Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, April 20, 1915, Page 8, Image 8

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    8
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
, EsUtbluhid IS3I
PUBLISHED BY
TBS TEI.EURAPH PRlxn*G CO.
E. J. STACKPOI<B
President and EJitor-in-C kief
F. R. OYSTER
* Secretary
GUS M. S^EINMETZ
MamiiiHg Editer
Published every evening: (except Sun
day) at the Telegraph Building-, 216
Federal Square. Both phones.
Uamber American Newspaper Publish
ers' Association. Audit Bureau of
Circulation and Pennsylvania Associ
ated Dailies.
Eastern Office. Fifth Avenue Building,
New York City, Hssbrook, Story &
Brooks.
Western Office, Advertising Building,
Chicago. 111.. Allen & Ward.
-fggPTiit. . Delivered by carriers at
AiltE> six cents a week.
Mailed to subscribers
•t IS.OO a year in advance.
Entered at the Post Office In Harrls
burg. Pa., as second class matter.
S won dally average lor the three
★ months ending Mar. SI, 1915. m
21,832 *
Average for the year 1914—23.213
Average for the year 1913—21,577
Average for the year 1912—21.175
Average for the year 1911—15.551
Average for the year 1t1*—17,495
]
TUESDAY EVENING, A PHI I, 20
LOCAL OPTION
ALL. the arguments in favor of
Local Option that can be made
have been made. It only re
mains now for the Legislature to cast
the vote.
The members of the House to-mor
row will say whether or not they pre
fer the will of the people to that of
the liquor ring.
They will be called upon to say
whether they prefer to give the peo
ple home rule or to fly in the face of
public opinion in defense of a minor
ity that has no thought for them or
anybody else aside from its own selfish
interests.
They will be called upon to register
their names on the roll of honor or to
sign their own political death war
rants.
Few who vote against the local op
tion bill to-morrow will come back to f
the Legislature two years hence. Their
constituents will not trust them.
They will have registered themselves
as men careless of the will of the ma
jority and an aroused electorate will
attend to their case in the future.
And they will sacrifice themselves
thus for what?
Merely that local option shall be
held back only two years.
Just as certainly as the sun rises
and sets, the next Legislature will pass
a local option law If this one does not.
Only, the legislators who oppose it
this time will not be there to partici
pate in the ceremony.
This is not any attempt at" prophecy.
It is a plain statement of facts as a
majority of people see them at this
time.
Let any lerislator doubting its accu
racy as such read it to the first fifty
people he meets this evening and keep
a record of the opinions he receives
thereon.
THE LEO FRANK CASE
DESPITE the decision of the Su
preme Court that may send
Leo Frank to the gallows, there
will be many who will continue
to doubt that justice has been done in
this case. So many entangling cir
cumstances and so hiany involved con
troversies have been injected into it.
that it would only seem the part of
fair play to the defendant to have
given him a new trial far from the
prejudiced community in which he;
was convicted and where he made j
such a gallant fight for his life.
Nobody saw Frank commit the
crl? > of which he is convicted. Cir-1
cumstantial evidence alone connects;
him with the case. Race feeling and !
politics beyond question entered Into j
the verdict. This alone should have'
been ground for setting it aside. That
two justices of the Supreme Court dis
sented from the decision handed down
yesterday ought to be enough to have
given Frank another chance.
Human life is too precious and the
rights of the individual too sacred to
be trifled with even by a divided de
cision of the Supreme Court.
IX FULL SWING
ORDERS for new equipment for
the Pennsylvania Railroad
which went out yesterday will
affect 11,650 men directly. Un
less all signs fail, vastly more than
that number of workmen will be bene
fited indirectly. Twenty million dol
lars expended by one railroad com
pany will Bet the iron mines to work
ing. the blast furnaces to belching
and th« rolling mills to humming.
■TUESDAY EVENING,
Freight traffic itself will receive a
stimulus and the better business that
will be engendered thereby will have
the effect of putting men to work,
setting factories in motion and of
sending customers into stores all over
the country.
Within ninety days the United States
should be enjoying the height of pros
perity. Great war orders are being
placed in this country' and even an
early declaration of peace will result
beneficially, for Europe will not be
able to outfit itself for the great re
building program that must be in
augurated immediately upon cessation
of hostilities.
There is no ground for Democratic
rejoicing, however, in this condition.
Secretary Redfield's claims of return
ing prosperity correspond exactly with
the facts in the case, but he Is over
lapping when he gives credit therefor
to the Democratic administration. In
fact, just the opposite is true.
When the war broke out the coun
try was in sore distress due to the
operations of the Democratic tariff law
and the experimental legislation at
Washington. The war has had the
effect of abrogating the tariff law tem
porarily. It is as though a high tariff
Wall now existed, so far as exports
from are concerned, except
that our imports now bring us little
or no revenue as compared with re
ceipts under the Payne-Aldrich law,
and instead of having our govern
mental bills paid by foreign exporters
we now pay them ourselves by means
of the stamp act imposed by the Wil
son administration to make up for
the losses caused by the operation of
the Underwood law. This condition
will prevail until European manufac
turers (fret back to a normal basis fol
lowing the war, by which time the
mistakes of the Democrats will have
been corrected by a Republican Con
gress.
In short, American manufacturers
may now proceed as confidently as
though protected by a high tariff law,
and they realize this and are proceed
ing accordingly. There remains noth
ing, therefore, to stand in the way of
such an era of prosperity as the coun
try has never known, but this, as has
been pointed out, is not due to the
Wilson administration, but despite it.
BUY IT NOW
THERE is a thought for everybody
with a prospective purchase in
. mind In the announcement of
the Pennsylvania Railroad Com
pany that it expects to "save between
$2,000,000 and $2,500,000 by going into
the market at this time" for the equip
ment that it must have to take care of
the growing volume of business.
"Buy it now" is the slogan of a cam
paign started recently throughout the
central west by the proprietor and edi
tor of the Omaha Bee. It has been
endorsed by many newspapers
throughout the country and now the
Pennsylvania Railroad management
adds its words of approval in a very
substantial manner.
The feeling is general that there
are now no real obstacles in the way
of a resumption of active business In
this country. Everybody knows that
the way to resume business is to re
sume. That, however, is easy to say
but difficult to accomplish. Men who
have given the thought a great deal
of attention believe that the situa
tion may be greatly helped by the
"buy it now" movement.
In brief, they urge that anybody
with money in bank, or in prospect,
who has any purchase he intends to
make this year or any improvement
he desires to inaugurate in the near
future, make his purchase or do his
contracting now.
There is good sense back of this,
aside from the benefit to general
business that would follow the
adoption of the plan. The mar
ket for all manner of supplies, labor
included, is at comparatively low ebb.
With the rapid improvement of
financial conditions, prices are bound
to go up. Therefore, one may adopt
the "buy it now" policy either from
a purely selfish standpoint or for the
benefit of business as a whole. The
result will be the same, and the hold
back is going to pay heavily for his
conservatism.
PROFIT FOR CANADA
THE ofttimes sensational, but al
ways entertaining and enterpris
ing, New York Journal calls at
tention to the following card
posted in the Canadian building at the
Panama-Pacific Exposition:
All the Canadian railroads are
making ready for the enormous in
crease in Canadian grain export
by the Pacific route which will be
brought about by the opening of
the Panama Canal.
It is estimated that in twelve
vears from now over 300,000,000
bushels of Canadian grain will be
shipped yearly by this route, at
a cost of five cents a bushel less
than by the shortest route to Eu
ropean ports.
It is to be seen from this that
Canada hopes to make the Panama
Canal yield it a handsome profit—
"3,ooo,ooo times 5 cents a year," fcs
the Journal puts it Nobody objects
to this. It only shows how much the
Panama Canal was needed and what a
great work the United States per
formed for humanity In constructing
it, but there is another point not
brought out. While the Canadian
farmer is saving for himself some
fifteen millions of dollars, what is the
American farmer getting out of it?
It will be remembered that through
the instrumentality of President Wil
son American coastwise vessels are
made to pay canal tolls In the same
sum as those of every other nation.
The United States farmer, who is
taxed to build the canal, and all other
United States citizens who use it are
given to understand that their duty
and profit commenced and ended when
they btlllt the canal and threw It open
for the use of the whole world. In
other words, they spent their millions,
not for their own special benefit, but
for the world as a whole, with special
reference to the English shipper and
the Canadian Pacific Railroad Com
pany.
The law to which President Wilson
and the Democratic Congress in their
national platform were committed has
been repealed. The canal from which
wc were assured wc should derlv# such
extensive profits has keen to all in
tents and purposes turned over to
England. Such is the patriotism and
business foresight of our friends In
Washington.
EVENING CHAT 1
This is the season when the man
in Harrlsburg who owns a cottage
aJong the'Juniata (|r in the mountains
that come down to the Susquehanna
or in the shades of Mount Gretna or
one of the numerous haunts of Har
risburgers in summer heat commences
to mink about what repairs are neces
sar>" and fine afternoons are apt to
find men taking automobile trips to
look over "the place." It is aston
ishing how little repairs the average
cottages really do require after the
winter. A shingle or two or some fix
ing up of windows or overhauling of
the drainage or spouting is about all
that is needed except paint. Prob
ably more cans of paint have left Har
risburg stores heading for sumfner
cottages in the last ten days than the
average man would dream. Cottage
life has become so generally accepted
us a part of summer existence in this
community that It has to a certain ex
tent taken the place of the annual trip
to the seashore or to the mountains,
and there are families amply able to
afford it who have cut out the ex
tended vacation trip and made it a
practice to go to the woods instead.
These trips to spots along the Juniata,
Conodoguinet, Swataru, or along the
wide reaching Susquehanna, are made
all the more enjoyable because of the
development of automobile roads from
the city. Probably hundreds of cot
tages are owned by Harrisburgers now
when five years ago there were dozens
And when one comes to think about
it there are no more delightful places
close to a city in the state than those
Which are to lie found within half an
hour's ride of the State Capitol.
Men connected with the gardening
force of the State Capitol are working
pretty industriously on patching up
the lawns these days. Fresh earth lias
been brought in from the country and
is being used for filling in the spaces
along the edges of the walks and,
a 2,out trees where the gross was killed
off last fall and grass seed and fer
tilizer mixed in.
The drive up along the Susquehanna
Is proving more and more popular as
supervisors are completing the dam
age caused during the winter and early
Spring by heavy wagons driven over
iV, 8 ro . Scores of automo
biles, filled with pleasure seekers speed
along the paved stretch these balmy
afternoons. Instead of turning back
at Fort Hunter, as con
tinue on to Dauphin and sometimes
even farther. An old resident at Rock
ville who carefully follows the latest
change in modelft and prices of auto
mobiles from the catologs esti
mated that $78,000 worth of cars pass
ed his doorway in little more than an
hour yesterday.
People who have sat in trollev cars
in Market Square awaiting their start
may have noticed a very staunch busi
ness like club hanging over the tele
phone box on the pole between the
tracks just on the line of the south j
side of Market street. This club is
kept for emergency use. for occasion
ally say the trolleyinen some one gets
gay at the terminal and the club has
to be handy.
Although men to fight the fires
which have been raging on the moun
tains north of the city have been
rather hard to get because of the fif
teen cents an hour rate the fire ward
ens have had to literally chase boys
away. The smoke has attracted soores
of youngsters from the city to the
mountains, some of them walking four
to five miles to see the fires and to be
around as boys like to be when fire
rages. Some of the bovs jumped In
to help fight the fires and had to be
driven away for their own good.
"It would not bo a bad thing for
some of the people in Harrlsburg to
take note of Governor Brumbaugh's
arbor day proclamation and turn in to
help put out any fires which mav be
burning next Friday. I know of no
more practical way to help," said a
resident of the city yesterday. "The
city should be more interested in for
estry. I am glad to see that the Gov
ernor refers to birds. The two go to
gether and if we take steps to see that
woods are not swept by fires we will
be helping both trees and birds."
Dickeys Run in Franklin county
concerning which a man has com
plained to the State Department of
Fisheries that a farmer is draining off
its water to run goldfish ponds, is one
of the streams immortalized by Dr.
Henry Van Dyke. It is the stream
which lie has visited every year for a
long time and which gave him inspir
ation for some of his writings. This
year will be the first in over a decade
that he has not whipped the run for
trout.
Joseph Montgomery,the senior mem
ber of the company which lost its stor
age, places irf Sunday's fire, was com
pelled by illness to remain at his home
in State street during the fire. By the
irony of fate he is the oldest man on
the active list of firemen in Harris
burg. He is over eighty and has been
a member of the Citizen Fire company
since 1850. He joined when he was
but 16.and took an active part in fight
ing fires for many years. He was
elected an assistant chief when the
fire department was put into a com
plete organization.
1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE"
—Dr. C. Floyd Haviland who is urg
ing State care for all insane, has long
been studying care of the dependents.
—Congressman S. G. Porter, of
Pittsburgh, will speak when the monu
ment to Seaman DeLowry, killed at
Vera Cruz, is unveiled at Pittsburgh.
—Charles S. Calwell, Philadelphia
banker, addressed the Philadelphia
Real Estate Men yesterday.
—John Gribbel, colonel on the
Governor's staff, spoke at a mission In
Germantown the other evening.
—Henry Tatnall. vice-president of
the Pennsylvania, is at Virginia Hot
Springs.
I DO YOU KNOW—=I
That Harrlsburg use«l to make
cannon balls for the United States
army?
—
Fitting Out
The Summer Home
As soon as the Spring attire
has been provided for attention
turns to plans for the summer.
Cottages and summer homes
have to be looked up.
New furniture the cheap and
cool kind has to be provided.
It is n time when every bit
of helpful information Is a bless
ing.
Merchants know this and shape
their messages accordingly.
Always full of live news the
advertising columns of the Tele
graph are particularly good read
ing at this season of the year.
HARRIBBURG TELEGRAPH
MEN INCH OF
LOCH OPTION BILL
Williams and Vickerman Both
Highly Regarded by Their Asso
ciates of the House
TIOGAN'S LONG EXPERIENCE
Gossip of the Legislative Halls and
Mention of Visitors During
the Session
•
The administration local option bill,
which will be on third reading, th"
lighting stage, to-morrow morning at
11 o'clock, is in charge of two of the
most respected legislators on the floor
of the House, men in whom their col
leagues have evory confidence.
George W Williams, of Tioga, spon
sor for the bill, is former senator and
is serving his third term In the House.
He has been chairman of important
committees and Is a member of the
Republican platform legislation com
mittee. He was a candidate for speak
er and has been a local optlonlst ever
since he came to the legislature.
J. XV. Vickerman, who reported
out the bill, comes from Bellevue. Al
legheny county, and. a new
member has made many friends and
Is regarded as one of the strong men
of the Allegheny delegation. He is
editor of one of the newspapers of
Allegheny county and a progressive
and aggressive member.
—J. Denny O'Neil, the Allegheny
county commissioner, who had been
111, came here last evening to take a
hand in the local option fight. He
was given a cordial greeting by his
friends. •
—Representative Adams, of Lu
zerne. says that serving in the Boxer
and Philippine wars, was easy coin
pared to being in a legislative session
with a lot of big bills pending. .
—Ex-Senator Fred A. Godcharles,
of Milton, was among legislative visi
tors at the Capitol.
-Ex-Representative G. W. Moses,
of Johnstown, looked In on the House
last evening.
—Representative Richards, of Phil
adelphia, came here last night after
having been very ill for several days.
—J. B. Martin, of Middletown. mem
ber last session, attended the full crew
bill debate last night.
-—The Borough League, which Is
fighting for some changes in the Pub
lic Service law, has opened headquar
ters In this city to conduct its cam
paign.
—Robert A. Orbison, of Hunting
don. a former attache of the State gov
ernment, was a capitol visitor.
—The appropriation bills passed by
the Senate reached the House last
night and went to the
committee where they will be held for
the present.
—Patrick Conner, the Philadelphia
member, who Is sponser fo rthe Wil
liam Penn Bridge bill, used to be a
fireman in Philadelphia. He is one
of the veterans of the Quaker City
delegation and is not often heard from
except when he votes.
—Representative Samuel McCurdy,
of Blair county, has only missed three
sessions since the legislature began.
—Senator Henry A. Clark, of Erie,
used to write editorials when he re
turned from college. Then he owned
a paper for a while.
—Among visitors to the Capitol yes
terday was David Martin, former sen
ator, secretary of the Commonwealth
and insurance commissioner. He
called on Governor Brumbaugh and
his presence set a lot of people talk
ing because he has a couple of pretty
close followers in the Legislature and
his attitude on local option is inter
esting.
—Senator Asa K. DeWitt, of Lu
zerne, has been in the harness in
banking in his community for thirty
five years.
—Senator John G. Honisher, of
Lancaster, is one of the foremost au
thorities in the State on laws pertain
ing to justices of the peace. He served
for years in that capacity and pub
lishes a magazine devoted to their in
terests and information.
