8 OARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established its' —— PUBLISHED BY THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. a. J. STACK POLE, Pres't Ml Treas r. F. R. OYBTKR. Secretary. GfUS M- STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. 0 Publtihed avory evening (except Sun day), at the Telegraph Building, lit Federal Square. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue New York 6lty. Hasbrook, Story & Brooks. cjtern OfTice. IJS M* dl » on street. Chicago. 111.. Allen & T* ard. Delivered by carriers at «riKf|J3nL> six cents a week. Mailed to subscribers at 11.00 a year In advance. Entered at the Post Office In Harrls burg as second class matter. C /fX The Association of Atner- ( i IjMil ican Advertisers has ex 'i NSfeJpr amined and certified to ( i the circulation of this pab- i' 1 1 licatioß. The ftgares of circulation i' 'l eontaiaed in the Association's re- i > port only ere guaranteed. 11 AssiciatiNof American Advertisers | • No. 2333 Whitehall Bldfl. N. T. City i| ■si sia isdr eTerege for ttie si»»rt of January, 1914 * 22,342 * irnnfo for the year t»13—51.5T7 Average for the year »IJ—3l.l"' Average for the Tear 1»lt— I8.SB1 Average for the year l#l»-lt.« s TELEPHONES« Bell /M>st> Branch Exchange No. 1040. VaHed Business Office. 301. Editorial Room 555. Job Dept. 20J. SATURDAY EVENING, FEB. 28 MR. BRYAN'S OVERSIGHT WHEN' Senator Lodge called on ! Secretary of State Bryan and t pointed out to him that the J proposed new treaty with | Denmark provided for the arbitration of the Monroe Doctrine, Mr. Bryan ; "WAS surprised. He said that he "had not given any I thought" to that phase of the ques tion. As a consequence, the treaty I has been halted for repairs. What are we to think of a Secre tary of State who is "thoughtless" ) enough to overlook so basic a prin- ; clple as the Monroe Doctrine? If he | had deliberately over-ridden it, we might have excused him, but to con- j fess he did not know it was there, is' enough to shake our confidence in his i qualifications for the high office he , holds. Evidently, Mr. Bryan has not been so successful in running the State De partment as a side issue to the Chau tauqua circuit as he would have us believe. We had always looked upon the oyster as a lazy, inactive fellow, and now comes a scientist to tell us that one oyster will in a single season easily produce a million young ones. Probably along the same line of rea soning that always gives the poorest family in the neighborhood the largest number of children. ALLISON HILL ACTIVITIES GREATER activity among men of this city in religious work has been a topic of comment for some time in the pulpit and press. On Allison Hill, particularly, a j growing interest among men in church , activity has been noticeable. Doubtless one of the most powerful Influences In this movement has been due to the efforts of the Allison Hill 1 Men's Christian Association, organized j a little over half a year ago. In the ranks of the association are the fore- Tnost lay leaders of every church on ) the Hill. Live wires have been push- j ing the association work and every I Sunday afternoon from three to four hundred men—many of whom are not church members —attend special meet- i Ings for men only held in a Hill mov- , lng picture theater. Evidence of the energy that is back ' of the association is seen in the an- ' nouncement that the organization has; called to Its assistance Dr. Henry I Stough, the evangelist, who, next to j Billy Sunday, lias made more conver- ! Fiona, perhaps, than any other man in I t he country to-day. Early next Fall the Allison Hill i (Men's Christian Association will bring Dr. Stough to this city to wage a gigantic evangelistic campaign. A • Kreat tabernacle, capable of seating ' S,OOO people, will be erected by the nssociatlon and efforts will be made to ! tiring the many thousands now "out of the fold" into the church. Another proof that the Hill asso ciation is made up of "live wires" is • Rt en In that the organization believes! 1n publicity and is doing much of its educational work through a campaign In which newspaper advertising plays j a big part. A Boston newspaper tells its readers that "there are indications of a lively political battle in Pennsylvania this year." Indications? Battle? Man! Man! Your words don't begin to express It. MTDDLETOWN POST OFFICE IT Is to be hoped that the effort of Congressman Kreider to obtain an appropriation for the erection of a ; post office at Middletown will be successful. There is no question of 1 the need of a federal building there. ; The town is growing rapidly and is ! one of the most important business I between Harrlsburg and Lan caster. Mr. Kreider shows a keen j appreciation of local conditions in directing his energies toward its fur- j ther Improvement. Residents of the Eighteenth Con gressional district are beginning to j realize that in Mr. Kreider they have a representative who is "on the job" ! and who is doing good work for them. As a practical business man Mr. : Kreider is looking after his congres sional duties