. vice to give a man in trouble is “Gel ecutor of the last will and testament term thereof begun and held and Mrs. Marie K. Country Work for the National Y. VV N. late of Bar Har- Maddocks. both of of said deceased; date of ^,i*®'vorth- within and for satj coun- Nancy Sawyer, Busy.”—Thrift Magazine. qualification ot bor, in said I’• ,r!on Bar Harbor. The body was taken to C A February 3. A. D. 1920. ty Hancock, on the first Tuesday of county, deceased. A. D. that Phehe S. Rodick or som» "ther Bar Harbor “Cirls learned Dorothy A. Bent, late of in January 1920. to wit, on the 13G, Tuesday for interment. something of the Brooklin. suitable person he a'lndui*- said county, deceased. E. ?* A D. 1920. in favor of appointed Rev. H. W. was Ralph Bent “J*£ J.?nuiir>- trator of the deceased* Conley called to inspiration of working with hundred, Thermos Bottle of said Joseph Dondis of Long Island Plant*- estate of said Brooklin.appointed executor of tion.in said without by Dexter by the death of his sister. and of the last will and testament of county of Hancock. Riving bond, present'd hundreds other girls un If us*.' said de- Herman Uair.M I hehe S. de- you rhernm you ceased; date of Anderson and Rodick, daughter of sa’d Mrs. Frances A. Stevens, of pneu- and qualification February bolh Emily Ander- ceased. selfishly unstinting!?, throngh Red will notice, after usitir first 3. A. D. 1920. ??”• of I-ong Island Planla- monia on Sunday at the time, for morning, Cross work Now the Y W C A dollars ,md forty- Albert H. Lullum. late of 12 i Is worth. that the cork vmell or ei>,ht cents,Blxt>':n,n*i debt In in- home of her step-daughter, Mrs. may musty ert. in said county. deceased. or damage, and four- said county, deceased. V certain through Its world wide nl George teen dollars and strument wn* Josie Burnard. Mrs. program have th* kIo- oi <*;»(" e on it. To do Henry Freeman of in said sixty-eight cents costs purporting to be tA*» last Stevens was Tremont. and ! to- service for women. Is planning to e* county, appointed administrator of the testament of said leceas* formerly Frances A. Pierce of Ells- away with this entire';*, dip the cork u«r« gether with there- Its work estate of said deceased; date of qual- as: petition for probate worth Falls, of pan*! so that girls all over the of and r f the daughter the late in hot par.: i n until nil the [wires are ification February 3. A. 1). 1920 for the appointment John and Priscilla world, and particularly In smaller com William O late of executor without giving bond, pre- Pierce, and many closed. ii* oh* whenever the Emery, Sullivan, o < lock in the z& sented paraffio in said county, deceased. ™V-V'MaMforenoon, the following by John Lullum, executor old acquaintance learn with oi munltles. will not lose this experience Edmond J dea. r.he.l real named* regret is worn orV.—ciooj Walsh of Ellsworth, in said ealate and Si! In said will. her death. Housekeeping. county ap- title and Interest ihjrttlS *tness of She married Samuel L “Citizenship forums are being organ pointed administrator, d. b. which the said Her- Bertrand E. Clark. Judge n. of the man Andersen has said Court tenth Stevens of and for Ized estate of said date and had In at Ellsworth this Bangor, many for girls In small communities deceased; of qualifi- the same on the and*to of of cation 13. A. 17th day of November day February In the year years her home was in that where February i». 1920. our city girls may come together to lean Bertha E. \\ ° Clock and mla- Lord one thousand nine hundred where Ideal Union. itham, late of Bucksport utesutealn’the in the f.WO and she was widely and more in said afternoon, the tim-* when twenty. favorably about their country and their re What county, deceased. J. E. With- known. Mr. Stevens greater thing is there for tw< iim of said »"«hed on the wr t u ROBERT died twenty to it Bucksport. appointed ad- he SI *“B. P. KING. Register. sponslbillty and as citizens 01 human ministrator of the °n« '‘"d one- years ago. She leaves, besides the souls, than to feel that the; estate of said de- halfnan acre ofnV l? w},: A true copy. the world. ceased; date of land more or i,.u- krother and are for life—to qualification February the Attest: step-daughter men joined strengthen eacl o. A. D. 1920. jthd buildings and wharf ROBERT P. KING. Sioned. “Reading courses have been James on the Register. two daughters. Mrs. Herbert planned other in all labor, to rest in each othe Adair, late of Bar Harbor, in i5*r-%n °fjKyated easttj- at National said Island Harbor at M. Stevens of Belfast, and Miss Headquarters In New York in county, deceased. Charles H. l? £$1 all sorrow, to minister to each othe Wood of 8aid Ix,nbr Island Plan- so that a In said Bar Harbor, appointed tatinnhf«ro’ ? Maude B. Stevens of The girl any community mat u owned and Bangor. In all pain, to be one with each othe administrator d. b. n. of the estate of 8r«i;™,.ri’;J. t*2td.»nd occut>i> funeral on a Morse, and known as the SPECIAL NOTICES. was at Dexter, Tuesday; in carry course of study, either hv said deceased; date of qualification oa-cu^-iWm ^M in silent, unspeakable memories at th* «*“*<» and now terment at Mt. herself or with other February 3. A. D. 1320. o'1: Hope cemeterv. Ban girls, 0.1 a wid* cuple|r0hPvert.yi,;° DISSOLUTION OF. moment of the last parting?—Georg* George W. Butler, late of Bluehill. in Keft-renr/ tt?*5frn2an Anderson. PARTNERS!!'*1 gor. variety of subjects said from thr Eliot. county deceased. Walter R. Rut- Morst ”o Wm M wCtl, Sylvester Notice is hereby given that er of said “The Y. W. C. A. has at present thlr Bluehill. appointed admin- partnership lately subsisting between istrator of the estate of Scott a"» tv-nlne secretaries said deceased PageSM^1? of. Deed8°Tn'book^O. .the undersigned Fred ,C. doing county wort* °f U il.iam H. Scott, on busiti*® There is more catarrh in this sec- quaI,ftcation Eebruary3. A. I). carrying This means ut style tion of the country than all othei that they travel about from 19-io Ellsworth. Maine, under the WANTED. Emeline F. or firm of F C. was on diseases put together, and for H one Ginn, late of Southwest & W. H. .Scott, years community to another he! pint Harbor, in "r' said A was supposed to be incurable. Doc- said county, deceased. JoBie mhm«tay of d\"°n "f'a‘'ton to.7, tw/i‘nly'fRth day of February f. girls to WILD RABBITS— E Meader H8 D. 1919, to a and tors prescribed local remedies, and plan out social, recreational ALIVE AND UN of Mount Desert, in said conveyance' £OV*.r2b*r- A J2?? *SiB8.oIved mutual consent, by injured. O. A. con- tnat the be ear- constantly failing to cure with loca educational and DOYLE, Ellswortl county, appointed administratrix ol .rac business in future will religious activities foi Falls, Me. Box 111. tht* srvssr*l,y ned on alone treatment. pronounced it incurable »aid deceased; date o! WARD by the said Fred C. Scott themselves and W. WESCOTT, " debts Catarrh is a local disease, in- organizing them to ear TO qualification February 3. A. D. 1920 ,5**’ pay and discharge all greatly RENT—AN UPRIGHT PIANO I! Calvert Sheriut llrect city Powell. Carl L Richards, Paul S his. games and social life. better Bangor.Iv. f5 30 t3 15 a man can bear. lamps. He enjoyed nothing C A self,*' said I'ncie i.ben Richards, Reynolds and wife, B Brewer June...... 5 37 3 21 “sometimes inis Is done with the co-operation his j. -o- than a recital of some of earlier S Rose and Holden. 5 59 3 43 von de he "f wife. Francis Wakefield, surprises by ay manages to the factories managers and it was his work McKenzie's.. f6 04 pro- experiences, unless V ives W akefield, A K Whitaker make a and Phillips Lake... f6 06 f 3 50 Subscribe for The American puny good speech -m a mighty prietors. One of the most Influential in his garden, in which he took de- wife. !. Ruth F. Whitaker, Lester E Green Lake. 6 16 4 00 slim subject." <>f these Is He continued his $1.50 Per Year Mrs. Suzuki, the most served pride. lioung and wife. Linwood Young and Nicolin. f6 26 f4 10 the Ellsworth Falls. 6 39 4 23 prominent woman manufacturer In work in his garden all through wife, Leonard S and Young wife, Ellsworth 6 47 4 31 summer, and his almost daily Jerse E |. ■lapun who Is owner and manager of a past Young, Crosby R Young, Wash’gt’n June. 1. 6 53 4 45 until the severe firm which exported $11,000,000 worth walks down town Helen M Googins, Anna M Young. Franklin Road.. r: ii f4 52 weeks pre- Hancock. 7 2«. 5 00 of weather of the past few l>enn oil to America last year. Weuk-eng, £ Fy!. 7 24 5 03 vented. Mt Desert ar .. Recently Mrs. Suzuki decided to BORN. Fy t7 30 tfi 10 bijou theatre: Capt. Means leaves one son. Ever- j one thousand women lu her employ ett S. Means of Ellsworth, and four t ranklin. Fet 21'. to Mr and Sullivan.ar. t7 50 D\rER—At.Mrs Sorrento.i. ODD FELLOWS BUILDING offices She could not And enough Miss Arie Means. Mrs. Dana Dyer, a daughter. (Cleo t8 2C daughters, Annetta.) Bar Harbor ..ar. 1855 *600 well trained ones so she established Mattie B. Harriman. Mrs. Lyman L. a of f Thursday, F_b. 28—Matinee and permanent school where Japanese Lord and Mrs. F. H. Osgood, all MARRIED. Slope on signal or on notice to conductor. Evening bu.. .eu. t Dai g rls be trained to enter the busl Boston. Daily, y. except may CUMMINGS—MAXFIELD— At Alexan- Sunday. The funeral was held at the home dria. Va. Feb Miss WILLI AW! FARNUM ness world. The greatest danger 18, Edna E Cum- DaNa C. DOUG LA1 R. H. mings of Portland to ahead of this afternoon. Rev. Moyle Harold F Max- Federal in tlu- biir urcvlnctinii Japan, she says, is In Its held of Charleston, N C. and J. B. officiating. — Coy — growing materialism, nud Japan's IJNSCOTT STOVER At I-amoine M. L. HARRIS, fell 14. by Rev W H Rice. Miss Caro- Oenerni greatest the of her Passenger Agent. “THE RAINBOW TRAIL” need, development iine l.lnscott to Stover, both Leroy I'oat Mail e. women. GEORGE BYRON JAMESON. of Lamoine. and, A » No Voil i-vil eel B. Jameson, a lifelong resi- George DIED. ADMISSION lO ami 20 cvnts, I*Iuh the War Tax 44444444444444444 dent of Ellsworth, and one of its use- ful and worthy citizens, died last Bucksport, Feb. 18, Mrs. BRIDGES^-AtMyrtle Williams Thursday, in the seventy-first year of Bridgets. 4 NATIONAL FRIENDSHIPS 4 BROWN—At Franklin. Feb 14. Mrs PLUMBING his age. Mel vi na Brown, 4 DEPEND UPON WOMANKIND 4 aged 69 years, 6 Mr. Jameson was horn in Ells- months. 3 days. Hot Water + —At Green Heating, Fi>rn;ne 4 As a man he learned Rake, Dedham, worth. young teb 23. Marv. wife Smith’s Sea Food"* Meat Market 4 Japanese Diplomat Men 4 of Martin A. Gar- Says the trade of a sailmaker, and worked aged 39 years. 2 months. 4 Work and 4* days. Jobbing, Alone Cannot Create Interna 4 at it for years, for some time being Deer lsl*. Feb. 1S.Capt.John affefl 32 years. 4* tional Friendliness. 4 in business for himself. This H 'NEST WORK: HONEST PRICES Fresh, Salt, Smoked and Dry Fish, Oysters and Clams JAMESON—At Ellsworth. Feb. 19, Geo. 4* 4 naturally led to awning work, and 70 5 vi a ivrvMr*T*2n’ yeai*s» months. 4* with the decline of sail-making here, K&>—At *North Ellsworth. Feb. Years’ Maine Coast is but we can 15c International friendship be- 4 Twenty Experience. Haddock scarce, supply you, lb Fs telle. widow of Galen tween he gave most of his attention to awn- i?or.a 4 nations depends largely 4 Maddoeks. aged o2 years. work, to this carpet MEANS—At Persona! attention to all details. Telephone A full line of all kinds of Meats and Fresh Vegetables. ou 4 upon the between 4 ing adding Ellsworth. Feb. 23. Capt. Try friendly feeling or mail orders atteucbd r >. cleaning and laying. Nehemiah H. Means, aged 95 years. 3 promptly Home-made Meat 25c Head Cheese, ;$Oc It has no 4 the women of those nations, ac- 4 months. 28 days. Sausage equal. He was a useful citizen, a good 4 cording to representatives of the 4 PARKER—At Bluehill, Feb 19, Pearl S neighbor and loyal friend. He 74 y‘*arB- 15 days. Uruund Bone for Hens. for Hides. Live 4 In 4 C w-vte,^ed EDWARD F. Highest prlre p.thl poultry bought. Japanese embassy Washington leaves a widow, one son. Edward D. SALNDERS—At Old Town, Feb 21 BRADY, 4 Their is Sarah E.. widow of Edward theory that there can 4 Jameson of Bangor, and one sister, Saunders Oran' of Ellsworth, aged 70 years St., Ellsworth, Me. 4 be no firm between 4 friendship Mrs. Clifford Cousins of Ellsworth. Tlrpy—At °**Ian~- Feb. 13. Mrs. Betsy Telephone 173-2. 4* two nations unless the women of 4 The funeral was held at the home Trim, aged 84 years. 4 months. PAltCKL POST OltDKRS OIVKN PROMPT AITKNTIO.N 4 those two countries know and 4* Sunday afternoon. Rev. R. H. 4 like officiating. Subscribe For one another, as co-operation 4 Moyle CARD OF THANKS. He 4 between nations, ns In the state 4 desire thus publicly to express our sincere gratitude to neighbors and Water Street Maine 4 and In the family. Is based on co- 4 Sedgwick. friends Ellsworth, I tor their kindness and sympa- News has been received by Mrs shown The Ellsw orth 4 operation between men and wo- 4 thy in so many ways during our American Herbert O. Young of the death of her recent bereavement; also for the 4 men 4 many sister. Mrs. Johnson. Mrs. floral offerings. 4 If and Amerl- Sopjironia Mrs. Oscar Tlie Piiiicr That Stops Coming When Therefore, Japan 4 Johnson was a native of Brooktin. Staples. Mrs. Clifford A. 4 ca are to have n real, lasting 4 Sargent. Subs.ription Expires. No more sub Prices For 1920 but since the death of her husband, Mrs. Lena G. Moore. Seed bills 4 friendship, to really know and 4 Capt. Frank Johnson, some years Ellsworth Falls. Me.. Feb. 23. 1920. scription piling up unexnectedly. If You'Want to Save Money 4 understand one another, the wo- 4 ago. had spent much of her time with Von get what you pay for, but the 4 men of the two nations must 4 Mrs. Young and other relatives in paper will not be forced upon you on Seeds Send us Your Order this town and Brooklin. Her home 4 learn to play together, to study 4 beyond iliat time. was on Deer Isle. She leaves three H. W. IU:\\S 4 together and to think together 4 DUNN I:it. alpaca lined coat, li. B ESTEY & 4 many things which they bad 4 Mrs. Henry Scott February 10. CO., Proprietors BEETS Admiral Dewey .45 .85 5.70 full li ed in sizes nine «>* y4 tt» nt 4 never of before the 4 Mrs. E. J. Douglass has gone to pants, to “tate Street. Me Improved Telephone .45 .85 5.70 thought doing IS))*.worth. Detroit Dark Red .15 .50 1.75 Medford. Mass., called by the illness sixteen years. Value #18.00 Duke of Albany .45 .85 5.70 4 war 4 Crosby Egyptian .15 .50 1.75 of her daughter, Mrs. A. E. Bliss Everbearing: .45 .85 5.70 i- imp w * a nas neen ns- t- Spurling. Crimson Globe .15 .50 1.75 Friends of Mr. and Mrs. George Eh .St rate gem .30 .50 3.15 4- sured the fullest possible oo-opor- 4* Price $1-1.75 Korbiton Giant (stock) .15 .45 1.50 Smith of Arlington, Mass..extend con- Marrowfat .25 .40 2.40 4* a!ion of fhp Japanese embassy + •Alan's Mammoth .15 .45 1.50 gratulations on the birth of a son, Hardwood Wanted Canada Field .15 .25 1.50 **• Co hie n and the Japanese people In mak- 4 Tankard .15 .45 1.50 George. Percale Its “World Service 4* Boy’s Blouses of high grade Kane's Imp Sugar .10 .45 1.25 1M XI I'K I \ Vi It» n» 4* ing program” Mrs. E. C. Whitmore has been in j We are in the market for Hound make in sizes Conn Field .10 .35 1.00 4* for three million dollars to he 4* Bar Harbor the past two weeks. eight to til teen C*Un\GE White Sugar .10 .35 1.00 4* used for women and girls In the 4- Edward Hopkins and daughter years. Value *1.15 Uircli, Yellow Birch, Bock Early Jersey Wakefield .40 1.60 4- United States. India, China, In- 4* Dorothy, who have been guests at Danish Ball Head .75 2.50 It A DISH MapU, also * Good ac- South Mrs. Harold Higgins’, have returned Poplar. Prices, Scarlet White Tip .15 .45 1.50 4* pan. America, Egypt, Si- 4- Price 85c CARROT to 4- berla. the Near East and Mexico 4* Bridgeport, Conn. cording to quality of stock. Pleas Danvers Half .20 .60 MU IMS C HARD .15 .45 1.50 Feb. 23. X. Long 2.00 4* a success. 4* Chatenay .20 .65 2.00 -o- call at our office or address Ox SPIN VC II Heart .20 4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4-4- North I.amoine. .60 2.00 Thick Leaf .10 .30 1.00 ^a>ng Orange .15 .50 1.50 Edward Gilpatrick, who has spent New Zealand .15 .50 1.75 Y. W. C. A. TRAINS WOMEN ■COM N some time hare on business, has re- nit Ex i:n» ishdi MUI ASH turned to New Haven. Conn. Early Crosby .25 .45 2.60 "Mte War ted Hubbard .15 .50 1.75 Voting women students from forty The triends of Mary Tripp Chase, Sent Ellsworth Hardwood Co. Cory .25 .45 2.60 prepaid parcel post, C. O. I)., «nlden Golden Hubbard .15 .50 1.75 four states and nine countries -China formerly of this town, sympathize Bantam .25 .45 2.60 or upon receipt of Delicious .15 .50 1.75 the Philippine Islands, France. Bulga with her in the death of her husband money ouler. Early Yellow Canada 15 .25 1.75 in Bath, where they now reside. .Satisfaction guaranteed or c,, TOMATO rla. Holland. Russia. Armenia, Canada money GARDEN SEEDS hbbr «»* n» — Feb. 23. Y. refunded. y* n» Earllana .35 1.25 and Mexico are registered In the Improved White We have some Choice Seeds all .15 .50 1.50 National Training School of the Young E°“k Green 15 .50 Tl RMP grown 1 hi h and tested •lap 1.50 Women’s Christian Association In Nev Valuable Japanese Plant. Climbing .15 .50 1.50 liuta Basil .15 .50 1.75 Boston York. A plant glows in Japan which fur- -turnip, i Jarrot, iJcet, Parsnip and Pickling .15 .50 1.50 Yellow' Aberdeen .15 .45 nish a son of Strap Leaf .15 .45 1.50 They are studying methods of Y W vegetable leather. It Cucumber E'KIVK is u DUNHAM BROS. WHEAT, BARLEY, C. A work with a view to pretty .rub called the mitsumata. <***•» Curled OATS, Ill'CK- taking up .15 .50 and its inr -r in WHEAT, MILLET, CLOVER. Etc. positions In Y. W C. A work either in bark, after going through Specialists Boys’ Clothing Price 5 cents per packet cert a tills or in other of the coun :a pro.-, sses. Is converted into u country 87 SUMMER Address 112 suti. iaiue ST., BOSTON, MASS. n. C. MAIN STREET, tries \vh‘»re the Y \Y C. A. is earning as tough as French kid, so and that one AddregH Mail-order STRATTON, Ellsworth, ma.ne on, opening expanding lis work. transparent can almost see Department Hancock Co. & Seed I'rloee to through it, and ns Nursery Co. subject change without notice. terms cash. pliable and soft as call’s lan. SURRY, MAINE English Women Buying Farms. Women in England are buying their own farms or their own truck and gar- den spaces In rather conspicuous num- Your an of child’s And this

Feebleness. Previse! ro". The Forgetful Parson. There is Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson tells nothing wi.i-h tries oui j “Tos. pr 1 -.ii clad that my of an old West patience r.mi good Cl more that. J son, Ola, la now safely provided for an amusing story coun- feebleness; the ti. ’d:ty he aoill.i ! for the rest of his life.” “Indeed try parson who had to hold two serv- tien. the conventionality, u fretful Hon is that?" “Well, I don't know ; Ices, one In his own church and one In the church over the moor. BP" the prejudices of tlie weak; thi how. I only know that we heart! On at the latter church he fact -inii the people can be so v.ell fron him yesterday from Christiania arriving REPUBLICAN DEMOCRAT. Into the and said he was meaning and so disap]>o;ming. It ha- telling us that some judge had jnst ; got pulpit awfully sorry, but he had forgotten been truly said that there is no strait gi'en him a life term.”—Christiania For Mayor, For Mayor. < to a most admirable sermon so nt!nu<>. as that of helping Vikingen. bring which he had written. St.., trieaii to climb,— Exchange. Alexander C. Hagerthy. AVard 1. Frank L. Heath. Ward 2. "Luckily," he continued, “as 1 came Liberty Before All Things. across the moor, I remembered a beau- □ Trench-Digging Crab. Blandishments will not fascinate ns. ful story, which I will tell you In of the sermon. □ One of the creatures most at nor will threats of a halter Intimidate place Er-er-well, dash adept For Street Commissioner, For Street we are determined I’ve too?” Commissioner, mimicry is the fiddler crab. This cu- us; for, under God. It, forgotten that, rious creature is an in trench that, whatsoever, whensoever or how- expert Fred B. Ward 2. J. Ward 2 soever we shall be called to make our Marden, Perley Phillips. digging. He carries with him. as part we will die free men.—Joslah of his body, e.n extraordinary weapon exit, □ which serves as spade, sword and Quincy. li/7ton you are "wide awake as rr ilCfl □ spoon. This is an enlargement of one an owl” at night, and □ in the For Alderman. For Alderman. claw shaped so much like a fiddle that Goodness of Apples. can’t "keep your eyes open” day- need it gives the crab its name. Beer use we like apples we use them time you certainly Frank R. Moore, Ward 2. Edward F. Small. Ward 2 ■at apart from that we use them he- □ •ause they contain healthful acids, □ First Overhead Trolley. needed minerals including Iron, lime The first practical overhead trolley- tnd sulphur, many calories of energy, □ □ line was built in Kansas City in 1884. md some real nutrition. True, an esgS&s For Warden. For Warden, in which double overhead conductors Self poison- Bcccham's .pple is eighty-five per cent water, but were used, with a trolley wheel ing by im- Pills cor- riding so is milk, and the apple has thirteen Harry R. Jude, Ward 2. Herman J. Scammon. Ward 2. on the top of the wire. perfectly rect it. □ >er cent of sugar and starches. eliminated Ufi«t Stl* «f □ ---—o- food poi- AwNeCciwia tlM WmU, sons is a Subscribe for the □ □ Subscribe for the com- very For Ward Clerk. For Ward Clerk. Ellsworth American Ellsworth American mon ailment. l'oVr'Sk. 'j James A. French. Ward 2. □ Ralph H. Wescott. Ward 2 0 STATE OF MAINE. □ □ For Constable, For Constable. List of Candidates nominated to be voted for in the of Ellsworth City Fred G. Smith. Ward 2. George C. Pierson. Ward 2. March I, 1920 Penalty for wilfully defacing, tearing down, removing or destroying a list of Candidates □ or Specimen Ballot, five to one hundred dollars fine. THOMAS E. HALE, City Clerk.

To a vote straight party ticket, place a cross (X> in the square above the party group of Candidates for whom you desire to vote; or omit the crosstXi in the large square above the party group and place a cross

SPECIMEN BALLOT y < WARD THREE

WARJD ONE.

I. REPUBLICAN L .1 L J DEMOCRAT. For Mayor, REPUBLICAN. For Mayor, DEMOCRAT. Alexander C. Hagerthy, Ward 1. Frank L. For Mayor. □ Heath, Ward 2. For Mayor. I] Alexander C. Hagerthy. Ward 1. Frank L. Heath. Ward 2. □ D □ For Street Commissioner. □ For Street Commissioner, Fred B. Marden, Ward 2. For Street □ Perley J. Phillips, Ward 2 Commissioner. For Street Commissioner. □ □ Fred B. Marden, Ward 2. Perley J. Phillips, Wrard 2 □ □ □ □ For Alderman, For Alderman, □ □ Eugene A. Carlisle, Ward 3. For Alderman. Russell J. Smith, Ward 3. For Alderman. □ D Carlton S. Donnell, Ward 1. Clifford Earle Smith, Ward 1. □ □ □ For Warden. □ For Warden, □ □ Albion H. Carlisle, Ward 3. For Warden, Edward R. Dunham, Ward 3. For Warden. □ □ Charles H. Merriam, Ward 1. □ Lyndon McGown. Ward 1. □ D For Ward Clerk. □ For Ward Clerk. □ □ Andrew A. Webber, Ward 3. For Ward Clerk. Henry Dunham, Ward 3. For W’ard Clerk, □ c Frank S. Call, Ward 1. □ Arthur B. Mitchell, Ward 1 □ □ For Constable, fl For Constable. □ □ Frank E. Brown. Ward 3. For Constable, Bernard McDevitt, Ward 3. For Constable, □ c Leslie W. Jordan. Ward 1. Albert G. Garland, Ward 1. □ a □ t □ □ The First WOMEN Bottle of PE-RU-NA ADOPT

WARD Entirely Free from 10.000 0RPHANS FOUR. Gave Catarrh of the Stomach “Peruna has positively done for ine what many doctor* foiled to Connecticut to Provide Foster Relief do. I have been time and again compelled to take to my bed for days. The first bottle of Peruna Mothers for Little Victims pave relief and while I aiwa/8 so keep it in the house for emerg- of Turks. encies, I conMldcr my*elf entirely free from catarrh of the Mtomnch. the trouble from which I suf- Writes fered for so long before taking Ten thousand little victims i • this remedy.” of j Turkish brutality are to be foster- O. or ,!r',& ¥,• Tf?%,n> Engineer, Liquid Tablet Form 7. Ry, 17 Highland St, Grand Sold Everywhere • mothered by the big hearted women is, .Vlch. Ask Your Dealer | j of Connecticut as the result of ap- j peals by Near East Relief, the former j Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief of 1 Madison avenue, New York ONE-FOURTH WORLD'S city. The women at a meeting voted J to “adopt" that number as their share WOMEN IN CHIN', j of the 250,000 homeless and starving ! boys and girls orphaned In the massa- REPUBLICAN. DEMOCRAT. | cres and deportations. Seventy Per Cont. Employees in ! Three hundred representatives of For Mayor, j women’s organizations attended the For Shanghai Cotton Mills Wom- Mayor, j meeting at Hartford, at which Gov- C. Hagerthy, Ward 1. en and Children irnor Marcus H. Holcomb presided and Alexander Frank L. Heath, Ward 2. Soldier Husband and Battlefield V/orking j pleaded the cause of the stricken peo- □ Twelve Hour Shifts. Baby Touring Country With j pies. Another speaker was Henry Mor- DD □ Her for Near East Relief. } genthau, former U. S. Ambassador to For Street Commissioner, I Turkey. For Street Commissioner One-fourth of the women In the A mother, father and (laughter, the world are Chinese—200.000.000 of Assurances that the example of these B. Marden, Ward 2. latter born In a lattereil Red Cross noble hearted Fred Perley J. Phillips, Ward 2 them. They are going Into Industry Connecticut women will tent In the ley Caucasus while guns be followed □ In large numbers to work long hours by similar organizations in roared all around and Turkish shells. all the and for little money. ! other states have been received Ignoring the mercy emblem, hurst near In for at the headquarters of the Near East DD □ It, are America In behalf of Shanghai, Instance, seventy j For Alderman, touring For per cei t. of the in the ! Relief, 1 Madison avenue, New York Alderman, their native Armenia. They are Gen- employees cotton mills are women and children. eral Nevton his fit/. j Asa C. Flood, Ward 4. Mezrop Azgnpetinn. Charles W. Sweeney, Ward 4. Working hours foi spinners are from □ 1 six In the morning uytil six at night and from six at night until six in the □□ □ morning. Weavers work from 5 :30 in For Warden. the morning until seven at night and DON’T For Warden, NEGLECT A the wages are from ten to twenty cents William E. Richardson, Ward 4. a day. Hundreds of women are em- Leland W. Cowing, Ward 4. □ ployed in silk filature mills, standing RHEUMATIC PAIN ! hour after hour washing cocoons In basins of boiling water in the ex- Go after it with Sloan’i DO □ ; cessivel*- hot rooms necessary for For Ward Clerk, Liniment before it For Ward Clerk, apartments where fine silk is spun. gets In Canton alone, there are lf»0.0(K) Raymond Camber, Ward 4. dangerous Olin L. Sargent, Ward 4. women In factories at a maximum □ wage of forty cents a day for women Apply a little, don’t rub, let it pene- and of fifteen cents a day for girls trate and—good-by twinge! Same for external □ As part of its program of world aches, pains, strains, stiffness DO of or For Constable, service for women the National Young joints muscles, lameness, bruises. For Constable, Instant relief Women’3 Christian Association Is ex- without mussiness or soiled clothing. Reliable—the Wayman Boulier, Ward 4. pecting to put on Its staff of sec- biggest selling liniment year after year. Eco- retaries in China nn expert on in- nomical reason of enormous sales. dustrial conditions who will by develop Keep a big bottle ready at all times. social work In □□ □ factories, and work to Ask your druggist for Sloan’s Lini- Improve conditions for women em- ment. 35c, 70c, $1.40. ployees. This work will Include the Introduction of recreation and social LADY ANNE AZGAPETIAN. life among the workers and of health lectures and educational classes. Sloan's wife. Lad; Anne, and Ireneh Esther Liniment Araxle Azgapetlan, whose haby eyes ii opened upon scenes of horror and later Foolish Fad of Idle Rich. Keep handy through them saw much of the suffer At one time snail racing was a Ings of the people of Armenia. great fad in Austria. Vienna had a The family are making their tour un- fashionable snail racing club, where der of the fortunes auspices Near East Relief, were frequently wagered on the the big organization which has saved ridiculous contests. Careful rec- hundreds of thousands of the people ords of the time taken by the winning In (hat part of the world from death snail to crawl around the miniature by hunger and cold and Is soon to open race course were kept, in order that a nation wide campaign for funds to contestants might be properly handi- Mon the complete the work of saving the sur- capped in subsequent matches. vlvors, more than a half million of WABJD FIVE whom must perish unless aid comes to BESTFUL them soon. America Is their only hope. Remedy for Burn. Tu_,urns General Azgapetlan served gallantly If you sustain a burn and no rem- in the Russian armies In the Caucasus edy is at hand try common toilet soap Teas against the Turks. His who ac- wife, at once. Simply rub it over the burn companied him to the did noble front, and you will secure immediate relief work for the wounded and sick, and Wed ABE GOOD and there will be no blistering. It was while In this service that her baby was born In a hospital tent during a battle. An army blanket from Hilarious £ride. Every swung two poles In one corner of the tent was Because a London bride, ug' <1 forty- iu™siims the baby’s crib during the rest of that one, got drunk on weddim lay terrible winter campaign. With the and kicked a police >ergeam. -• »uf Day ^ collapse of the Russian armies after her honeymoon in jail. the Bolshevist revolution the Azgape- Fri THE tlans returned to Armenia for a brief spell and did their best to alleviate A TRUE LETTER. the suffering they found on every hand. East Boston, Mass. The following But with a Turkish price on his head letter may bring advice to other suf- Sat the father Anally made his way with ferers: "Dr. J. F. True & Thurston and his Russia Finland Co.: Having heard Kingsbury Co., family through to that your medicine. Dr. True's Elixir, Importers and Packers and then to this country. What they had been on the market for years and _Bangor. Me. (4419) I tell of conditions and needs In Armenia years, thought possibly my ailments REPUBLICAN. would be helped if I tried it. I have DEMOCRAT Is Arst hand evidence. spent many dollars in trying to get a In the Caucasus, Armenia, Syria, Laxative which would agree with me For Mayor, —be pleasant to take, and yet effect- For Mayor, Turkey and Persia are more than 250,- ive. At last I have it—Dr. True's 000 little victims ol Elixir, the Family Laxative and Worm Alexander C. Hagerthy, Ward 1. orphans, helpless Expeller. massacre and and □ Frank L, Heath, Ward 2. war, deportation, For years I have had a poor appetite □ for the great majority the only bar be- —any rich foods disagreed with me. After you take and my headaches were eat—always tween them and absolute starvation frightful. I □ was troubled with tired feelings, ner- Is a bowl of hot bean soup every day. vous depression, weakness, spots be- For Street Commissioner, □ fore my eyes, bad breath, sleepless- This soup Is supplied by the Near East For Street Commissioner, ness, irritability, dizziness and many Relief now making an appeal to other signs of sickness. YOUR STOMACH S SIkD 'red B. I O0R Marden, Ward 2. the American people for sufficient can now do a day's housework and □ Perley J. Phillips, Ward 2 not mind it, and your Dr. True’s Elixir Instantly relieves Heartburn, Bloated Gassy funds to Increase this dole and to pro- is always handy—I don’t know of a Feeling. Stops indigestion, food souring, re- □ peating, and all the miseries vide these suffering little ones with better laxative—Igive it to my chil- n&any caused by dren with wonderful results—it relieves □ clothing and give them an education them of worms." For Alderman, □ that will help them to become self sup- MRS. HELEN WOODFORD, Acid-Stomach For Alderman, 23 Lamson St., E. Boston EATONIC is the best remedy. Tens of thou- porting. It Is estimated that more The prescription. DR. TRUE’SELIX- sands wonderfully benefited. Positively guar- -harles IR.. the F. Fuller, Ward 5. than 1,500,000 In Western Asia will Family Laxative and Worm anteed to please or we will refund money. Expeller. has done □ Frank J. Dunleavy, Ward 5. die of starvation unless American aid wonders for sick Call and get a big box today. You will sea. people, men, women and children. AT □ Is continued. ALL/DEALERS. iU. U. MOOKK, 58 MAIN ST. □ □ Ellsworth, Maine For Warden, For Warden, Cold-Water Cure. ieuel E. are In we Bartlett, Ward 5. Edwin A. Wescott, WafS 5. If our eyes good order □ □ may keep them so by opening them under cold water every morning when □ □ we wash, but cold water Is for strong For Ward Clerk, For Ward Clerk, eyes; weak ones should use it tepid, with a little boraelc powder dissolved ■eorge H. Gould, jr., Ward 5. Henry M. Dorgan, Ward 5. therein. Keep your boracic solution □ □ ready mixed in a bottle, then you won’t have to make it up every day. □ □ Thousands of housewives hereabouts have placed the SUPREME CLASS A1 mark For For Sang Praises of Heroes. of Constable, Constable, school on SUPERBA Food to classic days Products. According mythology Clio The excellence of these goods is sure tc A- was the goddess who sang of glorious Goodwin, Ward 5. Charles J. Brown, Ward 5. appeal to your family circle. □ □ actions, bestowing her praise on he- •'SUPERBA on the Label—SUPERB for your Table. roes. An ancient statue represents Why not try SUPERBA Canned Teas her as a beautiful woman with a roll Goods, and □ □ Coffees? Buy by the it's economical. of and the of Case—assorted; manuscript trumpet THE dealer in your neighborhood sells the SUPEPBA line. fame in her hand, as If recording and • 19 spreading the fame of heroes.

Bilious? Feel heavy after dinner? Bitter taste? Complexion sallow? Liver perhaps needs waking up. Doan's Reeulets for bilious attacks. 30c at all stores.—Advt. E GOV.-GENERAL OF PHILIPPINES FOR FREEDOM

Declares It Not Right That Free- dom Should Longer Be Withheld.

By FRANCIS , Governor-General of the Philippine* (First Article.)

couldn't be built My six year*' ex- They perience as gqv- eraor general of now for twice $7looo tbe Philippine Is- lands hare con- Give Me a Tinced roe that the Friendly,\ Filipino people are ready and (It to When the talk turns from to railroads, politics haTe their inde- ! Natural Hand-shake and the traveler with the cocksure air breaks pendence. I have j recommended t o in with, "There's an awful lot of ‘water’ in an’ a natural tobacco. P Congress, as well I friendly Keep yo’ put- the railroads,” here are some hard-pan facts as so me executive on airs an’ “sauced-up” tobaccos for the fellow idiulnl st ration, to him: give that independent-* that likes nut sundaes better than home made Gov. Gen. Harrison be granted. pie— As to the question of the stability of American a railroads have cost $80,900 mile government. I wish to say to the Am- —roadbed, structures, stations, yards, termin- erican people upon my responsibility So says a friend of ours named Velvet as the governor-general that In my Joe. als, freight and passenger trains—everything opinion there exists today in the Phil- And he just about hits the nail on the head. from the great city terminals to the last spike. ippine Islands a stable government, which I think should answer the re- quirements laid down by Presidents Velvet is made for men who think there’s A good costs Rrant and McKinley, and as I under- no smoke like real tobacco. If you are that concrete-and-asphalt highway stand it, also Mr. a by Root—namely, sort of $36,000 a mile—just a bare road, not count- government elected by the suffrage of man, listen: the the cost of culverts, etc. people, which is supported by the ing bridges, people, which is capatde of maintain- Velvet was born in ing order and of fulfilling its interna- old Kentucky, where tional Our railroads couldn’t be to- obligations. more than one good thing comes from. It was duplicated I am very glad to go on record as tie- , raised as as othei day for $150,000 a mile. imr entirely in sympathy with the as- | carefully any Kentucky [drations of the Filipino nation for in- ; thoroughbred. But the real secret of Velvet’s dependence. ! is its slow They are capitalized for only $71,000 a mile— I have recommended to Congrcsa friendly qualities natural ageing in that in some i much less than their actual value. granting independence wooden hogsheads. in the wood Seventy-one provision be made similar to what ia Ageing never hurt thousand dollars today will buy one locomotive. known as the Platt amendment in the anything—and least of all, tobacco. treaty with Cuba, which restricts the ability of the new republic in borrow- And so we Vr’vet is English railways are capitalized at $2 74,000 a ing of foreign governments and also say, good tobacco— permits the United States to interfere more or the French at German nothing less. It runs second to mile; $155,000; $132,000; with the affairs of the new republic in none. even in Canada (still in pioneer development) case conditions of disorder should fie I found to prevail. Such recommends- ! are at a mile. The they capitalized $67,000 tion does not come as an expression of 1 the views of the The of the on the tin needn’t average for all foreign countries is $100,000. Filipinos; it is my picture pipe own view of what would be desirable keep you from rolling a jim-dandy cigarette to secure a feeling of confidence and with Velvet Low capitalization and high operating effici- satisfaction on the part of all persons who have already invested money in ency have enabled American Railroads to pay the Philippines or who contemplate do- so in the highest wages while charging the lowest ing the near future. But It is not right that independence rates. Itself should longer be delayed. By temperament, by experience, by financial ability, in every way, the 11,000,000 Filipinos are entitled to Qfiis advertisement is be free from every government except published by the of their own choice. They are intelli- Slssociation Executives gent enough to decide for themselves. oj'Slailway I have found the native Filipino of- ficial to be honest, efficient and as ca- pable of administering executive posi- Those desiring information concerning the railroad situation tions as any men I have met anywhere may obtain literature by writing to The Association of in the world. Railway Executives, 61 Broadway, New York •inese omciats are today governing 1,000 municipalities and forty-two provinces, economically, efficiently and for the good of the entire people. They have a native congress. Including many graduates of Yale, Princeton, Harvard and other American universities. Oth- Blnehill Falls. BluehUl. er members are graduates of Santo To- Mrs. Nelson Smith of Sunshine, Walter Littlefield arrived hom mas and other Philippine universities, who was thrown from her sleigh and from Waterville Feb. 22. and In education and ability they com- severely injured, has the sympathy Miss Alice Wescott has gone t pare favorably with any I know. of her many friends here. Belfast to care for her sister, Mr They have leaders like Speaker Os- Feb. 16. “Crumbs.” Carl who is Stevens, very ill. mena of the House of Representatives -o- F. K. Perkins Capt. has sold th and President Quezon of the Senate Ashville. steam laundry on Mill street to Mr j who would adorn any office. T. of Eva Candage. The laundry will b ; George Noyes Presque Isle The Philippines are away ahead of visited his Mrs. re-opened about May 1. sister, Fred Orcutt, the United States in successful recently. The academy students will preser. I govern- the three-act ment ownership and operation of Mrs. Harry Hill and daughter comedy-drama, "Light i pub- house Nan.” at the town hall lic utilities. Leonice are in Prospect Harbor, Thurt ] called there by the illness and death day evening.' The government took hold of the By of the State of Mrs. Hill’s mother. Mrs Wasgatt. request adjutant steam railways and made them pay a general, the installation of Lewis Martin of Belfast is ill at officers o profit of 1,000,000 pesos a year more Horace K. Duffy A. has I the horne of his father, William Mar- post, L., bee than under private ownership. postponed until the new tin. ritual shal | It took hold have been of the highways, and John Tracy was called to completed. Bangor The we have 7,000 miles of the best mac- on Saturday by the serious illness of regular meeting of the W. F I t was held adamized roads in the world. The his son who is at the post hall Feb. 21 Shirley, employed Manila there. \ with a good attendance. A prograt city government is about to for the observance of take over the street A daughter was born to Mr. and the birthdays o railways and the Lincoln Mrs. Conary last week. and Washington was prt gas and electric plants, while the ter- pared by the Mrs. Emily Davis Martin died Feb. patriotic instructor, Mr ritorial government is arranging for 12. Florence Merrill. to the dif She seemed to be recovering Owing ownership and control of the coal sup- Acuity of a from an operation for appendicitis, procuring janitor, it wa ply. voted to hold the and her death came as a shock to all. meetings at th The home of Mrs. movement for Independence Is Mrs. Martin, by her faithfulness in George Butler durin the remainder of a peaceful one. No territory was more all her work at home and In the com- February and th months of March loyal to Uncle Sam the war. It munity, endeared herself to all. She and April. Febru during ary the offered an armed and -the leaves a husband, William 28, regular meeting will b equipped division tobacco Martin, held. five sons. After that, every alternat to our government, gave it a subma- friendly Clarence, Linwood and Wil- will be liam of this place, Lewis of Belfast meeting a social, ladies t. rine destroyer aud oversubscribed Lib- bring their work. and Philip of Columbia Falls, and six erty loans and Red Cross funds. The funeral of daughters, Mrs. Gertrude Eutler of Pearl S. Parker Two million natives who died speak English West Sullivan, Mrs. Margaret Miles February 19. was held a home fluently, and there are 700,000 English of Connecticut, Mrs. Ethel Walton of Ithe Saturday afternoon, Rev Frances speaking children in the public schools. Seal Harbor, Mrs. Inez Clark of How- Walkley officiating. Mr Parker was I am more than willing to retire if land, Mrs. Dora Farrin and Miss Sa- | seventy-four years of age and had been a the Filipinos oan be what die Martin of Ashville; also one great sufferer fron granted they tuberculosis for deserve—a brother, Charles Davis of Winter ten years. He wa government like that of the Harbor. formerly superintendent of the Whitt United States. Granite Co., and was a Feb. 23. “Phoebe.” past mastei of Ira Berry F. lodge, and A. M„ and A MISREPRESENTED RACE. past grand of Bluehill lodge, I. O. O F. Lath Men The town loses an honored citi Sawyers and Teams Lath Wood The Filipino people are a much mis- sen, and one highly respected for hit represented race. The moral worth and sterling manhood frequent pub- Men to work in woods 4 ft- He lication of pictures of seml-naked Min- We Spruce and fir cut, leaves a widow and one sister ! want danao about two miles from We Do Mrs. Abbie Allen of Massachusetts. Moros and Igorotes has caused City lin., 8 ft. 2 in., or 12 ft. Feb. 23. a great many to to g Americans believe experienced Lath Sawyers limit, cut lath wood. of they are typical of the Inhabitants of 4 in. from top Work by the or long BILL HEAD ths Philippines. Such Is far from th» Mill and Yard Men day by *'■' the cord scarfe so that butt-stick PhH^'nohy. case, however. Of 11,000,000 Inhab- whichever you Some men make ;t itants of the will 4 PRINTING 'womanish com islands, 10,500,000 are s for the Lath Mill prefer. Teams to haul this square. Size from that It is a plaint irrent misfortune t< Christian, civilized people with a cul- on wood from the woods to inches Wood to be die before our f me. I would ask what ture and refinement that will compare at Ellsworth up. time? Is It that the mill | of nature? But she very favorably with that of other na- yard. delivered at mill-yard. Indeed* has lent ns i life, as we do a tions. The Filipino women are excep- k sum •»* ''ey ^ **.» pertain day is tionally modest. A street flirtation In r ~ BOND tiyoft 'V*»at ropsnn then Manila, so fsr os a Filipino woman Is APPLY AT Or PICE OR WRITE TO and:- It at pleas- concerned, Is something that Is almost * eonditlon that unknown, as any American that bus IVIain© Mill LAWYER, Ellsworth, visited Manila will and office at tnown as testify. bulldlnn Soap Factor, building near Maine Central Station