CONDENSED DISPATCHES. totM Kventa of h Week BrUflf Clinilrld. Foot were killed In a collision on the Janadlan raclflc at Gait, Ont v The price of raw mtjrar In the Hawai ian Islands lias been Increased. Thirteen cars loaded with California Inlt were wrecked near Caddo, Colo. A relative of James McNeill Whistler Ays the artist was born at Lowell, XajM. A hailstorm In the department of JI tide, France, has done Immense lam . agtto vineyards. . Premier Balfour moved, the tlilrd MOlng- of the Irish land bill In the iMuse of commons. Severe fighting has been rejiorted be tirecn Turks and Mncedonlnn rebels. Tto Turkish troops have been re-en-Nrced. ' A auburban train on the Hock Island was wrecked In Chicago. One passen ger was severely Injured and a hundred kttten panic stricken. Tnridaj, July JU The body of Mrs. James d. Blnine haa been interned In Washington. W. H. Snvage, a conductor, was knocked from his car at Providence, a. I, and killed. ' One man was killed and -everol wounded by a collision of trolley cars ear Cleveland, O. Two young women and a man wero feowned by the upsetting of a siillboat IB the harbor of Everett, Wash. B. M. Ilayes, a millionaire of IMtts targ, and his wife were burned to fteath In a hotel fire at Koine, Alaska. W."Frste'ersof Sohunectndy, X.'Y." was probably mortally hurt and A. F. Knight muluied In an automobile uc sldent. The steamer North raclflc, from Se ittle to Vancouver, was wrecked In a log. The passengers and .crew were aascued. - Martin Wlnton of St Joseph, Mo., whipped eight militiamen who made offensive remarks about the girl he es corted to camp. A' million dollars Js the estimated lamage done by a severe hailstorm vhich passed over (he east portion Of lock county, Minn. Bruno Wollenhuunr, on aged musi cian, was found dead from asphyxia flon at New York, his violin in his hip 1 ud bow In his hand. Felice Cheenre, an Italian, and his ' .rife were struck by a Delaware and i Hudson railroad train and instantly Ulled near Saratoga, N. Y. Four Chicago anarchists who are said o have pledged themselves to effect the leath of Emperor William of (Germany ire supposed to b In Sweden. General Jose Manuel Hernandez, rev lutlonary leader in Venezuela for thlr-y-flve years, but now a friend -of Tresl- . tent Cuatro, has arrived in New York a his way to Washington, whither he . iss been sent as the official representa Ive of his country. Theodore TJnderwood, who less "than t week ago was tarred and feathered y the citizens of Teruvllle for cruel reatment of his wife and chlldron.-was .rrested and sentenced to n hundred ys In the Monroe county penitentiary 'or disorderly condoct on the street in thaca, N. Y. Monday, Jilr 20, New York city's Dags were half mnst d because of the pope's death. It Is denied that the Grand Trunk as acquired the Clover Leaf system. Sir Thomas Lipton has entertained he sailors of the Shamrock aboard the Crin. Daniel Callahan of Tonkers, N. Y., vas found dead in a hay loft. Cause f death unknown. Mother Jones and her army have left ?aterson for rassaic. Oyster Bay 1m ho objective point' 1 , Lieutenant Nicholas Yareda of tle Jexlcan navy has eloped with sixteen-tar-old Evn Kampf of Eliznbeth, N. . and man-led her In New York. ' George W. Heavers will not surren . himself In Brooklyn, and the dls rlct attorney will not disclose his case, fhlch an urrest in New York would re . ulre. Saturday, July 18. China has concluded a loan of 2,000,- 'K taels with the RusHo-Chlnese bank. The wages of the employees of the 'hlcago and Alton railroad have been :creased. The British steamer Monterey is shore on St. Fierro-Mlquelon and will a total loss. A complete crop failure is leading to mine and rebellion about Teklng and ientsln, China. W. B. MeKlnney, a mine foreman at lelle Sumter, Ala., was killed by" a egro in a dispute over pay. The Armenian monastery at Surga op was pillaged by Kurds and a num ,?r of monks seriously Injured. Major Andrew Ilussidl of Leaven sorth, Kan., Is dead from the effects fa nurse's mistake In a Missouri hos pital. A number of otfleers of the Fifth Por igueso Infantry have been arrested on charge of ronsplring against King . harles. Forty-live miles was covered In a few -tconds less than forty-live minutes by . . special trnla on the. New York ('en- ml from New York to l'lttsfield. President Koowevelt has ordered the reparation of commissions for General ioung as lieutenant general nnd Krlg dlers Sumner ami Wood as major gen rals. In the Sand hills near Crawford, , eb., W. C, Fhlpps, assistant professor ' t English at the I'nlverslt.v of Ne msku, met his death lu a sudden -;ood. Fifty negroes In the employ of the outhern Bell Telephone and Tele rph company, engaged lu building "he lone distance line through the Dojr patt ecUon of Mudlsoq county, near, ftshevlilo, N. C, have been driven out , af that section by the mountaineers. 