—Representative W. D. Walton, of
Lawrence, has a very healthy boom
for congress coming along out his way.
When the session is over he is going
out to take hold of it.
r »U
(From the Telegraph. April 20, 1865.)
liooth Near Reading?
Reading, April 20.—1t was reported
here late to-day that John Wilkes
Booth, passed through here on a train
en route to Pottsville. A special train
was sent in pursuit of the assassin, but
the man being pursued escaped at one
of the smaller towns.
Burial Place For Lincoln
Springfield, April 20.—A plot of
ground, six acres in extent in the heart
of the city will be purchased as the
burial place for President Lincoln.
A MOTHER'S VISION
Sitting alone in the firelight, with aged
head bent low
Over some little garments that were
worn long ago,
A woman, old and faded, was dreaming
of other years;
And the faces of absent loved ones she
saw through a mist of tears.
All was silent; no echo of footfalls
swift and gay;
The dancing feet of her children had
wandered far away.
Busy and happy and thoughtless, they
were scattered far and wide:
All grown to be men and women —save
the little boy who died.
It was strange that of all the children,
he should feel to-night so near.
His little grave had beer, covered by
the snows of many a year;
Y«t she fancied she saw him enter;
that she saw him standing there,
His blue eyes clear and smiling, the
light on his curling hair.
And a voice spoke from the silence,
saying; "This for you I kept:
But my meaning you could not fathom
when for your child you wept.
The living have left your hearthstone,
but with you shall he abide
In the beauty of deathless childhood,
your little boy who died."
—Gertrude Hockrldge, In the Christian
Herald._ _
Sore Throat or Mouth.
You must keep the throat and mouth
ileaa and healthy. Any disease that
attacks tbe canal through which must
oass the food we eat, the Leverages wo
drink and tbe very air we breathe is
a serious matter. Why neglect Sore
Throat or Sore Month when TONSILINE
makes it so easv for vou to get relief?
TONSILINE is the remedy speci
ally prepared for that purpose,
TONSILINE does its full duty— C' 1
vou can depend upon it. Keep a IS
I bottle in the house—where you can rj
| get it quick when needed. 25c. |!j
I and .Vic. Hospital Size SI .00. M
i All Druggists. bl
I OUR DAILY LADGHI
THE MEAN 1
I've been losing f&Sy' |
ljulte a lot of my *
Tou should V lP
iock It up, de*r.
WORSE.
Gee, but this is JjQj fc t? JT&
cold weather! y^w* l Y \ '•*■
Ever see any I ) \
colder? v\ 1 }l' "A
No, not exactly, / | 4 L»
But I tried to flirt 4| |
with a Boston 9l Mil -
Ctrl. one*. ■f'jfcSil <£>9ll
IIIC'I.I, GET YOU
n> \\ In& Ulngrr
A malady is going 'round
That gets most everyone,
£n<l up until to-day I have
Kept it upon the run.
It's phased me for a week or more.
And almost caught me, too.
But when 1 felt its breath on m*
With speed away I tlew.
But now the demon's got me, bo,
He landed me to-day,
And when he flung his arms 'round me
I couldn't get away.
I haven't changed a bit in looks
But I don't feel the same—
Look out for him, he'll get you, too.
Spring fever Is his name.
IN HARRISBURG FIFTY
YEARS AGO TO-DAY
(From the Telegraph, April 20, 1865.)
Associations Invited
The committee of arrangements for
the reception of President Lincoln's
body, met this afternoon. An invita
tion was extended to all of the organi
zations, fire companies and associ
ations of this city and vicinity, to en
ter the procession.
Services In Nearby Towns
Many residents in nearby towns are
holding short services in honor of the
dead President.
Governor Oilers Howard
Following the announcement that
John Wilkes Booth, accused of mur
dering the President, was in this State,
Governor Curtin offered a reward of
SIO,OOO for the capture of Booth.
AN EVENING THOUGHT
The Bible not only dwells on
the rights of property and the du
ties of labor, but. for once that it
does not. it preaches ten times
over the duties of property and the
rights of labor. —Charles Kings
ley.
BOOKS and rfa
18l MAGAZINB3^||
Hamlin Garland has just come to
New York to establish his residence
in the East after nearly twenty-five
years of lifo in Chicago. He will re
tain the old homestead in Wisconsin,
and will spend his summers in the
Rockies; but his literary headquar
ters will be in New York City. Mr.
