st Hi 4 Bac the value of a good appearance i a general thing your own j § lr 1 VE INA STEVENS Repeating Shotguns "The Stevens Hammerless ‘costs na more than some hammer guns. { it has the celebrated STEVENS RECOIL UNLOCK provines safety against hang-fires. T. W. Garley. Dealer fa . SPORTING GOODS. take the d ~ For sale by ving others svaywhes. Z ~ Oppetlsimer ( Clothes Wear Better Vous men Ss buying doles a are < pateakss about style. They koow and instinctively choose Ae night thing. i But when it comes to quality, which is just as important, they must as ealer s or the maker's word ri it. The safe plan i is to look for the Oppenheimer label. © Its a garment is assurance of the maker's integrity, the dealer's od judgment. ~~ A A pint] guarantee accompanies every garment. ~ Suits’ nua ip - Trousers $2 to $6 i 4 BPE . OPPENHEIMER & co. | t: Wholeshle Exclusively 18128 Seventh St.—now Sandusky St. PITTSBURGH, PA. Ap gg ret rr. gr INTHENS TO BE “CITY BEAUTIFUL ER 1 i § Wil Have ‘ncient Wonders in a Mem Say English La: dscape Architect Plans Government Center and Other At- fl tractions on the Lines of Economic as Weil as Aesthetic Development. Thomas H. ‘Mawson, the English landscape architect and city planner, who has recently returned to London from Athens, has given the following information as to his great town plan. ning scheme: “1 had the honor of placing certain | tentative proposals before their majes- ties, the premier and the mayor, and: the suggested developments were ap- proved. These were the result of three months’ study and work; and the ideas are now to be embodied in a prelimi- nary set of plans, which I hope to sub. mit in three months. “1 have made a thorough study and investigation of the archaeological problems, because archaeologists are those with whom a modern town plan- ner has. chiefly to contend. I have studied the matter with Dr. Karo, the "| famous’ archaeologist responsible for the excavations of the German School of Archaeology in Athens and a lead- ;| ing authority on ancient remains. I spent considerable time with Dr. Karo going over every yard of the ground likely to be affected by the mew city |'plan and have mapped out with him all} the area over which excavations will SUED) ciel in in Gn ne boxes, on OY Ym the price in stamps for fails uaa! 91100, Is hana: wep Rind yoann sind package, charges paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. &C0., @ 20-26 ; Albany Street, Cambridge, Mass The Oldest aul Largest Manufacturers of Shoe Polishes in the Worlds’ : Dromm’s Handmade Pretzels ‘‘Made in Johnstown’, on sale ab McKenzie & Smith’s "and at F. A. Bittner’s Meyersdale’s - progressive grocers. Better than the rest, kind. SSNS NTA INT I SNAIL Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA ~ In round white cakes’ 1 be conducted. “The scope of the work of recon: structing the city will be even more extensive than was originally expect- i| ed, as the largely increasing population that is flocking into Athens demands very extensive street planning for the future. ; “It is now agreed that there must be very considerable clearing of undesir- able property in the neighborhood of the Acropolis, around which a great fore, however, much demolition takes plage it is proposed by the mayor, M. Beneckes, who has lived a great deal in England and has been much inter- | ested in the question of the housing c esnecially the peovle ’ Ovércoats $10 to $30 Wostraiod nls book free presence on sincerity and re | port Sunngut and other garden cities, that an extensive housing scheme shall be developed—a scheme planned on the latest English models, but adapicd, at course, to the climatic Ronaitions of Greece.” = mitted to the authorities rough sug- gestions for dealing with the new gov- ernment center, saying that the start- ing point of the plan will'be the new .union railroad station, into which it 1s railway now running into Athens. The and probably will be adopted. “It will afford a panoramie view of great beauty of the most interesting portion of ancient and modern Atbens i not long tolerdte the confinement of "| animals in menageries and soological Fae .| allow to intervene between them and 41% a : Ii go out of existence.” # EE Mr. Mawson said that te has ub proposed to bring the several limes of | | suggestion respecting the site of the’! & station has met with general ‘approval’ 2 in order to strangle or crush the ier edity By EUNICE BLAKE {Xie ately bagisn gas fig: «d end, w« Bayo: ‘ ihe say mi” bg far 3 {ooming is prom ed by the ra; fd ¢ {reiopment Of the “umans =obhiim it | during the List fifty years. Just as (slavery was doom:d Tha” mor ent tue rights of man 8¢ man began to Bb: manner born. So impressed was pars of the idéal of Which a few ddr the lady with the belief that Silvia d dream, §0 this injustice to our i had good blood in her veins that she | zindred, lowlicr bor, thls entoréid. wsked the girl to tell her something imprisonment. of them for what tne about her origin. Silvia refused. | might ‘have been our pleasure, will], ~Where did you spend your child- cease as man’s finer and nobler sen-, 00d 7° asked Mrs. Waterbury. timents lead him a little further on-| 3 eahnot tell you,” was the reply, ward. while Silvia hung ber head. -e' y (Pa » Feeling ae we do, we quote with ony remember your parents? a great deal cf pleasun.e a few sen-| .pgw tong: have -you been In “erv- | tences from an article in the New fee?% { York Mail under the beading—*'Are “TWO year” Zoos Doomed’, | Mrs, ‘Waterbury gave up uylng to ‘A humane” public’ sentiment will‘ nd her maid's antecedents, [~* iw BT hot. SIVIEY eos Tatebesn Mrs. Waterbury empioyed a maid why was pot only comely, but there was about her an atr of one to the gardens. There is no creature on earth tuat is really finement. kept in a pen or chicken housé and her extravagant joy when liberated is pathetic. “Watch the lions, tigers, leopards, ‘| cheetahs, wolves and other ‘‘free ‘| peeple” in their cages. They may be fat and sleek but see how closely they keep their noses to the bars as they walk up and down. Not one thirty-second of an inch do {hey Aw 5 a. | dea a Te a eins there was about her. /What'ft was in the servant that re- minded her of the high bred woman Mrs. ‘Waterbury could not tell. Mra. Marshall had been socially prominent a quarter of a century before. Mrs. Waterbury, who was twenty years her junior, had not been intimate with her and ‘had seen her only at certain func- tions. Silvia came to be an important per- son to her employer other than as a servant. Arthur Waterbury, the lat- ter’s son, came home from college and had not been in the house a day before his mother noticed that be had become engrossed with ‘her maid Arthur struggled against the passion till with- bolding ‘expression ‘of it became aubd- bearable. then confessed it to Silvia. His mother overheard him doing sv “You were not born a servant,” said the blessed - outside. Everyone of them proves constantly that be yearns for liberty. They suffer and | sorrow in" confinement, and sensi- tiye humans are beginning to sor- row with ‘them. "= ‘““The day will come when men and women will no longer take pleasure in seeing ‘animals shat up in cages. When that'time comes the" 2008 will Arthur: “No such high mapper hi . | could come trom a plebefan: 1t is hered- Woman Suffers Terribly ttary.” From Kidrey Trouble. Iw am a servant and nothing else” “replied. Around on her feet all day—mo “Whatever you are | cannot help lov- ‘wonder a woman has b he, back- ing 108 Iori 10 love you. 8 and you. shall ache, SHE swollen joints, ‘weariness, yi will not be your wife. ay wl sleep and kidney trouble. Fc- a arry me -would deprive you of the ley Kidney Fills give quick relief “or | _ a1 ‘position which is your right. these troubles. They strengthen the | yon would always be ashamed of we, kidneys—take away the aches, pain | and I would drag you down.” and weariness. Make life worth living | Mrs. Waterbury heard mo more. She {| again. Try Foley Kidney Pills and | said nothing to her son about what see how much better you feel. she had overheard. but the next day ‘| 801d by all Dealers Everywhere. ad did all she could to save her son from i . a misalllance. She sent the girl away od and did not tell Arthur where she bad gone. Several months passed. Mrs. Water- bury saw that her son was not the same man he bad been before he came home from college Ambition had left ~-him; he took no interest in anything. He had experienced a grand passion. | and the breaking with his mate bad blighted his life. : Then came a coincidence—a chain of coincidences. If there were no coinci- {| dences there would be no storles. Dr. Shotwell, Mrs. Waterbury’s fam- | fly physician. one day drove up to her | house, rang and wus admitted “Why, doctor,” sald the lady, “what ‘| brings you? We are all well here. ‘| Surely you must have called socially and are welcome socially.” “1 have called to tell you of a singu- | lar happening.” HABIT. Imagine Hercules as oarsman in a rotten boat. What can he do there but by the very force. of his stroke expedite the ruin of his craft? Take care, then, J% the timbers of your boat, and avoid all practices likely to in- : troduce either wet or dry rot . among them. And this is not to . be accomplished by desultory or intermittent efforts of the will, ° but by the formation of habits. The will, no doubt, has some- times to put forth its strength - Special temptation, but the for- - mation of right habits is essen- "|, tial to your permanent security. They diminish your chance of “ihe in < ron het patos. when | J Spterioe aoviely, ula tea Mur, ‘other the Acropolis, another the Temple boulevard is to be constructed. Be- | | more. in Bourmville. | and will give a visitor a fine—and probably lasting—impression of ‘the: city,” he continued. “One view. will include the Temple of the Winds, an-: . falling when assafled, and they augment your chances of recov- ery when overthrown. — John Tyndall. of Theseus and another the new gor ernment center. The Lycabettus will form another view, while still another vista will lead up to the beautiful park. “The new houses of parliament; the various ministries and other important buildings in the government center are now receiving much careful attention. I have had several interviews recently with M. Gennadius, the Greek minister in London, who has taken great inter- est in this part of the work.” Provision is made in the scheme for well placed first class hotels, and it is anticipated. that the extended sugges- tions will lead to the removal from an- clent Athens of numerous small facto- ries and the grouping of them in & new area, where they will be in direct com- munication with the railways. Thug heavy traffic will largely be taken from the roads in the ancient city. Mr. Mawson believes that the popu- lation of Athens will in ten years reach half a million and that the rail way trafic will. have: increased five- fold. He also. contends that the re- planning scheme will be on the lines of economic as well as aesthetic devel. opment. Wing 8hun’s Note. A woman going away for the sum- mer received the following note from ON HIS BLINDNESS. When I consider how my light is spent Ere half my days in this dark world and wide, And that one talent which is death to hide Lodged with me useless, though my soul more bent To serve therewith my Maker, That murmur, soon “God doth not need Either man’s work or his own gifts. Who best Bear his mild yoke, they serve him best. ‘His state Is kingly. Thousands at his bid- replies, They also serve who only stand and wait” —John Milton. her Chinese laundryman, to whom she had sent word that he need not call at her house for the laundry werk until her return in the autumn: The Letter xX. The letter “x” appears but once Dear Lady—Wing Shun sends SOrry reé- |i, ghench. CASTORIA grets on you go away. Hopes you have happy good time and need some more washing and you glet home. Glad to wash you some more then. All biziness dull in summer time some hore for so many like you to go off and stay one, two, three some 4 munts. Bad for Chinaman; good for lady. I hopes you write me leter or say on tellyfone where you return back all dirty clothes in trunk and I come some ‘With love, WING SHUN. — New York Post. on —— ~— ———— For Infants and Children in English for every six times it occurs InUse For Over 30 Years Always | bears | sigaatare of 7857 “Let me hear it.” “You remember the pretty maid you had here for a time. [ have often seen her here and noticed how little like a servant she appeared-=that ladylike air’— #Yes, we all noticed that,” interrupt- ed the lady somewhat impatiently. “Well, on leaving you she at once found a position in a family I also at- tend professionally. She is ll, and 1 was called in to treat her. blades I noticed a birthmark shaped something like a Maltese cross. 1 had’ reason to remember that birthmark, for I had attended the mother of the and present fore under peculiar circumstances. The My. true account, lest he re- woman was the daughter of a social turning chide. leader, and I had not heard that she “Doth God exact day labor, light had been married, though I was after- " denied?” ward -furnished@ with proof tbat she I fondly ask. But patience, to was. At any rate, the accouchement prevent was secret.” “The name of this family, doctor? Mrs. Waterbury broke in. “Marshall.” : “Marshall! Do you mean to tell me that Silvia is the granddaughter of Mrs. James Osgood Marshall, who flourished socially twenty-five years ago?” ding speed, : “I do. Julia Marshall, the daughter, And post o'er land and ocean married clandestinely. There was trou- without rest; ble in the family, and her mother with- drew from society. Julia’s marriage was never published. The child was consigned to a foundlings' home and was lost to her parents, both of whom dled soon after she was born.” ‘When Silvia recovered her health she was removed to the house of her for- mer mistress not as a servant, but as the betrothed of Arthur Waterbury. Her identity was established, and she came into possession of certain proper- ty that had been left her, but could not be paid since no trace of her could be found Since Mrs. Waterbury noticed in ber daughter-in-law the manner of a wo- man she had not herself seen in than twenty years she has become a gtrong believer in he re rodite TET Bm" In applying" a hot poultice between her shoulder’ child who bore it eighteen years bes: i Pant the »c afe no vacant ! home. WE SHOULD BE THANKFUL, BECAUSE— fg orkeys are not extinct. i 5 ALF a dollar will buy a ta- ble d’hote dinner. A PPLE pie is not all made in factories. S and raisins can be eaten even when you haven't rocm for anything else. 1¢ NIVES and forks still have work to do. S WEET potatoes haven't gone | out of fashion. RAPE juice has the approval % of the department of state. CE cream is sometimes made of cream. | ERY little turkey will be left ; to" muke hash of. NDIGHSTION | comes after _dinner—not before. EW sweet cider is In season. dd Sh Sp 9 - [3 ORGONZOLA cheese is ‘not : compulsory. HE great American‘nation takes a holiday at the bidding of the president every November. Our many states. all. unite In keeping the beautiful festival of Thanksgiving. Ita very name, is suggestive because the giving of thanks implies a recog ‘nition of One, unseen but everliviag, who sends the world the ‘which. ite existence depends. From {Almighty God we receive-the rain, the sunshine, the summer's heat and the winter's’ vay, he 6 bread we eat, tdel that warms us and the clothin we wear. There are few so foolish or so stupid as not to ‘believe in the great Creator and the kind All-Father, from whose hand our daily blessings come. Especially should you and I have a thought of him when the myriad homes of the country are en- joving at this season the gifts that must be traced directly to the kind ness of heaven. The great nation keeps Thanksgiving, but the great na- tion is composed of millions of indi- vidual persons, among them you who read and I who write. Suppose we stop and ask ourselves what we like best about this holiday and what spirit we may most fittingly bring to fits celebration. First, I think we like it because it is so genial and jolly, so cheerful and bright, so patriotic and stirring a day. Thousands of families are reunited at the Thanksgiving dinner. The trains that come to New England or Penn. sylvania or Illinois, from California, Oregon and Nevada, bring home for Thanksgiving men and women who want to be boys and girls once more. under the old roof. I remember watching from a train as it stopped at a station the deiight- ed greeting of a half-dozen people who seemed to be father, mother, sons and. daughters, as they swarmed upon & = dear little old lady who was waiting’: to receive them. Her husband, a white-haired patriarch, who might have sat for the porirait of Sania Claus, was holding his horses while the children and grandchildren: thronged into the big four-seated wagon. Thanksgiving. Many such scencs wi be enacted this year, as they have . been every year since our country was: settled. If we have been so unwise as to let a pessimistic spirit weave its evil spell = around us, iet us break the fetters without delay. Wherever we are, at home or abroad, rich or poor,.let us be thankful that we have reached anoth- er golden milestone in life. I repeat that Thanksgiving is a genial, cheer- ful, wholesome and breezy day. Let us make the best out of it, and wher- ever we are be as jolly as we can. Much to Be Thankful For. If ever we are tempted to say that though others have much to be thank- ful for, our lives are hard and our paths are thorny, let us stop a minute: and see by what standard we are measuring our blessings. If we look at a cripple plodding "along with crutches. we cannot help beipg thank- ful that we have feet which serve us well and that we can walk and run without so much as considering thé effort. If we see somebody ‘who ‘is barefooted, we may be thankful for: shoes. When the rain beats on the roof at night we may be thankful for & the house that shelters us. When the doctor calis next door to see an in- xa whois tossing with fever w& nay be thankful that we are well. | If th the dcor bei ay be thankfit They had come home for, ¥. A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers