Montour American. FRANK C. ANGLE, Proprietor. Danville. Pa., Sept. 5, !907. Back to Work. Tiie Summer play spell is drawing towards its close. Thisjveek and next practically closes the 'ason for tlie large majority of people, who have au extended vacation, or who have cot tages or live in the country, at. the lake or other resorts during the so called heated term. The public schools open the first of next week and par ents hie home usuatly a few days in advance to prepare wardrobes and pro cure other necessities forfchildren for school. The housewife has her canning and other early Fall work to look af ter, and the business man to enter in to or prepare for activt Fall business. More people are now rotuming from their vacation than are leaving the oity for a play spell. Next Saturday, Sunday and Monday will find railroad trains crowded with folks who have had a few days, weeks or months of vacation, as the case may be. It is not usually so regarded,but the homecoming of the vacationist bears a far more important relation to his own and the public welfare than his de parture. Every avenue of human ac tivity will receive a new current- of energy and vitality of the vacations have been properly spent. Great pro blems that lay unsolved before the tired eyes of workers in May or June will be taken up and a quick and easy solution found. Enterprises of mo ment affecting vast improvements which have lain untouched for mouths will be put into motion. The arteries of trade and of industry will feel the pulse of a new life and fresh vigor, affecting not isolated concerus_J>ut reaching out for good throughout en tire communities. The individual who has only his own private responsibil ities will take up his work with new courage. It may be possible that when the opportunity for a vacation came he was about to give up in despair and own himself beaten in the game of life. A few weeks at the seashore or iu the mountains has given him a new view of life and added new strength to his nerves and his courage. All this accession of renewed energy and activity pours into the currents of human endeavor a stream of in creased vitality which will be felt to the farthest corner of human work and thought. It is astonishing what encouragement comes to workers through the opportunity to pause a moment and view their work from the outside. The outgoing vacationists With all their high anticipations of having a good time carried with them a rather tired conception of their own place and work in the world. Bad as things may have been in June, Sept ember somehow looms up radiant, with a better promise. All this is the result of sensibly spent vacations, and the value of such a period of rest is only half told when we recite the number of pounds we have gained or proudly exhibit the tanned skin we have ac quired Radical Change, At the last sesison of the legislat ure, a joint resolution was adopted providing for certain amendments to the State constitution. This resolu tion will come up again for considera tion by the next lrgislature, and if adopted, will lie voted on by the peo ple of the state iu the year 1909. The amendments, which affect the people generally, relate to the change in the elections, the terms of county and local officers and of aldermen. The changes suggested ;ire sweeping ones. The pro visions of the proposed amendments 3s gathered from the pamphlet laws just issued, are as follows: 'Elections are divided iuto two clas ses. One is called the general election and the other the municipal election. These elections are to be held only once in two years. The general elec tion is to be held iu the even number ed years; and the municipal elections in the odd numbered years. Both are to be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in each of the respective years. The spring election is to be entirely done away with. The term of every county office is to be four years and aldermen and just ices of the peace six years The term of local offices that in now one year is to be two years, and the term that is now three years is to be four'years. the amendment be adopted, all j officers.to be elected in the even num bered years, whose term of office will expire in an odd numered year, will hold his office for one year more. And all officers to be elected in* odd num bered years, whose terms of office will expire on an even numbered year,will 1 hold his office for another year. All county, city, ward, borough and township officers are to at what is termed the municipal election ; and this is to be held in the odd num bered years. The terms ot all city, borough and township'officers are to begin on the first Monday ot Decem ber after their election. The time when the term of other officers is (o begin is'not.to be changed. String of Big Bass. John D. Jones, Motyrey street, on | Labor day, caugtit what is probably j the largest string of bass that has been j taken from the Susquehanna by any of the local fishermen this season. His catch numbered 10, the smallest one being 11 inches and the largest 17, while the other 8 measured between 13 and Id inches. BIG PILE DRIVER IS RECALLED : The D. L. &W. railroad company, which a couple of weeks ago began I work on an important improvement ! just cast of the station involving the I changing of the course of Blizzard's \ run and the construction of a concrete I culvert, finds the job a rnoch more j difficult and complicated-one than was j at first figured on. As a preliminary step some weeks ! ago the big pile driver was brought here and, as is customary where con crete bridges are contemplated, logs ten inches to a foot in diameter were driven iuto the roadbed to support the ! track while the new bridge is in building. These were all the piles that it was thought woxild be needed in the operation and when that job was completed the pile driver w;as with drawn. After a week or more was spent iu excavating and a depth of some ten feet was reached, it was dis covered that, instead of a solid bottom on which a concrete structure might be built, all about the spot was a sub stratum of soft and yielding clay of unknown depth. There was only one way to overcome this defficulty and that was to drive piles into the bottom of the deep ex cavation at regular intervals and on | the bottom thus reinforced to con \ struct the concrete foundation. The pile driver was recalled. It ar rived Tuesday morning but did not nearly complete the work. The piles "driven are as large as those employed to support the track. Scores of them will be required to furnish a founda tion for the concrete,besides the work is subject to many interruptions due to the passing of trains, so that yes t( r lay it was not thought likely that the pile driver would get off the ground before Thursday. Need of School for Parents. To the normal infant of the human species it is commonly a source of as tonishment that the world into which he has been put without his consent, is not his to command. His nearest relatives are, as a rule, his devoted slaves. He has never intentionally done auything for them, except to rob them of quiet thoughts by day and of slumber by night. Yet they scuttle about endlessly to amuse him and gratify his wishes. The arrangement, so far as it goes, is good enough from his point of view. But its limitations j are grotesquely apparent. His retinue, j as it turns out, is composed of servit ors of only very ordinary powers. Ambition bids him get as much power as possible, enlarging to that ! sn<l the circle of persons who accept and execute his orders. Meanwhile it is good to be amused. If one has enough money one may be botii idle and important; hence it seems to him that money is the secret of happiness. | Here is a deduction that protrudes from the surface of things if one be a j sufficiently superficial "reasoner. So, | the lesson of life having been learned j up-side-down by the growing youth, j ambition is ready to do its worse in I his case, as in many others. The succeeding years which he de- J votes to making money and paying it j out for pleasures more or less dubious are of no special interest. If lie never gets beyond this stage he has lived in vaiu. To the end of the chapter he is jof no importance to anybody except I his heirs and the other parasites that j expect to prey upon him, living or dead. , One of the great needs of the age is | a proper school for parents. Even those j who have learned the lesson that life is service are prone to apply it the wrong way. The child of their own ] is the obvious vessel to receive their | devotion and he accordingly receives ! it. But they do not look beyond him | —do not look even so far as to the ] years of his'manhood, when a taste for | usefulness to others should have been j made his by their training, not greed, | not a consuming love for pleasure and I a tendency to shirk unpleasant duties. How to set this matter right for the rising generation and future genera j rious is one of the great problems of mankind. TURN TABLE ABOLISHED The turntable, which for so many years was au appendage of the D. L. & W. railroad yards at this place, has been abolished and on its site a switch is being constructed to connect with the round house. Hereafter locomotives will he turn ed at Bloomsburg. Among other changes the supply coal, which in the j past was always left exposed, hereaft er will be kept in the round house. | From time to time a great deal of the coal has been pilfered and it was deemed advisable to give it better pro tection. Library Institute and State Nor mal School, Bloomsburg, Pa. |yo7—l9oß. New Science Hall, costing fid,ooo— Methods—Good Gymnns- j ium—New Library and Recreation Rooms —Well-Drilled Model School, with ample accommoudations—Free Tuition to Prospective Teachers— ! Healthful Location—33 Passenger , trains daily—Fall Term opens Sept. 3, IHO7 —Classes begin Wednesday, Sept. 1 14th. For various courses and rates see catalogue. Address D. J. WALLER, JR., Pricipal. A RIRD'S EYE VIEW OF SWITZERLAND Dr. Benjamin F. Diseroad, who wrote so interestingly several weeks ago of his impressions of Edinburgh and Scotland In general, has sent an other letter to a friend in Danville. Dr. Diseroad, after leaving Scotland, journeyed to Switzerland, by way of Paris and spent some time exploring the wonders of the highest peak of the Alps. His letter which is given be low shows him to be a close student of nature and capable of an interesting portrayal of the incidents of his jour neys. The letter follows: "I arrived in Geneva yesterday and today lam taking a climb up Mt. Saleve, the highest peak in the vicin ity of Geneva. Seated on a huge boul der thousands of feet above the sea, I am writing this letter. "From here I can see Mount Blanc, ninety miles away, the highest moun tain in Europe. In the other direc tion 1 caft see across Lake Geneva and 100 miles down the valley. To my left is the beautiful city of Geneva. Down the valley toward Geneva the air is clear save a few white clouds obscur ing part of a distant mountain. On my right,looking toward Mount Blanc, I am impressed with the black clouds moving up the valley, and some dist ance below me and for the first time I am looking down on a thunder show er. "It is a strange experience to see the lightning flashing below you and the roaring thunder in the valley. "Above the storm an eagle is sor ing gracefully around in the majestic glory of its power It appeared quite near as I focused my glasses on it.. I waved a little American flag at it and as it did not take fright I judged it surely must be an American eagle." Dr. Diseroad also writes another let ter, this one being written during his ascent of Mount Blanc, several days after the incidents of the above: "This letter I am writing from one of the highest peaks of Mount Blanc; 12,000 feet above the level of the sea. Yesterday I made the ascent aud readi ed Mede Groce.one of the finest glaci ers in the world. It is a wonderful river of ice about 2000 feet wide and | miles in length. The ice varies in : thickness from 100 to 500 feet and is moving down the mountain at tho rate of 15 to 20 inches a day. It carries j with it huge boulders of rock and granite weighing thousands of tons. "The glacier is white in places but as a rule it is of a beautiful grayish hue. There are great wide fissures at | several places and one is unable to see ! bottom on looking down. \ "We crossed the glacier with the aid | of ice shoes and picks, and spent the afternoon until sunset high up on the floe aud from there watched the sun sinking over the distant mountains. The sky soon changed to a delicate pink aud reflected its Color on the snow covering Mount Blanc, changing 1 the whole to a pinkish tint anil giving 1 the effect of the entire top of the mountain being ablaze. Likewise the ; glacier took on various hues as the I sky changed with the sinking sun. ; "Am very high iu the mountain this afternoon aud all around me is snow and ice of unknown depth. But ! directly in front I can look down into the fertile Chamonix valley aud see the men working in the harvest field The contrast makes the scene vtry in- I terestiug. "Am enjoying this stay iu Switzer land with two recent graduates of Ox ford, whom I met in England and j joined at Paris. This morning on our I way up the mountain we met two young men from Yale university. We had au interesting chat, aud after giv ing our respective college yells, we parted." FOOLING A CAMEL. How the Arabs Let the Animal Exhaust Its Bad Temper. You all have heard stories about the ! camel—how patient and useful be is on long, hot journeys, so that be is often called the "ship of the desert." . But he has one very bad fault. lie i likes to "pay back," and if his driver has Injured him in any way he will not i rest till he has returned the Injury. The Arabs, who wander about the desert? and so use the camel a great deal, know about this fault of his and have a queer way of keeping them selves from getting hurt. When a driver has made his camel angry, he first runs away out of sight. Then, choosing a place where the camel will soon pass, he throws down some of his clothes and fixes them bo that the heap will look like a sleeping man. Pretty soon along comes the camel and sees the heap. Thinking to him self, "Now I've got him," he pounces on the clothos, shakes them around and tramples all over them. After he Is tired of this and has turned away the driver can reappear and ride him away without harm. Poor silly camel! He has been In what we call "a blind rage," so angry that he can't tell the difference be tween a man and a heap of clothes.— Mayflower. DROP BY DROP the offensive dis charge caused by Nasal Catarrh falls from the back of the nose into the throat,setting up an inflammation that is likely to mean Chronic Bronchitis. The certain, rational cure for Catarrh isjEly's Cream Balm, and the reliet that follows even the first application cannot be told in words. Don't suffer a day longer from the discomfort of Nasal Catarrh. Cream Balm is sold by all druggists for 50 cents,or mailed by Ely Bros., oti Warren Street, New- York. MEMORIAL TO THOMASJEFFERSON To honor the author and other sign ers of the Declaration of Independ- I ence, the Thomas Jefferson Memorial | Association of the United States, a ' body corporate under the laws of the District of Columbia, and directed by a Board of Governors composed of em ! inent Americans who are co-operated with by a vice president and State : Committee in each State of the Union, I plans have been approved which call i for the erection at the National Cap- I i of a memorial building of consid erable proportion and of classic arch itecture. The Parthenon at Athens has been accepted as the design. The estimated cost will be about |ooo,ooo. This tribute will be in desigu and cost fully iu keeping with the magni ficent character of the men and the i importance of the document declaring jto the world iu unmistakable terms "that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights ; that I among these are life, liberty and the ' pursuit of happiness ; that to secure these rights governments are institut ed among men, deriving their jus | powers from the consent of the gover j ned". No appeal will be made to congress for financial assistance, as iias been frequently the case in the erection of ' memorials to others, i Modeled after the Parthenon at Ath ens, the proposed building will be most imposing and attractive. The I plans,now completed,call for a struct ure 76 by 130 feet. In general outline it will resemble the stately main build ; ing of Girard college in Philadelphia, only it will be much more ornate and | will contain many architectural re finements that the other building lacks. | Iu addition to the 48 pillars that will entirely surround the big rectangular structure, there will be an inside row iat the main entrance. Charles Bald erston is the architect and John Boyle ; the sculptor. The executive officers and board of governors of the association are : I Acting president, Hilary A. Hebert, first vice president: treasurer, Jesse B. Wilson, of Washington, D. C. ; j secretary, William Shields McKean, of New Jersey. Board of Governors : Mark A. Smith, Arizona; Judge Morris B. Beardsley, j Conn ; R. R. Kenney,Del. ; Dr. Ralph Welsh,D. C. ; ex-Gov A. D. Chandler, | Georgia ; Col. Oswald Tilghmau, Maryland and Josiah Quincy, Mass; Horace S. Cummiugs, N. H., chair man ; Philip P. Baker, N. J , ; Alton | B. Parker, N. Y. ; Josephus Daniels, | N. C. ; Charles Emory Smith,Peiin'a. ; D. L. Granger, R. I. ; Capt. F. W. | Wagener, S. C. ; Harry Lee Mavnard, v.. \ Each State is represented by a vice president, the Hon. George W. Guthrie, mayor of Pittsburg, filling that office for Pennsylvania and of the State committee in this vicinity are Hon, Simon P. Wolverton and J. Simpson Kline,Esq.,of Suuburv and George W. Ryon and Curtis McWilliams, of Shamokiu. Mr. F. Chauucey Laßnse, assistant secretary, of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial association.was in this city yesterday in furtherance of the move ment Epidemics of Typhoid F^ver. If there were less pollution of wat er in Pennsylvania there would be fewer cases of typhoid fever and few er untimely deaths. Of late years some attention has been paid to the purification o£ streams from which drinking water is drawn, but not enough has been accomplished. Tiiere is yet too much indifference to the public health aud too much pollution of streams everywhere. Last winter there was an epidemic of typhoid fever at Scranton.and many persons died of the disease. In Dun more and other towns in the vicinity there were many cases of the disease and a large proportion of deaths. The health authorities claimed that the \ cause of this epidemio was the pollu j tion of the water supply. Annually there are thousands of cases of typhoid in Pittsburgh, and conditions in Phil adelphia are even worse.3 Pittsburgh gets its water from the Allegheny riv er, which is seldom if ever clean, and Philadelphia draws its water supply ; from the Schuylkill, which is uearly ! always unclean. ; There is now an epidemic of the dis ease at Ridgway and one hundred and twenty-five persons are 111. There are not enough nurses in the town and manufacturing plants have been closed because there are not enough working men to operate them. Here, too, it is ascertained that the outbreak is due Ito impure water, and that all the iu | fection came from one spring. This spring became polluted in some way and it was nobody's business to ob i serve its condition. The penalty for this indifference to health is the epi j demic. I Man is the architect of most of his misfortunes, he responsible for most of the ills that assail him, and ho.is indifferent to the foonifort, convenience and healthjof his fellows. He should be compelled by law to re frain from polluting streams with sew age aud deleterious matter from in dustrial plants. It should.bejthe busi ; ness of somebody in every community j ' to examine the water frequently and i give notice of its condition. In short, ; every community should take common sense precautions to make impossible an outbreak of any preventable dis- j . ease. COMMUNITY IN GOOD HEALTH The health of the community as shown from the report of the local registrar, Dr C. Shultz, has, during the month of August, been exception ally good. At present there is but one home in Danville that is placarded,that being a oase of scarlet fever. During the whole month there were bat four cards displayed announcing com municable diseases. The report of the registrar shows that there were 24 deaths in this dis trict during the month of August, six being at the hospital for the insane. The death rate is slightly above that of the two previous months, there be ing 20 in July, 7 being at the hospital and 21 in .Tune,s of these being at the hospital. The returns for the births are not all iu as yet for August. In July there were 22 births and in June, 25. Recent Railway Legislation. The legislatures have all finished their work for the calendar year and it is instructive to look back over the swath that they have severally and collectively cut through the railroad operations of the country. Nearly three hundred bills have been passed affecting the railroad interests of the United States, the most prominent among them being those that have re duced the rates of the various lines. There are twenty states,or nearly half of the whole bunch, that have either reduced rates on passenger traffic or have taken preliminary steps with that in prospect. It is a radical change all along the line. The basis of it has been largely hit or miss. Ohio was the first state to declare a flat two cent rate and as the railroads in the state have shown larger passenger earnings since that was done, other states, without a close examination of local conditions, have assumed that a similar result would follow similar action. Indiana has a flat two cent rate. lowa makes the rate two cents on roads with gross earnings of 14,000 a mile; two and a half on roads earning 13000, and three cents on roads earn ing less than that. This looks like an attempt to supply a basis ajdusted to the strength or weakness of the road. It does not insist upon a Procrustes bed for the road to run on. But Mich igan has decreed that all roads hav ing passenger earnings of $1,200, a mile shall pay the two cent rate. Wis consin bases it on gross earnings of $3,500 a mile, and West Virginia on all linos over fifty miles in length. The two cent rate went into effect in Nebraska last March, with penal ties for violating the statute so heavy that the roads put it into force upon the very first day it was due, await ing final adjudication of the constitu tional questions involved by the sup reme „ court of the United States. Pennsylvania's two cent rate law will go into effect October l.although here the fight against its constitutionality is being waged in the State courts, the only state where the appeal is to tiie local trihuuals. Iu the southern States the rates have not dropped to what is the popular-figure iu the north, but low enough to arouse sharp controversies,as the country is by this time well aware. The new public service commission in New York cau make a two cent rate if so disposed. So can the new rail road commissions of Vermout,Montana and South Dakota In the States north of Mason and Dixon's line the average earnings per train mile are abDut twenty cent, higher than below it. Massachusetts is classed among the ten states from which similar legisla tion to that enacted in the States quot ed is expooted. The big railway sys tems in New York State have volun tarily lowered their rates, and any further adjustments that may seem de sirable can dobutless be effected through arrangements with the rail road commissioners But what a grist of special labor has been accumulated by all this legislation for the supreme court of the United States. Nasal jgefiTS. CATARRH m»AV\ cleanses, soothes and heals £ y M the diseased membrane. ■ It curescatarrh ami drives M. away a cold iu the head quickly. Cnmn Hnim is placed Into the nostrils, spreads over the membrane and is absorbed. Kelief is im mediate and a cure follows. It is not drying—does not produce sneezing. Large Size, 50 cents at Drug gists or by mail; Trial Size, 10 cents. KLY BKOTIIERS. 56 Warren Street, New York Sour Stomach No appetite. lea, •( atrangth, mniß CMS, headache, ooiutlpetion. bad braaWr. feneral Mobility, tour rialrfa, and aaMl of the itomaoh are all duo to tndlfaaMM. Kodol rellevse Indlfeatlon. Thla now dleaar ery rspraaenta the natural Jitlcea at dlf*r ton u they exlat In a healthy etenta*3. combined with (ho (realaat kaewa end reconetruotlve (ireperttaa. Kedai si> dytpepei* doea not only ielle*e todlfoM.w< and dyapapala. but thla feroeee remedy helpi all elemaoh treubtoo by eleanatag purifying. eweetsatag end afroagtkaataft the mucoue membrane, Mntag the ateme.it M' S. S. Bell, 1 WIT W. «k,aw " I fit Ueubled mtr rtemaaf tar Nnb H'«|» 1U4.1 cured ae uite in eaw eetaa W » mm far W»r." Hotel Mjeeta Wket Ym fcafc •eltlei ealy. KiiefH le»oee««e. mm ma* keMUet e* tea. ete 'reaerod bf ■. O. BeWtTT * M., For Sale by Panles & Co. DANVILLE COOK IN COLLEGE ROW The following <*rto;e which appear ed in the Philadelphia North Ameri can uu Monday refers to E lward Kein er, the well kuown ciief, whose home is in thi.- city : COLLEGEVILLE, Sept. 1. There has been ahe »ted contest at Ursiiiii> college this summer between the profe>sors of the summer school find the college cook, and the profes sors have come ott victorious. Urisuu-; college has au expert cook, who receives a salary eqnul to that paid to some of the professors. In fact he stands ~o high in his profession that 1.0 culls himsielf a chef. Realizing that a college, like the average in dividual, will put up with many in conveniences in order to keep a good cook, the chef, it is asserted, has late ly been treating the professors in a manner that indicated that he thought they were very small potatoes. This summer some of the college buildings have been used to accoum modate summer boarders, under the supervision of the olief, while in an other part of the buildings the regular Ursinus summer school has been con duced. It is declared that the cook compel led some of the professors to vacate their regular quarters and give them up to summer boarders, who paid fancy prices; and, further, that he has made a systematic practice of setting apart the best of everything in the way of eatables for the boarders, while members of the faculty were compell ed to subsist on the "leavings," and often these were not plentiful. Manv of the students and alumni of the col lege who happened in town this sum mer have protested against the in dignities to which various parts of the campus and buildings, sacred to all sons of Ursinus, have been subjected by the boarders. Complaints to the cook were in effectual, and finally the members of the faculty held a meeting and drew up a "round robin" addressed to the board of directors rehearsing the in dignities to which they were subject and demanding a redressal of their grievances. Some of the professors went so far as to declare that unless the cook was squelched they would look for posi tions elsewhere. When the hoard received the faculty's statement, at a recent meeting, sever al members at first thought it a huge joke, but the seriousness of the situa tion and the possibility of a strike among the professors were soon made apparent. They appointed a committee to investigate the various charges of derelictions upon the part of the pook, and finally decided to abolish the sum mer hoarding house altogether and to use all the buildings and grounds for a first-class summer school in the fu ture. Wouldn't Lose Two Days. A young man who dropped Into the recorder's office for a marriage license, finding that a license had Just been is sued containing the name of the young lady who was to figure In the docu ment sought, purchased his license all the same with the name of another girl inserted. That was his day for getting ready to be married, and he didn't propose to let small matters bar the way.—Kansas City Journal. Of Interns! To Women. To such worn da as ,ITC not seriously out jlThealthVbut woo have exacting duties tojperforin. either in the way ot house hold cares\or in social duties and funo \vhicl\scrl°"sij tax their strength, as mothers, Dr. Pierce's Favorite PiV-Vription has proved a most valuable sujXArtlng tonic and Invigorat ing nervine. By its timely use, much serious sickness*!'"'! suffering may ba' nyi»:,>d. The op'-ratiiig table and the surgeons' knife, would. It is billfveT. set'-m have to be employed it th v / I,' woman's remedy >y^r' - to in "good time. The "Favorite Prescrlp tloTrTias proven a great boon to ex pec urn I mothers by preparing the system for the coming of baby, thereby rendering child birth -life, easy, and almost painless. Boar in mind, please that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription la not a secret or patent medicine, against which the most Intelligent people are quite naturally averse, because of the uncertainty as to their composition and harmless character, but is a MEDICINE OK KNOWN COMPOSI TION, a full list of all Its Ingredients being printed, in plain English, on every bottle wrapper. t An examination of this list of ingredients will disclose the fact that It Is non-alcoholic In its composition, chemic ally pure, triple-rellned glycerine taking the place of the commonly used alcohoh in its make-up. In this connection it may not be out of place to stato that the "Favorite Prescription" of Dr. Pisroe Is the only medicine put up for the cure of woman s poculiar weaknesses and ali ments. ana sold through druggists, alt the Ingredients of which have the on anjmous endorsement of all the leading medical writers and teachers Of all the several schools of practice, and that too as remedies for the ailments for wbloh "Favorite Prescription" is recommended. A little book of these endortements will bo sent to any address, post-paid, and absolutely free If you request same bj postal card, or letter, of Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellet* cure con stipation. Constipation Is the cause ot many diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. Easy to take as candy. Windsor Hotel 1217 12211 Filbert Street. "A Square From Everywhere." Special automobile service for our guests Sight-seeing and touring ears. Rooms SI.OO per day and up. The only moderate priced hotel of reputation and consequence in Philadelphia, Pa. \V. T. BRUBAKER, Manager. JURORS FOR SEPTEMBER TERM TRAVERS JURORS. Anthony township—Wesley Pursei, Alfred Bitler. Cooper township—H. B. Foust Danville, first ward—Patrick Red ding, Henry M. Schoch,Edward Wert man, Frank Herrington. Second Ward—John Barry, Ezra Haas, Michael Werle, John Everett, William Elinbach. Third ward—Matthew Ryau,Thomas Murray, Charles Buckalter, D C. Jones, Jesse B. Cleaver, Arthur W ! Butler, G. W. McClain. Fourth ward—George Rodenhofer, John Mintzer, Elmer Newberry, Ed ward Yeager, Joseph Gibson, Arthru Watkins, Edward Blee. Derry township—James B. Pollock, Hiram Sliultz, Bruce Kelly, Harry Cromis. Limestone township—Cyrus Cole man, Miles J. Derr, D. R. Rishel. | Liberty township—S. M. Curry, O. B. Blue, Willard Pannebaker., Frank S. Hartman, W. J. Leidy, C. E. Laz arus. Mahoning township—Thomas Quigg, Charles Uttermiler, Frank Uttermill er. Mayberry townsliip—Clarence Cleav er, Valley township—E. A. Volkman. West Hemlock township—C.C. Sterl ing, Frank Crossley. Washingtonville—Burgess Heacock. GRAND JLRORS. Cooper township—lsaiah. W. Krumm, Alonzo Mauser. Danville, First ward—Edgar D. Pentz, George W. Hoke,Emanuel Sid | ler, Colbert K. Smith, George W. j Freeze. [ Second ward—Leander Kocher, John I Bates, Charles Leighow. Third ward—Harry Welliver, John Dietz, Jacob H. Goss, Peter Keller. | Fourth Ward—James Deen, David I Grove. Derry township—Peter C. Moser.W , H. Dye. ! Liberty township Bartholomew | James. : Mahoning township—John Berger. Landis Goss, George Berger, James Hickey, Jr. Valley township—John Hughes. Notice for Proposals. ! Sealed proposals will be received bj j the Commissioners of Montour Coun ty, Penn'a, at their office in the Court ! House at Danville, Penn'a, until 11 J o'clock, a. m., Saturday, September | 14th.. 1907, and will be opened two \ hours later for building three (3) high way bridges in Montour County, Penn'a,according to plans and specifi cations on file in Montour County Commissioners" Office. Bidders must submit such check as is called for in specifications as a guaranty that they will execute proper contract and bond ! for building the proposed bridges il I contract is awarded them by the Com missioners of Montour County,Penn'a at their bid. In case of failure on any bidder's part to execute contract and furnish proper bond for building tlit work, the check of such bidder will be forfeited to Montour County as 'Liquidated Damages" for failure on such bidder's part to fulfill the terms of his proposal. Any proposal not conforming to these requirements and specifications on file in the office of the Commissioners oi Montour County. Penn'a, will not be considered. CHARLES W. COOK, GEORGE M. LEIGHOW, GEORGE R. SECHLER, Commissioners. Attest : HORACE C. BLUE, Clerk Administrator's Notice. Estate of Mary K. Kearns, late of the Borough of Danville, in the countj of Montour and State of Pennsyl vania, deceased. Notice is hereby duly given that I letters of administration have been granted upon the above estate to the undersigned. All persons indebted to the said > estate are required to make immediate payment, and those having claims or demands against tiie said estate will make known the same without delay I t0 JONATHAN SWEISFORT, Administrator of Mary Kearns, dec'd P. O. Address Danville, Pa. I E. S. GEARHART, Att'y. Administrator's Notice. Estate of William'R. Miller, late of I the Township of Liberty, in the County of Montour and State of Pennsylvania, deceased. Notice is hereby given that letters of administration on the above estate have been granted to the undc-rsigued. All persons indebted to the said estate are required to make payment, and those having claims or demand against the said estate will make known the same without delay to DANIEL K. MILLER, Administrator of William R. Miller, deceased. P. O. Address: Pottsgrove, Pa., R. F. D. No. 1. Edward Sayre Gearhart, Counsel. R-I.P-A-N S Tabule Doctors find A good prescription For Mankind. The 5-cent packet is enough for usua occassione. The family bottle (00 cents ooutains a supply for a year. All dm gists.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers