DANVILLE INTELLIGENCER Established, 1828 DANVILLE, MONTOUR COUNTY, PA., SKPT lti, 'O4. D. All ST LUTZ, Editor and Proprietor. TLIK INTKI.I.HJKNCKK is the oldest and best weekly, Democratic newspaper in this section of the.State. It enjoys tin- distinction of bavlng a larger county circulation than all the other weeklies com bined. Itgocs into the homes of all the best Democrats in the county, and is read by thousands of Its Republican friend* weekly. Published every Friday at Danville, the county seat of Montour county. Pa., at 91.00 a year in advance or $1.25 if not paid in advance; and no paper Will be discontinued until all arrearage is paid, except at the option of the publisher. Kates of advertising made known on application. Address all communications to THE INTELLIGENCES Danville, Pa. FARMERS PICNIC The farmers' picnic, held at Hunter's park Sat urday, was pronounced a decided success. The day was an ideal one, which brought out a largo attend ance. From all sections of the surrounding country came the grangers with their families, sweethearts ami others. So well pleased were all over the day's delight ful outing that it was proposed to organize and es tablish it as an annual event. Several opinions were expressed and then the organization was effected. Persons, from different sections, were named as a committee to meet some time later and appoint the various committees necessary to manage such an or ganization and attend to the future arrangements. Mo doubt different topics on advanced agricultural questions will be assigned to a number of the mem bers to prepare for discussion, and a general pro gram arranged. Our rural friends will anxiously prepare for this event next year, after bearing in mind the grand time they experienced this year, and they can look for greatly increased crowds to bear down up on them. We know full well the sociability and kindly feelings of the farmer, and only trust that this knowledge will not lead to imposition on the part of others by trying to set themselves too heavi ly upon their hospitality. It is these good people, who, on such occasions try to "stuff your dinner box" until the sides and top bulge out with good things. Hunter's park seems to have been settled upon, or at least favorably talked of, as the place for holding the next year's picnic. It is easy of access and its location is a consideration. The beauty of the surrounding scenery attracts and all in all it is the place. The final conference between Senator Penrose and the trades-Unions that have protested against employing non-union workers on the Capitol at Harrisburg, has ended in a complete rupture and the American Federation and affiliated bodies have begun a hot campaign against "the party in power." They declare that they will defeat the Republican candidates in from twelve to fifteen con gressional districts in Pennsylvania at the November elec tion. This threat may not be quite realized, but there is trouble ahead. A LITTLE DIFFERENT NOW There is plenty of evidence that we tiro living in an age of style. Display is what is now most required, whether it lie a private demonstration or a public function, a wedding or a funeral, the dedi cation of a church, or the commencement at an educational institution. Things are different now in this respect from what they were a generation ago. Speaking of the unnecessary display, pageantry, and lavish expenditure which in these days attend the laying of the cornerstone of any public building with which the State or Government may be con nected, as contrasted with the simplicity that pre vailed at the laying of the corner stone of the Dan vill Asylum, a State institution, a gentleman con versant with the incidents of that occasion, remark ed, the other day, that the Governor of the State at that time, who was General John W. Geary, came lip from llarrisburg to perform that function. He came unheralded and alone, riding in the smoking car. When he reached Danville there was no ob sequious committee waiting to receive him. lie didn't want any fuss of that kind. He climbed into the old omnibus at the Station and was taken to the Montour House where he spent the night. The next morning he was conveyed to the site of the Asylum, laid the corner stone, and as soon as that had been done he started back for Harrishuag, rid ing in the smoker as before. In these days, on such an occaison requiring the presence of a Governor, there would bo any amount of pageantry, paiade and expense. Things are different now from what they use to be. Is it for the better or for the worse I Our pledge of independence to Cuba made peace and harmony, but Secretary Taft warns the American people that a pledge of independence to the Philippines would be followed by tumult and war. Will the Secretary please explain ? WORK ON MILL STREET All along the thoroughfare, from the Montour house to the I)., L. & W. lly. crossing, you will lincl things "up-side-down-sid'e." It appears privileges have been granted the street-paving contractor, by our borough officials, that would have received 110 recognition by any other city, and the same have been eagerly grasped and are being worked—we almost said to advan tage. To see Mill street paved is our ambition, but to have it torn up from one end to half or two-thirds of its length brings forth a "kick." The spirit of patience rebels in our hearts, and we believe it an imposition to favor one to the disadvantage of the many. Our merchants are entitled to better protec tion. Their trade is damaged and how soon will it again be satisfactorily adjusted is the question. Other cities in undergoing the same transform ation, allow only one side of a square to be worked at a time, thus keeping the roadway open to travel, and more or less protecting the business man's in terests, who lives in that section. A long time has been spent in the work thus far completed, and wo cannot blame the merchants and others living in the disheveled district for wearing a discouraged and dissatisfied countenance, and oven expressing them selves in open disapproval to the imposition. Poultney Bigelow proclaims that this country should keep an army of 770,000 soldiers, and Richmond Hobson wants about fifty new battleships immediately. They are ail inflammatory couple. SO GAY 1 No accusation is commoner among intimates than that of spreading gloom. Each member of a family privately feels how cheery he or she would be if only the others would make an effort to be cheerful too. "I am naturally of a gay disposition," said u young 1111111 to his friend as they walked sadly along together, "but I require nn echo." "And I can be very gay too," said the other, "but I also require an echo!" They continued their walk in dreary silence. THEY DO IT ALL Well, Mr. Roosevelt has accepted the nomination for President 011 the Republican ticket. Ilis Utter of accept ance covered an entire page of a large newspaper, and the most striking thing about it is its utter lack of Roosevelt iau rampageoiisncss, a lack so marked and »o remarkable that it leads some to speculate as to the real authorship of portions of the document, which are certainly not in the tone and style of the rampageous Roosevelt, although they are the very portions where IK- might have been ex pected to prance and paw the air in his most picturesque style. Consider the Panama paragraph, for example. There U nothing but a mild mannered defonse of the prompt recognition of the republic of l'anauui »•* an act well with in the rights of the executive, and fully warranted by both justice and expediency. Jjiter on he refers to"the presence of the warship at Colon" at that critical moment. One would have expected Theodore Roosevelt—the bold, blunt, straighforward rough riding Theodore Roosevelt— to state the plain facts frankly and defiantly, and to stand by them proudly, as the mau with the big stick, for surely he cannot imagine that all the world has forgotten that not one warship, but two fleets, and a handy shipload of marines, with more to follow, were all ready to pounce upon the isthmus when that precious "revolution" was sprung upon the startled natives. He cannot suppose that the situation was so dimly viewed at the time, or is now so nearly forgotten that pec pie will be ready to believe that our armed menace of helpless little Columbia, forbidding her to suppress the re volt of her own state, was a polite anil perfectly legiti mate proceeding towards a friendly nation, with due re gard to international law. No, he could not suppose the people so forgetful of events so recent and perfectly clear, so thoroughly in Roosevelt spirit; and his natural impulse must have been t<> recite them gleefully and stand by them manfully, with a "There you have me. That's my policy. That's what I mean by treading softly and carrying a big stick ! If you a want a thing, go and take it. Any other course is troublesome." The Presideut has evidently suppressed his natural impulses, all through his letter, and particularly at the points where he would have pranced. He is strongly impressed, without doubt, by the evi lence of a revolt of public opinion against his strenuous uid heedless methods, as illustrated at Panama, and de cides to remove the impression that he is inclined to vio lent methods, ami may lead us into more Panama ad ventures. Mr Roosevelt's letter, however, leaves 110 doubt as to who makes the sun shine and the grass grow airtl the rain fall, the corn to ripen and the hogs to get fat. The Republican party does it all under the indispensable boss ing of T. R. American manufacturers are exporting their goods to the ends of the earth at the rate of nearly $.">00,000,000 a year. The question before the people is why tliese hoary headed monopplies need to he forever coddled and pamper ed on fifty per cent tariff pap, to protect them from com positors who they are underselling in the markets of the world. That's the question, brethren; read it over again and solve the puzzle if you can. THE MADE UP WOMAN A very pretty subject for discussion has been opened up by the assertion of a lady novelist that the made-up woman invariably reigns supreme de spite the rulings of moralists and the prevalent sup erstitition that the sweet, gentle woman who is neat in her dress and nothing more is really man's ideal. That virtue is literally its own reward in such cases is the substances of tho lady novelist's at tack. Certainly clothes alone will not give a plain or an unpleasant woman the advantage over one whose wardrobe is demode, if the latter have beauty and grace, for it is possible to recall many instances where the family governess or the vicar's daughter has scored over a veritable bevy of faultlessly dress ed women. Still, 011 the whole perhaps it is safer for every woman to make the best effort she can to enhance such charms as she may possess and to simulate them as artistically as she can w hen nature has not been liberal. Beauty unadorned may and often does have a very good chanci, but when by no manner of mean can beauty be claimed, even in unadorned fashion, then assuredly it is decidedly risky, and one might almost say undutiful to one's neighbor, not to seek artificialty's artful aid. No woman with the slight est self-respect would go about toothless or bald: she would assuredly expect if she did that the "faked woman" would triumph over her. And if she is justified and indeed compelled by the laws of decency to supply dental and hirsute deficiencies, why should not a woman who is pallid, inclined to wrinkles, small eyed or of indifferent figure similar ly improve herself Republicans in Indiana are lying in ambush for Bryan and declare that they will make it hot for him when he mounts the Hoosier stump. This temperature is to be caused, they think, by asking him questions about silver, and Parker and the Commoner. These expecta tions are evidently entertained only by yoels who have never seen Billy Bryan on his feet in the presence of tui audience. REMEMBER, WE ARE DEMOCRATIC The task of editing a newspaper is not what many persons believe it to be. YOll can't please everybody all the time. It matters not how truth ful you may be in your articles there is room for complaint, it appears, for many. To the inconsid erate and false the truth hurts the most. We try our best to please the greatest number of persons, and dwell with articles in such a manner as we be lieve will do tho greatest good to the greatest num ber. It must be remembered by our Republican friends that while we are not only a staunch Demo crat ourself, we are running a representative Demo cratic paper. We do not resort to "mud slinging" and refrain, to a great extent, from being personal, yet, in our carefulness to not misrepresent, we find it a most difficult job to even handle political matter judiciously, for we are in touch with some political friends of the opposite party that are entirely too sensntive. They must not be so hasfy as to mis judge us, remembering that we are Democratic, both ourself and newspaper. Senator Fairbanks weeps great salt tears when speak ing of the decadence of American ocean shipping. Bu as this branch of industry, by the unanimous testimony 1 ship-owners, pays only about one per cent on the invest incut, the longitudinous statesman might well shed tear because we have so much. CHEAP WORLD POSTAGE BLOCKED The American proposition of a universal letter-postage rate of two cents will fail of adoption at the coming Postal Congress. The French delegates will oppose it, our calile despatches say, because they think it would he absurd to send a letter from Paris to Chicago cheaper than to a Paris suburb. Quite true; it would be absurd. But the way to prevent such an absurdity is not to block cheap foreign postage but to reduce the French domestic rate. Nothing keeps it at its present burdensome height except the cur*" of militarism and those empty dreams of "glory" which so heavily tax the resources which France needs for peace ful development. If the United States prefers retaliation to recipro city, Canada announces that rt has learned the trick of building Chinese walls also. If we can penalise raw ma terials from Canada, Canada can penahr.e our manufac tures. And verily our need is greater than liers. "THE DEMOCRATIC HOPE" Written for Public Ledger by HON. CARTER H. HARRISON, Mayor of Chicago. While ail prophecies arc more or less iu the nature of guesses, and any conjecture liable togo astray, the prospect for Democratic success in the coming election is good. The personality of the candidates, a question which has always entered into every political campaign, lias al ready been largely dwelt upon by the press and by political speakers. A careful analysis of the characters of the two men will show them to lie the almost exact opposite* of one another. In the judgment of most of the Ameri can people a President of the United States should be a man of cool judg ment, calm and equable us to tem perament, and a man of firmness. By firmness is not meant that lie should carry a chip on his shoulder, or that he should exalt the military above the civil iu government; nor to be governed by impulses which might lead him into embroiling the United States in wars with foreign nations. That the candidate for President of the United States 011 the Republican side is a very impulsive man, his best friends will not deny. That the Democratic candidate for President is a man of even, judical and conserva tive temperament, even his worst en emies will cheerfully admit. The temperament of a man does not al» ways change with advancing years. It is possible for a man to retain the sanguine and unfounded hopes of boy hood until the last; and while this quality is admirable iu a friend, it is exceedingly unsafe in an official. The manifold duties and responsi bilities of the Chief Executive of our country require the services of a man who will bring to the position a just and passionless view of men and mea sures; a resolution to do right calmly, and not in a spectacular manner; to admiuster the laws with the least pos sible leaning on the military arm of government; to adhere strictly to the policy of neutrality as to foreign na tions and their wars; to pursue, in a word, the even tenor of official ways, devoting his entire time to the peace, safety and prosperity of the American people, without regard to the false dream of making its a world power in a military or naval sense. As to the platforms of the two parties, while they are similar in some respects, t lie same radical difference is apparent in them as there is in the doctrines of Hamilton and Jefferson, liie greatest menace now existing, or ever existing, against the government of the United States is the tiu-its. The Republican party, as the father of a high protective tariff, is respon sible, more than any other cause,, for the building up of the trusts. It is not a logical proposition that a father should destroy his own offspring, particularly when the offspring have grown and flourished to such an ex tent as to be now the main support of their parent. It is idle to look for relief from the encroachments of the trusts under a Republican administra tion. ft is useless to talk of curtail ing the power ot' illegal combinations ALTON B. PARKER it Y*S # "I Read (he NEW ]M Vlllil.lt Every Day." THE WORLD Elected Cleveland. "If may be'said without reservation tlmt if the Democratic party in my first campaign had lacked the forceful and potent advocacy of Demo cratic principles at that time by the NEW YORK WORLD the result illicit have been reversed."—GßOVEß CLEVELAND'S LETTER TO THE WORLD, MAY 10, 1903. Bryan on THE WORLD. "THE WORLD never during the last twenty years considered itself a party paper. It promised to spread truly Democratic principles and truly Democratic ideas, and it has done so, and will do so, with entire independence of bosses, machines and platforms, following only the dic tates of its conscience."—QUOTED, WITH APPROVAL, BY WILLIAM J. BRYAN IN THE COMMONER, JULY 10, 1903. New York World Send us $1 for THE WORLD and you will receive THE WORLD Every Weekday for FOUR MONTHS from the day your subscription is received, including every day of Hie Presidential Campaign, or take advantage of our club offer made below. Both Sides of the Gregt Political Battle Fully and Fairly Given. Fl RST NEWS! BEST NEWS! THE WORLD IN THIS PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN. THE WORLD, us the "Chief Champion in America of Democratic Ideas,' will be the most interesting newspaper in the country in this Presi dential campaign. It already has a much larger circulation than any other morning newspaper in America. It will tell everything that is done or said to the public by both Pre sidential candidates every day until after the election. Its editorial page