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The Republican Journal BELFAST, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1919. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY ‘The Republican Journal Pub. Co. A. I BROWN, Editor. Adveriising Terms. For one equ&re, one inch length in column. 50 cents for one week and 35 cents for each subsequent insertion. SUBSCRim )N Terms In advance. $2 00 a year; $1,00 fersis months, 50 cents for three months. OUR WATER POWERS Much has been written and said about the water powers of Maine and out of it all the people of the State have gathered very little practical information. During the legislative sessions of the latter part of the last century one frequently heard some incipient statesman who had turned himself loose in the lobby, making the statement that rich land owners and soulless corporations were robbing the people of their water rights. Little by little the public mind has been impressed by the idea that this might be true until within and during the last three years there has been much discussion concern ing the rights and wrongs of the water situation. In 1909 the Legislature estab lished a State Water Storage Commis sion and specified its duties, which were fundamental to a complete understanding of what and where the water powers were, and to what extent they had been developed. This proved to be a task re quiring much labor, time and expense. Acting in accordance with the storage act, the Governor appointed the com missioners who secured the services of an engineer and work was begun. Re ports were made each jear up to and in cluding 1913, but owing to the fact that available funds had not been provided sufficient to cover the whole State, much necessary data was lacking. In 1913 the Public l_ tilities Commission was created, the Water Storage Commission was abol ished and its work turned over to the new commission. 1 here was still a lark of funds and in consequence the progress made was slow, till in 1917 it became evident that many of our people had become insistent, and were determined to know more about our water powers, the uses made of them, and whether they would be further de veloped or made more efficient, and hack -jf all '!':s was the desire to know wheth er it would be wise for the State to ac quire them and use them for the benefit of 1 he people at large. Funds were pro ' d, the Public l ulities Commission entered into the work with energy and a has just been made to the Gover nor and Council, in a book of -150 pages. This report is a compendium of the data of all former investigators who have made studies of rivers and storage basins and of electrical and hydraulic companies who have made surveys, and the facts ascertained during the last two years by the commission itself. This report, in r major pari, is statistical and scien ce a c contains many quite bewildering »at - ‘s- It is- about as interesting to read as /flection of physician's prescrip u fact i' is not worth while to re d It i., something which should :< ■ studied for hours. Not until we had done that d,.l we realize that the report was a v aluable addition to the informa tive literature of the State. In common w.th thousands of other people we Jiave wanted to know whether state ownership and management of the water powers of the Stale was a wise or an unwise preposition. Personally, we have felt that when three questions had been considered and answered by com petent authorities we would be ready to vote ves or no The first question was: can ttie people of the State through the agency of the -ommonwealth take the water powers tram the owners by legal process? The opinion of Hon. Lucilius A. Emery, formerly Chief Justice of our Supreme Judical Court, which is given in the report of he Public Utilities Com mission, very clearly shows that the wa.er powers can be taken over for a jus', compensation. The next question was: What will it cost? The report of the Utilities Commission says that the developed water powers of the State have cost $44,795,000, and to develop the power now undeveloped will cost $31, 969,000, a total of $76,745,000. The next question is: do we want the water powers at that price? It has been suggested that electricity generated by water power can be used for beatingour houses. That is true, but it has been proved by actual experiments that a dwelling house can •be Heal ed as cheaply with coal at $40 a hi. as it can be heated by electricity. It is also suggested that the steam rail roads be operated ay electric power, The report clearly shows that this is not feas ible. Until it can be shown that the people have a remunerative use for $76, 745,000 worth of water powers, we do not think the men who are talking about a better use of water powers will have a large following. COTTON IN CALIFORNIA. The Imperial Valley in Southern Cali fornia is the spot in which the plot of Harold Bell Wright’s story, The Win ning of Barbara Worth, was laid. It may be of interest to some of our readers to know [that the Imperial Valley is a real valley, not an imaginary one. Not many years ago it was a desert. Today it is a fertile farming district and strange to say [one of the principal crops is cot eon. Southern California is especially adapted to the production of this staple, irrigation prevents drought, the dry air prevents mildew and the lieat kills the weevil. \\ hile the average crop in other cotton growing States is about 175 pounds per acre, that in the Imperial Valley and other favored localities in California is 400 pounds per acre. The State produc ed last year more than 50,000,000 pounds and this cotton is of the finest quality, Being pure white and having long fibre. The increase in telephone rates which ! Autocrat Burleson has put into effect has ; raised a storm of disapproval which ■ comes from those who know very much more about the telephone business than the gentleman from Texas will ever learn. Mr. Baker, however, is in the saddle and he will override all opposition. The present Congress will do nothing to prevent government ownership or con trol of anything which the administra tion wishes to dominate. This condition of affairs will continue till this Congress passes into history next March. Prob ably it will continue much longer, per haps till next December. The next Con gress will not be servile. There will be an inspection of accounts and a general inquiry into the performances of a good many of our public servants. Very like ly, before that time Mr. Burleson will resign, because he will have found that his salary will not support his family. Children, Birds and Insects The Liberty Bell Bird Club, Founded Janu ary 1, 1913, Wilmer Atkinson, President, Chas. P. ShofFner, Sec., of Philadelphia, Penn. The clubs on Jan. 1, 1914, had 86,000 members; Jan. 1, 1915, 251,904 members; Jan. 1, 1916, 560,000 members; Feb. 29, 1916, 613,210 members, and it is very near one million members at the present time. The Belfast Branch has at the present time sixty-six members. One billion dollars a year are lost to the farmers and fruit growers on account of the ravages of insects. The cotton growers of Texas lose every year $40, 000,000 to $50,000,000 by the boll-weevils The wheat growers $100,000,000 a year by the chinch-bug. The farmers of the eastern states pay $15,000,000 a year for materials to kill the potato bug. The apple producing states pay from $1,000, 000 to $3,000,000 a year for spraying trees to keep down the San Jose scale louse and the codling-moth Truck raisers lose, yearly $53,000,000 by insects. Shade trees everywhere and our forest are being destroyed by insect pests. Why this great loss? Here it is in a nut-shell: It is said that ninety per cent, of the bird life of this country has been destroyed. Birds, and birds only, are able to keep in check the ravages of insects. Are you a slaughterer or a party to this slaughter that is taking millions out of the pockets of American farmers? Did you know that a quail taken in a cotton field in Texas had the remains of 127 cotton boll weevils in its craw? Another, taken in Pennsylvania, had 101 potato bugs. Quails eat 135 different varieties of in sects, and a quaii will eat on an average 75,000 insects a year. They are the natural enemies of the boll-weevil, yet they are being exterminated in almos) every state. A swallow's stomach was found to con tain forty entire chinch bugs, fragments of many others, and ten other species of insects. A bank-swallow was seen to devour sixty-eight cotton boll-weevils Two stomachs of pine-siskins contained t.QOi) black olive scales and 300 plant lice A killdee’s stomach contained cOO mosquito larvae; and a flicker’s, twenty eight white grubs. A nighthawk had eaten 340 grasshoppers, fifty-two bugs three beetles, two wasps and a spider. Martins, swifts and swallows eat enor mous quantities of rose-beetles, May beetles, cucumber-beetles and house-flies, onall caught the wing. Fifty-one species of birds eat hairy caterpillars, and thirty eight species feed on plant lice. Government Needs Hundreds of Accountants. Washington, D. C., Jan. 27, i«Jig. The war is practically ended but war work is not. The tremendous labor of the details of adjusting the accounts and paying the bills will occupy the time of a large force for many months to come. The Ordnance Department of the Army alone is in need of 200 senior cos”, ac countants at entrance salaries rarging from $2,200 to $4,200 a year; 300 junior cost accountants at entrance salaries ranging from $1,200 to $2,000 a year; and 300 clerks qualified in accounting at en trance salaries ranging from $1,000 to $1,800 a year, for service at ordnance estab.ishments throughout the United Statfsand in the headquarters at Wash ington, D. C. The collection of the income tax also calls for the employment of an addition al number of accountants. The income tax unit of the Bureau of Internal Reve nue is in need of a number of traveling auditors and resident auditors at entrance salaries ranging from $1,800 to $4,500 a year. All of these positions are open to both men and women. The United States Civil Service Com mission is receiving applications for these positions. Applicants will not be re quired to report at any place for exami nation, but will be rated upon their phys ical ability, education, training and ex perience, based upon the sworn state ments in their applications and upon cor roborative evidence adduced by the Com mission. Application blanks and full in formation may be obtained from the sec retary of the local board of civil service examiners at the post office or custom house in any city, or by communicating with the United States Civil Service Commission, Washington, D. C. Maine Nurses Meet. Portland, Me., Jan. 22. At the an nual meeting of the Maine State Nurses association held here today officers chosen were: Presieent, Lucy J. Potter, Bidde ford; vice presidents, Margaret Dearness, Portland; Sarah Hayden, Augusta; secre tary, Katherine Keating, Lewiston; treas urer, Betsey Edgecomb, Portland The public health department of the associa tion elected officers as follows: Chair man, Myrtle Taylor, Lewiston; vice chair man, Madeline Mosher, Lincoln; secre | tary, Helen Sanderson, Rockland. It was reported that five members of > the association had died in the service in 1 the war. \ A CRIPPLE EOS THREE HEARS Helpless In Bed With Rheumatism Until He Took “FRUIT-A-TIVES". MR. ALEXANDER MUNRO R.R. No. 1, Lome, Ont. “For over llireo years, I was Confined to bed witli Rheumatism. During that time, I had treatment from a number of doctors, and tried nearly everything I saw advert ised to cure Rheumatism, without receiving suiy benefit. Finally, I decided to try ‘Frait-a-tives” (or Fruit Liver Tablets). Before I had used half a box, I noticed au improvement; the paiu was not so severe, and tha swelling started to go down. I continued taking this fruit me dicine, improving all the time, and now I can walk about two miles and do light chores about the place” ALEXANDER, MUNRO. 50c. a box,(i for $2.50, trial size 25c. I At all dealers or sent on receipt of price, by FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N. Y. BtLfASlJESPMONY Home Proof Here, There and Everywhere. When you see Doan’s Kidney Pills recommended in this paper you most al ways find the recommender a Belfast resident. It's the same everywhere—in 3,800 towns in the U. S. Fifty thousand people publicly thank Doan’s. What other kidney remedy can give this proof of merit, honesty and truth? Home testi mony must be true or it could not be pub lished here. Read this Belfast recom mendation Then insist on having Doan’s. You will know what you are getting. Dr. Charles Thurston, retired physician, 116 High St , Belfast, says: “From per sonal experience I can recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills very highly. I have used this medicine for kidney trouble and they have been the only remedy I have been able to find that helped me. The kidney secretions at times became retarded and painful in passage. I first contracted this , trouble during the Civil War and have been troubled more or less in this way ever since I have never found anything that acted as quickly as Doan’s Kidney Pills. I have been a practicing physician for fifteen years and have frequently recommended them to my patients.” Price 60c. at all deaiers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy -get Doan’s! Kidney Pills the same that Dr. Thurston had. Foster-Milburn Co.,Mfgrs., Buffalo, N Y. War Work in Morrill The Morrill branch of the A. R. C. : was organized Jan. 10th, 1918, Mrs. A. B. Hatch, chairman, Mrs. Nathan Hunt, secretary, Mr. A. B. Hatch, treasurer. The society received from January until September, 1918, from Waldo county chapter membership dues and from all sources, $214.45. The secretary reported during the past year this branch has knit. 04 pairs socks, 16 sweaters, 7 pairs wrist lets, 2 helmets, made 24 undershirts, 6 pairs pajamas, 2b pairs trench slippers, 90 comfort kits, 45 pairs bed socks, 6 prop erty bags, 3 convalescent gowns, a total of 283 articles, made by 20 workers. They have given to our town “Boys” 20 pairs socks, 6 sweaters, 2 pair wristlets, besides this work that they have done. The Morrill branch has a membership of 89. At the second Red Cross drive in May $123 was raised. At the Christmas drive $49. They have paid out for ma terials, etc., $186.92. Refund from the Christmas membership $21.75 Balan ® remaining in treasury $17.53; home re serve fund $10. Total $49.28. $49.28 less $10 reserve fund, $39.28, for home service. At the third Liberty Loan drive, April 1918, 5111,000 was subscribed. The sec ond Red Cross drive in May $123 was raised. The War Savings drive in June $4,400 was pledged. The Fourth Liberty Loan in October, $5,700 was subscribed. United War Work campaign in Novem ner, $180 was given. Red Cross member ship dues $92. It is safe to say that $22, 000 has been raised as an investment and free gift in this town the past year. A. B. Hatch, Treasurer CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature uf PROSPECT iERRY. The pneumonia patients are all on the gain. Mrs. Charles Banks and Mrs. Rufus Harriman visited Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Gilkey in Searsport Jan. 17th. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Avery have gone back to Sandypoint to live. Mrs. G. A. 1 Avery, who haB been very ill the past six i weeks, is greatly improved. The many friends of Evander Harri man will be glad to know that he has got back home. He enlisted in the Naval reserve as a C. M. to work on planes last July. He was sent first to Charleston, S. C. and from there to Pensacola where he has been stationed for the past four months. He is looking fine and speaks well of his treatment in the Navy. He will work in the Sandypoint shipyard. - SHOULD HAVE GARDENS Cultivated Plots Mean Comparative Independence as Well as Adding to Town's Attractiveness. A friend of ours who mixes the mu sic of dreams with the rattle and bang and noise and clamor of life, so that the one will soften and thus make more endurable the other, has a favor ite theory of combining smokestacks with gardens, says a writer in Los An geles Times. His idea is for the wage earner. It is an idea through which the man who depends on a salary or a day’s pay may place himself in a position of in dependence. And it seems to us that there can be no bigger or more im portant idea than this in all the philoso phy of life. What could be more sensible and practicable than a scheme whereby the wage earner raises on a piece of land near the city all, or nearly all, that his family needs in the way of food, especially in this climate. That’s his greatest item of expense—food. Why not raise his own food In his own garden? By doing this his wages or lus salary from his job soon becomes an income —something that he can lay away, put in the savings bank, liny Liberty bonds with, and all that. Of course, this means that he will have a little extra work to do outside of Ills job, hut, with a system, and his children to help, the work isn't great, and it can really be made a pleasure. GARDEN WITHIN HOME WALLS Attractive Window Filling Adds Great ly to Appearance of House, Both Inside and Out. When winter compels ns to bring In our goldfish and water lilies from onr water garden and to tuck our roses In under warm overcoats and to mulch - the beds in the regular garden, we do not cease to garden. For indoors we have our window or winter garden. It is part of tin' life of the home—an essential part, we hold. It might well he named “Everywoman’s Conserva tory," because there is nothing in it hut wiiat .-an he grown by every wom an, and yet it is satisfying and beau tiful always. Every country or sub urban home can have one as good or better, at small cost and in return for a little care. Our winter or window garden is part of our living room, which faces south. The room is lighted by a dou ble window, sash dimensions of the usual household si:o There is a siiglit division between the two sections of the double window. A teachable carpenter did the work readily from our rough ideas. The lit tle bit of summer that we keep with us through the winter is contained in n tiny conservatory, which is support ed by strong wooden brackets and so set against the house that it incloses the opening made liy taking out the sash of our double window.—Estelle M. Gilbert, in House Beauliiul. LOOK AFTER HOME GROUNDS Farmhouse Is Attractive or the Re verse According to the State of Its Surroundings. Farmers just now have plenty of troubles: they are short of help, and much of the little help they arc able to obtain is poor and unreliable. The women of the family are working like heavers; In fact the women on many of the farms along the roadside were helping the men in addition to doing their housework. The plucky si irit of the women Is unconquerable. Where there is a successful farm generally, if the real truth can he ar rived at, very much of the credit will be due to the spirit of a woman, who in times of discouragement insists on another and greater effort and who secs that the men are up and doing daily. If women knew how cheaply and with what little labor the home grounds could be improved they would see that the men made the necessary effort, or more likely would themselves do the work. A house in the country, standing out prominently, surrounded only by broad fields, swept by the blasts of winter winds and consumed by the fire of the summer sun, with the barns and outbuildings as the only piece of land scape. is surely a lonesome place, to be avoided. There Is no comfort there. —Exchange. Protect Fruit Trees From Rodents. Thousands of young fruit trees are annually injured and many are killed by mice and rabbits that gnaw the trees just above the ground. Frequent ly young trees are completely girdled. This trouble can he largely avoided by protecting the lower part of the tree trunk by hanking it with earth late In the fall or by wrapping the trunk with building paper or even old newspaper. Wood veneer and wire mesh tree guards may he purchased in the mar ket. One or more of these precautions ought by all means to be taken as a means of protecting the young tree. A $5 or $10 tree can be protected and saved by the use of only a little labor and the expenditure of only a few cents for material. Doctor’s Formula Over 100 Years of Success JOHNSONS Anodyne LINIMENT (Internal as well as External use) A soothing, healing Anodyne that speedily stops suffering. Wonder fully effective for Coughs. Colds, Grippe, Sore Throat. Cramps. Chills, Sprains, Strains, and many other common ills. For more than a century humanity’s best “Friend in Need” WHITE’S CORNER, Winterport. Mrs. C. H. Libby and son Lewis visited relatives in Swanville recently. Mrs. Linnie Clement and son Theodore are spending a few weeks at C. O. Whit ney’s. Guy Nealey, who went to North Anson to work a few weeks ago, has returned to his home. Nearly all of the dairymen in this vicing ity improved the recent good weather by cutting and storing their season’s supply of ice. Percy Larby, who has been in training at Camp Lee, Virginia, has received his discharge and spent a few days with his father, A. G. Larby, before going to his home in Caribou. SANDYPOlNT. Mrs. Philip Bates and Mrs. John Graf fam spent Jan. 20th in Bangor. The Red Cross met with Mrs. John Graffam last Wednesday afternoon. Ed. McLain has moved his family into j rooms in Mrs. Ella Smart’s house. Miss Thelma Segar was home from j West Seboeis recently for a short visit, j Work is rapidly going on at the ship- | yard here, over four hundre beingd men | employed. Edward Avery and family, who have ! been with his parents at Prospect Ferry I several weeks, have returned here. News has been received here of the death in Bangor of Robert Morris French. Mr. French was born here, the second son of Robert and Frances Stowers French, and spent his boyhood here He was 59 years of age. HUMPHREYS’ WITCH HAZEL OINTMEN (COMPOUND) For Piles or Hemorrhoids, External or Internal, Blind or Bleeding, Itching or Burning. Ona application brings relief at all druggists Send Free Sample of Olutmeot to Humphreys* Homeo. Medicine Company (56 W illiam Street, Xuw York. STOCK~ BOOK on treatment of Horses. Cows, Sheep, Dogs and other animals, sent free. Humphreys’ Homeopathic Vet erinary Medicines, 156 William St., N. Y. COUNI V OF WALDO, SS. To the Honorable jjustice of the Supreme judicial Court, next to be holden at Hel fast, within and for the County of Waldo on the third Tuesday of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hun dred and nineteen: 0K1N W. WING of Belfast, in the County of Waldo and State of Maine, respect fully libels and giveB this Honorable Court to he informed: that he was lawfully married to ! Lillian H Wing of Belfast aforesaid, at. Mon roe, County and State aforesaid, on the sixth day of March, A. D, 1903, by F. L. Calmer, Khq , a Justice of the Peace duly authorized to solemnize marriages; that they have lived together in the State of Maine since said mar- . riage; that since said marriage your libelant has conducted himself towards the said Lillian H. Wing as a faithful and affectionate hus band; yet the said Lillian H. Wing, wholly un- ! mindful of her marriage covenant and duty, j since ‘said marriage, to wit, on the fifteenth ] day of April, A. I). 1918, at said Belfast, and on divers other days and times and places since said intermarriage and the filing of this libel has committed the crime of adultery with one Chester Campbelle. Libelant avers ;hat the residence of said libelee is not known to him and cannot be as certained by reasonable diligence. W herefore your libelant prays that he may he decreed a divorce from the bonds of matri mony now existing between him and the said Lillian H. Wing. Dated at Belfast, this twenty-eighth day of December, A. D. 1918. GRIN W. WING. Personally appeared the above named Orin W. Wing and made oath that allegations contained in the above libel by him sv. jed are true, before me, this twenty-eighth day of December, A. D. 1918. H, C. BUZZ ELL, Justice of the Peace. 1 STATE OF MAINE. W'aldo, ss. [l, s. Supreme Judicial Court, In Vacation. Belfast, Jan. 20, A. D. 1919. Upon the annexed libel, it is ordered by me, the undersigned a Justice of said Court, that notice be given to the libelee by publishing an attested copy of the same, or an abstract thereof, together with this order thereon, three weeks successively in The Republican Journal, a newspaper printed in Belfast, in the County of Waldo, the last publication to be thirty days at least before the next term of said Court, to be lioiden at Belfast, within and for said County; on the third Tuesday of April next, that she may then and there appear in j said Court and answer thereto, if she see fit. WARREN C. PH1LBROOK, Justice Supreme Judicial Court. A true copy of this libel and order of Court thereon. 3w4 Attest, GEO. J KEATING, Temporary Clerk, .Notice of Sale, _ I STATE OF MAINE. County of Waldo, ss. January 16, 1919. By virtue ot a decree of the Supreme Ju dicial Court, within and for the County of Waldo, in the jState of Maine, made and en tered on the eleventh day of January, A. I), 1919, in the case of Robert C. Logan, in Equity, vs, Mary E. Logan, Alice J. Sweetland, Thomas P. Logan, Jr., Grace M Kackliffe, Margaret C. Logan and Martha I. Knowltou. 1 shall sell «t public auction to the highest bid der for cash, at the office of the Clerk ot the Supreme Judicial Court, in the Court House in Belfast, in said County of Waldo, on the fourteenth day of February, A. 1). 1919, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, the following describ ed real estate belonging to said Robert C. i Logan, Mary E. Logan, Alice J. Sweetland, Thomas P. Logan, Jr., Grace M, Rackliffe, Margaret C. Logan and Martha I. Knowlton, | viz; A certain lot or parcel of land, with the j buildings thereon, situated in said Belfast, bounded and described as follows, viz: Begin ning on the easterly Bide of Bridge street at its intersection with the center of Green ! Street; thence easterly by tne center line of said Green ■ treet five rods; thence northeas terly at right angles with said Green street nine and one-half rods; thence westerly five rods to said Bridge street; thence southwester ly by said Bridge street nine and one-half rods to the place of beginning, being the former homestead of Thomas P. Logan late of said Belfast, deceased. _ . , GEO. I. KEATING, opecial Master in Chancery appointed by said Court. 3w4 If you have never used WILLIAM TELL, you do not really know how easy it is to bake at home when you use a flour of this qual ity, how much better flavor you will have in your bak ing, and how much you can actually save by using it. Try WILLIAM TELL now. See how much furth er it will go. See how easy it is to handle. See what splendid success you will have with it and what a su perior flavor it will give to your bread. It will be a revelation to you, I know. Ask your grocer for WILLIAM TELL—tha flour that goes further and bakes better. swAN=wm n ti\ co. mmmmm—m irimmii ■■ Real Kslale Owners, Alteali* By direction of the State Assessors, an ml vision of the form of DkSCBIP'l ION of Ileal l the Assessment Inventory must be made tor subsequent year-. Ycu may be required by the Local Hoard them in “bounding” the various parcels of red standing in your name, and will consequently pared, it call/el upon, to furnish up-lo-the-nr.i formation relative to names of abutting ewiui boundaries, the acreage and character of the U what par t wood hit, pasture, mowing field, etc II possible, a rough sketch of suburban should be made and submitted. BELFAST BOA III) OF \ 'SIP EVERY \JOMM WHO CAN CEV Is NEEDED AT ONCE to help make REFUGEE GARMENTS Tor the home! sufferers of Belgium and Northern h. These garments must be completed bv 1. A garment made now has double r. value of a garment made next month Volunteer for this work at IVlemoria Monday. Wednesday, Thursday, Frida and Saturday afternoons at 2 o’clock Tlie Republican Journal Clubbing Writes for 1010 The following clubbing offers are for subscriptions to the Journal paid one ycai in advance: The Journal and Farm and Home, $2.00 The Journal and McCall’s Magazine, 2.70 The Journal and Woman’s Magazine, 2.O'* The Journal and Thrice-a-VVeek World,2.f>0 The publications Included in our club bing offer may be sent to different ad dresses. Send in your subscription to the REPUBLICAN JOURNAL PUB CO. Belfast, Maine. FIRE SALE We are closing out our entire stock groceries, which were recently da agea by fire, at very lo w prices. Cor in and look around and see the ba gains we are offering. Open Saturd* evenings. YOUNG’S GROCERY STORE THE JOURNAL WANTS AGENTS IN EVERY TOW* IN WALDO COUNTY To Solicit Subscribers for the Paper