DANVILLE INTELLIGENCER tstablished, 1828 DANVILLE, MONTOUR COUNTY, PA., JAN. 27, 'OS. D. AUST LUTZ, Editor and Proprietor. TIL K INTBLLIGBNCRR IN the oldest and best weekly, Democratic newspaper in this section of the .suite. It enjoys the diHtinetion of having a larger county circulation tbun all the other weeklies com bined. Itgoes into tiie homes »>f all the best Democrats In the county, and is r« ad by thousunds of Its Republican friends weekly. Published every Friday at Danville, the county seat of Montour county, Pa., at SI.OO a year in advance or 81.25 if not paid In advance; and no paper will be discontinued until all arrearage is paid, except at the option of the publisher. it ites of advertising made known on application. Address all communications to THE INTELLIGENCER, Danville, Pa. THREE OF A KIND The Russian government, the Pennypackcr government and the Danville Town Council govern ment make a good combination. They all believe in the suppression of the press. But their muzzles are made of a too flimsy material and do not sup pre s Last week we hinted at the dark clouds of sus picion that hover about the various institutions of on i' city government; today the clouds have become heavier, aud a down-pour is evident. The Borough statement is GIVEN to two pr e s each year to print. Other printing is sometimes (?) let to bids by thi, august body of Borough representatives. Last year we did not get a smell. This year the statement goes elsewhere. The value of the press cannot be considered. \V at is it that counts i Compare the various newspapers of the county to the Intelligencer and you will declare its equal is not to be found. If this is the case, why is it we don't get a por tion of the printing Are we too honest i Are we too straightforward l)o we not deserve it; Or is it because we do not offer a ''divvy" to have some of the leaders work for us ? No, we do not believe any of these questions e in bo the real cause. The Intelligencer is fearless, which is too well known. They would suppress it; force it from the lield, if possible. But let us tell you, dear people, that this sheet has lived seventy-six years and is j ist blooming into manhood. It is healthier today thin ever before, and is sought weekly by the read i"X public for the straightforward facts about you all. We believe in a free press and a free people, aid as long as Russia, Pennypackcr or our Town Council does not muzzle us too tightly we will have our say. It is not so much that China's conduct lias been de plorable in Russian eves, but that Japan lias acted so Imdly. Great quantities of potatoes are being shipped from the United States to Cuba. The dear Cubans are coming 011 famously. William Jennings Bryan did not have reference to anyone in Danville when lie said iu a recent issue of his paper, "The Commoner," that "every crook, bribe-giver, bribe-taker, corruptionist and lover of darkness would help Governor Pennypaeker to get his libel law." Both Democrats and Republicans seem to be falling over eacli other in their haste to get there on the Railway rate regulation "ieasiire. Mr. Bryan's presence in Wash ington and his call at the White House may have done something to promote the great anil harmonious stampede. Three millions of dollars have been cut off the Dis trict of Columbia appropriation bill, and the excision is perhaps popular in Texas, New Mexico, and Danville, Illinois, where the speaker of the House, affectionately called Uncle Joe Cannon, lives and thrives and is elected. Gov. Douglas is strictly in business in shoes and poli tics, but he has a strike settlement to his credit affecting the work in the cotton mills at Fall River. The strike is said to have cost five million dollars. The men have re turned to work, and the governor is given credit for the settlement. Some of the senators and representatives are said to be protesting against the contemplated call for an extra session of congress on the ground that they have laid other plans for the coming summer and these might be seriously disarranged by a spring session of the next con gress. But congressmen are paid for all their time and not for a part of the time. How would it do to cut off their pay while they are filling their "other plans for the summer?" Iu all our experiences and thoughts we are conscious of a hand. Whatever touches us, whatever thrills us, is as a hand that touches us in the dark, and that touch is our reality. You might as well say that a sight which makes you glad, or a blow which brings the stiuging tear to your eyes, is unreal as to say that those impressions are unreal which we have accumulated by means of touch. The delicate tremble of a butterfly's