in the same manner as he attends to his private affairs. His keen Judgment is becoming known to SATURDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 28, 1914. his colleagues and as a consequence he is one of the most popular of the new members. While Mr. Kreider can take the floor i of the Ilo'ise and discuss ably any i legislation under consideration, his I time is largely given to committees, i where most of the effective legislative j work is done. j Pride goetli before a fall. This ap ! plies to the man who declines to in ; crease the size of his feet with rubbers. I : KEEPING POPULAR FAVOR THE job of being governor is a thankless one. In the ordinary course of things a new governor is a much courted man.. He has a legislative policy to outline, a 1 host of appointments to make and j many bills to sign. He is usually popu lar until after the second term of the ; Legislature during his four year in cumbency. Then the rank and file and ] those who have axes to grind are or- j dinarilv content to let the governor j play golf to his heart's content, and jhe is not even called upon to race! i about the State making speeches. j j This applies in general to good gov-j | ernors and poor governors alike. But it does not apply to Governor Tener. IHe is the one exception. He is more j I in demand now than when he was in augurated. He could be out on the speech-making circuit every day if he| I would and then not fill all requests for : his presence. The answer would seem to He to a ! considerable extent in baseball. The head of a major league is a bigger man •in Fandom than the chief executive of! j a mere State, no matter how just and | efficient he may be. The hobble-skirt lias been found to j i have originated in ancient Egypt. At j that few of the mummies have anything | on the fashions of to-day. 1 THE LONESOME Mlt. GLACKEXS AT the age of fifty-seven years and after two previous matrimonial ventures which do not seem to have been entirely happy, Isaac I Glackens, of Philadelphia, has de ! clared himself a candidate for a third j marriage. Mr. Glackens says he is "lonesome," j but, in spite of that fact, he is very exacting. He announces that he will j j entertain no applications from young 'and inexperienced women and that the future Mrs. Glackens must not be j a suffragette, or one who devotes all i her time to dress and society. She j must have had experience in house keeping and a qualification which will jbo insisted upon is that she be able ! to make good pies, which, by the way, i seems to be entirely reasonable, j Mr. Glackens would prefer a good ■ looking wife, but if she possesses all the other qualifications, he is willing to waive her appearances. But Mr. Glackens is lonesome, that is the significant thing. Beggars and lonesome men cannot be too choicy and the probabilities are that when Mr. Glackens finally takes unto him self No. 3, it will be discovered that he has done just what most of the rest of us do —take them as we find them. • You owe it to your children to edu cate them. Part of every good educa tion is familiarity with foreign lands. The Telegraph has arranged to bring the whole world to Harrisburg. Do not deny the little folks a visit to Chestnut Street Hall next week. The Niblo pic j tures are the best of their kind, and the I Telegraph has arranged to exhibit them j here for ten cents admission, but to get I the reduced rate don't forget the | coupon. ■ ~~ REDFIELD, THE FUNNY MAN TIE funniest man in President Wilson's cabinet is one who has absolutely no sense of humor and who entertains us by his ab | surd solemnity. Secretary Redfield Is ino Mark Twain. He cannot play on , words and get off striking "cute I things" as Vice-President Marshall ; does. He is not witty like Bryan, but ' he can say and do the most ridiculous j things ever attributed to a Depart - j ment Secretary. ! Just now he is engaged in the old ■ task of touring the country for the I purpose of telling the people how ! prosperous they are. It has never occurred to him that prosperity does not need to be pointed out. A man | knows without being told when ho is hungry and when he is not hungry. But the big laugh In Secretary Redficld's recent performances is his .serious assertion that the tariff has ; lowered the cost of living by attract ing food supplies from other coun tries. He tells us how mucli meat and butter have come in. how many ' bushels of potatoes and crates ot eggs. i He does not quote a single instance ' in which the prices of these products have not gone up instead of down j since the passage of the Underwood i tariff law. A government statistician has fig ured out from the imports that the total amount of beef brought in since { October first would allow every man, i woman and child in the country ex actly half a pound in five months and : that the total butter imports amount I to only one-half ounce per capita for the same period of time. It is not | necessary to Inquire further for the ' causes of the Underwood law's failure ! to bring down the high cost of living, | although it is very