Smart k Silberbere January White Sale, The Greatest in the History- of This Great Store, is Now Going On. Aside from a tale when everything in the White line will be -marked greatly un er price, several other features lend unequaled moment to the occasion. No news more interesting or more important has gone forth from this store in a long time. We have prepared carefully and Intel.-'., ligently for this sale. Fortuoe has favfagjfciis io many wy ev " ' erything we offer you will be new, clean anoMresh and bought by "V us under peculiarly favorable conditions, and we'll give you bet ter goods for less money than you have ever beeo offered before. Everything in White : Muslin Underwear, Sheets and Cases, Counterpanes, Household Linens, Towels & Handkerchiels, Embroideries, White Goods, Laces, Muslins, Long Cloths, Cambrics, White Dress Goods, Silks.' t Let every Housewife Profit By This Sale. Extraordinary Sale o Once a year we have this great Lace Sale. Every year seems an improvement ou the last. To the hundreds who, have, profited by these sales in the paot this one will need do recnoamenJatioo. Lack of space prevents pur giving details suffice it to say, it's the greatest showing of Laces we have ever attempted. . Trochons and Vals Trochons and Vals Trochons and Vals SMART & OIL CITY, PA. The Borrowed Dura. According to a Scottish fireside rhyme, alluded to by Sir Thomas Brown In his "Vulgar Errors," three days were borrowed by March from April, with a view to the destruction of some slieep, but the popular fiction of the borrowed doys is really of older date. In the "Complaynt of Scotland," printed in 1548, we find: "There eftlr 1 cntrlt in ane grene forest, to con tempill the tender yong frutes, becaus the borlal blnstls of the three boroulng dais of Mnrchc bed chalsslt fragrant flureise of evyrle frut-tree far atuourt the Ueldis." The origin and meaning of the ex pression are obscure. It may probably be founded upon that relapse Into win try weather which Is often noticed at the close of March and which seems to snatch a few days from Jhe promise of opening spring. A similar funcy has prevailed In the highlands of Scot land in connection with the first two months of the year. London Answers. A Qnalnt Introduction. It is told of the late Clarence King, the ethnologist, thnt he met John Uus kln in a picture shop, and his com ments were so delightfully phrased that Kuskiu took him to his heart, in viting him to Conlston and offering hiiu one of his two greatest water col ors by Turner. "One good Turner," said King, "deserves another," and took both. King once wrote from San Francisco to John Hay the following letter of in troduction: "My Dear John My friend, Horace F. Cutter, in the next geolog ical period will go east. - It would be a catastrophe if he did not know you. You will 'swarm in, as the Germans say, when you meet Lest I should not be there to expose Mr. Cutter's alias I take this opportunity to divulge to you that the police are divided in opinion as to whether he is Socrates or Van Quixote. I know better; he is both." A Japnne.e Gardener, Sir Edwin Arnold bad a great many stories in illustration of Japanese traits. "The Japanese gardeners," he once said, "have carried their art further than we have carried ours. A land scape gardener In Japan is esteemed! highly. He is looked on quite as we look on a poet or a painter. And these Japanese gardeners are truly remark able men. I was riding with one of them near Kioto on an August after noon, nnd we came to a steep hillside. " 'Tell me,' I said, 'how would you plun a road to the top of that difficult hill? "The gardener smiled humorously. " 'I think,' ho said, 'that I would first turn some cows loose nnd see how they got up.' "Collier's Weekly. Peculiar Time Regulation.. Chatham island, lying off the coast of New Zealand, In the south raclflc ocean, Is peculiarly situated, as It Is one of the few habitable points of the globe where the day of the week changes. It is Just on the line of the demarcation between dates. There at 12 noon on Sunday, Sunday ceases, and Instantly Monday meridian begins. Sunday conies Into a man's house on aces. 3 cents a yard 5 cents a yard 10 cents a yard SILBERBERG, me east siae aoa Decaines aibminjr uj the time it passes out or tne western