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_I0 BE ,. Dead Mrs.Monyhan’* *£5 Published by Her Permission. Lydia E. Pinkham’s ound helpedme so much during the time 1 was lookingforward to the coming of my , little one that I am recommending it to other expectant mothers. Before taking it, somedays I suffered with neu ralgia so badly that I thought I could not live, but after PU , taking three bottles ! ' ’ ' of Lydia E. P i n k m Jham's Ve getable 'I ' l\ Compound I was en k tirely relieved of \ neuralgia, 1 had "■ ™j£.' gained in strength ‘V and was able to go ® around and do all i My baby when seven -■I., 119 pounds and I feel ive for a long time. I medicine do me so . Pearl Monyhan, C . th during maternity is a tor to both mother letters have been - Lydia E. Pinkham Mass., telling of i.igthis trying period s E. Pinkhams Vege Ktnerican Business-Soldier in the War Zone. Part VI. • about the line holding. , mmfort in it. We don’t '• , i.mient this danger is. 1 ids it is after it has sag iat sag has made thou ' homeless. We never n we think of the line u.,. \ ■ not think of the thou 5. . ;iar that day were crowd Amiens away out into \ :ii!mg the roadway with m .« and ducks and’geese, ng wheel barrows and J. ; a Beside one doorway I <i ise there was a scene Handed my attention, very old people and a \ rs old. I took him to m? two old people and * i hour of parting had m re leaving this, their irs, and the son had come r,. ni to picture the scene, f, • just what was hap s is the way I interpreted \ : c me to take the old I mie and the old father n . either to a daughter’s \ other son’s house. The many of them, are very > son could only take j He had there a little had piled with be 12.:. mat hour of parting had people. The boy took j arms—I used to think ;• - was rather an unmanly to laugh at it. But as I mit day take this old man 1 aw him up to his breast m there a moment and on either check in that that is so tender and he old man looked at his ( ' t.s swimming in tears, I i wonderful sight. Then looked at each other and I ped in each other’s arms j k'ssed. The old lady was r seat and the old man oid he watched her drive saw such a look of sad f > face. e Hun, his guns roaring •i four years he has been •r people away from I thought if there is any j inly earned a place in it. HI in her power to re n ble acts. fasten over there with ! of her great young life ’ -mu I.jy upon this altar some : measure to redeem these holding the line over H'vv is the most critical ( wind’s history. We have ; 1 iv of thinking that this \ is going to be won, but ml all of us wake up Hu it is a real war. i had the war brought ■ ; just in the last few days in [ never expected. Your ■ • s rushed up frantically ;i the denim in the market, j J'"‘ed to realize by that there is me there is a war. Be ne that runs down through j life line of the world If j of tne great points of iniage will be lost. ’ m losing this war for four -lai, propaganda has done 1 haii her army and within , months she has taken over ; - tiVany bloodshed 50,000,000 ' * hundreds of thousands of { ning some of the rich mi 1 and oil. She has Queried herself as she never was E . l'1 e arouse herself from her r *■ ami realize that her extreme ef i(5t . I<' t0 w*n this war. It cannot D ailV half-hearted way or by Preparation. The mostsplen l? 1 ‘ America are needed in ,) 1,1 " iay. We ought to bring . council board not only '■ ability, but the biggest, 'bat we have in the indu3 rica to fight on the in i' Qt. It seems sometimes 's 140 years of existence S; /'as had has been just a "reparation for this ex :'bf nation’s history. Now It- " given us, either the ab iii na or democracy. What '', r tjc? 1,1 *e are preparing to give t , America, the richest na il" "tld is now challenged to it 'he is something else than a In. a,‘d thank God she is show kit , Bl?8e-) No man in the fu kji,. l|IJesli"n why we went to war. •tt 11 be war, to be sure, after Ew °pe-half years without any bi»lA “e:nk raised, and therefore, ln after three and one-half ■kt ![([J'JI L,!iv new issue being raised, i t*-,- i, ,Uiat this was our war from V ' elsium was invaded. (Ap ?k ik. . f ’°d, it is siven us to prove [i* ,i ' ®ea we are, it is now given Sorr«Ve 'ha. we do not esteem a A:1 ,n we esteem liberty. Now, 'll! u w hether the might of Amer '"nslated over to the plight of f kra. A*’ we can take of our dollars ^itih,Ulfm into bullets and hurl Jjtd i i.niost dastardly foes that ever i DUed« !Jecency of civilization. I uplause with audience stand V| ‘"'toaster: I can oUy aay that I am proud, and I think the rest are that we are garment manufacturers and in that way related to you, Mr Larned. (Ap plause. ) I want to call on Mr. Cohen who was the first president of this organization. (Applause.) Mr. I. Cohen: Mr. Toastmaster