easy to see how j an increase of approximately 225,000 .cattle and an increase of 4,200,000 ! bushels of corn and an increase of j 13,200,000 bushels of oats and an I increase of 2,800,000 bushels of pota | toes In the imports for five months ! would have a very serious effect upon the prices quoted to our producers. If it is any satisfaction to Mr. Red ' Held to know that his party's tariff | has hit the farmer, he may be as sured that the facts bear him out, but ■ before he presumes to boast of the law's benefit to the consumer, he had better consult the housewife who knows a great deal more about it than he does. ( evening QDAT Anybody seen a bluebird? The daintily-colored harbingers of Spring are due and people wlio liave an eye on the birds say that they expect to see tlicni any day in Capitol or Reser voir Park since the tirst robins have been noticed looking over what house keeping accommodations the trees af ford this Spring. Generally bluebirds have been noticed about Washington's birthday, but the decidedly wintry weather which prevails just at present has apparently kept even the scouts of the bluebird migration from ven turing above Mason St Dixon's line. Some of the bird sharps say that the bluebird is a real advance guard of the feathered tribe, but it is a matter of local record that robins are the tirst to get here from Ihc South. The bluebirds are not seen much in the Capitol or riverside parks, preferring the more undisturbed sections of Kes ervoir or Wildwood Park. In the country they abound, except where sparrows have gotten the upper hand. As soon as the bluebirds appear we may look for something like real Spring weather and as March Is close at hand, the present severe conditions will not prevail very much longer. When the bluebirds arrive they will be closely followed by the blackbirds and then the farmers will commence to think about ploughing. The black bird, however, is one of the foxiest ot birds, escept when hunters are .about, and it stands to reason that as long as the weather is so severe as to drive the crows into yards to get food, that there will be no blackbirds around. rhero was a lot of telephoning and asking of questions at the Post Office to-day about the income tax, because a number of people were not quite sure in their minds as to whether it would hit them or not. Most of the questions were asked at the stamp window and people were referred across the way to the offices of the revenue collector's deputy, who is in charge of such matters for the official who sits at Lancaster. Some of the inquiries betokened anguish of mind for fear that arrest would follow if a blunder was made, and the clerks soothingly explained that there were opportunities for corrections offered. During the day the Auditor General's Deparanient, which was on the jump anyway with the rush of bank stock and general corporation reports, was asked a number of questions about the tax by folks who seemed to think that that branch of the State government had something to do with it. A fine Spring day—overhead—and a, building operation can attract a "building committee" about as soon as anything that can be arranged. \ esterday's balmy air caused a good many people to collect in the streets and the building operations at the Federal Building were quickly sur rounded by a large and much inter ested committee. At one time a fore man thought he needed more men or else determined to have a little fun. So he asked several of the men stand ing around if they wanted jobs. None did. The Harrisburg Railways Company is rapidly equipping cars with jacks, especially in the winter weather when run-offs, are apt to occur, and most of the cars on the runs through the business sections are prepared for emergencies. The local company was one of the first to have a liberal sup ply of jacks provided for accidents, although in some cities such articles are very hard to find. "You Harrisburg people sit here and do not realize how splendidly your highways are kept clean," said a trav eling man at one of the hotels to-day. He is a man whose territory covers this State and part of New York and Ohio, and he gets into almost every city the size of Harrisburg in the three States. "I do not know of any place that keeps its streets in cleaner condi tion than you do in Harrisburg, sum mer or winter. Why in the last few days I have been in five Pennsylvania cities and not one of them could show streets as clear of snow as I find Mar ket street." "What's the cause of all the rush?" was asked of the ticket chopper at one of the theaters last night. "Big gest Friday and biggest night we have had except Saturday for weeks. 1 think it is due to the mild weather. YoVi see the people have been housed up by the snow and the winds and this Is the first nice evening. So they just came out. And they came out in crowds," replied the man at the door. PREACHERS' SONS WHO MADE GOOD [From the Christian Herald.] When a minister's son or daughter goes wrong, the chronic critics and the uncharitable in spirit point to them and say, "Why do preachers' children turn out badly?" Nothing could be farther from the truth than such a notion. Ministers' children turn out well, better than any others in the com munity. There are exceptions, but this is the rule. This fact has been recent ly mentioned in a sermon by the Rev. Robert Hugh Morris, preached in the Central North Broad Street Presby terian Church, of Philadelphia. Among other things Dr. Morris said: "Of the fifty-one names in the Na tional Hall of Fame, twenty are from ministers' homes: Roger" Williams, Jonathan Edwards, William Ellery Cliannlng. Emerson, Holmes, Henry Elay. Agassiz, Bancroft, Beecher. Sttrtve, owell and Phillips Brooks, being fifty times more than a proportion proper if other families measured up to the stan dard. Of our twenty-seven Presidents three were ministers' sons, Arthur. Cleveland and Wilson. The wives of live were ministers' daughters: Mrs John Adams. Mrs. Millard Fillmore Mrs. Franklin Pierce, Mrs. Benjamin Harrison and Mrs. Woodrow Wilson. i Known-peo pi fgq —W. C. Fowncs, Jr.. noted Pitts burgh golfer, has laid out a golf course for indoor practice in a Pittsburgh building. —The Rev. Frank Dean Miller, prominent clergyman or Wllkinsburg! will take a charge in Altoona. —John A. Topping, the steel manu facturer, lias gone to Jekvl Island, S. C. —Dr. Stewart M. Neff, the Phila delphia director of health, who was 00 yesterday, was wired best wishes by many friends. He is ill in Atlantic City. —E. T. Stotesbury, the Philadelphia banker celebrated his ijixty-tifth birthday yesterday. —Ex-Mayor S. R. Carothers, of Chester, believes that military train ing should be given every youth. BOOFCSand g&a NEW METHOD OF HISTORICAL IN STRUCTION What should prove to be a highly successful method of instructing the child mind in the history of the coun try is that given in Mary Hazleton Wade's new volume. "Abraham Lin coln, a Story and a Play." The first fifty pages are devoted to a short simple story of Lincoln's Life. Of course many such have appeared, but the play Ide taken up in the last part of the book is new. What could be more in- I structive than the actual acting of a [school class of the life of Lincoln. The plot and language are so simple that this is made possible with the least amount of pre-urrangement This is the tirst of a series of vol umes that will each take up one of the I gTeat American heroes. BRUMBAUGH READY TO ANSWER GALL The Superintendent Says He Will Rnn if the Plain People Ask Him to Stand ALTER MAY ENTER THE RACE Governor Again Backs Brumbaugh —Democrats in a Pepperjig Over the Judgeships Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh, the Pliila jdelphia superintendent of schools, who is being strongly urged to enter the ■ race for the Republican nomination i for Governor, said last night in Phila ' delphia that he would not be a candl i date of any politicians, and added j "The only call I would listen to would i be the call of the common people, the ] people who work with their hands, jM\ people are up-State, not only here jin Philadelphia. I would not let the i politicians make me a candidate be fore the people, but 1 would listen to the call ot' the people themselves." It is believed that, because of the strong endorsements being given to Dr. Brumbaugh all over the State that he will consent to be a candidate. Governor Tener in Philadelphia last night reiterated his approval of the candidacy ol Dr. Brumbaugh, saying: "I consider Dr. Brumbaugh a splendid candidate and one who is sure to lead to victory. He is honest, tirni, sensi ble, really an ideal candidate." Speaker George E. Alter, who lias under consideration the urging of friends that he become a candidate for Governor on the same platform as J. Benjamin Dimmick for Senator, has not indicated what he will do. He says he has the matter under consid eration and is expected in Philadel phia to-day with J. Denny O'Neil to go over the matter. Dimmick has been in Pittsburgli for several days and has been endorsed by the Speaker. The Democratic tight is getting very | bitter. The Ryan people have start ed hundreds of petitions .throughout the State and the McCormick people j have them out by the thousand. It be ing the reorganizers' game to get to people first, to get their names down and then demand that they vote as they sign. The Lewisburg Saturday News, the newspaper of B. K. Focht, gives Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh a strong en dorsement for Gover nor. The ex-CongresSr Ben Focht man knows Hunting- Strong For don just as he knows Brumbaugh his own county and he comes out strong for Dr. Brumbaugh. The article says in part: "The week ends with every likelihood that he will enter the race. If he does, and wins the nomination, he will give the rich city McCormick chap, who will likely be the Democratic nominee, a run for his millions. As fortunes are reck oned these days, Brumbaugh is a poor man and working hard at his profes sion every day, but he is an tual colossus, and in a contest such as is promised, the Democrats may mar shal their best talent to forensic bat tle only to be