'Four convicts, all "third termers," named Peter James, John Conilns, John j Elliott and Edward Kennedy, have es caped from Clinton prison at Dunne- mora, N. Y. vu me -c in iiini ivi'uiig inu pic-nt I wheat crop of Kansas a serious car famine exists. It Is Impossible for the railroads to get enough cars Into the j Itato to prevent a car famine. A fierce gale from the northeast ' afrnek the fleet of the New York Yacht j club, at anchor In New London harbor, ; . . 1 . - . ,....!.... a. .j.n4 Conn., and as the 200 yachts were crowded close together collisions were frequent, and considerable damage was done to the fleet of pleasure craft. Off the Marine and Field club's head quarters, Seagate, N. Y., Edwin IIollls Inw, the well known steamship and tourist agent, was drowned. The trag edy occurred with the entire flotilla of the Atlantic Yacht club about, of which T. Low was a prominent member. Frlilar, Jalr IT. Twelve have been killed by nn ex plosion In n coal mine ot Comox, B. C. Lee Brown, the negro who caused the Evansville riot, Is thought to be dying In Jail. ' Twelve employees of the Wallace cir cus were Injured In a truln wreck at Shelbyvllle, III. F. S. Kelley of Oxford has defeated A. II. Cloutte for the amateur sculling championship of England. One-sixth of the business portion of San I.uJs Obispo, Cal., wus burned; loss more than $100,000. Governor John L. Bates mode the passnge from Boston to East Boston through the new tunnel under the har bor. Alfred A. Knnpp, self confessed strangler of women, was convicted of murder In the first degree at Hamil ton, O. Ten were Injured, three of them se riously, In the wreck of the Colorado limited on the Missouri Pacific near Kansas City. After a forty mile leeward and wind ward nice off Sandy Hook lightship Shamrock III. led Shamrock I. to the finish line by (tin. 30s. The state department at Washington has received assurances from the Chi nese government that it will shortly open several ports to the world's trade. The government of Venezuela has paid to the representatives of the al lied powers the last installments of in demnities agreed upon lu the peace protocol. The Chicago city council has granted to the Illinois Telephone and Telegraph ! company a franchise to build tunnels ! for transmission of parcels and mer chandise as well us for telephone busi ness. The state department at Washington has received u reply from Russia stat ing that it neither would receive nor f consider the matter of the Jewish peti tion on the subject of the Klshineff in cident. With blue sky for n chapel, an arbor of trees for an ultar and the waters of Luke Ontario for a background, Fritz .Sage Darrow and May Goodall married ' themselves on the beach at White City, Windsor Beach, N. Y. They ure urdcut. theosopblsts. The citizens of Peruvllle, N. Y ad ministered a coat of tar and feathers to Theodore Underwood, who a year ago was tried in Ithaca, N. Y., for the .murder of J. F. Teeter. It is reported that Underwood drove his wife and Children out of their home. j Thnrmlay, Jalr 1U. 1 '.The sixth International convention of (the Epworth league has been opened AtiDetrolt, Mich. Several were killed and many in jured In a railway accident near Liv erpool, England. Emperor William has conferred med als uipon John S. Sargent nnd Edwin A. A bbjy, American artists. Three were seriously injured nnd a (dozen slightly hurt In a collision of ex press trains at Clinton, Mass. Claus Spreckels, sugar magnate, was sued by his daughter for the possession of a $400,000 block In Honolulu. A trolley car was held up at Portland, Ore., by seven highwaymen, who robbed forty passengers nnd shot one of them. Dr. Walter P. Kountz of Pittsburg was sentenced to five years In the pen itentiary for killing John E. Walsh, a contractor. William