wings in our hand, the soft petals of violets curling in the cool folds of their leaves or lifting sweetly out of the meadow grass, the clear, firm outline of fact- and liuib, the smooth arch of a horse's neck, and the velvetly touch of his nose—all these, and a thousand resultant combinations, which take shape iu our mind, constitute our world. "Order reigns in Warsaw." "They make solitude and call it peace." "It is a mob," said Louis the Six teenth, looking from the palace at Versailles. "No, sire, it is a revolution." said a courtier. Happy the nation that can make progress by evolution. Since Lincoln is sued the Emancipation which loosed the bonds of four million African slaves, the Czar of Russia has issued a proclamation giving freedom to many more millions of serfs, and in both countries it has been proved that a lit tle freedom is a dangerous thing. But what are we to do and what arc they to do ? Humanity and civilization forever grope iu darkness. The world is full of advertis ed remedies and panaceas for political as well as physical ills, but they are quack nostrums. The worst despotism is preferable to anarchy. Nevertheless, we believe that despotisms like anarchies will be—must be put down, and that from their revolution, bloody or bloodless, better con ditions will finally emerge. SPEED MADNESS. On tho Florida beach course where Frank Croker and his chauffeur "scorched" to their death on Saturday, William K. Vanderbilt, jr., on Sunday was running his racing machine at the rate of a mi e in thirty-nine seconds. Another autoist made at the same time a thirty-five-second burst of speed. The death of Mr. Croker is not expected to ii' tjrfere with the Ormond races this week. The; e wa; a tragedy just before the Vanderbilt Cup ra<e 0.1 Long Island last fall which scarcely cast a shadow oa tho event. And a killing and maiming which marked the race itself did not prevent enthusiastic indorsement of the meeting. Speed madness permits those whom ii afflicts o learn nothing. They may not understand even the shocking pitifulness of purposeless sacrifices of life and limb. Whether they menace pedestrians in city streets, or on more open courses invite the gravest personal risks, their aberration is the same. There seems to be no cure for the "scorching" mad ness. i THE INEVITABLE CRISIS IN RUSSIA The surprising thing is that the criik- in Russia was put off so long. The people have been patient beyond all reason. They have suffered long and sutFered as have 110 others in the century just closed. At last they have struck at their fetters. Long delay makes the crisis all the more terrible. Autocracy has been forced to build so many defences that the fall will come hard, but it must como. Op|iivM>iuu has been so severe that the people who love liberty and : would dare to die for it are illy prepared to make use of it' should they gain their purposes. 1 The Russian empire is a monster surviving in Europe and Asia, a relic of the past, made possible only by reason of its bulk and the momentum given it in the days when absolutism swayed all the world. It is one of the very few nations ruled in a despotic way. The czar is the government, and yet the czar is in fact ruled by the no bility and those who have formed cliques for the control of the nation. There is no semblance of popular govern ment. But despite all this there is some loyalty among the people and love of country. There can he no doubt that the desires of the people who have engaged in rioting in St. Petersburg are for the welfare of the country. They are true patriots. They formulated their grievances—most industrial —aud pre sented them in a respectful manner. They demanded a representative government. They were met by the soldiery under the czar and were shot down by the thousands. That is the way of despotism. The saber and the bullet are the last argu ments of those who deny the equality of men. A hundred million Kussian peasants are today no better off than their ancestors were under the serfdom of the last century. The chance for life is a bare one—and there is nothing higher for them than just to live aud try to keep from starving. The industrial system is bad and growing worse as population increases. In such countries naturally the industrial problem po litical, and so it has in Kussia, and out of the great strikes which were forced by the unbearable conditions has come a demand for political reformation. This must bo the ultimate aim of the people. It matters not that they are not fit for government, that they are impractical and vis ionary, that their ideas of liberty are vague and that they probably need to be taught how to govern —they demand self