and friends: I feel I have a right to address you as friends. In an atmosphere such as we have here, intensified by the elo quent, passionate and stirring address of our fellow member and guest of honor, I feel what little I might say now could not do justice to the occasion. I feel very much like Mr Larned did up in the bal loon. I am confident that we are all thoroughly impressed by what he told us. We all would like, I am sure, to go across tonight and meet the Hun in person and help to drive him to hell. (Applause.) I am glad to be called on tonight, proud of the opportunity to look about me and see this magnificent crowd and to be con scious of the fact that I was in a measure instrumental in bringing about the de velopment of this organization. I feel it is a just cause for satisfaction and pride. I am glad to oe here tonight and to be able to sit at the same table with my fel low townsman, Mr. Larned, (Applause), if for no other reason than to show you that we have some big people in Detroit besides Mr. Henry Ford and Ty Cobb. (Laughter and applause ) I am glad to be here tonight to greet our president. We are proud of his work. (Applause.) When it comes to' doing things we must hand it to him. And, my friend, Mr. Miller, the members of this association have selected me to hand a memento to you. I have been chosen to perform a duty that you performed about five years ago. The sentiment that you at that time sought to convey to ine I want to convey to you, only in a more intensified form. I would ask Mr. Ross, representative of the American Red Cross, to step for ward. Mr. Ross, in behalf of the Nation al Association of Garment Manufacturers and in honor of our worthy president, I will present you with this plate and ask you to place it upon an ambulance-kitch en to be taken across the seas to cheer and aid our boys. Also, let it be symbol ical of the unselfishness and untiring efforts of our worthy president and the patriotism and loyalty of the garment manufacturers of this country. (Ap plause.) Mr. Koss: When Mr. Marcus fc.at.on, chairman of the Chicago chapter of the Red Cross, late this afternoon told me to come here and on behalf of the Red Cross to accept this plate it was an honor that I felt that I would long cherish, and hav ing heard this magnificent address to night I am going away with a thought of the importance of the work of the Red Cross that I never could forget. I was to bring this message to you, from our Red Cross, that it is the pa triotism, loyalty and national devotion of just such organizations as yours through our common country that is going to win us the war. Those of you who heard Major Simmonds last week, on his way home from the French trenches, tell his experience, will not find this story new but it is a story I think I can bring to this meeting here appropriately. He j said that a little over a month ago he was standing on a little hill with an English general and the English general pointed down to the plains below where the am bulances were carrying the wounded soldiers to the hospital and the English general said: “Major, do you know how many men are wounded in the plain be low?" And the Major said: “No, 1 don’t. Are there as many as 10,000?” And the English general said: “There are 60,000 English wounded soldiers in those plains. ” And that brings me back a little less than 60 years ago to the battle of South Fredal, when a young man from Switzer land came down on the plains and saw 40,000 men wounded, crying and suffering, with no ambulances or doctors or nurses to give aid to them. It shows the pro gress that we have made in the last sixty years. It is with great satisfaction that we can feel what progress we have made and it is most desirable for us to realize that it is only through this progress that our boys over there are going to be pro tected. Mr. Cohen, and Mr. Toastmaster, 1 ac- • cept on behalf of the American Red Cross and of our common country, this j tablet to be placed upon a rolling field kitchen to go to the French trenches. It is with great honor that 1 have the priv- j ilege of being here to accept this and on ! behalf of the American Red Cross to ac- ; cept this splendid offering and to thank ] your organization for what they have j done on behalf of our common country, but words fail me. I wish I could xpress to you the thanks and the gratitude of the boys over there whose lives are going to be saved by this kitchen and it is only with the greatest effort I can say that on their behalf as well as on behalf of the American Red Cross, I thank you. (Ap plause.) Mr. Miller: Fellow members, I really don’t know what to say. 1 have been talking a great deal since coming to Chi cago. I did not think that I was going to be stumped at this convention but I am stumped now. I never