Timelier, a white man under a life sentence for murder, was taken from jail nt FJeuilngsburg, Ky., by a mob and hanged. ' Mi. Archie Swltzer died at Carthage, N. Y., from tetanus, resulting from a Fourth of July accident. She toyed With a toy pistol. George Moton, cf.lored, n contractor, shot Eplmtlm Matthews, colored, lu a street affray in Steelton, Pa., and the latter died two hours afterward. Professor H. P. Langley's house boat, containing his new 175,000 air ship, has left Washington for a secluded point on the lower Potomac river, where the machine will have Its Initial trlul. Frank Worst, president of the Trol ley Men's union at Bridgeport, Conn., has oiliclally declared the Htrlke of the employees of the Connecticut Hallway und Lighting company off. Rioting by strikers, flourishing of re volvers by special policemen and shoot ing at disturbers by regular policemen marked the teamsters' labor trouble lu Chicago. Men In the mob were clubbed on the head by policemen and nineteen were arrested. Udell at Frisno, SAN FRANCISCO, July 21. Govern or Odell of New York and his party spent the day In sightseeing. Mayor Schmltz waited on the governor and mude him und his friends the city's guests for the day. In the evening an Informal reception was extondad at th Union League club. The party will leave today for Yellowstone park, THE COLUMBIAN, DANDELION. Btsrry-rsjrfd, an da hmrt of gold, Looking up to the iky, A lifted face to the sun and rain, A untie to the psKser-fcy ; Wayilde warder, sentinel flower, What Is your password say? You know the seasons, you tell tht hour, And you hold a title. In sun and shower, To a slmpla right-of-way. Yiu have sister Inside the garen wall, Tended with human care; They grow up graceful and fair and tall, But naught of your freedom share. Their beauty Is hid from tht vulgar aaaa, They pine tn a wilting' ease.; But you you are light of the lowly way. You shine on tbe common, you star tit braes; Boon-comrade of the breese. A lifted far te the rain and sun, Eyes moist with the morning dew, . A nod and a smile for every one. And the Joy of living for you. Btarry-rayed, and a heart of gold. Planted by Ood's own hand; Too poor you are to be bought or sold, Too fret to forsake the heathy wold; Ftar-flower of No Man's Iand. Walter C. How den, In Chambers' Journal. MADAME BARBETTE By WAYNE B. CARLOCK COprrtsto,H, by Dally Story Pub. 0.) IT was about 10 a. m, I was out fret ting a little fresh air, strolling idly and aimlessly up Broadway, almost wishing something exciting would happen to puncture the morning's tire dome serenity and instill a little high life into my apathetic state. Arriving near Thirty-fifth street my attention was attracted across the way to a rumpus on the front steps of the Herald building. A man, apparently 5n the throes of great excitement, was directing the eyes of several others toward an open car headed down Brondway. He was making violent gestures with his hands and evidently had discovered something about the vehicle which amounted to grave fear or Importance. I no sooner turned them In Its direc tion than a gentleman ran awkwardly against me, nearly sprawling me head long Into the street. Glancing around as quickly as I coxild balance mys(?lf I noticed him point with a sweeping movement toward the fleeing car, his eyes glaring wildly with the fire of discovery. I whirled and caught sight of the departing vehicle, all the time strain ing my ears to overhear what my neighbors were saying, but thy were conversing so rapidly that It came to me as the merest jargon. I scarcely knew what to do; In fact I had nothing to do, wanted something to do, so I mnde up my mind that I would run. down this mystery if it took me all the way to Battery Place. Just nt this moment a second car rolled by me, nnd seeing my oppor tinity, I made a wild climb for it. My morning lethargy was fast disappear ing. Strolling rapidly to the front I noticed the preceding car Just opposite Smith, Gray & Co., where a mob of men who had been Inspecting the windows were making various kinds of frantic gesticulations. They, too, had discov ered something and were Imparting the news to each other In the most non plussing manner. I now turned my attention to details. That car wa moving along as smooth ly as possibly could be, so there could not have been anything