LOCAL TIME TABLES PENN'A. R. R. EAST. WEST. 7.11 A. M. 9 (W A " M> jq \7 «« 12.10 P. M. 3/31 P. M 4.31 " 5.50 " 7.51 ' SUNDAYS. 0.17 A. M. 4-31 P. M. D. L. & W. R. K. CAST. WEST. 7.01 A. M. 918 A -10.19 " 1?. 44 P. M. 8 11 P. M 4.38 5.43 " 905 SUNDAYS 7.07 A. M 18.44 P M. 5.48 P. M. ®.of» " PHILA r sli' tt, N. H. St »uffer, L.'-ter 1 hotna-. H «rvey Ktst-r, Bowl Moore, William G-iser. Charles D Misse rillie W rkli i er. Maggie Deig'uui 1- er, bura K wt"r,E It Maiist-ller. M »rie Hartman, Ethel Deighm ) er, Maiy Dy.-r, B ssi Bi'her El a Br dist, M»y Wampole.Hazel Dver, Messrs. Edward Mau-t, Samuel Stver, Chirlen Styer. Po lip Confer, Wi liam Gable, P i., I M.er, Gorge K ifodeip'.er, Horace Geiser. Cleveland tl tit nan, Artiev Rtichtid, Gordon Dyer, Haiold Dver, Roy Thomas,h «rl A'ampole and Will iam Dyer. A Lenten Attraction. The cornii g engagement at the Dan ville theatre is of more than ordinary interest to theatre goers, inasmuch as this, being the Lenten season, it is difficult to attract to places of amui-e ment those who hold strictly to the re quisites of their various creeds "A Royal Slave" is a beautiful Christian story of Old Mexico, a series of pie tures of life iu that country of romance. Ministers have been unanimous this season in exhorting their congrega tions togo aud see the production of "A Royal Slave," because it. savors more of the atmosphere o 112 the Chapel than the Theatre It has not been an uncommon sight during this Leuteu season to s e the stage boxes entirely filled with clergymen of all denomina tions witnessing a performance of this morally uplifting drama i Its time now for the umpire to be-1 gin developing bis voice. 1. WILL BE PUSHED i TO COB LET ON I People who have occasion to use the new State Highway between Danville and Mausdale, which has lain all wiu i ter hi an unfinished state,will be glad to learn that the work is at out to be resumed and carried speedily to com pletion. The road, natnrallv had iu the Spring of the year, with recon struction at its present has not been much improved and people are i heard to complain about it daily. The work, which was begun towaid ■ *he latter part of last Snmmer,seeni"(l to proceed very slowly. The principal part of the work seemed to lie in the grading. There was an immense amount of cutting and filling required to level up and straighten the high way as required by the plaus. When • winter set iu the grading wascomplet- F ed and the six-inch course of crushed i cinder was applied from one end of the road to the other. In this condition, • with the bare cinder exposed, the road i has lain all winter. ' When the snow was deep and the i sleighing was good but little anuoy -1 auce was caused by the cinder, but • now the road from one end to the oth- I er is bare of snow and it shown up in i bad shape. The Maryland Construction Com pany, which has the contract,has writ ten onto Danville to learn what cou -1 ditiou the road is in and has stated " tiiat a representative of the company ' will be on hand iu a few days to pre > pare to resume the work. Nothing 1 more requires to be done than to apply " the three inches of trap rock, called 3 for by the contract, which will con- wist of two courses, one being two 5 incln s thick of oue and a half inch ' iock an! the other one inch of fine ' screenings. This last course will be : subjected to lit avy pressure under a road roller. If the company is able to i carrv out its plans the road will be i finished before May Ist. ) , Petitioning for Free Delivery. 3 The people of South Danville and 112 Riverside, are circulating a petition . asking the Post Office Departaieut to ; establish free delivery of mail in those i two places. The residents on the South » side obtain tbeir mail from the Riv . erside Post Office. They r sent ihe . idta, lioaever, of being obliged to re -1 c ive their mail iu the old-fashioned t way in the present prngrtssive tines aud regard themselves a little worse oil ill til the scattered inhabitants of . the rural districts,who have their mail delivered at their do irs daily by the • R. P. D. carriers. 3 This is the way they look at it. What view the Post Ollice Department • may take of the matter will develop I liter. A freed liverv in connection with tie R verside Post Offi e is saio to b- out of the question, unless thai office be m id" a sub-station to the Dan ville Post Offi e. Some are of the opin ion that tree delivery for South Dan ville and Riverside if granted at all could only be maintained in connec tion with the Dauville Post Office. 1 Whatever the ultimate outcome may be the movement seems popular Last evening the petition had about a hun dred signers. The April Smart set. In the novelette whioh opens the April Smart Set, Grace MacUowen Cooke has struck an entirely new note in fiction. It is a story of the West, so saturated with the atmosphere ot that part of our country and so photo graphic in its depiction of ranch life that it will take high tank among tli best tales of that class; yet ir is more as a character study that "Tie Red* Headed Woman" will win praise. The heroine is the most original, the most human, the most refreshing woman ! who for a long time has stepped from a ptinted page. There is no reader who will not be fascinated by fier vagaries and iutere-ted iu her remarkable ca reer. The short stories in this cumber cov er a wide field. First of all, ttiere is a wonderfully graphic tale by a new writ. r. JulU Lawrence Shatter, which she has cal ed "A Realist." Iu it, with consummate art,she analyzes the intricate character of a forlorn crimin al who has become a subject of inter est for a novelist in search of "copy " This story alone would make any mag azine worth while, but there are oth - er excellent tales, notably by William R. Lighton, who tells how a dead love was resurrected in"The Shadow of a Shadow;" by Mrs. Henry Dudeney. who wtites a powerful English story lot 18i8 in"The Swift Shi|s;" by Ar thur Striuger, who goes to the Oau adiau frontier foi the set dp of"In th> Du k of the Goddtss;" by Guy Bot ito whose wit sparkles in"The Si*n P..inter;" by Inez Hayoes Gillmore, who contributes a delightful love storv, "TieGodsof lluogtr;" and b* H. G. Dwi.-hr, who v ri'es a charmiog -t r. eu iiled "Sus-a nali and the hlder." Bliss Carman has contributed an < ss»y to tl i- number, "On Having Kuown a P»inter," wherein he again r> veals hitusi If as a writer of exquisite prose The po 'try is f:»r above the averag of m gtz u - terse, and is written h\ ueh ftvorite authors as Edith M. Thomas, Clarence Urmv, Zona Gale, Madison Cawein, Arthur Davisoi Fi< ke, Natin e Bryd Turner and Gou vertiear Morris, the latter supplying another insta ment of his inimitable verses, "Below Stairs " The April Smart Set maintains its own high standard of excellence, and is remarkable for the note of variety which it strikes American Institute Farmer's Club Reports the wines of Alfred Speer, the most rt liable to be obtained, and that his Oporto Grape makes a Port Wine superior to any iu the wo: Id. His Burgundy and Claret and the Climax Brandy are superb. Received Appointment. George West Diehl, son of Mr and Vlrs. O. I Diehl, of Pine Grove, W Va., ami a grwidson of Surveyor George West of this city, has received an appointment to ttie United States Military Academy at West Point The i young man u now preparing to enter., t JUDGMENT JT ERED ON AWARDS » The report of the viewers appointed • to a sess damages sustained by the four Mill street properties by reason I of the change of grade was confirmed • absolutely by the Court yesterday. As * a nest step judgment was entered on i tie* awards, from which the Borough ; will file its appeals iu due time, j The awards as rendered by the jury i i in the Mill street damage cases are as | follows: Sperring property, sid-»; I Frances Hartman property, $500; i Schuster property, $850; Ella Cousart estate. #175. In entering judgment for ■ j verdict were added in each case > for costs. ' The Borough Council bases its ap peal on the ground that the damages 1 are excessivo. The next step of course will be trial by jury. In the present 1 case a peculiarity exists in the fact | that the property owners as well at ; the Borough Council is dissatisfied ' j with the award. Nettle r side agreeing I with the viewers, a court trial would 11 seem to be about the only means of ; settling the matter. 1 ! A great deal of formality remains to jbe complied with. Issues will first have to be formulated,after which the I cas s will be regularly put on list for trial in Court of Quarter Sessions. It ' is hardly likely that the cases will be ready for trial in May. THE TRUE TEST. • Tried in Danville, It Has Stood the Test. The hardest test is the test of time, 1 and Doan's Kiduey Pills have stood it . well iu Danville. Kidney sufferers can 5 hardly ask lor stronger proof than the following: 1 Levi AHeger, baker, of 102 Horth i Spruce street, says:"l found more re -5 lief from the use of Down's Kidney Piils than from anything I ever osfd for kidney trouble. About eight years 1 ago I tad considerable lameness in my 3 hack, over the h.p< aud a continual a'iiing right over the kidneys. These pains clung torn« and ii-creased in severity if I stooped or lifted. Oc , casionally sharp pa ns would i a-s through me and shoot up between my 1 shoulders, along my spiue. All this ) caused me considerable suffenng and , uiitittert me for my work. I coul I not step well at night and in the morning 1 would a is« tired ami unfreshed. I read about Doai's Kidney Hills (u-ing 3 other- and got a box. After taking them as directe. I felt better and cm . tinned the treatment until I felt all right. I made a s'afeinent in 18SA0. in 1 which I said that Doan's Kidney I ill-» ' hal cur-d me I can only reite at» j i hat st a eineut a f this time. 1 always . keep Dcau's Kidney Pills in the house,a d w enev r a cold or a tiam 5 firings oil a tired or weak ba k they never fail to remove the trouble." For sale hv all dealers. Price 50 ceut-i. Foster-Milburn Co , Buffalo, 1 N Y., sole agents for the United i Slates. i Rtmember the name -Doan's—and take no other. Y. n. C. A. Notes. The secre'aries and physical direct ors of the Young Men's Christian As- I sociatious of North America have in vited specialists outside of their org anization to make a study of their . rnetho Is for six months and criticize them without favor at their coming annual meeting at Niagara Kills. These men will come at the Associa • ..• —uuinjs of view aud give criticism to the weas . features of the management and sug i gestious for improvement and adapta ■ tion of their methods to benefit more men. Prof. Graham Taj lor, head of the Chicago Commons, and professor in i MoCoruiick "Theological Seminary,and Luther H«lsey Gulick.M. D., director of physical training of the New York public schools, will cousider the As sociation's social aspects, Dr. Gulick investigating especially the Associa tion's efficiency in reaching all sorts ot men. President King, of Oberlin College, will examine its methods of biblical instruction, and the eminent psychol- I ogist, President G. Stanley Hull, of Clark University, its religious work. The educational service of the in stitution will be investigated by Hon. Carroll I). Wright, ex-C immissioner of Labor,and Prof. Starr Cad walladcr, Superintendent of Education of De troit. Mr. James E. Sullivan,the secretary of the Amateur Athletic Union, will criticize its athletic department, and j the leading university lu-tructoi in physical education will look mto its methods of physical training. Mr. Ernest H. Abbott, of the edi torial staff of the Oottook, is making an ind. p indent study of the movement tor a series of articles iu the Outlook, to appear after the conference. He is n exp rt student at first hand of so oi il and religious conditions. Dr. James M. Buckl-y, the editor ot The Christian Advocate, will discu-s the efficiency of the Association, as viewed from tin standpoint of the Church. The Association office m inauement and accounting is to receive att. ution trom Mr. G. F. C. Hocg'iton, a Ins - ness expert of Chicago, aud the busi ness administration frbiu the stand point of memnersbip extension will he 're«»ed bv the circulation manager of the Pntl tdelphia Rec »rd. One of the advertising exp» rts of the country, Mr. O I'. O msred. of the Niagar» Pure Food Company,will r■ 11 "How I Would Advertise the Young Men's Christian Association." The executive committee of the As sociation Employed Officers' Society, of which Mr. Lyman L. Pierce, ot Washington, is secretary,expects from ( these unhampered studiess to 'irtng to tho managers of the Associations prac tical suggestions and fair oritici-m which will be vistly helpful in enabl- i I ing the Associate into improve their | service to an increasing number of men. The critics are given a free hand and 1 reque-ied to"go to the bottom" of the ' Association's methods, with the aim , of securing the Nrge-t possible benefit to the organization from their studio- Date of Inspection Changed. i Company F w 11 be inspected Mou- i day evening. March 37th. instead of s March 29th, as heretofore stated. Ow- t ing to tiiis change iu the date of the i inspection, drill will be held Friday v and Satordav evenings of this week f] A tall attendance will materially liilpj i the rating of the oompauy* WILL REMOVE ! CANAL BRIDGE i Among the improvements in store 5 for onr to*n during the coining sum i njor will be the removal of the canal 1 bridge at F. rry street and the con* s -truction of a culvert with ample wat i er way to take its place, l The Borough is re-pousible for tin Ferry street bridge just as it was for r the structure at Mill stteet by virtue ■> of jiii agreement several years ago eu ; terecl into with the Pennsylvania Can ; al Company, whereby the Borough ob t ligated itself to remove both these r structures in consideration of being 3 given the ironwork, stone, etc., used in the structure. TliT l bridge is an oh . sightly old affair and is rapidly reach -3 lug a limit- when if will be no longtr j considered safe. In | rosecuting its t policy of improvements Council can t do no less than order its removal, i The work will in all probability be j entered upon coincidenr with the re j suming of paving on Mill street,which 1 will begin in av» ry short time. The 112 intention seems to be to utilize the ground that is excavated in fi ling up ( the culvert built to replace the bridge. , The paving will require a great deal of excavating, betwecu the Montour r House and the river bridge but the r gronr.d can all be conveniently di.*pos j ed of at the culvert. The idea is to build a culvert like the one at Church street, without any side or retaining wa Is, in*relv laying three-foot iron pipe in the bottom of the canal and dumping flee earth and stone in upon it, filling up to the eu t tire width of the street. 1 By the Tonic Koute. The pills that act as a tonic, and not as a < ia-tic purge, are DeWitt's Little - | Early Risers. They cure t'eadache, 1 | Constipation, Biliousness, etc. Earley * Risers are small, easy to take and easy Ij to act—a safe pill. Mack Hamilton, > I hotel clerk at Valley City.N. D.,says i | "Two bottles cured me of chronic con stipation. '' Sold by Paules & Co. i I 1 Godcharles' Pure Water Bill. 1 | Senator Goduhailes ha- not been to r ' | soon in introducing a bill tor the pro [ tection of streams and ponds fr ni p< 1- i \ lution by factories. The bill s strong J ! Iv recommended bv Fish C mmts-ion j ! er Mnelian, hut tha loutrolling reason , j for the enactmeut of such a measure ■» lis tho health of human beings. If the * | fish were exterminated It would b mo t unfortunate, but it wotld not bf , ' di-asrrous. If the people of everv ? town uia-t drink poll i ted water oi establish their own filtration pliutf '' the result w'll be an appall tig in j crease of -i -kne-s or a vast expense to j the tax oarers. * ; NVw York City ha* powers for the protection of the sources of its wafer sop| !>• that are refused to Philadel phia New York has condeint ed wat | ersheds man? miles from it« limits; has moved not oily occasional houses j but v 11 tg.-s and c *meteries, and has I ample nuihority to prevent the con rjt .m ntfioii of its drini.iug water. Phil idelpliiii lias b< en old ged 11 goto : | very gr. at ■jxpouse to construct filters ! because ot the pollution of the Scliuvl ! kill. Much of this pollution is caused *-»» - ••u.-i iuiiitoi u|> iiio u t aua nan wouli not b" remedied by the God cliarl w bill. But about a vear ago an inspection of our water supply disclos ed a factory discharging quantitit sof foul wa-te mt i the river from winch | Philadelphia fill ■ its mains,and it was hlf that the city was j owe. less. Its otti i• 1 s could not even gain access to the premiss to make a thorough study of the case. The Godchaihs bill provides for the payment by the state of half the cost i of constructing such dams, filter beds or other devices as the St »te Board of Health may deem necessary to prevent the waste from the factories from pol j luting the ponds or streams. This is liberal to the owners of the plants. It is ahsolutilv necessary for the future population of this state, irrespective of the interests of fishermen, that the streams and ponds should be kept pare. —Plnladtlphia Record. To Care a Uold iu One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE j Tablets. All drnsrgists r-fand money |if it fails t > cure. E. W. Grove's signa }nre is on each box. 25c. Surprise Party. A surprise pwty was tendered Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sht rs Jen nie and M giie and so is W'lliiaiu, Walt-r nil I K Iwar I, vl aid Mr- Ha n iair, md d ing' t rs Ru h. <»rae and Ra •he 1, Mi. and vliMcKarlaud sons J inn, Sru »rt and Herbcit ami 'taug' ter Blanche. Mr Deet rand son Will am, ue rge Woodruff, Clark M lis h, Charles Wlialen, lit orge.H'-r --brt and Kdwa d Woalen, Edward phult/:, CI irk. Orv 11, Thomas and \mhmse Shnltz. Mi ses Sin Shulrz, Anna Men-eli and L>dia 'Vhalen. AVOID a I •li ving inhalants and use that which cl miscs and hei.ls the memhiane. Ely's Cream Balm is such a rem- dv an I cur- s Catarrh easilv and pleasauilv Cold in ttie head vanish's quicklv. Price 50 cents at druggists or by mail Catarrh caused difficulty in speaking and to a great extent loss of htaring. By the use of Elv's Cieani Halm drop ping of muc us has cra-ed, voice and hearing have greatly improved. J W. D»vid -on, Att'y at Law, Mon mouth, ill. I A (iood Idea. The W >st Chester trolley company ' has bad all its conductors and motor- 1 men sworn in as police officers to pre- » serve order in and on their cars, and 1 the re-:ilt Is that the traveling public < is saved much annoyance and incon- < venience from the men under the in- I flueuce of liquor or who are disorder-1' ly. |l TWENTIETH WED DING ANNIVERSARY The Jacobs homestead, Mill street, Saturday eveuing was the scene of a very interesting event in the form of 'lie twentieth wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jacobs. The event was unique in that not only was the pastor present who tied the nuptial knot, but also the bride-maids,grooms s men and all who assisted at ihe wed ding twenty years ago. Iu all some seventy guests were pres ent, the following from out of town: ) Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Riley, of Will t lamsport; Mr and Mrs. Calvin Mc- I Collum, of E-py; Mrs. John McCoy, of Watsontown; Mrs. A. P Fowler, Mrs. Grace Bradbury and daughters : Graoe and Helen, of Espy; Mis-o --< Sarah and Ada Paoles.of Marietta,aun i Fred Dasch, of Wilkesbarre. A delicious wedding dinner was seiv » ed to which all did ample justite Another fetture of the evening on i which much interest centered was the J mock mariiage, in which Mr. and } Mrs. Jacobs were tho principals, al > tie original attendants of the wed ding, twenty years before assisting at I the mock event as follows: Brides r maids. Miss Sarah Paule» and Mrs S 3 A McCoy; groomsmen, Harry Ellen - bogen aud Sam A McCoy. Mrs. VS. L. Riley, of Williamsport, nee Miss 0 Maggie Breece, who played the wed -7 ding march at the wedding officiated 1 at the piauo on Saturday night. Rev. 112 M. L. Shindel was the officiating i clergyman. The Colonel's Waterloo. Colonel John M. Fuller, of Honey Grove, Texas nearly met his Waterloo, 1 from Liver and Kiduey trouble. In a e recmt letter, he says:"l was neaily • dead, of these complaints, and, al y though I fried my family doctor, he d dine no good; so I got a 50c bottle ' of your great Electric Bitters, which ured me. I consider them the best medicine on earth,and thank God who gave you the knowledge to make them." Sold and guaranteed to cuie Dyspepsia, Biliousne-s and Kidney ' Disease by Paulea & Co., druggists, at 50c a bottle. l-or a New flileage Book. Mr. Creasy, of Columbia county, in- J troduced in ttie h mse a bill, which, if e passed, will sweep to one side the pres e ent mileage on railroads and revolu tionize the two-cents per-mile travel, e as now obtains within Pennsylvania v Railroad companies niu-t issue aud r sell upon demand the mileage books as s pnsaribed by law,but by far the most important feature of tho measure is 1 that which provides that such a book shall be accepted as passage for the e person presenting it,and shall be good r until usml, ihere being no time limit * allowed to be fixed upon it The rate which is now charge 1 by : the railroads on such books, two cents 8 per mile, is to remain as it is. Ev rv 8 book must contain one thousand mile-' ' passage—one thousaud coupons each coupou good for oue mile of travel be -0 tween stations at which the train on 8 which the book is presented isschedul * ed to stop. The book mu-t be accepted by the 3 conductor. Irorn tlie Ti ilder, any inem • ber ot his firm or agent thereof, an 1 tut mher of his 112 «uuly, or any person who present* it. 112 Should auv of the provisions of the 1 act be violated, each aud every ofll er N and director of the guilty companv s mu-t ptv to the State a fine of ssoo') 5 aid undergo an imprisonment of niue 1 months. For the purpose of the act, the critne-i will be jadged to tiave been 3 committed in the county where the t offense occurred. li-credib e Brutality. It would have been incredible burt ality if Ch is. F. Letnbergcr, of Syra ' cuse, N. Y., had not done the best he could for his suffering sou. "Mvboy," he says, "cut a tearful over his eye, so I applied Buck leu's Arnica Salve, which quickly healed it and saved his eye. Good for bums and ulcers too, Only 25c at Paules & Co's drug store. Delightful Surprise Party. A delightful surprise parry was giv en last eveniug by Mr. and Mrs. Web ster Foust, at their home on Front street in honor of their daughter, Mabel's 10th birthday. A large nom 'ier of frieu Is of the youug lady yaihe ed to participate in the fesiivi ti'-s, and an excellent time was enjov ed by all. During the evening a delicious sup per was served. In t'ie center of the t«hle was a large cake, sur mounted by ten candl s. Mis Fiu t was the recipient of a numb r of beautiful gifts. Those i resent wre : Kathe ine Vloy. r, thel Roa', Laur* W a t. Khanor Wvau'. May Mon.au. Jennie Bie t, Lucretia Berg r, M.r A'aiker, Eth I H»nug, H-len Arm , Gertmle Buckley, Edna R at, Helen Fou-t, Marga-et Foust, Eiiuira Mo. er, Eleanor Deutsch, Alice Wait ,Ka her iue Lynu, M try Lynn, Theresi Wag ner, Jessie Ayaut,Pauline Watte, Mil d ed Sidler, Anua E lmond-on, Krance- Harpel, Ruth HtaptT. Lucy Detwiler, Nellie (Joss, Lizzie Stewart, Loi» R. it. snyder. G.ace Foust. Blam he Arm , Ida Ev iu-, Minnie Cde n. I t ie• Joues. Ethel Foust, William Vasiioe, Dan Bleckef, Ernst F iust, Walter Kou-r, James B \er. Jam s Pstton, R< y F.iust, Jauie« Evans, Philip Koust, Janes C*iviu Foust and Mi-ses Josephine ousatt, Kathi rine Bennett an I E mlra Foust Strikes Midden Rocks When your ship of healtn strikes the ' hidden rrn ks of Cousupmtion. Pne<> ' monia, etc., you aie lost, it you don'i get help from Dr. King's New Discov ery for Consunii tion. J. W. McKin-I non.ot Talladega Springs, Ala .writes: ! | "I had been vorv ill with Pneumonia, under Hie care of two doctors,but was | getting no better when 1 began tot t held a mflpt ing and until it does nothing defiuit will be known. If the matter were left to the meubers of the Third biigane with the privilege of voting on toe question there is no doubt as to the verdict. It would be for brigade camps ( and Mt. Gretna would be the plane selected by eighty per ent. of I lie toys ' The indications are now that the Aimory bill aud the Guard apj ropria tiou bills will both pa»s the u e The former will evintually pro vide every command iu trie guard with a state armory and.he I itter will pay ■ the running expeu-es of the guard for the next two ye«r-, whioh luclude au ' appropriation for officers eqoipmeut. i A Destructive Fire To draw the fire out ot a buru,or heal a cut without leaving a scar, use De- Witt's Witch Hazel Salve. A specific 1 for pile?. Get the genuine. J L. Tucker, editor of the Harmouizer, Ceutre, Ala., writes: "1 have used DeWitt's Witch Haz~d Salve in mv family for Piles, cuts and burn-. It is the best salve on the market. Eviry family should keep it on hand " Sold by Paul- 8 & Co Plenty of Fish for Lent. Observers of Lent mat well con gratu ate tlieui-elvi s that th season of fastiug aud prayer is later this year than usual, for if it h»d come a week ear ler there would not have been cii'iugh ti h in the ma ket to supply one-fourth of th de narid A- it is. L-'iit i- h re,and theit is fish in p euiy du»- to tie warm weather that nrt vail e I for the pasr w• ek Spring making it- a Vent so early will soon till the in iri-ets with pri-> e fre-h fi-h, di-|l icing the cold stoiage article. The early spring does not iff« (t the prices of Halibut as it is not irtken from domesiio waters, and is brought into this country in great quantities, and is preserved for use in cold -tor age. All indications point to a much mild er March tlrau usual, so that the sup ply of fi-h may so mi excee I tie de main! iu that case a much larger drop in price may be looked for Pleasant and Harmless. Don't nrug the - tonne h to cute » cough «)u Minute Cough Cuie r ol her utile son Harry's bi ri h lay. R Ireshim nt- we e >ervei ami the patty was much enjovei. Those present were: Harold Kerns, Charles' Hancock.Freddie Gerst,Howard Gerst, Alfred Pat»on. Frank Smith, Lucy I Detwibr, Margaret Deen, Ethel Hodine, Catharine Hodman, Frank mid j j Hairy HoStuau. j A coil HOLDS i SMUT SESSION A special 6eesion of Court was held Saturday His Honoi Judge Little aud Associates Thompson and Blee being on the bench. Courf '■at for only an hour and a halt aud lor cliil- H dren." —Mb-. « 11- llm vek. Slielby. AU. $ as<- 50c..?l W J. C. AYER CO.. for MMMMMMiBiaa* Night Coughs Keep the bowels opt n with one of Oyer's Pills at bedtime, lust one.