will—as it always has—support Democratic plat forms and Democratic leaders wheji they are right. It will not support— and it never has supported—them when they desert true Democratic princi ples and put themselves in the wrong. Its news will be absolutely fair and impartial. It believes that the truth is always to be told. 1 lie World believes lliat the triumph of the Democratic party on a truly Democratic platform means a return to sanity and purity, a return to those ideals which won for Americans the admiration of the world as a peo ple who minded their own business, and were willing other people should mind theirs. It is on these lines that the battle must be fought. The divergence is sharp and clear. On one side are corporate might, the spirit of adventure millions and yet more millions for army and navy, and a dangerous foreign policy. On the other side arc equal opportunity for all, the free develop ment of the individual, a just observance of the rights of others, and honesty and moderation in the public expenditures. The progress of the present campaign will always be told tersely, truthfully by The World. If you are interested, as you should be, in a vital contest, you will need it every day. No Democrat or Republican should be happy without it. The World "never appeals to class prejudice. To encourage the prompt formation of clubs for the campaign a special offer is made, as follows: We will send the Danville Intelligencer and the MORNING WORLD every weekday for four months for 81.00; Regular price, §2.35. This is a splendid clubbing offer. The New York World' is Amer ica's greatest newspaper. Sample copies of The World supplied free on application. Every subscription will be for the DAILY Morning World for FOUR mouths from the date it begins. of capital by a party which owes its continuance in office to such illegal combinations. The trusts are the immediate and vital concern of the American people. And the people will not be able to counteract or stem this evil unless there is a change iu Washington. Another salient point of difference between the two platforms is regard ing the Philippine question. This question, forced upon the country by a Republican President, has become a most serious one, touching the very core of. our existence as a republic. The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States have been nullified, to the astonish ment of the world and the lasting dis grace of our country. Reparation for this, while it cannot wipe away tlio stain upon our national honor nor atone for the blood spilled by men fighting for their liberty, can conic, even as an act of tardy justice, only from the hands of a Democratic ad ministration. The opportunity offered the Demo crats in this campaign, both as to candidate and principles, is excellent. The Democrats are united to-day as they have not been for many years. The selection of Mr. Taggart as Chairman of the Campaign Committee was a wise and judicious one. He is a man of great energy, large experi ence and good judgment. He will leave no stone unturned to achieve Democratic success. The expressions of opinion anil pledges of support from prominent Democrats all over the country are evidence of the fact that the Democratic party will present a solid force to the enemy next No vember. Tliere remarkable threat in the Re publican platform, embodied in the plank proposing the disfranchisement of the Southern white, will not only solidify the entire South, including Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia and Maryland, but it will have a wide-reaching effect, in my opinion, on voters at large. Can a man who would directly insert into a platform a plank which might result iu civil war l>e trusted at the head of the gov ernment for four years, either in the present unsettled condition of the world's affiiirs or at any other period ? The President's predecessor handled tlie intricate and perilous race ques tion with wisdom and judgment. The present adminstration has gone about it with the infantile recklessness of a child who plays with matches iu close proximity to a barrel of gunpowder. A rational and dispassionate study of the negro question will force, any sane mind to the conclusion that, however the problem is settled eventually, the white man will retain his plane in civilization, and the black man will hold his. This is simply a law of nature, and can no more be avoided than the laws which govern the course and directions of the planets tliem sel ves. | With a candidate whose life and record are beyond reproach, with a platform which stands for the essenti al principles of Democracy, with a party united in every section of the country and in every particular, I