wrong with the machinery or rolling stock. Both motorman anxTj conductor were calm and collected, as likewise seemed the passengers. One thing, however, ap peared quite singular as to the differ ent passengers positions. There were aboard just five men and one woman. Thes five men were bunched together on the two rear seats. As they were not smoking I could hardly believe this incident!, The woman sat in the second seat from the front, was large ard attractively dressed; that is, if you call a full suit of sable in the summertime attractive and wore a black chapeau adorned across the front with a single large plume of brilliant green. That she was the cynosure in ques tion. I had no further doubt. We were keeping within an average of about 30 yards of the leading car, so I could eas ily see everything that transpired ahead. As we emerged into Madison Square I detected the woman glancing side wise toAvard the Bo,ffman house. At the entrance stood a g roup of men, whom her advent had thrown into a fluster, and as they were apparently gentlemen of time and money, the per plexity of the sltuntlon became more and more puzzling. What could there be about this woman which gave birth to such commotion among both class and commoner? Then something else happened. The group of men sitting on the rear seats had placed their heads together, nnd I could tell they were consulting each other in a strange, enigmatical style. One gentleman In particular wos as suming an explanatory attitude of the most startling and conspleuous nature. The car came to a hfl.lt at Twenty-third street and the entire pnrty sneaked fearfully from the car, never looking once behind them. My anxiety and curiosity this turn of affairs simply became unbearable. Something had to be found out quick or I would probably fall in an uncon scious, sweltering fit. The fated car was now rolling into Union Rijuare. From Jn fronit of Tif fany's a crowd of window inspectors had caught on, and If the hubbub they displayed could have been seen by a party at a dlt-tance, they would have believed someone was going through one of the plate glass windows In quest of sunbursts. A thought now came whirling through my fevered brain which great BLOOMSBURG. PA ly distressed me, I could not recall that a single policeman had so far ap peared In any party of these perturbed discoverer. Why didn't somebody find a bluecoatand Inform him? Sure ly It must be of Importance to them! In a blockade at Fourteenth street our car caught up with the one bearing the terrifying black and green. Alight ing to the pavement I dashed forward and caught It just as they started on. The conductor was in the extreme rear end and was looking calmly up the street In the opposite direction from which the Car was traveling, so he was evidently Unaware of the disturbances arising on the sidewalks. In my undue agitation I caught his arm with such force that we came near crashing Into each other head-on. "What In the Devil Is the matter with this car? Who 1s that woman?" "Why why?" . "Lookt Look out there at those et lted men, Pon't you see where they're pointing?" He faced around and fastened his eyes on the only other passenger aboard. Then a the light of discovery semed to break over his features he suddenly became white and purple as a corpse. He shrank back almost con vulsively. "What Is the matter? Spenk," I Im plored. "Have have yon change for $5?" he stammered. "Quick!" I jerked out what money I had. "I just have a ten and four ones. "They'll do," he said eagerly, almost savavgely, thrusting the five into my hands. "What! the ten and the ones?" I gasped. "No just the ones here!" A signal came from the lady and the man pulled the rope. While I was trying to beat into my brain why this man had taken four ones for a five the woman had alighted from the car and was disappearing flown Kast Ninth street. "Tell me, who was It?" I yelled. Somebody shouted "Madame Bar bette!" Who in seven worlds could be Mad ame Barbette? I knew almost na much as I did before. However, I came to my senses again nnd rushed like a wild man down East Ninth street In search of the sinister, lugubrious, city-upset ting madame. As I tore along I remembered "the five dollar bill!" The conductor must have had It from Madnme Barbette In collecting her fare. Not having paid any particular attention to the passenger he had over looked her Identity until I aroused his especial Interest. Then he thought of the bill! He was afraid of it! He would have gotten rid of it at any eacri flee! He had palmed It off on me I had been duped had probably sold my life for a dollar! Or maybe. It was counterfeit per haps the madame was the chief and queen of some notorious swindling gang. I hurriedly pulled the thing from my pocket and held it up to the light It appeared faultless in every1 detail, so I tried to think of some other reason. The other reason, which wns not long coming, sent cold chills all over mc Maj-be she had some deadly contagion some horrible, zymotic disease! The thought paralysed me! I stopped a policeman, quickly de- scribing the madam; he hadn't seen her. I ran three blocks farther, look lnr Into Btores and buildings, stopped another bluecoat If ha had seen her we could approach her together, ne knew nothing of her. Then followed a futile search for hours. I haunted every street corner from Wannamakers to Chatham square to no avail. Till late In the aft ernoon I hung around Mott and Pell streets, thinking she might put In an appearance there, but she never came In sight, Sick, tired and disgusted I made my wav home that evening ond threw my self dejectedly on a couch. I had lost a day, worried myself ill and discov ered nothing nothing but a name Madnme Barbette. A morning paper which I had not yet read lay besade me. I wearily pleketl it up and glanced over Its pages. My eyes fell on a sensational article with scare headlines it had been read that morn Itijt, no doubt, bv every man and wo man in New York but myself. My blood froze In my veins! IS IT BLACK DEATH? Madame Barbette, Hopeless Victim of Leprosy and Fever, Banished by Decree of France, Believed to Have Escaped to Our Shores. I slowly drew the five-dollar green back from my pocket and stared at it feebly. Then solemnly striking match, I watched H vnnlhh In phantom plumes of greenish smoke. Squelched. Feline amenities show themselves most forcibly nt committee meetings. There was one of these latter gath ered together to discuss a charity bazaar. The chairman smiled sweet ly upon the artist's wife, and said: "You'll get your husband to let us have some little thing of his for the nrt Vuble, will you not, Mi. Mahl stlek?" "Well, you know husbands are not alwoys ensily managed, my dear." "Ah, but take him after one of your nice dinners and then put in a word for our worthy cause but, re member, we are not allowed to have anything which sells for over $25." "Indeed!" and Mrs. M s eye brows went up alarmingly; "then perhaps he'll induce one of liix pupils to dash off something for you. N Y. Times. Five hundred pounds' worth of feathers have been taken from a sin gle ostrich during' Its lifetime. it stands Atone. Doctor Tierce's Favorite Prescription stands alone, as the one and only remedy for leucorrhea, female weakness, pro lapsus, or falling of the womb, so abso lutely specific and sure In curing these common ailments of women, as to war rant its makers In offering to pay, as they hereby do, the sum of fyso reward for a case of the alxve maladies which they can not cure. This is a remarkable offer. No other medicine for the cure of woman's peculiar ailments is backed by such a remarkable guarantee. No other medicine for woman's ills is pos sessed of the unparalleled curative pro perties that would warrant its makers in publishing such an offer: no other rem edy has such a record of a third of a century of cures on which to base such a remarkable offer. MIm Kmma Weller, who Is Secretary of the Yming People's Chrintlsn AiwnciiKoti, at 1S18 MudiKin Avrnne. New York Cily, : "Your ' Favorite I'reicrlption ' is a boon to jJck and tired women, for It cures them when ofller tned tcinee fail. I kuow whcreol I speak, for I hare hud eierielice with It. For fourteen months I hnd constant hendsches ! teemed too weak to perform my dsilv dntien, and when the dy wtj over I wi too tired to sleep well. I sufTered from nervousness and indigestion, tod every thing I ate distressed me. Doctored with differ ent physicians bat received no relief. After rrsding one of your books I decided to give your 'Favorite Prescription ' a trial. Am very glad I did, for 1 (bund it was just what 1 wanterl. I commenced to improve at onre and kept getting better until, after seven weeks, I was entirely cured. I have remained in perfect health ever since, and remain a firm friend of your ' Favor ite Prescription.' " The dealer who offers a substitute for "Favorite Prescription " is only seeking to make the little more profit afforded by a less meritorious medicine. His profit Is your loss. Therefore, turn your back on him as unworthy of your pat ronage. If constipated v.e Dr. Pierce's Pleas ant Pellets. They cure constipation, biliousness and sick headache. They do not produce the "pill habit." Wori.d'9 Dispensary Mrdicai. As sociation, Proprietors, Buffalo, N. Y. A Teat of Refinement. The truest test of refinement is a uniform regard for the welfare and Interests and feelings of others. There Is a refinement which is by educntlon, but In each case, the suro indications of refinement are tho same. You can recognize the difference between those who have and those who lack refine ment by their bearing In a crowd. In deed this difference is easier perceived in n street car or In a u.arket or In a thronged highway than in a drawing room. A person of true refinement takes up the less room and claims the less concession nnd Is roadler to yield position than nn unrefined person. The way in which a mnn cnrrles a cane or umbrella In a crowd settles the ques tion In his case. And again the keeping of one's market basket In the way, or out of It, as at the busiest market hour. Is an Infallible test of the bearer's in ner grain. And so in many other minor matters. l'hiludelphla Ledger. Silk Culture In Ittilr. About F(X) A. D. Persian uionks first brought silkworm eggs concealed In the head of a hollow staff to Constan tinople. Thence silk culture spread In to Greece. A little later conquest car ried It to Sicily. From there to Italy It was but a step. Soil, climate, peo ple suited It. The Industry took root, grew, throve and continues to this day. Tho thrifty peusnnt manages to get silk and oil and wine from the same small holding. First he plants his mul berry trees, sixteen feet each way; next he prunes the heads Into a hollow cup nnd trains his vines all over them, ond finally around the edge he sets a shelter of olive trees. So nil seasons bring him labor and the reward of it ForBnttcn, but Not I.oat. "My dear," said Mr. l'ewuyhub, ven turing to put in a word as she paused for breath, "may I ask what you are scolding about?" "I can't remember it Just now," re plied his Irate spouse. "You've driven It out of my head. But if I hadn't a good reason for It do you suppose I'd be as mad as I am?" And she broke loose again. Chicago Tribune. The Only Difference. . "Do difference between do man dat's flgerin' on perpetual motion," said Un cle Eben, "an' de man dafs workln n system to bent de races Is dat de per petual motion man didn't hnb no mon ey In do f us place." Washington Star. Between the party of the first port ond tho party of tho second pnrt there's many u sorrow sanctioned by law. Schoolmnster. A Word on the Subject tf 1000 MLie Tickets. "Of all inventions the Alihibet and the Printing Press alone except ed those inventions which abridge distance have done the most for civil ration." Macaulay. The Reading Railway interchange able mileage ticket would no doi-bt be classed by the writer of the above as one of the greatest of those inventions, they can be bought for $20.00 at all principal ticket offices of the Reading system, are good for anybody to use. tor himself, family, neighbors, friends of whoever he cares to take along, and will ba honored for one year from date on lines of the Reading system, Central R. R of New Jersey, New York Central, West Shore & Bufiilo, Rochester & Pittsburg Roads, They are of course good, through to New York from Philadelphia, where the Reading operate hourly fast express service, leaving each terminal on the hour, another very important inven tion 10 abridge distrnce which does away with the annoyance the average traleler usually feels towards time tables. RAILROAD NOTES. 