door.' A man sits down to his noon day dinner on Sunday, and it is Mon day noon before he nnisnes it lu don Globe. Thi One Who Wnant Whipped. It wna In n larce school, and one of the boys had committed some nve infraction of discipline, me xeacner Announced thnt he would thrash the whole class if some one did not tell him who had committed the offense. Ail wpre Rllent. and he began with the first boy and thrashed every one In the class until finally he reacnea tne last one. Then he said. "NOW. II you Will tell me who did this I won't thrash you." "AH right, sir, I did it," was the reply. Tomorrow's Money. Moncv counts today, but the money of todoy is worthless tomorrow. The multimillionaire o Monday dies on Tuesday, is buried on Wednesday and la foreotten on Thursday. The real man who has something to hlra abovo and beyond trading, who neither recr ons himself nor is reckoned by his Aol lore, never dies. Hayfleld Mower. A Tnrklnh Riddle. Here is an old Turkish riddle which has been handed down for many cen turles nnd yet has never been an- swered: "There was once a beggar who always dreamed he was a pasha, and there was a pasha who always dreamed he was a beggar. Which was the happier?" Whr She Wa. In It. riiyllis-Chnrlle Short told me the other day that he preferred blond gins Tanliel You must be mistaken. He proposed to me last week, and I am a decided brunette, rhyllis True, $ear. but then you have a rair income. ct. Louis Bepubllc. The ConTlnrlnar Anrament. Young Lady Shopper This piece of dress goods suits me, except that I ao not think the figure In it is pretty Subtle Salesman Ah, but you surely will when it Is made up and you have the dress on. Something- to Glre Them. "Mary," said the invalid to his wife, when the 'doctor pronounced it a case of scarlet fever, "If any of my creditors call, tell them that I am at last In a condition to give them something. During a long life I have proved that not one kind word ever spoken, not one kind deed ever done, but sooner or later returns to bless the glvcK Lord Shaftesbury. Datlfnl For Once. Roy My tooth aches, nnd mamma said I should come here nnd let you look at It. Dentist I see. It must come out. Won't take buta minute. Now be a brave little man, and I'll I?oy (hastily backing off) Mamma didn't say I' should let you pull It; she only said I should let you look nt It If the people who know us best did not deceive us pretty often we should consider them disagreeable. I'uck. Mi A SUPPLEMENTARY ME68AQB." Dealing With Forestry and Question of 8tate Taxation. j Albany, Jan. 10. Governor HIggInt will send a supplemental message to the legislature on the policy which the state should pursue in relation to for-; esLs, and it may be followed by an-' other on the question of taxation.' What the governor's recommendations t on the subject of forestry will be are1 not known. In fact he has not made ap his mind what ho will recommend. The question of the policy which the state should persue in regard to the forests of the state," said Gover nor Hlgglns last night, "Is an import ant one. I did not have sufficient time to consider it when I was draft ing my legislative message, so I de cided to leave it for treatment in a pedal message. I cannot tell what I will recommend. The message will liver the whole subject." Will you communicate with tire legislature on the question of taxa tion" he was asked. "I may inter," he replied. In explanation of an interview giv en out In New York city he said: What I intended to state there was that there would be no direct state tax this year and that we would draw on the surplus this year It necessary. fcdld not intend to say what might or might not be dono next year." Governor Hlgglns arrived In Albany on a late afternoon train. Concerning his trip to Washington he said that it was unexpected to him, as it was to others. "I had no intention of going to Washington when I left Albany Sat urday night. I had not thought of it until Collector of the Port Stranahan proposed I' that evening. It had no politirnl i 'Iflcance. I saw neither Senator i ..lit nor Senator Dopew' while there. I only met the president and members of his family and many representatives of the press." HUDSON TUNNELS COMPANY. Organized to Construct and Operate Subways In New York and Jer sey City. New York, Jan. 10. It was an nounced today that the Hudson com panies had virtually acquired the New York and Jersey tunnel under the Hudson river, with all Its rights, in cluding the subway franchise across Manhattan under f lith street and up Sixth avenue to .