Garland's latest book, "The Forester's
Daughter," is a romance of the Rock
ies and of the woodlife he knows so
well.
Norman Duncan, author of "Going
Down from Jerusalem," is at present
in New York busy reading proofs of
his new book of travels which will
appear in the autumn. Mr. Duncan
divides his time—when he is not off
on an extended trip—between Canada
and the United States.
Margaret Deland has just left her
her home In Boston for a Spring holi
i • |:;!
No synthetic
flavorings are
ill used in our
candies. jj
M j
I Ij
fRJiSU t/urY MX* t|
9
i'lii.i: Our Sales Agents in i|i|ij
1 " Harrlsburg are ?'§
J. H. BOIIER
F. J. ALTHOUSR ! 11l
CUNNINGHAM'S
I (!S Hurler's Cocoa, like
Stops Stomach
Pains in Two Minutes
The recent discovery by a leading
specialist that pure blsurated magnesia
will almost instantly relieve pairs in
the stomach resulting from Indigestion,
dyspepsia or acidity Is of the greatest
Importance to thousands of people suf
fering from various forms of stomach
trouble. As is well known nine-tenths
of all such disorders are directly
traceable to excessive acidky. A tea
spoonful taken In a little water after
meals not only neutralizes the acid und
stops the pain, but quickly overcomes
the cause of the trouble, soothes the ln
i named lining of the stomach, and In a
short time effects permanent relief.—
Advertisement.
~ ' \
IIKA I)<trAISTEHS FOR
SHIRTS
SIDES & SIDES
1 ».. i
APRIL 20, 1915.
Children Cry for Fletcher's
The Kind Yon Have Always Bought has borne the
ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his
personal supervision for over SO years. Allow no one
to deceive yon in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
•STust-as-good" are hut experiments, and endanger the
health of Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTOR IA
Cnstoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains 'neither
Opium, Morphine nor other Nareotio substance. It de
stroys Worms and allays Feverlshness, For more than
thirty years It has been 1H constant use for the 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
In Use For Over 30 Years
THI CCNTAUH COMMIIt, N«W YOWK CUT.
day in Florida. "The Hands of Esau,", a* her vacations fc.ro usually devote
Mrs. DelanU's latest book, which was 'to work.
published recently, is a shorter tales I As the result of the popularity o
than "The Iron Woman," her latestl'The Turmoil," Booth Tarklngton hn
big novel. On reaching Florida Airs, (been receiving numerous requests t
Deland expects to begin its successor, | lecture at various colleges.
NEW Metropolis J|
YORK
Low Rate Excursion
B 23PSee Broadway; Pennsyl- Nk
■ vania Station; Central Park; «/
u Riverside Drive; Grant's Tomb; M
B Metropolitan Art Gallery; 1
Brooklyn Bridges and get a
glimpse of the greatest city on . D M < ln< iT r : n
I the American Continent. Round 1 rip
SUNDAY, MAY 2
SPECIAL THAW LEAVES
Harrldburs A.M. l.anraHter «.43 A.M.
>"At A.M. riirlHtlniin 7.12 A W.
Mlddlt'town it.mi A.M. ParkexhurK 7.'Jit till
Ellmabethtoivn «.18 A.M. C«ntr»vllle ..... T.-'U A.M.
0 *»3 A*M* nonnlDKtowa 7.3S A.M.
Returning, leaven New York 9.50 P. M.
See Flyers! Commit Ticket Agent*.
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
(c _
I It's easy to do banking
here, we make it that way
for everybody.
Union Trust Co.
of Penna.
Uaioa Trust Building
You Smokers Who
Like Strong Cigars
Do you know that imagination has a lot to do with
your taste? Don't bank too much on black tobacco.
A full-bodied all Havana smoke with a rich aroma
will touch the spot quicker and with less harmful re
sults than the strongest cigar rolled. Get wise and
get a quality smoke for your dime.
M2^A
Made by John C. Herman& Co.
|; Buy Coal Now—Cheapest
11 This Is the month to order next winter'* supply of coal. There's
|! a material savin? to be effected, and th« wise folk are taking advantage
\! of present low prices. Buy before the advance comes, and buy Mont
|\ \ gomery coal thus Insuring the most quality for your money.
J.B. MONTGOMERY
ij Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets