MONTOUR AMEjRIOAN FRANK C. ANGLE. Proprietor. Danville, Pa., Nov. 30. 1905 MINOR MATTERS OF INTEREST WINTER AT LAST. The long period of delightful vvt hll<- er, whioh made the present autumn remarkable, ended abrcptly Monday night. Yesterday we had winter. A cloudy dismal morning ston brought ou a storm of hail and snow, whioh in turu was followed by raiu. About uoou the mountains were white and hunters begau to smile at the piospects of a rabbit snow. It was not long, however, until the last trace of the snow was wiped ontaud it became evideut enough that the long drought that had prevailed was to be Lrukeu with a copious raiu. The afieruoou proved very disagree able and few people were to be sepn out of door*. Thn raiii was welcome, however, and no one was disposed to complain at the disagreeable weather conditions. At many places water was very low and the outlook for winter was not at all encouraging. Thep res ent rain will fill up the wells and ■ well the streams with the result that they will be effectually flushed and the impurities deposited by low water carried off. One year ago yesterday winter also began to assart itself.as it was ou that date that ioe first began runniug on the river. Should the coming winter prove of equal severity with last hu manity will have reason to be thank ful for the delightful Indian Summer, which has taken the place of ftormy days and which will have the effect of making winter seem shorter. ( K l> TRACKING DEER IN SNOW. The snow which began falling yes terday morning about£9 :30_ o'clock the fl ra I rea ITn o~w~o f~ti uT'se asMn will make the laur two days of tho deer season interesting ones for the hunt ers. Today and tomorrow are the I ist days ou which deer ran he killed, and it is needless to say that the hunters who are iu the wo ids will make the ino9t of it. Several parties are still in the woods,and a number of others * ill start out asaiu this afternoon aaid to morrow morning. The snow, while only an inch or two deep, is enough to make tracking good. « « «112 FOOT HAhL FATALITIES. Twenty-two deaths is the foot '.all eeasou's friglitf(i 1 record. l'hree of these fatalities occurred on Saturday and four of the total number of vic tims were Peunsylvai'ians That's au alarming death roll for one seison's ball play. Excepting automobile rac ing, it is the most, dangerous of >ll sports,and a revision of the rulei ttKkt govern the game that will lessen the danger is demanded. There Is more Catarrh iu this sectionof tha ountry than all other diseases put together ami until the last few years was supposed to be neurit ble.-l'or a great many years di Hold b Druggist*. 7r><-. Basket Ball Thanksgiving After, noon. The Pittstnn basket ball Is am will play Danville at the Armory on Thanks giving afternoon. They defeated the home team several weeks ago by fast, oleau playiug, one of the hest games 80 far this seasou. Manager Callahan has added two first class players and the local tea n will be much stronger thau in the previous game,consequent ly every patron of the game will be well satisfied. Philadelphia Wants Elks. If the plaun of Philadelphia Lodge, No. 2, H. P. O. Elks, bear froit, the Quaker City will be the scene of the twenty-fiist annual m ssiou and re union of the (Jratid'Lo !g« of Elks in IVJO7. Although mora than a year aud a half must pass before that reunion is held, there is already considerable competition among several of the cities to become the bout of the occasion. Will Visit Old home. John J. Walsh, a prominent New Yorker, expects to spend Thanksgiv ing in Danville. Mr. Walsh is a for mer resident of this city and is at pies ent occupying a responsible josition with the liapid Transit interests of New York City. Like all of oor best railroad men Mr. Walsh began at the bottom of the ladder aud by hard work placed himself where he is to day His many friends heie will be glad to welcome him horns. King Haakon VII, aud his family eutered the capital of Norwav on Sat oiday with a most enthusiastic wel come from their new subjects. The revolution iu Norwav, and the setting op of a kingdom has bet n accomplish ed without tiie shedding of a drop of blood, and while it will be difficult for the world to see wherein the Nor wegians have bettered themselves.only in sentiment.from King Oscar to King Haakon, and the additional cost of maintaining a separate government, we trust that peace, happiness and prosperity will follow the change. Sopreme Court Justice Brewer gives William Travers Jerome the hint that uuless he ceases to smoke cigarettes he can never hope to be President. He declares the cigarette to be the Ameri can abomiuation aud asserts that no oiagrette victim can climb to the top of the ladder. YOUTH IS CONTAGIOUS. Anil*Younv \\ i*e*. It I* Ciilmed, R#- 111 \ cIIIIII* Oltl II u*l*i4ndv, "Strange statistics," sai«l an insur ance agent, "are collected*ln my busi ness. "I have found that the more times a man marries the younger in comparison with himself he wants his wife to be. For Instance, his iirst wife on the av»r uge is four years younger than he. Ilia second is ten. His third is tw«nty or thirty. "What do these statistics prove? Do they prove that as a man gains In years and experience he finds that It Is best, for many reasons, to be almost as old as his wife's father, or do they only prove that as men approach old age they are more foolish than they were in youth? "Old X., aged seventy, with a third wife of twenty-three, said on this head the other day: " 'You can't marry a girl too youns. The younger she Is the longer she'll keep her health and strength and beauty. Furthermore, the older you are the more respect she'll have for you. Hhe'U reverence you and obey yon as she would her own father or grand father." "Young wives rejuvenate old hus bands," the Insurance agent ended. "They make these old fellows dresi younger, talk younger, act younger and feei younger. Youth is contagious. A yonng wife is believed to prolong an old husband's life. If a man oi seventy insured In my company should marry a girl of twenty, I'd consider him a bet ter risk by 8 per cent than he had been b«fore."—Philadelphia Bulletin. FUNNY LITTLE "FIDDLER." On* of (hr Mont Intereatlng Members of the Crab Family. One of the most Interesting members of the crab family is the queer and grotesque little "flddler" which lives In burrows in the banks of creeks and *rtuarlus bock of the beach. Into these burrows the crab retires In autumn and composes itself for a long winter Bleep. The eye stalks are then folded down into sockets beneath the shell and the large claw rests closed and Inert against the body, while the legs are folded up until the entire animal Is snugly closed upon itself, and It re mains In this dormant condition until tbe spring. Early In April the fiddlers ■waken and Immediately attend to tlearing out their burrows. The large olaw Is useless for eating, only tlie ■mall one being available for this pur pose. It is amusing to see «be dell oacy with which this little claw feels about and picks up the particles of vegetable matter and places them in the mouth, while the eyes are all the time raised aloft on their stalks and apparently looking off Into the dis tance. The female crabs have both claws small and of equal else, so they are both used In feeding, and she can satisfy her hunger Just twice as easily and quickly as the male. These fiddler crabs also gather food and store It in their burrows for future use.—St. Nicholas. DON'T BOLT YOUR FOOD. There In Plenitnre an Well aa Health In Deliberate Batlnf. Fast eating Is sure to be Injurious, because to properly prepare the food for digestion It must be thoroughly masticated. Rapid eating Is still worse when It Is canned by the hurry of business or by anxiety or nervous irritability or by the common habit of "bolting" the food. Buch eating is sure to produce indiges tion or dyspepsia. The teeth, as well as the stomach, are made for labor, and neither can have their proper work to do If only paps and broths and puddings and hashes and other soft and artificially prepared foods are crowded into tbe Btomach as though the cook in the kitchen could masticate and digest the food better than the natural grinders and the chemical action and assimilat ing power of the stomach. Those people who shovel great vulgar mouthfuls of food Into their mouths and bolt it down as though they had but ten minutes for a meal are gor mandizers instead of polite people. Tbey know little of the pleasure of deliberate eating or the luxury of sat isfying hunger, and certainly they are laying the foundation of disease. Dry. hard food, vigorously chewed, stimulates the flow of saliva, strength ens the teeth and keeps them healthy and invigorates the digestion. A II limbic Ar<*lil»iMlto|». Willegis, a famous archbishop of Mentz, rose to that elevated position from the very lowest ranks. He was the sou of a poor carter, but was never ashamed of his parentage. He not only caused the following inscription to be placed conspicuously in his palace, "Willegis, remember thy parentage," but had the wheels of a cart hung up In the Cathedral of Mentz. From that time to this the arms of the see have borne the figure of a cart wheel. The Word "Covey." Ix>nn custom has practically limited the word "covey" to association with the partridge, although it has always been used with grouse and ptarmigan. Beaumont and Fletcher, however, spoke of "covey of fiddlers" and Thack eray <>f a "covey <>f trumps." The word means properly a brood, hatching, com ing through the French "couver," to sit (of a hen bird), from the Latin "cu bare," to recline, whence "Incubate" also sprung. A (Incor Ceremony. A queer ceremony Is performed every year on the sth day of September In the Yalle Maggio. Italy. The region abounds In vipers. The celebrants form into a weird procession, each per son man, woman and child—carrying a huge figure of a snake stuffed with cotton. As they pass along they weep and lament, believing that by the ex platory ceremony they will render themselves proof against snake bites during the grape gathering. .Joy. Joy Is a prize unbought anil Is freest, purest in its flow when It comes un sought. No getting into heaven, as a place, will compass it. You must car ry it with you, else it is not there. You must have it in you. as the music of a well ordered soul, the tire of a holy purpose, the welling up out of the central depths of eternal springs that hide the wafers there. Horace Bush neli. Hair lluMnc Husband I feel in the mood for reading something sensational and startling something that will fairly make my hair stand on end. Wife- Well, here Is m.v last dressmaker's bill. —Washington Life. Ma ii v MeanfnfgN. Traveler- Some expressions In the Chinese language have as many as forty different meanings. Little Miss Same way in English. "Yiui amaze me. Mention one." "Vol at home." CAVE OF THE WINDS. The \ inlon Curved In Stone t nder lis Hills of Dakota. The great wind cave has the form of an eight story house, each story, or stratum, containing a distinct forma tiou of its own and each containing chambers of a size and magnificence of decoration such as have never been found in any subterranean cavern of the world. It is a dream, a nightmare, a vision, carved in solid stone under the green hills of Dakota, stone as white as the milk the hired man used to give us to drink. in the dawn of a happy June morning, stone as red as the heart of the first blood root that you dug in the spring when the world was all spring to you and stone that Is blue with a blue that all the painters who have ever painted Venice have tried to get for generations and have failed. Frozen fountains are there, white with the leaping foam of untold ages, sculptured cats and horses and great monsters to be dreamed about o' nights and feared in dark corners in the daytime, organs built by the hands of giant gnomes for a Titan to play wild hymns of praise upon, a kitchen for the cooking of weird dishes never thought of up here in the sun shine, all manner and all kinds of rooms, ninety miles of tbeni, down there under the hoofs of the gallant little range horses who pound the grass into hay the year round, up there in South Dakota. A CALL TO THE WOODS. Commnnr With Yvurnelf Orraalan alljr For Your Own Good. Mr. Busy Man, leave your task some day; let the shop take care of Itself, let the mill go as It may, let the plow stand In its furrow, and take yourself into the depths of the solemn, shad owy woods. Call back, ah, call back the forgotten years; collect around you the old friends, the old thoughts, the old ambitions, the mistakes you made, tho faults you had, the wrongs you did or suffered, the opportunities wasted, the vain things you sought, the work that you might have done better, the kind words you might have spoken and did not. the good deeds you might have done and did not, the frowns that should have been smiles, the curses that might have been blessings, the tears that ought never to have been shed, the wounds that need never have been made. Commune with yourself—your past, your present, your future, your crimes, your weaknesses, your doubts, your fears, your hopes, your despair—and thus let conscience and the angels of your better self beat your soul Into the prayer: "Cod be merciful to me, a sinner!"— Watson's Magazine. DIED WITH HIS CHUM. A I)«-fJ of lierotnm That Stirred an Kntire Arm). In the reminiscences of General Kir Evelyn Wood, himself a brave English soldier, a touching instance of courage and self sacrifice Is given. One June day in 1885 a detachment of English marines was crossing the Woronzow road under tire from the Itusslan bat teries. All of the men reached shelter ID the trenches except a seaman, John Blewitt. As he was running a terrific roar was heard. His mates knew the voice of a huge cannon, the terror of the army, and yelled: "Look out! It Is Whistling l>lck!" But at the moment Blewitt was struck by the enormous mass of Iron ou the knees and thrown to the ground. He called to his special chum: "Oh, Welch, save me!" The fuse was hissing, but Stephen Welch ran out of the trenches and, seizing the great shell, tried to roll It off his comrade. It exploded with such terrific force that not an atom of the bodies of Blewitt and Welch was found. Even In that time when each hour had Its ex citement this deed of heroism stirred the whole English army. One of the officers searched out Welch's old moth er In her poor home and undertook her support while she lived, and the story of his death helped his comrades to nobler conceptions of a soldier's duty. HIS "KINGSMAN." The Silk »ckirrlil»f Worn hf the London Coitrrmonjifr. Speaking of London costermongers. Mavhew says: 'The man who does not wear his silk neckerchief—his 'klngsman,' as It is called—ls known to be In desperate circumstances." The neckerchief is more prized than any other item of his attire and a coster's caste Is at stake If his klngsman be not of the most approved pattern. This habit is derived from the gypsies and doubtless dates from some long forgotten oriental custom. It Is very curious that a taste for similar colors prevails among the Hindoos, gypsies and costermongers. Red and yellow are the favorite colors and the oldest. Of these, the coster chooses his plush waistcoat and his klngsman, the gypsy his breeches and his wife her shawl and gown; the Hindoo his robe and turban. If a fight occurs, the favorite colored ar tide of dress receives the greatest care. The pugilistic coster ties his klngsman round his waist or his leg, where, by the rule of the ring, It Is comparatively safe. London Tele graph. rook About Yon. It is wonderful how much one can learn by cultivating the habit of obser vation. As you walk in the street or ride In the car you pick up a surprising amount of information. < >ur fellow be ings are intensely interesting, and they are constantly teaching us some thing or other. I»o not let your knowl edge stagnate. Put it to some practical use. She Wan \\ IIIInK. "Kind lady," remarked the weary wayfarer, "can you oblige me with something to eat V" "Co to the woodshed and take a few chops," replied the kind lady. Phila delphia Kecord. Onr llmiKrr Aviililtil. "I may run chances of a breach of promise suit." saiil tlx- fo>y old bache lor, "but 'here is some satisfa tion in knowing licit the divorce court can't touch me." Detrci Free Press. rue l.cnllr I.over. Wife You do not speak to me as af fectionately as you used to. Ceorge. 1 think you have ceased to love me. 11ns band There you are again! Ceased to love you! Why. I love you better than my life. Now, shut up and let me read uiv tamer. Good new* Know*. Mrs. Nayberleigh Judge, I want you to try some of my angel cake Judge Sokem (absentlyt What is It charged with? Cleveland Leader To believe is to be strong Doubt cramps energy. Belief is power.— Rob ert MOD THE PHENIX. I.efrt-ml of linn It Livrd nnd Died unrned its head, its plumage contained nearly every tint of the raln bow, ar*i Its eyes sparkled like dia monds ttuJy one of these birds could live at a time, but Its existence covered a period of , r >oo or »MK) years. Wlien Its life drrew to a close the bird built for itself a firineral pile of wood and aro matic spires, with Its wings fanned the pile Into a flame and therein consumed itsKlf. From its ashes a worm was produced, out of which another phenix "was formed, having all the vigor of youth. The tlrst care of the new phenix was to solemnize ltatparent's obsequies. For that purpose it made a ball of myrrh, frankincense and other fra grant things. At Heliopolls, a city in lower Egypt, there was a magnificent temple dedicated to the sun. To this temple the.phenix would carry the fra grant ball and burn it on the altar of the sun as a sacrifice. The priests then examined the register aud found that exactly SUO years or exactly 600 years had elapsed since that same ceremony had taken place. „ Modrrn Cnrtl I'1U?IIIK. The gambling of today is a mild af fair compared with the extant records of English society. We shall never again see the days when General Scott won a fortune of £IIOO,OOO at whist, chiefly by dint of keeping sober. And high play, it must never be forgotten, Is a relative term. When Lord Stavor dale gained £II,OOO by a single coup at hazard, his only comment was that If he hail been playing "deep" he might have won millions. When the dimen sions of modern wealth are taken into account the wildest excesses ever wit nessed ut the card table would have a timid and parsimonious aspect to the bucks of the regency.—Times of India, Bombay. A .Story of WimhliiKton, George Washington's head gardener was from some European kingdom, where he had worked In the royal grounds. But coming to America he left his wife behind. Homesickness for his "gude" woman's face soon be gan to prey on him, and Washington noticed the anxious eye and drooping spirits of his servant. Finally the man went down to the river and declared his Intention of shipping to the old country, when who should come up and lean over the side of a newly ar rived vessel but his wife. The kind hearted general hael secretly sent for the woman, and she fortunately sur prised her loving husband In one of his fits of despondency. A Startled Guent. Mme. Pattl took elaborate precau tions against burglars at Craig y Nos, her casjtle In Wales. A guest there who was spending a sleepless night rose before dawn to open his bedroom window. Immediately there was a violent ringing of bells In different parts of the castle. The visitor made his way downstairs, only to tlnd him self In Imminent danger of being lac erated by a whole troop of snapping and snarling dogs. It turned out that he had uuwlttlngly set the diva's patent burglar traps going, the dogs being released from their chains by an electric connection with the window. Cuts' Eyf«. What Is the correct color for cats' eyes as related to the color of the cats? Is the question which has been answer ed as follows: A black cat or one known as a "blue" cat should have amber or orange eyes. White cats must have blue eyes, chinchillas greem, though orange are permissible; orange, cream or fawn cats must have orange or haeel eyes; smokes, orauge eyes. THE CHOICE OF MATES. Artificial Matrimonial tieUrtlon Ilaa Olren Poor Results. No one knows what type will be the best for survival In an unknown future environment. We often see the ex tinction of families of parents whom any physician would have pronounced Ideal, but their children lacked resist ance to the Invasion of pathogenic or ganisms or there was some other de fect which made them easy targets for climatic causes of physical decay. On the other hand, we quite often find that parents below par physically have fine families. The curious unions which take place mnirt be the result of laws such as we find In every biologic phenomenon. Man has the same In stinct found In lower animals to select a mate who Is more or less different from himself. Should like types inato, their com mon characteristics may be so exag gerated as to be harmful and the line perish. It !s an Instinct of those of great Intelligence to marry those of less than the avernge, for the offspring revert to the better average. It Is very evident that If we try to Improve the race Intellectually by the marriage of like types we will violate the natural law upon which our existence la based. Artificial matrimonial selection has been tried, though the results were dis astrous.—American Medicine. IMITATIVE FLOWERS. Th« Caricature Plant Is One of Bra stl*a Peculiar Growth*. The Brazilian flower known as the running antelope is so called because its white petals have a series of well defined, dark colored lines and dots In which the Imagination can readily trace the form of an antelope, with its limbs outstretched and head thrown back, seemingly fleeing for Its life. In the "caricature plant" one species has the imitative form on the petals, an other has it outlined In the ribs and shading of the ribs. This last men tioned curiosity bears a remarkably well executed likeness of the Duke of Wellington and has on that account been named Arthur and Ills Nose. Among the orchids the imitative form is entirely different In character, being exhibited in the shape of the flower itself. Some are exact counter feits of bees, butterflies, moths, etc., while others take upon themselves the form of worms and beetles. Natural ists believe that in the lirst Instance it is nature's trap to lure other bees, moths and butterflies, but in the case of the worm and beetle orchids or those that are exact counterparts of toads, lizards and huge spiders they do not attempt ! > explain. "WW ML W W VEGETABLE SICILIAN tIALLo Hair Renewer Perhaps you like your gray hair; then keep it. Perhaps not; then remember —Hall's Hair Renewer always restores color to gray hair. Stops falling hair, also. " STARS FOR VOYAGERS. Rliie 1 *«'«! l»y \tt \ icntor* to Place m Lot'ation. There are nine eminent nautical stars considered by navigators. They are important as determining the po sition of' the ship at the time the ob servation i< taken, calculated by their distance from the moon. The stars are Alpha, Arietis, the principal star of Aries, but of the second grade; Alde baran, first magnitude, in the rich as terision of Tail rue, easily distinguished by its red color; Pollux, second magni tude, in Gemini, readily known by its companionship with tlic brighter Cas tor; Regulus, a first class star in the breast of Leo (hence often called Cor Leon is, the Lion's Heart); Spica Vir jimis, a lirst class star in Virgo, re markably conspicuous from being in sulated in a dark surrounding lield; Alpha Aqtiilae, generally known as Altair. lirst magnitude; Alpha Pegasi, second class, usually termed Narkab; An tares, first magnitude, in Scorpio, distinguished by its fiery red color; Pomaihaut, first class, in I'iscis Aus tralis. Thee stars are conveniently situated with reference to the moon's path and are used for taking tables of lunar distances by makers of nautical almanacs in order to enable vessel masters to deduct their longitude. The distances of the center of the moon from some of the nine conspicuous stars near the ecliptic are computed j with the utmost care for every three i hours during the year at Greenwich. . When on the broad ocean the navigator ■ finds his position by marking when such a lunar distance, set down ac curately in the almanac for the day and hour, o<- nrs. as seen from his own vessel, atul d' luces thereby his where abouts fin the watery waste.—Milwau kee I 'roe Prcs . Father V. h\. -.. iic.i i was your ago I didn't have as much money in a month as you spend in a day. Son- Well, father, don't scold me about it. tVhv don't you taik to grandfather? Trouble Mr. Joax Saw a man today who had trouble ahead of him. Mrs. .Toax How did you know? Mr. Joax He was pushing a baby carriage containing twins. Washington Star. .JuM llic Heverse. Mrs. Naggs I understand your hus band is utr b!e to meet his creditors. Mrs. Wairgs Don't you Itelieve it. Ho can and does meet them much oftener than he cares to. We&R Hearts Are due to Indigc stton. Ninety-nine of every one hundred people who have heart trouble can remember when It was simple Indigea tion. It ;s a scientific fact that all cases of heart disease, not organic, are not oniy traceable to, but are the direct result of indi g*>stion. All food taken into the stomach wnich fails o: pcrtect digestion ferments and swells the stomach, puffing it up against tilt fcsart. Tms Interferes with the action of the heart, and in the course of time that ielicate but vital ortfan feoeorr.es diseased Mr D. Kauble. of Nevada. 0.. uya 1 h»d itomick ouble and was in a bad rate »> I hud haart troubla * hit I »o3k K.odo' Dyspepsia Cure for about fcui > i.iths and It cured ir.9. Kodol Dige-.ts What You *., i rellivei the slom.ch of &'l uetvou* if'sin ar.. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys, Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the blood in your body passes through your kidneys once every three minutes. fThe kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they are sick or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, achesandrheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in the blood, due to neglected kidney trouble. Kidney trouble causes quick or unsteady heart beats, and makes one feel as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-working in pumping thick, kidney poisoned blood through veins and arteries. It used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning in kidney trouble. If you are sick you can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases and is sold on its merits » by all druggists in fifty cent and one-dollar siz- s!' -* -'i £ es. You may have a sample bottle by mail nome of Swamp-Root, free, also pamphlet telling you how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y.' Don't make any mistake, but remein ber the name, Swanp-Root, Dr. Kil mer's Swamp-Root, and the addres Binghamton. N.Y .. on every bottles. CATARRH CATARRH ■jj&g&l Ely's Cream Balm^ ,ro « J|^l Easy and pleasanMP / to use. ('ontains injurious drug. ' s HAY FEVER It opens and cleanses the Nasal Pas sages. Allays Intiamation. Heals and Protects the Membrane Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell Large Size, Till cents; at Druggists or by Mail ; Trial Size, 10 cents, by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 5B Warren Street New York. riasy and Quick! Soap-Making 'vith BANNER LYE To make the very bc*t soap, simply dissolve a > in of Jhi/:; r Jye in cold water, melt -,' i lbs. of :;rca e, pourthß Lye uati-r in tlic aiiklc t.i i.et. pull Directions on Cv.ry I' -ckags eis milveri.xd. The ran may be ope »td a:.v! (lo ejl: will, per mitting tl»e use of a small quantity at a time. It i jlist tlic arii. ;u needed in every licuscle mailed to you at once. FULL Wlat Sappßfls in Cenlral IT" Telegraphic Pennsylvania is News Reporters Despatches What llapj>ens Elsewhere Incident. Everywhere Both Complete in the Telegraph. That's why The Daily Telegraph is read in more h«mee in Central Penn sylvania than any other paper. Try it for a month and get the Picture. You'll get a Capitol Picture and a Capital Newspaper. Special rates to Clubs THE DAILY TELEGRAPH. Harrisburg, Pa. THE SMART SET A MAGAZINE OF CLLVrir:rS3. Magazines should have a well-defined purpose. Genuine entertainment, amusement and mental ricrea tion are the motives of THE SMART SET, the M 0 T SUCCESSFUL OF MAGAZINES Its NOVELS (a complete one in each number )are by tha 1 most brilliant authors of both hemispheres. Its SHORT STORIES are matchless —clean and full of hu man interest. Its POETRY covering the entire field of verse —pathos, love, humor, tenderness—is by the most popular poets, men and women, of the day. Its JOKES, WITTICISMS, SKETCHES, etc., are admittedly the most mirth-provoking. 160 PAGES DELIGHTFUL READING No pages are WASTED on cheap illustrations, editor vaoorings or wearying essays pnd idle discussions. EVERY page will INTER Est, J HARM and REFRESH you Subscribe now— $2.50 per year. Remit in cheque, P. O. or Express order, or registered letter to THE SMART SET, 452 Fifth Avenue, New York. N. B.—Sample copies sent free on application. Executor's Notice. Estate of Mary Louiia Gtaihart.lae of the Borough of Dauulle, County of Montour and State of Pennsylvania deceased. Notice is hereby given that letters testamentary on the ah >ve estate have been granted to the urulersigned. All persons indebted to the said estate are required to make payment, and those having claims or demands against the said estate, will make I nowa tbe same, without dealy to ROBERT Y. GEARHART, M GRIER YOUNGMAN, Executors. - Executrix's Notice. Estate of Jolia Anne Bowyer, late of the Borough of Danville, County of Montour and State of Pennsylvania, deceased. Notice Township of Derry, in the County of Montoor and Sfate of Pennsyl vania, deceased. Notice is hereby givtu that letters testamentary 011 the atiove estate havn been granted to the undersigned. All! persons indebted to the said estate are required to make payment, and those having claims or demands against the' said estate,will make known the same,, without delay, to WILLIAM HOUSER', Executor of Mary Lockhoof, deceastd. P. O. Address, (>l2 8100111 street, Danville, PH. Edward Savre Gearhart, Counsel. ens 11 UK IB 2 TO 15 HORSE POWER Strictly High Class ! Fnlly Gnarant eed SEND FOR SPECIAL CATALOGUE liiKtf sis lit to. WILLIAMSPORT, PA. Windsor Hotel Between 12th and 13th Sts. on Filbert St Philadelphia, Pa. Three urinates walk from the Read ing Terminal. Five minutes walk from the Penna. R. R. Depot. EUROPEAN PLAN SI.OO per day and upwards. AMERICAN PLAN $2.00 per day. FRANK M SCHEIBLEY. Manage R.I P-A-N S Tabula Doctors find A good prescription For Mankind. The 5-cent packet is enough for usual' occasions. The family bottle (60 cents) contains a supply for a year. All drug gists sell them.