-d street. It has executed a contract with the Pennsylvania railroad by which It will build its Jersey City terminal under the present Pennsylvania station in Jersey City, connect the New York and Jersey City tunnel with this by a subway through Hoboken, and com plete the tunnel under the Hudson river to Manhattan at Cortlandt street This will make a complete system connecting Jersey City with the ship ping district of Manhattan, -i'- w. The system will -be oorTnected with subway and elevated lines of the In terborough company and will be com pleted in about two years. It is reported that the tunnel in Ho boken will be connected with the sta tions of the Erie and Lackawanna railroads. , MARKET REPORT. New York Provision Market New York, Jan. 9. WHEAT No. 2 red. 11.24 V4 f. o. b. afloat; No. 1 northern Duluth, f 1.28ft- CORN No. 2 corn, 51 He r. a D. afloat; No. 2 yellow, 61c. OATS Mixed oats, 26 to 32 lbs. 37c; clipped white, 3(5 to 40 lbs, 3941e. PORK Mess, $13.0013.r.O; family, $14.00(314.50. BUTTER Creamery, extras, 29iJ 29ftc; factory, 1418c; state, dairy, common to extra, 17 27c. CHEESE Etate. full cream, email chclce, 12 Uc EGOS State and Pet nsj Irani a. fanev. 38(S40e. POTATOES State and western, per bbl.. $1.2501.60. Buffalo Provision Market Buffalo, Jan. 9. WHEAT No. 1 northern car loads. $1.2314: No. 2 red in store, $1.2214. CORN No. 3 corn, 48V4c f. o. b. afloat; No. 3 yellow, 49c. OATS No. 2 white, 3Cc t. o. b, afloat: No. 3 white, 3514c FLOUR Fancy blended patent per bbl., $C.507.25; low grades, $4.50 5.00. BUTTER Creamery western ex tra, tubs. 2828c; state and Penn sylvania creamery. 27tt2Sc; dairy, fair to good, 2223c. CHEESE Fancy full cream, 12 12V4e; good to choice, llllftc; com mon to fair, 910c. EGGS Selected, fancy, 2830c. POTATOES Per bu., 5055c. East Buffalo Live Stock Market CATTLE Best steers on sale, $5.50 5.80; fair to good butdher steers, $4.504.85; medium half-fat steers, $3.7504.50; common to fair heifers, 2 75(3)3.50: choice to extra fat Hellers $4.50 4.75; good butcher bulls, $3.2B 4.00; choice to extra veals, $8.75 9.00; fair to good veals, i7.5U7.7& RHEEP AND LAMBS Choice lambs, $7.807.90; fair to good $7.407.G5; handy wethers, $5.25 K.75: mixed sheep, $5.255.75. HOGS Mixed packers' grades, $4.904.95; medium hogs, $4.955.05; pigs, light, $4.704.75. Buffalo Hay Market HAY Timothy, per ton, loose, $iaM 14.00; timothy tight, bdl., $18.00(9 13.50; No. 1 timothy, $12.00 12-601 ho. 2 do, $11.00011.50. Pimples, Piles, Eczema Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Tetter, Salt Rhenm, Old Soren, Ulcere, Chllblslni Catarrn, uoma, i;napien nnuus aim lapa, Boll. Carbuncle, Felons, Itching, Bleeding, Protruding Hit, intent Bltea, Poison Ivy, and all Bkln Dlieases are cured by San-Cura Ointment Which will top at once that Hchlnr, burning pain. We guarantee thatSan-CiiraOlmmentwill not heal a cut or sore of any kind until the poison la all removed; then It henU rapidly. Prevents can. Drug-nut !c and bOo. ' VOCAL CULTURE. Hints For the Cure of Thin and Throaty Voices 3 p o a k I n fl Voice:. Tho Question of tue Importance of voice pi-ouucuuu ei-y o.iva arise for Uio t.. injur, lecturer, ucu.r. preacher it in n. o ordinary me oi tne speaking voice In priuie 1.1'-, uiid its serious ULj.eci in mo cultivui.on of tne place Uii...l ui u.o voice. lu Aiuer.cn' education In this res pect is bwioualy nog ooied from child l.ood. and iu European countries It is a Lrunc.i most emphasized. lu tho proper study of a foreign lan guage the necessity of pure diction Is tortul upon you, especially In France. This is acuulrod not by following a grammar with your eyes, but by carefully acquainting your ears to the sound of othor voices and your own. Tho eara have to be opened to the sound of one's own voice. Why should Americans allow it to be generally considered that their voices aro thin and throaty? We have as beautiful vowel sounds as ny other language. They neglect tne pure diction of thoir own English, and consequent placement of the voice. Excuses are not allowed to-dajr for harsh or throaty speaking voice's it Is certainly a neglected eiiMfla.- A singer or spoaker wU 'admired for the natural beauty ;jitje quality of his wlce and perfect fcmincla'tion, but he alone knows the difficulties he has overcome. Sound is composed of irregular and regular vibrations, noise and music, and for this quality, freedom and res onance are needed. Sir Morell Mac kenzie says: ."Without artistic enun ciation sound loses all Its greatest charms." Singing is only a higher order of speech; words are the Bplrlt and music the drapery. It Is Important though, that in speaking a musical note shall not be recognized to avoid making It sing song, not to speak In monotones, of course, but with the natural variety of Inflections for expression with flex ibility and freedom for sound. The close relation In speech and song when approaching the singing voice under the same methods of placement gives it sympathy in quali ty and character, whether the voice Is naturally pitched nigh or low. To alter this particular quality would be as ridiculous as to change a contralto, jlrtger into a soprano or vice versa. Many good singing voices are Im paired by the bad use of the speaking voice, and care in childhood cannot be too strongly emphasized. St Loulo Republic. A Flower Lamp-Screen. A pretty and useful parlor decora tion may be made of a large, full pa per dahlia or hollyhock serving as a lamp-screen. The flowers are made of three shades of pink or other col- r'l tisrue-raper, the leaves being i -,:t in tl;rrc sies varying an Inch :n c'rwm'ercnce. When finished the iowcr should be twelve inches In dia o'er. The center Is made of two I ades of yellow paper, fringed, and 3 whole Is arranged upon a paste- iioard six inches In diameter. On this all the lenves are pasted or sew ed, beginning at outer edge, after tl:ey have been folded so as to make them full. Cover the back with green pr. per. Mount on a small easel which will hold Itat the proper height, or it can be fastened with wire at the lamn-shade. The easel should be long rn1 narrow, and the flower fastened to the very top. Cut the easel from heavy cardboard or pasteboard, with three cross-pieces; strengthen, If ne cessary, with rtlff wire stitched to (.ho back of the card. Make a Joint In tho back upright by cutting and Join- lnc; with a little piece of morocco or silk. Cover all with plush or gild as liked. Cau"9 of Headache. Bofnro consulting an occulist when suffering from perslFtent headache stop and consider whether It may be cr.iiFed by some other trouble than overwrVel eyes. There are many causes for a hr-adache. Be sure that the bedroom Is well aired before re t'r'rig and thnt there Is a good venti lation through the night. Do not re main too long in the sun In summer nor too much In a high wind In win ter. Keep the digestion In good order, eat at regular Intervals and do not stoop over writing or sewing too soon after meals. Tako regular exercise and romoml'er that overstudy is worse than too little. If possible In summer tako tin books or sewing out In the air whoro inoro Is not too much glare; then tho atmosphere of the house will be avoided. To make cut glass pl'sren.and spark le It should bo sprinkled "with saw dust and thnn rubbed with chamois. TO 1 1 KK A I OI.II IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, All druggists refund the money if It falls to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on each box. 25c. o25 CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bough Bears the Signature of Ho Lot Vomt Between tho Arnolds. John Denlson Champlln told nn amus ing story of Matthew Arnold and Sir Edwin Arnold. "Some years ago," he said, "when walking with Matthew Arnold on the banks of the little river Test, near Itomsey abbey, conversation turned on Sir Edwin Arnold and The Light of Asia,' published four or five years previously. It is not necessary to enter into Mr. Arnold's opinion of tho poem. During the conversation I took occasion to ask htm If he were related to Sir Edwin. Ho paused a moment, as If shocked at tho sugges tion, and then said: 'No, we are not of kin. Indeed, I doubt If ho hud any right to the name of Arnold. I have been told that he Is of Jewish descent' A few weeks later I happened, to meet Sir Edwin at a dinner In Iondon and, prompted by, I hope, a not unpardon able curiosity, propounded a similar query to him. 'No, ho replied quickly, with what seemed a shade of asperity in his tone, 'I am not relnted to Mat thew Arnold. We are of wholly differ ent fnmllles.' Then, his face breaking into his peculiar smile, he added: Matthew Arnold Is an Intellectual dyspeptic His brain does not digest properly.' " "Maarlf.h" Hirer. , Maxwell Sommerville of the Univer sity of Pennsylvania spent nearly for ty years of his life in oriental travel and study. Professor Sommerville used some times to narrate the strange error thnt was once made by a French explorer he had known. This explorer had made a Journey to Knlrwan and had drawn a map of the country he passed through. The Blngulnr thing about this mop was that the name "Maarlfsh" appeared so many times on it A river would be the Maarlfsh river; a mountain would be Mount Maarlfsh; a village, a hike, a vplley, each . would be culled Muar lfsh. hen Professor Sommerville saw this map be laughed. Don't you know," be said to the traveler, "what nianrlfsh' means In Arabic?" "No." said tho other. "What docs it mean?" "It means 'Don't know.' A Jealous Ape. Rlr Harry Johnston, the English ex plorer, once traveled on a ship with a pet ape. It was a great favorite with all the passengers until there came aboard at Madeira a lady with an in funt. The latter received a good deal of attention jnd tho ape In conse quence became, neglected and Jealous. Sir Harry Johnstog followed it on deck one day Jiint In time to prevent a trag edy. The child had been left unguard ed fori womeut In fS. cradle. The ape had n- ' for it, pulled It from the crndle'ahd was In the act of throwing It overboard when the tm veler pounced upon it. Says v. "It would certainly iavciiurlid vj. into the sea mid nor. my arrival cauaeu me gumy ape to drop the child on the deck and scramble away." The ape was relegat ed to a strong Iron cage for the rest of that voynge. Whisky as an alteroatl to wine mav undoubtedly be employed medici nally with advantage In certain cases. both for men and for women. Hut this is very different) Ihe constant recommendutlon ) h suggested, as if, indeed, doctors-regard w-Irisky as a sort of panacea for every disease un der the sun, nnd take a perfect delight in urging its consumption upon their patients. As a mutter of fact, there never was a time when medical men were more slow to prescribe the use of alcohol In any form than they are in the present day, nor a time when so many refrained from advising Its use at all. Hospital. . Queer Neat of the Toatobnne. The oddest of all birds' nests Is the one built by the tontobane, a South Af rican songster. It Is built of cotton and always upon the tree producing the material. Iu constructing the dom icile the female works Inside and the male outside, where he buims a senti nel box for his own special use. He sits iu the box nnd keeps watch or sings neurly nil th- time- mut when danger comes In the form of a hawk or a snake he warns tho family, but never enters the main nest Saves Children's Lives. THOMPSON'S BAROSMA. Have you a family? Do you realize that the annoying kidney trouhle of Ml,lron nt vnur habv. evidenced by Irregular and involuntary emissions, will leaa in time t.o iaiai result, if nnt remptfiprl? Thousands of children, of young men and women, die every year because ot tne negiecr. u parents to give the proper care In this respect in their eariy years, ixeneruny this is due to a non-real I zatlon of the meaning of the symptoms, often to liu-Ir of knnwlnriee of the nrODer reme dies Even vour uhyslclan, nan of science that he Is, may be led astray by iha vnrvln ftvmntnmR of liver and kld- ney disorders. If your little." one gives 1 ..... .--r. j . anv evidence of a weakness of the Kio neys, of Inaction of the liver, sbljing tho linen or net Ine sluggishly. Vet Thompson's Barosma for It The rem edy is unfailing. It is absolutely narm lfisa eomnoRed of tiure "ttcAle in gredients, and prescribed a yer the world by medical practitioner of the hlo-hoct - drill unit ronutAtlOn. Mrs. Fred Lobelenz, of Tltusvllle, Fa., writes that her little son, four years bv aft'er being given tnree Domes- oi i Hud son's Barosma, was permanently curea of bed-wetting, an annoying trouble since babyhood. Mrs. N. F. Leslie, of Oil City, Pa., says her five year old daughter, after several months of in effective treatment by physicians for bladder trouble, and being In dangerous condition, was completely cured by six bottles ot Thompson's Barosma or Kid ney and Liver Cure. Ask your druggist for it. 50c and tl.00 a bottle. ' Jumping at a Conelanlon. Bragg About a month ngo I fell Into' a nice Job as assistant 11111 linger, nnd the manager told ine If I made good he'd raise my salary. Newltt-Is thnt so? What are you doing now? Cath olic Standard. Wide Awnke. rnsserl))' I thought you were blind? Mendicant-Well, boss, times Is so hard and competition is so great thnt even a blind man has to keep his eyes open nowadays1 If bo wants to do any busl- JANUARY'S THE MONTH and we're throwing out on these tables all the broken assortments, , odds and ends and slow selling merchandise we don't want to take into stock, and as the prices indicate we're not at all backward but getting the prioe low enough, so we won't need to. " , Dollar Dress Goods, 65c. Dollar Twenty-Five Dress Goods, Dollar Fifty Uress Goods, 85c Seldom such excellent merchandise offered at prices 10 much un der the regular. Mostly noat mixtures, and in a great variety of hades. 45 C.SCOTCH FLANNELS, 30 A rink a Green, a Tan, and a liluo, Nice for children i dresses, or waists you know there's a third of coiton in Sootch Flannels and they wish without shrinking. WHITE GOODS, 1-4. 1-3, AND Y bite "V K, ileeced are bait price. Waistmgi are t and t ou. It's cleaning up the White Goods stock preparatory to arrival of new goods. LADIES' 50 C. UNDERWEAR This price because of a slight mill imperfection. Tina does not begin to enumerate all (hat's on tlime tables. One has a lot of new embroideries at 15c, 19a and 25o yard that, at the prices, ia value unusual and exceptional. Ateclable Prcparalionfor As similating flic Food arulltcfiula ting theSloinachs and Dowels of Tromolcs Digcslion.Chccrt nessandnest.Conlains nelllicr Opium.Morplune nor Mineral. TSOT NARCOTIC. AwtafoujysiMiiLPtraaii Jtx.Smn Jkwmwtt - HnSrd Clmnrd.lUfnr i rumr. Apcrfccl Remedy forConslipa TUm, Sour Stonmrh.Diarrhoca Worms .Convulsions Jcvcrish ncss tind Loss of SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW "YOHK. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS Nnfi. Afwnvs rpllftble. I.af1lp,aftlf rtni(r(fist fht ( II It'll IJIT1K H ENUI.IKII III Krd Slid Ull metallic bux, iwtilti wtlh blu. ribbon. Tnk no oilier. Kefuwe dnnirrron. .iib.ll fullon.nncl Imltnllon.. liuyof your DniKKiiit, or twnd -If. in Mumps lor Particular., Tr.ll monlnl. and "Krllrf for l.allr.,' in tftter, by rrlurn Hall. 10,000 TeuiuwuMla, Bold by ail Urugxirfts. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL OO. 100 Hadi.on Nquarc, 11111. A., PA. McbUq. this 9th9W BANKING CO. PITTSBURG 423 Fourth Ave, (IyoVi&reinterejted 2) in MORT6A6E5. our Booklet will inter-)! ejtjfou . . . ' It rrmtaintf Vipwf nf PiHrKunCS llrnuMiiMtlp fl.' iuiuriiiaiioiiur uic h&ve hit money ein 6 pep cent Booklet frtx on requyt. PS. di'Gi'sr Moqck OFTIOIAK Oflict ) "X National Hank Building, OIL CITY, PA. Eyes examined free. Exclusively optica!. n A VC TO ADVKRTIRR I I "M I O IN THUS PAPKK EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. J EJuuCjI IMP Go' p '. In the Center Aisle On 5 Large Tables ia piled a lot.of goods that the price now is only a fraction of - lEV regular. WE TAKE INVENTORY - 75c, C. SOME 1-2 PRICE. 37 C. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years TNI OtRtTAUR OWOtlT. NKW ITf. 91 Write today for weekly price-list We pay the highest market prices for Hides, Calf-Skins, Pelts and Tallow In any size lots-Prompt payments Our reputation 10 years' fair dealing Bank references furnished Force, Sauer & Co. South Canal St. ALLEGHENY, PA. THE OLD RELIABLE LIVERY STABLE, OF HONEST A, - PENN. S.S.CANFIEID PROPRIETOR. Good Stock, Good Carriages and Bug pies to lot upon the most reasonable terms, lie will also do JOB TEAMIUG All orders left at the Post Office wil receive prompt attention. A. C. DREY, LIVERY Feed & Sale STABLE. Fine Turnouts at All Times at Reasonable Rates. Hoar of Hotel Weaver TIOITESTA, 3?A. ' Telephone No. 20.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers