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ORLEANS COUNTY MONITOR,VV7EDNE3DAY, SEPTEMBER I O. 10 1 3 PAGE 5 . - 'MMH"1 BMMM No. 529 FLANNEL WAISTS Only A new line just in. Gray, Wine, Stripes. - a - Dollar just the thing for Fall wear. Shoes! Shoes! 224 pairs in one invoice just in. More to follow. Special attention given to Children's School Shoes Ratine and Corduroy You will need them We have them. Sweaters Good Sweaters "Oakes" Sweaters Meals Mews ID age News and Views from this Hustling Village Ladies' Suits, Coats, Skirts and Dresses Made to Measure Use the Parcel Post Fay Cash and save two and one-half cents on every dollar I will $ay $i.oo each for the re turn of Cash Receipts 9676, 4431, 2963, 1 142, 3r46, 4873. 8741 and 2164. Mrs. A. W. Fletcher returned No. 1111 J. B. Flint - ' " 2331 Killed By Freight. Patrick Ring of Lowell,- Mass., was killed by the way freight going south Friday, afternoon.. He was one of the gang working on the culvert near the Brown farm in the town of Irasburg and did not hear the train until too late. He was struck in the head. His father came from Lowell and re turned with the body Monday. Methodist Episcopal Church Notes. , W. S. Smitheks. Pastor. The Sunday services will be held as usual with sermons at 10.30 a. m. and 7.15 p. m., Bible school following the morning service, to which all not now members of a Sunday school are invited. Sunday the choir sang the anthem 'The King of Love, My Shephersd Is," Mrs. Kinney and Mr. Miller sing ing the solos. At the evening service. Mr. Kinney and Otis Smithers sang a duet, "Hold Thou My Hand." Midweek prayer service Wednesday at 7.30 o'clock followed by a meeting of, the Sunday school board. The Orleans County Sunday School association will meet in the Metho dist church Sept 23 and 24. The opening service will be at 1.30 p. m., Tuesday, the convention closing the following afternoon. Your presence will help make it a success. ror At Our Farm Sale 15 Holstein Cows AND Don't expect a cash receipt if it is charged O. W. LOCKE ORLEANS, VERMONT 15 Grade Gurensey Cows Taplin & Rowell ORLEANS, VT. This School Each Year has more calls for help than it has pupils and, therefore, its pupils are pleasantly located in positions all good ones. Have you a good reason why YOU should not enjoy what others do with and through us? Send for proofs. CAPITAL COMMERCIAL SCHOOL "The Worth-While School" Lyon Block, Market Square, Albany, N. Y. D. A. CASEY, Prop, and Prin. is Urns ov. wee& a 5 ew Fa! 1 Suit. HAVE YOU SEEN OUR NEW LINE OF Come in and look them over, We have them in the latest styles and materials. 4 We also have messaline petticoats in all the new colors. Just the things to wear with your new suit. E. L. Basse.it Anna M.t Brennan. Miss Anna M Brennan was born in Parkhurst, P. Q.. Dec. 7, 1862. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Brennan, living in Parkhurst until she was fifteen years old and then came to the States, living with her mother and brothers on the Brennan brothers' farm on the Barton hill road. About two years ago -she moved to Orleans with her brother Ernest and her mother, who died last December. Miss Brennan has taken care of her mother faithfully in her declining years even when she was not well her self. She has been to the hospital three times and in the last few years has been more or less of an invalid. She had always been cheerful and did not wish to be a burden to anyone. Her good example cannot be forgot ten. She died Monday morning, Sept. 8 at 7.45. The funeral was Wednes day, -Sept 10 at 1.30. Rev. E. W. Eldridge officiating. Interment at Pleasant View . cemetery. The de ceased leaves four brothers, Nathaniel, Richard, John and Ernest and one sister, Mrs. Ella Twombly, who mourn her loss. .. Congregational Church Notes. . The Woman's Missionary society held a well-attended and profitable meeting at the parsonage Tuesday af ternoon. 1 The work of installing the pipe organ will be completed today and the carpet laid as soon as possible, after which the pews will be put in place. Several days will be required for this work and it is hardly expected a service will be held Sunday, but a week from Sunday, Sept. 4, a reopening will be held. By post poning the service a week ample time to have everything finished in proper shape will be given. 16, at two o'clock. Program : Topic. Christian citizenship. Devotibnals, roll , call, reading. "The Widow and the- Judge." Mrs. E. W. Eldridge; solo, selected, Miss iLillian Doe; paper, "How May We Become Better Citizens?" Mrs. Mary Ordway; poern, "Not a Battle but a World-wide War, f duet, Mrs. Bartlett and Mrs. Dickens. Social hour. " - EVANSVILLE Mrs. B. Hilliard is forking at Or leans. . J. E. Waterman has - sold his farm to Ellie Clark. v George Bickford and son have bought the Clark farm. Earle Drown of St. Johnsbury was home over Sunday. - Albert Gallup fell and hurt his hip quite badly last week, J ' Mrs. L. A. Drown is at Irasburg j working for a few days. John King has gone to visit his daughter in Massachusetts. Mrs. Snow of New York is visiting her father, John Brownlow. Miss Mildred Montieth commenced school at Orleans last week. Milford Gray of Morgan is working for the Pike Mfg. company. Harry Caswell and family visited at Gaylord Fox's the past week. Mr. and Mrs. David Morrison were on a visit to Toronto last week. . Henry Trescott has sold his farm to Ed. Porter of Brownington Center. Mrs. Parker of Irasburg visited friends here Saturday and Sunday. ' Mrs. Roy Bickford has been quite ill the past week but is now recovering. ' Sidney Murdock of Montreal is visit ing his grandfather, John Brownlow. Mr. and Mrs. A. Wilkie of Barton visited at U. W. Brown's over Sunday. B. J. Dunham has gone to work for the Pike Mfg. company in their shop. Miss Hazel Alexander commenced her school at Brownington Center last week. Dana Clark of Irasburg has moved onto his farm recently purchased of Ed. Aldrich. Mr. and Mrs. Mary Hall and family of Pike's Station visited at Fred Fos ter's the past week. Out "Lucky Cereal Department "Lucky" entire Wheat Flour,, - 10 lb. bag, 40c. Lucky" Graham Flour, V - 10 lb. bag, 35c. " Lucky " Corn Meal, - . - s - - 10 lb, bag, 25c. " Lucky" Breakfast Food, - - - 5 lb. bag, 25c. Best Quality, Strictly Fresh, Direct from the MILL to you? TO GROCERY- B.: O. SMITH, Proprietor p. s. save smith's sale slips ORLEANS, VERMONT . Mongolian Lamas. " ' Every third man in Mongolia is a lama. Some live in tents with and on their relatives, while others live in the temples. The temple lamas are of the lower type. They are coarse and'filthy and much inferior both morally and physically to the tent lamas. They are not unlike those sometimes seen -by travelers in the Lama temple at Pek ing, China. The lamas living in tents tmong the people are of a better class and are much respected and looked .up to all over Mongolia. Sume. which consists of the two temples and their outbuildings, forms one of the lwgest and most important lamaseries v outer Mongolia. . There are about 2.0W) lamas living here, some quite young, as Sme is an impprtant theological school. This lamasery or . monastery is a town in 'it self and very interesting. Lamas may be seen here of all ages and degrees. On the tops and corners of the temples are' prayer wheels covered with gold leaf. These contain long prayers writ ten on rolls of script, and the wheels revolve in the wind. National Geo graphic Magazine. Telephone 79-3. ORLEANS, Brown Block. Opp. Station VERMONT ORLEANS Miss Eva Ducharme is working for Miss Bassett again. Clarence Swett is working in H. S. Tripp's grocery store. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs; Lynn Eldridge Sunday, Sept. 7. Ralph Harris is working in 9the Orleans Bakery out of school hours. Mrs Grace Black ofJorfh Adams, Mass., is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Smith. Dr. Hight, chiropodist, will be at Valley House the third Thursday and Friday of each month. adv. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Bean and the Misses Waterman wpnt to Rino-ham. Me., lay auto last week. j Miss Doris Spafford is home from Chautauqua, N. Y., where she has been spending the summer. Mrs. C. E. Corwin of New York city, who has been spending a- week at C. E. Gay's, has returned home. Fred D. Pierce, town treasurer, will be at the Valley House here from nine until four p. m. on Friday to receive taxes. Mr. and Mrs." M. M. Taplin, Charles Taplin and Hugh:Rowell were in Bur lington last week. They made the trip by auto. There will be a social dance at Le Beau Lac Boat Club house at Bar ton on Thursday evening. Madame Brock's orchestra. Otis S. Smithers left Wednesday morning for Union Springs, N. Y., where he is to teach the sciences in Oakwood seminary the coming year. One of the workmen on the bank block, Martell by name, of Burlington, broke his leg below the knee Monday. One of the girders of the vault carried away the staging with the men on it and fell on Martell's leg. The girder was estimated as weignmg about a thousand pounds. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Turnbull, Leon and Randolph Turnbull, Alton Doe and T. Stanley went to Boston Friday by .auto. Leon and Alton returned Tues day, Randolph stays to attend Cushing academy and Mr. and Mrs. Turnbull will later attend the state fair at White River Junction. - Tuesday morning the veneer mill whistle-woke everyone up to announce a fire in ..the engine room. , After a time the fire alarm rung and the com pany turned out but the fire was out. It was about 5 a. m. No material damage was donejaut a good deal of excitement was caused., ' The Mothers' club observed Grand mothers' day on Tuesday, Sept. 2d, at the home of Mrs. Frank Hardy. There were about twenty-seven present, con sisting of grandmothers, mothers and small children. After the business of the club, a good program was rendered which. was made up of readings and music. After adjournment, the com pany was invited to sit out on the lawn where dainty refreshments were served bp the hostess and all seemed to have a very pleasant time. The Orleans Woman's Christian Temperance Union will entertain the Barton union at the home of Mrs. Jennie Jones Tuesday afternoon, Sept. Smallest Deer In the World. The "mousedeer" of India and Africa is the chevrotain, one of , the smallest J hoofed animals. It stands less than twelve inches in height at the shoulder. The prevailing color of the fur is brown, finely speckled, with yellow. The spots are large and sometimes run into each other and form stripes. The underparts of the body are white. It possesses the peculiar habit of walk ing on the tips of its hoots. This lends a stiffness to the legs, which has gain ed for the chevrotain the reputation of having no knee joints. It has no horns or antlers. But. as in the case of the musk deer, the male is provided with large canine teeth or tusks in the up per jaw. It is of exceedingly timid disposition and lies hidden in the jun gle throughout the day and only ven tures to feed, in the early morning and after dusk in the evening. Open Spaces In Cities. Along with the new keenness over social and economic reform England has developed a number of other vir tues in the past score of years. One is an appreciation of the value of open spaces in cities, and one is the increas ed determination to preserve ancient landmarks. Every few1 months an ar ticle appears in the Times or some other influential newspaper acquaint ing people with the danger that threat ens some historical or long cherished spot, aud usually the money necessary to save the property has been forth coming. Indianapolis News. Effect of an Explosion. It seems incredible that an explosion could be of such force as to cause an ordinary steel rail to wrap itself twice, round the trunk of a large tree, yet there was just such a result from the discharge of gelignite at Nanaimo, B. C. Twelve workmen lost their lives by this explosion. The rail was lying on the ground fully thirty feet, from the spot at which the explosion occurred, yet it was lifted Into the air, sent in the direction of the tree and twisted round the trunk thereof, just as if it had been a piece of piano wire. It was so tightly wrapped about the trunk that it cut deeply into the green wood and caused great splinters to start out on all sides. The explosive re sponsible for this unique occurrence is one of the most powerful preparations known, composed of nitroglycerin, ni trocotton, sodium nitrate, sodium car bonate and wood pulp. St. Louis Republic. A Modern Heart. "Do you see that lady over there? She broke my cousin's heart." "Was she so cruel?" "No, but the day before he ttroke off his engagement to her she inherited 200,000 marks." Fliegende Blatter. ; Involuntary Fasting. A remarkable feat of involuntary fasting was performed twelve years ago by a corporal in a regiment of French colonial infantry. On his way to work one morning a man heard cries proceeding from a disused mine near Brest. At the: bottom of an ex cavation nearly 100 feet deep Corporal Andre Desrats was found in so weak a condition that he could scarcely ar ticulate a word. When he recovered his rescuers learned that after acci dentally falling into the -mine Desrats had been imprisoned for twenty-eight days without anything to eat or drink. But a pig can beat a man." Dr. W. B. Carpenter in his "Manual of Physiolo gy" records thaf a pig weighing 160 pounds was entombed by the fall of a portion of the chalk cliffs at Dover. It -was dug out 100 days later and found to be' still alive, but reduced in weight to forty pounds. London Mail. The Way It Felt. "Here's something queer." said the dentist. "You say this tooth has never been worked on before, but I find small flakes of gold on my instru ment" . "I think you must have struck my back collar button." replied the vic tim. Philadelphia Ledger. n CLOTH ES For Every Age & Every Ta ste Our Fall display of MEN'S Clothing is Big and Wide. It contains all kinds of Style, all kinds of Fabrics . We can Please You no matter what. Drop in as you go by and let our Mirror tell you how well YOU CAN LOOK WITHOUT SPENDING A BIG SUM. V . Look in our window, If you ever saw a finer (not larger) display of Mackinaws .x; ; and Sweaters in this town, don't come in. J Low Prices and Reliable .Goods F. H. Pierce, Orleans Vt. ARLt FALL S TILES Our Clothes represent a con "v scientious effort on our part to give you maximum value for your money. When we buy our clothes each season we carefully choose the best quality -fabric in the most attractive patterns and colors, then we select the models that represent the new fashion ideas best, and we have our manufacturers , make our clothes from these fabrics over the models we desire. The Result Is Better Clothes Value for You $6.50 to $20 It will pay you to find out about it. STEVENS - - VERMONT ORLEANS, s Subscribe for the Monitor $1.50 Per Year in Advance PRINTS MOST COUNTY NEWS Try Our Classified Advertising If Youi Knew REXALL AD-VANTAGE NO. 1 the facts as stated in our advertise ment in "THE SATURDAY EYEN- lJNijr JfUbL" ot kept ember JU5, this week, (see advertisement in your Saturday Evening Post, this week), then you surely would use - Rexal! Toilet Preparations realizing that better preparations are not made at these prices Rexall Shaving. Lotion 25c Rexall Rose Water Glycerine 25c Rexall Violet Talcum ; 25c Rexall Camphorated Cream 25c Rexall Shaving Powder 25c Rexall Shaving Stick, . 25c Rexall Shaving Cream 25c Rexall Toilet Cream 25c Rexall Cream of Almonds 25c Rexall Cold Cream 10c, 25c, 50c Rexall To6th Powder 25c Rexall Tooth Wash 25c Rexall Tooth Paste 25c Rexall Toilet Soap 10c, 3 for 25c Every one, of the above guaranteed to please or your money back Sold only at AUSTIN'S PHARMACY PH ' ft 0: A. O. AUSTIN. Pharm. D. Store ORLEANS, VERMONT &L00 Will Pay for the Monitor 8 MONTHS Pin a dollar biil to a sheet of paper, put your name and address on it and mail in a aealed envelope. We'll do' the rest. TIME 6-3-21,- - Mrs. Myrtie Perley drew the $2.00 on Time Card 5-1 9-56 i Mrs. Geo. Stevens drew $1 .00 on 1 ime Card 5-1 9-54 Your card may be the nearest net Friday afternoon -at . three; o'clock, but you don't draw the money on it unless you are here. ' " ; v :' ' '. Save all your time cards. They are good every Friday at 53 o'clock. V , ' v xiThis is the last week-you can get those Every basket has more than one-half bushel of nice,' large, soundpeaches, and we have only 100 bought. YVe shall buy more if we. can get them, but no more Hale Peaches will be shipped after this week. V , I WEAR if IP RUBBERS i