government, and may get it. If Czar Nicholas had been free to act as he would have desired it is probable he would have done the right thing. To have yielded and to have granted representa tive government would have made for him a name imper ishable in the auuals of Russia. It was the opportunity of a century. But the czar did not dare do this. lie has done the wrong thing. Now it must be fought out. THE SECRET OF LONG LIFE "Jll my opinion," says Dr. Philip O'Hanlon, who has performed hundreds of autopsies for the county of New York, "no man should die before he is eighty. Indeed, I think the span of life might reasonably be prolonged to 120 or 140 years." Dr. O'Hanlon has reached in those significant sentences the view held by Metchnikotf and other investigators, and he has reached it by tho same road of analysis and experiment. He has found men who had been rejected by insurance com panies because they showed symptoms of specific disease to be entirely free from such diseases. On the other hand, in the case of Andrew 11. Green lie found a man whose arteries were "like glass" and probably had been so for years. Yet at eighty-three Mr. Green bade fair to live for years, and might have done so but for an assassin's bullet. "Nervous waste" is Dr. O'Hanlon's way of ac counting for those frequent cases where, in spite of the improvement in public sanitation and in tho art of medicine, young and middle-aged men die without apparently adequate cause in specific disease. Pool tickets in the suicide's pocket, the initable manner of men jostled in public con veyances, unnecessary exertion put forth in the most ordinary acts, are all manifestations of this waste. It cannot be said that the laboratories have come very near the secret of indefinitely prolonging life. To talk of phagocites in the blood sounds learned, but it only pushes the problem of causation one step further back. Nor has any one yet better ed the advice of Cornaro, who, born in 1407, "turned over a new leaf" after forty years of riot ous living and made the slender remainder of his strength hold out for fifty-eight years longer by extreme abstemiousness and by living in the pure air of the country, and who, when ho was enjoying the nineties, wrote: "I never know tho world was beautiful until I reached old age." THE ' EMBATTLED^FARMER. The "embattled" farmer throughout the United States has been doing pretty well, thank you, this year, according to the report of the Secretary of Agriculture. If ho wore so disposed he could pay off the national debt from the proceeds of the corn crop alone. His helpful hen in a single month could take care of the interest on the debt for tho current year. When it comes to the value of the total farm products the figures are so stupendous as to be be yond comprehension. Persons with a mathematical turn of mind may figure out how many miles high a pile of 5,000,000,000 silver dollars would be, or how many times thoy would encirclo the earth if laid side by sido along the equator. It may add to the understanding of the Secretary's figures to re call that in two years the American farmer has pro duced more wealth than has been dug from the gold mines of the entire world since Columbus discovered America. With his comfortable returns from the year's work, with the exception of rural free delivery, with the spreading of telephones and trolley lines and the impetus to the good roads movement, tho farmer has occasion for satisfaction in the life that now is. Furthermore, the country as a whole has rea son to share in his complacency. For the prosper ity of the nation is founded on tho well-being of the farmer. HIS OWN EXECUTOR. Stephen B. Roath, a wealthy octogenarian of Norwich, Conn., has just distributed a second sl,- 000,000 among his relatives. He adopts this course to "avoid any contest over his will after he is dead." This plan has some obvious advantages. The money goes where its maker and owner desires it to go, without dispute, without depletion by lawyers' fees—and incidentally without tho payment of an inheritance tax ! Tho giver is alive to receive the gratitude of his beneficiaries and to enjoy the satis faction of seeing them happy. This is one sido. The other presents the pain of consciously "lotting go"of great riches toilsome ly acquired. The passion for accumulation is one that is apt to increase with age. A man must have great faith and a truly generous spirit to become his own executor. But it ought to help him to re member that "there are no pockets in the shroud," and to reflect that one of the most mocking ironies of life ami death is the heaping up of a great fortune for heirs to quarrel over. The gambler who deals out cards or throws the dice is not the only kind of a gambler who can be relied on for getting into politics. There are several forms of do ing business by chance that need the protection of the law or the law defenders. - liUSSIAN REVOLT LED BY A PRIEST Workinqmfn's Strike Converted In'.o ;i Mo.c.nent for Com plete Revolution. APPEAL TO CZAR NICHOLAS Conditions Declared to Be Unbearable People Must Rule—Demand an End to System of Bureau cracy. The revolution of 1905 is now on in Russia. The labor movement has been converted into a revolt Against the Russian government. The mov»- ment is led by a priest and thousands of workingmen, believing that the time has come for them to secure free dom from practical slavery, are parad ing the streets 'lhe leader of the movement among the workingmen U nu interesting young man, a priest, Father Gapon, a I man of the people, self educated and trained for the pries*hood. He is said to be eloquent and iiery, and he has organiz d the workingmen in an intelligent manner. Began With Strikes. The strikes at the various govern ment works precipitated matters. Father (iapon had gone to the min- 1 inters and had given them fjtir warn- 1 ing. He hail told them that unless relief was granted the men would strike and make demands. No atten tion was paid to his appeals. Now I he is ready to lead the strikers to any length to gain their demands. | As a matter of fact the czar is prac tieally a prisoner in his palace and does not dare stir. He cannot rely on his army nor on his most intimate associates. Would See the Czar. Immense throngs of strikers, the number estimated at nearly a half million, have been parading the streets and demanding the attention of the czar personally. Father Gapon has I declared that nothing shoit of the | promise personally of the czar that he I would grant the reforms demanded j would satisfy the people. Demands Stated. j The petition prepared by Father ! i Qapon and signed by thousands of j workingmen and presented to the 1 j czar, states: "We are poor, persecuted, buiden-i ed with labor beyond our strength. ! We are insulted, treated not as men, j but as slaves, who ought to bear their ' cruel fate in silence. We have suffer- ! ereil, but we are being plunged deep- ! erin the mire and deprived of our 1 I rights. Unrestricted, stilled by <le- ' stitution ami injustice, we are perish- j ing. We have no strength left. •'Sire, we have arrived at the ex- ' treme limit of endurance. We have 1 reached the terrible moment when 1 death is to be preferred to a continua- I tion of our intolerable sufferings. I We have left our work and informed j our employers that we will not re sume until our demands are con- ' ceded. Chance for Life. •'We have not asked much; we j have asked hut for means of liveli hood, without which life is a burden and labor continual torture. "Our first request is that our masters should investigate our case. I They have refused. We have been denied the light to put forward our j claim, it being held that such right is j not recognized by law. '•Any one of us who dared raise his voice in the interests of the people of the working classes has been thrown into prison or transported. Kindness I and good feeling have been treated as a crime. 'I he bureaucracy has brought j the country to the verge of ruin by a shameful way. It is lining it to its downfall. For Popular Government. ' We pray your majesty to gracious ly receive our demands, which are inspired of a desire for your majesty's and our welfare, and the conscious-; ness of tin? necessity of escape from an intolerable situation. Russia is | too great and her needs are too varitd i aid numerous for officials only to ' rue. "National re| resent sit ion is ind j pensable, as only the people them-j solves know the country's real needs. •'llefuse not thy aid, but order a can vocation of representatives of all classes including working men. Let all be free and equal in the elections, and to this end permit the election of a constituent assembly by general so2ret ballot. '•That is our chief demand, in which all else centers. It is the sole balm for our wounds, which will otherwise speedily bring us death. '•These, sire, are our principal needs, satisfaction whereof can free Russia from slavery and misery, make her prosperous and enable work men to organize in defense of their interests against the capitalist oxploi tat ion and otticial robbery which are stilling thi» people." Suspended the Newspapers. The newspapers were all suppress ed. Working men l(?fi their places aud refused to work save under guaid. The city is under the control of the military but the belief prevails that the army is with the people What wid be the outcome can no. be told, but the revo'ution is on. The women's clubs of Cincinnati are organizing anti-spitting bauds in the schools of the city in order to create a sentiment against the habit of expectorating on the cars. The city superintendent of schools favors the movemeut. BARGAINS that are BARGAINS Wo will give you such bargains as you never had before. Our loss will , be your gain, so come early. An elegant lot of dress goods that were 50c to close at 33c yd. All flannelettes that were 10, 12J, 15c yd to close at Bc. 30 inch wide Silkoline, 12Ac qual ity, at yd. 30 inch wide Percales, 12i quality, at 9c yd. All 50c Underwear at 41c. All 25c Underwear at 21c. Laminated Cotton Down Comforts that were ours at $2.50 are yours at 81.75. All Blankets at greatly reduced prices. A big lot of all kiuds of remnants at half price. W. M. SEIDEL, 344 Mill Street. SEND US a A COW, |i Steer, Bull or Horse 80BSB hide, Calf skin, Dog skin, or any other kind Hljy of hide or skin, and let us tan it with the hair on, soft, light, odorless and moth-proof, for robe, rug, coat or gloves. But first get our Catalogue, IHB giving prices, and our shipping tags and instructions, so as to avoid mistakes. We also buy 7 raw furs and ginseng. r THE CROSBY FRISIAN FUR COMPANY, 116 Mill Street, Rochester, N. Y. " WHEN A WOMAN RUNS. (From the Portland Oregon lan.) | Prof. Mason, of Washington, sayn i that woman is not built for running, | adding that "she may wa'k like a I goddess, hut she runs like a hen,' 1 ! There is good ground for the out j spoken Prof. Mason's remark, as con temporary observation discloses, but one cannot justly attribute it to any more deep seated reason than skirts. ! Diana, who would hardly 4, give unto the Hying hart space to breathe, how ! short socven," was not encumbered I with llappinir petticoats, nor did ! Atalanta outdistance her panting—if 1 pantless—suitors under the handicap jof even a rainy-dav skirt. Nor, if magazine illustrations are to he be ! lieved, do the young Amazons of the ' girls 1 colleges run 100 yards in eleven | seconds or there about in the gait they wear at a dance." The "winning j wave, deserving note in the tempestu i ous petticoat." has nothing to do with winning foot-races, and Prof. Mason should attribute woman's (alleged) j hen like g.iit to the fashion of hei ' clothes rather than to the fashion ol J her making. j Even under this handicap some wo | men can run more like hares thai I hens. Detective Haw ley could in ' form the Washington educator on ! this point. Although not exactly ' built to rival a Duffy, llawley cat catch up with most of the truant boyi he has to arrest, but Julia Shea, i | sixteen-year old girl, tan rings arounc him and finally disappeaied under i I bridge. Anyway, some hens can rut fister than others. Differences In Charges. j A lawyer charges a man $lO for tei minutes* conversation, says an ex change, and the man insists on pay ing it. A doctor charges $1 for i ' prescription and the patient says ' 'Oh, psh'tw, is that enough?* Ai ; undertaker conducts a funeral am ' charges SIOO, and he is just "perfect ly lovely** with » very one inside an< I outside the family; a man buys a go'< I brick and apologizes for not having bitten before; an editor walks a mlli in the hot sun to get the fact of tin death; wedding or social function ' sp .'iids ilirce bonis in writing it on ' and tell* lies and praises people nj till he hates himself. Then if In makes one insignificant omission o j error, charges 5 cents straight fo l three extra papers, he's a stingy ' good-for-nothing cuss, who never get anything right; he is a most any old thing ami ought to be run out o t.iwn. Talk about the ice man. The Man Who Is In Earnest. (J. I*. Bo una tn a London Interview.) The vital necessity for the qualities of inspiration, reality and magnetisn was brought home to me wheu I wai a schoolboy fiddling at college func tions. I saw speakers who came for ward, and who—well, ju«t spoke sr many words. Then would come an orator, a man who acted the part, who lived the part, who was the pari because he believed it, and so swept the people off their feet. "Uncle Joe*' Is llonk. Honking Now. Washington, Jan. 20.—••Uncle Joe' Cannon wore hickory shirts when lie was a Representative. He put on white ones when he was elected Speaker and went to high-priced tailors Then ho installed a private telephone in his house and began giv ing the Kwel'est kind of dinners. Now he has blossomed out with an auto mobile. in which he scoots up and down the a-phakted streets. Joliu T. and Michael 11. We!fell, the well known sliowuieu, have dissolved partnership. They have had a tent show on the road for ten years under Ihe name of Welsh Bros, and frequent ly ) 1 1>o 1 in Danville. In the futnie the show will be ccnluctod by Johu T. Welsh. The show is in winter quart ers at MaoOrann's Park, Lancaster. FARMERS AND DAIRYMEN! 1 ATTENTION! Orders will l>o taken for a guaranteed 43 per cent. Protein Brand of Cotton Seed Meal, delivered off the ear ut Potts grove, at a reduced price. Send inquiries and orders by mail lo Pottsgrove. Persons having orders in, will be notified on arrival of the ear C. H. HcMahan & Bros. Special Dairy Foods and Dairy Supplies, ' HAY AND FEED Pottsgrove, Northumberland Co., Pa. A $45 flachine for S2O IF YOU NEED A SEWING MACHINE^ IT WILL BE WISE OF YOU TO CALL AT THE OF FICIO OF TilK INTICLLIdICNCER. WE CAN FUR NISH YOU WITH ONE OF THE VERY LATEST STYLES AND MAKES, STRAIGHT FROM THE FAC TORY OF THE "NEW HOME" PEOPLE The Woodwork Is of Fine Quartered Oak Finish. Drop Head. Ball Bearing. Five Drawers. Will Sell at Wholesale Prices. Drop us a Postal Card. THE NEW YORK WORLD, THRICE-A-WEEK EDITION Read Wherever the English Language is Spoken. THE THRICE-A-WEEK WORLD has made special ar rangements for the year 1905. Its already great news ser vice has been extended and, as heretofore, it will report all important events promptly, accurately and impartially. An original and striking feature of the THRICE-A WEEK WORLD in 1905 will be its serial publication of the strongest and best fiction that has ever appeared in the columns of any newspaper. The novels already arranged for, and which are by writers known throughout the world, are: CARDIGAN. By Robert W. Chamber*. A brilliant romance of the opening days of the Revolution, depicting life on what was then the border in the state of New York. Scenes with the powerful tribes of the Six Nations, and a thrilling description of the Battle of Lexington. Contains a love story, told with great force and charm. IiEFOBE THE DAWN. By Joseph A. Altshcler. A powerful story of the Civil War, describing the last days of the Confederacy in Richmond, vividly depicting conditions as the world's great est war was drawing to a close. Contains a strong love story, and the mighty struggle of Lee and Grant in the wilderness passes through its pages. THE BEDS OF THE MIDI. By Felix Gras. A story of the French Revolution, the greatest event in the history of the modern world. A peasant boy who marches with the tremendous battal ion of death, the Marseilies column, tells how they overthrew the French monarchy and achieved the eouquest of Europe. The love story is of singu lar delicacy. THE CARDINAL'S HOSE. By Van Tassel Sutpheu. This is the last touch in modernity. The hero wanders iuto a con tinuous performance in New York City. He sees a scene in a biograph which arouses his curiosity and which leads him into a remarkable series of adventures in a remote part of the world and to the winning of the baud of a princess. THE BLAZED TRAIL. By Stewart Edward White. Mr. White has opened an absolutely new field, and he is now perhaps the most famous of all the younger American writers. This is a story of the great northwestern logging camps, and tells how the character of a powerful man of action was built up and how it was finally softened by the influence of a woman's love. In addition to these stories the THRICE-A-WEEK WORLD is in negotiation for others equally as good. THE THRICE-A-WEEK WORLD'S regular subscription price is only $ 1.00 per year, and this pays for 156 papers. Wc offer this un equalled newspaper and The Danville INTELLIGENCER together one year for $1.50. The regular subscription price of the two papers is $2.00. AUCTIONEER Real Estate or Personal Prop erty Disposed of at Public Outcry. 's/ 'Jtesul/s CJuaranleed Address, Micliael Breckbill, Rural Route 4, Danville, Pu. Wednesday. March ], 1905, Ciia.». Cotner will eell Horses, Durham Cattle and farming implements at Strawberry Ridge, A mile front depot, at 9 o'clock sharp. Diehl & lluuty, auctrs. Thursday, March 2, 1905, John S. Dennen will sell on the premises in Anthony twp., Montour comity, horses, cattle, hogs, farming implements, etc. see large posters. Monday. March 13,1905, Thos. Dennen will sell on the premisses in Anthony twp., Montour county, horses, cattle, liogs, farming implements etc. see large posters. Thurs , March 10, Geo. M. Leighow will sell, on the farm on the road leadiug from Danville to Rloomsburg, 3 miles from Danville, horses, cattle, hogs, farm ing implements, household goods, &c. Sale to begin at 10 o'clock a. m. Michael Breckbill, auctioneer. Big Fire at NVilkesbarre. A disastrous He, which for a time threateue I the busiues* section of the city of Wilkesbarro Jt tried at 10:45 8 tnday night and damaged the store iind stork cf Simon Long's Sons to tin* euont of SBO,OOO. This was the mott disastrous fire Wilkesbarro has had in 1 years, although it might have been more serious. The firj is siid to have originated •)ii the third Ho r of the building, be* uitf three stories high. It looks much higher owing t > the manner in which the glass front is fixo 1. The ex ict cause of the tire is uot known but aR the store is It avily wired with electric light wires it is beli ved that this wa« the cause, although uo defect could bo louud iu the wiring. i The early bird catches uo worms these mornings. | 1 For suhool directors--men of hon esty and capability,whose only aim in seek ins election is the proper educa tion of the young and the economical and just administration of the business affairs of the sciiool board. Uasy and Quickl Soap=Making with BANNER LYE To make the very best soap, simply dissolve a can of Banner Lye in cold water, melt 5/4 lbs. of grease, pour the Lye water in the grease. Stir and put «side to set Pull Directions on Every Package Banner Lye is pulverized. The can may be opened and closed at will, per mitting the use of a small quantity at a time. It is just the article needed in every household. It will clean paint, floors, maible and tile work, soften water, disinfect sinks, c.osets and waste pipes. Write for booklet " Uses of Banner Lye '' —free. The Penn Chemical 'Vorka. Philadelphia NOT IN ANYTRUST Many newspapers have lately given currency tore-ports by irresponsible parties to thccfl'ect that THE NEW HOME SEWINQ MACHINE CO liad entered a trust or combination; wo wish to assure the public that there is »<» truth in such reports. We have been manufacturing sewing machines for over a quarter ofa centu ry, and have established a reputation for our selves and our machines that is the envy or all others. Our ** JVPIU Home" machine has never been rivaled as a family machine.—lt stands at the head of oil Uiyh Gratle sewing machines, anil stands on its oicn merits. The " A'eir Howe" is the only realty HIGH GRADE Setting Machine on the market. It is not necessary for us to enter Into a trust to save our credit or pay any debt* as we have no debts to pay. We have never entered into competition with manufacturers of low grade cheap machines that arc made to sell regard less of ;.;jy intrinsic merits. Do not be de ceived, when you want n sewing machine don't send your money away from home; call on a " New Hotne " Healer, he can sell you a better machine for less than you can purchase elsewhere. If thero Is no dealer near you, write direct to us. THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO ORANGE, MASS. . New York, Chicago. 111.,8t Loula, Mo., Atten. u, Ofc, Daiuu. I'.x., Du rnuufccofc CW._j PENNSYLVANIA 1 RAILKOAI3 The Standard Railway o: This Continent PROTECTED THIIOUUHOLT JiV THE liiterlockiug Switch & Block Syslca Schedule In Effect Nov. 29, 1903 jutttra'sujut STATIONS A.M. A.M. P.M. I'.* Sun bury Leave S »t ir» i: u rr t •><-. c r.» Kline's Grove I uii (MM 1 JSSSSSTKSli:::;;::::;;: J 112 Kff «wi |g South Danville > ... * 1 • >4< Danville 112 ' ll 10 17 221 fi 50 Boyd f7lO 112 1021 12 ot, is ■» Itonrlnu Creek 112 723 no as I 2 HI I i m Catawlssa Arrive 732 1033 «3}i «oi ÜBtawUn.......Leave j 7 82j 1085 | 230 i no# East Blooms burg .. ) ...... ' ' Blooinshurg / 787 10 43 2 4tf (J 15 Espy Furry... f7 42 11(147 .... I(i lu Btonytown Ferry I 750 flo 58 . .. I N esi-< >peck.' A rrl've I 752 10 w ** «l» Berwick 112 #O2 1J OS 8 (V. ti 40 &SkVen Ferry VO \J S» "«*«« «M « »i',, SSrViSVIS#. 52 Moeutiaqua i 1 J ™ 1 6 M Shickshimiy / 831 1132 810 701 Su,lf, ii« ?,*; y<> 1 » 1,1 112 I- l«l 1 3 55 I 7 24 I 1> mouth I*erry...... i air' riu (» i -i r.- • « >H i HUZV. 1 . Htiiifr" re -- """ 12 «« •"«' >*> riu/.U Street . UOH 12 (M Jin 7qo Wllkee*Barre... Arrive SJO 12 W Jig 7 ,fS aaa'/iioraiii) STATIONS A.M. A M 1- M P M S!KS" J< ' Vt S I 2 15 J COO SUftK 7 2* 10 87 247 002 h ..mi! l F^ry' r :r:: r?32 rlo«r2 «.«« ••"Sr f ßg«d{|S shlV- k" liVll ny .V. ™ SS Mocanuqua J 801 11 07 820 637 K»5!lL; - 112 II II 112 3 25 I 642 Beal'li Haven Ferry *" 18 331 647 Berwick* A " IV 0 818 1120 5427 00 NeseopeckLeave} 1 8 " S •' ai ! 3 42 |7 00 Sluiiw lu ii Fi,Vrv , 8:10 11 :l " :| 'B 70 » Ks V FlVrrv ° 18 :CI f llßM'l>l I7 12 8 43 '" 10 1 ,r -' ' 72o East BlooniNburg / 1150 100 725 Catawlssa Arrive 855 1157 118 782 Catawlssa Leave K;V» ii« j w -«.» Bovil'"® trcek 112 #IH fl2 05 i I 19 112 7 8# ! Danvu'le V ' " 12 ' 10 11 I <2of 740 Hnutii Danviiie::::::} u " 1214 431 751 .w.Vu-."..?.', 1 1 1 folffl22of 4 35 112 7 50 K h,. ■!