vanquished. Hunting don county, where Brumbaugh was born and reared, and the counties of the Juniata Valley, in fact the entire State, for he is known far and wide, will respond to the appeal of this great man once a country lad. And if elected it may be expected that he will follow in the footsteps of Stuart and Tener and give the people a clean, wise and progressive administration." These are busy times for the Demo cratic bosses who are trying to keep their machine from being taken away from them, and who are trying to use the machine while they Democratic have it to put over the Bosses Hit Jersey ticket for the Trail Hard Pennsylvania Demo- crats. To-day Scout master Roland S. Morris and the rest of the bosses went to Wilkes-Barre to engineer an endorsement of the presidential interference ticket through a meeting of Democrats of that division of the State machine. The resolutions were prepared at the State windmill in Market Square dur ing a visit Morris paid yesterday to see how the Federal officeholders were coming up with their contributions in response to the second edition of duns. Out in Pittsburgh the Brennan wing of the Democratic county committee had a meeting and this afternoon the reorganization wing will flap. Judge E. C. Bonniwell, the official thorn in the reorganization side, his been in Pittsburgh for a couple of days, and Monday Palmer and McCormick will open a series of receptions and ban quets for advertising purposes. The distractions of the Democratic State machine with a Jersey made ticket to put over on Pennsylvania Democrats and Fed eral judgeships open Both Ends at both ends are some- Arc Making thing rather trying Big Bother theso days. The pro position to prevent a further breach in the eastern end of the State by naming a Jeraeyinan for the place, has aroused such a storm of protest that Congress man Palmer, who was Inclined to see the claims of Jersey for a Federal job in Pennsylvania, has got a new pair of glasses. Now friends of half a dozen men are pulling and hauling to get the place. In the western end of the State friends of G. B. Shaw, of Westmoreland, who got licked for Congressman-at-large when Wilson did not carry Pennsylvania, are de manding that he be put on the bench. Allegheny has several candidates and every other county will have at least one by Monday when Palmer ar rives. IPOHTICAbSID6fcI6f)tSI —Forty prospective Federal office holders have formed a Palmer-McCor mlck club at Wlliamstown. And who do you think is president? J. R. Hancock. —Central Democratic Club mem bers are apparently getting dubious about the propriety of endorsing can didates before the primaries. —Speaker Alter appears to be a central figure just about now. —Gifford Plnchot Is expected to make his formal announcement to day or to-morrow. He has been an nouncing in speeches for some time. —John L. Richardson will be a Washington party senatorial candi date for Senator in the Northumber land district. —"J. J. Lybarger has announced he will not be a candidate" Is a morning greeting to-day. Back to the Forget tery. —"Farmer" Creasy says he has not heard of any opposition to his boom for Lieutenant-Governor. He did find some to his hopes for Governor a few weeks ago. —Some of the suggested Democratic [candidates for the Legislature au- The Saving of Money by the use of Royai Baking Powder is considerable Royal is economical, because it pos sesses more leavening power and goes further. Royal saves also, because it always makes fine, light, sweet food, all digestible; never wastes good flour, butter and There is no eggs. oo nnwnpr en More important still economical is the saving in health. j^P r^ ,ical Royal Baking Powder matter how adds anti-dyspeptic ma^cosf™ I. . I £ l IIWj tusi) qualities to the rood. as the Royal peared to be a little shy about it to day. —That courtship between Palmer and Dewalt or Dewalt and Palmer is one of the most touching things about the campaign. —Representative P. W. Snyder, ot Hollidaysburg, has joined in the race for the Republican nomination for Senator in Blair. —Tom Greevy'q remarks on the Huntingdon meeting Indicate that all was not so harmonious as indicated. —C. S. Prizer, Middletown, is now said to have congressional aspirations. He is a manufacturer with no interest in the tariff, of course, and likewise a single taxer. —Mayor Cauffiel will not promise to be good toward the Lewis ticket. —That man Bonniwell simply has to be followed up every time he goes about the State. Here he's been In Pittsburgh and Palmer and the others are going right after him. —Philadelphia Keystoners are booming Sheatz for Governor. —Scoutmaster Morris is finding that dunning of officeholders is not always a sure way to get money. —J. Gundy Wolfe, former member from Union, is a candidate for the Republican nomination for the House. —The Marshall legislative candi dacy in the city may have to shake hands with the Kaufman boom for Congress. 'Tis said there are frowns on it. —They are always beating Senator Crow in Fayette before the prima ries. —Two deputies of long standing were fired in the Philadelphia office of the United States marshal to make room for Democrats. —Brumbaugh's progressive friends are strongly urging that he be named on both Republican and Washington ballots. —Ryan and Blankenburg are hav ing another fight in Philadelphia. —Representative C. A. Shaffer, Democrat, is out for renominatlon in Columbia county. —The way York's council, con trolled by Democrats, is firing Repub licans from the police force of York, is not being given much prominence in a certain Harrisburg morning newspaper, —C. O. Schierer, of Leliighton, is another candidate for the Democratic nomination for the House in Carbon. —Edward Ingersoll is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for the Senate in Montgomery against Senator Heacock. —Ex-Senator Fisher will not be a candidate for Lieutenant-Governor. —The Rev. R. A. Hutchison Is be ing boomed by dissatisfied Bull Moos crs to run in the primaries against Dean Lewis. / i Helping the Manufacturer Who Helps' You Mr. Merchant: — Work with the mnimfnWurer who la rnterprlalng enough to help make a market for you rather thun with the one who dora nothing. Of course you must keep the kind of goods the public wants. But where all things are equal you should let It be known that you will be more friendly towards the goods of the man who helps you market them than to the one who stocks up your shelves with his goods and lets you get rid of them the best way you can. As a rule, advertised goods un der a standard name are of better quality than the nondescript kind, because the manufacturer of 4he former is striving to build a reputation. When you put your own name on a brand of goods you are pretty certain as to the quality— are you not? The manufacturer has more at stake than you have. The reason the public favors advertised goods Is that It has come to know that advertised brands are usually the best. The Bureau of Advertising, American Newspaper Publishers Association, World Building, New York, solicits correspondence with manufacturers Interested in newspaper advertising and co i operative dealer work. Booklet on request. news - d ißp&tcf> e s - -OF -The- CIVIL* WAR From the Telegraph of Feb. 29, 1864. SHERMAN IN ALABAMA Memphis, Tenn., Feb. 26.—Arrivals from Vlcksburg confirm the previous reports that General Sherman had oc cupied Selma, Alabama, and is safe. It is reported that Smith is slowly falling back towards Memphis, but the report is not generally believed, as but little credit can be given to the statements of stragglers. ENEMY AT DAI/roX Louisville, Ky„ Feb. 28.—A reliable informant who left the front on Fri day morning reports our army then five miles from Tunnel Hill. They had ascertained that the enemy was. in force at Dalton. ALL ABOARD: By Winn Dinger Come along, we're going a-traveling All next week to distant lands. We will see the snows of Russia ' And old Afrlc's burning sands. Spain and Ireland, France and Egypt We will visit on this trip. And there'll be none of the bugbear Checking bag or trunk or grip. Clip the coupon from this paper, Bring it to the Chestnut Street Auditorium with ten cents, Which will give you a good seat. Then through aid of moving pictures You'll be treated to a sight Of old countries and their peoples That will give you much delight. Don't forget the train leaves promptly At eight fifteen Monday night. Get aboard, we're off for Russia, Where the skeeters never bite. A most satisfactory way of buying: a MONUMENT, MARKER, etc., Is to make a selection from the finished assortment I carry in stock. You are better enabled to judge size, design and quality of material than to select from numbered stock designs, which often mislead and upon erection are unsatisfactory. Should your ideas tend to tho higher art in memorials I shall be pleased to embody them in a design. (A sample of my designing is given above). Special attention is given to making ot plans and the construction of Modern Underground Vaults. I. B. DICKINSON BOTH PHON'ES DRlcr Silnruoini and Hcaldener. Thirteenth, near Mate street, P or I, car*. Manufacturing; Plant i Paxton street anil tteadlnic Hall road. •ItVbARRia&URfr-fMf-Ty ye-ARS - AfrOTOt)^ From the Telegraph ijf Feb. 29, 1864. SUNDAY SCHOOL FAIR The fail 1 gotten up under the au spices of the Sabbath School and la dies of the New Presbyterian Church, will open at 5 o'clock to-morrow even ing, in Brant's lower hall. 55TH VOLUNTEERS TO MEET The members of the Fifty-fifth Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers, (Colonel Richard White,) are request ed to meet at the Cotton Factory to morrow (Tuesday) morning, at 9 o'clock. "This phonograph," averred the sales man. "needs no introduction." "Why not?" "It speaks for itself."—Judge. ■EADDUAHTCni FOB SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES * The place to insure Is where you are a full part ner in the management, benefits, privileges and profits. Its policyholders own the PENN MUTUAL LIFE 103 IT. leoond St Isaac Miller, 1 Local F. O. Donaldson, I Agent*.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers