THE ¥ A_lOURNAL. VOLUME 84_ 15 E THURSPAY7 JANUARY 25, 1912. NUMBER T Much is felt in the Contents of Today’s Journal. OBITUARY. sympathy death of Mrs. NEWS OF THE GRANGES. SECRET SOCIETIES. THE NEWS OF BELFAST Lucretia E. Barlow, widow of the late Levant PERSONAL. .In Me- a 1. The Churches. .Obituary. L. who was burned to Union Harvest Center At special meeting ot Phoenix Lodge, F. & pace Passed to a higher life in village, Barlow, death in her Grange, Montville, The Univeraalist moriam. .News of the Granges.. A. last Social Aid will meet with one week home in Waldo. She was born in had their installation of officers last M., Monday evening three candidates Mrs. Sallie Transfers in Real Estate. Wedding January 18, 1912, after an illness of Waldo May Saturday Mrs. Willis G. Haseltine Durham Hanshue has returned were the this, Thursday, after- Societies. .The News 6,1842, the of the Job and Mark master, was the given Master Mason degree. A ban- from a brief business Bells .Secret of pneumonia, Miss Emily Frances Skidmore, daughter \ate Lydia evening. Howard, past noon at 2 o'clock. trip to Boston. of Belfast-Personal. Clements. She was a assisted Dr. quet followed the degree work. aged about 78 years. She was born in Union, very estimable lady, was installing officer, by Ramsay. Mr. and Mrs. Frank John Parker is the and J. Rigby have returned 3. of the Tariff Board. .Ice in loved by all who knew her and will Cake and were served. The names of On account of agent janitor of the Page Report Me., 26, 1834, the daughter of the late be missed coffee the illness of the installing to Rumford a of Maine May from trip to the Pacific coast. the Delaware. .0 State her Odd Fellows hall and lodge rooms, and not of Elias and 'Priscilla (Newell) Skidmore, and by many friends and neighbors. She was Misses Mary Bennett and Mary4Wentworth officer, Mrs. Etta Dodge, the installation of the I poem).. The Grand Banks Fisher- the Odd FellowB Mrs. Amanda G. Howe of Lincolnville is to lend a were acted to become members of the of building as incorrectly re- man. .The Rural Schools. .Obituary.. was one of a family of seven children, all but always willing helping hand and do upon officers Pythian SiBters was postponed from last week. the guest of her sister, Miss Sarah R. Gardner at Rockland. .Maine News all are to receive the first and ported Divorced one of whom had pfeceded her to the great the good she could. Her motto was: do by Grange and they last Friday to tomorrow, Friday, evening. Mrs. William Laffin Items. others as second next The steamer Camden of Ellsworth spent the beyond. To the question propounded by that you would like then to do by you. degrees Saturday evening. took the place of the Charles E. Sherman, State Deputy Warden, in 4. Editorials.. .A New Maine Book... Belfast on past week Belfast with her daughter, Miss rvi ancient patriarch Job so many centuries ago: She has lived alone with her granddaughter The officers of Clinton Grange the Boston route last week while County Correspondence’, following went to Bangor last Tuesday to attend a special Sadie Laffin. “If a since Mr. Barlow’s death. The the latter was on the man die shall he live again,” she always funeral was were installed Jan. 13th: Mas- of railway at East Boston 5. The News of Belfast. Saturdayevening meeting the Maine Wardens and Deputy f v h held at the Charles answered, yes. Her religious faith, that of a home of her sister, Miss Ada A. ter, C. E. Marcia; overseer, Bliss Watts; lec- Wardens having slight repairs made caused by her col- McKinley of Camden, formerly pro- How a Thousand Hens Pay..Culled of the New England Order of Pro- firm her that she would Clements, in Rev. David L. B. G. assist- lision with a barge, as last week. of the Phoenix was in Belfast from McCalls. .Barge vs. Schooner.. Spiritualist,had taught Waldo, Wilson turer, L. A. Burns; steward, True; tection. reported prietor stable, Literary News and Notes..Maine’s meet her loved ones over there. She leaves, officiating. The floral offerings were many and ant P. H. Ranlett; chaplain, F. W. In its annual last week on business. steward, A was review of local events in 1911, Brick .Wrecks on Pe- banquet served at the regular meet- First House. to mourn her going out, one sister, Mrs. Mary beautiful. She leaves a sister, Miss Ada A. G. H. the Belfast Journal referred to the Dr. G. C. of Hatch; treasurer, Hunter; secretary, of (Me.) Kilgore the Governor's council nobscot River...The Key to the ing A. E. Clark Camp, Sons of Veterans, leather board mill of Sherman in Ann of and several an Mrs. Lee H. & Co., East was “Maine” .Settled Out of Upham Union, nephews Clements, adopted daughter, Bertha Stewart; gatekeeper, H. Bagley; Ceres, present Jan. 19th at the annual inspection Mystery. last Monday evening. Plans were discussed Belfast, which, it states, “was greatly im- Court. and nieces in this State and the west. The L. Pease of Dorchester, Mass., and one grand- Alice Marcia; Pomona, Blanche Watts; Flora, of the State School for Portland. in regard to entertaining the State Division proved by moving and consolidating the build- Boys, The Editor was Steals only relative in this vicinity is A. J. Skidmore daughter. Miss Hazel Whitcomb. Alice Verna ings and continued to do a and away..Mink Stinson; lady assistant steward, next June. large prosper- Miss Blanche Hill returned from Tom’s .Revive Our Encampment ous business.”—United States Maker. Monday Old Fish (story). of Liberty village, who has been a loving rela- Brown. The installation was followed an Paper by Fairfield, where she had been the for a Merchant Marine. .The Ships That Tarratine Tribe of Red Men will their guest tive, a true friend and a wise councilor for Earle Curtis died in East Bluehill and and remarks for the give The annual and Have Gone... Pittsfield Personals.. Jan. 6th, oyster pastry supper supper ball of Washington few of her uncle Fred the j annual masked ball in the days ,Mr. Hoar, For Miss Skidmore held a was Opera House, Feb. Hose Mrs. McKenney of Jackman Tidal many years. years aged 17 years. He born in Prospect and i good of the order. Company will be given in the Opera of The Gerald. 12th. The proprietor Bower Scheme. in Salem, Mass. her hall will be elaborately decorated responsible position Then, went to Bluehill with his parents when an in- ! has the House tomorrow, Friday, evening. Supper lJirigo Grange, Freedom, adopted and Mr. and Miss who will an il- .Stockton father a in Keyes orchestra will furnish music. The Blattner, give Searsport.. Springs....Ship having bought property Liberty, fant. When he was two years old his mother resolutions of will be served from 6 to 8 o’clock, with the following respect: lustrated lecture on in News.The News of Brooks- she came to make her home with him about special feature will be a ghost dance with 40 Japan the Improve- died and he found a good home with his The silent has grand march at 9 o’clock. A good supper, Births.... Deaths. Whereas, messenger again good ment Jan. Marriages.. and where she remained characters. A prize will be given to the best Society course, 31st, will i:e guests thirty-five years ago, father's sister, Mrs. W. F. Chapman, they car- entered our ranks and removed from Dirigo music and a good time are assured. mas Tickets, of Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Hazeltine while in till her death. Since a our esteemed W. ked couple. The committee in charge of the then, having competence ing for him as their own. The first week in Grange brother, George including supper and dance, 50 cents. The Churches. Choate, therefore, be it ball are Orrin J. Edwin S. G. Belfast. she has lived an life, and has been December he was taken with Dickey, Perkins, independent quinsy sore Resolved, That in the removal of brother Veterans’ Meeting, ike Waldo Parker Bowden, Vernon Stover County Mrs. M. A. Hoar of is a constant boarder with Mrs. Carrie M. he out from was a Cook, Leroy Machias.who spending ■ church will hold services at Ayer, throat; got that, stricken with Choate our has lost worthy mem- Veteran association will Episcopal j fraternity and meet in O. Gardner a George W. Patterson. the winter with her Mrs. S. for the past seventeen years, and in whose and lived but a week. He was con- ber and the community highly respected daughter, M. Hill, North church vestry next Sunday after-' paralysis hall. West Winterport, Feb. 1,1912. If citizen. Our charter is draped in mourning stormy, left last to several weeks in home she died. She was tenderly cared for in scious until the end. The of the Bagaduce Lodge, F. & A. M., of North the next Friday spend 0,r ai 4 o’clock. sympathy and our are sad because he is fair day. have a hearts gone from Comrades, they Fairfield with her her last sickness Mrs. and and out to the bereaved Brooksville installed the officers son, Mr. Fred Hoar, propric by Ayer family community goes family. us. following tine hall and stable and we have a fine v. A. J. Lockhart of Winterport occupied always tor of The Gerald. A. J. Skidmore and family. Her tall and The deceased was a member of East Bluehill Resolved, That we extend our sympathy to January 13th: Charles H. Babbidge, W. M.; of the Methodist church last Sunday time with the good people of Winterport. .Ipit form and face will be missed the family of our deceased brother and that John E. S. J. graceful smiling Grange and also of the Y. P. S. C. E. The fu- Bowden, W.; Harry Saunders, W.; Mrs. Frank Pierce and Prank hange with the pastor, Rev. M. S. Hill. this tribute of our respect be sent to them. Bring your picnic basket, and remember that young son, upon our streets, where she has been a famil- neral was at the home Jan.' Rev. Ernest E. Babson, Treas.; Ira J. Cousins, Sec.; 8th, Charles Resolved That a copy of these resolutions we want a for our Pierce, Jr., who came down for the Christian Scientists hold services in good day meeting. Chapman The iar for more than She be sent to our ers for Floyd Black, S. D.; James J. object thirty years. Hargrove, of the Baptist church officiating. local paj publication; also Campbell, D.; concert, returned last Saturday to their home 127 Main a From the river at th, hall, street, Sunday morning will be missed in our where she was copy be inscribed upon our records. Frank K. Perkins, S. Alden B. J. icy Bagaduce Brooksvilie homes, The floral offerings were many and beautiful, S.; Blodgett, and in after the of Mr. at 7.30 Castine; from the breathing space near ‘Bucksport being guests o’clock and Wednesday evening a welcome guest. She will be missed of J. H. Vose, ) Committee S.; Alvan A. Goodell, Wm. Mar- | always including large pieces carnation pinks, roses Chap.; Cain, from that which con- and Mrs. Charles D. R. V on Winterport; long bridge, Bradbury. h.. which all are welcome. McGray, to at the grange, of which she had been a worthy and ferns from the the Chase shall; Edgar J. Blodgett, Tyler. After the in- nects Bucksport with Verona, and from the grange, Granite E. W. Downer, ) Resolutions. Rev. and^ Mrs. Montford S. Hill and little and a constant attendant. No slan- stallation a was cities-of-houses-on-runners at come Ve.rning service at the First Parish Church member, Co., and seventeen pinks and roses from his banqnet enjoyed. Brooklin, Knox Pomona Grange held its annual meet- the reports that the smelts have not “struck daughter Adelaide M., will return today, usual hour next sermon derous tongue has ever uttered her name. No friends. me iNew Sunday,with by young rmgiana uraerot Protection work- in” as yet, and the catches are to the from where have of ing Saturday, Jan. 13th, with South Hope hardly Thursday, Hampden, they astor. Sunday school meets immediately finger scorn was ever pointed in her direc- ed the on 22 candidates at their average of former years at this degree regular time.—Bangor been the week of Mr. tion. George W. Patterson died Jan. 18th at the Grange, and in spite of the extreme cold about News. guests past Hill’s par- afte the close of the morning worship. meeting last Monday evening and has a class 100 were in attendance. The of officers ents, Mr. and Mrs. John J. Hill. Count life home of his sister, Mrs. James J. Mellen, on reports Same here. The of the sermon at the Umversa- by virtues, these will last of 11 waiting to take the degree. This repre- subject showed a When life’s stormy voyage is o’er, the Citypoint road, aged 66 years, 10 months prosperous and busy year and very Ex-Governor and Mrs. Burleigh, Mrs. Clar- hurch next Sunday will be “A Medieval s ents the work of Mr. John McCullock of There will be a Unitarian parish party in And these when earthly joys are passed, and He was born in faithful attendance a of the offi- ence B. .18 days. Thomaston, the by majority who Memorial Burleigh, Mrs. R. J. Martin and Mrs. in an Enlightened Age,” with special Shall cheer us on the shore. Orono, has been in Belfast several weeks Hall this, Thursday, evening. The 1?pel brighter son of Freeman C. and Ruth Pat- cers. The following officers were elected and who had been (Emmcns) in the order’s children of the i Joseph Williamson, visiting reference to a medieval gospel that is now be- The funeral services were held at the home working interest. A picnic sup- Sunday school and invited terson. He is survived two sons and two they will be installed at the next session,which friends in Boston and for some by was served at followed friends will be vicinity time, ir.g in Bangor by an evangelist. of Mrs. Jan. 21, Rev. W. H. Abbott of per 6.30, by the work. given the time between 6.30 preached Ayer, Freeman Patterson of Geo. will be held with Mt. Pleasant Grange Feb. returned to last daughter, Boston, Later in the remaiks were and followed a Augusta Thursday. Palermo The was a se- evening made by 8.30; by dance, with music At the Men’s Club at the Universalistchurch officiating. singing by W.« of 10th: Worthy Master, Warren B. Gardner; by Patterson, Jr., Belfast, Mrs. Frank Warden Sherwood of Walter A. Powers, son of former the of the of lect quartet of Mrs. Helen Hurd, Supreme Providence, R. Keyes orchestra, for all members of the parish Congress- re- Sunday subject history consisting Thomas of Camden and Mrs. Lamont of overseer, Henry H. Payson; lecturer, Mrs. Lydia and Grand Warden Jones of and man Powers of Maine, has been will be continued for discus- Mrs. Blanche Dr. W. L. and Mr. I., Gardiner. invited friendB. Tables will be furnished Llewellyn Trade Unionism Cram, Cargill Boston. One Warren Gardner; steward, James C. Morse; as- sister, Mrs. Mellen of Belfast, Punch and wafers were served. to those who appointed fourth assistant attorney general of The is at noon, and all men are John Sanford, Mrs. W. L. at prefer bridge. j meeting Cargill presiding and one Daniel E. Patterson of Glou- sistant steward, Herbert Kenniston; chaplain, brother, Ocean Bound Massachusetts, following the resignation of rdially invited. the organ. The flowers were many and beau- L. H. Young; secretary, Clara Light; treasurer, Rebekah Lodge, I. O. O. F, of The Rockland cester, Mass,, also survive. Mr. Patterson Courier-Gazette has publish- I Assistant Attorney General F. P. Field. for the week at the tiful, but the writer of this has no tact for Charles Sim- Vinalhaven, held a public installation in Memo- ed the roster The services Baptist had been engaged in the hotel and restaurant Lysander Norwood; gatekeeper, of the Second Mounted Battery, rial The annual of Press As- be as follows: even- describing them. They were the Martha Hall, Tuesday evening, Jan. 16th, in the M. meeting the Maine cMirch will this, Thursday, given by business in Gloucester, Mass., and Belfast for mons; Pomona, Kalloch; Ceres, Martha V., commanded by Capt. Davis Tillson, as it sociation will be held in Portland and to- — at relatives and friends of and Annie presence of a large of invited existed today the prayer meeting; Sunday, 10.45, Liberty village by many years, and until illness his re- Young; Flora, Morse; lady assistant company guests. «*an. 1st., 1862. It contains the names j compelled Jan. school at Miss Frank Ayer of Providence, R. I. One executive commit- D. D. G. P., Lucy Weaver and D. G. M., Della of the morrow, 25th and 26th. Mr. and Mrs. C. ng worship, Sunday noon; tirement wa6 proprietor of the now the steward, Myra Kenniston; following Waldo County men: Corporal, Alpha, S. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. at 6.30 service beautiful basket of flowers was given by the tee for three Jesse execu- Clark of Camden, assisted by Delilah Cunning- Bickford, George Quimby meeting p. m.; evening Colonial, restaurant on High street. The fu- years, Overlock; Calvin P. Lincoln, Searsmont; Artificer, Charles members of River ham as D. G. Lada and Charles A. of the local members T >o m. Georges’ Grange. The in- tive committee for one Walter W., Robbins as D. G. S., and B. Pilshury a; p. neral was held at the home of his sister last year, Ayer. Caswell, Liberty; privates, George W. Sher- 1 terment was in the Skidmore lot at Jennie Patterson as D. G. T., the will attend. .services in the church at North Belfast family Sunday afternoon. Granite Grange of North Searsport held a performed man, Lincolnville; James M. Yates, Searsmont. North Union. j. o. J. ceremonies in a faultless manner. A musical seems to De until a full matrimonially speaxing, e as follows every Sunday further regular meeting January 20th with Poors’ Mills. There will be an entertain- program was much follow- in the lead, the contracting parties being : service at 10.30 a. m. with house. Visitors were enjoyed. Dancing Morning Mrs. Mary S. Ware of Thorndike, widow of present from Morning ment at the hall Tuesday Jan. 30th Lewis and Vida Brown of Is- ed, with music the Arion orchestra. evening, Sylvester Eagle ■>n the Rev. C. E. Sun- wife of Laforest and Comet by were Camden and are re- by pastor, Walsh; Mary Louise, Benjamin Rev. Elijah Ware, passed away Jan. 15th at Light Granges. W. M. Veazie ; Admission 10 cents;supper 10 cents. The pub- land, who married in a. service in died at the Waldo the The Militant was worked on three siding on 700 Acre Island. Also Sterling Stin- jhool at 11.45 m.; preaching Robertson, County Hospital the ripe age of 84 years. She was the daugh- opened grange in form and the officers degree ; 1 »c are cordially invited. If stormy, the next son of West Stonington and Alice Dodge of at 7 o’clock. Saturday noon, Jan. 20th, 33 years, 7 ter of and were all After the usual routine of candidates, Leon Shute, John T. Davis and Mrs. vening aged Benjamin Annie (Stevens) Chase present. night.... J. A. Hartshorn of Belmont Sunset. Congratulations extended to the hap- months and 18 She had been in business two Wm. F. at a days. failing and was born in Unity Oct. 5, the oldest a\ plications were received for Jellison, meeting of Canton Pallas spent a week with her py Isle Messenger. re will be services next Sunday at Ma- 1828, recently daughter, Mrs. couples.—Deer health for several years, and Jan. 16th, Dr. W. of a family of 13 children. She married at membership. The following officers were in- last Saturday evening. It was decided to have Delbert Rolerson.... C. Mills at 10.30a. m. and at Trinity Reform- ; A. McKinley and Mr. Mr. ai.d Mrs. Carl Lampson have returned Harris a stalled Past Master Z. the ball in the Hugh of Augusta performed critical the age of 20 years Elijah Ware of Thorndike by D. Hartshorn: M., military Opera House, Feb. 27th. of Camden a urch at 2.30 p. m., with sermons by Rev. j Spaulding spent, few days with from an extended trip to the tropics. Mrs. abdominal operation, from which she did not and to them were born two children—Edwin Ira Veazie; O., Josiah Kingsbury; L., Belzora The degree of chivalry will be worked by Gen. Mr. tm Vaughan, followed by Sunday school, McKinley’s sister, Mrs. Jane Cole_Mr. Lampson will remain for some time with her Chas. M. Stewart of his staff have vitality to rcover. She passed away and She was a Nickerson; S., Chas. Kelley; A. S., G. H. Stev- Bangor and of ! ana Mrs. Will meeting at Trinity Church this, Thurs- Lydia. devoted wife and Adams of Morrill are stopping parents, Mr. and Mrs, Frank Waterman, Con- Those entitled quietly and without the least apparent suffer- mother and a faithful ever ens; chaplain, J. W. Mathews; treasurer, Hat- State officers. to the degree with Mrs. Rhoda vening at 7.30 o’clock. Christian, ready to Page...,Mr. and Mrs. Fred gress street, but Mr. Lampson left yesterday ing. Mrs. Robertson was born in West Win- lend a tie May Nickerson; F. M. G. are Mrs. H. D. Mrs. Elva Jewett and helping hand,and a great comfort to her sec’y, Nickerson; Clough, ! Toothaker spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. for Porto Rico in the interests of Carter Ink services for the week at the Methodist the of late K., Harold L. Abbie Miss Isabel Ginn. The committee in terport, daughter the George W. husband while he lived. After his death she Stone; officers, Kingsbury, charge Freeman Wentworth. Co. h will be as follows: even- are j this, Thursday and Edith Nickerson, but when a young girl made her home with her children in Abbie Pierce, C. B. Spaulding; L. A. S., Au- of the ball Orrin J. Dickey, Edward F. Thorndike, The Woman’s Alliance of the First Parish Mr. Charles C. of the branch he at 10.45, Stevens. The Pineo, manager prayer meeting; Sunday, went to Monroe, where, August 4, 1894, she where she had her married life. Fu- gusta supper call sounded and Littlefield, and Arthur R. Murch. Keyes or- passed (Unitarian) church will meet at the home of bank of the Bank of Canada in ng with sermon by the pastor; was all to the room chestra will furnish j Royal Maya- worship, married to Mr. Robertson. They have neral services were held Jan. 18th at the home repaired dining to partake of music. The committee Mrs. A. A. Church Porto was vice school at 12 m.; Junior at 3.30 an old Howes, street, this, Thurs- guez, Rico, recently appointed League made Belfast their home for many years. Her of her conducted fashioned harvest feast. The grange will endeavor to make the ball one of the social son, by Rev. James Ainslie afternoon at at 7.30 | day, 2.30 o'clock. Mrs. Ellis president for the district of Forto Rico of the evening service p. m.; Tuesday husband, to whom her death is a severe of was again convened and a fine program pre- events of the season. blow; Unity, Methodist, that being her faith. Peterson of 1 Jamaica will As there are a Plain, Mass., be pres- American Banking Association. p. m., the Epworth League meeting. two sisters, Mrs. Lottie Knight of Molunkus sented, visiting members responding to the William W. Cutter of er‘t and address Watts H. Bowker, aged 76, a well known Westbrook has been the meeting. Mrs. Peterson 15 banks in the district this appointment is •.he annual meeting of the Universalist and Mrs. Florence E. Stimpson of Belfast, sur- call for remarks. At a late hour the grange citizen of Brookline, dropped dead about 10 a. selected as grand secretary of the i *s onfe of the directors at for Massachu- most to Mr. Pineo. of- vive her and have the of a cir- closed, all had the grand lodge large complimentary iy school, held recently, the following sympathy large m„ Jan. 20th on the corner of Morse and Wal- seemingly enjoyed meeting. of I. O. O. Grand Master setts and chairman of the committee on starts on a new Maine, F., by Jackson South- vvere elected: Supt., Frank I. Wilson; cle of friends in their bereavement. The de- ter avenues, Brookline, Mass. Mr. Bowker Granite year in a was \he of two well flourishing to ern January 22d, birthday was born in and ! fill out the unexpired term of the late Her- Missionary work. As a representative upt., Ansel Packard; sec’y., Miss Frances ceased had been a valued and consistent mem- Machias, Me., learned the condition. Sixty members were present.—a. s. known and respected citizens—Elisha R. Con- building trade in that town. About 1870 he bert W. Sears. William E. Plummer of Port- from the National Alliance she has much Charles E. Johnson. The ber of the church for about 11 spent a tt, treasurer, Baptist years came to Brookline, and continued in that busi- ant, retired merchant, aged 86, and MosesW. TRANSFERS IN REAL ESTATE. land will serve as grand scribe of the grand en- time in the South and her subject, "Southern :ay school starts out at the beginning of and was serving her sixth year as the efficient ness until about 35 years ago, when he retired, Rich,the well known shoemaker, 82. Both of Field will aged he was campment Maine, having been appointed to Work, be of great interest to all ■iow year with bright prospects before it. secretary of its Sunday school. Possessed of a j Formerly prominent in affairs of town are hale and the latter to his and that Isaiah hearty, attending county, and served three years each as The transfers in real estate were position by G. Elder of Brunswick, Alliance members. It is a number bright mind she was a life student and the following hoped large work have the best wishes e services at the North church will be as selectman of Brookline and as the every day. They Norfolk County recorded in Waldo of grand chief patriarch of the grand encamp- will attend. earnest reader of standard She was County Registry Deeds as; afternoon at 3.30 m. works. a Commissioner. In the latter he of the community for many happy returns of this, Thursday, p. capacity the week ment. Mr. Cutter has been Identified with the of the of the for ending January 23, 1912: President Robert J. Junior C. E. at 7.30 m. the graduate the Seaside Chautauqua Scientific supervised building Dedham court- Aley of the University the meeting; p. Odd Fellows for day. house. During the Civil War he was a musi- Lucie E. Bennett, Bucksport, to William D. many years. He has held all of Maine has Castle North, K. O. K. A. Fri- and Literary Circle and had also taken post arranged through the university meeting; cian in the 6th Maine Volunteers. He was a the offices in the of Mrs. William Veazie Pratt (formerly Louise Bennett, Brooksville; land in Stockton gift the body, and is a past committee on work. She was never so as Springs. fitting schools to the a .. at 7 o’clock; morning worship Sunday at graduate happy member of Charles L. Chand.er Post, G. A. R., supply high Johnson of Marlboro street) took leading Martha A. et to grand representative of the grand lodge. Per- schools of the when busy with her books. The funeral was and Beth Horan of both of Shapland, York, Neb., als., State with one lecture free of part in the tableaux vivant given by members >• a. m.; Sunday school at 12 m.; C. E. prayer Lodge Masons, A. land manent officers for the of sec- of the when held at her late 22 Cross last Brookline. He leaves a wife and three sons. Mary Kendall, Lincolnville; and build- positions grand charg The idea has grown out of the uni- Newport colony, Tuesday evening, at oO p. m.; a cordial invitation is extended to home, street, with Mr. in Lincolnville. retaiy and grand scribe will be selected next many of the cottagers and naval officers afternoon at 2 Rev. Bowker was a frequent visitor in Bel- ings versity extension lectures which were >• Tuesday o’clock, Hosea W. inaugu- wrere Wil- public to attend these services. October when their families present. Commander here from Rebecca G. New bert, Lincolnville, to the grand bodies meet. rated last Rhoades officiating. There was an abundance fast, coming Lincolnville, where he Ralph year. The aim of the committee is liam V. Pratt, U. S. N announced the tableaux, Rev. C. E. Owen of one of the H. Waterville, 6pent the summers with relatives. Newbert, do,; land and buildings in Lin- to take the as which were in a frame. Mrs. of beautiful flowers, including set pieces from At the regular meeti ng last Tuesday even- University far as practicable to posed large gilt :.-i i secretaries of the Maine Christian Civic colnville. Pratt and Miss Roberta Willard won much ad- the the the High schools, and it is the desire of family, Sunday school and classes. ing of Aurora Rebekah Lodge, I O. O. F., the the miration and in “The Private View,” last to a Fred of Palermo died Dec. 3d at Samuel applause league, spoke Sunday evening good Young his H. Richards, Searsmont, to Charles and president to serve the The remains were placed in Grove cemetery officers were installed Mrs. Helen A. faculty High schools which showed the young women at a s by looking congregation at the Central square Bap- home in that town after an illness E. Richards, do.; land and in Sears- as much as tomb to await burial in the extending buildings District and Mrs. possible. Option is given the High portrait.—Boston Post Jan. 21st. at spring. Cooper, Deputy President, church Deering Center relative to the over several months, aged 75 years. He was mont. schools on Mamie District Grand a varied list of subjects and a list of Curtis, Marshal, both of Mr. and Mrs. Neal of Brookline, Mass., Mrs. plans and work of the Civic league. He said the son of Furber and Lydia Bryant Young Charles E. Richards, Searsmont. to George E. has been of assisted the fol- appointments published, but it does t William M. for about a Loyal Lodge Monroe, by Monroe of Sloan and Miss two-thirds of the members of the State Johnson, sixty years and had always made his home in Palermo. Richards, do.; land and in Searsmont not include Roxbury, Benjamin this and buildings officers: the Belfast High school. Present resident of city long a merchant tail- lowing grand Mrs. Annie R. Dennett, Ethel of have been L-- lature would not support any plan for Thirty-one years ago he united with the Meth- Charles H. is to Appleyard Boston, spend- or, died yesterday afternoon after an illness Richards, Searsmont, to Charles Mrs. Bertha Aley lecture in Houlton Feb. 12th and in the deputy grand warden; C. Keene, a few at the cities to have license while the towns re- of four weeks. He was held in esteem odist church at North Palermo. Deceased was D. Richards, do.; land in Searsmont. Rockland Feb. ing days Lakehurst, formerly high Mrs. Ina K. 18th. i; all who knew him. In business deputy grand secretary; Fogg, Two John at Swan their ’nl prohibition. by he was married to Ruth Belding Charles H. West to Farm, Lake, taking nearly forty years Burgess, Rockport, The first of a series honorable and careful of the interests of his deputy grand treasurer; Mrs. Cora J. Bowker, of whist parties to be meals at the Lake House. While there David L. Wilson a series of mid- ago, who survives him with two a Charles D, Richards, land in Sears- they Rev, began patrons; in his church relations he was an children, Searsmont; Mrs. the of deputy grand chaplain; Carrie S. Murch, given by members St. Francis guild, the snow and out of door life. winter sermons at the North Church earnest and consistent Christian, and in his son, Frank Young of China, and a daughter, mont. enjoyed shoeing Sunday, deputy grand inside guard; Miss Isabel was held in the new last home life a devoted husband and Ginn, chapel Thursday January 21st. The general theme is “Modern father. He Mrs. Eugene Rowe. He also ieft three grand- Elizabeth A. Denaco, Freedom, to Fred A. Mr. and Mrs1. Frank A. Sawyer of Augusta, was and to meet and deputy grand outside guard. The officers in- evening. Ten tables were filled. Miss Alberta genial pleasant easily one Mrs. their w bile," and the titles and dates of the sermons children; sister, Johr. Brown; and one Nichols, Unity; land and buildings in Unity. who have been spending honeymoon ith made friends. Mr. .Johnson was born in a stalled were: Mrs. Lizzie M. Clary, noble grand; Farnham won the first prize for ladies, a box are who lives in Tileston Mrs. Mrs. Lottie in as follows: small town near canterbury, England, and in brother, Alfonzo, Prentice. He Wadlin, Belfast, to Matthew Lead- Sawder’s mother, March, Miss Gertrude B. Patterson, vice grand; Mrs. of flowers, and Mrs. A. C. Hopkins won the Jan. 28th. Modern Social Conditions. his youth was a member of the choir of the was a kind husband and father, and leaves better, North Haven; land and in Morrill, were in Belfast last Saturdaj or: their buildings Annie K. Mrs. a John Kb. 4th. The Modern Canterbury cathedral. He was about 77 Adams, recording secretary; second, pretty tray. Flynn won the City. years many friends and neighbors who will miss him. Northport. way to their home. Kb. 18th. The Modern Church. old. He came to this country when about 16 Effie K. Harrison, financial secretary; Mrs. Ab- first for men, an ash tray, and Edgar Harding, The Congregational Society associated with Kb. 25th. Modern Patriotism. years old with his parents, William Henry and bie F. the a box of IN MEMORIAM. Cook, treasurer; Mr. W. K. Keene, second, playing cards. Refresh- 1 Mary Weeks Johnson After a short residence the First Church in Belfast, to the first Con- WINTERPORT he public is most cordially invited to attend Mrs. Cora J. Bowker, Mrs. Annie R. Dennett, ments were served at 10.30 o’clock by Miss in New York he removed to Troy, where he Church of land and The officers of Rebekah Uicse services. At a of Union gregational Belfast; build- following Mizpah resided until his death. Mr. Johnson was in regular meeting Church Cir- trustees; Miss Sarah M. Seavey, warden; Miss Sadie Laffin, Miss Martha Pendleton, Mrs. in Belfast. were installed Jan. business as a merchant tailor ings Lodge Wednesday evening, The Bangor Unitarian church, temporarily many years. He cle of Rockland, held January 4, 1912, a com- Caroline G. Hatch, conductress; Mrs. Annie George Darby, Mrs. Ross Hammons, Miss Mary conducted a store on Franklin Moses Baker, to 17th Mrs. Blake of and Mrs. square at the mittee was to draw Hampden, George A. Cole, by Orringtcn occupied for their meetings Dy those of the appointed up resolutions Lindgren, chaplain; Miss Grace E. Walton, Cullinan, Miss Agnes Cullinan.and Mrs. Loren time of the big fire and his entire stock was land in Merrill of Brewer: Noble Grand, Mrs. Jtnnie 1 on the death of our Abbie Winterport; Winterport. of versalist faith, was crowded to its capacity destroyed. He resumed business in the Hall sister, Walker: right supporter noble grand; Mrs. Annie B. Colcord. The second party will be given Whereas, Our Father in his Ali-wise care of Etta M. Thayer; V. G., Mrs. Stella Campbell; Warden, last afternoon, when the Rev. building at 222 River street and subsequently ChaDin, Searsport, to Martha How- Patterson, left supporter of noble grand; Miss this, Thursday, evening. The refreshments Sunday pastor, his children, has called our sister there- Mrs. Maude Mrs. E. M. was at 202 River street, where he remained home, ard, land and in Alice A. will Young; Conductor, Ashley A. Smith, preached a sermon in fore be it do.; buildings Searsport. Stimpson, right supporter of vice be cake and coffee. reply until his retirement from mercantile life. He Arey; Secretary, Mrs. Florence Belches; Treas- an address made H. that the intimate relations Joseph C. Plourd, Monroe, to Charles C. grand; Mrs. Gertrude M. left by Rev. L. Gale last married Miss Clarinda Larkin of East Nassau, Resolved, long Colson, supporter Sidney Laroche of Lewiston was sentenced in urer, Mrs. Dora M. Kneeland; Chaplain, Mrs. *eek. She died in held by our sister the past, with this so- Clements, Winterport; land and in of vice Mrs. Elizabeth Mr. Smith took for his text Malachi April 27,1859. 1887. Mr. Johnson buildings grand; Murch, inside at the January term of court to 60 in was a member of ciety, render it proper that we should pay days jail Chloe Sanborn; R. S. N. G., Miss Lena M. K and theme was the First Baptist church Winterport. Mr. L. his the destiny of the wick- tribute to her and she guard; Eugene Cook, outside guard. for of a suit of and more than years and held offices in the memory, although has larceny clothes, part of the L. S. N. Miss Jennie C. R. S. in fifty Fred P. Shaw, Burnham, to C. F. The Sprowl; G., Grant; reply to Rev. H. L. Gale he “there not been with us these many years, we have Mitchell, regular picnic supper was served at 6.30 he was to said, church and Sunday school. He was for many penalty pay was to saw wood with Mrs. L. S. V. C., Mrs. ever her land in Burnham. V. C., Marietta Googins; !s '■ but not a of missed presence from our midst. She do.; o'clock and a short in- just punishment, an eternal pun- years member Mt. Zion lodge, F. and A. program followed the the other inmates of the He made was ever ready to use the talents she jail. stren- Blanche Npallpy: I G., Mrs. Mary Cole: O. G., ishment.” The News M. He went to his old home in England in possess- Charles E. Bowen, Brooks, to Charles F. stallation, Miss Caroline G. Hatch, Messrs. Bangor Daily printed ed for the of the and com- uous objection to this of the 1901 and revisited the scenes where his good society the part sentence, Sanborn... .Messrs. C. C. Moody and H. toe sermon in fu boy- Fogg, do.; land in Brooks. John Parker and E. S. Pitcher Ralph l. munity in which she lived. rendering solos but when told of a hood days were spent. He is survived a strike of the prisoners were in and by that we Charles E. to and E. Kneeland Bangor Saturday William a Resolved, extend to her children our Bowen, Brooks, Charles F. and E. P. Frost reading. was son, Irving Johnson, daughter, Mrs. Dancing enjoy- which resulted in their on a diet of troy. love and in their loss of a and being kept called on Mr. C. A. McKenney. They report Winfield S. Pendleton of Brooklyn; two grand- sympathy good Merton L. Fogg, do.; land and buildings in ed after the program. The remains of faithful mother. the All-wise Father bread and water until they were to re- Clifton Rhoades, aged 14, children, Mrs. Paul Dale Owen of Troy and "May Brooks. willing finding him quite comfortable, and that he bless them always and in every turn to work he onto his 8o; f the late Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Rhoades and Harriet Pendleton of Brooklyn, and a sis- way.” got job. But he did to be able to come home in about two a c Edmund B. to Annie hopes Mrs. J. Kendle of North Resolved, that py of these resolutions be Sprague, Frankfort, H. “Chet” Perkins in Boston. not like it and last 'G home was ter, Troy. The fu- Thursday morning he was filled Sun- Troy) were from sent to the of our a to The land drop- weeks... .The Methodist pulpit brought neral will be held afternoon at res- family sister, copy Sprague, do.; and buildings in Frankfort. Sunday the his mounted a sn. w his late Jan. Courier-Gazette for and one ped saw, drift in the jail M. S. Hill of Belfast in r, home, 17th, accompanied idence of the son, 1910, Seventh avenue.— publication, plac- Zula M. day by Rev. exchange Hill, Belfast, to Fred A. Robbins, He Advises all His j Charles N. Press Dec. 29th. ed on the records of our society. Friends to Patronize yard, scaled the fence and struck out for his Rev. A. J. Lockhart. He grandfather, Batchelder of Dex- Troy, Y., do.; land and buildings in Belfast. | with the pastor, gave Margaret E. Libby, Committee Childs’ home town. He was followed and late his old r brother, Lawrence, and his ) Restaurant. easily a fine sermon which was aunt, Augusta Charles E. Lane, Brooks, to W. F. Emmons greatly enjoyed by '' Boman, on in the afternoon was at Waldo Inez Gordon of Garland. Funeral services Somerville, Jan. 1912. I captured sta- the audience... Mr. C. A. who is Mrs. Lucinda Sprague, Resolutions and R. A. Barden, do.; land in Brooks. Mass., 18, wish to McKenney w‘ Dorothy B., wife of Thomas H. Decrow, ) tion and back to held at the Cook’s Corner schoolhouse that while from Belfast brought jail to resume his job is of Charles D. Richards, Searsmont, to Judson say away this winter, still at the Paine hospital, Bangor, getting c formerly Searsport, Me., passed away Jan. on the wood 1 led Rev. James Ainslie and we are all pile. by the inter- land much pleased each Friday along quite nicely and it is hoped that he will 13th, in West Upton, Mass., after an illness of G. and Lucy H. Knight, do.; in Searsmont. morning, <- was in Fairview WEDDING bells. cemetery_Miss Hattie Sarah W. upon receipt of the dear old Journal. We are SWANVILLE. soon be able to return home... Miss Isabel two weeks. She was born in Jan. 27, Peterson, Rockland, Mass.; to | ■rJ es is at home Unity, from Knox, where she was C. land in very comfortably located here. My daughter Mr. and Mrs. Albert w*ent Crockett, whose illness was mentioned last 1834, the daughter of Ellison and Sally (Mitch- Ernest Milton, Belfast; Belfast. Cunningham to I some weeks the The has an She re- ago by illness and death Wiley-Shaw. of Lester R. William H. exceptionally fine position as a Mr. Clarence Curtis re- week, is improving slowly. was the In 1857 she was married to Thos. marriage McIntosh, Belfast, to Mary A. Prospect Sunday... ^ ell) Libby. teacher in the her who has of Bangor and Miss Irene H. Shaw of land and "Burns School.” I have been turned home from last last week of a “silver shower” from a grandfather-Joseph Estes, H. Decrow of Freedom, who survives her with Wiley Parkinson, do.; buildings in Belfast. Burlington week.... cipient been very ill, is reported to be Belfast took place Jan. told that the schools, here in Somerville, "rank Mrs. T. Nickerson number of her friends and also of a nice box of improving.... eight children: Manter E. of Dorchester, Thursday morning, George went to Dr. Tap- Aord has been received of the Jan. 18th, at the home of the bride’s Mrs. Foxes on Fox Islands. second in the State.” For something to do, I last for fruit and other goodies from the W. C. T. U. death, Mass.; Joseph S. of Brooks; Thomas L. of Bel- mother, ley’s hospital Sunday treatment. Mrs. of Reuben am to find was a 4nd, Webb at his late home in E. O. Shaw, in Belfast. It was a quiet home learning my way around Boston. E. L. Cunningham will care for her baby while .... The basket ball team defeated in fast; Frank P. of West Upton, Mass:; Mrs. W. Eaton’s of Maine History says: “In But Boston is no at ^hens. His age was about 80. He was a wedding, the bride and groom being unattend- May, place for a Belfast man to try she is absent and Mr. Nickerson will board game with the Bangor Y. M. C. A. Union L. Hanson of Stockton; Mrs. Herbert Staples 1603, Martin Pring sailed into Penobscot Bay Witr resident of Troy and the remains ed. Rev. Arthur A. Blair of the to hide. While visiting Childs’ Restaurant at with his Mrs. W. E. Hall Wednesday evening Jan. 17th....The W. will of Philadelphia,Pa.;Misses Azubah and Dorothy Universalist and discovered these islands, which he named sister, Damm... Mr. and ^ here for church was the Fox Islands on account of the 607 street a few Mrs. Fred C. T. U. met with Mrs. C. R. Hill brought Wednesday interment.... of West and twelve officiating clergyman. The many foxes he Washington days ago, I came Cunningham and son Horace of Wednesday Upton, Mass., grandchil- saw here.” For a J°hn Hart and have bride and le ft on great many years, in contact with the faees of Monroe were afternoon. At the close of the business session family moved to Detroit, dren. One died in groom Belfast the afternoon however, smiling E. R. Con- guests of his parents, Mr. and son, Ellison, infancy. Be- foxes have been very rarely seen, but at the *"ere he has taken the store train for Boston, en route for ner and Will Mason. Childs’will Mrs. a social hour was enjoyed, and dainty recently occupied sides these, one brother, Benjamin R. Libby of California, present time seem quite plentiful. Mr. Berton Patronizing Emery Cunningham, Sunday..Mr. pleasant George Jackson and will go into trade_ where Mr. business interests are lo- E. Vinal this season, shot five bring a smile on any one’s face, it is a Charles Marr is ill. His refreshments were served.,.. Mrs. C. R. Albion survives. The greater of her mar- Wiley’s has, foxes, one although critically daughter, part of which had the farmers are rushing potatoes to station cated, and where to make appearance of being of ex- strictly This restaurant Miss arrived home from where has to Plymouth to visit her Unity ried life was in where she they plan their temperate place. Nellie, Bath, L.ougee gone spent Searsport, home in the future. treme age, the fur being gray and worn off in $1 per bushel....I would of the The best wishes of a easily seats 600 people, and I was told the she is and Mrs. J. daughter Frances, who is teaching there. !| speak was and some around the by teaching, Saturday....Mr. but think the highly respected beloved by all who great many friends go with them. Mr. places head.—Vinalhaven subject is exhausted. I Wiley head waitress that on Christmas fed W. Nickerson went to North father knew her. is well known in this Deen the correspondence. day they Searsport last ?nn(it find language to express my opinion of Although quiet and unassuming section, having manager of the Tuolumne River & Power fifteen thousand poople. That would afford to attend the installation of The Shoe Situation. weather, of the past few weeks. Now it is her life was spent in tor those Co., Saturday evening doing good which was sold to the whole of decent winter weather and all hope the recently the Yosemite Pow- Fire at Washington. Belfast three meals and some to the officers of Granite Grange... Mrs. Mary about her and her influence was always of the Co. for over a of the winter have Old Janu- er, half million dollars. Mr. for customers at ^rrors departed. is to spare my Northport Camp- D. Nickerson received a post card shower Fri- The volume of trade in shoes has increased soon be best. In October, 1911, she and her husband Wiley be associated with the new com- Jan. 22. gone—happy thought—and Washington, Me., (Special.) Hotel I think one jv.will at the head of which ground. and all believe that I day, her 76th Master Frank Cur- to the return of salesmen to the pring is not far away. went to West Upton to spend the winter with pany, is John Hays Ham- Light, W.W. Light proprietor, located at Wash- birthday... owing mond. Mr. is to be know a when I see Wiley associated with Mr. ington Mills, was destroyed by fire about 1 good thing it, and I not only tis, who has been spending the summer with and to an increased number of a their children and it was there the funeral ser- Hammond in buyers Annie the development of electrical o’clock this with a wish to Hasty, formerly of this city, left morning, together stable pay Chiles’ Restaurant a compliment his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. ton who are more stock for A?; vices took place, the eight children pres- power on the coast. Miss Shaw is a which Augustus taking Ihursday for Dexter, where she will being charming adjoined. The greater portion of the for fine prtf^Hre- join treatment, but would advise one and returned to his heme in Prices are firm and advant ent, and the remains were in the tomb young Belfast woman with hosts of friends. household were as was the Tripp, Worcester, quirements. /are t' husband, P. A. Hasty, Esq., formerly of placed goods saved, live- all She is also known here, visited friends stock in the of my friends, when in Boston and having Mass., las t His John asked. The leather is still oks, Mr. and Mrs. Hasty will reside in there. The beautiful flowers were tokens of having stable, also the carriages. The Ihuitoay. uncle, Tripp, market extremely in this on several loss is that Commercial. city occasions.—Bangor estimated at about $2500, and it is un- hungry feeling, to be sure and visit Childs’ accompanied him....The farmers Mon- with tanners firm at the Xler.—Bangor the esteem in which the deceased was held. Commercial. began strong, holding very derstood that the property was insured. Restaurant. C. E. Perkins. day to cut their ice on Swan lake. recent advances.—Dun’s Review Jan. 20th. WeAreGoingToDoIt! I ^•TRAGOO JQ WHAT? | Clean Dp Onr Winter Stock By Selling At Cost

WHY? i This Method Enables Us to Buy

Copyright 1911 I j Michaels, Stern & Co. 1 Rochester* N. Y. I NEW GOODS Each Season. Our First Semi-Annual Clearance Sale WILL BEGIN—- I Saturday, January 27th, and Continue 14 Days, To February 10th. DON’T MISS IT.----WE DO AS WE ADVERTISE. SEE PARTIAL LIST BELOW OF VALUES TO BE GIVEN Men’s Suits Men’s Overcoats Men’s Pants Fancy Browns, Blues and Grays, in Cashmere and WORSTED, CASHMERE AND WOOLEN FABRICS. Worsted Fabrics. $25 BLAOK KERSEY, $18 “ $25.00 Suits Reduced to $18.00 18 “ 13 $5.00 Pants now $3.50 “ “ “ “ 22.50 16.50 20 FANCY 14 4.00 3.00 “ “ “ MIXTURES, 20.00 14.00 “ “ 11 3.50 2.75 18.00 “ “ “ 13.00 10 OXFORD 7 3.00 “ “ 15.00 “ “ “ 10.75 2.25 We have just 21 Coats left to make your 2.50 “ “ 12.00 “ “ “ 8.00 2.00 selection from. “ “ 10.00 “ “ “ 6-75 * 2.00 1.50 j 1.50 “ “ We advise an early selection. COME EARLY. THEY WILL SOON GO, 1.10 Suits and Overcoats Men’s Sheep Lined Coats Boys' WITH REGULAR AND CLIPPED $8.00 Suits and Overcoats going at $5.50 PELTINGS 6.00 and $7.00 “ $4.25 and $4.75 $6.00 COATS CUT TO $4.75 “ “ “ 4.00 and 5.00 “ 3.00 and 3.50 5.50 4,25 “ “ “ 3.00 and 4.00 2,25 and 3.00 5.00 “ 400 4.00 “ Our experience indicates that the best clothes BLANKET LINED, CUT TO .TOO 3.00 “ “ “ “ For Boys are the^T RA GOO^ BRANDS. UNDERWEAR SWEATERS 2.25 Boys’ Pants at Following Prices: $2.50 nedlicott Shirts and Drawers, White Odd Lot Sweaters, broken sizes, Shirts and $1.00 QUALITY NOW 75c. Wool, non-shrinkable, Sale Price $2.00 35c. to $3.00 Night Pajamas 2.00 “ « Fancy Wool Shirts and Drawers 1.50 .75 .75 55c. $1.50 Boys’ Sweaters, $2.00 OUTING FLANNEL 1.50 Whitelamb3 Wool Shirts and “ “ PAJAMAS, $1.50 Drawers, 1.00 “ .50 1.50 “ “ Sale Price 1.00 1.00 1.00 “ “ “ SHIR IS SHIRTS SHIRTS 1.50 Rockwood Gray Wool Shirts and Drawers, 75 Sale Price 1.00 Gloves 100 “ $2.50 Flannel Shirts Priced at $2.00 Hats, Caps, NIGHTSHIRTS, .75 “ “ 2.00 1.50 1.00 Natural Wool Shirts and Drawers, Our Popular $3 Derby now $2.00 .50 “ «< 40 “• Sale Price .75 “ 1.50 1.00 Special $2.50 Derby now 1.75 .50 BOYS’ OUTING FLANNEL NIGHT .35 “ 1.00 Natural Wool (light wool) Shirts and SHIRTS, 1.00 .75 $2.00 Soft and Stiff Hats now 1.50 Drawers, Sale Price ,75 1.50 Soft Hats now 1.00 $1.00 Heavy Jersey Overshirts at 75c. .50 Merino Shirts and Drawers, Sale Price ,35 “ “ “ “ “ “ FURNISHINGS .75 50c. 1.00 Wright’s Health Shirts and Drawers, 1.00 .75 “ “ “ “ .50 .35. ‘.Sale Price .75 $ .50 WOOL HOSE REDUCED TO 35c. WINTER CAPS. “ .75 White Lambsdown Shirts and Drawers, *• •25 15c. Sale Price .50 $5.00 Pieced Seal Skin Caps, $2.25 .15 MIDDLESEX HOSE REDUCED TO 10c .50 High Rock Fleeced (best grade made) (,SPECIAL TO CLOSE. ) Boys’ and Girls’ Flannel Shirts in Gray, .25 CASHMERE. Shirts and Drawers, Sale Price .35 1.00 Winter Caps, .65 |5c‘ •« Blue, Red and Green colors, sizes 12 to “ 1.00 NECKWEAR .50 .35 05c‘ to 14, $1.00 quality cut to 75c. ■75 “ “ UNION SUITS .50 Toboggans, .25 45c. “ “ j •50 White to .25 35c. $1.50 Bates’ Street Shii'ts, $1.15 $3.00 Wright’s Wool, marked $2.25 .10! “ .25 •• 20c, 1.50 Whitney 1.00 j (Extra Fine) .50 and $1 Aviation Caps, .35 and .65 — ■ i .50 2.50 Natural Wool marked to 1.75 — BRACES REDUCED 1.00 Wachusetts .75 Gray TO 35c. (Broken Sizes) •2S .50 Negligee .35 20c 1.50 Flexible Ribbed marked to 1,15 $1.50 Gloves, $1.15 1.50 Full Dress 1.00 j 10 RED AND BLUE BANDANNA HANDKERCHIEFS, 1.00 marked to 5c,‘ 1.00 .75 Heavy Balbriggan .75 1.00 Mitts and Gloves, .75 “ “ “ 1.00 White Stiff Bosom Shirts, .75 .50 ’• “ “ .35! .50 .35 -BOYS’- “ “ “ .50 Flannel Work .25 Outing Shirts, .36 $ .50 Fleeced Union Suits marked to $ .35 Work .151 | .50 Cheviot Shirts, .40 .50 Fleeced Shirts and Drawers Wright’s marked to .35 This includes all Dress Glove * i .50 Boys’ Outing Flannel and Cheviot Work .35 Shirts, .25 Fleeced Shirts and Drawers marked to ,2o Work Gloves aud Mittens.

l wish to thank the People of Waldo for their liberal and will County patronage show my appreciation by values given at this sale. —-—AGAIN, DON’T MISS IT.—— The Home of Good Values 1PALPH D. SOUTHWORTH, Belfast, Maine. Report of the Tariff Board. THE GRAND BANKS FISHERMEN. Prefer to Take Chances on To the Editor of The Journal: The RECORD OF I Making a Wonderful “Catch” looked-for report of the Tariff Rather than to FREE BOOK I Two Important Lessons From long Stated j on the wool and woolen industries Accept Wages. Board on the Farm The no Fur Living Thing Coe-Mortimer Five-Hundred transmitted to and I Perhaps place in the oceans Every Company Dollar Prize Com Contest has been Congress GREAT great MEDICINE of the world holds more local Veterinary Specifies. FOR been looking at it, and it is very interest Humphreys’ I THE have than the Grand Banks of Newfoundland j what was expected. The 6 vol- where for three BOO Book free, on the Treatment and Most Profitable much hundred years fisher- Page j Acre of Field Com Raised in New 1911. are men have battled with Care of Horses, Cattle, Sheep, England During umes of the report very comprehen- Doctors Could Not Mrs. fogs and storms Dogs, Help and the last also Stable Coe-Mortimer $500.00 Corn Contest for 1911 was handled the Massachusetts Corn covers of the in- during half century, at least Hog* and Poultry, Chart to I n by Show IncornorateH The I 51ve. and every phase I following were the Premium Committee who had direct of T empleton—Regained with great ocean liners rushing from mailed free. charge the competition and of the awarding ofPthe prizes: dustry from the raising of the wool to hang np, shore to shore, in their endeavor to win PROP. WM. D.JHURD, Massachusetts Agricultural College, Amherst, Mass. Health from sea a j tne finished garments. through Lydia E. the livelihood and competence OF SPECIFICS. I MR. GLEN C. and in LIST SEVEY, Editor New England Homestead, Springfield, Mass. ! The Board made an exhaustive survey which struggle annually many fish- Pinkham’s Ferer. MR. E. H. Compound. ermen are swept to death. The value of t, A. For FEVERS. Milk Lang Ferer. NAYLOR, Secretary of the Board of Trade, Springfield, Mass. and study of the cost of producing wool | the codfish that are taken from 1. R. For 8PRA1N8. Lameness. RbenmatUm. na- annually in all of the principal wool-producing these waters about averages $6,000 000 3. C. For SORB Throal. Eplaootle. Distemper. thiS C°mmittee 8"d at the cost of and some men follow ^ 8ppr0Ved * the 10!!s. In arriving produ- Hooper, Nebraska.—“I am very glad 7,000 the industry! 0. O. For WORMS, Bote. Crake. It is beneath the a At the the pri*eseresi^Pare^ a of wool did not reckon to tell how E. dignity of Gloucester Cold.. request of Committee of the Massachusetts Corn ing pound they Lydia Pinkham’a Vegetable B. E. For COUGHS. Inflaeasa. Show, the $600 was divided into three as fisherman to work for wages. prizes, follows: of the food that the Compound has helped me. For five years He de- P. F. For COLIC, Bellyache. Diarrhea. th, market price mands a share of the FIRST from female catch, and fortu- PRIZE, $250.00 SECOND PRIZE, $150.00 but allowed what it ac- I suffered troubles so I was ». G. Prevent. MISCARRIAGE. THIRD PRIZE, $100.00 sheep consumed, nate is the fisherman who averages able to do work. I took doc- $100 8. H. For KIDNEY and Bladder Reorder*. A UNIQUE of this was scarcely my a month as his of the that Home Mixtures of Fertilizer or tuaUy cost the farmer to produce the share profits of a FEATURE competition Materials Stable Manure could ! tors’ medicines and used local treatments 1. I. For SKIN DISE ASES, Manse. Ernptlone. be used instead of or with Commercial no restrictions of trip. Fertilizers; any sort being imposed. Further it was provided ami did not allow interest on the that no officer or stockholder of The Coe-Mortimer but was not helped. I had such awful Contracts are made so that J. K. For BAD CONDITION. Indignation. Company or any other Fertilizer should have the If this item of cost usually one- do with the of the records CompanyF y anytninganything to h of sheep. down and back was so half the keeping or with the of the bearing pains my value of the catch goes to the At druggists or sent prepaid onreoeipt awarding prizes. been allowed it would have owners the v, probably weak I could hardly walk and could not of vessel and from the re- ! of 60 cts. each. half price. in addition of three cents to the ride. I often had to sit up nights to sleep maining expenses are deducted, the vessel these HUMPHREYS' HOMEO. MEDICINE 00.. Comer RESULTS OF THE COMPETITION f each pound of wool, and my friends thought I could not live sharing expenses equally William and Ann Streets, New York with the crew and then taking as an ad- included nearly long. At my request my husband got ruty-aeveu cuiupeuiura iruin ail over INew iUng- THE FIRST PRIZE investigations ditional profit one-fifth, say, of the resi- was won by Mr. L. S. Wh«'te of me a bottle of E. Pinkham’s land entered. Only thirteen the num- wool in 173 counties in 19 Lydia Veg- crew finished, large Collinsville, a NET growers due, the sharing equally in the bal- OBITUARY. ber Conn., showing PROFIT on his acre of etable Compound and I commenced to dropping out undoubtedly being due to the early Corn of the wool-growing States. ance. One curious provision is that the $65.75. principal take it the time I had taken the frosts. By cook, also the if the vessel is THE SECOND PRIZE was won Mr. M. H. \ \ iiS t*X peeted they found that it costs engineer, Funeral services of the late E. Values for Cob and by Williams seventh bottle health had returned with a Mrs. B. Corn, Stover were affixed of my equipped gasoline engine, shall by Sunderland, Mass., who showed a NET PROFIT on his to a of wool in this the above mentioned Committee as produce pound and I began doing my washing and was a share equally with the crew. Coleord were held at the family resi- follows: acre of Corn of $49.26. the .-.try than any where else in woman. At one time for three weeks men will follow so on Water Shelled Corn (12 per cent $ .75 bushel well Why very hazardous dence street, Rockland, Moisture) per THE THIRD PRIZE was won Mr. M. H. Clark of a cent by and that the merino of the work for calling in these days, when can Cob (12 per Moisture) 7.00 per ton wool, I did all eighteen boarders money afternoon, Jan. 17th, Rev. Sunderland, Mass., who showed a NET PROFIT on his so Wednesday cent be much more if not Stover (40 per Moisture) 8.00 per ton acre of of ,-h our mills are such heavy consu- with no signs of my old trouble return- safely easily C. A. Allen of the Universalist church Corn $43.23. earned ashore, is readily explained the is the most to raise, ing. Many have taken your medicine by expensive love of gambling that is inherent in hu- officiating. Many neighbors and other what it me. most to raise wool after seeing did for I would man The Following Table shows the net and value expensive place nature, and then, too, the love of friends were in attendance, and numer- profit of Corn, Cob and Stover, together with cost of production of not take $1000 and be where I was. You six of the This table is well the State of Ohio and adjacent ter- the sea is born in these Gloucester fisher- leading competitors. worth your long and careful study:_ to use name ous floral offerings bespoke the loving have my permission my if men. It is a game of chance all Net Profits of Six Com and the cheapest is in Australia. around; regard in which the deceased was held. Crops.-Coe-Mortimer Competition for Most Profitable Acre of Com in New Enelaml it will aid anyone.”—Mrs. Susie Tem- and to win against such odds as these iurse it is difficult to arrive at the The body was placed in the receiving pleton, Hooper, Nebraska. men fight gives a zest to their en- tomb. The pallbearers were Nelson B. Bushels Pounds Pounds Value Value Seed Manure j Resi- L cost of a of wool and deavors that those i7 Value H v. .a! pound sepa- who live lives Prepar ■ B ThePinkham record is a proud and peer- quiet Cobb, N. C. Crockett, George A. Sher- Grower Variety of Corn of of of of of and and \ dual ;.7„ve3l r^e} cost on shore never Pro,lt tt from the of the lambs and less one. It is a record of constant vic- experience. Struggling man and J. S. W. The deceased Shelled Cob Stover Corn Stover Cob Land Piant' Ferti1'- Fertil-; Burpee. cf ^ H£J"dK with the elements, sometimes ing zer lty etc. but the same over obstinate ills of winning, was born in Rockland March a __ un, produced, sys- tory the woman—ills sometimes 21, 1853, losing, making virile men, of Asa and was taken in all cases and it will that deal out despair. daughter Agnes (Benner) too, whom the nation can draw on to re- 1. L. S. Whi*f». 97-90 1111.89 Black. was for a 7733.9 $73.43 $30 93 i 00 -r an established She engaged long $3.89 $4 $130 $18 10 $0 00 $2 90 $16* 20 out in one as well as in another. It is the influences of 2. M. H. William. Dent 90.10 1361.41 7067.62 67.58 place degenerating city of years at Her 28.27 j 4 76 2 25 1 18 27 80 7 75 13 00 9 37 fact that E. period dressmaking. 3. M. H. 58.33 602.14 7026.42 ! *9.26 was to all to the Lydia living. Through many generations, to Clark. gent 43.75 28.11 2 1 2W 131 5 OT5 7 50 2 44 charge expenses marriage Capt. Emery B. Coleord 4. E. & H. W. 59.44 643.63 llIL Pinkham’s Vegeta- however, in Gloucester not only have the Moore ggnt 6371.89 44.58 25.49 2.25 5 75 1 65 23 80 0 00 4 62 17« ; and credit the wool with the entire took place in 1880, and from that union 5. J.G. F 65.37 750.20 4124.85 ble has re- men gambled with fortune and Cook. !«t 41.3 16.50 2 63 5 675 2 08 19 10 i 5 125 8 00 A Compound death, one son was born—Jose E. who «■ L-W- Flmt 62'51 869 09 2348.82 me of the flock, and this will the but the women who share Coleord, Pee‘. 46.88 9.40 3.04 3 00 L32 0M 0M 5.69 give storedhealth to thou- too, their dep- survives. The deceased is also survived j 16.“ JJg cost of the wool. rivations and more often suffer I sanus oi sucn suner- early by one sister, Mrs. Joseph Clark; and __I widowhood than n t. when the I a as found after the most careful tn- women. Only one brother, G. L. Black. Mrs. Coleord ing Why sea them claims or theirs do they give had been in ill health the -• that a of merino wool don’t it if you past two years, THE FIRST OF THE TWO igations pound you try over the game. GREAT TRUTHS. a her death finally from a stroke to cost in the United 12 needsuch medicine? me resulting raged States, iisning is none irom (lories, of Proven this Prize Contest is that in a wide open where apoplexy. Prominent among the by competition high Grade Commercial Fertilizer* nomeHome and when a schooner reaches the fertilizer., per pound; while in Ohio and the traits which bring her an endearing Mixtures and Stable Manure may compete freely, grounds these are launched and each arby it costs 19 cents per pound. That suit or clothes. memory was her extreme kindness and is taken in two Largest Crops Are Produced by the Use of High Grade Coirirercia! charge by men. to those sore for Fertilizers Alone average cost of all classes of wool The price of these 3.6 yards at wholesale Trawls generosity possessed is.$4.70 (long deep-sea fishing lines) friends. Her deeds of were not Mr. L. S. White, the winner of the First Prize used 1.000 lbs. per acre of Grade a charity High Commercial testing -is the American farmer 9 1-2 cents are out from the schooner in Fertilizers, 1 Cost of trimmings. 2.78 spread heralded, and a very few outside of the about 5-8-8. und to That the cost in Cost of 3.74 directions like the spokes of a wheel, winner of the Second Prize used ; produce. making. recipients ever knew of the painstaking Mr. M. H. Williams, the 1,000 lbs. per acre of a similar High Grade Commercial Ferti General expense and expense,_ 2.03 the vessel being the smaller lines lbs. acre of a Home ::h America of the same costs selling hub; manner in which she strove to alleviate lizer but, in addition used 360 per Mixture of Cottonseed Meal and Muriate of grades with hooks baited, from these Pota*h The return* hang suffering on the part of worthy poor. As show the use of this mixture, gave no corresponding increase in the crop, but increased the s tween 4 and 5 cents a pound. In New Total cost. $14.25 to the of only cost of raising the Corn trawls, usually number about mother and sister she a The winner of the Third Prize. Mr. M. H. Clark, used 325 Cost to wife, occupied only lbs. per acre of High Z- and in the most situ- retailer.$16.50 3,000, each of one. Grade^Commercial F?rtiHzer^in nand, favorably dory taking charge sphere in life which leaves none but 1911, but had previously for three successive years applied a ton to the acre of Grade This suit will cost the wearer at retail is these small High Commercial Fertilizer to t i* 1 of where im- It from craft that so many tender and land. Thus it is that Mr. Clark s of Corn was portions Australia, grateful memories.—Rock- plain profitable crop clearly due to the use of large quantities of Commer- and never less than at out casualties happen. They get lost in the cial Fertilizer. nse clips of wool are it $23 $20 closing land Courier-Gazette. produced, ap- fog, are or are run down sales at the end of seasons or to make swamped, by : r.rs that the sales of other products of passing shipping, as familiarity with THE SECOND room for new stock. The manufactur- Dr. William Atwell for 47 GREAT TRUTH. dock cover the entire expense, leav- danger frequently makes the fishermen Swett, contest is that er’s on the 3.6 of cloth in hazardous. in active and a veteran of ®*? Clearly proven by this V the wool a net and there- profit yards extremely years practice product, The introduction of this suit was 23 1-2 cents. The gasolene-propelled the Civil died 17th at his Grade Commercial tere a net ready War, January Heavy Applications of High Fertilizer not only Raise the of Corn but profit. schooners is working one change. It is Largest Crops per acre, made clothing manufacturer’s is home in Bangor. He was born in also The average number of sheep kept on profit lessening the risk and hence Raise the Most Profitable attracting 72 Crops. $2.18 and the retailer’s profit is some are Hampden years ago. He attended 11,060 farms in this State that re- capitalists. These, however, offering what of from the Note is said above concerning quantities fertilizer used and then the table. You then see $6.00 or $7.50. regular guaranteed wages, frequently Hampden Academy, graduated study will clearly how ted sheep thereon at the last census, Dartmouth Medical School in this works out. $100 a to the but the 1863, and As very few w’ill ever see the full re- month, fishermen; about 20 per farm. This means latter in rare instances began practice in Monroe. In 1864 he except refuse to Your Corn for 1912 Will Need Is to port of the Board I have here a was commissioned an assistant Crop Fertilizer—Now the Time Provide for it by Ordering a Good of 120 pounds of woo! raised per flock, given accept the innovation. It does not mat- surgeon Supply resume of the more ter to a real in the 29th Maine Regiment, and after will mean a of about hasty important Gloucester fisherman that profit $15 per the war settled in where he features of it.—C. E. Smith. he will do fairly well if he nets but $50 Winterport, ■k. or about 75 cents per head. This remained until when he went to for his share when gambling on the 1884, was E. not a and He a member of the staff ,857 FRANK COE’S FERTILIZER irely very large profit, if catch of cod, or that he is hardly likely, Bangor. ,9,2 IN THE DELAWARE. of the Eastern Maine General rest on the value of the flock was ICE even with excellent luck, to make a hun- Hospital (STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE FOR OVER FIFTY from 1893 to YEARS) there remains the of a 1910, when he resigned. He n out it would reduce dred, always hope this profit at was a member of the Penobscot Our Annual Fertilizer and Handsome Calendar for will be sent free of while the wonderful voyage, and when he is County Booklet, 1912, charge supply las t MO cent. While the The Equitable Fire in New York City. only ; per labor, for- driven to it by circumstances be- Medical Association, the Maine Medical if you mention The Republican Journal. wholly Association and the nnd other expenses exceed $2 per Last week we received the following yond his control will he work for stated American Medical Association. He was also a 51 in the western sheep raising personal letter from Capt. Albert M. wages.—The Marine Journal. member of THE COE-MORTIMER COMPANY 'v™“s NEW YORK CITY Hancock Lodge, F. and A. M., of Hamp- a s, these same expenses in Australia Rich, master of S. S. Pawnee of the den; Hancock Chapter of Royal Arch DR. LEONHARD i'S less than $1 and in South America Clyde and Mallory S. S. Co., under date Masons of Bucksport; Maine Comman- Order of the Le- M $1.15 per head. So while it costs of New York, January 15th. and believe dery, Military Loyal Hem-Roid Will Interest Every Person gion. and was surgeon of Hannibal Ham- per cent more to raise wool here it will interest many of our readers. Who Has Piles. lin Post, G. A. R. He is survived by NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE 'i it does in the other principal wool Capt. Rich runs between Philadelphia his wife, Elizabeth Patten, whom he Th.^ is indebted to Albert R. Crosby, late of Stock- and New York. He writes: public Dr. J. S. Leon- married in a son and a ucing countries the duty on the wool 1868; daughter, NERVOUSNESS WHEREAS.ton Springs, of Waldo and State hardt of County Lincoln, Nebr., for years of study of Frederic of and Miss of deceased, then ily 40 per cent. Butin the scoured “I have the old story to tell. The George Washington Maine, living,by his mortgage the treatment of piles, and for his discovery j Carlotta Bunting of Madison, Wis. deed, dated.the fourth day of April, A. D. 11*08; I elE(ss some of the rates are too Delaware river and bay are frozen up and recorded in the high of a successful taken which This Man Given Doctors Cutlerr'Cuts Waldo Registry of Deeds, remedy, Up by inwardly, book 285 and should be lessened. and I am sor. y to say that our reg- We page 204, conveyed to Lewis M. tight livens up the stagnant blood circulation and DIVORCED AT ROCKLAND. have 'just received a full line of cut- Took Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Partridge of said Stockton Springs, a certain uuuso ular have been for a time aban- which vii ai.u ouuuuj is s>u trips reduces the swollen vessels. Dr. Leonhardt's lery, includes parcel of real estate, situated in said Stockton Rosetta of that very little is imported. But doned. We came down the river last prescription is HE.M-ROID, sold by Wm. O. George Rockland, libellant, and Was Cured. Springs, and bounded and described as follows, from Bertrand L. George, residence un- to wit: Beginning at the southeast corner of is all right. one who has been Thursday night (January 11th) in a snow Poor & Son, Belfast, Me., and all druggists at Any I known, for cruel and abusive treatment; Mr. Elmer E. Warwick, a foundry- Carving Sets, Carrie R. Dev creaux’s farm; thence N. 22 and was from six *1 for 24 treatment. Guaranteed to a shoddy mill will say that we do storm. The ice inches to days’ give name of libellant changed to Rosetta man, of Xo. 10S Ash street, Albion, i W. by said Devereaux farm, one hundred and satisfaction. Dr. Leonhardt Co., Station B, Kitchen sixty-five rods to a stake; thence north twenty- want any more shoddy in our cloth- three feet thick in the bay. Since then Linscott. Mich., says: Knives, Write for booklet. five feet to a stake; thence N. 22 and A W. Buffalo, N. Y. Villa M. from John T. “I had an attack of •: than we can An our ships have been tied up to await a Berry, libellant, the grip which thirty-one rods to the county road; thence help. investigation of for cruel Butcher ■ ier in the ice conditions. have Berry, parties Rockland, left me in a very weakened condition. Knives, south twenty-five feet to the old line; thence the Cleveland administration change We and abusive THE RURAL SCHOOLS. treatment. to numb N. 22 A W. by said grantor’s land ds to wed the had cold weather the Soon after my legs began have forty fact that more shoddy was awfully past week. Mary E. Gray, libellant, from Wilbur Pen Knives, a stake; thence N. 62 east said Bpells and darting pains went through by giantor’s i- i in the manufacture of cloth in At one time our wheel was frozen so Plans for Their General F. Gray, both of Rockland, for cruel and land, twenty-nine and three-fourths rods to a ; Eng- Betterment Being them. Little use abusive treatment. by little I lost the of etc. maple tree marked 1874 in the west line of the t than in this country. In fact, we that it scarcely would turn over. We Advocated Smith. Spatulas, by Supt. Lena V. Frazer, libellant, from both legs. I had to lie in bed for four Ella Small farm; thence S. 22 and A E. by said of anchored in New York harbor Small’s farm to land of W. S. ■port large quantities shoddy and Saturday State Supt. of Schools Payson Smith Charles A. Frazer, both of for or five weeks. For a year I was out of Devereaux; Rockland, thence south fourteen rods by said Devereaux’s to go to to work into morning and the windlass froze is advocating important plans for the and confirmed habits of intoxica- work because I was unable to ; England up. gross get land to a stake; thence S. 22 and A E. by said betterment of the schools of the tion and cruel and woolen cloth. It was found that the oft- “Last Tuesday I stood on Broadway public abusive treatment. around. I had a doctor from Detroit Devereaux land to high water mark onshore of State. These are to be Name of libellant to Lena Fort Point near Wall plans strongly changed V. look me over and he said there was no Who Said Cove; thence southerly by said high assertion that the was Street and witnessed the Scissors? nprated duty in a series of Teachers’ In- mark emphasized Bennelt. show for another doctor said that water to the first bound; reserving there- o P d to the fire. With me; price of the articles, even Equitable building eight stitutes, which are to be held in Aroos- Lillian E. McNelly of Camden, libel- from a strip of lard six rods wide or location it was only a question of time when I of the B. & A. R. ; »i -n made in this country, was not true. streams of water from the Broadway took county, during the week of January lant, from Raymond of North- We have Scissors and R., containing thirty-nine McNelley would die. I down. more or less. 23. for utter continued for kept running My acres, Board purchased 16 samples of side being poured into the building, the port, desertion, Also a lot of land the above de- State Smith declares that no Btomach and digestion seemed affected adjoining c Supt. three consecutive years. all of whs which the duties lower was a furnace. The Shears, sizes, scribed lot, described as follows, to wit: Ke- upon ranged part roaring man should find it to remove by the paralysis. I could keep nothing necessary Ida M. Sukeforth, libellant, of Rock- ginning at the northerly line of the town road oi 15c to 20c so in fi'remen’s hats were covered with ice from his farm home to educate his chil- on my stomach except raw eggs. I was per cwt.; high, land from Herbert L. Sukeforth, now of the best at line of said grantor’s land and tunning dren and that a rural extremely emaciated and a nervous quality. ij fart, they could not be brought in here and frozen to their heads. The streams good system of Lans Dimas, California, for utter deser- northerly by said grantor's land to land for- schools is Maim’s best aid to the devel- wreck. I read about Dr. Williams’ of Leonard Shute; thence >’ sold in with of water froze as soon as touched tion continued for three consecutive merly westerly by competition domestic they Pink Pills for Pale in a saidShute land to land of Alonzo opment of Maine agriculture. years. Custody of Marion E. Sukeforth, People paper Also Scissors and Heath; thence poods. These 16 of cost the building. Many of the and took them for six months because Shears said Heath’s land to the said pieces goods standpipes The principal features of the program minor child of the parties, granted to southeasterly by I saw that I was after I had town road; thence by said town road to the ■PP.»4 abroad. If one them had to be abandoned on account of for rural school betterment in which Ida M. Sukeforth until the further order improving brought ice, at 25 cents a first more is the aid used the first box. At the end of that pair, any bound, containing twenty-two acres, "this he would have to and the in front is covered State Supt. Smith asking for of Court. Miller for libellant. or less. country pay today building time I was cured of of teachers and Maud B. Thom s- entirely paralysis aiso .90 on them with two feet of ice, all the windows are superintendents, public- Morse, libellant, of size want—a anotner certain lot oi iana Dounieii as duty them, making cost, are and my system was restored to you good spirited citizens, as follows: ton, from Thomas H. Morse, residence general follows, to wit: Beginning at a maple tree in or about with gone and is a a healthy condition. Idon’tknowhow ■ig'nt here, $118.80, $120 tj?e building complete A properly qualified teacher, with ade- unknown, for utter desertion continued article for the line of land of Ella Small and northern line of wreck. a many boxes of the pills I used but money. thence freight added. Now the domestic But few months from now we quate pay, for every country child. for three consecutive years. Custody of grantor's land; northwesterly eight A and I do not begrudge the outlay as it rods and five links by land of said Small’s to of will see a on the comfortable attractive building, Muriel M. and B. Morse, minor Price absolutely similar goods made sixty story building Floyd was much smaller than the other stake and stones; thence said with proper ventilation and children of the to Maud westerly by and the healing, parties, granted Small’s land to t-rv was found to be $69.75, which is spot, old Equitable building of treatments. I have never had any re- LET US SHOW eleven rods and five links stake lighting. Sanitary outbuildings kept B. Morse. and stones; thence twenty-two "So than the to of or nine stories will be a of currence of the paralysis and am now northwesterly duty, say nothing the eight thing clean and decent through daily inspec- Leroy C. Fields, libellant, from Cora rods said Small’s land to land of in good health. I. owe life and THESE GOODS. by formerly cost. And the the New York has a fire tion. E. of for cruel my Ira W. thence west rods and -‘-'reign notwithstanding past. good Fields, parties Rockland, health to and Harriman; twenty with the painstaking long-con- ten links to of this south- but a Ample school grounds plenty of and abusive treatment. land grantor; thence high rates of duty on manufactured equipment, on such day as the tinued use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills space for play and some provisions for erly fifty-six rods and six links to land of this " "len we do not Equitable fire it was almost impossible for Pale People. I believe are the grantor; thence line of land goods produce enough school gardens. MAINE NEWS ITEMS. they by grantor’s to reach the the best remedy for twenty-nine rods to first bound, containing fur our own use, but we imported from upper part, wind blew so A full supply of good text-books in paralysis.” There is no of reach- Mitchell & Trtissell. four acres, more or less, from the northwest and it was so clean and wholesome condition. A few absolutely way ign countries se^en times as much in heavy The Governor and Council, late Thurs- nerves And whereas the condition of said mortgage a ing the with medicine except cold.” up-to-date maps, globe, necessary ref- refused to been now Estelle 'alue in 1910 as we sold them. It was day afternoon, grant pardons through the blood. The nerves receive having broken, therefore, I, erence books, including dictionaries, a to two men, who are serving life sen- all of their nourishment and B. Crosby, owner of said mortgage, by assign- ‘'-'and that in the erection and equipment school with books both for the Bupport ment of same from said Lewis R. to library tences at the State prison at Thomaston, the which under healthful Partridge '1 O STATE OF MAINE. from blood, dated re- two identical woolen mills, one here school and the community, and a few Samuel D. of Rockland and Eu- me, the ninth day of July, 1910, and Haynes conditions, carries the elements needed corded in the Waldo Registry of Deeds, book one in the mill good pictures. C. Hurd of both for COOMBS’ England, English The pointed fire stand on thy hills, gene Harmony, to rebuild wasted nerve tissue. 297, page 22, by reason of said breach of the A reasonably, but not rigidly classified murder. cusl ,p.tuv,uuv, anu me American Thy rivers seek the ocean’s rest, who is interested in the conditions thereof, claim a foreclosure of said or course of with Every person And dimpled by the passing wind graded study, adequate home treatment of nervous disorders mortgage. ■'145,000. It was found that in the blue lakes attention to the with The members of the student body and MEAT CART Thy smile upon thy breast. fundamentals, large should send for a new edition of our January 8, 1912. Thou art so O State of Maine! for hand and with the faculty of Colby College are making -‘ed mills investigated in this coun- fair, opportunity work, free booklet “Diseases of the 3w2 ESTELLE B. CROSBY. For beauty’s self doth with thee bide— connection between the extensive preparations for entertaining entitled, I will call ^ ""■ '7 cent of the other every possible Nervous Tuesdays, Thursdays per machinery, And pleasure-loving sons of men of the school and the actual- the seventh annual Maine Boy’s Con- System.” experiences Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain no and Saturdays with a full line of the looms, was imported. As to Along the green-fringed highways rider. ities of life. ference which will be held in Waterville harmful or and 1 Jan. 26-28. The are in habit-forming drugs, the best of fresh beef, pork, lamb, ificiency of labor it was found that Long, long ago our fathers came, Expert supervision made possible to arrangements of President Roberts and Presi- the sufferer who gives them a trial will of the American laborers Sought this new land so strange and fair, all towns through the system of union charge etc., Arlington hams, bacon, sau- Dr. W. C. LIBBEY. avoid the so common in fijority And from the watch-towers o f hills dent Russell H. Lord, ’12. of the Y. M. danger taking thy of towns with State aid, sage. Everything of the best no while in Their brave the A. drugs which only deaden pain. qual- previous experience, songs rang upon air, The school building a social center, C. of North Brooksvilie. ; : Thou them the to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold ity and prices right. A chance to land there is an adequate supply of gavest strength do,— used under the of teacher and by A vision of what could be done— leadership George Stanley Stevenson, principal all or will be ■: to druggists, sent, postpaid, inspect your meats without going DENTIST, r that has been trained for a superintendent promote all the educa- of the Coburn Institute for genera- O give vision now, reveal Classical six on receipt of price, 50 cents per box; six The truth unto the father’s son ! tional interests of the community. has announced his down town. s in the woolen industry, and is years, resignation, boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams 93 MAIN MAINE. “This is not radical,” says the same to take effect at the close of STREET, BELFAST, skilled and and in Thy sons, O Maine, fought for the sla«re, program Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. The best of home-made Mined thoroughly efficient; Supt. Smith. “It involves only the fund- the school Mr. Stevenson 4" Thy children shaped a nation’s fate. present year. Bradford district the looms run at a amental of a school Meat by the pound. Order by But still a greater task is thine points good system. is to become the principal of anew Boys’ TELEPHONE 223-3 No reason exists all a n d rate than do in the Fair guardian of our northern why these factors school in the location to be an- 8e con d- h telephone. Telephone 178-14 higher of speed they gate. Maine, of de- Those of old have may not soon be realized all commu- goods every Morse days passed away,— by nounced later. Mr. Stevenson is a native Furni- W. Given His Freedom. United States. The labor cost of con- A battle out as are scription. ARTHUR COOMBS, cry rings again.— nities, they already realized by of Clinton. ture. car- r bedding, ing the wool into “tops” is about 80 Banish, O Maine, from thy proud State some.” pets, stoves, etc R. F. D. 4. Belfast. Washington, January 18. President The sin which thrives on others’ furniture Br cent. here than in pain! The installation of the Vinalhaven Antique 43tf greater England; a specialty. If you Taft tonight commuted to expire immed- !h'- O touch all hardened hearts with love A Rhyme for Nineteen-Twelve. bodies affiliated with the G. A. R., took have to labor cost of converting the “tops” anything the 15 sentence for violation For saddened home where woe is piled, place Friday evening, Jan. 12th. Col. E. sell drop me « iately years •to is over 90 cent >ostal card aud will receive a call. yarn per greater Where breaks a woman’s gentle heart. 'Tie publicly stated that nineteen-twelve K. Gould failed to appear, and the S. of you prompt of the national banking laws under which ',tre Where a helpless little child. Is a year that is hard to rhyme, WALTER H. COOMBS, than there; and the labor cost of sleeps V. ceremony was deferred. Comrade F. Charles W. the New York banker O State of Maine! O old State! The only two words, just “delve” and “shelve,” Federal Morse, into the finished grand S. Walls was officer for the Post Corner Cross and Streets, Belfast, H. C. Hoffses inverting the yarn Make our men like men Can be found in clime. installing strong of old poetic and Mrs. Lottie H. Carver and ice king, served two years in the cl°lh is from 60 to 170 cent Who gave their lives a sacrifice,— Charles Libby, the chopper, when swinging his performed per higher the same for the Ladies’ federal at Ga. The Whose honor was not or sold. axe, duty society. CLEANING. penitentiary Atlanta, than in bought England. —Elizabeth Merrill. In eighteen hundred and twelve, The Post members were remembered by commutation of sentence which gives Mine and seven-tenths pounds of raw Can show you the statement is not from facts; Mrs. T. G. Libby, and each presented TRUCKING STEAMPRESSING Morse his complete freedom—but unlike As he a hold the a does not restore his which costs the Ohio farmer $1.55 $100 PER PLATE. keeps strong of “helve.” with a white carnation in memory of pardon civil .its —C. O. of in the Portland I am prepared to do all kinds of trucking, —was lij was at a to in New Stickney Bridgton Comrade Libby. granted upon recommendatiC, )>f him $2.23, or 68 cents paid banquet Henry Clay, furniture and a Leave and REPAIRING. raise, brings Orleans in 1841. for those with Argus. piano moving specialty. Attorney General Wickersham Mighty costly irders at the stable, corner of Main and Cross E.jir'pur- Wt. This costs the manufacturer stomach trouble or To geon General According ‘the indigestion. day peo- itreets, and they will receive prompt atten- CUSTOM CLOTHES TO ORDER Torney. ^■t11 use Dr. New Life Pills “Had dyspepsia or indigestion for years. Children to the desi- at the mill. This will make three ple everywhere King's Cry ■ion. Telephone connection. 3mS0; surgeon general’s report for these as as No appetite, and what I did eat distressed me itld troubles well liver, kidney and FOR FLETCHER’S dent, Morse could not live one month six-tenths of all-wool cloth, bowel sure. terribly. Burdock Blood Bitters cured me.”— W. W. At 52 High Street. Tel. 216-13 yards disorders. Easy, safe, Only 26 BLAZO, longer in confinement and even at lib- '’hich cents at all J. H. Walker, Sunbury, Ohio. 16tf is sufficient to make a three-piece druggists. CASTOR IA 126 Waldo Avenue, Belfast erty probably would not live six months. prospect ferry. election will be held, and expressed him- Became Stiff Miss Gertrude Berry of Stockton Springs The Republican Journal self in its He also de- Knees favor. ... strongly visited Mrs. Evelyn Harrison last Sunday law Years of Severe Rheumatism fined his position on the prohibitory Five Mrs. of is visitin g BELFAST. THURSDAY. JANUARY 26. 1912 Maggie Cayad Stonington him The cure of Henry J. Goldstein, 14 so that several men who opposed her Mrs. W. C Harding .. .The sick Barton Street, Boston, Mass., is anoth- daughter, should are Harrison PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY four years ago declared that they er victory by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. people all on the gain_Arthur medicine has succeeded in was at Sun support him in the coming campaign. This great home fro.n Bangor and spent day The Pub. Co. many cases where others have utterly Republican Jour. several ... Mrs. G. W. Silver is visiting friends in Mr. Haines said he had received failed. Mr. Goldstein says: "I suf- White it Bangor for Quimby o. Sale I he had sent fered from rheumatism five years, several weeks ...Fred CHARLES A. PILSBURY. !■ hundred replies to the letters Manager kept me from business and caused ex- Stockton is hauling paving bloeks at Mt. Hea out his candidacy for gover- knees would-be- We have received a full line of announcing cruciating pain. My gan-Miss Harriman i3 with just many Kate through and showed that the come as stiff as steel. I tried i $2.00 a nor, they Republi- her and is at home Subscription Terms. In advance, medicines without relief, then took millinery season in Bangor for six 50 cents for three cans would next fall and IS THE BEST IN THE year: $1.00 months: get together Hood’s Sarsaparilla, soon felt much with her parents, Capt. and Mrs. W. H. Harri- months. were a number en- work as of old. There better, and now consider myself man. -WORLD- one one recommend Hood’s.” Ant ertising Terms. For square, of other speakers, and their temarks tirely cured. I Inch length in column. 25 cents for one week Get it today in usual liquid form or is made of for each insertion. were in to resubmis- called Sarsatabs. SANDYPOINT. because it Ladies’ and 25 cents subsequent mainly opposition tablets MUSLIN chocolated if John Brock of Searsport spent the week- sion, and on motion of Mr. Hudson it wa the purest and best in- end with friends here ...Miss Edna Herrick Shouldn’t the last syllable of Woodrow unanimously voted ‘‘that it is the senti- because it ten years old, was the youngest. “After has returned to F. S. Harriman’s, after a two gredients, W’ilson’s Christian name be pronounced ment of the meeting that our represent- receiving a limited education he follow- weeks’ vacation at her home in Lagrange- contains more heeding, to rhyme with cow? atives in the legislature vote at the spec- ed the sea for eighteen years till cast Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Lloyd and children of Houl- and resub- strengthening up- UNDERWEAR ial session against any further ton are the tenement over that oc- An writer includes one Ameri- away on old Metinic when the vessel was occupying English form.” building material than mission in any headed cupied by Mr. Harry Twist and family/... Sev- can among the ten greatest men living— for Penobscot bay in a heavy eral from here attended the masked ball in any other Emulsion, and Which will go on sale Thomas A. Edison. An original supporter of Senator La storm. He came to Vinalhaven and Prospect Jan. 19t... Miss Faustina Griffin, who because it is a perfect Follette and his warm friend, worked on granite, then to Islesboro and The New York Sun is after Woodrow formerly is teaching school in Hampden, was at home followed and married Miss of a scientific- ex-Governor W. D. Hoard, editor of The fishing, finally over .Miss Olive Merrill was called product Wilson with its stick. The Sun Sunday... sharp the a Jefferson County (Wis.) Union and a Agnes Ross, daughter of clergy- to Hampden last week by the death of her ally perfect process. an Thursday, January 25th, he is cold-blooded and ingrate. says well-known announced man of English descent, settled in Isles- brother-in-law, Mr. Calvin Young—Mrs. agriculturist, Doctors the world over and later the farm in Maria Hanscomb of is the These are made from excellent TheAndroscoggin grand jury has re- some time ago in an editorial in The boro, bought - Sangerville guest goods material and in ton on which his were born and of her niece, Mrs. F. F. Perkins....H. M. Grif- recognize ported 77 indictments, and 62 are for Union that he had abandoned the cause family a very manner and will be sold at the reared.” At the time of the hermit’s fin’s new hall is completed and it is expected superior very liquor nuisances. How many convic- of the Progressive leader. He has fol- it will be for use the week.... visit the son Perth was ready coming lowest The is invited to tions will follow? lowed this a letter to Chase S. Osborn already pre- prices. public cordially by Grant & ice for all for and the Irish lad Co. have harvested local Scott’s of Michigan, in which he strongly com- paring college, Emulsion call and inspect same before elsewhere. The move to secure the nomination of use the past week_During the recent cold purchasing had determined to follow while as mends the executive for his recent at- him, the 24 below the Standard prepa- Prof. L. as the snap %thermometer registered j Henry Chapman Repub- the of the house were re- We also have a verv nice line of tack on La Follette, He then goes on to daughters zero. It was the coldest here for ration of Cod Liver lican candidate for Governor was cheek- many years. Oil. his of the in solved to go out into the world and express opinion Senator -The skating on the ponds is excellent at AU, DRUGGISTS ed last week a statement from Prof. by earn their or phrases not often equalled for bitterness. living by teaching other this writing.... Mrs. H. M. Griffin went to Bel- 11-22 Chapman that “he would be unable to _=HAMBURGS—* How the earned fast ... W. Grant is in Mr. Hoard says: employment. boys Wednesday, shopping J. be a candidate.” for their of the aid Greenville for a visit ... Relatives here ac- I believe him to be the most dangerous money college career, which will go on sale the same date. man that has arisen in American received and of the adventures knowledge the receipt of cards announcing NORTHPORT. When we get that line of sailing pack- politics they since the of Aaron Burr, for he is the marriage at the village of Mr. and Mrs. to the of the weather and ets between this and Boston, why days which befell them, is told at length in the Owing inclemency «@=REMF.MBER THE DA7E.“^a port as was shown Nicholas absolutely unscrupulous, book. Another B. Ginn, and extend congratulations the bad travelling the first social function of not have a stage line between Belfast in his of the law. prominent figure is that repudiation primary to them. the New Year was postponed until Wednesday and Burnham. it at one mil- Neither law nor friendship, nor any of of Father Neilson, a Catholic priest, who 107 Capitalize evening Jan. 17th, when Mr. and Mrs. Geo. E. lion dollars and sell the stock at one dol- the common elements of honor among is relieved of his charge to go on foot NORTH UNITY. H M RT ACK Bowden held their at their 11. iTl. men, will be allowed to stand in the way Mr. and Mrs. Rand of Mon- wedding reception Main street. lar share to those for a the sanitation Stephen Utica, per looking per- through country teaching the on Beechhill of his ambition, if he thinks it safe to with Charles pretty cottage, Rockery, and methods. The tana, spent Jan. 2d Mr. and Mrs. manent investment. cast them aside. improved farming avenue. 8 o’clock room was Wellington_Mrs. D. V. Rollins of Unity, By every literally You notice that he made no to villians of the story are two young with old and came reply Eng- who has been is somewhat better at thronged both young,who to Warden Wiggin of the Maine State and strictures quite sick, your very temperate just lishmen cruising on the Maine coast in express their good wishes and to extend to the in the other him. This is his When this writing. Dr Trueworthy attends her- prison appeared Augusta concerning game. their who abduct the I bride and wishes for a New Year §^S^i*§»l§iS§»§»?^|^gS8KS§a8»iiS yacht, Clayton There was a ball and in Adams’ hall groom happy were in his exposed he keeps still, and here he is supper day wearing stripes. They and them to a on as well as a future. Mrs. Bowden shrewd. You struck him an honest girls carry bungalow New Year’s with a and prosperous which is said to have very night large attendance, yellow “weskit,” was the widow of the C. E. Rhoades, and deserved blow when you declared the White Isles. They are rescued a fine time is lateCapt. the by reported.... Mrs. Charles Wel- I ONE-THIRD been so dazzling that it “awoke that in his efforts he has been for and was united in marriage to Mr. Geo. F. public the hermit, the priest and others and re- lington has a fine new piano_The Odd Fel- 1 echoes of the State House and drove La Follette alone. Everything else is Bowden of Passadumkeag Monday evening, stored to their homes, and their abduct- lows and Rebekahs had a public installation of Governor Plaisted’s advisers to seek the merely a cover. Jan 1st, by the Rev. G. E. Frohock at the resi- Of All Cars Made In America in ors captured and punished. The Dale officers Wednesday evening at Odd Fellows H of blinders.” Very much such a man as the mayor dence of the groom’s sister, Mrs. Thomas Bush- protection club in the book. There is much hall, Unity. A very nice supper was enjoyed figures by, in Camden. After congratulations and Will of Belfast, but with more brains and a and a 1912 Be Fords of historical interest and general good time was reported by all g The new between Boston charming pen ( other pleasant and happy compliments had subway cleaner record. present-Mr. Charles Cook and Miss Helen of local scenes. The been tendered to the arid all had and is now com- pictures C. M. happy pair, What a Valuable to the Cambridge practically Hale, both of Troy, were united in Message World. Clark marriage themselves, the host and but will not be in The Publishing Co., Boston. Price, severally enjoyed Sg pleted, public opera- Woodrow evening, Jan. Rev. A. S. Rol- Wilson-Harvey-Watter- Monday 8th, by hostess invited all to the where a One of the and Exclusive Features which tion It has $1.50. dining-room, Original until early in the spring. son affair was the chief topic in Wash- lins ot Troy. They have the best wishes of most delicious spread was partaken of. Then Have made the Ford Model T the Most cost six million dollars. The whole dis- last Con- their friends_The funeral of Mrs. Lorenzo Popular, ington Thursday, Republican followed an inspection of the many beautiful ^ Colds Vanish was tance is three and a half miles, and the as Garcelon, who died Jan. 3d, held Jan. 10th Most Widely Bought and Most Serviceable Car in gressmen manifesting much interest and useful presents from their wide circle of p; gjj time will be the at her late home. The burial was in Fairview running eight minutes; in the matter as their political opponents. The Sensible Overnight Remedy for friends, not only from home folks but from the World is as follows: Sen-1 cemetery. Rev. James Ainslie of was time of the surface cars It was almost the universal that Unity distant as well. It was a running present opinion sible places very enjoyable FORD A of inventive one of the People. the officiating clergyman-Mrs. Ida Rollins Eg .MAGNETO. triumph genius, greatest is about thirty minutes. Gov. Wilson had received a occasion, and everybody went away brim full staggering After you have stomach with R& inventions of the age because of its unlimited as to motor cars, — upset your of Troy, who has been very sick with utility applied ve pneu- of good cheer extended to them by the genial blow Col. Watterson’s disclosures. It into ™ at the Board of Trade by pills, powders and vile nostrums, and still re- monia, is gaining, which will be welcome news ^orc* ma8nc4° is buil4 antl becomes a part of the fly-wheel. There are no In his address i host and hostess. And here J. will say that Mr. Itill is now7 conceded that the race for the tain possession of that terrible cold, do what to her many friends-Mrs. Herman Richard- wearing surfaces, no moving wires, no ignition troubles. The safes4 banquet Hon. Robert F. Dunton, State and Mrs. Bowden deeply appreciate their kind- simplest, nomination is race, with thousands of sensible people are doing. Do son is with the but at Dresent and liable to trouble of all said that the bank- anybody’s suffering grip, ness and extend to their visitors their most least magnetos. bank commissioner, this: (jjj) Speaker Clark to most writing is able to sit up a very little. Both institutions of Maine had resources likely profit by grateful thanks for the splendid gifts received, ing the check Gov. Into a bowl three-quarters full of boiling Dr. and Dr. hi ve attend- for Waldo Wilson has received, al- Trueworthy Whitney and in the come Agents & JONES. about and that the years to they will look back County—CARLE of $200,000,000, great- water pour a scant teaspoonful of HYOMEI ed her-Mr. and Mrs. J. and little though the latter is said to stand head Mudgett with and ever investments were in pride pleasure and remember er part of their (pronounce it High-o*m.e),cover head and bowl Ruth of Burnham last and shoulders over the intel- daughter spent Sunday j these evidences of kindness and advocated home Speaker a generosity, iMBmwmmMWMm&mMmmmwmmwMwmm outside securities. He with towe! and breath for five minutes the with her Mr. and Mrs. Man in who parents, roe, lectually. Conservative Democrats soothi friendship. investments and spoke of one trust com- ng, healing vapor that arises. Troy-Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Stone will go to did not want who Wilson, but preferred Then to bed and awake with a a pany which from the start had held only go clear head Boston this week for week’s stay on a com- Unclaimed in the Belfast Bank him to fear that FREEDOM. Deposits Savings either Clark or Bryan, jn the morning. HYOMEI does not contain bined business and Mrs. Stone that class of securities. pleasure trip. Miss Sarah entertained the Ladies will The Perley Bryan again be the nominee. opium, cocaine or any harmful drug. A bottle will visit friends in Boston. BELFAST, MAINE. Aid Thursday afternoon, Jan. I'l-th_Miss The Bowdoin College Republican club St. Louis Democrats who looked with of HYOMEI Inhalant costs 50 cents at A. A. Edna L. Osgood, teacher of the Normal branch- The following statement contains the name, the amount standing tc his credit, the la.-: Howes & and was 19th with the favor upon the of Gov. Wood- Co. druggists everywhere. Guar- CENTER MONTVILLE. or office organized January candidacy es and English in Freedom Academy, was called known place of residence post address and the fact of death, if known, of every de- row Wilson for the Presidential nomina- anteed for catarrh, asthma, and catarrhal The most exciting event of last week in this | following officers: Wm.Riley Spinney,’13 croup home Jan. 8th by the illness of her mother and positor in the Belfast Savings Bank, who has not made a deposit, or withdrawn any part there- deafness. snow-bound burg happened Friday, when Carl of Freedom, president; Frederick Ben- tion were stunned by the publication of Miss Noyes from Waterville will take her of, or any part of the dividends thereon, for a period of more than 20 years next preced- Foy shot a three-year-old heifer belonging to ; Simpson, ’12of Bangor, vice presi- the Watterson statement. The general place... Professor V., F. Holman is having November 1, 1911, and is not known to the treasurer to be living: jamin Martin Whitten. No, Carl did not mistake her dent; Lawrence Allen Crosby, ’13of Ban- opinion was that it had made Wilson’s County Correspondence. quite a sick time with lumbago_Miss Hatch Amount for a deer. The heifer was turned into a pas- Name of Last Known Whether Known Date of Last Deposit Standing and Wm. R. nomination from Belfast was the guest of Mrs A. M. gor, secretary treasurer; extremely improbable. They ture with other young stock last spring, but Depositor Residence to be deceased or Withdrawal to Credit HALLDALE. Small the past week... Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Spinney, Frederick B. Simpson, Lawrence were further disturbed by the fact, just got wild and could not be captured last fall. Donald McCorkindale, Unknown Unknown May 26, 1884 $2»> Rev. J. McAuliff at the church last Vose attended the funeral of their wrote preached j grand- Willis W. Scott, Deer Isle, Me, Unknown Dec. 1, 1889 A. Crosby, Prof. Geo. T. Files and Prof. brought to light, that Gov. Wilson When the big snow came, two weeks ago Fri- Sunday morning and wiil preach there again mother Ware in Thorndike Jan. 18th.Mr. Mellen W. Drew, Jacksonville, Fla. Unknown July 24. 1890 43 William A. executive committee. a letter on 6th,last, strongly indors- day, it was thought she would not be able to Moody, July Jan. 28th-Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Tobie and Mrs. Worth visited Mr. and Mrs. Sunday George I hereby certify that the above statement is true acccording to my best knowledge and belief. ing State-wide prohibition in Texas. J as. get away from two dogs and a crew of deter- Col. Watterson has found ut and son and daughter from North Dakota ar- Roscoe Perley Jan. 18th Mr. Perley is in poor Henry chairman mined men. But she tuckered out the bunch WILMER J. DORMAN, Treasurer. R.Nugent,who lost his office of rived Jan. and are health-Mr. Harrison from candidate for Wood- 17th, visiting Mr. Tobie's Bangor Seminary chat his president, of them, sometimes going through snow 12 of the New York Democratic State Com- mother, Mrs. Addie Plummer_There will be occupied the pulpit last Sunday morning in the row Wil is stuffed with sawdust; or, feet Then Mr. decided to ;on, mittee deep. Whitten have HOW’S THIS? because his fellow-committeemen prayer meetings at the houses in the neighbor- absence of the pastor, Mr. Atchison, and gave Grows Hair at 65 Years of to quote more nearly the colonel’s words, her shot. C. E. Howard wounded her near W. resented his characterization of Gover- hood this week-Several in this community a fine sermon from Judges 16:21. He will oc- We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward more of a schoolmaster than J. Bean’s, and as she went towards W. N. Foy’s that he is are sick with nor Woodrow Wilson as a “liar and an in- the grip. cupy the pulpit again next Sunday morning. Age. any case of catarrh that cannot be cured editor of he was notified by telephone and Carl did the a statesman. Col. Harvey, -Mrs. E. J. Vose will entertain the Ladies Hall’s Catarrh Cure. grate’’ at seaside resort at One Dear Sirs: “I heard of PARISIAN SAGE the Woodrow Scotty’s SWANVILLE CENTER. rest. lady suggests that the shooting Harper’s Weekly, original Aid afternoon_Mr. Sumner would itch a 1 F. J. CHENEY & () N. last now considers this, Thursday, and as my head good{ deal, CO., Toledo, Avon, J., summer, Clements of Monroe has made was a public calamity, as the heifer would Wilson boomer, has taken a reef in his Harry 3,000 Glidden sold a separator to Mr. Frank thought l would try it. I never used any rem We, the have known F. himself a have invaluable this winter Sharpies undersigned, pioneer. apple barrels-Freeman Clark has been on proved to break edies before and was bald on top of my head. and between what Watterson and Johnson ...The three-act Cheney for the last 15 years, boom; recently. drama! bottle and have a lot of and4believe “I was not he “to the sick list with a strain in his back.,..A roads with, if she could have been captured I am using the third surprised,” said, Racket” wras at the honorable in all tran- say it is evident that Wiison is “Captain presented Grange hair where I was bald. perfectly business Harvey read the of five from who alive .. Miss Jackson returned to Pitts- statement of Colonel Henry party Brookline, Mass., have hall ! see the new hair out- tions and afflicted with of the Thursday evening, Jan. 18th, by the Same- I would like you to sp financially able to carry out any o elephantis cranium, been at Marden’s returned field Thursday.F. A. Myrick and Miss Avis The in Watterson exposing the manner of man boarding Hotel, set club, and it was stormy, and the ing from my head. itching my scalp gations made by his firm. as the head. although otherwise known big home last ...Mrs. E. A. Robertson is Myrick of Halldale. and Mrs. Joseph Went- disappeared l am 65 years old and Woodrow Wilson has him- Saturday. roads there was a attendance. quickly Warding, Kinnan & again proven rough, large have been at the Bazaar 51 years.”. Marvin, in Searsport, the guest of Mrs. E. E. Clements worth and her son of Waldo, were Sunday Senator F.lihu as President of self to be his cold-blooded off j Tozier’s orchestra furnished music. After the Win. A. Auctioneer, Harkness Ba- Wholesale Toledo Root, by casting of Mrs. F. A. Cushman-Mrs. John Hopper, Druggists, for several days ... Too much snow for busi- guests and Samson York State Bar of one who sacrificed real friends in order play Thomas Vose sang a song entitled “Casey zaar, Ninth streets, Philadelphia, Hall’s Catrrrh Cure is taken internally, the New association, and C. H. were ness-Charles Marr is very low at this writ- Cornforth of Knox Thompson Pa. Jones” and was encored and sang another upon the blood and mucous sur- at the annual of that or- that he advance the for- bottle of PARISIAN SAGE 50 cents. ing directly spoke meeting might political ing. A trained nurse is in attendance and guests of Mrs. W. P. Jones Thursday-F. A. Large This closed the entertainment. faces of the •* tunes of comedy song. Guaranteed by A. A. Howes & Co. for dandruff, system. Testimonials sent fr ganization in New York city Jan. 19th. Mr. Wilson. I had heard of there is to be a consultation of doctors Luce is visiting relatives in Lawrence, Mass. today, Then all went to the dining room below and falling hair and scalp itch. Puts life and beauty I Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggist. the break between and .... were His theme was “Judicial Decisions and Colonel Harvey Monday. Tuesday the neighbors made a bee Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ayer of Union at into faded hair and is a hairdressing. partook of a fine oyster stew served by J. B. delightful Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation and in his address he Wilson, and I also realized how and got up fire wood for Mr. Marr. D. M. McFarland’s Sunday-W. D. Tasker Public Feeling,” utterly Wiggin. Judson’s stews cannot be beaten. defended both the State and the conduct must had a hog assassinated last week that weighed “Had dyspepsia or indigestion for ye, staunchly repugnant governor’s Then they returned to the hall and spent the EAST NORTHPORT PROPECT. 546 the fat. No aj petite, and what I did eat distressed have to a man the pounds, including rough Federal courts of the country and de- appeared of fine remainder of the evening in dancing. All went Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hills and Miss Mary terribly. Burdock Blood Bitters cured me. j The McKinley lodge, K. of P., held a mask nounced the the re- character and true instincts home feeling had been well repaid for Kelley attended the progressive whist party J. H. Walker, Sunbury, Ohio. principle underlying j gentlemanly ball at their hall Friday evening, Jan. 19. MONROE. they of the effort made to there. The club in the of St. Francis Bel- we Colonel Watterson. members of Ezra M. they get given vestry church, --- .. call of judges. Still, from what have Fifty-eight couples in the grand march, and al1 The officers and Billings ... .. have had several to last .. .The choir met in the “I add that Colonel Col- W. R. C. met at their room Jan. 17th and invitations give the play fast, Thursday evening seen of the miscarriage of justice may Harvey, in mask costume, and it was a very pretty corps Thurs- held a with E. M. again soon. for rehearsal at Mrs. Isaac Hills last courts in recent years, we are not sure onel Watterson, some others intimately sight. Batchelder’s orchestra of three pieces public installation, Billings McCall's Post day evening .. .C. O. Dickey and crew cut ice Magazine but that the recall of is needed. and the world at have rendered fine music for an order of 18 dances. and friends present. The officers were judges large generally, at Cove W. El- installed in a able manner Past Post Saturday last Thursday for H. just come to know what was perfectly This was the banner hop of the season_Mr. very by well and others_East Northport was well and McCall Patterns The only Democratic official in the and Mrs. Hugh Bryant and Master Earl Grant Commander Fred L. Palmer, assisted by Past to me many months ago. DON’T DELAY at the plain Perhaps President Mrs. F. L. Palmer as represented at the Masonic installation State so far as we can learn that is living of Belfast, who have been guests of Mrs. Bry- Dept. Conduct- For Women the remark I made at a well-known New of thir- or, and are as follows: Pres., Martha A. Cove last Saturday evening. A party up to his oath of office and enforcing the ant’s parents, D. H. and Mrs. Gray, returned Moore; Have More Friend* than any othc seashore resort on a certain oc- ! teen went on one of Hills Bros’, double horse law is Sheriff John A. Mooers of Somer- Jersey home Monday, Jan. 22 ...O. G. Thompson is S. V. Pres., Elmeda Bowen; J. V. Pres., Emma Some Belfast People Have Learned That ! magazine or tpatterns. McCall’s is tl M. D. Mendall had four and C. O. casion last summer, in which reference at a few this B. Treasurer, Belle J. Palmer; sleds, Dickey 1 reliable Fashion Guide i set and at a of the Capt. Jellerson’s for days week. Trask; Chaplain, Neglect is Dangerous. monthly county, meeting All had a time and to was Mrs. B. J. Joie R. took several. good hope one million one hundred thousa: pointedly made to the lack of verity .... Mr. and Mrs. Will Batchelder were guests Colson; Conductor, Lufkin; | Democratic bosses in Skowhegan the 1 Annie Ritchie. The extended go again another year. The installation cere- homes. Besides showing all the lati and of gratitude in the of a cer- of Mrs. 0. G. Thompson Sunday, Jan. 21. Guard, corps The of trouble is other it was decided to his makeup slightest symptom kidney of McCall each day oppose thank3 to Commander Palmer for the able mony was performed by Right Worshipful | designs Patterns, tain honored is now far too serious to be overlooked. It’s the This of course is highly gentleman j is brimful of shoit st r: re-nomination. carry- EAST SEARSMONT. manner in which he installed their and Past District Deputy Grand Master, Isaac S. sparkling than it officers, small, troubles that lead to serious and better understood was.” Arad and were in East neglected j helpful information for women out the Democratic or agree- Henry Mahoney also for the nice room he has furnished Hills, assisted by M. G. Black as Grand Mar- ing policy, cozy, ailments. That in the “small” of their kidney pain Snve Money and in Style by snbscri: ment. to fu"ther the interests. On Northpcrt recently, guests of mother, for them to hold their meetings in. All then shal and R. A. Packard as Grand Chaplain- Keep liquor your back; that irregularity; those 1 for McCall’s Magazine at once C-sts only A NEW MAINE BOOK. Mrs. Sarah Albert Marriner urinary Mrs H. G. Hills last the other hand about 30 Mahoney_Mrs. adjourned to partake of refreshments furnished The Ladies’ Aid met with ! cents a year, including any oue of the edebr-n Republicans headaches and that weak, weary, « spent Jan. 18th in Camden_Among those dizzy spells; but six ladies braved McCall Patterns free. have the for by the ladies, towhich ample justice was done. Friday afternoon, only signed primary petition “The White Isles,’’ by Franklin F. Phillips. worn-out, feeling, may be nature’s warning of who have been laid up with sore throat and the storm and and one of the six McCall Patterns Lend all others in style .... Monroe I. O. O. F., held their instal- icy travelling Sheriff Mooers on the readers of The Journal Lodge, dropsy, or fatal disease. Why risk simplicity, economy and number sold. M candidacy Republi- To many of the colds were Leslie and Marriner and j Bright’s a Clyde lation Jan. 18th. District took her dressmaking along. NeverthalosJ, dealers sell McCall Patents than any other can ticket. Friday evening, your life these Mr. is known, and Clarence Gelo. are better at the by neglecting symptoms? makes combined. N<>ne than cents Phillips personally They present Grand Master L. E. McMahan and quilt was tacked and a lot of work accomplish- higher 15 Deputy Reac’i the cause of the trouble while there yet is front your dealer, or by mail from others know him his inter- writing and able to be out recent refreshments were served from This is to us a many through again-The Grand Marshal E. D. Littlefield, both of Bel- ed. Delicious by Maryland! time—begin treating your kidneys at once with of the annual of heavy snow storm kept all the available men the hostess_There will be a church supper new of that fair and fertile esting reports meetings fast, installed the following officers: Noble McC ALL’S MAGA.7.1I product a tried and proven remedy. No need on the road It is unusual that kidney Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hills the South Montville Club of ’69. It was shoveling. very E. T. Vice Grand, E. T. Gilbert ; at Tuesday evening, State, that takes from the Grand, Haskell; ! to Pills have been ; 236-24S W. 37t!> Si., T Vw V h C teeming we have storms so severe that our R. experiment—Doan’s Kidney announced some months that he was popular A. F. Financial Jan. 30th. There will be a good moon at that ago Secretary, Durham; Pwnii iia O .u. /itra waters of the finest Recording curing kidney trouble for over 75 years. Doan’s Ni.r-—.4ae»pi# Copy, Chesapeake bay F. D. carrier, R. W. is to time and a attendance is for as the a and now the book is on Richards, compelled Franklin Chase; Treasurer, F. L good hoped writing book, Secretary, Pills are used and recommended in the world, the diamond back miss a but this storm was too much even Kidney oysters trip, Palmer; Wilder trustees, T. proceeds of the supper will go on the pastor’s our desk, attractively bound and printed, Chaplain, Parker; the civilized world. Endorsed at and fish too numerous to men- for his and he started on two throughout terrapin, courage, although O. G. A. Palmer and Frank Littlefield. salary.Rev. A. J. Lockhart of Win- McCall’s Magazine and The Republic.! ; and with a fine of Shields, home. Read Belfast illustrated, portrait successive he was to and testimony. tion, and from its productive soil the days obliged give up The work was and done and preached in the chapel last Sunday Journal, one year each for $2.10 ably impressively Mrs. Z. A. terport i the author as a frontispiece. The story leave his without mail for five Connell, 18 Bay View street, Bel- choicest fruits and vegetables. And patrons days. listened to with close attention. The march afternoon, exchanging with Rev. M. S. Hill. advance. fast, Me., “1 use Doan’s is laid in this section, and the scenes are When he did make his he made all twice says: Kidney Pills, ice for Mr. and other are trip was Fred- Cunningham, violin, and _C. O. Dickey began harvesting these, many good things, played by at the whenever 1 1 by'one who evidently knows glad by an abundant shower of mail matter. procured City Drug Store, ...The Ladies’ Aid will meet with lavish hand the most depicted Miss Viola Conant, piano. After the installa- Wing Monday dispensed by feel that I am in need of a medicine them well and is enthusiastic over their kidney L. C. Ross next Two in the \ tion an oyster supper was served in the lowei with Mrs. Friday. quilts hospitable people world. But UNITY. and they do me I have never taken an- b In the sentence we are good. to tack and finish....Mr. and eauty. opening Notices have been in hall. Then the tables were removed and a will be ready apples! Well, why not? In antebellum posted public places other remedy as beneficial as Doan’s Kidney introduced to Hatchet, Megunticook, for the destruction of brown-tail moth social dance followed. Old and young spent Mrs. Chester Sheldon spent Sunday with Mr. an was a in the nests, Pills. I confirm all I have ever said in days apple curiosity praise in M. B. Ragged and Bald Mountains, and to the in accordance with an act of the last the later houre socially and pleasantly-Mr Sheldon’s parents Rockland-Mrs. South. Now Arkansas is famous for its Legisla- of this preparation and you may continue pub- Frank Littlefield to Portland this week tc was ill with an attack of in- mountain home of “Old Barrett,” Mr. ture. Perhaps if the originator of the afore- goes lication of former Whiting Sunday Oliver my endorsements.” red and Southern Missouri S “big apple,” said act was to woods and serve on the jury in the U. Court-A digestion. Barrett, the hermit, the clairvoyant, the obliged go through For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Fos- a noted section. is apple growing Last orchards in this masquerade ball will be given here Friday mystic, the seer. The hermit starts afoot mild, balmy weather (?) wad- ter-Milbum Co., Buffalo, New York, sole mail us a be done agents week the brought Maryland a evening, Jan. 26th, and everything will the river to visit friends ing through drifts, carrying heavy pole, and for the United States. up Georges valley of Children the and the snow from the to make it the social event the season. Cry apple Nero, carefully wrapped letting branches gently Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no living on Appleton ridge who figure and will be FOR FLETCHER’S packed in a pasteboard box. It arrived waft down his neck, he would have thought There will be good music, supper other. largely in the story—Mr. and Mrs. in lower hall. is asked tc in the best of condition, is of medium long and seriously before framing the bill. servfd the Everyone CAS TO R I A Kent Clayton, their daughters, Pearle and mask for the occasion.Mr. Horace Web- size, color rich red and green, flavor and .Never in the history of the town has there TYPEWRITE! ber’s has been here from Mas- Adelle, their son Perth, “a lad of been so bushels of daughter Mattie as unknown. It lusty many potatoes shipped H. C. Hoffses eating qualities yet father hei fifteen summers,” and in the kitchen from this station. The road to the station is sachusetts and her accompanied \ eame from Harrison’s Nurseries, Berlin, home Much is extend- E. H. BOYINGTON was Michael an Irish of filled with teams loads, for a visit.. sympathy DR, and with it a list of trees Dunleavey, boy large carrying heavy CLEANING. Maryland, price ed to Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Porter in the lose sixteen years, who “had been in America carefully packed to prevent freezing, to the in great variety. of their old Herbert \ «^,Plants cars and houses... .Mrs. Alfred Brad- 8-months baby.Mr. STEAMPRESSING EYE SPECIALIST but four months, having worked his way potato Cash or Installment! back to on ford spent the week-end with her sister, Mrs. Cooper is about to move Monroe the informal meeting of Piscataquis over to Portland in a cattle ship.” Mr. OF WINTERPORT, WILL BE AT THE *^tan C. M. Whitney... Edmund Webb and wife farm near his parents and he is getting out and REPAIRING. in Dover, Hon. was in son a Forest House, Monroe, Wednesday p. m. Jan. recently Clayton born London, the of a new house-The W. C. T, FOR CATALOGUE. R|w>licans,held have gone to Hartford, Conn., where Mr. lumber to build 31st. JNRITE wW. T. Haines of Waterville was pres- man of titled once CUSTOM CLOTHES TO ORDER descent, prosperous, Webb has employment....Mr. Charles-, U., met with Miss S. A. Mansur last week. The York’s Hotel, Brooks, Thursday, Feb. 1st. ent by invitation and made an address. but who had broken down and died at next be with Mrs. F. Chase.... The Hotel, Thorndike, Friday a. m., Feb. 2nd. who underwent an operation for appendicitis meeting will Central House, Unity, Friday p. m., Feb. 2nd. He spoke particularly on the direct pri- the of a widow several time a lot of ice has been harvested the At 52 High Street. Tel. 216-13 age forty-four, leaving weeks ago, was out for the first Quite past Bellows House, Freodom, Saturday a. m., Feb. maries act, under which the coming State and three children, of whom Kent, then Friday. two weeks from Monroe stream. i«tf 8rd. Iw4 CARLE & JONES The trustee* of the NEWS OF BELFAST. Waldo County Agricul- City Marshal M. R. Knowlton left on ths noon THE tural Society will have a meeting in the Court train Tuesday for Bangor to accompany Frank House this, Thursday, evening at 7.30 Dunbar to the Eastern Maine Insane Asylum. M RUSHERS’ NOTICE. o'clock. Journal ale on sale at JUST All members of A. E. Clark of The Camp. Sons of next week another in- Carle & e copies We expect to publish Jones’ 0 Veterans, are earnestly requested to attend John O. Johnson of tl* ;V lowing places: its hard work teresting article by Capt. office. now, pretty the regular meeting next ANNUAL f=.-ort. At the post Monday evening, as liberty on the United States Navy, and have I Springs. At the office. matters of are to be s post to imagine the “Good Old importance discussed other matter of interest for that issue, includ- At the store of I. H. W. crport. A Belfast citizen who has W. Gowen of Los An- Summer Time.” But a a flock of 36 hens ing a letter from Frank Muslin Underwear Sale was in one from J. c-. n. Store of D. J. Dickens. buying eggs a grocery store the other geles, California, and Warren Sullivan, Searsport and M. J. Dow, who is box or evening, and it was inferred that a feathered Siinner of Searsmont, spending the NOW GOING authorized agents to receive sub- ON, ,. arc labor leader had been around winter in California and writes from San Fran- and advertisements. and inaugurated Co. a strike in that dock of 35. cisco. , ri.ican Journal Publishing White Lingerie Skim, 98c, to The Belfast Trucking Company has diss:lv- Dr. Eugene D. Tapley received a letter last $5.50 Picture P. of ■ u reading the Motion Story ed partnership. Jesse E. Staples and James H. Monday from Hon. J. Jackson- It not are one of the Post will continue the recent death from Do Your Night Rohes, 89c,, 89c, to ne° you missing the business. Guy L ville, Fla., announcing Eyes 98c., $1.25 ,i can be obtained floleproof who of Mrs. Watson, the colored They heart disease magazines. Peavey, withdraws, will continue general from Mr. Russell nurse his Taliaferro Lane. Trouble You? ipc-ra House George stockings will help you do trucking as in the past. of little grandson, $3.00 cthful) who is agent, "Mammf’ was well known in Belfast and If tire Our Clubbing Offers. If subscribers avail- they easily—if reading, writ- it, for you know Six pairs made friends her sojourns here. Corset are confronted with rather many during cal ice men ing themselves of our clubbing offers will read ing or sewing causes headache, if your Cows, 12c., 15c., 25c., 39c. and 19e. She suffered several ill turns last summer and nditions for their supply for are Guaranteed to wear the announcement of these smart and getting offers which ap- eyes burn, you probably knew she would go that way. Mr. Taliaferro One four inches of ice week will all reason. reported pears every they save much corre- need Glasses and Brassiers, 25c. and 58c. holes Six Months. asked Dr. to recommend a nurse from every day’s delay sizes, reinforced, a foot of snow and he had to without Tap ley ,:icre than spondence. It may be further said here that works further fnjury. ice to a fresh Belfast. .Fii, up the get supply. a bit of we cannot guarantee to have the Ladies’ Drawers. of | Expensive—not it; subscriptions See us about the wise Special Oat the G. Fort Collins, Colorado. The January your eyes—it’s Sizes, mas H. Marshall Circle, Ladies of to the magazines begin with any particular for instance, number of the Gocd Will Record contains re- thing to do! rvill observe McKinley day at their regu- numb r, as the of the k publishers magazines 25c., 33c., 49c., and All ports of “Older Boys’ Conferences” in various $1.90 $2.00 eeting next Tuesday afternoon. rarely recognize these requests. We can 6 of Men’s, $1.50 only the and what is said of the to and be pairs parts of country, WE ARE INTRODUCING THE ,. ers are requested attend pre- guarantee that the subscriber will receive the NEW 2.00 held at Fort Col- in to 6 pairs of Women’s, Colorado boys conference, to give some quotations regard magazines for a full year beginning with the 6 of Children’s, 2.00 lins, is of local interest because of the Belfast Models in McKinley. pairs first number received. The of the Spring R.& 6. and Hem!) Corsets. Prerdent publishers The Record people in that western city. says: LET Maddocks of Bangor was in ceiiasc New Idea Magazine have increased their sub- US DEMONSTRATE THEM TO ,V Collins is a for a conference; a YOU. in and a 50 which good place Tuesday to install one of the newest So just step buy scription price per cent, necessitates clean city of fifteen thousand population with- an increase in our rates. a with a hotel Room No. Odd Fellows’ Block .... c Cash for clubbing The out saloon; clean, high-class 1, I the National ,.r of Registers and next when price box, Julv, of The Journal and New each money but without the sale of liquors; D. Southworth. The register is oper- Idea, one year, making broad streets which an air of think of is McCalls and The Journal give dignified electricity, has four drawers and 9 are sweltering, $2.25. $2.10. with concrete which you prosperity, pavements The Baptist Ladies’ Sewing Circle will meet a Home Life in Japan. On the last stretch in absolutely straight lines so far that .neluding special. old in evening with Mrs. W. J. Clifford at No. 9 that blustering day seem to disappear on the prairie, and Northport Creek sailed last week from of this month there will be given in Memorial they arge Bear with good churches and other fine public build- avenue on Wednesday afternoon, Jan. 31st. j a of cut when vou bought hall, in the lecture course, an illustrated lec- that are \ > do dock with cargo granite January 1 have the impression there ings. “The Teeth of the Gift Horse” will be pre- the tw’o million dollar con- ture on the Home Life of Japan. This lecture many church-goers both in the city and on the impletes sented the Senior class of the Belfast your Holeproofs. is illustrated views of irrigated farms in the suburbs, for, m addition by High : the new New York municipal build- superbly by the homes to the people who came to the Methodist school in the House of these who so Opera Friday evening, Are which the Mount Waldo Granite works people, have recently taken on from their You Church Sunday morning, walking Listed? Feb. with from 10.30 to 12. Music their the or on the there were 2nd, dancing ,»en engaged for the past two years. position among great nations of the homes riding trolley cars, hitched on a side street by orchestra. world, but even more interesting will be the twenty-eight teams Keyes Woman’s Christian Temperance Union each of which had If | flanking the church edifice, | not, begin the New Year quaint dances and ceremonials which Miss A Birthday Party. j right by seeing that your I to- folk from the The Saturday, wy ;eer at the Home for Aged Women brought worthy country. Blattner will present during the School in that one church numbered Jan. was the of Mrs. Richard -r 2 m. evening. Sunday 6th, birthday name is in vv, January 26th, at p. Reports the great social and business Miss Blattner will present these clad in the over five hundred members. index— 1 mmittees appointed at the last meet- Brown of Swan Lake avenue, East Belfast, and | flower robes of exquisite tinted the aristo- The Chapman Concert. The con- her friends had her a The be heard and special readings andsing- Chapman planned to give surprise Telephone Directory. ft was Knowl- cratic of Harlan Calderwood before Judge young people Japan. The opportun- cert in the House that The weather conditions were will make the meeting interesting, given Opera Wednesdaj evening. with habit- of an inside of ton last Monday afternoon, charged ity gaining glimpse the high Jan. 17th, exceeded expectations. A such, however, that the affair was entertained the evening, postpon- ’ohn Norton Pythian ual from school. He was sentenced to class Japanese home is seldom for- truancy gained by large and enthusiastic audience inspired the ed- to last Thursday evening, when some fifty | ircle Wednesday night, Jan. 17th, and The School for at Portland, the but the 1 ft edition now the State Boys eigners, exceptional position which artists and they responded to the repeated en- or more of her and friends called Forthcoming is made was a dozen or [ neighbors being up pleasant evening spent, sentence to be his be- Mrs. Blattner and her [ | suspended pending good daughter occupied for cores spiritedly and gracefully Miss Josephs her about 8 her A lunch was upon o’clock, taking complete- for I ;.eing present. dainty several them the publication. havior. years gave opportunities that Schaller, the violinist, was heard in Belfast After an ■ the hostess the table set with ly by surprise. impromptu program p y being are accorded intimate Clifford L. Wilband, who has taken the only friends. The result for the first time. As a child player she at- of music and followed re- sent to her direct from readings by games, -.-autiful dishes of this and agency for the Metz automobiles, as advertis- j friendship intimate knowledge tracted attention as the possessor of extraor- freshments were served Misses Blanche last with Mrs. by ^ The Circle met evening of the home life of the class listing therein is so ed in The Journal, has received a runabout of high Japanese dinary talent, and now as a finished artist her Foster, Ethel and Anna L. Farnsworth. ■I valuable to the business £i 21 street. Savery Langill, Bayview will be to show it or is given in the lecture which Mrs. Blattner and is fine and her tones have wonder- this make and pleased execution During the evening Mrs. Brown was presented man that no in of Ad- argument is needed to the pet alligator charge as to this car. her daughter will present on even- ful and She has a and demonstrate it. answer enquiries Wednesday depth beauty. graceful with a half dozen solid silver teaspoons, a sil- | new and convenient | ; >on Robbins, has ing, Jan. 31st. There are plenty of good seats and won the favor of There will be a picnic supper at 6.30 o’clock pleasing stage presence, ver cream ladle, a gravy ladle and a china fruit A ur*I*sted business man is like a town at the City Marshal’s office, Memorial for this lecture to be obtained at 50 cents each. the audience with her first selection. Mr unrecorded next Tuesday evening at the home of* Mr. and j dish. The presentation was made by Mrs. ^ Don him the best of care, and g gives 1 They will be on sale at the door on the John Barnes Wells in the con- on the Mrs. Henry G. Hills, East Northport, under night sang Chapman Fred N. Savery in the following original map. installed a pew galvanized bath tub in of the lecture. voice | | the auspices of the Ladies’ Aid. The proceeds cert here last year, when his sweet tenor poetry: Pete is about three old, and j —-- years i The in York. won instant recognition, but those who heard will be applied to the pastor's salary. Ice Shea’s New We are per- i January bin was the birthday ot Mrs. crown. I last Mr. G. C. | -ought North year by 1 him then that he has broadened since, that 1 She decided to have a so cream and cake will be for sale in the evening. mitted to quote from a personal letter from say party, accordingly If firm sent around your a his voice is richer and fuller. He sang as if contemplates change from its £ All are invited. Mrs. George E. Evans of Stamford, Conn., I To all her friends near and far, | on he and the audience did. :■ OI.lt, J. vu what she of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. enjoyed it, certainly £ The next of Seaside Chautauqua says Shea, i To come by boat, train or motor car. present telephone service thrt may necessitate a 1 meeting While he renders selections from i but you have not seen it in actual life who played “A Man and His Wife” at the grand opera | Circle will be held with Mrs. E. P. Frost, No. ! In the paper that week, you Know, the and of with ease it is in his with their tender- 1 in its aval, with beauty grandeur Grand Opera House in New Jan. 15th: ballads, Was a for change telephone number, 42 street, afternoon, Jan. 29th. York, prayer “Snow, Beautiful Snow.” give your order High Monday ness in his dialect Hie’lands and the lowlands” of “Bonnie “We were fortunate to witness the and human appeal, and On Friday it began to | The lesson is from the C. L. S. C. enough J morning spit, book, “Spirit with their humor and inimitable we had of it. without and.” It will be presented for the first performance as their guests. It was a remark- songs, quaint ; By Saturday enough delay. of American Government,” chapters thirteen, It covered the window, and blocked the door | | at Belfast House, “The Home of able and Mr. Evans and I would not have drollery, that he pleases most. Miss Mildred Opera fourteen and fifteen. Roll-call, current events. night Until we cried aloud, “O Lord, no more.” was heard at the Music Fes- Pictures,” on Monday and Tuesday missed it for anything. The theater, one of Potter, contralto, All members are requested to be present at You know the rest, there was no party. that i A 29th and 30th. tival in October, but sang in Belfast for the residence the cmts, Jan. the largest in New York, was sold out; every I telephone helps busy housewife this meeting. of night; § was ! first time. She has a rich and deep voice unie,” the driving horse of Dr. G. C. Kil- box filled and hardly any standing room The roads were in an awful plight; with her and in ! wide as was demonstrated a man day’s work, addition, is a social com- The Board of Trade Banquet The second was left. The which finishes “Down range, abundantly And not far threatened the life of Mrs. got gay last Saturday while coming over play, | in her well chosen Brown annual banquet of the Belfast Board of Trade tells the of a selections; and, perhaps ridge from East Belfast with Drs. G. C. ! East,” story banker who was If she dared to have another birthday while 1 fort. took at the Windsor Hotel last best of all, in the duet from “Trovatore,” H. L. Kilgore and E. A. Wilson, who had place Friday nearly ruined by the folly of his wife, who is, she lived in town. | and was a success in all its features. which she sang with John Barnes Wells. Mr. Now we didn’t want Mrs. Brown to stand still on a consultation case, dumped all three ! night however, injudicious without being bad. It rest The attendance was so that all could not abounds in Chapman was the accompanist and his piano and the grow old, For rs near the broke the large speeches of the good old moral details as to rates draw, up sleigh j So some of the neighbors to the others told and classes of be seated at the Windsor and ten were served which Mr. Shea delivered with playing is a treat in itself. At the close of | -truck out for Northport, where she was kind, telling That we would have that birthday party any the Mr. in a brief service call at by Landlord French at the Colonial. At two effect, down the house time. program Chapman speech way, the Cus- c gnized near Little River bridge by a friend bringing every Manager’s Office, tables in the W’indsor room and thanked the Belfast Musical Society for its Whether we had it in or had it in | long dining of the January May. K’s. who brought her home, Mrs. Shea played the part wife, and was tom-house two smaller ones in the room 108 were efforts in so fine an audience or writing a vision of some getting together So they started out, despite threatening skies, Square. Belfast, the House is the home of loveliness; wearing stunning telephone at old Opera To a sur- | seated. The tables were decorated with and Director E. S. Pitcher of the for give Mrs. B., they hoped, complete potted gowns. She acted the part in a sweet society 24 of _• : cannot be gainsaid, as the excel- sympa- (free n pictures and at each was a boutonniere. his loan of the beautiful concert grand piano prise. charge). plants plate thetic manner and earned many curtain calls. i And so all of the wherever programs that Manager Clifford is pre- people, they went, After the viands had been of the used for the concert. The following young I disposed post- To say anything about the of Mr. ; Agreed to come, with hearty accent. ;g are the best that can be procured, acting Shea, exercises began, with Mr. Orlando E. ladies of the senior class, Belfast High school, | The roads are not very good now, I am sorry to 1 prandial actor that he would be like P. S. ose who missed the three reel of sterling is, “carry- DON’T DELAY. DO IT NOW. production Frost as a role which he fills to in acted as ushers say, toast-master, owls to Athens.” I must dainty evening gowns, < ’olleen Bawn missed one of the treats of ing Still, confess I But we are here and we’re going to stay; some sober under the direction of J. Lee Patterson: Hazel | perfection. Although thoughts never saw him a role that fitted him It may be until tomoroW morn year. Another big feature, which will be play any Alice Hester and were Doak, Parker, Brown, Arvilla until we have eaten the practical suggestions presented, better. After the second act he had cur- ; Any way candy, pea- n for the last time is Edison’s eight Dagget t, Edna Crawford, Flossie Heald, Mar- tonight, there were remarks and nuts and corn many mirth-provoking tain calls and was ee! production, The Three Musketeers, presented with a huge garet Craig. jollity prevailed. The first speaker and friends, to you I have a word to general laurel wreath with the Stars and on Neighbors ; ted from the drama by Alexander Dumas. Stripes all was John R. Dunton, who for say, right, ex-Mayor spoke one side and the of Erin on the other. miss it. As usual there are 4 reels. flag Keep your hair combed, your faces washed, for the city, its needs, etc., and made some telling The third act, which was written by Mr. Shea, some night, .*• vertised Letters. The following letters Rev. David L. Wilson, of the or WaldoTelephoneCo. pastor I do not know when points. was, to me, the best. The audience insisted on just where, Med uncalled for in the Belfast post office ! Congregational Church, spoke effectively on But at your door, you’ll surely find us there. a speech and he delivered one in his usual For J the At the first we found a week ending Jan. 22d: Ladies—Mrs. A. “The Moral and Religious Conditions of Bel- party Gross; graceful manner. The scene of the last act is At the second a color, Brown, a good color, for Addie L. Larrabee, Mrs. Fred Moore, fast,” and his remarks contained much food a farm in Maine and has many reminders of most. : V. Nevenes, Mrs. C. N. Nickerson, Mrs. for Rev. Arthur A. Blair, of ! The next be a a thought. pastor Belfast and Bangor. After the performance may Walker, Staples product, Smith, Della May Seekins, Miss E. M. the Universalist Church, spoke instructively Savery perfume, we went back of the stage, where Mr. and Leavitt, Nickerson, Stephenson, Leary, Bowen, i I Carrie Harvey. Gentlemen—Clarence on “Education.” Hon. John R. Mason of Ban- Mrs. Shea held a reception in their dressing Patterson, .an, John D. S. Gourlie, A. Jones, E. Al- commissioner of who was in I do know gor, bankruptcy, rooms a* d notable in the not whom. ^ many lights world of ,oas, F. N. Littlefield, Wilson L. Mayo, Belfast on business and was an invited guest, Are you so fortunate as to art, science and commerce paid their compli- It may be a Davis, Mason, Nash, Stevens, Me- j C., Percy Simmons, William Weyman. an interesting talk on the gave bankruptcy ments to the star and his lovely wife. Then, be well satisfied with you' Donald, Coombs, t White. law. Robert F. State bank Any one who has a few rooms. W'nite, Ralph Ex-Mayor Dunton, after it was all Mr. and Shea We have received over over, Mrs. took hair? Is it I do not think it will be harm 7,000 rolls 1912 on long enough, any >: Arts and Crafts Party. One of the commissioner spoke “Banking,” advocating us to tneir hotel, where we spent the night If we happen to visit a schoolmarm; investments thick rich V social events of the season was home for banking institutions, enough, enough Bu come we we want all to wall 5 to 25 cents and pleasing and had a pleasant chat until the early morn- shall, you know, paper, prices would which now hold largely foreign securities. And l air does not tall Hope you’ll be glad to see us come, | progressive bridge whist party in Memor- ing, and I assure you that Belfast and its good your Hon. Arthur I. Brcwn, of State, Maybe more glad to see us go. be very to show the to :ail last evening under the ex-Secretary were not I pleased samples you. \ Tuesday auspi- people forgotten. suggest that Mr. out ? Well, welt, that is good. We shall surmount all obstacles, suffer no de- to the “The was of the Arts and Crafts. It was ip responding toast, State,” given by Shea and his company open the Belfast new But know of some i feat, members in honor of the active both wise and witty and was roundly applaud- you may Ask no and our own treat. are associate Opera House with their new play.” permission, bring We also agents in Belfast and have ed. Mr. Morris L. of so 'libers and invited friends. There were 21 Slugg, superintendent rot fortunate. Then as a have East Belfast. Mrs. E. S. Achorn of Swan just Mrs. Brown, neighbor, you always the Coe-Mortimer in this on of es. Mrs. Edward Sibley was chairman of plant city, spoke tell them about Hair done your part, the 1912 line samples of A. E. Thibaut’s Lake Avenue is ill at her home with a severe Ayer’s I •• “The Industrial Conditions of and true and kind of heart. committee of arrangements. Miss Mel- Belfast,” Steady, cold-Henry C. Burgess went to Rockland will thank And it us to to you ? was most in his views of They gives great pleasure give PEERLESS line wall ra V. Parker won the first prize for ladies, a optomistic present Vigor. surely papers, 5c to $5.00 last Saturday for a short visit with Mr. and These mementos, showing our appreciation silk bag, and Miss Frances Chase the conditions and future prospects. It was after you after using it, if not be- true. nty Mrs. Alfred Crockett-Mr. and Mrs. Horace roll. when were said and the are solid and per -isolation, a raffia basket. Mr. S. A. Parker midnight good nights fore. it does Like you they bright, Maddocks of North who have been Remember, in all and all went home in a Searsport, Not easily turned, ways just right. was the winner of a burnished brass ash bowl, company dispersed, their son Sumner for some re- color I am in the name of all here, with the enter- visiting weeks, not the hair. Show glad present Yours very and Mr. C. W. Wescott was consoled with a happy mood, pleased evening’s our friend most dear. truly, turned to their home last To present them to you, tainment and as to the future of Saturday_The to f-vk of Congress cards. Coffee, hopeful our. the list of ingredients doughnuts Ladies’ Aid of Trinity Reformed church will We wish it might have been more, CARLE heese were served. city. doctor. Let him decide But it is the in which the is rich & JONES. meet with Mrs. A. K. Fletcher tomorrow, Fri- your spirit gift Advertisements. The As the gifts of the Wise men were; -U' I Hkrreschoff Ice Boats. In a New first semi-an- afternoon-Miss Eliza Harriman and value. He knows. personal day, their And we are not told whose was the gold nual clearance sale at “The Home of Good I -te from Newport, R. I., Mr. Alfred Johnson Mr. James Carr of Searsport were guests Sun- Made by the J. C. ASTEB CO., Lowell, Mans. And whose was the gift of myrrh. “Nat Herreschoff is building ice boats Values,” 12 Main street, Ralph D. Southworth, day of Miss Ethel Savery_Mr. and Mrs. will Jan. and ^ r some of the fellows here; lighter and proprietor, begin Saturday, 27th, James Robertson are receiving congratulations continue to Feb. 10th. It is stronger than any design yet on the market, proposed to clean on the birth of a boy, January 20th. Mrs. R. the winter stock on i am going up to Bristol this week to look up by selling at cost, and was formerly Mis3 Mary White ...When Mr. Ctias. R. Coombs the second •>m over and have a sail on one. 1 might page will be found a partial list of Fred N. Savery was crossing the draw on the the values to be '■sold all of Horace’s fleet if Nat hadn’t given. These are all fresh, lower bridge abou~ two weeks ago with his *' new and will be as UNDERTAKER, started on them, but I judge it is useless goods they sold advertised. team, one ot his hcrses caught his foot in one W. Clark & announce their Sale with him. seem to Co. side of the which was Mid-Winter ryto compete They .Harry reg- draw, about 6or 7 inches ^LICENSED EM3ALMER. rhow to get more strength and ular semi-annual Red Tag Clearance Sale, to lower than the other side, the horse | 1 rigidity throwing *-**-' f light construction in everything they begin Friday, Jan. 26th, and last just eight and causing a severe sprained ankle. Dr J. B. S n CORONER FOR WALDO COUNTY or until than any other builders I’ve ever seen in days, Saturday night, Feb, 3d Prices Darling is attending the horse, and he is now S country or England. They combine prac- have been cut on the entire stock, and on some able to stand on his foot for a time_The ) knowledge with the best scientific train- goods to less than cost. Everything will be friends in this vicinity of Mrs. May Robertson EVERYTHING MODERN IN iat can and some of the found as and no will be were to learn of her HOPKINS&C0.1 Technology give, represented, goods grieved death, which oc- IN.H. but at the cut | they get up, which The Journal charged prices given in the adver- curred last Saturday. Mrs. Robertson was a Caskets and Burial SLEIGHS | c never hears about, are extremely in- tisement.... H. M. Black, 107 Main street, has former resident in this vicinity and while here «tj) Announce their annual ten days’ sale, commencing j§§ [ Suits. \ us. The last time I was there they just received a full line of ladies’ muslin made many friends. At one time she conduct- ? All grades, including Maine State I 1 me a boat that would to windward underwear which will on sale Jan. ed the of the go go today, meetings Juvenile branch of Home Telephone 48-3 S prison, New York and W estern. Also miles an hour means cf a with a nice line of Good which were held in j by propeller, 25th, very hamburgs, and Templars, Knowlton’s * the famous double runner Prison Office 48-4 Pung I 'i iiy a windmill.” will be sold at the very lowest price. The Hall, and in these meetings she was much in- 1912. public is cordially invited to call and inspect terested. Sympathy from a host of friends is January 26, 72 MAIN STREET, BELFAST ROBES, these goods... .Carle & Jones have received extended to the husband and relatives. | | over Fur, Montana, Arctic, 7,000 rolls of 1912 wall paper, prices 5 to Masses Ethel Savery, Julia Leary, Blanche Fos- -! 25 cents, and are also agents in Belfast and ter and Annie Farnsworth are attending the Plush and Cloth have the 1912 line of A. Thib- samples of E. last half of Spinney’s dancing school ... Fifty- aut’s Peerless line of wall papers, 5c. to $5 one couples attended the dance last Saturday BLANKETS, Edison per roll... .Carle & Jones’ Annual Muslin Un- at Knowlton’s hall. There will be an- night To Let. Plain'and Fancy Squares. Stalls of derwear sale is now going on. See prices other dance next Saturday with music night Three unfurnished rooms suitable for all kinds, including the famous Baker given in the advt. They are introducing the by Keyes-Aliie Howard and Ben Butler light housekeeping at 14 Bayview street. Blankets. new spring models in R. & G. and Nemo cor- have moved to Belmont,where they are cutting sets Apply to and would be pleased to demonstrate and hauling lumber—Mrs. Belle Trippe re- much] FRED HORN. them.... See list of unclaimed deposits in the turned Monday from Camden after a few days HARNESS, A assortment of Belfast Savings Bank_N. H. Hopkins & Co. visit with her son Henry... .Miss Lida Hop- [how large every description and Phonographs announce their annual ten days’ sale, to begin kins returned to Rockland last Monday after a ! For This Piano? grade. Any size and with Friday, Jan. 26th... .Carle & Jones are agents few weeks’ visit with her mother, Mrs. Annette To Let. for Waldo county for the Ford car, which has Marshal Knowlton took Hopkins.City Sealed bids will be received till M. on & Two unfurnished rooms, with toilet and B. O. NORTON. and 12 February 15, 1912, Hughes 12 records, for many original exclusive features that Frank Dunbar to the insane at j hospital Bangor Son at the corner of and have a Mahogany Upright Piano No. 21652, when the bids will be opened and 5 bath, High Spring given it wide popularity.Lost, de- last Tuesday. Mr. Dunbar has been deranged Belfast, Maine. book No. the Piano will go to the highest bidder. streets. Apply to posit 3940, issued by the Waldo Trust for about two months.... The funeral of George L. Pease 2w3 M. R. KNOWLTON. $1.00 Down Company-Bertha and Ada A. W. Patterson was held at the home of his sis- This is a desirable instrument, being one of the latest regular models (' Clement publish a card of Mrs. thanks....Lost, ter, John J. Mellen, at the Upper Bridge of a thoroughly reliable manufacturing concern. < books Nos. 197i and 2043 of the Searsport last Sunday, Rev. D. L. Wilson Mr. officiating. in and see the Piano and ask wish and 50c. bank... .Charles E. Knowlton any questions you J regarding < Belfast Bank LOST per week at Savings has for P. was 67 years of age. He is survived by I Savings the Information and blanks mailed on rent on Pearl street a suitable for a two proposition. application. | Book No. 3940, issued by *0 building sons, Freeman of Boston and Geo. W., Jr., Notice is hereby given that Savings Bank Deposit \Jf garage, carpenter’s or this has shop storage purposes. of this city. The bearers were Eben Holmes, Book No. 15,732, issued by bank, been Trust Company, Belfast. Finder wilT 'ase ... .The music has been made for a Holeproof stockings, sold only at The M. R. Knowlton, Jesse Staples and H. E. Brad- DITAL1ETD9C store, j. lost and application dupli- Dinsmore cate book according to laws regulating issuing return same to CARLE & store, are guaranteed to wear with- man.... An account of the surprise party to I I JONES’, vrlLn O new books. out ICome Belfast,me. holes for 6 Treasurer. months.... Lost, book No. 15,782, Mrs. Richard Brown is given in a separate j WILMER J. DORMAN, Treasurer. HERBERT T. FIELD, Maine. issued by the Belfast Savings bank. item. Belfast, January 22,1912,—3w4 January 19,1912.—3w4. Belfast, I I THE KEY TO THE “MAINE” MYSTERY. ▲t a Probate Court held at Belfast, within and for tbe of on the 9th News and Notes. County Waldo, day mn How a Thousand Hens Pay. Literary TNI INNISI January, A. D. 1912. The of metal which to be atrip proved FREEMAN, brother of Elizabeth The number of the Atlantic the SAMUELParker, late of in said Just How F. W. Mossman Breeds, Feeds January STOPS TUT ITU key to the mystery of the destruc- Nortbport, County of Monthly the conspicuous fact Waldo, deceased, baviug presented a petition and Shelters Them. emphasizes tion of the U. S. "Maine” is praying thatihe may be appointed that the is old in years only from Battleship administrator have magazine If you are suffering Eczema, shown of the estate of said deceased. So in New England and are the or other kind of skin in two illustrations in the Feb- many people that its interests habitually psoriasis any Ordered, That the said petitioner gives notice trouble, into our store for in- to into the “hen business,” expecting prime interests of its contemporaries. drop ruary Mechanics An all persons interested by causing a copy of gone stant relief. Wo will guarantee you Popular Magazine. thij in this issue all order to be published three weeks in financial to find them- The first four articles to stop that itch in two ssoonds. article states: successively big returns, only and dis- The Republican Journal, a newspaper mibli'hH strike notes distinctively modern A 2oc trial bottle will prove it. a selves the question "With the indentification of the at Belfast, that they may appear at Probate greatly disappointed, These papers are We have sold other remedies for strip Court, to be held at Belfast, within and for raise tinctively important. skin troubles, but none that we could as a bottom between frames 28 saij is often asked: “Is it possible to "Modern Government and Christianity, plate, County,ion the 13th day oi February, A. D. linj recommend more highly than the well and 31, the of the mine was at ten of the clock before noon, and show can*.' on a scale by “The Contempo- known of Oil of Winter- position poultry large profitably?” Churchill; compound fixed as if any they have, why the prayer of said peti- “The Po- and a few other in- under the bottom, a little to port, who have a few hens rary H. G. Wells; green Thymol tioner should not be granted. Many people kept Novel,” by that have such won- and between the frames named. litical Evolution of a College President, gredients wrought GEO. E. JOHNSON, Judge. in their back door yards, and fed them editor of derful cures all over the country. “The conclusion of the board that a A true copy. Attest: by Solomon Bulkley Griffin, This known as D. D. D.' P. have found compound, low form of was used means Chas. Hazeltine, Register. on scraps from the table, The Springfield Republican; and “Insan- Prescription, will cool and heal the explosive skin as else that a mine, not a was the in- that the venture good returns. ity and Non-Restraint,” a paper on the itchy, burning nothing torpedo, yielded can. Get a bottle and see—on strument con- At a Probate Court, held at Belfast, within and new the regular used. A torpedo always Then have to get out which is revolutionizing offer. for the of Waldo, on the »th they proceeded theory our no-pay tains a such as County day ,-,t high-power explosive, a. pencil and paper and figured it out care of the insane in this country, by January, D. 1912, these nitroglycerin or similar compound. Black mathematically that if 10 hens yield a Charles Whitney Page. Add to WmJ O; Poor & Son, Belfast, Me. MORSE, daughter of William g the powder, a low is used on the Keene, late of Freedom, in said net of S20 a year 1000 hens ought Senator Bourne’s paper on explosive, ALMEDA County of profit other in mines. That a low ex- Waldo, deceased, having presented a petition to furnish an income of $2000 a year. Referendum and Recall, hand, that she be “Initiative, was used the board concluded praying may appointed admmistra. Most of these fortune seekers via the which comes at the close of the number, on plosive trix of tbe estate of said deceased. Wrecks Penobscot River. the of the and Atlantic is from nature of the sides That the said poultry route have overlooked the fact it is easy to see that the Ordered, petitioner give notice f. for its ad- gash, where this strip was blown inward. all persons interested by causing a copy of t; ,; that grain and other food for 1000 hens hot relying upon its history Peculiar and Serious Marine Mishaps. Had it been a high explosive, the bottom order to be published three weeks successive’, costs while the food for the 10 vancement. in a money, Most people associate the word ship- would have been in- The Republican Journal, newspaper publish, bens in the back door yard was not fig- punc'ured neatly, ed at Belfast, that they may appear at a Pro but- a seas stead of torn. The difference is to be held at Belfast, within and for > an at all. When of interest wreck with disaster upon the high being Court, ured as expense Furthermore, the limelight popular of the National the same as that in the case of a rifle County,on the 13thday February, a. I). In-, it is to give 1000 hens the is focused Washington, or on a bold and coast, but some at ten of the clock before noon, and show impossible upon rocky bullet a of mak- can-’ to unless a more welcome visitor penetrating pane glass, if the same care as is given 10 hens, Magazine is even decided wrecks take on the any they have, why prayer of said p-?„ to very place a clean-cut and an hurled tioner should not be one makes a business of it. And than for there is a sort of face ing hole, apple granted. yet, usual, GEO. E. in the fall would face affairs at the national placid waters of inland rivers, as the by a boy at the same piece of glaRS, JOHNSON, Judg-. the high price of eggs glimpse of A true copy. Attest : which would result in a indicate that there is a demand which is capital in Joe Chappie’s chat. It may story of the Penobscot River well illus- jagged, irregu- Chas. P. Hazeltine, Regi.-t- lar gash, or ture. not at present met by the local supply. be the titillating thrill of a vision of in- trates. Between Bucksport and Ban- ruj Where is the trouble? ternational warfare incident to the ab- At a Probate Court hem at Belfast, witl a distance of 20 there have an old gor, miles, Settled Out of Court. lor the of Waldo on the Frederick W. Mossman of Westmin- rogation of an ancient treaty with County 9th been some January, A. D. 1612. ister is one of the men in Massachusetts ally, the latest bit of society gossip, or a spectacular shipwrecks, The case of Ada Faustina of TOHN L. DOW, trustee in the who has that cared brand new “cloak-room but it which while have Berry appointed proved hens, properly joke,” they not involved the t) will of Caroline H. Dow, late or Btii; as had been versus & for, will gjve a man a good living. Start- always makes one feel if he loss of life, have caused serious financial Searsport The Penobscot Coal said County of Waldo, deceased, haying Mr. folks” at Wash- seated a for the continuali< ing in 11 years ago with 90 fowls, right there “among the loss and have run the of Wharf company at better petition praying of gamut ship Searsport, said appointment. Mossman has gradually felt, his way ington. Illustrated by photographs types from small schooners to the big known as Mack’s Point, was entered That the said until now he has a flock of 1000, historic Fort Stevens, the story of four-master coal Ordered, petitioner give not along carriers of today, and all persons interested by causing a oi ; not but of Wash- “neither party’’ at this term and “no copy and finds them only profitable Early’s brief beleaguerment from the old small side-wheel steamer to ! order to be published ihree weeks succe.'M Mossman his Lincoln’s same in The a also instructive. Mr. says ington and President “baptism the big tramps of the foreign trade. further action for cause.’’ This j Republican Journal, newspaper at the time War is interest- lished at Belfast, that, may appear at work new problems of fire” the Civil the was an they presents during In early days of action brought by the plaintiff to I bate Court, to be held at Belfast, within am which add zest to his labors. He makes steamboating ingly told; being historically important along the New England coast, there was r. cover the sum of ¥5,000 for the injury I said County, on the 13th day of February. ». |. a of the feeds, condition and the instance where a President I 1912, at ten of the clock before noon, and si study physical only a side-wheeler called the City of Bangor. and death of the husband of the plaintiff and of and aims to of the United States was and ! cause, if any they have, why the prayer of breeding poultry, present Compared to the big mcnsters of that on the second of September, 1910, while ! petitioner should not be granted. his work down to an exact science. under fire an while bring during engagement type familiar on the Hudson and along employed in unloading the schooner Mar- GEORGE E. JOHNSON, JmL After from Amherst Agri- in the executive office. A true copy. Attest: graduating the coast at this time, she was a toy garet Haskell, which was discharging cultural in 1890, Mr. Mossman Chas. p. Hazeltine. Register. College steamboat, but in those times she was coal at that pier. Through the breaking busied himself at various until 11 Tfie intensive methods which have be- things some boat. One on her of one of the and the modern morning trip up guy ropes falling At a Prebate Court held at within years ago, when the death of his father come a feature of every industry | Belfast, the Penobscot, for she plied between of the coal bucket, the husband of the for tlie County of Waldo, ou the Dth da decided him to go back to the home react upon the mind and stimulate to Bangor and Boston, her pilot made a plaintiff, Frank H. Berry, received such January, A. D. 1912. in Westminister and make the soil nrodigious effort the ranks of human- place mistake as she was going to land at serious injuries that his death resulted. A AlOS CLEMENT, executor of the last w his livelihood. Like many similar kind, from the most humbly talented to A Abbie M. late of in yield miles It is understood that a settlement Caldwell, Belfast, I The That Hampden, six below Bangor. The was of ones in New this farm abound- Lamp those endowed with the most extraordi- County Waldo, deceased, having present England, a effected a steamer went up great shelving without trial. Dun ton & petition praying that the actual masket alt.-- ,« ed in rocks. nary genius. A remarkable prolificacy ledge. It was half tide and the water was drop- Morse appeared for the plaintiff and WT. the property of said deceased now in his lie.t. Mr. Mossman therefore decided to Saves The in invention and scientific investigation to the of the collateral Eyes as subject payment ii.lt.-; -. It was that the tide H. Gulliver and H. C. Buzzell for the de- trees a and to sot is the immediate and result, the ping. supposed i ance tax, the persons interested in the sin. make fruit specialty, tangible 1 Children never think of went down she would keel off and be fendant corporation. siou thereto and the amount of the tax ti- out the beginnings of what he intended naturally tendency ever being to render existence stove up. The captain was a resource- on, may be determined by the Judge of Prol. to have become a large orchard. At the possible strain on their eyesight when less laborious but more complex. The ful man and his head. All the 'Ordered, that the said petitioner give noti' a few hens to diverse of the creative mind kept big same time he purchased ponr.g over a book. phenomena all persons interested by causing a copy of fascinating hawsers aboard were gotten out and run get a supply of eggs for home use. It supplies Popular Mechanics Magazine j order to be published three weeks succe*- It i. up to you to see they do not ruin ashore, where they were made fast to ; in The Republican Journal, a was not long before Mr. Mossman saw with abundant interesting material each newspaper ; the the other end fastened lished at Belfast, that they may appear at a r and as a then eyes these so its 154 of trees, being the possibilities of poultry eggs young long evenings month, that pages reading bate Court, to be held at within ami to the masts and top works of the steam- Belfast, revenue Fruit raising was under a poor matter teem with marvels which a few said County, on the 13th day of February, A producer. by reading light. on an er. These held her even keel un- 1912, at ten of tiie clock before and •> given up, and all his energies were de- centuries ago would have been classed noon, The Rayo Lamp is an insurance til the tide was again at full flood, when cause, if any they have, why the prayer ot voted to poultry raising. Through all with witchcraft and the miraculous. In petitioner should not be granted. troubles, alike toi she slid off, none the worse for wear. these years Mr. Mossman has been ex- against eye young the February number ot the Magazine GEO. E. JOHNSON, JmL- Just below Hampden, on the A true copy. Attest : perimenting and studying, with the re- ! and old. appear 262 articles, every one “written opposite a great mud flat into the Ckas. P. Hazeltine, Regist sult that he now has a poultry plant and ! so you can understand it,” and 291 jm- shore, projects The is a but it is constructed on the soundest river. One the famous old a for for his hens that is Rayo low-priced lamp, usual illustrations. morning system caring | 1T7ALDO scientific and there is not a better iamp made at any once steamboat Cambridge, afterward wreck- SS.—in court oi Probate, lieid at Bel- setting results. principles, tt on the The February Wide World Magazine ed on Old Man ledge, off Monhegan Is- fast, 9th day of January. ! •!: is on its is so soft and white and George A. Quimby, administrator ou the HENHOUSE 240 FEET LONG. It easy the eye because light as full of stories fair and is, usual, interesting land, sailed square onto this flat. of Henry Staples, late of Belfast, in said C. To house his 1000 hens Mr. Mossman widely diffused. And a Rayo Lamp never flickers. gathered together from all quarters of She was pulled off later, none the worse ty, deceased, having presented his first count of administration of said estate foi a 240 feet divided into ot easy to clean ano wick. the It is a constant surprise how for wear. The has a henhouse long Easity lighted without removing shade chimney globe. unexplainable thing ance. 10 24x12 feet each. The house is 8 Solid brass handsome nicke1 finish also in many other style? anc* finishes. the editor of this unique publication is about this was that it was broad pens throughout, ,with day- Ordered, That notice thereof be given, t at the front and 5 feet at able to collect such a wealth of material and no In this connection it feet high high ! Ask your d»fbay to show you his Eoe of Rayo tamp* or write o> descriptive circular light fog. weeks successively, in The Republican Jounu month after month and the rear. Attached to the entire front to any agency of.the from “real life” is interesting to recall that on the De- a newspaper published in Belfast, in said < that “Truth is ty, that all interested attenu of the henhouse is a scratching shed 8 still uphold the old adage cember night that the Cambridge was persons may Probate Court, to be held at Belfast, ou tin- incloses the Oil Than Fiction.” The on Man it was feet wide. Wire netting Standard Company Stranger present piled up Old ledge per- day of February next, and show cause ir some stories front of the scratching shed and the two (Incorporated issue contains startling of fectly calm, not a sign of fog and the they have, why the said account should n< allowed. doors lead from the shed into each adventure; two—“The Ordeal, of Mrs. moon she went pen. shining bright, yet away GEORGE E. a '. JOHNSON, Ju a believer in and in Cave” course 1 Mr. Mossman is thorough Page” "Hung Up being off her and went on the rock at A true copy. Attest; Lars Lind con- the open-air system of housing poultry. particularly thrilling. fullsBeed. Ciiah. P. Hazeltine, Regist. and well He says that hens do much better in cold, tributes a topical illustrated Another time the Cambridge, then in air than in hen-houses that are tight- article entitled “Among the Bedouins of command of Charles dry Capt, Sanford, VITAI.DO SS.—Iii Court of Probate, held a on Eastern and Whitfield ly shut up. Only the coldest nights Palestine” Fegen founder of the Sanford Independent I ff fast,.on the 9th day oi Januan. ! curious IMchard T. Kankin, executor of v are the doors of the pens shut. describes the “Swinging, Festi- Line between Boston and Bangor, now the last Vienna C. Kankin, late of Belfast, in said ( Mr. Mossman does not believe in the val of Siam.” Marguerite con- the Eastern was j Roby Steamship Company, ty, deceased, having presented his liis; of boards. In each is J. tinues her account of “A White Woman on her the The of use Marcellus Dow account dropping pen way up river. passen- administration ot -aid esia and H. Bill com- allowance. placed a litter composed of straw, corn in the Congo,” J. gers were at dinner, when there was a stalks, grass, etc. The hens work over mences his descriptive papers entitled: shock which shook the boat from end to Ordered, That notice thereof be given : -DEALER IN- weeks in this litter, and the fresh air which circu- “Across Persia and Europe on Pony- end. Sanford rushed from the successively, The Republican .1 Capt. a newspaper published in Belfast, in said the henhouse removes the Back.” other articles and stories lates through Many dining saloon forward. As he neared ty. that all perj-ons interested may att< — odors which are usually so noticeable in all dealing with real life—are to be the house he met an officer who Probate Court. 9- be hold at Belfast, on pilot of the henhouse. In each com- found in the February issue of this re- ; day February next, and show cause. average j saluted and said: the said shed they have, why account should partment in the scratching Mr. and markable magazine. “Captain, we’ve cut a schooner in two. ■ allowed. Mossman places a load of loam or sod in Dry FancyGoods There is her bow on the port hand and GKO. E. JOHNSON, J ine ouanu uumarna A true copy. Attest: the fall. This makes an excellent reuruary many her on the i place quarter starboard!” Chas. P. to dust with articles of interest, foremost among Hazf.lti.vk, Keg for the hens themselves, With a grunt of satisfaction the cap- one Dr. William the result that are free BROOKS, MAINE, them being by Brown, tain turned and started back to his in- they unusually SS.—In from hce. entitled: “Is Love a Disease?” Accord- Court of Probate, held terrupted dinner, saying: WALDOfast, on the 9th day of January. his hens a moist to Dr. Brown it is and should be Mr. Mossman gives Suesine Silk, all shades, 39 cents ing “That’s right, when you hit ’em cut Ida A. Adams, executrix of the last as such. Another article of mash in the morning. This is made up treated ’em in two clean!” Charles K. Adams, late of Searsport. I interest is: “Who are the Ten County, deceased, having present!' of 25 cent, of such as The has '‘Suesine” on the of every of especial In the summer of a per vegetables, genuine stamped edge yard goods. 1890 schooner account of administration of ‘•aid estate : boiled the : Greatest Men now Alive?” The ques- squash, cabbage, beets, etc., loaded with corn was discharging at one low a nee. 10 cent, beef tion was to a large number of cele- previous day; per scraps | put of the grain elevators on Kenduskeag ! Ordered, That notice thereof be given, and 00 cent two- brities and Americans may be interested ; weeks successively in The Jem per grains, comprising From Our Counter 1 stream, which enters the Penobscot in Republican Bargain to learn that in list sent in the newspaper published in Belfast, in said « thirds bran middlings and one-third corn every She the water Bangor. sprang aleak, | that all persons interested may attend at meal. A small of cut name of Thomas Edison appears. And portion finely goods slightly shopworn and somewhat imperfect are sold regardless of cost. caused the corn to swell until it burst bate Court, to be held at Belfast, on the l;; clover is also and the mixture second in popularity comes that of of February next, amt show it a» hay added, only the schooner wide open, making a com- cause, are with a of merchandise and are to turn Roosevelt. is have,why the said account should not be ai.' is slightly salted. In winter a moderate We overcrowded variety ready Theodore “Lip-Reading” loss of her. plete GE« »K(iK K. JOHNSON, Ju amount of or mustard or actual cost to us. C. Sibley Haycock, pepper ginger it into cash at less than fully explained by The Sprirg and Summer of 1905 was a A true copy. Attest: is also added to flavor to the mash and an added interest is given to the CriAS. P. give From now to May 1st, you can get the Harmony Singing and Talking remarkable year for accidents of this HAZELTINK, Keg!- to the hens into article the which and stimulate greater by many photographs kind. One of the first was free with worth of from our store. when the At noon whole raw beets are Machine, absolutely $25 goods the text. “How the King activity, accompany pilot of the British tramp steamer Dor- SB.— In Court of Probate, held at in each and at the hens We are in the market for CASH and to reduce our stock. Come in and which is written a member WALDOfast, on the 9th day of 1 placed pen, night Works,” by set to clear the new steamer January, attempted Alton K Bralev of Belfast, m said Count.. are fed with whole corn. be sure to with of the royal household, proves that see us, and bring your pocketbook you. City of Bangor. The pilot made a mis- ing presented his first and final account >■* Mr. Mossman does not believe in is no shirker and labors as hard tributicn of keep- -- George take in judging the current and she cut pioceedsof «ale by license of roosters with as it as of us. The fiction consists ot a bate Court of the real estate of the heirs ing laying hens, only ■ any the small schooner L. Snow Jr. in two in different States of serves to the latter stirred with dozen short stories bv such writ- Esther E. Bralev for keep up, popular and sank her. She then went ashore ance. no increase in the amount of ers as Morley Roberts, Richard Marsh, appreciable BARGE VS. SCHOONER. herself on the river bank just below Ordered, That notice thereof be given, eggs laid. : Mrs. de weeks Children Philip Crespigny, sawmill on the Brewer shore. successively, in The Republican J« Cry Sargent’s a METHODS OF BREEDING. Austin Philips, etc. For the youngsters newspaper published in Belfast, in said c FOR FLETCHER’S Prediction that all Granite Wil 1 The Dorset suffered no that all Freights a stories trans- damage, beyond ty, persons interested may atten there is series of fairy the When the breeding season arrives Mr. Soon delay, but the Snow was a total loss. Probate Court, to be held at Belfast, on fin go by Barge. lated from the Russian and specially of Mossman goes through his flock of layers O A S T O R I A Not long after that the small schooner day February next, and show cause, i; C. A. Crabtree of New maste selected the Czar for his own children. they have, the said account should York, by Olive Branch was why and picks out those that have the sturdi- beating down the river. PROBATE NOTICES allowed. healthiest and uses of the and a former Han She and went on the rocks est, appearance, CULLED FROM McCALL’S. barge Baltic, MAINE’S rIKST BKILH HOUSE. misstayed GEO. E. JOHNSON, Jud near A true copy. Attest: these for producing eggs for hatching. cock that in a fev Ayer’s mill, where she was com- At a Probate Court held at Belfast, within and county man, predicts Chas. P. Hazkltink, Regis' Usually 12 hens and a rooster are placed COMMUNITY OF INTERESTS. pletely wrecked. for the County of Waldo, on the 9th day of years the barges, which have practicall; Erected in 1773, of brick of his own January, A. 1). 1912. in each breeding pen, although Mr. do love One Sunday morning in 1898 a big four- Doting Mother—And whom you making, the Hugh McLellan house still A. IT-A Mossman is inclined to the opinion that run the small coasting schooner out o 1P masted schooner parted her hawser and QUIMBY, administrator of the LOO SS.—In Court of Probate, held at best, Daddy or Mummy? stands in Gorham, probably the first GEOEGEestate of Henry Staples, late of Belfast, in | w* last, on tlie 9th day of January, 1 20 hens with two roosters will secure the will be the current of the river swung her clear said of Frank Johnny—Daddy. coal-carrying trade, carrying brick building in Maine. Many visitors County Waldo, deceased, having pre- K. Wlggin, administrator on the. • better results. This method prevents from the wharf and completely across sented a petition praying that the actual market ! Mary Plaisted Wlggin, late of Belfast, u Doting Mother—Oh, bat Johnny. all the granite freights from seapor t come every year to see this fine value of the the out of favorites. speci- the where she property of .said deceased now in County, deceased, having presented lii> «»i picking so kind to river, lay aground until Mummy has always been you. such as those at men of the work of the old days, which his hands, subject to the payment of the collat- final account of administratlou of said est.i By a more careful selection of breed- quarries, Stonington high water, when she was back eral inheritance the Johnny—That’s all right; but we men has been kept almost u changed. The warped tax. persons interested in j allowance. stock and the hens ir Swan’s Island, Sullivan, Franklin and o 1 to her berth. the succession thereto, and the amount of the ing by handling are four Ordered, that notice thereof be t c must stick together! walls all of thicknesses of brick, tax thereon, may be determined given smaller lots on fresh Mr. Moss- Somes Sound. In a letter to the r In the same a British by the Judge* of weeks in The ground, Bango and the with their year tramp lay- Probate. successively Republican Join snrall-paned windows, ■ man believes it possible to get a fair egg News, Capt. Crabtree says: ing at the High Head Wharves in newspaper published in Belfast, in said < shutters and deep window seats, the flax Ordered, that the said petitioner give notice to that all persons interested may attend at a yield in November, when eggs areusuallj NICETIES OF LANGUAGE. some imriy years ago, oeiore Darge 8 Bangor, bars for all interested wheel and other former possessions of loading spool Grenock, persons by causing a copy of this bate Court, to be held at Belfast, on Ou- scarce. He believes that a hen is at hei were in the coal-carrying trade, schoon Scotland, filled order to be published three weeks in tlay of next, and show it “Wilt fly with me?” asked the ardent j the are all interest- began leaking, partially successively February cause, family, exceedingly The Republican Journal, a the i. beBt for laying in her second year, anc swain. ers of 100 to 400 tons were considere 3 and would have sunk had not several big newspaper published they have, why said account should ing to the lover of the days of our fore- at Belfast, that they ntav appear at a Probate allowed. when she is three years old she is killec the large enough for the business and wer 8 towboats equipped with wreck- to be held at “All depends,” answered practical fathers. The register which is kept of powerful Court, Belfast, within and for said GKO. E- JOHNSON, Ju and dressed for market, Mr. Mossmar but after thi 8 been on the 13h of A “Is that a or merely an paying property, shortly ing pumps available. They suc- County, day February, a. I). 1912, true copy. Attest: girl. proposal the visitors bears signatures from many at ten of the clock before and breeds entirely from 1-year-old hens, invitation to the building of large schooners bega ceeded in her afloat until all of noon, show cause Cham. P. Hazki.tink, Keglst go aviating?” States. The land was purchased in 1738, keeping if any they have, why the prayer of said peti- and he raises but one variety, the Rhodt and we kept building them larger an 3 her cargo which had been aboard should not be Mr. McLellan securing the gra tee’s put tioner granted. Island Red. larger until the limit was reached in th 8 could be discharged, and then accompa- GEO. E. JOHNSON, Judge. NOTICE. The right of land in “Narragansett No. 7,” A scriher not ce That Mr. Mossman’s system is a prac- THE LANGUAGE. Thomas W. Lawson (lost about tw 9 nied her to Boston, where the damage A true copy. ttest: ADMINISTRATRIX’Shereby gives that she has or 200 acres, for the sum of £10 The Chas. P. duly appointed administratrix, with the wi tical and satisfactory one is evidencet said the traveler in an Erie years ago) which carried 8,000 tons. was Hazeltink, Register. of the “Waiter,” deed of this land is now in possession of repaired. nexed, estate of the number of who have 1 “did I had “These schooners wel One of the oddest accidents by people begut Railroad restaurant, you say large paid happened JANE L. late his descendants. a Probate BRYANT, ofjael»>out. to follow his example. —Boston Globe. minutes to wait or that it was while the smaller ones suffered, but the at in 1901. A shift- At Court held at Beilast, within and twenty The a romantic as well as City Point, Bangor, of all have had their and house enjoys for the County Waldo, on the 9th day of in the County of Waldo,deceased, and twenty minutes to eight?” day their place ing engine was shunting a string of box A. 1). 1912. Clubbing Offers The following clubbinf an antiquarian reputation from the writ- January, bonds as the law directs. Ail persons n. Oi said had are being taken by barges and steamers cars onto a The momentum was demands the “Nayther. ye twinty 1 of siding. BICKiMOKK and Octavia Hick more of against estate of said do. offers apply only to subscriptions paid in ad There are several reasons for ings Elijah Kellogg, great-grandson more than are desired to minutes to ate, an’ that’s all ye did have. this, hi 1 it should have been, with the MAYOTroy, in said Comity, adoptive parents of present the same for settle! of Hugh McLellan. Mr. Kellogg in his and all indebted thereto are ■ vance; and when payment is made it should b< the reason is the of lime result that the at the Lettie Estelle Bickniore, minor, having present- requested to Yer train’s just gone.” ; principal saving "Good Old “In this bumping post end “Not when J Times,’’says: house, of the ed a petition praying that the name of said payment immediately. stated what if is desired. It ii i! _ ! many years ago gc wharf gave and one premium, any, they built in the first brick house erect- way big log minor may be changed to Lettie Estelle Rich ARVILLA 8. WEBB! so fast that could 1773, car slid over also necessary to that none of these | they discharge 300 ton the edge and settled down mond. Belfas*-, January 9,1912. say publi PREFACE OR APPENDIX. ed in Maine, the bricks of which were of coal a day, it was somethin across the deck of a lumber That the said cations are mailed with The Journal or fron thought made his own hands and those of his squarely Ordered, petitioner give notice to A insurance man in San marvelous. Today 1,00 by schooner. alt persons interested by causing a copy of this NOTICE. The this office. We have to for these prominent 1 they discharge and died pay publica tons an children, lived Hugh McLellan, order to be published three weeks scriher notice that h- Francisco tells the following story: hour. The dealer, a few year ° During the Winter of 1902 a schooner successively ADMINISTRATOR’Shereby gives in The a beer »• tions one y ear in advance, and they are thei midst of to and Elizabeth his wife—the father and Republican Journal, newspaper publish- I duly appointed administrator ot the "A man went to sleep in the ago had send his order to ninet which had been hauled at ed at that sixty mother of Uncle and other up Bucksport Belfast, they appear at a Probate of sent from their respective offices to our sub a curtain lecture. When he woke up in before Billy eight broke from her Court, to be held at Belfast, within and for said ISAAC | days delivery. Today, by barge j! of whom moorings and the wind HILLS, late of Belfast, as children, the youngest Martha, County, on the 13th day of A. 1). scribers. Our clubbing offers are as follow, the morning the words were flying and steamers, the eastern dealer ca and tide her across the February, 1912, was our The walls to swept river, pil- at ten of the clock before noon, and show in went to coal Grannie. cause’ the County of Waldo, deceased, and for one year’s subscription paid in advance: fast as when he sleep. ‘Say,’ have|his delivered in Bostpn sixt ing her up on the rocks under t e em- it the ot said the second are of brick—the ends any they have, why prayer petition- bonds as tlie law directs. All persons b to hours after and story er The Journal and Farm and i he interrupted the harangue inquire, ordering, the Maine dea bankment of old Fort Knox. In some should not be granted demands against the estate of said deeea- Home.$2.0 and roof of wood. The of im- L. and ‘are or ! er in ten to hours later, progress unaccountable GEO. JOHNSON, Judge. desired to present the same for settlemen The Journal Tribune Farmer. 2.2i you talking.yet again?’” twenty jI manner the vessel took A provementhas replaced the old gable by true copy. Attest: all indebted thereto are requested to mak- The Journal and McCall’s Magazine. 2.1< i “Up to within a year or two fire, and all that remains of her is Chas. P. barge a modern and some al- today Hazeltink, Register. I meut immediately. The Journal and New Idea Magazine. 2.21 have confined themselves to sharp roof, slight burned and HE LAUGHED. j carryin blackened timbers. MAINE 1111 included in our of WHY l terations have been made inside; the The publications clubbing coal and ice, but to-day they carry abou 88.— In Court of Probate, held at Bel Belfast, January 9,1912. fers be sent to different addresses. last that has to a stove on 9th may He—I dreamed night your all the granite shipped from Massachu _ great fireplace given way Steamer Carolyn WALDOfast, the day of January. 1912. old house stands as the Breaking Up. Herbert T. Field, administrator with the The of the New Idea mother was very ill. setts and a —otherwise the will publishers Magazine very large quantity j annexed on the estate of o. w shippe "Grannie” was the Fred hite, late of NOTICE. The advised us of an increase in their sub She—Brute! I heard you laughing in from I founders left it.” have Maine. predict that within Portland, January 18th. With about Belfast, in said County, deceased, having pre- ADMINISTRATOR’Sseriber hereby gives notice that author’s great aunt, his grandmother’s sented his first account of been scription price and a consequent advance ii your sleep. very few years granite shipped fror $5,000 worth of anchors, boats and other administration of duly appointed administrator of tl sister, at whose house he often visited said estate for allowance. tate of clubbing rates, and The Journal and New Ide: Stonington, Bluehill, Swan’s Island, Mt material taken from the wrecked steamer when a and at whose knee he drank ISAAC TOO GREAT A STRAIN. Desert Sullivan and Franklin wii j boy, which went on Ordered, That notice thereof be given, three S. ELLIOTT, late of Troy, are now $2.25. Island, Carolyn, ashore Metinic in the stories which he preserved for the weeks successively in The Republican Journal, almost all go in barges. Rock near Rockland last the in the of D The publishers of McCalls magazine havi Theater Manager—You say you object world in his "Good Old week, lighter a newspaper published in Belfast, in said County, County Waldo, deceased, and one is the fascinating owned bonds as the law directs. All h. *• to real food on the table in the “Every getting habit Salvor, by the T. A. Scott Wreck- that all persons interested may attend at a Pro- persons sent us this notice: “The subscribers having Times.”—Biddeford Journal. demands the estate of said maj Hurry! Ship at once! Get it there a ing of New is bate Court, to be held at Belfast, on the 13th day against decease- scene, Mr. Why, Company London, Conn., desired to the same for their free within 30 aftei banquet Greesepaynt. soon as of February next, ami show cause, if auv present settlement, select patterns days possible. But sailing vessels wi; now in this port. The men on board the they all indebted thereto are the rest of the company are delighted at A HERO IN A LIGHTHOUSE. have, why the said account should not be al- requested to make d of their first not at for will Salvor ment the receipt magazine by making it! disappear once, they carr; J say that the CaTolyn is fast going lowed. immediately. and other For J. S. So. to E. H. H. LAMSON a on an post card, lumber, cargoes that are no t years Donahue, Haven, Mich., pieces and that all of the GEO. JOHNSON, Judge. request ordinary stating Mr. Greesepaynt—Yes; but my part hope saving A true Freedom, January 9,1912. so for n a civil war as a steamer has copy. Attest: is a free U the table after quickly handled, any years yet captain, lighthouse keeper, been given the own- that the pattern desired pattern requires me to rise from up by Chas. P. Hazeltike, Register. As our coastwise business is done entire averted awful but a fact he ers. One man is now on board the which are %ntitled.” a of mouthfuls and say, “I cannot wrecks, queer is, they couple American vessels with EXECUTOR’S NOTICE. The subscriber 1. ly by America) 1 have a if wrecked steamer and will as eat tonight—a strange dread comes over might been wreck, himself, Electric remain, ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. The sub- 1i by gives notice that he has been dul\ officers, it is sure to take care of itself Captain commander of the scnber notice that lie has FRIGHTFUL POLAR WINDS me. I will seek the quiet of yonder Bitters had not prevented. “They cured me O’Leary, hereby gives been pointed executor of the last will and testan and all of these make i and the owners duly appointed administrator of the estate of of a improvements Carolyn, hope to save a terrific force at the far north and apartment for time.”—McCall’s Maga- of kidney trouble and chills,” he writes, “after with quicker and cheaper to the dealer am I few more articles of value. MARY ANN THOMPSON, iate of Winterport, MARGARET P. HALL, late of Freedom with the skin, zine. I had taken other so called cureB for ^TijAkavoc causing red, rough also to the consumer.” years, iu the County of Waldo, deceased, and given hands and that neec In the County of Waldo, deceased, and gr-.o otthffe chapped lips, without benefit and they also Don't let the suffer from bonds as the law directs. All persons havtug them. improved my baby eczema, sores bonds as the law directs. All persons h Arnica Salve to heal It makes Never can tell when you’ll mash a finger or THI CHILDREN URE 8T demands against the estate of said deceased are viuif Bjf|Tlen’8 at seventy, I am fine.” demands against the estate of said decent tHu ‘akin soft and smooth. Unrivaled for cold- sight. Now, feeling or any of the skin. Doan’s desired to present the same for and suffer a cut, bruise, burn or scald. Be pre- itching Ointment settlement, are desired to the same for settletneuf KENNEDY'S For all liver all indebted thereto are to make present sores, also burns, boils, sores, ulcers, cuts, LAXATIVE dyspepsia, indigestion, stomach, requested pay- and all indebted thereto are mnW pared. Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil instantly re- and gives instant relief, cures quickly. ment immediately. requested to bruises and piles. Only 25 cents at all drug* COUGH kidney trouble, they’re without equal. Perfectly paj ment immediately, lieves the cures the wound. SYRUP Try them. 60 cts. at all ELLERY BOWDEN, giata. pain—quickly Only druggists. safe for children. All druggists sell it. Winterport, January 9,1918. II. II. LAMSON Freedom, January 11,1912. The Editor Was Away. MRS. McKENNEY OF JACKMAN HAS GOOD MEMORY. STATE OF MAINE. Pro Tem had to What the Editor Say. [The Independent Reporter.] Proclamation for Primary Elec- the editor of of Jackman, When Charles F. Mann, Mrs. Patrick McKenney tion. from who is 80 walked 4 miles to the Lisbon goes away years old, To the and Mayor and Alderman of the i-;r„ on business or pleasure, taking home of a neighbor recently, after Belfast and nit, Selectmen of the severs, f or the edi- there she recited the poem the him a pointed pen pencil, reaching M Th,rte.e?th Senatorial Dist-ict of from th" »* Waldo ,,jl chair is filled by another whose “The Orphan’s Prayer,” memory, s^d SUte°mPn8,n8 °OUnty when 10 of is not known, but who may be which she had learned years GREETINGS.* was the mother Whereas, a vacancy now Whoever it is, he has an age. Mrs. McKenney exists in the reore , vil. origi- tor imams and local of 13 children, 11 of whom are living. Sensorial v of stating things regarding 'District, ’comYria?ngt*theTjr^aa^J of much Castoria is a harmless Waldo by the death j and that are applicable in other The poem will doubtless prove substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- orKo^bl^C^ and It Pleasant. than Lisbon. Here is what he interest to the older readers of our paper goric, Drops Soothing Syrcps. is, It contains neither Opium, nor other Narcotie and is as follows: Morphine say in a recent issue of the Enter- reproduced substance. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. THE ORPHAN’S PRAYER. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teeth- 'XL™ 1 knew a widow poor, ■ all the see very ing Troubles and cures It the .1 to me again to make a bluff at water. You he doesn’t hold REVIVE OUR MERCHANT MARINE. Coustipation. regulates men^f^hYeYveral Who four small chil. ren had. several towns dties^i^SeieYTmen^MYe at the town his Stomach and Bowels, giving and natural within the ... material for the editorial any grudge draining healthy sleep. District in which the rig The eldest was but six years old, vacancy.exists, the absence of the well. Don’t mention it for it makes As we the The Children's Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. directing and renuirYnv Vh™ in Editor, boys approach opening of the A modest lad. to cause gentle the inhabitant of their w well 1 am going to carry out the me laugh every time I think of it. Panama Canal, we are forcibly reminded re3pec^v^ And very hard this widow toiled, qualified ‘herefor, to assembte 1 will let the readers I I heard the boss making unusual noises of our utter lack of a merchant T,Zl"d r™V°teS judge. marine. To feed her children four; The Kind You Havo f°” a S»at« to flll id no instructions as to for a time and I couldn’t account Half a and more Always Bought InT sald absolutely long century ago, nearly 50 And honest pride this woman felt, vac/ncy, should or should not but for it, so I listened one and I heard cent of our trade was Whereas, the Governor J“hY [ write, day per foreign car- Though she was very poor. has, by his writ of blind to the fact that my future him trying to sing. Later he came to ried in ships flying the American flag. To labor she would leave her a deal what I me, with beads of In 1910 this had dwindled to home, Y -;s depends good may presperation standing only 8 per For children must be on fed; * af°reSa'd more on w at I do not say. his brow exclaiming, "darned if I know cent. SHE?-*?*5**take vacancy 8hal‘ possibly And glad was she when she could get, pTace and whole lot of that need whether that Child is in D Of the 92 the Tt’ rt areja things Awaking per cent, greater part is A shilling’s worth of bread. :sc after, but I’m not going to med- or B minor.” shipped in vessels belonging to p England One when snow was falling fast, ihese affairs to in hot I’m going to quit now for I expect I and A war, day, get myself Germany. therefore, be- And was the air, have said to either cause the boss tween piercing and that, in cases of v not on your tin type. However, enough those two nations—an event for I that would and ^SJt5?SSS32elections to 'di thought I go see. said vacancies to me or add dollar on primary election was the boss I would jump right in bounce another which we on this side can see no neces- How these children were. In Use For Over shall be neld at poor 30 Years. time as the sufh into a bowl of clam my wages. but of which the Governor shall order hungry negro weekly sity, newspapers of the by proclama- those Ere long I reached cheerless home, L d would flay and every- countries persist in everybody talking—would Searched by every breeze, ar® and left. I’d make the smoke mean that most all our directed and re- ]. right Mink Steals Old Tom’s Fish. exports afloat When going in, the eldest child auIi^rYn°they°Uquired, in the name of-he[ehy the would State of Maine to ;p thicker than a fog does on New immediately become contraband. I found upon his knees. lega!ly qualified voters' to vs river when the boss is The would and seize as attend YtdthYarrn °iU V plough- Surprise for Woodsman Who Thought He English capture Vot,nK Plac®8 “ the German I stopped and listened to the boy, aforesaid »nd tk"'" city tempest tossed billows down many merchantmen as possible, t0Wns in sa>d Dii- Knew the of all Wild Creatures. He never raised his head, trict,triit on thethedB m Veial Rock Ways and the Germans would do the same first Monday of ~: ball bridge. to But still went on and said, the February 191? [From Maine Woode.] vessels the being fifth day of said g learned the printer’s trade I flying English flag. As no Give us this our bread. of month, for the pu^ day daily pose voting for persons to must out were on the bank of the insurance could be or be nominated bv I look for my job, but They sitting had, only at pro- * I waited till the child was done. 88 candidatea lines 1 feel I ought to be a pugilist creek, resting and taking a smoke. The hibitive rates, the result would be an fior or't tne h^office omce of P8rties Still listening as he prayed, SenatorSe'^1 irom said District at n all these little Bantam old fisherman, Tom Tracy, who scorns to immediate shutting down on our export ‘° *" he‘d fighters When he arose I asked him why’ the «™‘ *<™day °* nave looked upon me as a wonder— carry a creel, had his nice lot of trout trade. The merchantmen of neutral na- The Lord's' he had said. Marctfnext. Prayer And it isn’t too late yet for me to strung on a double willow switch, the tions would naturally then become our you, the said Mayor, Aldermen sir, said he, this and few and should 1 decide tips of which he held in one hand, with carriers to a extent than at Why morning, conductinl? the said lessons, larger pres- When mother went election6.^1" primary the trout my away, y°ur be careful how you come around immersed in the water to keep ent, and, loaded with our exports clear- turnstoms of records and re- She wept because she said of ?hfthe same,mak,n*[ are them and fresh. a for other countries than hereby directed to fullv rich me in the ribs. bright Presently ing those at had no bread for us with all She today. comply the provisions of the tnat the Doss aoesn t small animal for an instant on war, would doubtless be to law re^ rejoiced appeared immune, though latmg the nomination of She said we children now must candidates at di- be scared of anybody or any- the opposite side of the creek, a hundred always subject to the annoyance of starve, knOWn being Our father being dead, 88 ,he Direct Pri- iut as he grows older he seems to feet or so down stream, and then disap- stopped and searched. Under most favor- maryPa”arleS And then I told her not to cry, of unusual almost as able it will Given at the scared sounds, espec- peared suddenly. conditions, however, For 1 could some bread. Executive Chamber, in Au- readiiy get this ■i they come in the dead hours “That’s a mink,” said Tom. “If his be seen to what extent we should be the psta, thirtieth day of Dec nber Our the t our wouldn’t be a few dollars losers. Father, sir, prayer began, Dord one sight. One night recently he peit worth i Ij'T JJjJdle, yea,r °J thousand’, Wiiat made me think, that he, I hu"dred and J. of scared about three months from now, and I Already our manufacturers are seek- i eleven, and of the being by strange As we have got no father here, Independence of the wasn’t to have that stretched and the United States of what he first thought was the goin’ pelt ing export trade, in next ten Would our kind father the °ne be. hundred and thirty- oriel sounding the last trump, over a board when the time comes, I’d go years this branch of business 13 going to sixth™3 And then you heard the be a new method of summon- shake him out and kill him now, for what enlist the services of our brightest cap- prayer, sir. frederICK W To ask God for bread each Hv thetko r PLAISTED. sickness. he’s up to now is lookin’ for a chance to tains of industry. We have much to day, Oj Governor. Attest: luring In the corner, sir, I wept, Cyrus W. .•■s 1 think I'd like to be road get at a o’ or the track re- Davis, of State. family pa’tridges learn—foreign languages, foreign And that’s what made me pray. Secretary of a or :irr just one year—if I got the rabuit, maybe a feast on some quirements, and foreign methods of doing I quickly left the wretched room, ir I know 1 never would get it unsuspecting wood duck. business. That the American young And went with fleeing feet; \ould have some remembrances “I know ’em, uodblast ’em. They business man will enter his new work STATE OF And very soon was back again. MAINE. held the can’t fooi me. I’d like to them with the same g office, for I’d pile perfect impetuous, unsparing and With food enough to eat. enough in January to last pa’tridges, or put that rabbit on its confident spirit with which he has solved A Writ of Election. or shoo that and other new 1 thought God heard me, said the 1 uly—that is I'd pile it up olf guard, wood duck away and difficult problems, there boy, To lh.3 Mayor and 1 answered with a nod, ^ Aldermen of t e city of :IVS. I would if 1 was only as cunnin’ as the is no doubt. But in it all he will meet UelFaat a"d Selectmen I could not speak, but much I of the several towns mink and knowed where to find ’em. with a unless can though J in the .oink of it, though, Mac has great handicap, there Of that child’s faith in God. Thirteenth Senatorial Disirict of But I can’t afford to be a revival of our Maine. ling to be remembered pertect ’em by merchant marine. composing the County of Waldo in by. oui-i otate. ic one walks Lisbon street killin’ that mink now. And to this end tve are all inter- I up vitally riDAL POWER SCHEME. greeting: corner of Union toward the car “Wood ducks ain’t goin’ to be no good ested, the farmer, the country merchant, V, hereas, a now remember Mac, especially if to me no time, 'cause the law won’t let the banker, the manufacturer. None vacancy exists in tile renre- Bath Corporation which will Harness the in tile Thirteenth Sen- corns on his feet. But then metetch ’em. There’s rabbits and but would share in the t plenty upbuilding Strt| c°mprising the Cmmtv to and that of our Ocean Tides. va- m uD „f t all walking the pearly streets spare, family o’ pa’tridges exports; hence the individual citi- tbe the Winfield would be all scattered to the four corners zen at even a 'ft /, b6athn0f .olden City so we ought not com- large, though thousand Augusta, January 11. The Maine fr°m Sald and miles Where-,- ,’h r eD'!‘?r District, o’ the universe, anyhow, by the time the from salt water, has a positive, Hydraulic Power Co. of Bath, Wednes- nrnvidl ?h,, {'““‘■‘“Don and laws of Maine ■ season come in for shootin’ and I interest in a revived vacancies to think about it anybody could ’em, personal American day, nled articles of incorporation at the I the shall occur fn * w,h®n®YerGovernor ued to office if had votes wouldn’t be likely to have a whack at shipping.—H. H. Windsor in the Febru- office of the of State. The I ,Sl shall cause pre- any they secretary cepts.Hi to be issuedth,e to the none of ’em. And the mink's to Mechanics Mayors and Alder- ... and succeeded in goin’ ary Popular Magazine. purpose of the corporation is the obtain- men of the printed getting j several cities and Selectmen of the into the ballot but since be worth about $6 to me.” of from the tides and waves several towns box, ing power ! within the District in which the law came into force that re- The old fisherman gazed at the of salt or fresh as vacancy exists, ii spot A GIRL'S WILD MIDNIGHT RIDE. water, described under directing and requiring them where the mink had last been and to cause the a politician to tell everything he again, letters patent of the United States, inhabitants of their respective To warn of a fearful forest fire in cities and towns ti and everything he does it might he had some more to say about that mink people the issued to Thomas A. McDonald and qualified therefor, to assemble ,S3E®S!S5FS.a8S86«Sa!WSB®i6SSai:g!®® and give their votes difficult to stuff the ballot box. and minks in general. Catskills a young girl rode horseback at mid- others. The capital stock is fixed at ®®afiSE«® JEHL-tSSSfiS for a Senator to fill said |B ®Sij vacancy; ,-ss. come to think about it I’ll stick “It’s on the for blood all night and saved many lives. Her deed was and ! rampage $1,500,000; $1,000,000 common, $500,- are 1S57 LET YOUR CROPS DECIDE' .910 Therefore, you hereby directed and re- t Id of for a while said he. “Warm blood is what are 000 f in job sticking type right,” glorious but lives often saved Dr. preferred, nothing paid in. The par quired, the name by King’s of the State of Maine, to When I read that the Keefe minks want most of It ain’t value of the shares is The | and warn the anything. New in $1. promo- notify inhabitants of the Discovery curing lung trouble, coughs K They will tell you to use E. FRANK COE FERTILIZERS. Manufactured v and city w was convicted of flesh they hanker after. A mink’ll kill William S. Maxwell of Patter- towns in the manslaughter and which have ended tersjare aforesaid, manner in which ducks and chickens colds, might in con- in the Best in the at the law directs it 1. me laugh. Remember I was a and rabbits and son, N. J., N. Gratz Jackson of Bath Equipped Faatory Country Belfast, Maine. .1 who are duly qualified to vote or “It cured me of for an once and I know all about what pa’tridges jest for the fun of it even af- sumption pneumonia. a and Eva J. Carleton of Woolwich. W. Representatives to the Legislature of this dreadful and JACKSON & HALL, Belfast Agents. the •w ought to do and say. That ter it has sucked all the blood it wanted. cough lung disease,” writes W. R. S. Maxwell is president and treasurer ^ ‘a ar,Se mb,o ?“ first Monday of “Some folks that a mink can | J?12, th* fourth of K i. woman killed a child if she killed says roll Patterson, Wellington, Tex., “after four in our and N. Gratz Jackson, clerk. The saidretl marev, to bJ>m* day month, give their votes in said meet- ■ itself in a ball and ai -1y. and how is that up does do it, too, so had died with and I three incorporators named are also di- THE COE-MORTIMER NEW YORK. for a manslaughter? family consumption, gained | COMPANY, ly inga Senator for the said Thirteenth Sen- N r mind the Board of Trade it can drift down under water and ketch rectors. The articles atonal will 87 pounds.” Nothing so sure and safe for all provide that the | District. so t. c eet and wiil look out that fish ’fore the fish has any idee that number of directors not less And you, the said again throat and lung troubles. Price 50c and may be, ^SSaSS-8StBSSSSaSfiSSSSS5tS89!ffiS£«jfSI Mayor, Aldermen and setch a $1.00. in « ce 3ome sand on the sidewalks. there’s thing as mink around, than three, nor more than nine, as fixed Selectmen, conducting the said election, and Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by all drug- m B. ; way, there is more than the side- but that’s all bosh. Maybe a mink might at any annual making your records and returns of the gists. meeting. same, are waiks in need of sand. go for fish in the winter when they was hereby directed to fully comply with The Journal of January 4th a 1 the provisions of handier to than warm published the law to the you ever notice there are a whole git blooded critters election of relating THE SHIPS THAT an article Mr. J. Frank State and but it hain’t no use for setch fod- HAVE GONE. by Googins of County officers, and h: f nen that don’t seem to care a rap is, got known as the Australian ballot on the law for r.r-ir wives until else der when there’s pa’tridges or rabbits or Searsmont “Harnessing Tides.’’ Given at the Executive somebody The Names of are Remember- Chamber, in Au- ■ wood ducks to stalk and Many Only along and speaks a kind word to steal up onto It looks as though there is something gusta, this thirteenth day of Decem- n 1 then and tap. ed by the Few Old-time Masters and Of- m the of the fat is in the fire; but in it. \ j ^er* year our Lord one thou- L- s- 8and n,ne a woman I’d talk when I You don t s pose a prowlin beast ficers Who Still Live. j hundred and eleven, and of got & Transient Stable «. } ~ 5 Livery, Boarding the Independence of the p ;.ady and have the last word that kin pitch in and kill a goose as easy The of K » United passing the full-rigged ship is a Vessels • States of America the do. as a cat can kill a mouse and can chaw Fishing Escape. Is situated on Washington street, just off Main street. I have single and 5 one hundred j. they subject that has for years received con- and thirty-sixth. there s a ditterence its way out of a tin-lined box with a wire etc. Careful drivers if desired. big siderable attention in the public N. Jan. 18. While all double hitches, backboards, Your patron- I FREDERICK W. PLAISTED. cloth front on it prints, Curling, F., you’re on the inside looking out besides is gpin’ to fool and whereas in former By the Governor. Attest: I-ay years our ports the 18 vessels of the Gloucester fishing mp age is solicited. Telephones—stab'e 235-2, house 61-13 5 ly28 j outside in. I found away much time chasin’ after fish in the Cyrus W. Davis, of looking harbored large numbers of full-rigged fleet which were ice at W. C. Secretary State. <■ water and runnin’ a imprisoned by PRESTON, Proprietor. night the boss left here. It maybe up agin’ several now Jgi J8 1 ships, years frequently pass of Islands are believed now to be blizzard do that’s what a Bay gular and the wind she muskrat, you? Well, without one arrival. For the clear of ice ! instance, the fields and well started on W *£* Vfl *£* ^ *5* •Sfi then biew some and the mink can do, and don’t think it much of •Sf BELFAST more, first vessel of this kind to enter Boston their run seven vessels of the M.-tled a trick as I know from havin’ home, around my ears, as we neither, harbor in was seven years the Aryan, fleet are still imprisoned at Bonne B ty. the platform at the new seen it do both of ’em. depot which arrived there this fall. Such The latter have little chance of getting BURNHAM ■i" the train and in at “Why should a mink be afraid to run looking names as the Edward O’Brien, J. B. clear unless the United States revenue so while a muskrat? He ain’t afraid un- anting nicely we stood up ag’in Walker, Julian P. Thomas, Wandering cutters Gresham and without. The boss said he less he runs ag’in one in the water. Androscoggin, On and after October 2, 1911, trains connect- Jew, William H. Conner, Samaria, Gov- which are on their way here, are able to live to see this town as as “A mink hain’t got no show at all ing at Burnham and Waterville with big ernor Robie, Abner Coburn, El Capitan, smash a channel through the ice pack. through people leaving on night trains ; with a muskrat in the water, as there James Drummond, bring to old-timers trains for and from Bangor, Waterville, Port- u some shelter while j the muskrat is more to home than the waiting, many recollections of the past, but none land and Boston will run as follows: the mink is and can handle itself so much boss kicking the other day j of these vessels sail the seas now, and FROM who were than the mink that if the mink BELFAST. ople so anxious to quicker the few that are left of a later fleet have were so backward about | can't break away and to land it’ll be A.M. P. M. •spel git as a rule been converted into cargo I Give the fl P.M. minister. A minister has i all with him less’n no time. On land Belfast, depart. 7 05 12 15 2 20 Ki up barges and are towed along the coast. I Children a Tonic! 1 we and he a muskrat’ll in its best licks to C»ty p0int. t7 10 tl2 20 i2 25 ought to be so put git In 1908 there remained on paid j this coast Children in their tender often 20 to the water if it sees a and its I years tl2 30 t2 35 pay others. Gospel may be mink, twenty-four Of these JJald<>.17 he about out of its head full-rigged ships. I need the strengthening influence of Brooks. 7 32 12 42 2 47 boss, but it requires money eyes’ll bulge from the Arthur E. Sewall, Bangalore, Tillie ■ a mild tonic. Give them Knox. ,744 tl2 54 t2 59 ad and a scare, but in the water it will onto get up good sermon, jump Starbuck, and S. P. Hitchcock have Thorndike. 7 50 1 00 3 06 a mink on they pass the collection box sight. been lost. The Shenandoah, Benjamin Umty--'. 7 58 1 08 3 13 to donate liberally. “There ain’t nothin’ you can bait your F. Packard, E. B. Sutton, Kenilworth, Wmnecook. t8 08 1 18 *3 23 ■ say the water is in mink with that’ll fetch that little ^^alFDON'T^V Burnham, arrive. 8 20 1 30 3 36 very poor traps ! Atlas, Great I. F. Astral, Admiral, TRUE’S Clinton. 8 39 critter to ’em so as 159 5 20 only fit to wash your feet in, so quick and sartin ! and P. Thomas have \ Chapman, Joseph BLIND Benton. 8 48 5 30 something better to drink. I muskrat. Yonder comes a muskrat, now been sold to be converted into barges or Bangor. 11 35 3 00 5 06 aril anyone about the by hockey! I guess I’ll have to manage lllflr complain fishing craft. The Glory of the Seas, an Waterville. 8 54 2 13 5 35 this so we to track of him, for I’ll want to town, explain why keep old American clipper which for forty ELIXIR 1 Portland. 11 50 4 50 8 20 much extra fluid to the make use of him by and baitin’ him YOURSELF quench by, years sailed the ocean under the Stars 1 Tha Laxative Boston. 305 pm 8 05 5 16 on a Family trap to gather in that mink when he m and Stripes, wag sold some time ago to ■ and Worm Medicine M X JrnW a. TO here let me we don’t need a gits his pelt in BELFAST say proper shape.’’ Capt. McDonald, who placed her under I and the common ills of Wt n'k and don’t work Sure a muskrat came swim- P.M. A.M. A.M. gentlemen enough the Uruguayan flag to carry hardwood ■ childhood will be avoided. wn clock. Don’t see the ming leisurely upstream, and when op- ■ It tones the stomach— Boston. 10 00 8 55 you cargoes in the South Seas. There are ■ the "mg would be the the spot where the had purifies blood—expels A.M. P. K striking hour? posite anglers still a few of the more modern fleet left, ■ waste and poisonous mat- seen Portland. 1 20 2 00 12 35 one of your wives could tell the mink it climbed out on the as I vital- however, such the Acme, Erskine M. ter—gives strength, uHjK\YmPI Waterville. 7 15 9 50 3 15 time you got home from the shore and moved among the water Edward I ity and aids a proper de- m Phelps, Sewall, W. F. Babcock, ■ worms. a Bangor. 7 00 1 F0 mad of in a weeds. velopment. Expels putting your money Dirigo, and William P. Frye, but it will ■ All dealers. 35c.t 60c.•$ 1.00 M Benton. 7 21 t9 56 3 23 m “Geewhillikins!” exclaimed old buy good chocolates for your Tom, not be before too will succumb ■ — DR. J. F. TRUE A CO., ■ Clinton. 7 30 10 04 3 33 ■' : long they it will her so “I that mink won’t scent ’o Burnham, leave. 8 35 10 25 3 60 brighten eyes hope git to the march of progress and ^_Auburn, Me._ '■ that changing Wmnecook. t8 f you will be able to see the muskrat, for he’d come back a conditions in the trade from 45 10 35 4 00 : carrying Unity o 54 10 y on the darkest night. mile to kech him squattin’ there on land, to 50 4 69 port port. Thorndike. 9 02 11 00 4 15 to what a good many Enter- and I’d lose that rat for bait. It’s The full-riggers had their day, and a Kno*. t» 10 til 10 t4 23 :l'rs for Mr. that t think, the boss does not lucky you, Muskrat, you it was. No matter how yMSlfpiffl Brooks. glorious day 9 26 11 30 433 bi downfall of come a little late and crawled Sandford, but along up magnificent the ships that come after Waldo. t9 35 til 40 t4 48 i s him. He is he is con- there, for you know there hain’t nothin’ ij glad ! them, how large or how speedy, they City Point. ,945 til 50 14 58 t ''<■ he can do no more could ’a turned that mink from Belfast, arrive. 9 50 harm, but away will never outweigh in interest, romance, 11 55 5 05 should be an on in insane asylum gobblin’ you up sight!’’ or value in their time the ships that sail- tFlag station. '■ " (NEWS, Just then there came a Limited tickets penitentiary. I have heard sharp jerk on ed the seas when traffic / for Boston are now sold at | between rhe Old »t so as the willow switch that held $5.00 from Belfast and all stations on long fanatics old Tom’s and the New World was Branch. religious young, when Announces that he has limited his H. D. W a trout in the and the practice ALDRON, General Passenger among class who doesn’t water, switch was the winds of heaven were the sole I Agent. 1 pro- MORRIS ther out to diseases of the HUMOR# MCDONALD, of his hand and Christ was crucified or pulled disappeared. and which was pelling power, element so Vice President & General Manager,. battle of Bull Run, just so Diagonally across the creek, toward the well understood and mastered the tit where by Portland, Maine. tit ions like Shiloh exist. spot the muskrat sat on the shore, old-time skippers.—The Marine Journal. as a movement of I many times rejoiced that something beneath the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat possesses a goffd water com- water was traceable by a slight break on Had it been otherwise the town the surface. Children ■" Cry AND REFRACTION. borne the and others w nen me Dreax reacnea tne otner sue j, expense FOR FLETCHER’S * the out of the water a the wil- »FEATURES^g| benefit reaped and taken crept mink, Office hours —10 a. m. to 12 1 to 3 m Co. ]m., p. Stoamsiiip low switch with old Tom’s trout on it in CASTOR! A 7 to 8 p. m., and by appointment. tow.'» The mink passed by the muskrat so close that the rat had almost to move REDUCED WINTER FARE Health PITTSFIELD PERSONALS. CORNER CHURCH AND BRIDGE STREETS insurance to make room for it, and trotted away out of for sight with the string of old Tom’s Telephon connection. 23tf those who keep well William left noon Belfast and j'taecessary*' trout. McGilvery Tuesday Boston, $2.25, .u* The best way to keep well on a busines to New York. pruper The fisherman gazed after the disap- trip ,, diet, sufficient rest, enough s, pearing mink and trout with Mrs. G. E. Gilmore of »hove all things by keep- bulging Burnham was in TURBINE STEEL STEAMSHIP B7::;,\and eyes for a moment and then found his town the of her BELFAST re£ular- If you are un- today guest sister, Mrs. DR. E. H. B0YIN6T0N ortm,\bowels tongue. B. L. Leave Belfast at 2.00 p. m. for Boston Mon- Suaat® oooash to be suffering from Fitzgerald. and “Dodblast your thieven’ pictur’s!” he day Thursday. Headaches, disordered liver, dys- Fred who For at his fist toward the Seward, has employment in EYE 8PEOIALI8T Bangor 7.30 a. m. Wednesday and can exclaimed, shaking oicir ?r constipation, you get where Belfast, with his Saturday. a spot the disappearance occurred. passed Sunday parents, by chai>ge of Mr. and Glasses Fitted Leave Boston at 6.00 p. m. and Fri- ifonmni‘ef diet, by “I can stand a Mrs. G. W. Seward. Accurately. Tuesday habit of good deal, but I’ll be ever- William Lincoln West day. y your, hasty eating, if I’ll with Piles! the amount lastin’ly jiggered put up bein’ Dr. Edwin A. Porter was in 44 South Main Piles!illiams Piles!! Leave Rockland at 5.15 a. m. on arrival of of rest or ex- Bangor St., WINTERPORT, MAINE Indian Pile Ointment will cure Ex-Veterinary Inspector Bureau of Anima (or tdsp^ating made a pervaricator out of by con- where he steamer from Boston) and Satur- r by depending on the True any Saturday, accompanied.a patient Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles. It ab- Wednesday fish stealin’ Office I ■. V. of s trary varmint of a mink that to the for a Days, Mondays and Tuesdays. sorbs the (Tiit-tij 6.1'r] srln.ent Agriculture day. f Medicine to relieve you hosipital surgical operation. tumors, allays itching at once, iw WOjd ever lived and I’ll fill with lead to- acts as a poultice, FRED W. POTE, Agent, Belfast. Maine. disturbing You you gives instant relief. as inf, symptoms. Bert C. Bean has returned from Williams’ Indian Pile le your health morrow, by hokey, even if you was Cam- Ointment is pre- VETf BINABIAN t against sickness goin’ den where he pared for Piles and of to be worth ten times what you will be has been visiting relatives itching the private iis old 7X,!Peti7 by systematic use of for the J. H. Parts. Druggists, mail 50c and $1.00. TREATS ALI. DISEASES OF AN1MA1S by trappin’ time!” past eight weeks. Mrs. Bean WOOD, WILLIAMS l household remedy, to jH OPTOMETRIST, MFQ, CO., Props., Cleveland, Ohio lias Ju.i!1(ijr^liable'd Old Tom took up his rod, and expects return home the last of this {) | thousands and is a house- declaring x ami eld rum Pj week.—Pittsfield (Eye Measuring Specialist) Hospital. Pharmacy Office. CASTOR IA that his Advertiser. O poor a in companions could go on and fish | For sale hv WM com omes hundreds of v Will test your eyes so as to For Infants and Tdy \oday some more if they wanted to, but as for accurately, 7 SPRING STREET, BELFAST; MAINE Children. sma11 causes y get the exact lens that vision ve cents t*ge bo7le’ dose> thirty- him he’d be Constipation headache, nausea, dizzi- your re- 7 dodblasted if he’d put a line V No work. »r the any dealer’s. Sample free ness, languor, heart palpitation. Drastic quires. guess Office in Ma- ) Hospital Never Closed. The act' any longer in water where there was phy- Kind You Have “L’ F.” Medicine Co., sics gripe, sicken, weaken the bowels and don’t >) sonic Temple, Room No. 1, Belfast, Me. (( Always Boug^'J* setch unheerd on on he strode cure. 228-13 rv IFor indigestion, orti^Me8' goin’s Doan’s regulets act gently and cure Rod * home. Relieves sour stomac*. Phones—Hospital 69-13. Residence 69-li away constipation. 25 cents. Ask your druggist. |^Tel. Oalpitation of the heart Digests what you eaS i

4 SEARSPORT.

Miss Jessie C. Nickerson left last week on a trip to Florida. Charles and Leon Merithew are in Swanville chopping wood lor Rufus Brown. the Phenomenal Prices* L. D. Littlefield began cutting ice Monday !*Note for local use on Opeechee stream. Harry L. Merithew has been confined to the house the past two weeks by illness. STAMPEDE Steamer Belfast took one of the largest THEY WILL THE TRADE TO OUR STORE. freights for the winter from here Thursday. | Henry Davis has moved from the Shute BEFORE IN THE HISTORY OF THE CLOTHING BUSINESS IN THIS CITY HAS THERE BEEN A CLEAR- house on Leaeh street to the Hawley house on g \TEVER a street. sa,e ,ike this—without single article, we have wielded axe Porter $. IN inS restricting mercilessly the on the prices of the for the of Chas. stock- them bare of all Among petitions pardon our entire knifing profit margin—knifing them below the very marrow of cost. This is W. Morse was one from Searsport containing | £ our semi-annual Red Clearance and if there is a man in this about 50 names. Tag Sale, all Waldo that hasn’t a Mrs. Eleanor B. Colcord, regular County bought suit including The Woman Who Works in Europe, M. Hichborn, scc’y; Mrs. R. T. Sullivan left Boston Jan. 17th for Mrs. or we are to get that man. Sale commences read Miss Mary trcas.; Mrs. Harriet C. Hichborn, chap.; £ overcoat yet going Friday, January 26th, and LASTS JUST will visit her by Booker T. Washington, by Ralph, Iowa, where she brother, Erdine S. Adah; Mrs. Nellie M. Knee- McClure in place of Mirs Lida Curtis; Some Gardner, EIGHT DAYS, or until Saturday night, February Jrd. Mr. John Joyce. Mrs. C. Shute, Esther; Mrs. jj Successes of American Woman, by Mrs. Newal land, Ruth; Evelyn Capt. and Mrs. D. S. Goodell and daughter Edith F.'Ginn, Martha; Mrs. Susie M. Grant, THE WHY OF IT. At the waning of each seas >n we have fo mi it to D. Hillis, read by Mrs B. F. Colcord, and A good palicy close out our stock at cost, Danzy have returned from a three months’ Mrs. Etta B. Griffin, marshall; Mrs. Woman With Convictions, a brief sketch of Electa; and in many cases on such goods as have not been selling well, we them down a deal less stay in Elzina T\eat, Mr. L. Albert Gardner, put good than cost. You cat Santiago. Mrs. Parkhurst, was read by Mrs. Ella Mowry. warder; as in was to sentinel; Mrs. Lettie T. Mixer, organist (a on finding this store. R. R. Lime Co. barge No. 5 towed At the meeting last Tuesday night selections <5 depend everything represented was car- sbe will load on Canada. proxy). The “work” very pleasingly Stockton Thursday, where pota- were read from Stoddard’s lectures will be at these cut this candidate well No goods charged prices during sale. toes for New York. ried through, each being pre- ^ ~ ~~ pared for the duties devolving upon the office, ■■ —- ---.... i Schooner Jacob M. Haskell, Capt. N. F. Gil- STOCKTON SPRINGS. and Mrs. Thompson especially well fitted for key, anived at Delaware Breakwater Jan. 18th, her arduous position as installing officer. Quite £ HERE’S SOME OF OUR LEADING BARGAINS 62 days passage from Buenos Ayres. Mr. Albion P. Goodhue, 2d, now of Belfast, an extended program ot entertainment follow- wd Steamer arrived Sun- 16th in town, returning toward Kanawha, Capt. Burns, spent January ed the installation. The “Female Quartette” of HERE’S AN OPPORTUNITY WIDOW JONES’ the harvard from Norfolk with tons of coal to to his home. r'; KUPPENHEIMER SUITS AND SUITS MUST GO $4.50 coat sweater day 3,460 night present Belfast, consisting of Mrs. Frost, Mrs. Wes- TO BUY A HIGH GRADE SHIRT FOR $5.00 and $6.00 Suits and Overcoats now the Penobscot Coal Co. at Mack’s Point. has been with her sis- WINTER OVERCOATS Mrs. Orilla G. Libby cott, Miss Skay and Mrs. Pitcher, furnished 4 now $3.50 Steamer Borinquen, Capt. Fickett, arrived ter, Mrs. Avelina C. Griffin, Sylvan street, for most excellent vocal music; singing without It is seldom that a customer, desirous of pur- $3 95 AND $4.95 her com- j-69c_- $6.50 Harvard from Norfolk with 3,355 tons of coal a week the absence of instrumental The a nice suit or overcoat, has £ Sweaters. yg Sunday past during accompaniment. melody, chasing really Mothers who have this make of $4 Best $1.00 Shirts.$ .69 bought Boys’ 1.00 Men’s and to the Penobscot Coal Co at Mack’s Point. Miss Shute. sweetness and of their render- chance the newest, well made mer- Boys’ Sweaters. 7y panion, Sarah delicacy, power to get Clothes can to their " ** testify good qualities, .. ar- of new familiar selections was ex- as firm at the 1-50 1.19 The officers of Sears I. O. O. F., will Mrs. M. J. Goodere and Muriel ings and chandise, such this only makes, and can .;35 Lodge, daughter when they be bought at a wholesale •* ** u .75 «. be installed tomorrow, evening and the rived home Jan. 17th from Fort Fairfield, ceedingly pleasing to all privileged to listen to manufacturers’ cost. Everything will be in- -50 39 Friday, WA cost price it is certainly a good time to buy. 8-°° installation will be public to Odd Fellows and Aroostook county, where Mrs. G. was called by the harmony. Recitations were given by Miss eluded at this sale, however, even the staple $1.00 Blue Flannel Shirt.79 ::::::::::::: i:9g JP $3.00 BOYS’ SUiTS AND OVER- 2 00 their families. the serious illness of her mother several Grace Calkin, Mr. Carney and Mrs. Richards. blues and black suits. 1.50 Flannel Shirt. 1.19 1.30 NOW ...... Miss Laura Blanchard a and overcoats in al 2.00 COATS $| .98 1.10 Mrs. B. C. Larrabee, who had been the guest weeks since. sang pleasing solo, We have just 75 suits 1.69 thus an ar- the latest blues of friends for the past week, has returned to Mrs.Wellman Hanson returned last Saturday completing unusually acceptably colorings—browns, greys, for the occasion. A delicious ban- for MEN’S 50e. FLEECED LINED UNDER- was in where she was sud- rangement blacks—that we have been retailing $18.0( HALF PRICE SALE ON MEN’S her home in Islesboro. Dr. Larrabee Bel- from West Upton, Mass., AND FUR COATS AT BARCAIN followed the and all invited and now to clear WEAR NOW PRICES fast for the Chapman concert and returned called by the death of her mother, Mrs. quet exercises; $20.00 -Our Reg Tag price 35c. denly BOYS’ WINTER CAPS $45.00 Fur is extended to our guests felt that the entire affair had been ex- Lined Coats. home with his wife. Decrow. Sympathy neigh- them“p and .75 $99 9^ fine those $13.95 $16.95 $ Underwear.$ .49 4.00 bor in her sadness. ceptionally among always enjoyable ^ *1.00 Caps.$ .50 Heavy Reefers. 295 The officers are out 1.00 municipal sending the of Wright's and Heavy Woolen Under- .50 6.00 evenings provided by sisterhood Beth- Best $15.00 Suits and Overcoats, $11.9! *25 Sheeplined Coats. 4 eg as to all owners of The Ladies’ Aid Society will be entertained JJ notices, required by law, O. E. S. wear.79 Odd Lot 6-°° even- any Chapter, $12.50 Suits and Overcoats, 8 7! Boys' Caps.09 3.98 real estate located in to socially, this, Thursday, afternoon (not Conticook A Wool Underwear. 1.29 Searsport carefully ^ $5.00 Ladies’ Seal Fur 50.00 Coon Fur last K 10.00 6 9! Caps. 3.48 Coat. 39 9- examine all of their orchard and shade as erroneously announced week) by UBITUARY. Saturday evening, Jan. 13th, the Cotton and Wool .48 trees, ing, Underwear... Fur Trimmed 18.00 ~ Don’t Caps.99 Dog .. 13.95 or cause them to be examined, and destroy all Mrs. Herbert Clifford, West Main street spirit of Mrs. Alice C. Merrithew, wife of Mr. £ 6.00 to $8 Suits and Overcoats, $ .50 Night Robes now.39 1 brown-tailed moths nests before Feb. 15, 1912. miss her prepared “surprise.” John R. Merrithew, passed from earthly con- » $3.95 and 5.9! 1.00 «• .79 Jan. 17th fines into the of Heaven’s after 9! 1.50 REMARKABLE PANTS MEN’S AND BOYS’ AND The Library Bridge Club was entertained Miss Evelyn L. Colcord returned joys peace, 22.50 Kuppenheimer Suits, $18 Pajamas .98 VALUES. LADIES’!*:. B. months of a .50 last Thursday afternoon by Mrs. E. D. P. Nick- from Rockland. Her uncle, Capt. Emery weary suffering from peculiar TlJ 15.00 Raincoats, B 9! Gloves and Mittens now.39 $5.00 Trousers.$3.95 HOSE NOW 9c. as before cancerous trouble which 1.00 4.00 els. About 30 were present and the afternoon Colcord, is keeping his house open permeated her entire & 12.00 87! .79 2.95 Miss Ethel all medical skill. The deceased 1.50 2.50 and $3.00 This is the most remarkable was much enjoyed. Miss Florence Colcord was the death of his estimable wife. system, despite ,. 1.19 | Trousers. 1.98 hose value ever offered. None the prize winner. The club will meet today, Colcord of Stockton is still a member of the was born April 2, 1869, at Prospect Ferry. Her NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY A .25 .19 1.50 Trousers.98 sold to dealers. Six pairs only young womanhood was in Stockton .50 Neckwear now.39 Boys’ $1.00 to a customer. Thursday, at 2 o’clock with Mrs. Sumner C. j household. spent Wd OR SOFT HAT. Knickerbockers.79 NEW DERBY " 50c Main street. last where she married Mr. John R. Merrithew .25 .17c. 3 for .5C 50c. Knee Pants.39 Woolen Pattee, The Universalist church was not opened ( Hose. 39c Hat now.$2.2! to Sept. 5, 1891. This congenial union was blessed B^ $3.00 Guyer 1.00 Watches, with rabbits foot fob now -79 25c Worsted Frank Pendleton is the name of the as the furnace was not in condition • 17! [i 19c | Irving Sunday 2.50 Stiff 25c son who arrived in the home Dr. with one son, Clyde M., born in 1893. A woman Men’s White, Turkey Red and Blue I5c. LINEN COLLARS, 10c feuster Brown, in both of and Mrs. use at that time. It is hoped matters may jALL Ladies’, E. of 1-2! Men’s and Irving Pendleton, Lewiston, Sunday night. fast the week to great industry, rare executive ability, 2.00.... \ Handkerchiefs now.02 ’ALL 25c. RUBLER 19c Boys’, now. l9c The first Robert is progress sufficiently present ^ son, Erskine, named for judgment and force of character, she fashioned Mrs. Pendleton’s father, Robert J. Hodgson, allow the customary Sunday school and preach- a home of comfort and attractiveness for hus- and the second son is named for the doctor’s ing service next Sunday. father, Capt. f rank I. Pendleton of Searsport. band, son and friends. She was essentially a —Lewiston Journal. of Belfast Sunday Rev. A. A. Blair spent home body—a pattern housekeeper. This break take the night at “The Stockton” to early in the circle is indeed an loss W. club was last family irreparable CLARK The Friday entertained week HARRY & for Caribou to attend a CO., train to the bereaved Mrs. F. and Miss Carver. Monday morning companion and son. Only the ™cSSSS™* by Gilkey Angeline is i funeral service in the afternoon. This the belief in her release from Owing to the storm but few of the club got iong suffering and her route which could take him to the home 4>aK&WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWAVfiVttVtK**** out. Among them were Mrs. James P. But- only present happiness brings a ray of consolation of the bereaved family at the desired time. in this hour of man, Mrs. B. F. Mrs. W. M. keenest anguish. Mrs. M. was a Colcord, Parse, The oldest members Constipation causes headache, nausea, dizzi- member of John H. Gordon. Norfolk, January 17. Sld, stmr Borinquen, Miss McClure and Miss Lida Curtis. A From Cape Jellison piers the following ship- Bethany Chapter, O. E. S., in which ness, languor, heart Drastic Mary of the in time of service, Searsport; 19. sld. sch James W Paul, Jr, Prov- palpitation. phy- she was lodge present, sics afternoon was The club will was telephoned Monday evening: much interested until failing health schs Gen E S gripe, sicken, weaken the bowels and don’t delightful spent. ping report John H. Gordon idence; 20, sld, Greeley, Provi- were Rev. David Brackett, cure. Doan’s regulets act and cure meet with Jan. Walter Ross arrived at dock. compelled her to all outside mat- dence; Edward H Blake, New London. gently tomorrow, Friday, afternoon Mrs. 16th, tug relinquish 25 aod Marcell us J. Dow, all past masters. The Fajardo, P R, 19. Ar, sch Robert constipation. cents. Ask your druggist. Fire W. M. Parse. Jan, 19th, Rockland & Rockport Lime Co’s, ters, and gradually give £up the domestic January work finished, the lodge was called from labor H McCurdy, Watts, Philadelphia. arrived for a load of potatoes. Jan. 18th, duties that were her chief a Penobscot K. of held first barge delight. Surely, Cabo Rojo, P R, December 20. In bark Lodge, P., their tj refreshments and ample justice was done to port, BELFAST PRICE CURRENT. steamer Millinocket sailed for New York with capable, devoted, helpful wife, and watchful, Kremlin, loading for (to sail annual banquet and smoke-calk, dedicated to F. R Philadelphia an oyster supper prepared by mine host, about Corrected Weekly for The Journal. insurance of and veneer. considerate mother have been taken January 4th.) steamer a cargo paper, potatoes from her Kanawha, Monday evening, January York, which means that it was just the thing Mayaguez, P R, January 19. Ar, sch Carrie came down from family, at the age of 42 years. Her PRODUCE MARKET. PAID PRODUCER. Representing Companies whose 22fid. About 50 were or- Mrs. Elmer E. Thompson early E Look, Gilchrist, Mobile. present. Peavey’s and reached the right place. There was a good Assets install the officers- mother, Mrs. Billadoo and her Mrs. S 19. Pen- Apples, per tm, 40a50 Hay, 14.00 aggregate over chestra was January 17th, to sister, Georgetown, C, January Sld, sch furnished fine music. F. A. Nye Bangor, attendance and the members were much grat- dried, 7 Nettie J. came from dleton Brothers, Boston; 21, ar, sch Mark Pen- per lb., Hides, 84a9 elect of Chapter, O. E. S., the fol- Bishop, Orland to be with toast-master, and entertaining remarks were Bethany ified to have Bro. Brackett with them once dleton, Wilmington, N C. Beans, pea, 2.50a2.75 Lamb, 'll after- her the last days of her life, Mr. B. joining his Y. 2.50a2.75 Chief lowing evening, and returned Saturday an officer of the 16. Beans, E., Lamb Skins, 40a50 Judge Black, Crowley, West, Pattee, more. He has been lodge Searsport, January Ar, barge Boylston, $35,000,000 her wife for the funeral. The burial services took North Mass: 18. R & R Butter, 30, Mutton, 8 Webber, Merrithew and other members of the noon.^ Old associates regretted departure, and the time was when he did not Weymouth, sld, barge place 16th, at the Merrithew home, many years L Co, Stockton; 20, sld, stmr Kennebec, Nor- Beef, sides, 7a7^|Oats, 32 lb., 45 as she and Mr. T. have been missed January lodge. greatly intend to lose a meeting. After the re- stmrs Beei,forequarters, 6.V Potatoes, 1.00 [ Rev. A. A. Blair of the single j folk; 21, ar, Borinquen, Newport News; since to B. for the winter. Maple street, Univer- Round going were and asocial smoke Kanawha, do; 22. sld. barges Barley, bu, Ho! Hog, 8 News has been received of the death in salist church past the cigars passed Boylston, Wey- John M. Ames officiating most comfortingly and mouth; It & R L Co No 6, Rockland. Cheese, 16iStraw, 6.00 ! Compan Mr. and Mrs. Alvah C. Treat drove to Bel- of Mrs. talk was enjoyed. Chicken, 20a28 I Johnstown, Pa., Dec. 17, 1911, Lucy acceptably. Many beautiful floral tributes Stockton, January 18. Ar, barge R & R L , 16»Turkey, STOCKTON SPRINGS, MAINE fast last finding the sleighing rather Caif Jane who was born in now Saturday, testified to the love and Co, Searsport. to load potatoes; sld stmr M il li | Skins, 14!Tallow, 2 ! Totten, Belfast, mutely esteem felt W1NTERPORT. thin on the shore road, but excellent on the WEST nocket, New York. Duck, 20Veal, 12 the of and Sarah for the dear from i Searsport, daughter Sfiepard one, gone earthly com- The school opened Jan. 15th Eggs, 30 Wool, unwashed, 20 back road, which they took on the homeward Longfellow Clifford Blanchard. She first married Phineas panionship, by husband, son and mourn- the instruction Fowl, 14 Wood, hard, 4.00a4.50 with a attendance, under FOREIGN POl.Td. Petition for drive. in W interport, good 18 Bankrupt’s Discharge. P. Nichols, a well-known master of They spent Sunday relatives and friends. The Miss Geese, Wood, soft, 3.00 carpenter ing offering of Miss Farie C. Hadley of Jackson. In the matter of > the of Mr. and Mrs. James Freeman, Salina and moved to guests from — a Cruz. January 17, 6 a m; sld, stmr RETAIL PRICE. | RETAIL MARKET. Searsport they Grinnell, Iowa, Bethany Chapter large floral is a of the Jackson High j Bert L. Dyer, ]n and the fine in that Hadley graduate Mexican, San Bankruptcy.J and reported traveling locality. with one broken Tapley, Diego. Beef, Corned,'' 12 Lime, 1.10 many years ago where Mr. Nichols died. star, point—was especially has attended the Maine Central Puerto Bankrupt. ) school and Mexico, about January 17, 5pm.' Butter Oat even of our town’s realize the Salt, 141b., 18a22 Meal, 5 To the She afterward married a Mr. Totten, who died Few people The interment was in the vil- stmr Hon. < appropriate. Institute and came with best of recommenda- Sld, Hawaiian, Dow, Delaware Break- j Corn. 81 4 Clarence Hale, Judge from i Unions, District Court of several years ago, and the remainder of her size and value of the freights taken Cape Stockton water (for orders); 19, 7 am, ar, stmr the United States lage cemetery. extends deep sym- tions. She is boarding in the family of Mr. Oregon- Cracked Coi n, t 76 Oii, kerosene, llul2 District of the to ian, Dow, New York. Maine. life wTas passed with her daughter in Johns- Jellison piers by steamships running pathy to the stricken husband and son in their Corn Meal, 76 Pollock, 7 Daniel L. Dyer_Your correspondent was the BERI L. York The Millinocket took Cheese, 20 Pork, 12 DYER of Thorndike, ir town. NewT regularly. affliction, know ing that “Our Father which art from MARINE MISCELLANY. of recipient of a pastor’s card of greeting Cotton Seed, 175 Plaster, 1.13 County Waldo, and State of Maine, it on her last 130 car-loads of potatoes, departure, in Heaven” watches over all on earth and in the District, «. Prom an old we find the Rev. Herman A. pastor of the Eden | Codfish, dry, 10 Rye Meal, respectfully represents, that diary price of calico of Clark, Jan 3.^ of 2 car-loads of veneer, and 30 car-loads paper. “Eternal Realm.” Bermuda, 20 Sch John Paul, Hutchinson, Cranberries, 10 Shorts, 1.65 9th day December, 1911, he was dui. ■ at in 1812 was 75c per yard, and there were no Baptist church Salisbury Cove, together from Savannah Dec 31 for has in under Can any other Waldo county town show such “I know Boston, put Clover Seed, 20 Sugar, 7 judged bankrupt the Acts of Con. not where His islands lift of himself and his church. here in to strikes in those days. A business man from with a photograph distress. 5.50a7.00 T. 40 relating bankruptcy; that he has j an export from its boundaries, in quantity or Their fonded palms in air, Flour, Salt, I., duly" also fills the at Town Hill Jan H. rendered all his property and of Searsport who was touring in Southern Italy a I only know 1 cannot drift Mr. Clark pulpit Baltimore, 17 Stmr Ocmulgee, from G. Seed, Sweet Potatoes, 0 rights pr< valuation? ty, and has fully with all the few His love anu care.” on the 2nd and 4th afternoons Searsport, Me, via New York for Sabine, which Lard, 12 Wheat Meal, complied rei, years ago saw posted in Genoa, Naples, Beyond chapel Sunday ments of said Acts Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Witham of South arrived here today, has lost rudder. and of the orders of t and other cities Orring- of each month and that of the Hull’s Cove his large which he visited, large “I long for household voices gone, touching bankruptcy. Mrs. Della Rowe of Belfast, Mrs. Hannan Delaware Breakwater, Jan 18 Sch Jacob M K< 11{ N of ton, For vanished I on the first and third Sundays. Mr. Wherefore he That he posters telling the fabulous wages paid in smiles, long; chapel Haskell, from Montevideo for i prays, may be de Lowell of Mrs. Ernest of Philadelphia, the Court to have a Belfast, Burgess But God hath led my dear ones on, numerous friends here and in Frank- by full discharge fru.n the United States. Lawrence, Mass., is now Clark’s arrived here at 7.30 a m today with mainsail debts Mrs. Edward Colcord of Belfast, Mrs. And He can do no wrong.” J Davidson. In New York provable against his estate under getting a taste of the troubles from the Bangor, fort, his native town, will rejoice in his social, and spanker gone. city, January 13, people to Mr. and Mrs. Maurice E. a bankruptcy Acts, except such debts as are Hattie Moore of Brewer, Mr. James Kneeland feel Jan Davidson, daugh- who were advertised for in the large cities of moral and intellectual success and justly Norfolk, 19 Sch John Bossert, recently I ter. cepted by law from such discharge. of Mr. and Mrs. W.H. Reed. Jr., of in collision with Diamond Shoal No Dated this southern Swanville, that he has made so well, and the best lightship Gray. In Orland, 7, to Mr. and 19th day of January, A. D. Europe. The News of Brooks proud 71, was libelled here the January Mr.Bert Kneeland of this town, today by United States Mrs. Alvertie E. a BERT L. Bankru: Cape Jellison, wishes of all go out to him in his ministerial Gray, daughter. DYER, Matilda B., the wife of W. F. died Jan. authorities, to recover $3,500 ORDER OE I Ml Ellis, of Mrs. seeking damages. Spear. In to Mr. NOTICE «Eon and other relatives and acquaintances duties_Mr. G. H. Clements has returned to Rockport, January 16, 18th at the home of her Mrs. Mrs. Omar G. and son Will were in Saunderstown, R I, Jan 18 Schr Luther and Mrs. Laforest a son. daughter, Henry in the Jan. Hussey |T Spear, District of Maine, ss. John R. Merrithew, were village Dorchester, Mass.The Thursday night Garretson the loss ot her starboard Harriman, in North after an illness Brooks last on business. reported j On this Searsport Thuxsday anchor and 40 20th day of January, A. D. 191. 16th to attend her funeral. dances are liberally patronized and a fathoms of chain when she ar- of one with cancer on the face. She was quite reading the it year Drs. Cook and took a cancer rived here from News for MARRIED foregoing petition, is— a Kilgore pipe is the today Newport Ordered a sufferer. The “Ladies' was observed last civil and pleasant evening’s enjoyment by the Court, That a hearing hi great funeral services were Night” Saturday from the of John Frost last It Allyns Point. Ct. Her sails were split and she lip Thursday. The Clark & or- upon the same on the 1st of March. held at the M. E. church at Club. Messrs. H. order of things... Dyer was badly iced up. day Sunday, Rev. J. Albert evening, Wassaumkeag had been him for some Avery-Sweetser. In Bangor, 21, 1912, before said troubling time. the January Court at Portland, in sain and R. A. C. Treat and A. M. Ames were chestra played for the dance following KOCKiana, January iy. rrancis L. Norton, Edward Crocker of Brewer and Miss Corey officiating, the interment was in Hichborn, Avery ! trict, at ten o’clock in the forenoon; and Joseph Stantial, a life-long resident of Knox, basket ball in Union Hall Wednesday Capt. Charles E. Hall ami Nathan F. Cobb Marie Louise Sweetser of notice Elmwood tomb. She is survived the committee on entertainment, their wives game Stonington. thereof be published in The ■ cemetery by a to island Repniil died at his home in that town Jan. 22nd. He Elmer H. Clement is made trip Metinic Wednesday Sylvester-Brown. In Camden, January 3, Journal, a in her husband and four children—Mrs. Mark the refreshments, cakes evening.... Mrs. gaining newspaper printed said Dist furnishing tempting and inspected the wrecked steamship Caro- by Rev. Sylvanus E. Frohock, Lewis W. Sylves- and that all known leaves a widow and two sons, A. B. Stantial of is now able to sit most of the creditors, ai d other per Ward and Mrs. S. Harriman of North and cocoa. Cards were enjoyed rapidly and up lyn in the of surveyors. While ter of Deer Isle and Miss Vida F. Brown of 1 in Henry appetizing capacity interest, may appear at the said time Belfast and Blin F. Stantial of Brooks. Clark was the of a various homeward Dalton guest their report may not be presented for sev- Eagle Island. and Searsport, Fred Ellis of Stockton Springs and until late hour, when the day_Master place, show cause, if any they hav.- Miss last Fri- eral days yet the condemning of the craft Wiley-Shaw. In Belfast, 18, the of Clifton Ellis of a were each that the Mrs. Sophia Rowe wishes to thank her his cousin, Sylvia Dyer Curtis, January by prayer said petitioner should n» Searsport—by brother, Capt. ways taken, lady feeling as a total loss is a matter of course. Rev. Arthur A. is Un- Blair, Lester R. Wiley of Ban- granted. Warren A. Griffin of club had an of friends who were so kind and in day_The whooping cough raging here, Searsport, and a sister, gentleman’s provided evening thoughtful der the ship’s bow it is considered very gor and Miss Irene H. Shaw of Belfast. And it is further of children who at- Ordered by the Court, r Mrs. Pendleton of for all fortunate to be presenting her with the and useful hardly a family escaping likely that the bottom has been “chewed out.” the (. lerk Byron Haverhill, Mass. pleasure enough guests. pretty shall send by mail to all known < those afflicted The of the smokestacks indicates that gifts in of her and faithful tend the Fisher school. Among position tor* copies of said and this order North Searsport. Herbert Read is on the Mr. and Mrs. Levi street, re- appreciation long DIED petition S.Griffin, Maple the boilers and engines have been shoved up- dressed to them service as treasurer of Brooks’ Union are the children of Mr. Warren Grant, Mr. at their places of residen sick list... Howard Ward, an old resident, turned Jan. 16th train from a somewhat pro- parish, ward about two feet. The steamship is broken ■ .. by Mr. Thomas Mr. Alton .| slated. Llewellyn Clark, Lang, in two and has a bad starboard list. passed away recently.... Mrs. Fred Ellis died tracted visit in various Massachusetts towns Frank H. Smith met with a painful accident amidships Averill. In Steuben, 13,Dr. Witness the Honorable Ci.ARKNCF. T and others....Miss Etta of the of January Henry [ Patterson, several A portion cargo paper is thought to D. Averill of Bar Harbor. of tne said last week at the home of her Mrs. and been on the Bos- last week. His hand was between two Judge Court, and the seal the daughtei, cities, having passengers caught have escaped as well as the 30 Hall has returned from Albion and Hermon, undamaged, Curtis. In East Bluehill, 6, Earle at Portland, in said on the 20th .1 Harriman... .Mr. barrels of he was and January District, Henry and Mrs. J. G. Trask ton steamer several days earlier, which after a appleB unloading severe- carloads of potatoes which she carried. Curtis, 17 A. where she visited relatives .. The Larkin aged years. January, 1). 1912. will be sold at auction as she of Newburgh visited at A. Stinson’s last Sun- collision with a returned to the city. ly injured. He came near losing one of the Un- [The Carolyn Coombs. In East I [L- JAMES E. Cle barge with several invited at 10 Bucksport, January 11, S.] HEWEY. Soap Club, together lies ashore a. m. to-day, Jan. 25 th. Mrs. Orrin 60 A true of day -A. Stinson sold Frank T. a car had been absent since the week before gers. Coombs, aged years. copy petition and order there Bussey They were entertained at the home of Mrs. guests, Washington, Jan. 21. All the American fish- Ellim. In Searsport, January 18, Mrs. Ma- Attest: JAMES E. Cle of hay, loaded at Frankfort... .White & Bus- Christmas, the with | HEWEY, having spent holidays Thursday evening, Feb. 1st, all roads will Oscar Littlefield at the last regular meeting. ing schooners, with one exception, that were tilda B.. wife of W. H. Ellis, aged 64 years. sey are doing a large lot of sawing at their their and Mr. and Mrs. in the ice for several off the Hatch. In Mrs. daughter huskand, lead to Brooks, where the Knights of Pythias Miss Charlotte Patterson and friend of Hamp- imprisoned rays ! Castine, January 10, Mary steam miil near North and Edric in Mass. coast of Newfoundland, are now safely sailing D. Hatch, aged 98 years, 3 months, 4 Searsport_Mr. Coleman, Milford, Welcome ball will be in with a were Julia days. given Union hall, opening den Highlands present-Mrs. the of St homeward bound to Herrick. In Mrs. W. J. Nickerson attended the in gulf Lawrence, Rockland, January 13, infant LOST grange home, neighbor! concert by Pullen’s orchestra of Bangor. An White of White’s Corner was the guest last Gloucester, Mass., according to advices to the daughter of Fred and Mary L. Her- North Jan. 20tn_Marden & (Wotton) Searsport, Jar- 1 cutter service. The rick. Notice is that Mr. Aioert m. Ames leit last rnaay for excursion train will leave Belfast for Brooks week of her son’s family, Mr. L. E. White.... revenue schooner Bohemia, hereby given Book No. 1 rett have pressed most of the hay in this vi- for some unknown reason, left the other ves- Maker. In Spruce Head, St. Jan- Pittsfield, called there the critical condi- at 7.30 after the dance. Fare Winnefred has returned George, at Searsport Savings Bank of by j p. m., returning Miss Bussey Ordway sels of the fleet after released from the Israel M. 65 Searsy cinity... A. Stinson has pressed hay, straw being uary 17, Maker, aged years. tion of his maternal uncle, Dr. Truman M. for the round trip 50 cents. her home in Plymouth after a visit with ice and returned to Bonne N. F. The Mansfield. In Union, Harold Maine, has been lost. Kinder will ki: and sied oats for sale-F. E. Stinson is hav- Jo Bay, j January 14, Griffin, who has been in poor health for three The funeral of Mrs. Carrie Moulton was her parents, Capt. and Mrs. B. F. Bussey- revenue cutters Androscoggin and Gresham, W. Mansfield, aged 33 years, 8 months. return same to. or a run of trade at notify ing good his store this win- Miss Minnie Smith has gone to where which were despatched to the assistance of the 1 PRESCOTT. In Rockland, 11, infant months, although considered improved until held at the Friends' chapel last Thursday Togus, January iw4 I AMES B. ter. she has employment in the boldier’s Home distressed fishermen, are now returning to daughter of Herbert and laiura (Hunt) Pres- NICHOLS, Treasure. seized by an ill turn one week ago. A serious Rev. David Brackett | morning. officiating. Mr. Lyman Clark has gone to Boston,where he New England shores. cott, The officers of Kebekah Knyvetta Lodge stomach trouble, which consulting physicians : Miss Jennie Reynolds of Augusta sang a beau- will have employment in the store of his Beaufort, N, C., Jan. 20. The schooner Patterson In Itelfast, January 18, George .... The un- 0. 66 10 were installed last Thursday evening by L). L). find it hard to exactly decide about, is the tiful solo and the choir furnished appropriate uncle, Wilbert Clarke Ham school Harry Prescott from New York to Wilmington, Patterson, aged years, months and 11 LOST Mrs. der the instruction of Mrs. Leroy Mar.ien is N. with salt, foundered on Diamond Shoals days. President Helen A.Cooper and l). 1). Mar caute of the present anxiety. Stockton feels selections. Mrs. Moulton was a most estim- C., j closed to the whooping cough of Robertson. In Belfast, January 20, Mrs. Notice is that Book No. shal Mrs. Mamie Curtis of owing epidcin/c off the Hatteras coast Thursday. Three her hereby given Monroe, assisted by great sympathy with the watchful wife and able woman and her death is greatly regretted. Mary Nickerson Robertson, aged 33 7 crew of seven were saved in the afternoon. years, )f Bank of Searsr Past Noble Grands from The in their sad months, 18 days. Searsport Savings Knyvetta Lodge. daughters hours, hoping with D. R. McAndless, of Belfast but The remaining four were still clinging to the , formerly Totten. In Johnstown, Pa., December ^laine, has been lost. Finder will kit following othcets w*re insUlled: N. G., Lula them for the of favorable rigging, with seas so'high as to make the work 17, ; appearance symp- now a prosperous farmer of Brooks, dressed SHIP NEWS. Mrs. J. Totten, of V. G Abbie of life savirg almost impossible. The three Lucy formerly Searap order that they might by headaches, nervousness, nightsweats tnd High streets, about 24 by 60 feet, suit 18th, stalled at their hall Jan. savers. are cared for at the Hat- dreams forever. Woman .suffrage was discussed, and although Thursday evening, January Bethany Wednesday evening, Murphy, Somes Sound. They being 'or a garage, carpenters shop or storage 16. teras station. The Prescott left New Get a 50 cent box of MI-O-NA tablets at A. some strong arguments were made for and Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, gave a 17th,with Rev. David Brackett as the installing Wilmington, N C, January Ar,sch Brina i Harry )oses. Will be fitted to suit tenant. App! was P Baltimore, Md; 17, cld, sch Mark York Jan 9, and encountered severe weather. A. Howes & Co.'s today. They guarantee them Mainst tha assembly pretty much “on the installation of the officers, officer. The officers are as follows: W. M Pendleton, 3w4 CHAS. E. KNOWLTON public following S C. She was to into Delaware break- for of the diseases named above or for at the close. Rev. J. Albert Corey. Pendleton, Georgetown, compelled put any [■P* with Mrs. Lelia S. as F. S. M. Brown; J. W., of the Methodist church, spoke in the Thompson installing James Jewell; W., Harry Fernandina, Fla, January 16. Ar, sch Lizzie water for harbor. But ice floes from the upper | any stomach distress. Sec- Delaware tore her from her and she No better for was CARD oTThANKS and Mrs. A. M. Ross and James C. officer: Mrs. Rose Blanchard, worthy matron; F. K. Roberts; Treasurer, Harry Staples; B Willey, Fall River. , anchorage prescription indigestion r^jBtive We wish to thank our friends and was January 16. Cld, sch Inde- was forced to sail. Her master was seeking ever written. neigl ffKn in the negstive. Mrs. Ross par- Mr. Charles Knee Mrs. E. G. Roberts; Marcellus J. Jacksonville, 1 land, worthy patron; retary, Chaplain, and or their kindness in our late t tfe>rly witty in her arguments and all the New York; 19, sld, sch Theoline, harbor at Beacfort, N C, when his vessel MI-O-NA makes the stomach vigorous bcreavemei Annie K. Harriman, associate matron; Mrs. Dow; S. D., Everett Tasker; J. D., W. S. Jones; foundered. The Prescott hailed from to food without aid. For he death of our mother and Sister. •Makers were moat entertaining. At the con- Sendent,oston. Harry strong enough digest Marietta D. conductress; Mrs. Ada W. F. J. S., Ernest 17. stmr New Haven. She was built at in sale A. A. Howes & Co. and every- BERTHA L PEASE. clusion the consensus of opinion was in favor ; Fletcher, S. S., Emmons; Stimp- Newport News, January Sld, Bath, Me, by drugsists and 411 tons. j where. ADA A. CLEMENT ct limited suffrage for both saxsa. Articles, M. Hopkins, associate conductress; Mrs. Alice son; Tyler, Alfred Reynolds; Marshal, Kanawha, Searsport. 1882, registered