/• ' • • r 1125 f1228f442 I8 08 Bin,*. '",-;" IH27fUSO f4 45 fßob "' ,ur> Arrive s 113551240 | 455 {8 10 I only'"!, 1 *»""»>-■ 112 Wops BlgiuU 06 lo Londutitor or Ageut, or on So " 11 ' I'Hnville un follows: anil J a n d 11 a m and 2 21 and .» .JO pin week-days; 10 17 ain dally. 7 n'. ) . l .M°,!!wJ o If.' Keudl »» "»d Philadelphia 11 ,n and 221 p m week-days. week-dji^s et(>n ' 711 a m and - 21 ail( l 550 p m For Lewisburg, Milton, Wllllainsport. Ixxsk . Haven, lienovo and Kane, 12 15 p m week* da,vs; Lock Haven only, M N a in and 431 pin . wc'OK-Uays; for WilllaniNport and Inti-rinedl ate stations, y 14 a in and 7 61 p 111 week-days. e . ,, n f ?! 1,e ' T >' ron «'» I'hilllpKburg and Clearlield, 9 14 a m and 12 15 p 111 week-days. For Harris burg and Intermediate stations, 0 Ha in, 12 lap 111 and 751 p 111 week-days; 431 pin dally. J ' i Kor Philadelphia (via Harrisburg) Baiti more and W ashiiigtun, 0 H a 111 and and 12 16 » and t ol pin week-days ; 4 :il pin daily. , For Pittsburg (via Harrisburg) •» 11 a m and I 7.1 p m week-days ; 1 :{| ~ m daily ; (via Lew istow n Junetioii) !> 14 a in and 12 15 p 111 week* tla>s;(\ia Lock llaveii)ol4am and 12 15 p m week-days. r Pullman Parlor and Sleeping Cars run on through trains Inttween Sunbury, Wililams portand Erie, betweeu Sunbury and Phila delphia and W ashington and between Ilarrls r burg, Pittsburg and the Wi«t. 'a '' V't. wrl ' ier hiformation apply to ticket » W. NV. ATTERBUHY, J. H. WOOD, General Manager. Pasn'r Traffic Mirr GKO. W. BOYD, General PasN'r Agt. [LADIES "" Dr. LaF RAN GO'S Compound e/ '^" v ' Powerful Combination. Successfully used by [ 200,000 women. Prlc c 25c, or by mall. LaFranco A Co., Philadtlphla, Pa. TO CONSUMPTIVES* The undersigned ha*inp been restored to he*!th by simple means,afiersulTermg for several years with a severe lung aflection, and that dread disease Consumption, is anxious to make known to his fellow sufferers the means of cure. To those who desire it.he will cheerfully tend (free of charge) a copy of the prescription used, which they will find a sure cure for Consumption, » Asthma, Catarrh, Bronchitis and all throat and tunx Maladies. He hopes all sufferers will try his remedy, as it is invaluable. Those desirin* the prescription, which will cost them nothing, and mav prove a blessing, will please address, lUv. EDWJLHD A.WILSOS, Brooklyn, New York. j ADMINIHTRA'TKIX NOTICE! ; ExUitv of Charles M. Kinn. <ic<"en*efl,!ate o the | liuroii(/h of Dancille, Montour Co., J J a. Lelters ol'admiuistration on the above es ? tate, having been granted to the undersigned all persons knowing theniselv.w in.lebud to said e date are hereby requested to make im mediate settlement and th »s » having claims I are n >tilled to presont them proporlv autiieii tieated for payment, to MltS. MAItHAKET KINX, Administratrix, : Danville, i'a. , *•* 1^ Trespass notices for Bale at this office. Two for 5 cents or 25 cents per dozen. AN ANTED—Quickly, lV\v persons to represent IOHR entablibhed wholesale house among retail merchants and agents. Local territory of few counties, $lB salary and expenses paid weekly. Expense money advanced. Commihsion extra. Permanent engagement. Busi ness Hiecessfnl. Previous experience not essential. Enclose self-addressed enve lope. Address, SUI'EHINTBKI>KNT TRAVKL- Kits, ,'i2s Dearborn St., Chicago. 12t Periodic Pains. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills are a most remarkable remedy for the relief of periodic pains, backache, nervous or sick head ache, or any of the distress ing aches and pains that cause women so much suffering. As pain is weakening, and leaves the system in an ex hausted condition, it is wrong to suffer a moment longer than necessary, and you should take the Anti-Pain Pills on first in dication of an attack. If taken as directed you may have entire confidence in their effectiveness, as well as in the fact that they will leave no dis agreeable after-effects. They contain no morphine, opium, chloral, cocaine or other dangerous drugs. "For a long time I have suffered greatly with spells of backache, that seem almost mui than I can endure. 1 heso attacks come 011 every month, and last two or three da -9. I have never been able to get anything that would give me much relief until I be began the use of Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Tils, and they always relieve me In a Short time. My sister, who suffers the same way. has u*ed them with the same results." MRS. PARK. <2l S. Michigan St., South Bend, Ind. Dr. Miles' Antl-Paln Pills sre sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that the first package will benefit. If It fails he will return your money. 25 doses, 25 cents. Never sold In bulk. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind
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