Established in 1828. ID. AVST LVT3 Editor und Proprietor DANVILLE, I*A., JITXK 2, 'OS. Published every Friday at Danville, the county seat of Montour county, I'll., at fl.tw a year In advance or Jl.'Ji if not i>uid in ad vance; and no paper will be discontinued until nil arrearage is paid, except ut the option of the publisher. Kates Mt ail vert isi IIK made known on ap plication. Address ull communications to riiK INTBLLIGENCEB, DANVILLK, TA» ANNOUNCEMENTS \\jT£. are authorized to annunce the nuine oi W oko. W. MILLS as a candidate lor the Office ol County Commissioner, subject to the regular rules of the Democratic party of Mon tour county. WE are authorized to announce the name ol GKO. M. LKJGHoW as a candidate for the lllocc of ("ounty t 'ommissioiicr, subject to the regular rules oi the Ueinocrutlc puny oi Montour county. WE are authorized to announce the name ol ii i.N It V I « M iJ'j.iC lis .. candidate lot i hi office of County Commissioner, subject to the regular rules of the Duniocrutic l'arty of Mon tour county. WE are authorized to announce the name ol CLARENCE W. SEI DEL, of Washlng tonvlile, as a candidate for the office of County Commissioner, subject to the regular rules ol the Democratic Tarty of Montour county. WE are authorized to announce the name ol ANDREW HI LLME YEK, oi Liberty township, as a candidate for the office oi County Commissioner, subject to the reguiai rules of the Democratic Tarty of Montoui county. WE are authorized to announce t lie nnnieo: CHAS. W. COOK, of \ alley township,a? a candidate for the office of Couiiiy Comiuis sloner, subject to the regular rules of the Re * publican party of Montour c.mnty. WE are authorized to announce the name o CHAS. T. liEARUART as a candidal for the office of District Attorney, subject to the regular rules of the Deniocrailc party ol Montour county. Democratic County Convention. By authority of the Democratic Count) Committee tlie Democratic County Con vention will meet in Danville in th( Court House, on Monday, June sth, l!H)5, at 10 o'clock in the morning of said (lay. The primaries will be held on Satur day, June 3rd, 1905, between the hourt of 2 and (> p. m., at the usual place in each election district. Each district it entitled to two delegates. The following will be nominated at the primaries:- One person for Associate Judge. One person for District Attorney. Two persons for County Commission ers. Two persons for County Auditors. HOK VO; C. HI. I K, Chairman, JOSEPH R. PA'ITON, Secretary. JOHN BRUDER AT REST. To the Editor of the INTEI.MOENCKK : Will you please give space it your valuable columns to the fol lowing beautiful song of praise and words of comfort The funeral of John Br tide r, or C street, on Thursday of last week, was largely attended, while the floral offerings were indeed exqui site—pink and white carnation.' and roses, handsomely fashioned into shields, pillows and bouquets, heartfelt tributes of respect from t le several organizations of which t ie brother was an honorable and s eadfast member, consisting oi t ie Eagles, Firemen and Koyal Arcanum. Rov. Martin L. Shin dal, 1). D., pastor of Pine Street Lutheran Church delivered ai i npressive and eloquent sermon, which appealed to the hearts oi all within the sound of his voice, a:tor which Rev. Mr. Sherman, ol the First Baptist Church, offered aa earnest, fervent prayer. Out-- i ig the services Mrs. Joseph 11. Johnson and Win. D. Lanmastei s.veetiy rendered the touching hymn, "Saved by (irace," accom panied on an organ by Miss Ann it Divel,which was, indeed, pathetic ••Home day the sliver cord will break, And I no more as now shall sing; Rut (), the Joy when 1 shall wake Within the palace of the King! CIIOKt'S: And I shall see Him face to face. And tell the story—Saved by Grace; And I shall see Him face to face. And tell the story—Saved by Grace. Some day my earthly house will fall, 1 cannot tell how soon 't will be; But this I know—my All In All Has now a place in lieav'n for nie. Homo day, when fades the golden sun lie neat It the rosy tinted west, My blessed Lord shall nty, 'Well done!' And 1 shall enter into rest. Some day—till then I'll watch and wait. My lamp all trlhun'd and burning hrighl That when my Saviour opes the gate, My soul to 111 in may tukeTs tllght." After the solemn services at the homo of the bereaved mother and only child, the funeral wended its w ty to the Odd Fe'lows' cemetery, where the remains were laid tc rest. We sympathize with the bereaved widow and daughter and tie many kind and affectionate re!- a ives and friends of the deceased, who has "gone to that bourne from whence no traveler returns." nE. THE JUICY GRAPE. It. Illatury I. Well Milk a. Old m 'Mint of Muu. The history of the grape is til most an old as that of man. Growing in Us highest perfection in Syria and Persia, Its recommended it to the especial care of the patriarchal tillers of the soil, and vineyards were exteu slvely planted long before orchards or collections of other fruit trees were at all common. The grape came originally from Per sia. From the latter country as civili zation advanced westward this fruit accompanied It—first to Egypt, then to Greece, Sicily, Italy, Spain, France and then to Great Britain, to which latter country the Romans carried it 200 years after Christ. To America the seeds and plants of the European varieties Were brought by emigrants and colonists the first fifty years a/ter its settlement. There are a vast number of varieties of grapes, but there are really only about a dozen varieties goo.l for the table. California produces tlie Tokay, Muscat, Black Prince, Malaga, etc.. while the eastern states produce such varieties as the Concord,'Catawba, Ni agara, Delaware, Black Hamburg and Isabella.—New England Grocer. A DEEP SEA GLUTTON. rhin Murine Wlxnrri Can Sfrallow a riali Twice It- Own Slae. "That one animal can devour another :wlee its own size at a single swallow s a statement that may seem as in credible as any fish story ever invent-, »d," writes Dr. Sanderson C'hristison. 'Nevertheless it is true of certain fish es. So far as known such fishes are in labitants of the deep seas, where utterf larkness perpetually prevails, with an mvarying temperature almost as cold' is ice and a pressure ranging, accord ng to depth, from a quarter to three or four tons upon every square inch of their body surface. The deep sea is ?oinmonly regarded as commencing where the rays of sunlight cease to jeuetrate, which is estimated to be less than 1,200 feet below the surface, and may extend to twenty times that dis tance or even much more, down to the, bottom of the ocean. Fishes have been Iredged from below 12,000 feet. "A deep sea lish, the Cliiasmodus nl ger, six and five-eighths of an inch long, has been found to have swal lowed another lish ten and a half Inch es long. The stomach of the devourer Is stretched as thin as gold beater's skin. It has sharp, hooked teeth, which cross each other from opposite sides of the mouth and usually point backward. According to Guntlier, the lish after having seized Its victim with its capa cious and very movable jaws partly presses it down as a snake would do nnil partly draws itself over it. The prey is received into an esophagus and stomach the membranes of which are us extensible as an iudia rubber pouch. The stomach when empty is contracted and folded up and projects but little below the abdomen. "When a deep sea lish is brought to the surface, how gradually and careful soever, its bones are often like so much touchwood and its muscles like rotten pulp, while its eyes are burst from its sockets and its viscera are often blown out of the body cavity by the expan sion of the air bladder. It frequently happens that deep sea fishes are found tloating helplessly on the surface of the ocean with large prey in their stomachs. Their appearance under these circumstances is accounted for by the efforts of their struggling vic tims to escape from their jaws, caus ing them to ascend beyond the horizon tal zone which they usually inhabit. "Deep sea fishes are commonly black or dark brown. But, although it is claimed that light is essential to the formation of colors, some deep sea fishes are scarlet in parts or uniform red or rosy. Others are silvery white, while, according to Alcock, the neo copelus is 'one dazzling sheen of pur ple and silver and burnished gold, amid which is a sparkling constellation of luminous organs.* " BOATING ON THE NILE. The IlcMt rilotN Run Affround TITO OJ Throe Tlme« a Day. Navigation on the Nile is not so com plicated a matter as upon the north Atlantic, writes Alonzo Clarke Robin son in Outing. To run at full speed upon a sund bar is an occurrence ol such frequency as hcrdly to elicit n comment from the passengers. The crew take more interest because they are obliged to push the boat off again with poles, and this entails a great amount of shouting and some work The Nile below the first cataract is fl fairly broad, muddy river, flowing be tween deposed banks varying from fix to eight to twenty to thirty feet in height. Its surface is interrupted ev erywliere by sund spits and islands upon which are to be seen thousands of birds. The channel, if such it can bo called', winds from to the other and changes completely with ev cry flood; hence even the best pilots run aground two or three times a day It Is, of course, impossible to proceed at night, and each (lay's voyage come? to an end wherever darkness happens to overtake one. The boat's nose is simply run plump on tlie bank, twe men leap out and drive stakes to whlcli to make fast, and there you are for the night. A very simple and effective method, without any ostentation and requiring very little knowledge oi mathematics; it has also the advantage of variety. Sometimes one finds one self alone beneath the wonderful Egyptian moon lighting up the river the distant cliffs and the silent, empty plain, or perhaps one stops near some little native village, in which ease the bank is lined with silent, curious tig ures, who crouch for hours wrapped in their white cloth coverings. Once we tied up beside a lonely brick kiln. The sight was a weird one. The red flare of the furnace, fed with sugar cane cast Intermittent flashes of light intc the night, in and out of which moved black half naked natives, while over head was the cloudless, star lit sky of Egypt. OUR INAUGURAL OATH. It IN the Shortcut anil SlmiilcKt Tak en by Any Huler. The oath of ofHce taken by the in coming president of the United States is the shortest and the simplest re quired of any ruler on earth. It is pre scribed l>y the constitution and is as follows: "I do solemnly swear (or aflirin) that I will faithfully execute the office ol president of the United States, and, tc the best of my ability, protect, preserve uml defend the constitution of the Unit eil States." —This oath is slowly repeated by the president elect after the chief justice of the supreme court, in the presence ol the public upon a platform erected in front of the main door on the eastern sldo of the capltol. While the oath i being repeated the president elect and the chief justice face each other and hold with their right hands between them a Bible furnished by some person interested or especially procured foi the occasion, which becomes the prop crty of the president after it has been appropriately inscribed and sealed bj the chief clerk of the supreme court. At the close of the oath the president elect bows his head and kisses the open page of the book, and it has been cus tomary for him or for his wife or o friend to select some appropriate pas sage at which the book shall bo opened and the verse upon which he shall press liis lips. Sometimes, when those inter ested forget or neglect to choose a pas sage, the Bible is opened at random, but the clerk of the supreme court is always careful to note and mark the exact place where the lips touched the page.—Chicago Itecord-llerald. Car-vln»c* on Hauler Island. The hard volcanic rock of Easter laud is covered with carvings iutemlec to represent human faces, birds. Sshei aiid mythical nniiuals. Fishes and tur ties appear common among these sculp tures. but the most common figure is ( mythical animal, half human in form with bowed back and long, elawliki legs and arms. According to the na tives, this symbol was intended to rep resent the god "Meke-Meke," the grea spirit of the sea. MVSTERY OF DREAMS. "hr AVimilrrN tlic Ilrain S«*rs In llie Fraction of it Secoiul. It is not unusual to hoar one say that 10 has boon dreaming about unething ill night, v. lion possibly his dream oc •upied only a v< rv short time. Many ittoinpts have born mailo to measure ho time ooctiph I in a dt am, and rec »rds appear from time i » time In the mpors showing ti" 112 1 ' 'ihor.iie >nes occupy but a lew . < s. The ol lowing incident is told by a gontle nan who vouches for its accuracy: lie was engaged one afternoon with t clerk in verifying some long columns )( figures that had been copied from me book to another* The numbers, •©presenting amounts in dollars ant •outs. were composed of six or seven iguros. The clerk would road, for in stance, ••Fourteen, one forty-two, wolvo." making the amount of $14,- I4l!.12, and the gentleman would an swer. "t'he< k." to indicate that the •opy was correct. I'age after puge had jeen read as rapidly as the words •ould be uttered, each number receiv ng the "cheek." The work was drowsy, ind it was with diflioulty he could coop his eyes open. Finally sloop overcame him. and he :1 roamed -dreamed of an old horse he !iad been accustomed to drive twenty- Bvo or thirty years ago. lie could not recall any special Incident connected ivith the dream except the locality and the distinct sight of the horse and of the buggy t<» which ho had driven him. lie awoke suddenly and, as a number was ended, called "Check." lie was conscious of having slept and of hav ing dreamed and said to the clerk: "Charlie, I have been asleep. How many of those numbers have I miss ed?" "None," he replied. "You have checked every one." Close question ing developed the fact that «»f the fig ures $14,142.12 he had heard the four teen and the twelve, but had slept and dreamed during the time occupied in rapidly uttering the words "one forty two." He tried by reading other num bers to measure the time and thinks it could not have boon more than "half a second. Another story Is told, of a man who sat before his lire in a drowsy condi tion. A draft blowing across the room set a large photograph on the mantel to swaying. A slender vase was in front of it, and the man re members wondering, in a mood of whimsical Indifference, whether the picture would blow forward and send the vase to the floor. Finally a gust of wind did topple the picture, and it struck the vase. The man remembers having been curiously relieved in his state of drowsiness that at last the "old thing was going to fail and IJO done with It." Presently he was In the midst of a complicated business transaction In a western city miles away. All the de tails of a now and unheard of scheme were coming forth from his Hps, and a boa I'd of directors was listening. The scheme prospered. lie moved his fam ily west. Fragments of the journey thither and glimpses of the fine house he bought came before bis vision. A crash woke him. The vase had struck the floor. Ho had dreamed an unlived life covering year -., and all in the time it took for the vase which he had seen toppling before lie fell asleep to fall five feet and break.—Youth's Companion. Japanese Men of Iteauty. Professor Okakura of Tokyo in a lecture delivered in this country said that the Japanese ideal of feminine beauty varied a little between Tokyo and Kioto, but on the whole the Japa nese considered that a woman should not exceed five feet in height, should have a comparatively fair skin and be well developed, should have long, thin and jet back hair, an oval face, with a narrow straight nose, rather large eyes, nearly black thick eye lashes, a small mouth hiding behind red full lips, oven rows of small whito teeth, ears not altogether small, thick eyebrows and a medium forehead, from which the hair should grow in circular or Fujiyama shape—that Is, a shape recalling the truncated cone of the famous volcano. tier iilut. The Maiden- I have a fluttering about my heart, and I have no appetite, doe tor. The Doctor—Oh, you're in love; I can't do anything for that. "You can't, doctor?" "Certainly I can't." "Why, doctor, you're not married." No matter how stupid, uninteresting nnd tiresome a man may be. there is always some sentimental woman ready to make a hero of him.—Chicago Uec ord-Herald. *DiTKE^NEDY ; S % \xFA I i Pleasant to Take, Lmlyfl / 1 Powerful to Cure, And Welcome KIDNEY AND LIVER CURE Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy la adapted to nil and both sexes, affording permanent re llct" in nil C:IJ caused by impurity of the blood, nii'li d!i Kidney, ■ '.ladder una Liver <'om plaintx; cured Constipation and "\Vimkncssea peculiar to vv<>mo!i, It prove* successful in east-* where nil other medi cines have totally failed, .NO MI1IIT«T should despair as lonian thin remedy U untried. It has an uubro* kfii rtTord of suce«>s for over HO years, and baa won host# of warm friends. Art; you suffering from any disease traeeablo to the causes m. Nt i .ncd 7 If 80, Or. Kennedy hat* staked his personal and professional reputation on the statement that Favorite Remedy will do you good. Send for A free trial hot tin and booklet con taining \ i uable medical ad vico on tho treatment oj various dist-asrs. Wntealso for an "K:wy Tent'* for finding out if you have kidney disease. Address l)r. David Keiwn-tly'H Sous, l.'ondont, N. V. REMEMBER, tho full name is Dr. David Ken r.cdy'H I'.WDitl'i I. J i ISM El )Y, made at Uoudout, N. Y.,.vd the price is :«l.eo («ix hotths »i nil druggists in the United States, Canada ami foreign countries. vV P • «e« (V Leit« Have a Word to say to our customers ami also to those that arc not our customers, but ought to ho. THIS SEASON'S GOODS have been selected with the usual care ami forethought, hut never before were we able to fcivc you better value for the money than at tlie present time. The ever popular Mohair ami Sicilian are more popular than ever, ami we have them ia a full line of colors in both plain and fancies at popular prices. The wash yoods include ('lialiie. Ba tiste, I>imity. Ktnmino, Voile and Siik effects, in prices ranging from 7c to 2.k per vard. W. M. SODEL, 344 Milt Street. M&f, $h Steer, Bull or Horse ~/J hi• U-, C.iU !. ; H, it ~t I skin, or any other kind on, B'jit, liglit, odorless | and moth-proof,forrobe, rug, coat or gloves. feLal But first get our Catalogue, rg[i»fji giving prices, and our shipping tags and instructions, so as to Jffjtjjfa -- J • avoid mistakes. We also buy raw furs and Kinseug. THE CROSBY FRISIAN FUR COMPANY, 116 Mill Street, Rochester. N. V» MADNESS IN PLANTS. Mexican Weed* That When t'«e«l Will Drive Men Cra/y. Marihuana is a wood used by people of the lower class and sometimes by , soldiers, but those who make larger use of it are prisoners sentenced to long terms. Tim use of the wood an J it : sale, especially in barracks and prisons, are very severely panished, yet tt lias many adopts, and Indian women cultivate it because they sell it at ratb i»r high prices. The dry leaves of marihuana, alone »»r mixed with tobacco, make the smok er wilder than a wild boast. It is said that immediately after the first three or tour drafts of smoke smokers begin to | feel a slight hcadaoho; then they see everything moving, and linully they lose all control of their mental facul ties. Everything, the smokers say, takes the shape of a monster, and meu look like devils. They begin tj tight, and of course everything smashed is a monster "killed." But there are Im aginary beings whom the wild man cannot kill, ami those inspire fear until the man is panic stricken and runs. Not long ago a man who had smoked a marihuana cigarette attacked and killed a policeman and badly wounded 1 hree others. Six policemen won; need ed to disarm him and march him to tho police station, whore lie had to be put into a straitjacket. Such occurrences are frequent. There are other plants equally dan gerous, among them the tolvache, a kind of loco wood. Tho seeds of this | plant boiled anil drunk as lea will j make a person insane. Among some cla -es of Mcxic » it is stated that far i lot la. tho empress of Mexico, lost her i mind boeafiso she was given tolvache in a refreshment. There is in the state of Michoncan ' another plant the effects of which upon I tho human organism are very curious. The plant grows wildly in some parts of Michoaean, and natives have ob served that whenever they traverse a Held where there wore many of such plants they lose all notion of places. For this reason when a person reaches j a place wlfero there are many of these ' plants he forgets where ho is going, 1 where the place i-; and even where he | is ar.d what lie is doing there. It takes ; from three to four hours for a person affect < d by the smell of the plant tore caver the full control of his mental fac ulties. Another very curious plant is the one called de las can-eras in some places where It grows. When a person drinks a brew of tho leaves or seeds of tho plant lie fooU an impulse to run and I will run until he drops dead or exhaust- I ed.-—Mexican Jloral 1. | I CUSTOMS IN MOROCCO. l'he Scene ::t the Slave Market lv M.U-imMNII. "From time to time wo are taking our meals in the open air," writes a traveler to Morocco. "I see the shep herd boys staring at us frdin a respect ful distance. To tlieni we must seem ►no better than savages. In tho first place, we sit on chairs and not on the ground. We cut.our broad, which, as every true believer knows, is a wicked act and defies Providence, since broad i* from Allah and may bo broken with tho hand, but never touched with a knife. Then we do not know how to rat with our fingers, but use knives and 112 >rks and spoons, that after mere washing are common property. We do not have water poured out over our flug.Ts before the meal begins the preliminary wash in the tent is Invisi ble and does not count- and we do not say 'Bisinillah' before we start eating, our daily bathing seems to puzzle them greatly. I do not notice that lit tle Larbi and his brother Kasom ever tempt the sea to wash or drown them. Yet they look healthy enough and are full of dignity." Vividly delineated, too, by the same writer are the scenes in the slave mar ket at Marrakish. "The various booths where the salesmen keep their slaves, of all ages and both sexes, arc care fully screened from sight until the market opens. Then one at a time these booths empty themselves of their contents and men, women and children are marched around the inclosure, the auctioneer crying out tho latest bid, and the slave owner pointing out tho best feature's of his articles for sale. "Th« v are all gorgeously attired and decked out to how tliom off to the best advantage. Due by one the youngest and Iha fairest and the tittost are chosen until at the end of the long, hot ilay only a few aged and weary and worn are left. They have tramped round and round the maitiet all day long, but they are old and therefore not wanted." Pi» Sunday. Palm Sunday is known in En giant", as Pig Sunday because in many dis ' , trier* tigs are freely eaten on that day. \ The custom Is common in the villages of Bedford, Bucks, Hertford and | | Northampton and is found in some purts of north Wales. As Palm Sunday 1 i approaches tho shop windows of Dun ■ j stable are tilled with figs In readiness j for the crowds who goto the top of j Dunstable downs to regale themselves ; on that day. At Kempton, in Hertford i shire, to "keep warsel" is to feast on | figs or fig puddings with your friends on Palm Sunday, l'ig Sunday is proba bly connected with tho story of the barren tig tree, which forms part of ouo of the lessons for the day. TTI* Sail LOMN. "Dam the luck! I lost a poaoh of an umbrella today." "Yes, yoople don't seem to have any conscience about swiping umbrellas. How did you lose it?" "Well, It was standing against the wall in the restaurant. 1 kept my eye on it"— "You bet ymi have to! Well?" "And Just as I was gel ting up the fellow that owned it came along an 1 took it!"— Cleveland Leader. Cltiekenn. "Does he think there is any money In raising chickens?" 1 "Yes; he says for every grain they give a pec*."—Yale Record. "EUBRJLMLI ON SHE* IN Spolse.** Dumley—Do you take your breakfast - downtown? Quibble—Yes, but 1 cat 1> at home.—Boston Transcriot. FDRNITDRE! D..v v.S- IsjH'fiiilly liili'iTSliiiy for fin 1 iSprinij Season Never before have wc lnid such an extensive as sortment of everything in Pur nit ure at such WonMilli] Low i'riies e. v We arc' unusually well stocked with in Oak, Mahogany and Birds-Eye Maple. OUR LINE nnruifn n nmiiin nnnu M (i il-iIOOM FURNITURE t' :> V''' r,i «»■.» - v : "•• 1 •• ifl ? i i Rn- •• -i I lis : '3 I W®*** k •- is very complete at very low prices. Pon't miss this oppor tunity to purchase your FURNITURE. There is no need of buy ing your FURNITURE of mail order houses as we can give you much better val ues and deliver liyht at your door. Our assortment is such that you cannot help but. to be pleased. It will pay you to come quite a distance to see what we are offering. What selections you make now the goods will be held until wanted. | We Deliver Goods Anywhere in the Country You Will Save Money by Buying from Us ....WE CARRY.... The Largest Stock IN CENTRAL PENN'A J, Hester's Sons 298-300 Mill St, DANVILLE, PENN'A 1 Opportunities in California I The trade in the Orient is opening up. Our exports to Japan and China multiplied during the last year. There will soon he a tremendous increase in the trade of the Pacific Coast cities with the Far East. Big opportunities for the man who lives there. Why not look the field over? Only $62.50, Chicago to San Francisco or Los Angeles and return, May i, 2, 3, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 29, 30, 3 1, June 1, August 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,1 1, 12, 13, and 14, 1905. Tickets good for return for 90 days. Rate for a double berth in a comfortable tour ist sleeper from Chicago to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, and many other points in California,only $7. Through train service from Union Passenger Station, Chicago, via the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, Union Pacific and Southern Pacific Line 3 This is the route of The Overland Limited, leaving L nion Passenger Statiun, Chicago, 6.05 p. m., and The California Express at 10.25 P- m - 'h e California Express carries tourist sleeping cars to California every da}'. Both trains carry through standard sleepers. a Complete information sent free Son receipt of coupon with blank 1 lines tilled. Name W. S. HOWELI., strcct a< , dreas j Gcn'l Eastern Agent, 381 Broadway, NEW YORK CITY., C itv State F. A. MILLER, Probable destination i General Passenger Agent, CHICAGO. CAM FOR;:;.. 111 11 w—iii [■■■■■wrw 11 iwir l»y mail. Testimonials* booklwt free, llr. I.uFranco, Philadelphia, Pa. Heart Weakness. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure has made many" hearts well after they have been pronounced hopeless. It has completely cured thousands, and will al most invariably cure or benefit every case of heart disease. Short breath, pain around heart, palpitation, fluttering;, dizzy, fainting and smothering spells should not be neglected. Take Dr. Miles' Heart Cure and see how quick you will be relieved. It cannot make a new heart, but will restore a sick one by strengthening the heart nerves and muscles, relieving the unnatural strain, and restoring its vitality. "I had a very bad case of heart trouble. For six months I could not work. I*nst July I was plowing corn nnil feeling: had all day; in the after noon In plowing one row I had to lay down, or fall down, throe times. My heart throbbed as though it would • burst through, and I had difficulty in getting my breath. I purchased a bottle of Dr. Miles" Heart Cure, and before I had used half of it I could lav down and sleep all night. Previ ously 1 had to get up from live to ten times a night. I have taken several bottles, and my heart is as regular as clock work. I feel like a n< w man, nnd can work considerable for an old man, 84% years old." H. D. McGILL, Frost, Ohio. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure Is sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that tfae first bottle will benefit. If It fails he will refund your money. , Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind I RAim*OA. 1) The Standard Railway 01 This Continent I'R.vrKITKI. THIIOUOIIOLT 111 IIIK Interlocks SwM&IM :mi Schedule in Etfect fJov. 29, Ifct3 SlQjffilWAill) .STATIONS A.M. A.M. P.M. I'.* Sunbury § (• !.» , 0 65 § 2 m $ r>2o KlUik'n Orove i «;•»» HJOJ i..85 Wolvcrton 10 5s 110 00 fJ 10 I0 87 Klpp's Huh I7 00 fl» 11 .. . i5 14 Souih Danville I ... |UJ7 ..... , Danville ( 711 ,u " * *■' " Boyd I T Hi IJO 21 12 2.'. I 558 11* taring Creek I 7 : t ilO 2* I 2 81 I 1.11 CutuwiMHii Arrive 7 :t2 1086 288 t. td Catawlssa > 782 1085 $ M.i \ i it i 7.> in... 2•< ii \tl South \\ .«kes-llarre.. 7 ••» lo 4i< 2 MI i»«» I'lyinoiiili Kerry I 7 ;*2 i la 1.1 2 i. I0 0? ltntlo.iw .M.ii I ; > t 10 i> ) - i i »i dh NantieoUe 7 lu.*» 8.1 *l7 ltutreat 7-.1 IU 8 i OV'tt Slii.-k>liiiriy i . _ ... Mocanaqua i 1 ° Pond Uiil fßus 112 11 H ! 8 2.; I «> 12 W.-ipwitUoprn ;.i II i<> ;; .d ii (7 Beach lhiv. n Ferrv Nescopeuk Ai live SlB 11 Jti 842 .7 CO Nesei »| >«»oic ..... laa Ve } S *l* I U - tf : •*<- I" 00 Crcu«> - II :\i :..2 700 stony town Ferry .... t s .; t ll ;* » ;,»l t 7 12 Kspy Kerry *rjlll 40 i ir.! t7 20 Itloiiinshuic ) .. .« . Hiooin»lair«..../ H '' I,, '° 1 w t'utttw l»«a \rn\ t» 85» 11 57 118 782 CiliawlKMft . . I .ea ve 8.".» 1157 418 782 KOKI-JIIK Civek .. I MOl I 12 U» . I 10 112 7 ;i» liovil I : 1> I 12 II I 4 20 I 7 40 iVmuJ'n.v.;;iii.".::::::} "" 751 K i|»P - Kan I U 10 112 12 20 112 4 35 112 7 58 W'oi\ rion i i •'J :>• I i .2 i sort K line's Urove 112 » I IJ -'i 1 » i-t I S ih> Sunliury Arrive S " §1240|456 !8 10 i hal.y. § Pally, except Hiuiduy. t Htops only «mi not ice lo Conductor or Agent , or on signal. Trains leave South Danville As follows: For I'ittMtou and Scranion,7 11 a in and 2 21 and 550 pin week-days; 10 i7 ain dally. For Pottsvllle, Heading and >'hiiadelphia 711 a in and 221 pin week-days. I'"or II i/.leton, 7 11a in and 221 and 550 pin week-days. iW Milton. \S'llllHmsp«»rt, I.ock Haven, Ucnovo and Kane, 12 15 p in' week days ; l.iK-k iiav.-n only, u i I a m and I :ti pin weck-dayH; r.u W Illlainsport and mterinedi ate stations, Ka in and 751 pin week-days. For ilellefonto, Tynuie, PhililpshurK and Cleartleld, 0 II a m and 12 15 p m week-days. For Harrisburg and Intermediate stations, » 14 a in, 12 15 pin ami 7 51 pin week-days; 181 pin dally. For Philadelphia (via Harrlsbnrg) Balti more and Washington, 0 11 a in una and 12 15 and 7 •")! phi week-da \-; 4 i pin daily. For Pittsburg t via llarrishurg) s» 1< a m and 7 ;"d p i.i week-days ; 1 81 p m daily ; (via Lew isto'vn Juuet ion i it i I a in and 12 15 p m \v eek days; ,via I.oek llaven) Oil am and 12 !•» p in wr. k-da\ s. I*u 11 ma 11 Parlor and Sl.•••pint? Cars run on through trains between *uui»nry, M'ltliams port 1.11:1 F.rle. between Muii.uiy ami Phila delphia and Washington and bet*. e.*u Harris bury, Pittsburg ami the V." si. For inrther information apply to ticket agents. W. W. ATTKKiHJKY, J. It. WOOD, (Jenenil Manaerer. Pass'r Tratlie Mgr Gko. W. Born, General Pass'r Agt. NOTING? TRUST Many newspsipors have lately given currency to reports by Irresponsible parties to the effect that THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO had entered a trnst or combination; we wish to assure the public that there is no truth in such reports. We have been manufacturing sewing machines for over a quarter of a centu ry, ami have established a reputation for our* selves and our machines that Is the envy of all others. Our •• Xetr Home" machine has never been rivaled as a family machine.—lt stands at the head ofali tlraiie sewing machines, and stands on it.s own merits. The. " New Home." is the, only really HIGH GRADE Setciug Machine . on the market. It Is not necessary for us to enter into a trust to save our credit or pay any debts as we have no debts t*> pay. We have never entered Into competition with manufacturers of low grade cheap machines that are made to sell regard less of any Intrinsic merits. Do not lie de ceived, when you want* si wing machine don't send your money away from home; call on a " New Home " Venter, he can sell you a better .machine for less than you can purchase elsewhere. If there is no dealer near you, write direct to us. THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO i _ ORANOE, MASS. ' « New York, Chicago, 111., St- Ixjaii, Mo., AUi» to, a*., Dalian. Tex., Ball Fmnctoco, ON.