BANKERS HELD IN CELLAR? Imprisone id tomb- under eller Henry { Special). nights in a gub-cellar Pittsburg { three days and ti chamber of the ti iafe deposit vaults, 1 Re ser and Auditor John Young, al- leg: lefaulters and embezzlers, were subjected most drastic "sweat ing’ process by the officials the Farmers’ Deposit National Bank, be fore divulged any information concerning thelr irregularities which resulted in thelr arrest, John O'Leary, of K O'Leary & Com vy. brokers whon eivil has beer the authority for ment teiber and SLE w kept the undergr cham! It at pro 1 4 Xx 10 a Ol they irkwood against al d by suit 1 the state erning Reiber procedure. hat on Satur- 351 of known ‘ and You own stair DICKINSON NOT CHANGED. Eplscog ing ure hav BO( piace ENDS IN TRAGEDY. fal) A nding in a trages restaurant NEARLY Pottst which was Clayton Ise burgl commitie the tt. and as a result of robbery John Davis and Lafavett fevengood are now in the Pottetown Hospital in a precarious from inhaling g The t! ter rifling ft register the connection gas m removed $8.00 quarters The gas out rapidly and soon found to an upstairs room where victims were ing and they inconscious when found TO CUT MINERS' WAGES. (Special) .—Central Penn- operators do not pro- the present pick condition | eves af- broke and he 0 in leaked ita the wi eter leon sleep TO Altoona gvivania coal pose to continue mining wage scale of sixty-six cents a ton in effect im. this field at the present time without a struggle At a secret meeting here of fifteen of the biggest rators their inter ests were discussed, They decided on not less than a ten per cent. cut ail around, so it is sald. FLEE FROM FLAMES, Pottsville (Special). —The family of Ellas Reigel at an early hour awoke to find their sleeping apart- ments in the homestead, at Spring Garden Junction, all ablaze and them. selves hemmed in by a circle of fire. Not stopping to change their night clothes, they plunged down the stairs, which were also afire, ope Ni AMES STE EL RECEIVER. Media (Special).~~Judge Johnson appointed ex-Mayor Howard H. Hous. ton, of Chester, as receiver for the Tidewater Eteel Company, which un- til a short time ago, operated an ex- tensive Plant in that elty. seis do Woman Commits Suicide, Toughkenamon (Special) .—8uffer- ing with nervous troubles, Sarah, wife of Herbert Owen, of this place, committed sulecide by cutting her throat with a razor at her home, ' REWARDS OLD PRECEPTOR, Rey. Richard received his reward for ie devoted to charity and the up- fting of his fellows when he re- i 1 word that a man whom he helped in his studies many years had died at Haynesville, N. J., ving him 87.000, The studying been done in the West when Mr, worth wns a missionary to the inns there and the friends had all track of each other ‘he Jersey man, however, did forget, and in his will was the R. B. Dilworth Detectives began a for such a ut found for several until finally struck Ox- discovered that were right track and at once to New Jersey, where Dilworth has been staying for everal months The legacy will tand him his chari- acts little of his wi J Oxford (Special). Dilworth ved had LO, New cy Lo gearch ian, b no one nths they sS00n on he good stead a table } left him but 4 t wrld’s goods. DYNAMITERS AT Hamburg thi , has ome alarmed because three unsud WORK. 3 1h cont RAILROAD COMMISSION Poineer Oil Operator Dies, STATE ITEMS. from sury bought for the sinking fund $3 af bonds due in 1912, iv, the price ever paid for them 5.000 the at low ogt earthworm bait saturated with experiment, Policeman Dart and Police Yeadon. ean ght ordinary first as Clark John Carr. pounds of pended © mployees of the Penn vania Railroad on the Shamokin iivision sought legal advice relative to company. They they are not re-engaged lose a lot money paid into an # Of hat if rill fond. is announced by delegates who returned from the Indianapolis jon that John Mitchell and in fear t it convent Rocel Couldaniti, § years old, was burned to a crisp in a stable at Mount Carmel At a meeting of the class of 1908, Pottstown High School, the follow- ing were chosen to write and read papers on Class Day exercises: Class history, Charles Hellman; Charles Miss Blanche Bach will ead the class prophecy, and Mabel thoads and Edna Wisler will read the class statistics. After three years of legal battling in the county and Bupreme Courts, the Pottsville Gas Company won a victery in court against the Potts. vine Borough, a jury deciding that $2 is an excessive charge for a per- mit to open the streets in order to repair gas mains, The Schuylkill Canal is being pre- pared for an early resumption of pavigation. The usual damages in- curred by Spring freshets did not materialize, pated brisk coal trafic between Port Clinton and Philadelphia. Ralph Morettas, motited State po- liceman, was badly injured at Shamo. kin when his horse, which was run- ning away, fell upon him. paying the highest prices for clover geod, seed corn and seed potatoes this Spring that have been known since the In vafled during the Civil War, Fire of incendiary origin destroy: ed the new bank barn on the farm of C. C. Nella, at Rossville, while the family was obsent oat a sale, 1a¢ 108s is about $4,000, | THE PULPIT. I ——————— A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY : DR. ROBERT ROGERS. Theme: Overcoming Evil, and he is cared of his debauching sin, whatever it may be A very marvelous and astounding thought in connection with this meth. od of influencing men through this sub-conscious golf is that some of the most learned students say that it is impossible to influence men to do wrong or immoral things while in this gtate, They may be made to do fool ish or humorous things, but rebellion Brooklyn, N. Y.—In the Church of he Good Shepherd, the rector, the Rev. Dr. Robert Rogers, preached , Sunday morning on “Overcoming Evil.” The text was from Romans | 12:21: le not overcome of evil, | put overcome evil with good.” Dr. | Rogers said: This is the closing remarkable chapter. mediately preceding my thine enemy hunger, feed him; thirst, give him drink;"” “B which persecute you, bless not,” do not sound like the a Jew who was trained love thy neighbor thine enemy. They have the sound of the volce of said, “Love enemil very impressive to think how Jesus was able to fasten His teaching upon a man like Paul, who had been trained in the religious | philosophy of the old schools aul has lost hig old prejudices himse from the nar he has im- he has be verse of a rather | The words im- | text, “If | if he | less them | and curse words of under the | and hate | much more Jesus, who It is deeply peculiar your he has row te bibed the born again philosophy the separated 168i en into a and interpreter among the Luther new world of moral | been of wri regarded | the Gos ters of the said the omplete our text il} he has pistie epitome Paul ha and som about ev good nee evil, as 1 GOe8 Ii ngue red, He look 116% bi« and enmi rh his th © pow i The tw Are Curing sn and wom. nenness, drug mania, mur- and morbid mania, and JUBE woman the habit 0 parents and sous affliction | ible of cure by | advice. These are I other evils which | mrthod of treat- notice that each one in moral disorder of | and I have no doubt what; every moral delinquency is ie in the same way, The method by which this moral healing is accomplished is plain to! student of psychology. but it! is not easy to explain to others. The point of great interas to you and! me, ordinary people, is this: There seems to bo in every human being | what is called a sub-consclousness, or sublimal self. In other words, a substratum of morality-—a foundation moral nature, It is to this funda mental moral nature that these heals ers appeal. When the man afflicted with the cursed habit of drunken- ness applies for relief. he ia put into a hypnotic sleep, which frees him from the ordinary cares of everyday experience, While in this state of sleep, this moral nature of which | have been speaking is awake and is appealed to, strengthened and ine structed. The drunkard is told of the goodness of God, of His desire to re- deem a man from his evil habits, A moral stamina, an appreciation of the beauty and power of God's righteous ness is put into this sub-conscions self. And the result is that this g tmplanted, overcomes the evil he vietim goes out into life with a new power, his moral self strengthened, 14 of ying teache; which the best ; a ivpe of a hundre vield to this new ment You has its basis some kind, ever tha remodiab gcomo BOs 1 BR It is this which leads sub-conscious- What a to know guarded to and has put is suggested. a man's moral nature, and listen God how we are azainst evil, obey the advice guided if we will which us to note well method of in- is necessary It is important for this very subtle ducing a hypnoti¢ state before men can be cured. Why can- not the moral nature of persons af- flicted be appealed to in the ordinary way of teaching and advice? The reason seems to be that in moral de- linquents, this substratum of moral nature is so buried in bad habits, is separate from the ordinary and acts of life, that it {a lost, and therefore this means 8 necessary in order drive from the field the ordinary consciousness which is associated with evil. It is very imporiant to that a person may be so taken up with the physical affairs of life that the moral foundations based so deep as to be practi ally non | This is a sad state Now. as you of method it ig simple to underst least in a general way It is building up the moral founda Aa man—God's hood, goodness: the consclousn« his own ni life is to love and accompiis 0 fo Bee unre tent far a mi to arriy think new and-——at forcibly ions in father- in man flity sovereignty awaKening the that 1 10V him: of nol of in purpose rest a new i iuman hide nature Gus Mmseqguer the Powis i Let God g slat deeply set in never find a rest. temp Orary ds shall ug, the nEsert evil will if a standa hold of our moral take will permit power of itself and to s00nN » intrude: { toward the man is lesson of the Son of and cer real messages of ig to teach the truth of over ith good Let have Many men remain in gins and bad habits fear evil w 8 of evil go to their being constant all their att go and giving tion to the aivine such 1 fau begin an know in of paving end little or atten: power within them would say, stop thinking its and evils for a while earnest seeking after His goodness, His will the New Testament and know who Christ wa Learn His message; do the things + hich He asks, and you will find power for goodness hold of you and evil will have gone no The Value of Confession, “Next to not sinning.” “i& confessing sin.” A very learn od man has said: “The three hardest words in the English language are, I was mistaken.” Frederick the Great wrote to the Senate: “I have Goldsmith RAYS: “This confession displayed more greatness than all his victors jes.” Such a prompt acknowledge. ment of hig fault recalls Bacon's course in more trying circumstances. “1 do plainly and ingenuously confess that 1 am guilty of corruption, and so renounce all defense. 1 beseech your lordships to be merciful to a broken reed.” — Pittsburg Christian Advo- cate, Threads of Gold, Little self-denials, little honesties, little passing words of sympathies, little nameless acts of kindness, little silent victories over favorite tempta. tions-—<thess are the threads of gold which. when woven together, gleam out so brightly in the pattern of life that God approves.—Canon Farrar, An Uncomfortable Time, When a minister begins to drive home the truth, there are alw those in the congregation who would feel more comfortable if they could go home, (00, % WORTH QUOTING » Savers "ee Cl Th i“ could dwellers, ie, by cracker invendor further eo elf to city opineg the New inventing York 4 noiseles and a noiseless hand organ As we under New York Mail, tween a suffragist is that the man’s zhi the tand it, defines distinct and a maintains smoke i+ i the fon former a rl latter ¢ to cigarettes Xercigea If Henry the notes on the “Insti Mi: atrimon; 3 Avers Eighth's tution of pro Fi should book 0h § of South planned Com meres soston prove its Sa so “as adults Chicas talking blamsq lanta chances in the humb A man rade he found conditions of Jif an obscure and growing family, may, mors in ton ve ear has accun puinted ywiedge by laborious as more of intellectual than vast study greatness hh The ng, by Pittsburg Dispatch the goApe ro fa stifie by means of notwithstanding the fact that most successful were those which united in enforcing discriminations But the supporters of honest and impartial rates easily showed why the rebate is not “neces sary would the rai} the ear that and petition have tried make it ap; way bates eg OnLy voritism was to com WF noose the move otherwise.” reservoirs on the take 402,000, The projected Ohio headwaters would 000.000 gallons out of the floods would, by | clear to Pittsburg curable as the dry scason low water is as And in dammiag back this water the government would Kanawha alone than is to be got out nearly 400,000 horse-power, and cap able of being raised to more than » million. ‘The business men of the groat Ohlo Valley, contends the Pitts burg Press, should demand that Con gress quit playing polities and do something for the material prosperity of the country. Exports and Imports, Prior to the fiscal year 1907 mann factures imported always exceeded § values of exports. em —- "AN INTERESTING CHEMICAL EXPERIMENT Any Child Can Do {~The Result Is Almost Like Magic---Usefal Too Anything io the nature of a chem. { feal experiment Is always interesting and usually educative Here is a simple experimen which any child can perform and which is instructive in a very practical way: Get a bit of White Lead about the size of a pea, a plece of charcoal, a common candle in a candlestick, and a blow-pipe. Beoop out a little hollow in the char- coal to hold the White Lead, then light the candle, take the charcoal and lead in one hand and the blow- with the large end pipe in the other, of the blow-pipe between the lips; blow the flame of the candle steadily against the bit of whit :» lead on the charcoal and if the Lead is pure it will presently itself into little shining glob of metallic lead, under the intense heat of the blow-pipe ving no residue however, the Lead adulte crated in the slightest degree, nt golive 1 , leavi Wi is it into jead. this experi- entertaining but also of White iBETO~ bought mixed is the experi know wheth- which will ment chemical practical use Lead is the dient of pain pure and with pure rit nly noi. only +t raion, the home portant id be and That SAE Y demonst in ¥ guar- taken from a “Dutch Boy prove abso- iow-pipe test; ie to make the paint be- send a booklet on asking npan package Painter" lutely i and test fore sin blow-pipe paint to for ont Hon a “if bi free Beware of Ointments For Catarrh That Contain Me re ury, ests Le sense + of Le w & - merc smell an tem when surfaces except on § siCians, ast to good them. Ha by F BO Nery directly of the ss th the slem Ask Your Dealer For Allen's Foot- Ease, {font notion he if he didn’t FITS 8. itus manentiyon Restor vr. 8H Dance: Nervous Disagses per. wi by Dr Ki ine's Great Nerve 1 : and treat ine free, Arch? hiis , Pa of ten when because her a girl father out its Nine times can’t like you does. 10 insure the direct and quick clea of the system iake Garfield Tea, 1 Mil Herb ative it purithes the blood, eradicates disease and brings Good Health. nen AX The nice thing about a happy mar- riage is the woman always believes it. Many Professional Men, clergymen, teachers and singers use Brown's Bronchial Troches for curs ing hoarseness and coughs. most successful love affair is it's Imagination. The when Itch eared in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At Anyway there are no frozen water WE WILL DRESS YOU ELBUANTLY, IN THE LAT ASTHTY LES axp ¥ ASHIONS OF PARIS, WINDUN asp NEW YORK at MovgnaTs Cost 3119-This New York Fifth Ave, model waist is built of fine, white sheer lawn, Dwarf tucked panels, united by Val eo Inser i i | our yoke, Swiss embroidery of open and blind work, framed In Val constracis side Taos. edging. finieh collar and cuffs, Clusters of Krad. uRting pin tueks adorn the back in semi-fgure fashion. Buttons back, Made In white and three. quarter sleeves only Price $1 Guarantees go with overs patchases st wRran svery pu all of contagion,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers