Montour American. FRANK C. ANGLE, Proprietor. Danville, Pa., Nov. 28, 1907. D'-fi i« an Ideal Furmer, Secretaiy of Agriculture Wilsou'has been asked to define his idea of the •ssentials of the successful farmer, and in auswer he has set down these specifications: He keeps improved stock that re spond to their keeping aud that put on the greatest per ceut. of meat on the prime pnrts. He puis all mauure promptly on the fields. He rotates his crops. He tile-rlraius his lauds. He keeps up good fences. He has good pastures. He has a good gardeu. He breeds draft horses and does farm work with brood mares aud growing colts. He has a library with periodicals and standard works, aud a musical in strument. He helps his wife iu the house when she needs it, has a spring vehicle for her to visit in and drives her to church himself. He keeps dairy cows or mutton sheep, or both. Ot coarse, the Secretary has been compelled iu this general summary of the ideal farmer to avoid the consider ation of strictly local conditions which might impair the application of some of the specifications, but in the main it will probably be admitted that he has painted a fairly accurate composite pioture of the successful tiller of the soil today. The idea that modern methods have no place on the farm is being rapidly dispelled, and as a result the noble calling of agriculture is being restor ed to its old-time position of honor amoug men. For this restoration the well direct ed efforts of the National Department of Agriculture and such State depart ments as that of Pennsylvania are largely responsible, through their sys tematic campaigns of observation and education. Are a Husband's Pockets Sacred? There are many and varied excuses for the granting of divorces, but the latest reason for the separation of hus band aud wife was given in a case re ported in Massachusetts. Ic.this case the wife persisted ingoing through the pockets of her husband at night when tha poor man was sleeping the sleep of the just. When morning came the husband discovered his loss aud remonstrated with his wife but to no avail. The nightly plunder of the trousers' pocket of the slumbering man continued until patience ceased to be a virtue and he sought relief from the divorce court. Wives all over the country should take heed of the court's decision that the pockets of a husband are sacred in the eyes of the law. The desire of wo men to investigate things with which they have no right to meddle has caus ed a great deal of trouble iu this world and the woman who has curiosity enough to try to find out if her hus band dropped all his change at the poker game of the previous evening is likely to get into trouble, if other courts should follow "the example of the Massachusetts tribunal. Wives should let their husbands' pockets alone, aud if they are injneed of mouey they should use some less crimiual manner of securing it. Some Ideas of Happiness, Different men have different, con ceptions of happiness. Some look up on life from a purely physical stand point. They magnify the body at the expense of the intellect and spirit Their conception of perfect happiness is physical enjoyment. Something good to eat and to drink, boon companions of both sexes, pleasant surroundings immunity for the time being from cares or worriment, this is their idea of supreme happiness. But it is a con ception which will not wear. Ap petite will pall, the body will refuse to respond to the appeals of theseuses, one's boon companions, the friends of an hour, will presently tire and seek other scenes, the pains and aches which are accompaniments of age when youth has been misspent,at last arrive and remain, unwelcome guests until the final scene. Others find their most exquisite de light in intellectual pursuits. They covet familiarity with the words of the wise and the good of all time. They make their library their favorite room. They eagerly seek the com pany of the choice spirits wh.o have embalmed the best part of themselves in immortal books. Qive them access to such friends the clouds may gather, the winds may blow,the storms may beat upon the dwelling, but they are oblivious to everything except the high comrades who are with them. They feel like thanking God every day for the invention of the art of print ing. By its aid they are enabled to live with the noble and the wise of every age, secluding themselves from the vicissitudes and the troubles of life and accumulating witli eaoli pass ing week more and more of the wis dom which they esteem the choicest gift of fortune. Otliersjtake great delight in cultiv ating the spiritual nature. Like the great Hebrew of old tliev eudure as seeing him that is invisible. Like the grim but goodly Puritaus who establ ished the foundations of our republic they feel strongly that the only real things are those "which pertain to the spiritual life. They may be looked upon as fmfatics and lunatics,but they go through life calmly and joyously, feeling that they have accqnireda herit age which will remain long after the universe has been resolved into its original chaos. READING SEWAGE FILTER PLANT A sewage filtration plant, the kind 1 that the State has in view to prevent river pollution at this place and at the hospital for the insane has been installed at Reading and is ready to go into commission. It is expected to be a model for all other towns whose sewage is emptied into rivers or oilier streams. The device, which is of a typekuowu as a "sprinkling filter** is the first to be placed in actual service in this country. The method of purification adopted consists in general of the fol lowing process: After a preliminary screening which is made unusually thorough to remove the fibrous materi al contributed to the sewage by cer tain local manufactures, the sewage is pumped to a septic tauk ' on the other side of the Schuylkill, BBOOfeet away, and which is at sufficient elevation to permit all further flow to and through the succeding elements of the plant to the sprinkling filters, which are located on Fritz's Island, lying in the river about 2500 feet away. From the sprinkling filter the effluent passes to the-sedimeutation basin and from this is discharged pure and sparkling, into the river. The majority of disposal plants, and probably all which pump the sewage, screen the larger floating matter there from, as a preliminary to further treatment. Most of these,however, re move only such matter as would be caught by a screen of from one-half to one-inch mesh. In the Reading plant a rotary screen, called by the contractor a "segregator," is used. This consists of a cylindrical screen open at both ends, which continually revolves around a horizontal axta at the rate of three revolutions a minute. The sewage passes through the open ings of the screen and drops into a well below, the supsended matter be ing retained on the inside of the screen. The forty-inch mesh is expected to catch a very large part of the suspend ed impurities in the sewage and would undoubtedly clog up very rapidly if no provision were made for keeping it clean. To effect this, a three-inch horizontal pipe is suspended on each side of the screen, outside of aud a few inches from the same, parallel to its axis and about 45 degrees above the horizontal plane above it. Each of these pipes is pierced at five poiuts space at ten-inch intervals, from which jets of water, steam or air are to be driven against the out side surface of the screen aud normal to it; the pipes being arranged to move longitudinally back nnd forth a distance of twelve inches, thus caus ing the jets to strike every part of the screen. The sewage is expected to flow through the meshes of the screen and at the same time force toward the fur ther end the supsended matter, which is being constantly loosened by the cleaning jets. This suspended matter, as it is forc ed from the further end, will drop in to a bucket conveyor,which will carry it to a spiral conveyor, which in turn will deposit it in bags. These bags are to be placed into a centrifugal wringer making 800 revolutions a minute, by which a large part of the liquid will be removed from the solid matter. . The matter will be disposed of for fertilizer or used for fuel. The sewage, after this screening, will be pumped to the septic tank through a force main. What It Cost to be Elected. According to his sworn statement which has beeu placed on file in Pro t.honotary Terwilliger's office,Blooms burg, William Kriokbanm, Democrat, who defeated George M. Hughes, Re publican, for the office of associate judge in Columbia county, spent just $t»:S4 40 The expenses of John G. Barman's campaign for State treasur er was just $15,205, which included all bills of the State executive committee. This statement was filed at Harrisburg on Wednesday. Krickbaum's campaign expenses can be summarized as follows: To the county chairman $300.00 Printing and advertising 78.70 Postage aud stamps 5.00 Clerk hire, self and county chairman 42.00 Paid to individuals for dissemi nation of information to voters 208.70 Total bill of expenses 1634.40 The bill of expenses shows that October 23, was the first day the ex pense account began, except that on October 19th $l5O was paid to the county chairman. Livingstone's Vanity. The Victoria falls of the Zambesi river, in southeastern Africa, form the largest cataract in the world. They were discovered In 1855 by Dr. Liv ingstone, the great missionary and ex plorer. and were found to be twice as high and three times as broad as Niag ara. Carved upon a tree near by the initials "D. L." are still discernible, and in his book the missionary con fesses that this was the one occasion in his life when he was guilty of this form of vanity. These initials are carefully preserved by the ofUclals of the British South Africa company, to whom they were pointed out by the native who saw them carved. His Present. "What do you think? My wife's fa ther told me before we got married that he would give me a handsome present on our wedding day." "And didn't be?" "Well, X waited over a week, and as he didn't mention the subject I asked him for It, and all he said was, "Why, didn't I give you my daughter?" HUNTERS' UNIQUE EXPERIENCE William H. Treat) and .Tohu H. Treas, who were deer hunting at White deer mountain.have returned to South Dan ville. Thejrest of the party consist ing ofJDr. A. T. DeWitt, H. L. De- Witt,Dr. M. Sofith and D. R. Eck man expect to reach home in time to upend Thanksgiving with their fami lies. Under the present law.which makes it unlawful to shoot any but male deer with horns,the experience of the hunt ers was wholly unique. The restric tion cuts down the hunter's chances one-half or'more. None of the Dan ville partv at last, account* had ruu across a deer that might become legiti mate game. The guide wounded a big buck,but that was the nearest the Danville party came to getting a taste of veu ison The buck escaped, but he was easily tracked and, although pursued by the entire part*, he succeeded in making his escape. The does and the fawus as if realiz ing that"they are protected seem to have lost much of their fear. A couple of remarkable instances are related. The other day ,T. H. Treas and his fa ther came across a doe and two fawns. Whether paralyzed by fright or due to some other cause the animals,usual ly so timid, stood stalk still no more than twenty-four feet from the two men,maintaining their stolid position for at least two minutes, after which they gracefully bounded away. D. R. Eckman had a still more re markable experience. He found him self face to face with a beautiful fawn, which stood its ground not more thau ten feet away calmly surveying the man and the gun. Of course, under the previous law each of these deer would have fallen an easy victim of the hunter's musket. None but "male deer with horns" may be shot. This of course, gives the male fawns, which have not yet grown antlers, a chance to escape. Hunters have to be very careful that they do not unwittingly shoot a female and thus lay themselves open to prosecu tion. Save Life-Promote Health. The committee of one hundred, rep resenting the most prominent medical associations, scientists and eminent nou professional citizens, lias started an r irnest campaign for the saving of lifo and the preservation of health through federal endeavor. There is 110 doubt that this subject is one of the most important before the country. While public authorities and human itarians in general lire engaged in a vigorous campaign of social uplifting, every community having its benevol ent organizations, it is a fact that scarcely anything has yet been done to stop the fearful ravages of the pre ventable diseases. The movement against tuberculosis has been under taken within the past few years in some of the cities and in a few of the States, and iu some communities pri vate effort has set itself against the appalling infant mortality due to ig norance and neglect, but taking the country as a whole the general pre servation of life and health has com manded comparatively little public in terest. A milliou and a half people die annually in the United States and more than four milliou are constantly sick. As one eminent economist has said, "over five million homes, con sisting of twenty-five million people, will be made more or less wretched during the next year by mortality and morbidity;" and this horrible night mare of death and disease and misery will increase as the population in creases. The same authority says that "for a nation to permit such great wastes togo unchecked is more than a suicidal policy, for an evil more destructive than race suicide is race homicide." When it is known that hundreds of deaths annually,and many more cases of illness are due to pre ventable causes, the absence of a thorough and systematic campaign be comes national disgrace. The idea is to induoe congress to establish a separate cabinet office or a bureau under one of the present cab inet offices, to deal with these sub jects. It is argued, and with very good reason, that the government should take at least as much interest in the preservation of life and health, as iu protecting farm animals from disease and plant life from insect rav ages. Every person stricken down with typhoid fever, or tuberculosis, or dip htheria, or who has contracted a chr onic disease by reason of ignorance or neglect, is a living argument in favor of au emphatic arousing of public in terest in favor of a thorough and sys tematic campaign. Not Hi* Complaint. A short while since a number of amateur musicians in a country town met for the purpose of organizing an orchestra. They were successful in procuring all the performers they de sired except an ophicleide player. One of the number finally volun teered to take up the instrument and try to learn to play it. He had no ophicleide; but, hearing that he could probably borrow one from a young man In the place who was thought to own one, he, happening to meet him in the street one day, accosted hid with: "How are you, Brown? X heard you had an ophicleide." Brown looked at him in utter amaze ment, having probably never heard of such an instrument before, and stam mered out: "Well, I—l was very ill about two weeks ago, but I don't think I had that, at any rate!"— London Graphic. JURY CHOSEN FOR JANUARY TERM Following iB the list of jurors sel ected for the next term of court, which will convene ou January 18th: GRAND JURORS. Danville, Ist ward George W. Roat, Alexander Grone, Irvin Van nan, James B. Watson, Joseph Y. Sechler. 2nd wartf:—Alexauder Hoffuer, Jauies Dailey, Thomas Swank. 3rd ward:—Thomas J. Rogers, G. F. Bondman, 4th ward John M. Moug, Alfred Yerrick, J. M. Kelso. Derry Township :—George W. Diehl. Liberty Township—William Rob bins, K F. Ware, Daniel Heim. Mahoning Township:— Woodward Moirison, Edward Rudy, Wendel By ers. Henry Weirman. James Morrison. West Hemlock Township Peter Sandel, Peter Shultz. TRAVERSE JURORS. Anthony Township Amos John son, Samuel lliluer, Joseph Holdren, Amos Albeck, David Oox. Cooper Township John Mauser, George Heimbach. Danville, Ist ward John H. Hunt, O. O. Moyer, Thomas S. Woods. 2ud ward :—John Herrick. 3rd ward :—Thomas Roney, Samuel McCoy, Jacob Herman, Samuel F. Ricketts. 4th ward:—Alexauder Mann, Paul Knoch, Hugh McCaffery. Derry Township—Charles E. Shires, Sr., Owen Reber. Limestone Township George Wal ter, George Vanordstrand, William Bogart, George F. Butterman. Liberty Township:—Urben Rhodes, C. H. Auten. Mahoning Township—George Heck endorn.W. T. Madden, Oonrad Rishel, William T. Dyer. Mayberry Township Clark Kase. Valley Township :—E. E. Reun. West Hemlock Township :—Thomas Bradley, John Hawkins, Joseph Win tersteeu. Washingtonville :—William Messer smith. Notice In Divorce. Auua 0. Williams vs John Monroe Williams. Iu the court of Common Pleas of Mon tour County. No. 28 May Term, 1907. Divorce a. v.m. To Johu Monroe Williams, Respondent above uamod : You are hereby duly notified and required to be and appear iu the Court of Common Pleas of Montour County ou the first day of the next term thereof (the Monday, January 13th, A. D.. 1908), then and there to answer the complaint of An na C. Williams the above-named Lib elant in the above-stated case, and to show cause, if any you have, why you should not be divorced from the bonds of matrimony entered into with the said Libellant according to the prayer of the petition or libel filed in the above-stated case D. C. WILLIAMS, Sheriff, Sheriff's Office, Danville, Pa., Nov. 25th, 1907. Women Who Wear Well it is astonishing how great a change t lew years of married life of ton make In the appearance and disposition of many i women. The freshness, the charm, tho brilliance vanish like tho bloom from u : peach which is rudely handled. The | matron is only a dim shadow, a faint echo ! of the charming maiden. There are two reasons for this change, ignorance ami neglect. Few young women appreciate the shock to the system through tho change which comes with marriage and motherhood. Many neglect to deal with tho unpleasant pelvic drains and weak nesses which too often come with mar riage and motherhood, r.ot understanding that this secret drain is robbing the cheek of its freshness and the form of its fairness. As surely as the general health suffers when there is de>»4mcmcnt of tho health of the delicate \voma"Mj£organs, so surely whorfrttujse organs in heal\h therqee witness tot he Tact ini>i»J\tT-d Nearly B million women have found he:ilih amjJ h;i;i|>in. y; in the n-e of Dr. . vorite I'reseriinion. It makes weak wom en strong and sick women well. Ingredi ents on label—contains no alcohol or harmful habit - forming drugs. Made wholly of those native, American, medic inal roots most hlchly recommended by leading medical authorities of all the sev eral schools of practice for the cure of woman's peculiar ailments. Por nursing mothers,or for those broken down in health by too frequent hearing of children, also for the expectant mothers, i to prepare the system for the coming of ! baby and making its advent easy and almost painless, there is no medicine quite »o good as "Favorite Prescription." It : can do no harm in any condition of the ; lystem. It is a most potent Invigorating I tonic and strengthening nervine nicely I adapted to woman's delicate system by a pbysician of ln«ge experience in the treat ment of woman s peculiar ailments. Dr. Fierce may bo consulted by lettei free of charge. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Invalids' lintel and iiurgic»l Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. rriimnm. "I believe In being absolutely frank with everybody," Bald the aggressive man. "Well," answered the peaceable citi zen, "I suppose that sort of thing Is largely a matter or temperament If I were as good n hand In a fight as you are, maybe I'd be that way too."— Washington Star. Pretty Stingy. "About the stingiest man I have ever seen," said a local oculist the other day,"was an old fellow who came In here not long ago to be fitted with glasses, in examining his eyes I found that he could scarcely see with one ot them, and yet the trouble was one that could be remedied by a slight* opera tion. I asked him about having the eye attended to, but he said: 'No, I guess I'll just let it go, and then I'll only have one of *ern to fool with when I get glasses. I can just save the cost of that extra lens each time.' "—ln dianapolis News. j" PERSONALS. 1 | Mrs Margaret Stuck returned to , Fisher's Ferry yesterday after a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Noah Raker, | Mowrey street. ! Clarence Erick is giviug with relatives in Philadelphia. Miss Emma Asking, Ferry street, | left yesterday for an extended visit with friends iu Cinoinuati. Misses Bessie and Maud Seidel, Honevmoou street, left yesterday for a visit of several weeks with friends in Harrisburg and Philadelphia. Dr. Robert Jacobs, of Wilkes-Barre, is spending today with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fied Jacobs, Mill street. Mrs. William Leidy, Oak Grove, is : visiting her son, Charles Leidy,Bloom street. J. Hudson Kase,South Danville, was in Sunbury yesterday. J. W. Henry, who for several days has been filling the position of clerk at the Pennsylvania station, South ; Danville,returned to Creasy yesterday. ; Mrs. Alby Snyder, East Market street, entertained Mrs. Halie Wolfe, ' of Lewisburg, on Tuesday. Henrietta Angle left yesterday for Jersey Shore to spend Thanksgiv -1 ing with her son, Dr. W. P. Angle. Rev. C. D. Lerch will spend Thanks ! giving Day, attending the 40th wed i ding anniversary of his parents, Mr. aud Mrs. S. P. Lerch,at Spring Brook Farm, near Trnbotville. Mrs. J. W. S. Robison, of Milton, returned home yesterday after a visit with relatives in this city. ! Miss Clara A. Reiner of Perkiomen j Seminary, arrived in this city last evening for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Gotwalds, West Mahoning street. Mrs. Margaret Mowrer of Reading arrived in town last evening to spend Thanksgiving with relatives. Miss Mary 'Jameson, a student at arrived yesterday to spend Thanksgiving with her parents, Mr. j aud Mrs. Frank Jameson, West Mahon | ing street. Miles Barber returned to Wilkes- Barre yesterday, after a visit with liis parents Dr. and Mrs. I. G. Barber, East Mahoning street. Leonard F. Mayr.of New York City is visiting friends in this city. Miss Florence Tallmau, of Munoy, is the guest of Miss Maud McKiuney, Church street. The last of the'preliminary crop re- I ports for the year having just been is sued by the Department of Agricult ure at Washington, the country is equipped to make a close guess at the volume of its leading farm products | for this season. We will have 2,554,- 000,000 bushels of com, 623,567,000 i bushels of wheat, 741,521,000 bushels of oats, 147,192,000 bushels of barley. 292,427,000 bushels of potatoes, aud 13,911,000 bushels of buckwheat. The ; leading states rank in corn produc- I tiou in this order, beginning with the head of the list: Illinois, lowa, Mis souri, Nebraska, Indiana, Texas, Ka nsas, Ohio. These states produced more than two-thirds of the country's corn crop for 1907 and more than double the amount of the corn which was grown iu all the world outside of the United States. Usually when the farmers have i good times the country is prosperous. : The farmers are assured of good times until the next harvest at least, and the chances are that 1908 will be more favorable for them than 1907 has been, for in backwardness of the planting time 1907 broke all the recent records. Prices of farm crops, like prices of commodities of nearly every sort,will come down, to some degree, as a con sequence of the money scare and the 1 temporary shrinkage in the country's volume of activities, but the farmer, like every other wage earner, will be in good shape to meet this brief set back. The agriculturist is in a posi tion to look the future in the face with confidence. Science is equip j ping him to overcome such drawbacks ias lateness of planting season and j droughts, and he can count on coin i mauding henceforth a good many of ! the prizes of fortune. Sour Stomach Na appetite. !•■> •( airtnfth. a»rm? • aaaa. haadaaha. oanatlpattaa. bad b*a*«£ ganaral dablllly, aaur rlalnfa. afd aatt-' ■- af lha •lamaah ara all 4ua M Indljaa*"- K»del rallav«alndl(aatlao. Tkla naw «u«. nry raprasanta lha natural julaaa a( •ion ax (hay axial la a baallhy a«»WM»r •amblnad with lha fraataal ktava tw» in i reconalruallva araparllaa. Kadal J iyapapala daaa oat aniy fatlava iadlfw*—: «ad dyipapila, but iMa faaaaaa rem*. , halpa all alamaeh Irtublaa by a4aaa*tf - purifying, awaatacla( u4 MraactiMu. ,< lha inucaua mambraaaa kaiag fta I'tmi Hr. S. S. Ball 1 Hanimii W. Va., aww • I traublad wIU mvt Haiaaf fn >■■■ HI _ Kadal nrad M UIM an aa« aataa ■ • au <»r bak»." K*M M«aa«a WbM YAM fctt. a anv kalablai %t taa. alt » ■ >»arad kf «. O. O.WITT * M., dHw *** For Sale by Panlet & Co. ARTESIAN WELL IUGGGESTED Several of our pnMio spirited citi zens of a scientific turn of mind, who fully appreciate the 5, after securing a furlough from Pennsylvania aud serv ed with distinction until the eud of the war. He was in the posse whicl pursued John Wilkes Booth, the as sassin of President Lincoln, and was close upon him when ho was found and killed. In November 1865, Mr. Stahl return ed to the railroad company. Iu 1872 he had charge of laving a third track at Thompsontown. Ou April Ist of that year he was promoted to be sup ervisor of the Sunbury, Ilazleton and Wilkes-Barre, with headquarters at Sunbury. This position he has held ever since. He has had many strange experiences in the performance of his duties there. On one occasion while he was build ing a temporary track around a wreck at Catawisea, an axe, slipping fron the hands of a workman who was chopping down a stump, cut deep in his leg and resulted in the loss of his shin bone. On another occasion, while board | ing a work train at South Danville,on a snowy day his foot slipped and both legs went under the wheels. A track man seeing the accident threw on the brake and the wheels.slippiug as they moved forward, shoved trie prostrate man's limbs clear of the track. The large toe of his left foot alone was crushed. Iu August 1879, Mr. Stahl was en gaged in clearing away the I debris of i twenty-five coal oil cars which were ; smashed in a wreck below Kipp's Run I The oil from several broken tanks run down into the brush and the ground and shrubbery were thoroughly satur ated. He saw fire burning on a truck , and told one of the men to get a buck |et of water to put it out with. He pried away a sheet of iron to make the • blaze easy to get at, and stood leaning lon his crowbar on the edge of the em bankment, when the oil near tiie fire suddenly exploded. He was blown back wards over the embankment into the brush below. The oil which covered the grouud for yards iu every direc tion burst into flames like a volcano. Stahl thought that the end of his life was at hand aud he breathed a prayer for his family. He escaped but boars marks that he will carry to his grave, which tell how badly he was injured. In August of the next year he was working on an abutment of the Main ville bridge, which was washed out by a flood.when a derrick broke,struck him ou the back and hurled him bruis ed and bleeding to the rocks twenty feet below. The foreman of the ma sous, who was putting iu the stone was struck at the same time and kill : ed, but, though shocked and terribly injured Stahl clung to the slender thread of life and after a time recov ered his health. Only one marriage out of every K is a failure, and yet they say that- 90 per cent, of the business ventures are failures. A Remedy' e CATARRH Ely's Cream Balm i 9 quickly absorbed. ffljjCOtO« Gives Relief at Once. heals and protects jfe* the diseased in tin brane resulting fri>m •»* Catarrh and drives away a Cold iu tlio By *- ft" Head quickly. lie- II A V tTCKtCO stores tha Senses of UHI I Lf Lit Taste and Smell. Full size 50 cts., at Drug gists or by mail. In liquid form, 75 rents. Ely Brothers, 5(5 Warren Street, New York. R-I-P-A-N-S Tabule Doctors find A good prescription For Mankind. The 5-cent packet is enough for usua oceassions. The family bottle (60 cents oontains a supply for a year. All dmp: gists. Windsor Hotel 1217 122!» Filbert Street. "A Square From Everywhere." Special automobile service fot oar guests. Sight-seeing and touring oars. Rooms SI.OO j>er day and up. The only moderate priced hotel of repntation and consequence in Philadelphia, Pa. W. T. Bkl BAKE R, A'tnag-