6 HARRLSBURG TELEGRAPH Established Hji PUBLISHED BT TBI TILEORAPH PRINTING CO. E. J. FTACKPOLH FruUttu and Edit»r-in-Chitf T. R. OYSTER Stertiary C"«JS M. STEINMETZ Managing Editor Published every evening (except Sun. day) at the Telegraph Building, SIC Federal Square. Both phones. Member American Newspaper Publish* ers' Association. Audit Bureau •! Circulation and Pennsylvania Aisoel •ted Dallies. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, New City, Hasbrook, Story & Brooks. Western Office, Advertising Building, Chicago. 111.. Allen & Ward. , Delivered by carriers at ' six cents H week. BOS**' Mailed to subscribers at $3.00 a year in advance. Entered at the Post OfTice in Harris. Pa., as second class matter. Sworn dully average for the threo j month* cudlug Feb. SIS, 1013. W 21,745 * Average for the year 1914—23.1 IS Average for the year 1t15—21,577 Average for the year 1012—21,178 Average for the year 1911 —18,851 Average for the year 1ft10—17.405 TUESDAY KVKMXti, MARCH 23. GUTTING WORK UNDER WAV COMMENDABLE energy is being displayed by Councllinen Bow man, Lynch and Taylor in get ting under way the various public improvements coming under fheir direction as heads of municipal departments. Notwithstanding all that has been said to the contrary, these three men have been doing their utmost to get the Spring work under way and to provide employment for as many men as possible. Even with ihe weather conditions anything but favorable, they have put a large num ber of men on the payroll this week who are very much in need of the money they thus will be able to earn. Little remains to do on a number of the. big contracts except to put on the. finishing touches and indications arc that the great improvement cam-1 paign undertaken more than a decade ago will have been completed in the main before midsummer. That being true it would seem that the Chamber of Commerce Committee entrusted with the arrangements for a big cele bration to mark the completion of the gigantic task then undertaken and now being brought to a successful completion ought to get busy with its plans and dates. NONT\RTIS.\N FAILURE A BILL is to be presented in the Legislature this week asking for the repeal of the nonpartisan provisions in the Clark third class city act. It is to be hoped that this repealer will be passed and that the Governor will sign it. The non partisan feature of the act has been a failure from its very inception. What ever may be said of the Clark law as a whole, the operation of its nonpartisan provisions has been farcical in the ex treme. Not only has this nonpartisan fea ture not eliminated politics from city government, but it has compelled par tisan candidates to masquerade as no man cares to do. The three Repub lican members of City Council, for instance, were elected as Republicans. Everybody knew they were Repub licans and they were elected largely because of that fact. Almost every vote that has been registered since the organization of the city government along the lines laid down by the Clark net has had a. partisan basis. Repub licans have voted as a unit. So have the Democrats. The next election will witness a tre mendous effort on the part of the local Democratic machine to place three of its representatives in Council. Deliberate attempts are now being made to blacken the characters and the reputations of the Republican members with the idea of weakening them as candidates for re-election. No matter whether the nonpartisan re pealer is adopted or not, the next elec tion in Harrisburg will be fought out along partisan lines, just as the first one was, but it would be much better to have it conducted in the open in stead of behind the fragile mask of the Clark act provision that bars the use of party names. HEAVEN* ON EARTH THE REV. CHARLES F. TAYLOR proposes to erect in Greenwich, Conn., a little corner of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth. The fact that two-thirds of the world is torn by shot and shell and about half of the remainder is wondering whether or not it ought to get into the melee has no terrors for the Rev. Mr. Taylor. He is going to start the millennium at Greenwich—that is, if the people of Greenwich will only elect him Mayor. "Greenwich is the ideal community in which to found the first corner of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth," says the ministerial aspirant for mu nicipal office, because of its ideal sur roundings, its natural healthfulness and the great amount of money upon which It can draw out of sort of constructive reform. The Rev. Mr. Taylor notes that Greenwich is one of the richest pluccs per capita In the country, and the biblical precept that it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of Heaven appears to have no part in his celestial program. The Rev. Mr. Taylor says he already has received promises sufficient to warrant his election, but It is very much to be feared that he will get awake the morning after election to I find out that there are more candl- j TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBUR.G TELEGRAPH MARCH 23, 1915. i dates in Greenwich for the Ananias Club than for the little corner of the celestial kingdom which the mayoralty candidate would set up there. It fre quently happens that way with less ambitious reformers than the Rev. Mr. Taylor. BANK SECURITY ONE of the younger trust com panies of the Central Pennsyl vania district, whose manage ment has been criticised mildly by some of its stockholders for not declaring larger dividends from earn ings that have been unexpectedly large, issues the following statement In reply: The object of this company is to afford absolute security for the financial transactions in its bank ing field. If there are those who ■believe that our object should bo to grow big, we do not agree with them. If there are those who be lieve that our object should be to pav dividends, we do not agree with them. Our paramount object is to afford security, and is not to grow big or pay dividends; for it is only by affording absolute se curity that we can render effici ent and satisfying service in the growth and development of our banking community. If by increasing our security we also grow big, well and good. If by increasing our security we are also enabled to pay dividends, well and good. But whatever we do in • the conduct of this trust company, we do because we believe it will help us to afford security and ren der service. If we solicit a pros pective patron, we believe that he or she will assist us in maintain ing the security of this trust com pany and the efficiency of its ser vice. If we discourage a patron, it is because we believe that the patron's business endangers the security of this trust company and the efficiency of its service. If every bank follewed those rules there would he fewer failures. No bank exists solely for the profits of its stockholders. The banking business is necessarily one of routine, and ex travagance and extremes have no place in conservative bank manage ment. A banker must be a student of political economy and must be able to apply its principles to his business in such a manner as to utilize the ex periences of the past in his analysis of present conditions and what they portend for the future. A good bank er appreciates his relations to the bus iness community and he must be more than a mere receiver and lender of money and a dividend earner for his stockholders. In times of panic and distress, he must come to the aid of deserving customers and prevent the failure of any solvent ones who are in trouble. He must be identified with those things of a constructive nature—phy sically, morally and intellectually—of his community. In brief, a composite picture of a banker would show a com bination of moral worth intellectual ity, financial and commercial ability, integrity, amiability, tactfulness, cor diality. patience and unfailing cour tesy. He must be more than a mere money grubber. A banker whose in stitution was reckoned as the best dividend payer in the United States recently fp.lled for an enormous sum. Th 4 trust company management quoted is right; the bank must be judged by the efficiency of its service to the community and not by the amount of the earnings it pays on outstanding stock. VERY MICH IX EARNEST IF any political party in Harrisburg recorded an attendance of 1,500 at a mass meeting its leaders would feel that their ticket stood a very good chance of election. Indeed, it is only by the hardest kind of work and the widest publicity that 1,500 men can be induced to attend any political meeting, unless they are drawn there by desire to hear some very distin guished or eloquent speaker. As a general rule they do not turn out in such numbers merely for the purpose of registering their political views or endorsing any set of candidates. How different it is in the present local option campaign now Veing waged. On Sunday 1,500 men, all of them voters, attended three mass meetings in Harrisburg to urge upon local legislators that they support the county option measures now before the legislature. This means but one thing—that the voters are very much in earnest on this subject. They pro pose to make their wishes known in no uncertain terms and legislators who do not comply therewith at least cannot say thereafter that they had not opportunity of judging the senti ments of their constituents. A SOUND ARGUMENT IT stands to reason that the Stato commission which made the study of the condition of dependents in Pennsylvania under the terms of the act of the last. Legislature ought to be the best informed body on such matters at the present time. It hail the advantage of authority from the General Assembly, the services of ex perts nnd the co-operation of organi zations and individuals which have been considering industrial problems at close range and which have exam ined carefully into the causes leading to increase in that part of the popu lation which must be supported through charity. Its report is a mas terly summing up of the causes and conditions attending dependency in the Keystone State, with its compli cated industries and diverse elements of population. When this commission recommends that enactment of a system of work men's compensation is a necessity, its remarks should have weight. It points out that fair return for in juries would lessen public burdens and bring direct relief, the end which should be sought by a Legislature mindful of its pledges. The argument in behalf of a compensation act is sound and should be heeded. AN EVENING THOUGHT We must truly serve those whom we appear to command: we must bear with their Imper fections, correct them with gen tleness and patience, and lead th<ne of the causes for good-natured complaint on the part of street cur conductors, especially on the uptown lines, is the enormous number of pen nies given as car fare on Market davs, Wednesdays and Saturdays, when wo men members of the "basket brigade" are returning from marketing in Ver beke street markethouse. On these mornings the women form the ma jority of street car riders, and they have a habit of unloading their pen nies on the long-suffering conductors. They are usually well supplied with the coppers, on account ol the many odd prices at which so many forms of larmers' produce are sold. As a consequence, the conductors' pockets bulge with pennies, and some of them nave turned in at the office at the end of theiV run as many as 400. One amusing feature of the pennv habit is the alleged reluctance of the women to receive pennies in change from the conductor, who sometimes desires to rid himself of the burden, tine con ductor said he almost got Into a ns: fight the other day in a near-argu ment with a woman who objected to taking five pennies in change for a dime she handed him. There is a pile of snow In State street near Fourth that defies the sun shine. This snow remains over from the fall of ten days ago and it so hap pens that it is located so that the sun light does not reach it with much force. A number of people have re marked it and have noted the peculiar angle of the building that protects it. There are also piles of snow to be seen on mountains and in fields near the city which through some freak of the sunlight are almost as they were a week ago. "I see.'' remarked a man who notes things, "that it is a high crime and misdemeanor for some State officials who go about the state lecturing to accept- an honorarium. I have read with interest what has been said on the subject and also that while no ob jection was made some years ago here it is questioned now. I also note that in most counties it is generallv done without comment. What strikes me is that it is now a source of criticism when William Jennings Bryan, who gets twice $6,000. frankly goes about the country for what he can get out of the gate receipts." "My. what a racket that drummer is making" and similar remarks are heard quite frequently in the Harris burg theaters. Yet the person who makes the remark, were he to hear the same composition played without a drum, would instantly say that it was a poor sample of music. A march played by an orchestra without the accompaniment of a drum would be almost as big a farce as an army with out ammunition. When played* alone, or witli a piano accompaniment, a drum produces nothing that could be called music, but to a band or an or chestra It is as indispensable as any of the parts, according to musical au thorities. Harrisburg's weather prophets are not a unanimity as to future rendi tions. When one of the old-timers referred to yesterday's snow as "the onion snow," he was scoffed at by .1 veteran weather observer. "You'll "not set the onion snow for Sometime," was the statement. "Then we'll never get it." spoke up another veteran citizen. "If there is no onion snow before March 28, there will be no onions." was the explana tion. A fourth prophet broke into the same. "You are all wrong," he said. "We will get the onion snow after Ras ter. and I'll bet a hat." The argu ment continued for a long time and finally the prophets agreed to con sult their favorite almanacs. "Drat, your almanacs," said the oldest in the group, "I have watched the weather for seventy years and know what I'm talking about. This is the equinoxial we are getting, and the onion snow will come later." 1 WEIL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —George W. McNees, chairman of I the State geologic survey, thinks it should be continued. —A. J. Palm, the new postmaster at Meadville, was hit by an automobile while going to a revival meeting. —Bishop J. P. Berry addressed the dedicatory exercises in the new Ver sailles Methodist Church at Pittsburgh. —Wilson H. Brown, active in child labor bill matters, was formerly sheriff of Philadelphia. —J. C. Mclntyre, of Franklin, has returned from a trip to California. That Harrisburg lias always liad a military company from the day it started'.' SI'BMKItCiICI) PIPE 1.1.VE Novel methods and equipment are being used in laying a submerged pipe line across the Narrows to convey water from Brooklyn to State Island./ The distance from shore to shore is about 10,000 feet and the line extends across the busiest lanes of traffic to and front the port of New York. In some places tho depth of water is as great as seventy-four feet. The pipe line is made up of thirty-six-inch cast iron pipe in twelve-foot lengths and provided with flexible joints. It is laid in a trench dredged out of the bottom of the channel and Is to lie covered over as soon as completed. T!n> ingenious method of laving the pipe is shown by an illustration in the Popular Mechanics. r What's Inside Your Mattress? Do you know whether due at tention has been paid to "hy giene" in the making? Do you realize that this is such an Important thing that some states have very strict "pure mattress" laws? buying a mattress be sure of your store. Better yet, have the manu facturer's guarantee behind the store. The safe buying guide in this and many other things is the ad vertising In a good newspaper like tile Telegraph. ' V— -■ • REORGANEZERS IN II DESPERATE PLAY Trying to Attract Attention to Leg islation to Cover Up Their Own Blundering WANT A COMMISSIONER, TOO James Gay Gordon May Oppose McCormick For the National Committeemanship Democratic State Chairman Roland I S. Morris and the rest of the discredited J bosses of the Democratic State ma-! chine are starting a great play in the Legislature this week with Ihe hope of reviving interest among the dln gusted adherents of their party and also in the belief that they can win the appointment of PhlladelpUrfa regis tration commissioner. Morris is loudly proclaiming his desire to secure pas sage of a local option law, although he realizes that nothing he can say or do will change a. single Democratic vote and that all the noise he makes is to attract attention to his machine. Morris has arranged to have a room open in the windmill so that such Democratic members as desire can sit around when it rains. He will visit this room occasionally, but he will do most of his business from the throne room at Third and Market streets. —The indications are that men op posed to the machine wing ol! the State Democracy will rally behind Ex-Judge James Gay Gordon as candidate for national committeeman in case it comes to a showdown at a State com mittee meeting to select a successor to A. Mitchell Palmer. The reorganiza tion gangsters are in hopes that some way will be found to avoid a meeting and are talking as though Morris could act for the present. Although Pal mer will be on a federal bench he will probably have a good bit to say about the federal patronage In Pennsylvania as long as Blakslee is in the Post Office Department. —ln addition to Robert. S. Bright, defeated candidate for congress-at large on the McCormick ticket last Fall; Councilman J. E. Fabian, B. H. Renshaw and A. L. Mulhearn are can didates for the Democratic registration commisslonship in Philadelphia. It pays ?3,000. —Representative Bill Adams blos somed out as a speechmaker last night in advocating the militia bill. He got all the votes for it. —The Umbel resignation removed another cause for any prolongation of the session. — : The hill to repeal the moving pic ture censorship law is to be given a hearing on March 30 in the House. Governor Brumbaugh and Attorney General Brown have declared in favor of retaining the censorship. —Representative Dell last night in troduced a bill for a new State high way from Bellel'onte to Greenwood furnace. —Ex-Representative L. E. Donally of Perry county, was a House visl tor. —Samuel B. Scott, who represented the Germantown district for several terms in the House, was among legis lative visitors last night. —Dr. J. T. Rothrock, long forestry commissioner, is to make an address on forestry in Pennsylvania in the House to-night. —John Townley, of the Pittsburgh Press, was at the Capitol. —The State Department of Health opened the eyes of a good many peo ple as to what it is doing at its sani torla and what the big establishments at Cresson, Mont Alto and Hamburg are like by a moving picture exhibi tion in the hall of the House last night. The exhibition lasted over an hour and attracted general attention and many compliments. —James McKee, Pittsburgh assessor, is a legislative visitor. —Ex-Representative G. W. Allen and Frank Halferty, of Pittsburgh, were at the Capitol. —A Pittsburgh dispatch says: "Wil liam Flinn, the Bull Moose leader, has returned to Pittsburgh, and it was persistently rumored is here to co operate in any move toward helping Governor Brumbaugh in his local op tion fight in the Legislature. "Flinn's sudden return in the midst of warm political happenings at Har rlsburg and here at home in Pittsburgh started rumors that he is planning to break back into the Republican ranks. "Flinn's replies to-day dodged direct answers to the question, 