believe that the prospect of a Demo cratic President in the White House is exeeediugly bright. Is. the Republican Purty "Clean ?" Discussing an article from I lie pen of President Roosevelt's itilimulo friend William Allen White, in Mc- Cluiv's, on Koosevelt ami the Postal I irauds, the N Y. Times, in its issue of August 28th, quotes therefrom the s a cment that Congressmen and Senators went storming the White House in behalf of Maehen and Green. Commenting upon this particular statement of fact the Times verv poiniedly remarks: "We do not see where, except at the White House, it was learned that 'Congressmen and Senators came storming there in behalf of one booil lor, or that the two Senators from New York and every prominent Re publican in the Stato 'begged for mercy,' anil then 'threateneil Presid ent Koosevelt' for allowing the indict ment of another. We should like to know what Senator Piatt, Senator Depew, and Chairman Odoli have to say to such a degrading accusation, made with the inevitable implication of authority from the President him self "If this is n correct picture of tho demoralization of (lie Republicans in high places, would it not be well to change the party in power, and to plni o in the Whilo House a President to whom the Senators and Congress men of that party would not venture to address either supplications or threats in behalf of public thicvos?" Oosl ruglon constables are busy serv ing court sabpoenas for the torin of orimtnal eourt Iu Northumberland ounty whioh opous Monday, Soptoui ber JBth. Tlio nnmber of litigants, criminal and otherwise,that will pour into Sunhory will break the rocord Thomas Graham, of Norristown, thinks he is the oldest Methodist in the State, having connected himself with this church 72 years ago, when he was 18 years of age. T Diamond COAL YAI1I) WILL SELL COAL C PI K A 1 5 K R than any other coal yard in Danville FIRST CLASS QUALITY. T. A. Schott p airs iiii SII * j " The wind-up ot The Season with ) 112 Prices at less than j Manufacturers can produce them. i Draperies^ Draperies^— H®*- -AND-: C Q ce G UF tf a i ns Mattings! Mattings! Mattings! 1 HOUSE FURNISHINGS, E H DISHES, Ac., all reduced. u M N. B,—Cash balance paid on Butter and Eggs. 1 ■ I?armors will find our store tho head centre to do their I | trading. The largest stock to select from ami at prices B B that out-distance all competition. Q I REMEMBER THE PLACE 8 I DMVILUS GREATEST STORE P. C. Murray & Son FARMERS AND DAIRYMEN! 1 ATTENTION! Orders will ho taken for a guaranteed 43 per cent. Protein Brand of Cotton ■Seed Moal, delivered off tho car at Potts grove, at a reduced price. Send inquiries and orders by mail to Pottsgrove. Persons having orders in, will be notified on arrival of the car | C. H. TlcMahan & Bros. Special Dairy Foods and Dairy Supplies, HAY AND FEED | Pottsgrove, Northumberland Co., Pa. ONE WEEK'S TREATMENT FREE! ! * SIMPLY CUT OUT THIS COUPON, "i : And mail to The Cal-cora Company, Kennedy • : Row, Koudout, N. Y. • • Dear Sirs: I think lam •ufferinß from j ; Please provide me with . : week's' treatment with CAL-COBA SOLVMT, : : PRBB OF ALL COST. • Name \ Address J Any sufferor from Kidney trouble, Liver complaint, Diseases of the Bladder, Oo* 1 " at i pat ion, or Blood irapnrity who really desires to find a rermanent Cure, may obtain FREE TREATMENT with CaUura Solvent, Dr. David Kennedy's new medi cine. Simply cut out the coupon above, and mail to the Oal-cura Company, Ken nedy Row, Rondout, N.Y. Cal-curfc Solvent is unequaled by any preparation, and is Dr. Kennedy's greatest medicine. It acts on an entirely new principle. Mr. William H. Miller, of Matteawan, N Y., says: — 4, 1 was seriously troubled wiili my kidneys and bladder for over threo years. Many doctors and various kidney remedies, gave me no relief. But I finally bought a bottle of Cal-oura Solvent of my druggist,used a few bottles, and I am cured." MA^P R BALSAM J YoulhM* C<& J W. M. SEIDEL 344 MILL STREET Latest Improved Sewing Machine. We can furnish you with a $50.00 Sewing Machine, new from the factory, at jnst half price. It is a Llght-Ruuing Champion Drop-Head, one of the very latest patterns, anPy !■•■"*■■■ ' 7 w no 17 i o i# Htonylown Kerry I7 50 rlO 53 \1! i? llerwlek 112 802 1100 ,105 040 Neseopeek ..... I,.nve J HO2l 11 06 JBO6I 040 licucli Haven Ferry., I'B oil 1 l'iV.r'" l'iV.r'" , * 1,1 11 ai "3 20 862 uquuV.::-.-.-.-.v.i ' n,ai:i2i " M MlilekHlllnuy ; *3l 11 32 330 701 (ftnTfc * l,! 1142 3| o 710 Hm'uJ., •; f »«riiSS, .?ig r ?g SwUSiir;;:. F VS, r I? 1 '] $ UHflemreet II (h 12 £ \JS 7$ Wllkes-liorre... Arrive »10 12 10 405 735 v/Aiai) STATIONS A . M . A M P|| PM iilliMi wteiWrfi" Vm SS "S ;;;y." V utl. Kerry r 782 112 1044 f2 $ 112 UOT Sunt ~k, 1 v ' 112 264 111 0» „'". 1 7I - 111 ■*> 801 II 17 .swSi,i,;,Vy.v..v:'Y ,31 ,USB 3IU 828 Moeanumia 1107 3JO (J 37 si?" u , "I! 1 r H '*"» r1111f325 10 42 KSiVHU'ES? VOX:: si " :i: " 847 Ne«i'"|Hek Arrive 818 11 20 312 700 Herwlek > . te;„!bS£r:::::::: v s 4 - 1 11,attl *» iuast Hlooiiisbiir^.... / 1150 108 725 Cala\viH«a Arrive 855 1157 113 732 Catawissa.......liCave K,V» 1157 413 732 Koariiig ('reek 112 !Hm 112 12 05 112 I ly 112 7 3» '» 10112 "' 4 •«' 7 4« South Danville.!!!..} " 11 1216 431 761 Kipp'H ltun f0 10fl2 20 f435 112 7 66 u/; , V V r V n ry2511228r 442! K 0« K line s Grove I »»27 11230r445 112 800 Sunbury Arrive S 0 35 5 12 40 | 4 55 | 8 10 | Dally. $ Dully, except Hunday. 112 Stops si nal' 11 1 e Condwclor or Agent, or on TmlnK leave Soulli Danville nx follows: lyr I lltstuti ami Seruntou,7 II 11 in mid 221 ana > /) p 111 wcck-ilayii; 10 17 ain ilully. Kor I'ottsvlllc, ItemlliiK and Fhlladclplila. 7llii in and 221 pin week-day*. Knr IlHzlelon, 711 ain anil 221 and 650 pm week-days. Kor Lewlshurif, Mlllon, Wllllnmaport, Ixx-k llaven, Iteuovo and Kane, 12 15 pin week days; l. lll '•»<> 7SI i> m week-duyn; 431 p 111 dnily. * 1 For I'lilliirti lphm (vlu Harrislimv) Baitl in.nv and W asliiiinton, li I I a in and and 12 15 and /ol p m wei'k-days; 1 ill pin dally. For I'ltlHburg (via llarriKlmru) H 11 a m and 7 611. m wivk-duyi;: I :tl pin dally ; (via Uw iHtnwn Junrllo, i It II a in and 12 l"» p m week days; via l.nik Haven jU I! ain and 12 15 p m week-days. r Pullman I'arlor nnd Sleeping Cars run on through Iniln.s between Hunhury, Williams |H)i t mid Krii*. between Hunlmry unci Phila delphia iin< 1 Washington aud between Harris burg, Pittsburg and tin* West. For further information apply to ticket agents. W. W. ATTERBUItY, J. R. WOOD, U ei lent I Manager. Pass'r Traffic Mgr QKO. W. BOYD, General I'iuiß'r Agt. Easy and Quick 1 Soap-Making 1 with I BANNER LYE I To make the very best soap, simplyH dissolve a can of Banner Lye in coldfl water, melt 5 lbs. of grease, pour thdV Lye water in the grease. Stir and putfl •side to set. J ■ Full Directions on Every Package ' B Banner Lye is pulverized. The can ] may be opened and closed at will, per- I tnitting the use of a small quantity at a 1 time. It is just the article needed in J every household. It will clean floors, marble and tile work, soften water,® disinfect sinks, closets and waste Write for booklet "Uses of SOMMTU Lye' ' —free. l jH The Pens Chemical »Verka. fl La t o 11 a FOR THE TOILET. ( A Most Marvelous Preparation i FOR SHAMPOOING, 3IIAVING&CLEANSINO A magnificent flesh food-feeds the akin and im- P"'" s <'"mi«l«lon Used nnd recommended by all physician*. I.ATOILA is dcU K htrul. fra tt» a iiiVrils'' n * lIIK '' nd uatis<; l ,tlc Every trial prove# Free Samples of Latoils may lie obtained at the drug store of Mrs. J. D. GOSH & CO., DANVILLE, PA. My Breath. Shortness of Breath Is One of the Com monest Signs of Heart Disease, Notwithstanding what many tans say, heart disease can be cured. Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure has per manently restored to health many thousands who had found no relief la the medlclftcs (allopathic or homoeo pathic) of regular practicing physicians. It has proved Itself unique In the his tory of medicine, by being so uniformly successful In curing those diseases. Nearly always, one of the first sign* of trouble is shortness of breath. Wheth er it comes as a result of walking oc running up stairs, or of other exercises. If the heart Is unablo to meet this estrsf demand upon Its pumping powers—thora Is something wrong with it. The very best thing you can do, Is t<| tako Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure. I| will goto the foundation of the trou ble, and make a permanent curs byt strengthening and renewing the nerves,- 1 "I know that Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure Is a great remedy. For a number of years 1 suffered from shortness ol breath, smothering spells, and im my left side. For months at a time ft smother. A friend advised using Dr. J?i«h ll f? rt Cure, which I dkft with good results. I began to improve ni ??« e tr« nd * % tcr & k,n S bottle® «ii he *» Heart Cure th ® P atns In and other symptoms vanished. I am now entirely well. All those dreadful ftno l thering spells are a thing of the past."—F. P. DRAKE, Middle town, O. If the first bottle does not help you, the druggist will refund your money. Write to us for Free X XV£jJC« Package of Dr. Miles' Antl* Pain Pills, the New Scientific Remedy for Pain. Also Symptom Blank. Our Specialist will diagnose your caso. tell you what Is wrong, and how to right Free. DR. MILES MEDICAL COZ 1 APOHil r rftßiF J> i K r v A IVTi JMlfc