The Cedarville Herald, Volume 35, Numbers 27-52

m m mmmn ViSiT SHROYER’S ##<W-Sid and Main K m i i ) Dayton, Ohio. S T Y L E SHOW W EEK Autos, Efoctnofl, Auto Accessories, Kodaks, Bicycles, a ll kinds of Sporting Goods. Seamless Tires guaranteed 5000miles, 15,00 for you? bid Lira, if lt’sdver S t x 4 % . . $a,6o if smaller . * ~ *- G. W. Shroyer & Co. Second bad Main St*. Dayton, Ohio. "-"•— PPPWII ■$■ m tm A N O T H E R D E L U G E - , , flo .d of WATCHES ‘ * - *T ,«„ *■« „, v<* 5 a t low w a te r p rice s Men4* a tu f Ladles’ Gold filled Watches w ith Elgin arid other fine •/movements. * ' * ; r ' .i V' $ 3 .9 5 to $ 7 .2 5 ' Silver and Silvering Watches all American Movements. .• • ;$ 2 .5 0 to $ 4 ,5 0 Diamond Dings ?5.00 to 42GO,Off 1 ’ ^ Gold Bings 50o and up ■Overqoats $3:00 tctiO.Qff Suits 48.60 to 47,60 Hunting Goats,- -Guns, Revolvers,'. Shall* and Cartridges, Pocket Knives, Trunks, Saits Cape Etc. IJNDSErS . ' Mew location ’330S. Jefferson St. Dayton, Ohio,' / - REMEMBER ^ a i < t * * r * "4 4 i * n '• 'T h a t your trip to Dayton w ill not be ., eorriplete unless you, see the 1 w .? *fr. * Latest Style* in Furn iture * Carpets and Rugs, S to res , and General Household Furnishings Will do better a t , BYRNE'S 22-24-28/VVezfc F ifth S tree t,' ' Dayton, Oh«6. Seoond store west of Post Office ■•■. No matte* how hard your head acBe*,- • JJr. Mila*' Antl-Faln 'Pilla wtUhelp y 6 u. S T Y L E SHOW WEEK & at Mearick’s We Refund "Your Pares - Pnenonerial Values in Suits Goats * Dresses. Waist* and Pu rs L Speeial Arrangements for qmak v,.«iicfib0» , . t f a M S tr iM lS *»d $ 2 #,M ; 15WSite tbSeiect from Fallal Winter Coat* $12.00 aid / . % tm > 1210Coats to Select from IBMNawFall Skirts$IJ$ ** C—tommy$TJ$Valia#* ., *”SiinMS $!lk artd Oioth Dresses ; ^issitErs&Mb * * IC 4 « « 4 S 'W T SM I to i inW ( S N U f i u ’ Sw»t»rt $1.16 Bring ibis ad With you Mearlck's Cloak H oumb 1st $ Mathst, DayLori, 0 hl«. W T i iW T O T m awEE'- »n»sr Se«t Imiuttry, Still in lafsiw* Preent***- Big Things. That the value of farm l*uds is Ohio has been increased oue-thlrd whatever the cultivation of sugar beets, has beau introduced Sad that the aTtrage re­ turn to the farmer from beet caitlv* tion is several times that from other staple crops i*. the statement .of ex* Coagreaaman Ralph D, Cole of Find lay. O., who recently submitted a re­ port on this subject to the finance committee of the United States senate in connection with the free sugar hill before congress. ^‘The beet sugar industry Jri Ohio is merely in Its Infancy compared with Its possibilities of future develop­ ment,” said Mr. Cole. “The first sugar factory in the state was erected a t Fremont about eight years ago, Since that time mlllton dollar plants have been put up a t Findlay, Paulding, Toledo and Ottawa. This season prob­ ably 30,OOP acres of sugar beets will be grown in Oblo, bringing a direct return to’ the farmers of the state oJE oyer $2,000,000. But this represents otoly a beginning of the possible- ex­ pansion, since there is room for twen-s rty to thirty more factories, which will 'represent a capital investment of from $20,000,000 to $30,000,000, “The cost of growing an acre of eufar beets in Ohto varies, of course. With, the locality, the size of tlioJljirm and the methods of tillage; but from a- number , of statements' obtained the average cost may he placed at about $30, of which ‘$18 goes for labor. $7 to .$8 for. cultivation and harvesting ..and $5-for hauling the crop to the factory. As the yield runs from eleven to‘fif­ teen tons to the' acre, at an average price' of $5 a ton, the fanner’s net profit is from'$23 to $85 an acre after paying all expenses, That, of course, makes It' a very profitable crop. “I thirilc I am safe, in saying that the value of* farm land has increased 30 per cent wherever sugar beets have been grown in Ohio and that the av­ erage net profit per acre from this crop to the farmer is $30. or twice as much as could be obtained from corn. , “There is a measure of certainty tq the farmer In growing sugar beets which ‘is not. true of any other crop. Under the, contracts made with the farmer ;the factory takesb is lbeets •whether they are delivered or not, pro- -vided the nondelivery^ not the farm­ er’s fault Bast yehr the fields' Were so*muddy that it was impossible to go ■Into them and get the facets out, .and in Hancock county, alone $20,000was paid by the factory for’undelivered beets.” In summarizing tbe pertinent fea­ tures of beet growing in Various, states. the department of agriculture'calls at­ tention to beet growing as of peculiar ' importance to Ohio' because of tbe‘ex­ tensive stock feeding in ail parts'of the state, Beet pulp either wet Dr dried has, .been’ found to he tbe. finest feed, yet discovered for milk. cows, and fdr~ , fattening .cattle, sheep .and ’other ani­ mals, ' -A business of’about $2,000,000 a year has grown rib In tbe-sal* of dried beef pnlp,- in which foriri if can be profitably jalrippecL, ** k j,' r ?r ii”,ir y■ |j ^ <l PLANT THAT IMPR0VES SOIL tb s ' Sugar. / VtsldOf. ;*‘,i r * s-/ [ .’Othsrwfrop*. ‘ \ , , How sugar-beet* improve the fcrtll-. ity of the soil gnd: increase tfaa yield of all crops grown to rotation with them is explained in the National Magazine by Truman Go Palmer, who has spent the past ten years to studying agricub' tural methods ip-Europe and America; “The sugar beet belug a deepVooter,” * 8 ys-Mr..palmer, "U prerequisite to its culture is*that the sOit be stirred to a, jdepth-of .ten ‘to fourteen inches. The "tender’ beetlet haying to undergo the shock’of thinning soon after If comes up to-order fa? leave hot one' 0 >t to“a plage, it demands a well prepar d,. mel­ low seed bed. Gathering the sugar in its leave* from the utmospkere by 'tlie aid of tbe light and storing it up in tbe root*. It.Will not thrive if the light is cut off through being Bbaded by weeds, and their eradication means not only a fur|her stirring of the soli by cultiva­ tion and hoeing, but they are removed before going to seed, thus leaving weedless fields for succeeding crops. Being plowed out in autumn gives an extra fall plowing, which leave* tbe land in condition to absorb instead of shed tbe fall and winter rains and store up the moisture for the folio . .ug sea­ son’* crop, With the removal of the main root myriads Of fibrous roots tire broken off«and left in tbe soil to an average' of a'ton to tbe acre, and in rotting' they not only deposit humus in the lower strata of soil, but ledve mi­ nute channels through which it be­ comes aerated and hence fertile. The roots of subsequent crops follow these interstices and draw nutriment from two and three times the depth of sol) formerly reached, and fienpe tile farm­ er* double and treble their soli output without increasing their acreage.*1' B»»t pulp a« Cattl# Food, .In summarizing the important fea­ tures of sugar beet growing In various part* of the country the department of agriculture call* attention id Its peculiar importance to the middle western states because of the extent to Which stock feeding I* fotlowed a* an Industry In 'this territory. Beet pulp—that is, what remains of the beet after the sugar has been extract­ ed—ha*’ been proved to be the finest feed yet discovered,;.for milk cow* and - for fattening cattle. Sheep and Other farm animals. Tills Is'tru e whether the pulp is fed to its Wet State as it come* from the factory or after being dried, A business of about 42 ^) 00,000 a year has grown up to'th* sale of dried beat pulp, to which form i t can bs shipped to any distance. Mest&ge Sent by Explorer Pub- lio After Six Year*. California Farmer Has Finally Given Out Polar News Recoysrsd on th* L.«g of a Goose—Bird Cap- fared in 1906. Sacramento, Cai.-—“North Polo, July 1, 1908, Major Andre*/’ Was this message, which was .tagged ip the foot of a south-bound goose, captured by a northern Califor­ nia farmer on July 2f»1906, a message -from the dead telling of the first suet cessfuj conquest of the frozen north, written by the leader of the ili-fated polar expedition, which left Banes is land, Northwest Spitsbergen, to the balloon^ Cornea on July 11, 1897? For 15 years the civilized world has waited in vain for news of the An­ drew party, ' ■ On the morning of July 24, 1996, a huge goose, unlike any apeclea ever seep in California,Jell exhausted Into the-chicken-yard of If. M. Thomaa; a farmer residing near Montague, Slaki- .you county. Thomas discovered a email nickeled tag attached to onp of Its iegs, tied Se­ curely by a strand Of copper wire- Roughly, but legibly chiseled into the face of fbe tag.was the announcement of the pole’s discovery on July 1, 1906, For nearly six years Thomas has kept’the' secret to' himself. ’Whether' because ho doubted if the tale would be received-with’ credence by the outside world, or with a passive indif­ ference as to his discovery, Thomas did not divulge hjs find, He did,'how­ ever,, capture the goose and discover the tag. Both are still ’in existence.- The bird remains, fan. the UttTe' farm, Which haB now ■passed into other hands, and the tag is In the possession of'Thomas' who has removed to San Mateo county, - ' - ■ .-■L&uieg igfr ..' l **** i .. Many Persons Visit Churoh.at Eohternaoh, Luxemburg. N. -S CODFISHEBS GO PAP Many Gloucester Ships Obliged . Seek the Waters Off Western Alaska;- • m um VMTIMMIULEI VilliCriti .111 Imiiilnli Hr' IBIglSe elNPSrS^^rSPBS 3 *cl Seattle, Wash,—Off thi bleak shores .of western Alaska the world .Is'now, drawing on its last and"greatest store of codfish. Branches of all the large eastern codfisfaing packing plant* are now established on Puget sound, The supplies come from the shores of Alas­ ka, 1 , 000 , miles westward' from' Lh« Strait, ot Juan do Fuca. - Overdone hundred codflshtng boats are now on the fishing hanks,-each manned'with its, complement of dories; men and appliances-.for cleaning and salting'away the catch. Qt these-ships some- sixty once .claimed Gloucester, Mass., their home port. For six months' the codfishers will work as 'long as there ia light to haul into their dories their daily.catch, The men are paid Ian average of Iff cento per" fish, and a usual -day’s work is from. 260 to .350 fish, weighing from 'three t o ' fifteen 1 .“pounds- E*ch ship -carries eight dorjes, With five men'to k dory. j \ Bacli morning the fish are Piled up on 'the deck of the ship, where they are cleaned and then salted away to the hold, one’ pound of salt to four pounds offish., ' , • „ The men earn.' from $1,0 to $30 per driy. Frizes are given to the fisher who makes the largest catch during a season.' Bast aeason the champion caught 14,300 codfish., Anacortes, Wash., in mid-Puget sound,-is the Pa­ cific home of the world’s largest ,cod fishing fleet.' The cod fishing pay roll la $ 1 , 200,000 annually, LARIAT SAVES MAN’S LIFE Curious Ceremony Fart of Reputed Cur* for * Neryeue Disorder*— Severe! Banda Help pevotit Keep Step During Hop. London.—-The . extraordinary' .spec­ tacle of betwen one and two thou* sand solemn-faeed map,, women and children hopping and dancing, back­ ward and forward, to the inspiring ■trains of a number of brass bands was seen 1 n the quiet, little country town of Ecfaternach, Luxemburg, re* oently. The occasion was that of the feast of Bt. WilJIfaroed, an eighth century abbot of Ecfaternach, and the hopping multiuda ia formed of pilgrim* to fats ehrine, for it is said that all those who suffer from nervous diseases who wlU pass "before the shrine of .the aatot; displayed to the old abbey church here, hopping three steps forward and then two backward, wlU he cored; The scene remind* one strongly ot a troop of howling dervishes, .who aft­ er howling and -waving about Sot. haute, become freuzied and end by col­ lapsing. The pilgrims of ^3?hternach arc not bo had a* that, but many of them, danced until -almost exhausted, and .with clothing burst open and perspira­ tion streaming down their"faces, they Staggered to drink Litewater held‘out to them fay the onlookers, then dasfa- vtog through the croWd back to" the places in. a fever of religious excite­ ment, ' . . . ,,At a distance the procession looks like & huge party ot merrymakers un­ til closer Inspection shows the tense and solemn face*. - . They came doWn tbe. narrow streets in ranks o f about six, each holding ft' handkerchief to connect him with'hie neighbor, Hundreds at women, ut­ terly Careless of "ap^SfnnceT'.ttieln black dresses hovered with dust, hair combs and pin* .falling and. face* Ted With exertion, struggle along; in'many- cases dragging children with them-, * 'Whlte-rohed priest*, hkrida and'ham ner* head the’pilgrimage/ followed by a body Of young-men'weerlnff-only shirt, trousers 'and boots, who,, put great energy Into- their;dance,-'surg­ ing. -hack and forth regardless of whose toes they stamp on ,1 /■ When the church is reached, the pe­ culiar 'step is continued,'the pilgrims passing to at one;door and out a t an­ other, 1 <1 ; (,’ 4 v » v* .« Instead of the'quiet coblne*a' one expects to find JnSIdp.the church there Is a terrible din; several bands play­ ing independently fand the scraping and banging, of hundreds .Of , thick boots, make it quite Unlike a p 'ace .of Wotehip,h" !(<'*) /V’^ U T v A ' f * The pilgrimage to the shrine is held in -great esteem In th e neighborhood, and a. vast number of 'care* are’at­ tributed to' the beneficent Influence ot the worthy, old'Abbot of Echterriaeh,' STORMl l r i S ® BIRTH M » LIFE Rooster Is Instrumental in Averting Child's Death, Hands Only Above the Surface - ' the Water Are Roped ahd • the Rest Is Easy. of Santa Monica, Cat.—The' most poem liar rescue fit Adrownlng man ever ef- footed along the bay shore was that of Nicholas Cook. He 1* a workman on a pier and fell into the . sea, to­ gether with ft heavy iron wheelbar­ row. His feet became entangled in the harrow and it held him under, with bnly his hands'"protruding from the breakers. He waved frantically and attracted the attention of Arthur WlideS, another workman, who was formerly a cowboy. Wildes snatched rip ft long tope, tied it to a noose and lassoed the hands. So accurate was his alm.,tfaat At the first cast his noose slipped up­ on the wrists and tightened and Cook was drawn to safety. The wheelbarrow came up with him. TIES DOG ON FISHING LINE Angler Solves Problem of Leading Canine to London by Using Tackle. London,—1There is a dog crisis in a famous West end square. The regu­ lations are clear that all dbg* must he led, hut the trouble has arisen about the length of the lead. Cue in­ genious dog owner has an arrange­ ment like a fishing line, which he leta but and takes to, with the result thrt the terrier can go many yard* from his master without, he argues, break­ ing any bylaw* Another Owner is a tarpon angler, who threatens to put Ship on Wh)ch Woman fa. Passenger-, .--‘Driven by Stress p f ■ Weather, ■ - Takes Refuge a t Island., San Francisco.—Eleventh ,of a fam­ ily of fivS girl* and six stalwart boyB, the little, babO to arms, scarce three weeks old, which-arrived here'on the pacific Mail liner ha* the. distinction of being th e . bnly child that ever opened.it*. eyes to-the light of day- on the sacred Isle of.Miyajima to the inland'sea between. Kobe and Shlmo- noseki. . *' And but for a severe Storm the -lit-' tie One"would not have been horn un­ der these unusual Circumstances. The steamer on which Emelian Nosh- klah, his wife and large family were, traveling pitched and. tossed; So wild­ ly that the offlcers^numanely a*,„weU as tor safety, pub'to to "the famous- islet And there, five day* later, dain­ ty Baby Viera was- added to the. big house of Noshkln; , Noshkln IS forty-fane years of age and his wife .thirty-nine, and their children range to age from -the new­ comer to a pretty young girl of twen­ ty. The father fa A wealthy flour manufacturer of Vladivostok and has decided to settle in., the city by the Golden Gate, having been informed by his countrymen of the opportuni­ ties to he found here. The family’s alien tax amounted to $58, SHOW HUMAN*PIN CUSHION But for His Apt Woman Would Not Have Observed Two Little One* Running Toward Pond In ■ Cleveland. Cleveland.—A cantankerous roostef th*t crowed and complained whenever any one entered the yard that be con* Bidered hie own saved the life of lifa tie Alex Gaioekey, four, when he fell into the GlsvelandAkron Bag com- panya 1 pond at the foot ot East Thirty- seventh street . * Had ft not been for the rooster Mrs, Louis Busser would not have seen the two little children who ran through her yard and, down the hill to-the bank of the pond early In the afternoon, Mrs,' Busser looked out of the window when she heard the rooster expressing his displeasure and saw the Galoskey child, with six-year-old Johnny Zglenl kj, running through the yard, , She Spoke to her husband;-'. Louie,' about them and he looked to their di* rectlon from time to time. He was Bitting on the back porch putting bis shoes pn when ho looked tbe last time and saw the elder of the boys running up_ the fall, •The Smaller one was no­ where, in sight. - Surprised, he looked again toward the pond and saw a tiny hand appear above the surface of tbs water. , - v - He sent his son-Frank, fifteen, on the run -to call help from the mill, thinking that .the men cpuld get to the pond from the mill quicker than he could. An Instant later the hand ap­ peared again, with another hand be­ side It, ' ^ Busser saw he'must act instantly, so be r a n ,shoeless down the hl__ .leaped over the .fence that surrounded -the "pond .and jumped into the water. Amoment jater he had the baby in his arms,-:, ^ f ,, / , ^ Busser and his wife laid the baby, unconscious and apparently dead, on a bench and rolled the water out, of him. After half an hour of work, the child .began to show signs of life and his' rescuers put him to bed. They -had rio idea whose baby he was, Mrs. Minnie Spettigue of Oroton avenue S. E., to whose charge the ■Galoskey boy had been left while tbe mother .went out to, work, heard lie had been drowned and that the body Was a,t the*Busser home. She started for the. house arid on the way .met the boy's'.mother, whowas returning from work, - - When the two women arrived at the Busser home they found Alex Bitting up ju bed fand blinking happily and devouring mw eggs. ‘ ' NEWCHANNELREVEALS,RUINS s 1, ^'W1"*/"1 i <»■ n 4J 1 w \ .Walls of Huts Seen Ju*t Below th* Needles—River Situation , 1 * .- »•>’ Mp*t Serious^ Needles, Cal,—The flood situation Is far. more Serious 1 tfaah tat a rir time atoce thwColorado river began to rise;' The treacherous currentMs threaten­ ing to.break trie Only remaining water pipe totfae city, and its strength seems to defy the efforts o r more than five hundred men working to keep thewfa; fcers in check. ,„Thfa hastily constructed, dams and Abutments, while .holding, ;have only served to shift the danger zori* to other points,to the river bank. The Santa. Fg railroad has several pile, drivers a t work and more will ,be here soon- , ■ . - Great- quantities, of, brush ^nd sacks of sand are being thrown behind pil­ ings to shift the-current to the Ari-‘ zona side. Every building in danger of! beings carried downstream has been removed. ' ' - - ‘ What were declared to be the ruins of an’undent city were uncovered by the raging waters thirty miles be­ low the city, Persons who were at the spot say they could plainly see the walls of huts that must have been hurled centuries, Showing Just above the edge of the new channel cut by the flood water. Woman ’Apparently Feels No .When Needle I* Thruet Into Flesh* Pain Pittsburgh, Pa.—Ahuman pin cush­ ion was on exhibition to driminal court here recently when Martha Gey- yer, suing the city of Pittsburgh for $ 10,000 damages. because She fell through a board Walk maintained by the city, Was brought before the judge and jury by counsel, whO proceeded to rrin a needle through bet flesh. The Woman apparently felt no pain. A match was struck and a doctor whs about to burn' ft blister on the arm when, the court said he guessed that would not fafa-riecessary. A vew diet baa not been, reached.’ .ill Health Gauted raator’a Suicide. East Liberty, O.—*Continual Mood- tog over his oWri and his wife’s ill health caused Rev* Alonzo Skidmore, Christian minister, to commit sui- ^ r at?5 « tArp0a r«el which has *Cid* recently. He was found dead to i, 000 yards of line. A meeting on th* his room. hearinsH matter ia About to be called. i , anging to a. bedpost, havlpg made a rope of piece* of a shirt. Thit month** Buttmrkk Patterns ar« tOe and JSc —n o n * higher* RED-HOT POKER FOR BABY Maniac Mother Cheeked In Her Fright ful Sacrifice—Attempted to Drive Iron Into Body. Pittsburg, Pa.—Grasping her fount months-old baby by one leg and swing­ ing It Around her head, Mrs, Paul Cos- mack, thirty-five years old, near Uni­ versal, was chased &half mile to tbe homo ot an acquaintance, where, it IS alleged, she attempted to drive a red- hot poker into the child's body. She was overpowered and the child res­ cued. The mother Was later commit­ ted to an insane asylum. The conduct of the woman was first noticed by neighbors, Tossing the baby in th* air, she was seen to catch i t before it fell to the ground, and then clutch­ ing it by one leg, She swung it oVSr her head, WJten neighbors tried to interfere, she fled to the home of Mrs. Mattie Kuntz, some distance from' her home. The mother picked up a poker in tbe coals from the kitchen store and-tried to jab It Into the body of the baby, when her pursuers rushed inund overpowered her, A physician wa* called to examine the woman, arid he declared her insane, - May Hold Sunday Court. Albany, N. 7.—The right of New Fork magistrates to pass sentence* on Sunday was upheld by the court of appeals in a test case, Piles or SmilasP APOSITIVEGUARANTEE DR . HEBRAS UNBON) toe.SMMt wcrndwM itoriaUflo dt#*?-r#ryM D A Y TQ ff’ S STYLE SHOW WEEK K#I m you to jyuraftM* your Foil mn* Winter foo tw ow at .R E E D ’S ^ . M*lri Av*nu**t Fourth Largest $hoa Store in Payton A complete stock of ail the wanted styles and leathers for toen, women and children, to select from a t popular prices, TH E HOCKING V A L L E Y BUS CO. Jordon and Stahl Managers Mamifacturerof 1 B E A U T I F U L H A N D S O M E RUG S Made from your-old Ingram, Brussels, and Tapestry Carpets ; ] Call Mra, Mary, O, MoCorkell, CadarvHta, Ohio. Wq also oleari and remodel Carpet and Rag* . ' • 4 - all work Guaranteed. Offloe arid .Works (rear) 124-120 Bdgewood Are-, Dayton, O, ien iwewwfWewiwewnr'v inH ff fiw w wT mwE'i - Wo aro on the ,10*t,for P IA N O S P IA N O L A P IA N O S A N D V IC TO R V IG T R 0 LA S ^ THE'AEOMIAN COMPANY 131 West Third St., - - „ . Dayton, Ohio. Player Music Bolls and Victor Records, ’ . ' ATTEND STY LE SHOE SHOW OOTOBEK7th TO 12th INGLUSIVP H A A S S H O E C OM P A N Y 88 fil. Main fit., — *’ Dayton, Ohio, - Special Showing of 1-lANAN SHOES for men arid women.-,' ARMSTRONG SHOES for women ■’ > These lines are the besfcproducedby.AnierlcnnManufactureri" We invite your inspection Styla Show,W«ak We Refund Fares ’/ Haas Shoe Company 86 3. -Mala 0fc,t -■ - - . Dayton* Ohio, *. Public Sate of Tfae undersigned'having rerited hie farm preparatory- to spapyirig to South (Jhaflesten, will, brive a cio^iug out Sale on - •" , • , Oct. 10, ’12 . ^he'aale will take place on the Shady Him Farm, one mile eaetfaf South Charleston, on thfa London arid Gouth charleston pike, rind w ill commence atjO o'clock a. m. * - * 25 H E A D O F H O R S E S ;No, 1. Gray mare, 8 years old,‘weight’1000 lbs. , No:*.' Brown mare, comings years old, weight about’lBOOjbs. Nos. 4 and 4 . -Browrimaro, coming 9 yrs. bid, Weight 1500 lbs., with mule cdlfcbjteide. , ■ No. 8 - Sorrel tnare, coming 9 years old, weight aboub 1400 lbs, No* 8 .’ Black mare, 10 years old, weignfc about 1500 lbs. ' No. 7. Roan mare, Byears old, weight ahoufclWO lbs. Ail of thekooro oxtra good brood marea anci aro In foal. No. 8 . Tfaree-year-old black mate. Weight about 1400 lbs. No. 9. -Gray mare, 2 yearsold, pure-bred Norman mare. No. 10. Bay mare, 2 years old. - Nos. 11 and 14. Bay geldings, 2 years old. ’No, 18. Blackgeldirig,2 years o ld .. '*‘r ' - No. 14. J . tf. G. filly, 1 year old. * ^ No. 18. Driving horse, 4 years old, family broke, and a good big xringey fellow, • No. 16. Pohy mare, 8 years old, ahd a good saddle pony. Nos. 17 to 21. YEARLING DRAFT COLTS. One team of sorrels, one team of bays, one browrt filly. Nos. 22 to *24. WEANLING COLTS. Two draft, filly colts and cue toad colt, one mule colt, 1 year old. . ' 14 H E A D O F C A T T L E Four good shorthorn cows—two will be fresh this fall, ahd two giving good flow of milk. One Jersey sow—will be fresh early m winter, One good shorthorn hull. -> One yearling steer One yearling heifer, Six calves, three steers and three heifers. Sivehtv hand of yearling ahtap ' 429 H E S S O F HO 0 S 40 brood SOW*. . ” , 140 fftt hogs—Weight about 178 ot 180 lbs. 84 June Shoats—Will make extra good oattle hogs. 1 164head ot pig*—Will be sold eeparate.or with sows, 2 pure bred: male hogs—One Duroo anti one Poland China, Three farm wagons, one hog rack, qn* nxanurje apm tte t, two riding cultivators, two disc harrow*; on* oorri plahtet, oh * steel roller, two mbwlng machines, one hay rake* spike hairowe, drags, hog boxes, feed boxes, hog troughs, feed grinder, onegoqd carriage, one good phaeton buggy, hay ladders, twelve seta of good tug har­ ness, one le t of good buggy harness., T h r* a * t«m |a o f b#*a , HOUSEHOLD GOODS—One gacd bedroom suite, sideboard dining table, library table, one kitchen range, hide* ruga, mirrors carpets, bhalrs, etc., one new Sharpies* Cream aeparatorNo. a* one folding bathtub, * T E RM S -M ilte , known on day o f aal*. COL. MBADffi and COL. LAMAlt TiTUB, Auctioneer*.' JOHN BROWN, Cl»rk, Ltiweh a tra a tl by dob Wha*|«$ ' M bw fMyfpM# p a d i to i —If you the old on HOME Ufa The lire the Green, piation wtl 12 th in ths Kinley bui Briym Bin Margaret •will dehvc atfa^ ilar i C l o t h e CLEANE1 Wantcd- yr, old drlv y draft hon JGJ F ob S aj couch in fln Inquire a t t Seed wheat For Sale 2 yr. olds, y 'Sfltr la, l R b '„ D For Sale: and one : dition. Inq formation. F ob S alk crop reclean. Buy And: inufi youin everj »yto| FRE1 Will be ai its benefit . i i * j, -• ^ -Af* be &pleas ry - 1 < ?or You -A- ’, Arrange ourinVlting, on the flfti couches for for the wear waiting. TJ&E INFO bpufc{ . , f h t l Located - ' floor, wilt te Jrta. to know abo*^ Local Tele Faokag GUIDES to store upon a formation B Refund Courteous a Is given to Informatior * POU lust and rec ^ue accomdioda (See FALL DRE! A yard Mark you weaves of "V ford Cord ai —Special. 42 Latest col Gray and Gi p r ; Special q dresses-r-Plf Plaid Silks. Fashion Shi A yard ». * 'Gives yoi Cotton, fala always 6 c DcLorig white, witl for 6 Cents. arid. f t fll 'all, i ftidi tk, a pfNff '■t -> tnor** th« .. e*M»Mn*nUy, StttwKl— ^ prfs*» Owfa**, Trie* tftmple »«*»»* te « ovm Mauling. THEG. 0. BITTNE«CO.,T*l»4e,OM*.

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