'Are you going back into the Republican party?' " T am not back in the Republican party yet," he said, smilingly. "The Progressive leader met a num ber of his lieutenants of the late Pin ehot-McCormick fight to-day, and to night, aside from setting at rest re ports that he was going to Harrlsburg to take a hand in legislative matters, said he had nothing to say in politics. The former Senator's voice, which was giving him considerable trouble, is strong again." —The Northumberland County Bar Association has endorsed the candi dacy of John B. Head and George B. Orlady for the Superior court. It re gretted the decision of Justice Charles 10. Rice to retire and hoped he would reconsider this decision. Resolutions condemning the Snyder and the Tomp kins acts in the Senate, which call for the abolition of the board of examin ers, were passed. MACHINE KEEPS Ml HI. AI.IVE I \UI!R W ATEII FOR HOUR "During the recent .Safety and Sani tation Exposition at New York, a young woman was kept alive under water for one hour and ten minutes by means of a resuscitating machine such as is used by the Government, in mine-rescue work," says the April Popular Me chanics Magazine, in an illustrated ar ticle. "The test was performed for the purpose of illustrating the effici ency of mechanical respiration and was conducted under the direction of a former surgeon of the United States Bureau of Mines. The breathing mask, which has a double rubber tube ex tending to a hand-operated lung ap paratus. was strapped over the girl's nose and mouth, and she was then placed in a large glass-front tank. Throughout the period she was sub merged she did no breathing of her own accord." DUDLEY 2< g inchc* NORMAN inches AHHOW COLLARS I OUR DAILY LAUGH I WE DON'T <—) BLAME HIM. Papa: And \ V ■why don't you t,iju %\ want to go to "fill school any more? 1 KtCvVA Bobble: Teach- ,j\ er says I'm get- .4> \tTy ting to be as big 1 £&S a boob as my fa- p /m ACCOUNTED \jr for n? JMI Mrs. H.: Toul ,ffl SJb husband hat changed so that /*w WlfS 1 d,dn ' l recognlM —=V 111 hlm ~ « tall Mrs. D.: It -•'MB . isn't that, I*«| OM<: ON DAD By \MnK Dlnyrr It's funny how one's kids will got The better of their dad. Ami one of mine put one across On me, that wasn't bad. When something ungrammatical He says, I try to teach Him what's the proper tiling to say And be correct In speech. On Sunday he brought in to me An apple, and I said: "Did you get this out of the bag?" He slowly shook his head— And answered, with a knowing smile: "What awful grammar, dad— I got it In Ihe bag"—which 1 Submit was not so bad. , IN HARRI3BIJRG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph, March 23, 1 865] Change County Seat A bill was passed in the Legislature changing the county seat of Snyder county, from Middleburg to Selins gr'ove. Big Wlicat Crop Farmers report thnt the coming wheat crop will be large. I)le in Prisons Several residents of this county have died within tlie past few days in tho rebel prison at Salisbury, N. C. I NEWS bISFWTCrtEi I OF THE CIVIL WAR [From the Telegraph, March 23, 1865] Thomas' Campaign Washington, March 23.—Major Gen eral Thomas in his official report of operations of the army since Septem ber 7, 1864, announces the capture of 13,189 prisoners, large amounts of am munition and supplies, and almost 100 cannon. Lincoln to Get Davis' Horse Washington, March 23.—Sherman's scouts have taken Jeff Davis' Arabian horse, given to him by the Viceroy of Egypt, it is said. The scouts will pre sent it to President Lincoln. Rebels acknowledge that Sherman's army cannot be stopped. SAFEST PLACE FOR SOI.DII2H [From the Popular Mechanics Maga zlne.l Is an aeroplane the safest place for a soldier in war? The English newspapers recently re ported that an officer of tile Royal Fly ing Corps had applied to be allowed to rejoin his regiment in his former ca pacity. When inquiry was made as to his reasons he replied that he could not bear to see his brother officers running all the risks of the trenches while he himself was In safety flying in the air above them. Similar remarks by other British military airmen, all of whom seem to regard their work as much less hazardous than that of the light ing man on the ground, have lent in terest to reports of the surprisingly small number of casualties suffered by fliers since the war began. THE NONPARTISAN' RKI'KALER [From the Pittsburgh Gazette-Times.] Senator Tompkins of Cambria coun ty has introduced a bill in the Legis lature at Harrisburg repealing the act of July 24, 1913, providing for the nonpartisan election of judges throughout the State and of officers of second class cities. The repealer ap plies to elective officers in Pittsburgh and Scranton and to all judges of courts of record, and becomes effective NEURALGIC PAINS These inay be felt in any nerve of tho body but arc most frequent in the nerves of the head. Neuralgia may be caused by a decayed tooth, eye-strain or a diseased ear, but the most com mon cause is general debility accom panied by anemia, or ihin blood. For this reason women who work too hard or dance too much and who do not get sufficient rest, sleep and fresh air. are the most frequent suf ferers from neuralgia and sciatica, which is neuralgia of the sciatic nerve. Nutrition for the nerves is the cor rect treatment for neuralgia and the only way to nourish the nerves is through the blood. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills supply to the blood just the ele ments It needs to increase its capacity to carry nourishment to starved nerves. They have proved helpful in so many cases of neuralgia and sciatica that any sufferer from these troubles is fully justified in giving these pills it trial. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills con lain no harmful or habit-forming drugs and may lie taken for any length of time with perfect safety. The pamphlet "Diseases of tho Ner vous System," is free to you if you mention this paper. Address: The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. Your own druggist sells Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.—Advertisement. On Hand! Gloves for every occasion. Just now the new blnck embroidered hacks are "the tiling." Tliey give the finishing touch to the day dress or men who discriminate. The social season lingers along for a while .vet. May Ik 1 you need a pair or two of Dress (iloves. \Vc have them In white glace, reindeer and suede. Forry's 3 w17 Children Cry for Fletcher's |lf:Kl ill I fil The Kind You Have Always Bought lias borne the siprna ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his 1 personal supervision for over JJO years. Allow 110 0110 to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and *' «Tust-ttß-tjood " are but experiments, and endanger health of Children—Experience against Experiment. , What is CASTORIA Castrfria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium. Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It de stroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for tlio relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Trou bles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought I In Use For Over 30 Years THE CENT«Un COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. January 1 next. . the expense of candidates. Its inevitn- This measure should be passed and hie tendency, if continued, will he to signed. The nonpartisan experiment lower rather than raise the quality of has not produced the beneficial results nominations made and officials elected, claimed for it. by its sponsors. Osten- The very kind of men who, by reason sibly adopted as a concession to in- of their superior ability and stand dependent voters and to strengthen intf, appeal to the Kood judgment of them as a political factor, while weak- the people, will be deterred from ening the final influence of organized I entering contests on account of the elements, it has done neither. Its cost and struggle necessary, chief result has been to add to the The nonpartisan plan is especially confusion of campaigns and to increase objectionable with respect to Judges. j Iwtifkd Tires Span the Way from Trouble Goodyear tire® have bridged the way for count less men to less trouble and tax. And those men, by their endorsement, brought our last year's output up to 1,479,883 tires. Why do you suppose that Good- ways, exclusive to Fortified Tires, years hold top place—you who These five extra features cost use other tires? They have held us fortunes. One alone —our that place for years, outselling any "On-Air"cure—\.ostsuss4so,ooo other. yearly. But they save Goodyear The only reason, as you must »sers millions of dollars yearly, know, is that Goodyears average They avoid countless troubles best. And that's how they are for them, bound to win you. Lower Prices The SllDer-Tire On February Ist we made ' another big reduction. That makes They are not trouble - proof, three in two years, totaling 45 per Mishaps come to them, misuse cent. are giving you, through affects them, much like other tires, mammoth production, the best But Goodyears are Fortified tire value ever known. Tires. They . Please prove protect you in __ this, for your five ways em- m AD own sake, by ployed by no %. X EcAJtV the tire itself, other maker. AK*OM.OHto T] le following They combat Fortified Tire* I Goodyear Ser five major trou- No-Rlm-Cut Tiro.-"Ou-Air" Cored vice Stations bles in unique Wi.h Ali-Woh.r T„.d. c Sn.oo.h will supply ync Goodyear Service Stations—-Tires in Stock Oro. W. Mycru Hex 4 uto Co. Ford Slotor CUP CO. ' Jno. T. ScUinmi Square Deal Auto Co. Nearby Towns J. H. Wntkiiin Tower City lllllNhurit Auto Supply Co. DllhlMirß W. 11. Tyffon IlillerwlHirK I*. 11. liebuch llorrynburK C. T. Hum her gcr lOllMtbethvlllc LyKiMiN Motor Car Co. I.ykeon .1 1 1 it liit II (aftriiftc MlfFllntown llrook* Wrlgcl \f*v Cumberlnnri Newport Auto A Co. Newport Mprlo the 10c ioc ioc smoke > JMOJA 4 All Havana Quality JL V Made by JOHN C. HERMAN & CO.