felt as proud be fore, and I don’t know how to tell vou, so—but there isn’t anything that any of you could have do e, any thought that you could have had that would make me feel more proud, and, at the same time, more unworthy. I have tried to make this association realize that we had a wonderful opportunity. I think that or ganized industry, not for any purpose of SQueezing or doing anything except good, is the salvation of the United States to day. I think that every industry has got to stand one for the other and the other for the one, and until we get that idea firmly in our minds we are not going to be the nation that we all hope to be. The common cause has brought us in together stronger than ever before and I believe that this is just the beginning of a wonderful growth, when every part of the needle trades and the textile industry will be molded together, into one com pact, strong organization for the glory and the good of the United States. (Ap plause.) I am going to let Mr. Larned finish. Mr. Larned: Well, I am about finished. (Laughter.) I suggest that we all stand up and sing America. I wish that you could all have come back with me on the St. Paul—which was sunk just shortly after she reached her dock. , The boat I went over on was sunk and the boat I came back on was sunk. That is one hundred per cent. (Laughter.) But when I saw the lights of Coney Island twink ling out into the ocean, I tell you it was a wonderful thing. France is a great and wonderful country but I want to do my living in the good old U. S. A. Let us sing America and close the evening. (The audience sang America, after which the meeting adjourned.) Searsport’* Water Rates. An order was issued by the public utili ties commission Thursday at Augusta suspending the operation of a schedule filed by the Searsport Water Company containing an increase in rates for a per iod of three months unless prior to that time hearing has been bad and an order of the commission with reference to schedules or any substitution therefore made. The commission Thursday also ordered that a valuation of the property of the Searsport Water Company be made. — This paper is a good advertising ms medium. Try it. WHS TORTURED FOR TEJL YEARS With Terrible Stomach Trouble Unt3 She Tried “FRU1T-A-TIVES". . MRS. F. S. STOLZ 3807 Sacto Ave., Sacramento, Cal. *'I had Stomach Trouble for 10 years, which became so bad that I got Stomach Cramps two or three times a week. After years of terrible torture, I read about ‘Fruit-a-tives’ or Fruit X,iver Tablets, and sent for a trial box and wrote that it was the last remedy I would use—if ‘Fruit-a-tives’ did not help me, I would die. After taking the trial box, I felt better, so kept on taking ‘Fruit-a tives’ for nearly a year, and am thank ful to say ‘Fruit-a-iives' saved my life. It also saved a friend from an operation for Stomach Trouble, after he had given up all hope of getting ■well”. Mrs. F. S. STOLZ. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c. At all dealers or sent on receipt of price, by FRI 1T-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, Y. The Kaiser’s Recent Boast. AMSIERDAM, Aug. 1. The coming of i American armies to France and numeri- 1 cal superiority on the part of the Allies } d° n°xV-ir»lgilten Germany, declares Em peror William in his proclamation to the German army and navy. Vital forces which are streaming I across the sea to the enemy,” he says, are being attacked by German sub marines, which are certain of success.” The emperor in his proclamation, which is dated Aug. 1, alludes to the successes which the German forces have won, the bringing of peace to the eastern front and the heavy blows dealt the Allies during the present summer. He assures I the army and the navy that, although j they are in the midst of the hardest strug- j gle of the war, they will be victorious. He continues: “American armies and numerical su- : periority do not frighten us. It is spirit i which brings the decision, Prussian and ] German history teaches that, as well as | the course which the campaign has | hitherto taken. “In true comradeship with my army ! stands my navy. In unshakable will to win the victory in the struggle with op aponnts who are often superior, and de spita the united efforts of the greatest nav I powers of the world, my submarines are sure of success. They are tenaciously attacking and fighting the vital forces which are streaming across the sea to the enemy. “Ever ready for battle, the high sea foices, in untiring work, guard the road for the submarines in the open sea and in union with the defenders of the coast, safeguard for them the sources of their strength. “Far from home the small and heroic band of our colonial troops is offering brave resistance to a crushingly superior force. “We remember with reverence all who have given their lives for the fatherland. “Filled with care tor their brothers in the field, the people at home are, in self sacrilicing devotion, piaciug their entire strength at the service of our great cause. We must and shall continue the light until the enemy’s will to destruc tion is broken. We will make every sacrifice and put forth every effort to that end. “In this spirit the army and the home land are inseparably bound together. Their united stand and unbending will are certain to bring victory in the stuggle for German’s right and German’s free dom. “God grant it.” Your Brain Must Have Pure Blood. — No more important physiological dis covery has ever been made than that the brain requires a due supply of pure blood. It is estimated that this organ receives as much as one-tenth of all the blood that is sent from the heart—a great deal more than any other organ of the body. If the vitality of the blood is impaired, the blood than affords the brain an imperfect stimulus and there is mental and physical languor, sluggishness or inactivity. Pure blood is blood that is free from humors, it is healthy blood, and the term pure blood as it is generally used means blood that is not only right, in quality but also in quantity. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes pure, rich, red blood. This is one of the great truths about this great medi cine. MONEY BACK OFFER — Mi-o-na Quickly Helps Belching, Sour Stomach, Foul Bteath, Stomach Distress or Money Back. Stop your indigestion right away; you can do it if you will. Go today and get a box of Mi-o-na tablets; take one before, with or after meals for a few days and note the won derful results. In a week you can eat and enjoy any food you want without after-disturbance, in two weeks you will feel like a new being. Careful women who want to have and keep a good complexion, rosy cheeks and bright eyes, should try Mi-o-na, acting as it does on the stomach it is the great preventive of impure blood. If you have a sallow complexion, pim ples, blotches or dull eyes, your digestion is all wrong and you should take Mi-o-na tablets immediately, and put your stom ach right. Mi-o-na instantly stops belching of gas, sour stomach, heartburn and foul breath. Mi-o-na is guaranteed by A. A. Howes & Co. to relieve dyspepsia, sea or car sickness, vomiting of pregnancy or money back. Don’t hesitate to try Mi-o-na. It is< for sale by leading druggists everywhere. WANTED At Waldo County Hospital a cook. BEULA E. RICH, Supt. NEW SUMMER COAT Three-Quarter Garments Again Introduced in Suits. Fashion Does Not Disobey Wool Llm. itations Set by the Govern ment, Tailors Claim. Now another bit of perverseness in fashions, which is not as bad as it sounds, notes a fashion correspondent, is that France has brought in three quarter coats as a new summer fash ion, at a time when three governments have asked women to economize in Wool. These suits are made of wool and look as though all obedience had been thrown to the winds. But this is not so. The tailors claim that the suit is made on such slim proportions that it is kept within the four and a half yards allowed by the government; and they also say that the top of the skirt is of taffeta or satin, which is covered at the back and sides by the long coat and by that ubiquitous apron waist coat which spreads itself between the fronts of the coat and reaches half way between waist and knees. France is making these coats in a broad, mosaic design. Blocks of black and white are placed against each other, and the collars and cuffs are of American sealskin. Tlie long waistcoat, which in truth is sometimes made exactly like an apron, is of linen, pongee, tinseled satin and tinted muslin. Paris is quite delighted over these apron waistcoats made of pale pink, mauve, yellow, Jof fre blue and violet organdie or lawn. They are sometimes fastened down the front with tiny white buttons, but usually they do not present any break in the front line. They are more be coming and novel this way. DEVISES PRETTY GUEST ROOM Ingenious Young Wife Utilizes Old Furniture Painted In Alice Blue and Stenciled. Farm and Fireside has a story of g young wife who fixed up her home her self with a small sum of money. In talking about her guest room, she says: “My guest room was small and 1 did not want to buy any furniture. The wall I tinted a plain cream color. I used an old bed, dresser and two chairs, all painted Alice blue, and tried my hand at stenciling the furniture with oil paint. I bought a stencil «f a pretty flower design and put it on the rails of the bed, arms of the chairs, on the top of the dresser and the front of the drawers. I didn't attempt to do the stencil with different colors, just made al! the designs In blue, a lit tle darker than the main part of the furniture. “For the windows, cushions and bed cover I found a thin ‘sun-fast’ material which had a very wide blue and cream colored stripe. For my electric lights I made simple little silk shades of yel low. The rag rugs in this room were woven with a pale yellow thread.” AMONG EARLY FALL FASHIONS This handsome three-piece costume was exhibited at the recent fashion show held in New York by the De signers’ association. It was of taupe wool, elaborately embroidered in the same tone silk braid. Both skirt and coat were draped slightly on the hips, emphasizing the narrowness of the hem. The bodice was almost entirely of self-tone georgette crepe and embroidery. At the neck a ruche two inches high in the back and one inch under the chin encircled the throat, being attached to the waist only at the back of the neck. Law was First to Drop from Plane in Para chute. San ANTONIO, Texas, July 31. Rod man Law jumped from an aeroplane sev eral times and landed safely with the aid of a parachute at Kelly field. The last time the feat was performed from a height of #,000 feet with Secretary Mc Adoo a spectator. The plane was driven by Edward Stinson and an ordinary bal loon parachute was used. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S OAST ORTA What "Slow” Accounts Mean “SLOW” ACCOUNTS mean something more than the mere matter of delay in receiving pay ment of bills. They mean duplication of effort, the maintenance of records and additional officework that would be unnecessary if such accounts were paid within the reasonable specified time. But MOST OF ALL they mean that labor which might be devoted to necessary tasks essential to the comfort, con venience and efficiency that you derive from your tele phone service, is wasted on what should be unnecessary tasks. At THIS TIME IT IS DESIRABLE that unnecessary labor be eliminated as much as possible so that the output ot nec essary labor may be increased. Subscribers who pay their telephone bills promptlyl help to conserve labor at a time when the con servation of all labor is a national necessity. NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY E. R. SPEAR, Manager. DUMMY BOMBS FOR AVIATORS I Two men at Ellington field, Hous ton, Tex., preparing dummy bombs for the practice work of the aviators who are being trained especially for bombing. The Padre Scores. Now and again a guy will take me off to one side and fix it np with me to write his girl or his mother after he is bumped off, promising to do the same for me. Yet they joke about it, too. Pop said to the chaplain today: “You won’t forget that little matter, padre, will you?" “What little matter is that?” asked the chaplain. “Why, my tombstone 1” The chaplain looked surprised. 'Tou never mentioned a tombstone to me,” he protested. “Sure I did! Don’t you remember? A bottle of rum at head and feet!” But the chaplain came back at him. “No,” he said gravely; “for then you wouldn't lie quiet.”—George Patulio in Saturday Evening Post. Flour Little Hurt by Sea Water, It is a widely known fact among I sailors that flour will not only float \ after immersion in'sea water, but suf- j fer very little damage. To ascertain ! the actual damage a baker in New I South Wales submerged a bag of flour in the ocean and left it in the water 67 hours. A 98-pound weight was nec essary to sink a 150-pound bag, which would have supported 75 pounds on top of the water, it is estimated, or half its own weight. When lifted and weighed, the bag scaled 155 pounds. It was dried for four days and yielded 120 pounds of perfectly dry flour, the bag and waste weighing 28 pounds. Baked Into bread, it gave perfect results. Camera Vie Curtailed. A new government regulation has gone into effect whereby cameras are not al lowed on harbor steamers. The govern ment men on the dock8 take them all up and hold them in storage until the people come back, when they are delivered to their owners safe and sound. The Regu lation ia a general one in effect all over the country where there ia a sea coast or any lake or river navigation- The reason for this regulation is obvious. PRESTON’S Livery, Boarding and Transient Stable. IS SITUATED ON WASHINGTON STREET, JUST OFF MAIN..STREET. I have single and double hitches, buckboards, etc. Careful drivers if desired our patronage is solicited. Telephone—stable, 18-2; house, 18-3. W. G. PRESTON, Proprietor, Notice of Foreclosure WHEREAS, Leon W. Parsons of Thorn dike, in the County of Waldo and State of Maine, by his mortgage deed dated the third day of December. 1909. and recorded in Waldo County Registry of Deeds, Book 294, Page 87, conveyed to Ross C. Higgins of Thorndike aforesaid, a certain lot or pa-cel of land, situated in said Thorndike, and bounded and described as follows: A certain piece or parcel of land situated in said Thorndike, bounded and described as fol lows, to wit: Being the same premises that was conveyed to Jennie N Randall oy Charles W. Lo»d and Susan F, Lord by their deed dated November 9, 1903, and recorded in Waldo Co inty Registry of Deeds in Book 271, Page j 89, which is referrad to for further descrip tion of said premises. Also being the same premises conveyed to Leon W. Paruons by said Jennie N Randall by her deed dated Septem ber 3, 1909. And whereas the said Ross C. Higgins, by his assignment dated the twenty-fourth day of March, A. D. 1914. and recorded in said Registry, Book 315, Page 8, assigned said mortgage to the undersigned, Edwin A. Hun toon; and whereas the condition of said mort gage has been broken: Now, therefore, by reason of the breach of the condition thereof I claim a foreclosure of said mortgage. Belfast, Maine, July 19th, A. D, If 18, EDWIN A HUNTOON. H c. B. 3w3i Removal THE OLD CORNER DRUC STORE IS NOW The Belfast Drug Store WITH WILLIAM A. BANKS, Prop.. Main Street, next Webber Shoe Store. All the former firm’s prescriptions carefully filed by the new proprietor and can be refilled at any time. Everything in drug supplies on hand at all times. GEOfGE F. Kf NT, DHUGG1ST. House forRent The house on Court street, (between Park and Grove streets) recently occu pied by Mr. W. C. Shaw, will be for rent August 1st. This is a very desirable, two story house with cemented cellar, new furnace, large bath room, electric lights and city water. For lease apply to FRED T. CHASE, i 30tf No. 25 Main Street, Belfast. J 1 DR CLEHENT j Eye, Ear, Nose and Tbroat. HOWES BUILDING, MONDAYS, Office Hours—9-12, 1-5. 3m81* WANTED At the Waldo County Hospital, pupil nurses. Apply to SUFT. OF NURSES. For Sale Cheap KNOX MARINE ENGINE, 3 1-2 H. P, Fine condition. J. AUSTIN McKEE N, 26tf Belfast,Maine. Notice of foreclosure WHEREAS, Herbert E, Knight of Lincoln viile, in the County of Waldo and State of Maine, by his mortgage deed dated the sixth d**y of October, A. D. 1916. and recorded in the Waldo t/ounty Registry of Deeds, Book 325, Page 165, conveyed to me, the undersigned, a certain parcel of real estate situated in said Line Inville, and described as follows: The three certain lots or parcels of land situated in Lincolnville aforesaid and described in the mortgage deed from 0-*car F. Heal to Lev is A. Knowlton, dated March 14. 1878, recorded in Waldo Registry of Deeds, Book 183, Page 230, and tne sam ' described in the sec* nd clause of the deed of Ephraim H. Knight to Herbert E. K' ight, dated October 18. 1911, and recorded in said Registry, Book 308. Page 169; and where as the condition of said mortgage has been broken, now therefore, by reason of the t> each of the condition thereof I ciaim a foreclosure of said mortgage. Dated this twelfth day of July. A I) 1918. LUCY J. KNIGHT. D,£m. 3w29 lo Ernest E. bo wen, a Justice of the Peace in and for the County of Waldo and State of Maine: The undersigned, T, N, Pearson, Elisha Brown and H. E. Wentworth, owners of pews in the meetinghouse situated ir. Morrill, in the County of Waldo, deeiring that a meeting be called for the transaction of business, request you to issue your warrant to one of them di recting him to notify the pew owners ■ f said meetinghouse according to law, to meet at the time and place to be mentioned in said warrant for the purpose of choosing a moderator and clerk and such other officers as they may deem proper and transact all necessary business. Morriil, Maine, July 10; 1918. T. N. PEARSON, ELISHA BROWN, H. E WENTWOR STATE OF MAINE. WALDO. TO. T. N. PEAR'-'ON: Pursnaot'o the? fore going application you are hereby directed to notify the pew owners of the Morrill meeiing house, mentioned in the oregoing application to meet at said meetinghi use on the thirteenth day of August, A D. 1918 at 7 30 o’clock in evening.for the purposes mentioned in ihesaid application ana also to make arr ngements for the management and repairs of said meeting house. hy posting a certified copy of this war rant on the principal outer door of said meet inghouse undone in the postoffice in said town of Morrill, three weeks at least before said meeting, also publish the same three weeks successively in The Republican Journal,a paper published in Belfast, in said County and State. Given under my hana at Morrill, this tenth day of July. 1918. ERNEST E. BOWEN. 3w30 Justice ot the Peace RAGS Old rags are at present especially high. I am still paying the highest prices possi ble for old iron, burlaps, bags, carpets, rope, metals, rubbers, papers and other waste materials. If you have any goods on hand drop me a postal or telephone 229-4, and I will call promptly. SAM FREEDMAN, 16 Cross St, Belfast. NOTE: Be sure that you are selling your goods to Freedman by looking for the name on the wagon.