01 Interest to Our Many Ridrt and tht Public Is Censral. Srr.ctAi. Sunday Excursions to the Sea Shore via the Penna. Railroad. The Pennsylvania Railroad Com. pany has arranged for four low-rate Sundav excursions for the present from Lock Haven, Lewisburg, Wil liamsport, Mocanaqua, Sunbury, Dau phin, and principal intermediate sta tions to Atlantic City, t;ape ftiay, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Avalon. Anolesea. Wildwood. or Holly Beach, on Sundays, July u and 26, August 9 and S3, 1903. Excursion tickets, good going and returning on reeular trains within five days, will be sold at very low rates. Tickets to Atlantic Lily will De sold via the Delaware River Bridge Koute, the onlv all-rail line, or via Market Street Wharf, Philadelphia. Stop-ovet can be had at rnuaciei phia, either going or returnmg, within iinvt of ticket. For information iaregard to specific rates and time of ttains consult hand bills, or apply to agentf, or E. S. Harrar, Division Ticket Agent, Wil liamsport, Pa. Reduced Rates to the Seashore. The next Pennsylvania Railroad low rate ten day excursions for the present season from Sunbury and principal intermediate stations (including sta tions on branch roads), to Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Avalon, Anglesea, Wildwood, or Holly Beach, will be run on Thursday, July 9 and 23. Excursion tickets, good to return by regular trains within ten days, will be sold at very low rates. Tickets to Atlantic City will be sold via the Delaware River Bridge Route, the only all-rail line, or via Market Street Wharf, Philadelphia Stop over can be had at Philadel phia, either going or returning, with in limit of ticket. For information in regard to specific rates and time of trains consult hand bills, or apply to agents, or E. S.f Har rar Division Ticket Agent, William sport, Pa. 16 at NIAGARA FALLS. NIAGARA FALLS IS one of the grandest and most widely advertised of Nature's Masterpieces, and has been so often pictured and described that at first view nearly every one experiences disappointment but a few minutes brings back the realization how marvelously great and powerful is the flow of water and how truly magnificent is us scenic beauty. The Philadelphia and Reading's cheap excutsions every season have enabled numbers to view the Fails, and this year the. Special $10.00 Ten-day Excursions will leave Phila delphia July 30th, - August 13th and 29th; Sept. 10th and 26th, and Oct ober 8th. The Excursionists by the Reading Lehigh Valley Route, leaving Read ing Terminal 8:30 A. M., have a day light trip through the beautiful Lehigh and Wyoming Valleys, affording a view of fine mountain scenery, itself worth the cost of trip, and arrives at Niagara Falls in the early evening. A dining car is attached to train, meals being furnished table d' Hote at 50 cents per capita. Opportunities are afforded for sev eral stop offs on return trip. Tickets are good going only on special train and good to .return within ten days on all regular trains. Full information as to Side Trips, Rates and time of connection trains from other points, etc., can be procur ed from any P. & R. Ticket Agent or by addressing, Edson J. Weeks, Gen eral Passenger Agent, Philadelphia. Special Sunday Excursions to the seashore, via Pennsylvania Rail road. Pennsylvania low-rate Sunday excursions for the present season from Lock Haven, Lewisburg, William sport, Mocanaqua, Sunbury, Dauphin, and principal intermediate stations to Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Avalon, Anglesea, Wild wood or Holly Beach will be run on Sundays, July 26, August 9 and 23. Excursion tickets, good going and returning on regular trains within five days, will be sold at very low rates. Tickets to Atlantic City will be sold via the Delaware River Bridge Route the only all-rail line, or via Market Square Wharf, Philadelphia. Stop-over can be had at Philadel phia, either going or returning, with in limit of ticket. For information in regard to specific rates and time of trains consult hand bills, or apply to agents, or E. S. Har rar, Division Ticket Agent, William sport, Pa. Did It liver Occur to You thnt your teeth are given to you for a pur pose? If people would spend more time at their meals nnd eat fond which requires chew Inp, they would have leia use for physicians. HItn '8 a new prepared cereal food which has the natural flavor of the grain, and on account of it being cooked twice is easily diges'ed. "" ' rot a inusli, but a delightful, ciisp cereal of great food value. Try "It" you will like "If. Sold by grocers. a-l2iy
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers