J ++++++* ■>* ❖ *+❖ +*+ *+++ \\ AbseAtminded | Jones + i • 4* By CYRUS DERICKSON | i. I < > I .. Copyright, I!*H, by K M. Whitehead i 112 ++•{"{**{*+•>+«J* -i- -j..}. .j. The sign on the village store read, "Jones & Co., Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Etc.," but there was no "Co." It was put on by Jones because he thought It would look well and •omehow Increase his Importance. Sa lathiel Jones was Jones & »'o., and the only Jones, and be was a mystery to all who knew him. He was a success ful merchant, and at the same time he wa9 so abeentuilnded that he was dtyly laughed at by scores of people. His store was by all odds i«;e largest establishment of Its kind for miles around, and for many years he had had four male clerks in his employ. Then one day, to keep up with the times, he gave a place to a young wom an, and Miss Minnie Trent made her debut behind the counter at which most of the women customers made their purchases. In taking In Miss Minnie, Jones had aided a worthy widow and a smart and good looking daughter to eke out their Income, and he deserved all credit for It. True, he called her Minnie or Miss Trent half the time, and there were occasions when he looked at her and wondered where he could possibly have seen her before, but he was a good employer and she a smart salesgirl, and things went along without any trouble. One of the three male clerks in the store was named James Thomas, and It was generally understood in the vil lage that he was "sweet" on Minnie. Some said that It was through his In fluence that she secured the place, but that was not true. One of the other clerks was a bachelor of forty-five. Nobody could ever understand how he turned to mercantile life. lie seemed to be as slow wltted as he was slow footed, and his personal appearance was anything but prepossessing. It Was doubtful if any other merchant except Janes would have employed him at any wages, hut Jones wanted honest people about him, and he had the high est confidence In Albert Ross. Things had been running smoothly at the store for months and months, when there came such an Interruption as had never been known before. A woman lost a purse containing SSO. There were not half a dozen people In the store at the time, and she was Kure she had it In her hand when she bat down at the counter presided over by Miss Trent. Search was made at once and continued for half an hour. Jones had left the store five minutes before the alarm was raised to get an early dinner and attend a funeral, and he did not learn of the loss until sev eral hours after. Then he proceeded to a Judicial examination. He called in the constable and the justice of the peace, and the employees were exam ined and cross examined. The loser was firm in saying that no other per son except Miss Minnie was at the counter when she missed her purse, and, although she made no charge, there could be but one inference. She herself was permitted to seach the pro testing and Indignant girl, and a thor ough search was made above and un der the counters and all over the store, but nothing was brought to light. Then Jones did the right thing. He handed the woman ?f>o, with his compliments and regrets, and said nothing further to the clerks. Nothing further would have been said by any one had not the woman talked. Anything is a sensation in a village. The fact that ?."><» had been lost In Jonea & Co.'s was a big sensation, big ger than a circus and a Fourth of July In one. Teople at once divided off. One half of them were sure that the daughter of the widow had yielded to the sudden temptation and concealed the purse for her future benefit. The other half charitably argued that some one else had picked it up or even that there had been no loss at all. Jones & Co. tried to pass the affair over and bush It up, but the people wouldn't have It that way. It was a good thing to hang onto until some woman eloped or some man stole sheep, and it be came a leading and a burning ques tion. It resulted In quarrels between neighbors, and those quarrels finally resulted in Miss Trent being: called a thief and bavin* t'» take legal cogni sance of It by bringing a suit for slan der. The defendant in that suit swore out a warrant for the girl on a charge of having appropriated the and there was as pretty a kettle of fish as a town ever saw. Jones & Co. and the three clerks were placed In an unfortunate posi tion. While all of them fully believed In the girl's Innocence, their testimony on a suit would hardly favor her. If the purse was lost at her counter, as the loser was ready to swear, then It must be admitted that only the two were there at the time Thlnzs certainly looked very bad for Mlb> Trent, and the mental worry had put her under the doctor's care, when a strange thing happened. Albert Ross, the old bachelor clerk, went before the Justice of the peace and charged him self with the offense and made a full confession. In this confession he ad mitted to passing the counter while clerk and customer were busy looking at goods and to have seen the purse and slipped It into his pocket 11.- had destroyed the purse, but lie was ready to restore the ir.griey. He asked to be arrested, tried and punished, and in the course of a week he was arraigned :ind bound over to a higher court for trial. If there had been excitement before there was a sensation now. While Miss Trent's character was cleared, people hesitated to believe that Albert Ross was a thief. However, when a man says he Is a thief, swears that he Is a thief and demands that lie be sent to prison as a thief, what are you going to do about It? The key to unlock the mystery was kicking around under foot all the time, but nobody could see It The trial In the higher court came along in about a month, anil Ross pleaded guilty and was Bent to state prison for a year, lie took the sen tence meekly an. '-* u couple of days had disappeared from sight of the peo ple who had known him for fifteeu long years and believed In his honesty every day. Miss Trent returned to the ■tore, anil things went on in the old way. except with Jones & Co. Jones did not for one instant believe the girl guilty. Neither did he believe that Ross took the purse. lie went about scratching his head and talking to him self and trying to remember something, and It was one day after one of his "fits" had lasted him for half an hour that he suddenly Jumped up and down and used a swear word. Next instant clapped on his hat and started on a run r<>r home, lie being u widower, with a housekeeper. In fifteen minutes he was back at the store with the purse In his hand. It was as easy as breaking eggs. Jones had passed the counter while the two women were locking at some gar ment. He had seen the purse and pick ed it up to hand it along to its owner. A clerk had called him at the moment, and he had started off The purse had gone Into his coat tail pocket, walked home to dinner with him, and when he changed his coat togo to the funeral it was left in the old one. Upon his return he had put on another, and so for weeks the missing money had l>een hanging in Ids wardrobe. '"Why did you do it?" asked 2#lss Trent of the homely and ill shaped old bachelor as he returned from prison with his character fully cleared. "1 I thought I was guilty," he tame ly replied. "No! You thought I wan guilty!" "Not that. Miss Trent. I—l knew that James loved you and that you— you loved him and that—that"— "Then you thought him guilty and sacrificed yourself for the both of us?" "Well er well, you see, I'm getting old and homely and I never expect »> iiiirry and er well, it's all over with." And so It was, except that the girl threw her arms around his neck and kissed him, and her tears dampened his wrinkled cheeks—the first tears and the first kiss since he was a baby In his mother's arms THROWING THE DICE. The Ancient (Irrniam Were Fusion* (■ambler* at Thl* Game. The invention of dice has been of old ascribed to I'alamedes, the soil of Nauplius, king of Euboea, about 1244 I?. and also to a Greek soldier nam ed Alea, which is the Latin for a die, but Herodotus assigns both dice and chess to the Lydlnns. The ancient Germans would gamble away at dice all that they were worth and then their liberty, submitting to slavery If they lost, and the Saxons, Danes and Normans were all addicted to the game. Fox Talbot if of opin ion that the Latins invented, if not the game, at least the name for the single point, which they called unus. The Germanic races, adopting this practice from the Greeks, translated the Greek corruption of unus into ass, which has now become ace. The root of this word lies In the Latin as, tho monetary unit. John of Salisbury in the twelfth century mentions ten different uses of the dice. Stow mentions two enter tainments given by the city of London at which dice were in evidence.—Lon don Telegraph. THE BIRD'S SONG. It Is Produced by a t'nlque Voice Orican In the Syrinx. Birds have no vocal chords fn the larynx, but they possess a unique voice organ in the syrinx, which is provided with what are really vocal chords of a very effective and complicated kind. This syrinx lies in the lower part of the windpipe and the upper part of the branching bronchi, but varies much in its exact position and details of struc ture In different birds. Briefly it consists of a varying num ber of muscles, as many as from five to seven being found in the best song sters, attached to folds of membrane and the bony half rings, which at this part of the throat form a sort of en larged Adam's apple. Distinctness of the several muscles and the mode of their insertion Indi cate a bird's musical capability. The syrinx of the skylark ami nightingale, for instance, is a marvel of adjusted muscle and membrane, while, on the other hand, the ostrich and some vul tures have no voice organ, the pigeon has but little to show, and the common fowl has no muscles to modulate Its cry. Old Roman Halrplna. That deadly implement, the hatpin of modern times, is a descendant of an equally formidable toilet article used by Roman women. The Aspaslas and Julias and Claudias who decked them selves a couple of thousand years or more ago, to the undoing of the par ticular Balbus or Marcus they desired to fascinate, wore bone hairpins of prodigious length. Vet. like the wo men of this present time, they seem to have experienced the same difficulty In keeping them In place. This fact came to light during excavations at Sllches ler, ne-ir Heading, England, a hundred or so of these bone hairpins being found in tie Roman lath, collected maybe by the bath attendant, to prove all these centuries later that there is nothing new under the sun and that in all ages the same little foibles have been possessed by women. ZUNI FAMILY LIFE. A Vlllaffr Loolm Like a Have Hlt« ot Clay on a Sandy Knoll. The little half civilized children of Zunl so aroused our curiosity that we drove through forty mlleu of sand and sagebrush, from the railroad at Fort Wingate, to pay them a visit. As the Indians do not provide for travelers we took our hotel with us—tents, l»eds and food and camped Just outside their village. The village looks like a huge beehive made of clay and stuck fast to the top of a sandy knoll. The hive Is filled with n mass of cells —800 single rooms, placed side by side and piled In rows one on top of another. In each of these rooms lives a Zunl family. There an* no inside stairways leading from story to story, but If the boys and girls living In one row wish to pay a visit to a house above them they must go outdoors and climb a lad der. On the slope between the village and the Zunl river are a number of small vegetable gardens, each one in- Closed by a mud wall. Zunl has no Inns, no shops, no saloons, not even proper streets, but only narrow alleys that thread their way through the strange town. As we walked through the village ail the world came out to see us. Girls and boys clustered on the roofs or sat on the ovens queer little cones of mud which seem to grow up out of the house tops while fa thers, mothers and babies peered out from dark doorways to stare at the visitors. When we had finished our tour of the roofs and alleys we were hospitably invited Indoors. Even there the clilldrr-n followed us, and as we glanced up at a hole In the celling which served as a window a girl's J.t hing face filled the opening. We must have looked strange enough in our hats and gloves and long skirts.— Maria Brace Kimball In Rt. Nicholas Mflntpd WrddlnK*. The love of independence and the freedom and pleasure of today make girls less anil less anxious to marry before they are past five and twenty. I'erhaps It is better that there should be that disinclination, for our modern life may fit a woman better to marry late than early.- Lady Jeune In Lon don Opinion MY CHANGEABLE LOVEK [Original.] 1 have a lover. My lover's name Is Jack. Jack Is nt times feminine, at times masculine. Strange to Kay, 1 like my lover best when he Is feminine. 1 suppose, to be strictly grammatical, 1 should say "when she is feminine," but there i.s no word in the English language which stands fur "he or she." We use "he'' at times to stand for both. Therefore whether he is acting like a man or a woman 1 shall call him "he." Sometimes Jack pays me compli ments, sometimes tells me the truth— If It is the truth—blurting it out sud denly and gruffly. He often criticises my dress, at times approving of my costume, at times decrying it. I was dressed for a ball the other evening and, suddenly looking up, saw Jack re garding me intently. As my gaze met his an expression <>f admiration sud denly lighted up ills face. "You are very pretty, dear," he said. "I'm glad you like my costume," I replied. "Have you any suggestions?" "It is perfect. You might take that rose from over your right temple smd I put It farther back. There; that will do. It is a great improvement." I walked away from him, turning my head, while he kept his eye fixed on the rose. "Very pretty," he said. "And your train follows you gracefully. You are sure to have plenty of attention this evening. Your card will be tilled be fore you have been in the ballroom ten minutes. Then, when the fellows come up and ask for a dance, you will toss your head, hold out your card and note their disappointment. It will be de lightful." If Jack would always talk to me like this I would like him better. But he doesn't. Sometimes he looks at me in a most unsatisfactory way anil says what he looks. "You're a dowdy looking thing," he said to me the other day. "That dress hangs on you In wrinkles and makes y©o appear as old as your grandmoth er* "Well, I can't help it," I replied. "Mine. IV has tried three times to tit me and failed every time. She'll not have another chance." This is where Jack is feminine, when he is prattling about dress. Hut some times he talks to me about my good and weak points. He is very change able. I read him some verses lately that I had Just written, and he was in ec stacles over them. I read them to him again in a week, and ho called them rubbish. Jack's only rival is Ernest Field. Ib is very different from Jack, being hI ways manly. He rarely notices my dress or compliments me, but when he does I prize It far more than Jack's shifting opinions. I read him the verses that Jack at first admired, then called rubbish. He listened respectful ly till I got through, then said, "Very pretty," in a bored kind of a way. "Shall we go for a walk?" I could have scratched out his eyes. After that Jack called me a fool to waste my time dribbling over common place sentimental rhymes. Occasional ly he Is very sensible, but I have no ticed that I get the benefit of his good sense aftur Ernest has rapped me over the knuckles. The next time I saw Er nest I told him t Imll I was ( ashamed of l my poetic effusion and would not of feiul again. "Your verses Tire much abetter than the average," he.said, "but only a g«*n lus can avoid being commonplace iu verse." Yesterday Ernest told me that he would call tills evening and would have something very especial to say to me. It quite took my breath away, for I knew very well what that something would be. l£ow could I give up Jack? When Ernest was announced I had been ready ami waiting for him half an hour. It wan-the longest half hour I had ever known. Jack and I were reading—l was {pretending to read -at the time iu the v library. I looked up from my book, and Jack looked up at the Bame moment. He knew what I was waiting for, and I saw him shiver. There was a sharp ring nt tho bell, a heavy step in the hall —it*seemed as if an undertaker had come to measure me—and the maid came dn to tell me that Mr. Field wae in the drawing room. I gave Jack a half assuring look and went to meet my ftsbe, what ever It might be, for I'was In a state of Indecision. I hoped Ernest wo*ild lead, up to what he had to say gradually, but he didn't. He begun, by saying thuba bet ter understanding should exist bat ween two people who had) been so ranch to gether, and he had called to do Ws part In bringing that understanding about That part was to Jell me tliat hot loved me and wished mo to be his wife. Perhaps it was the way he did It. At rate, I snid afters» short s! lence that be avas too late; that I al ready had a lover who w»s the only one to whom V could entirely give my self. I was very sorry If -he had con strued a friendliness on my part to mean love. I had not intantionally misled him. The expression tlist'came over his face was <*n>> of teriflble disappoint ment It was surprising to me after his very metliodical proposition. It broke down mjj resolution. "1 only wish," he sail, "that I were In his place. God gnuit that lie may make yoiu happy, as you deserve." "Ettiest," I said in a comforting tone and (reaching for his hand, "my lover has >a fault whicl* may after all kill my affection for him. lie Is very changeable. I>o w«i wish to see him? Look!" I,'pointed to my reflection in a mirror. "Jaqwllne!" ' he exclaimed, radiant, and t'xik me in* his arms. EI'.IZA L. WIIITCOMB. SlflKMf I'rnru. Some years ago the sultan of Kuiit learned that tbe{ pearl fishermen wero reaping t>lg proßtf*. He supplied his revenue eolleirtoas with sieves and or dered that all .jmjiu'ls found near Sulu must be tented ta> these sieves. I'hos«- that dropped thsi'irgh were to be re talned by tht!' fiphennen; those that re mained In the etieves were to belong to the sultan for taxes. It nearly ruined the [tearl fisheries 111*) Idea of If. Caller—Why. .I'm Irish Hobby. I was really born in Ireland. Hobby <>h. you're In dlsgifise. then • aller 1" dis guise? Bobli r Sure! ou .'riji t not. suy red chin vfhis! ers I >r a pipe*stick- In' in your hatt Phi la Vlphia I'n'-s. IVrionii I. "Is there fflnythlae you don't >nee l that I might fjikeV" isl-ed the s!o\v:ny old junk man. waUfalng Sif bubs pv k Ing his goods on the moving van. "Yes," sn; j;>i"d SiJii mlisj. "a batn T Exchange. "Can you> ma!;e boili ends meet.. Fat?" "Shore /iiid I can't m* I c one end. meet!" T/bw»T'j.< AN ORDINANCE. ') VACATE A POR'i ION >l< CUOS STREET, IN THE BOROUGH OK DANVILLE, MONTO UK COIN IV, PENNSYLVANIA, WHERE II CROSSES THE TRACKS OF THE PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILWAY COMPANY AT GRADE AND IN LIEU 1 HERE<>F T<) 1 X TEND " A" STREET IN TIJESAIH BOROUGH,UNDER l ME l RACKS < * I'll I. SAID RAII \VA V COM WT,HE OTHER PURPOSES WHEREAS, a certain ju-r it ion ed by the majority 'u inteie t and number of owners of proj it. abetting oil the line of the prop; d in-piov< - iiieut, WPS dnly presented to thi (': of Burgess and Town Council << 1 the Bet jough of Danville at a regular MI I -rr-.r ui;<•. 1, setting forth,among other it.; , ihar the part or portion of Cro-s ~ r »« >t, in the said Borough, which i- ero-sed at grade by the tracks ft li " Philadel phia and Reading Railway Cci.ii.any JS dangerous to public travel and is a constant menace to life and limit in us present location, and that a much safer and more practical route for all Mich public travel cculd be readily ob tained by an uuder-grade crossing of the said railway at "A" street there by connecting tho latter sreet direct ly with Walnut street,in the taid Bor ougli; that it was therefore expedient that such part or pottion of Cro-s street between its northern intersec tion with Nicholas Av in \v lived all su' li - 'atu tory notice u> which if would b oil erwise legallv entitled, and respect fully requested that the neces-ary nud proper ord: nan fir t lie ab( \epi: p - e be at once duly era ted without am other preliminary or subsequ> ut i ro oeedingi a- to si:cll n ;[!>•• butt:;; had in the i remises, AND WHEREAS, the aid petir ioi»- er thus being a majoritv in in: r-t ainl number of owni rs of i.| "rty as afores.i d, in the said petition t 1 erein expre-t. v waived all statutory n< t ice preliminary and subsiqu nt t i tie en actinei tut' ii" crduriti I reque-t ed and furtiiei asked tint oicli ordin ance be at once dnh t ire ted without any other pr> I.miliary or -übs quent proceeding- as t > not: i ••ing had in the premi-es. AND WHEREAS, it thus cle.rly appears that a inajosity in ;nr r. t and number of owner- i t piopiit.- C ut ting on the Inn- of tl." ; : (<•- i im provement are in favor i t the ~,ui im provement and ttixt sucll im; rovenient is of manifest adv mta.e ml ue -.-ary to the safety of the trave ;ng public in general and especially to the in habitants of that local it v in th" iid Borough of Danville, AND WHEREAS, t l . lanvill and Bloomsbtirg Str et Railw iv <'■ mi any, its successors and a signs, in > isid eration of cert tin privilru- sand fran chises to it and them In reiuaft-i giant ed bv the said Borough of Danville, have covenanted and a :reed '.vith the said Borough of Danville to make such extension of "A" >-rrr, tut its and their own proper net and exp use,and to fully indemnify and save harmless the said Borough of Dinville from any and all damages, individual.prop erty, or otherwise whatsoever, that may accrue in, or be in any wise in cidental to, the eon-fruition of such extension of "A" street as well as to keep such extension ef "A" s'r. >t, when thus con-Mti t d, in pre; er ton - dition and rc'ait at a 1 times. THEREFORE, be it ordained and enacted by the Chief Burgess, and by the Town Council of the Borough of Danville, in the County of Montour and State of Pennsylvania, in Coun cil assembled, and it is hereby ordain ed and enacted by the authority of the same: SECTION 1. That all that ct rtaiu pa,rt or portion ;>f Cross street hot w en its northern intersection with N; In las avenue in th 3 Fourth Ward of the said Borough of Danville and its south, eru intersection with Walnut stre t in the Third Ward of the said Borough ol Danville bo vacaied upon the eotu[ le tion and acceptance by the sai l Bor ougli of Danville of tho said under grade extension ot "A" street to be constructed in lieu theieof as i< in the next Section < 112 tliis ordinance more specifically provided. SECTION 2. That said ' A" street, in the Fourth Ward of the said Bor ough of Dauville, be extended from sts intersection with Columbia mid Nicholas avenues in a southwardly direction, under, and at right angles "with, the tracks 112 tho Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company, to Walnut street, in the Third Ward of the said Borough of Danville. SECTION 3 That the said exten sion at "A" street shall be made by tho said Danville and Bloomsburg Street Railway Company at its own ■cost, and expense, under tho direction and control of tho committee t the said Town Council on Streets and Bridges in conjunction with the Street Commissioner ot the said Boiougli cd Danville, and in strict conformity with such terms, maps, plan- and upecifications a- shall b- piovided therefor hv the -aid B rough of Dan ville, and that it will fully •mp'e' the said extension of "A" street wit' in the period of ninety day- fr in t e timo that this ordinal e,> tak I uttect. SECTION 4. Thar in thn- making the said extension <>f "A" areit the , said Dauville and Bhumsbi eg Sire t Railway Coin] any fully indemn ify and save harmless tho said Bor ough of Danville from the payment of, or liability for, any and all damages, | i- dividual, pio; t,. r t • .v; ■ > ■ I- > : ,i"in. nr i in any wiso in< :d< n«* t< ■ HUt , ... extension of " A " whatsoev r t! . ■ villp by tlf > . Reading ft ». 1 v ■- premises. i SECTION 5. -iiid Vll.f Mllti Hl' .11:- • Company, i \ - shall, at it a: . "A" street, w ,itii t iiti - ; 1 r ; strooted. in pio,•< r >• I n | pair so that tip s line - 1 ;1 1 i c ; 1 ito all petit striae and \ ! i.-lt .1 i times. "•ECTION " <■■ j pletion thereof as afotisiid, tlr 1 .id Danville and Bioombsnrg Street lil vvav Com pan j shall lav ti ■ , t • properly i.r n;\v a- d m ti -id < tension ot "A" strict, it way. in accord met with • ti its 112 ranch i.-'s already 1 ~11 d the -ai to make • h antl improvement in and 11! i; C extension of "A" s-tieit a it - from timo to time deem 1 >1 ! iM < saiv and pro] er. SECTIONS . That t > 1 auti tv of the provisions, cm, 1. tions, stipulation- a: r i respectively, contained in this | ance shall he alike I inr ligatoiy upon tin -a: i I Bloomsburg Street lia lv.:r. 1 ' : ami its Miori'.-or- an jii SECTION S). Tlt .11 . or parts of ordinal,'■< - nt or-. t or contrary to the prm - ordluauce alO herd) r A 1 proved the . * t ber, A. D., HUM. WILI.IAM Ci I A t i< st : HARRY ]:. Seeretaiy ot t!i • B . P,.., Council < h, Danvillt. I ... Ott Jury Lis -Hi! " '. int» r< t and nr. »!• :'g gation will ' Iri'-d a* i • • month, for whi< It a - t ■ Court, to con\ • u vt ! ■. Ie 'ii ordered. Mis. Si 1 1 in ■ i : Limestoi;e towi.slu >, 1.1 ; to re eoV'T damages ft m t .v « railro id for 11 < • 1 v-- and son.wl o v i>> ki'l at Wat-untowii si ni \ 1 t'.o to trn th. v 1r« • a» d t!.t if r <":■ .-Ii • • 1 < down by a train. •I the case was uon tut « • '! was carrie I • 1 by that hndv w . t* . I . . for trial. For thi> spec lil ti < (' Mai' rs and Jury C( Cook and William drawn (he follow in.: Til A VERS .ICR Anthony towi -*. ip. Will.am IT Elmer Kurtner, David C" v Cooper Township. —J. II W< »v« r Danville, First ward- i< oTj. T • , Thomas Trainor, -if., William K t , John Cam 1 Pell. Will am 11 An man, Harry Patt> 11, II •_• Danville.Second ward W1 ;.r Mover, Batri' U Kern C bo 11s. Danville, Third waul.— El 1 i- M Simon Ell' r. 1 < .-••ji, (>■ 1 . ! Jacob Fry. Danville, Fourth War I Neville, Will iam Jordan, Little, David Gibson, William < . Evans, Thomas Dmups Ai I millt r, J< hn Derry township.--!.• v! ? 1 r. I ; Conrson, Amanda*- <" Sri ult Limestoce township Anil Cromis, James C. Smith, J <• M:t moyt r. Liberty towmhlp.- •' H D M. MilU ' iin, Clark ( Dy Pannet aket. Mahoning townshij'. Wi! James Morrison, Williai:. S eph Hitter, J. Lloyd h u 1 tin May berry township.—Jo ■ i 1 * hart, Cliarles A Sehult/ Valley township S.iim.i 1 i 1 William C. Flick Washiugtonville. West lfenilu ! . v Bom boy, J. W. An minimi/1 ; t!:<* i ii'**, ', : : ■ 1 Mr. Kltjce. 1 • case. "Ten iloij; ?ler. "I'll lake it. nntl after pn; ;g ! . ••Th!' \\ :;t"li ' be - ■ ill. " 1 p, :tr ' . !; ' • ■ yon t!u i'i 1;: J." "Certftitilj." A day er two i. • < me > dn. "llow good a w.M ii li v you got for 52:.?" he Inipttf j tlnicpiec■ id tin 1 1 i.i n ease and full jewelru. The niovenient Is warrant ii'.." "I'll take it." : ■ wiiieh and wi nt . After the lap- > ot ' w '• s oltler It jrron in beauty an', 'rnitfnlnt . it- i filling* the air with Its fragrance. It is ! I 1 ■ | ". 111"'! Us fruit i- n !«''# and its fla\or a? 1 st ent delicloi..?, its rind is bitter. \n as every oil ' k:iow > who h <* ' encctl it, Cnpld' " irt < iti -- 1 ornnge tree Is einhlt math of : DS woll as of and ! y •: ' NS Y I ''. - • h ry tin v I.', .tithe County of M a' t.r am hp of Pi'un.'ylv;ti hi, in Cotwr u A •: .: I II I ■ \ ' I .' I I mica Granting Perm >. i Dan : ' I' J:•• '' • ' •' • ■ t * » ! lllfl t i< Company (a rcrp f Penut-ylTaßia) at its own ' i fciugif* track el eiiic tree! pus r railway in. upon and r Till, ?»I irk« 112, H'ootu, Nortbam li . Walnnt, r.dvser Mn'berry and ■ t t . . . 'v. v. I'tir i'-t • ' • i ; ••• v., re-', :i ! wfol at t uul (t i: c - ; rv ■ »ir - td in liiitaiu tin i: r«'■ i jii •aid iccoiuuiodatieii of pub!.:- t »-►--! uid vinib r the following i n •filiations, stipulation . ;• tr •- .'■li ." be niid tti «»ni ib ueby ' ; . I ■ : ■ ' ' 1 • fnlb ws : T! it consent .• n ] rmi»-i I . , • ; ; v printed and *:>•< i r-.i T« Dan »y la ri rj ;■ > ;u1 •• i »» /• . : . 1V -HI • - to build, roil ' ■ i;. I' Hi I: < ' • ' i ■_ r railway in, tl.rno-'i, uj it and r Mill, Market, 15; cm, >• uni r! ud, Walnut, I iwrMolb V :»n i 'horob treets r. ■ i \t'ly, and also i, ! ' i; " i . ; ■ It io !. Bogiijuins af i'- ii. .: -efftion ! th Hlooin Str' et and t n I ovrr !. ' »'« '■•• 1.1 i i lailroad, (now ojd.ite 1 •' Phil i ' • >y : ■ 1 1, • 1 1: i . i; i • r Hailvvav C. • i Walnut } Unit afoH'saiil, ar si is sdint »>• it . 1j of Danville logo tl r with tht» -a- % '■ **' n | • e Paper 1 i Danville. ■ 0. course you reaa r * B i tho f.it «»r »!,«• "Wt* Iht on th«» fa ; tilings." Him In Tmvrling lint*. A iix it tip r with two littl* gir!« xr} Wf>r« ilainty wllit«• huts wmtM with flotr«T* l"» «>r» m train for a sbort }r at t'.f i?. srowN, THE EYE A SPCCiALT >" .♦> tittnal eyes suppiie*.. *kct Street, Bl<»>r TIW SH© ; Tor a!i kind of Tin Koo' Spouting and Conor Job Work, Stoves, Heaters. Ran*-* Furnaces, etc PRICES THE LOOT! QLALITY THE BEST! •JOHN HIXSO.N NO. 116 £. FRONT 81. coy*rf •ti»» f'Ni . I r» . If-.* . « tm - * r» ;« ■- • w «• ' •• * ffi < ** • « a -t » ns> *•* . ft® m •• . /r »»• - ■ -** *«f f|| . *• ■ ?» ■ 1 25 j> ii# rm ■« ?» . r« » • * P • "Hi lili" \BLE Nov. 'IMh, 1981. I MM $M * • t * g. 'Si 3'- .tlit m . ... * •« * » ' 1«, « » - - i-- * t rjs ... M .... ..... ""'I H> ■ . • 4IS t » • • 1 * J» -- ___ ...... n ■-■#■=■ ,T 3* 3T « rr > «♦ "J • «112« f*B >• jry WttHMMpMi fjr *«»-t Sat*** ..ry r»«t» > • 1 *»••« Pw Tf X«r