Montour Amorioan. V ANtll li. ••mrrtrlur, i»ium nip. l*a , live* lu. I of * «tol«a ki«« flint l« m q»i««»ton thlih yariottn i n, fi»>i««iiitf>f"il « ill «int mm In# any autminliliil iimtrlbn t«i iiii l w'' « m<»il l« that wileli kit* Jn«t l> ii inn ulntf the attention of * • nrl of Ju«ii-i» at Hnwheriih. N Y 11 >r ■ tl.i' ili'foiiilant wa« Mr John J iufll. n< on# tttn<* fire Minimi* aton. rof New Vnrk Oity. Mr H. nn ■nil wi* charged by * Mm l e»uie tip behind her, jmt hl« attn around her w »l*i and kiwi f.l her ou the Hp* before she lot I h change to prevent him. Tim ex|ieti etme *»euis to lnTf been *ati«fao»ory. for, *r 'onl intf to the plnintlfT'* state m#nt. tin su'd Hcanuell "of niallcp aforethought anil Imiiiu homln instlg at.• I by the devil," Immediately re pi>»ti the kIMPp wai not hy thistimesufflcl put iv upon her gn»rd to reppl thin en core is not ooiivineiiißly e*plaln*d. ; Presumably she hail been to much tak en ahvk by the man's audacity as temporarily to liavo lost the power of i ■elf-proteotion. For this duplicated assault Mr? White, reoiting the injury which her feelings had sustained, invited a sym pathetic jury to award her #15,000 damages Well, It dhin tdo it. The j judge in his charge treated the action 1 as involving no more than a question of assault Ho did not invite or em power the jury to take any account of the pleasure which the defendant may have derived from the irregular osoul ation attributed to him. He told it that the only issue was whether the defendant had placed his hand upon the plaintiff as alleged. If he had, no matter how lightly, then an assault had been committed for which dam ages might be assessed. Thus illumin ated, it did not take the jury long to reach a decision,and after having been O Jt an hour it brought in a verdict for the defendant ou the ground that the evidence had failed to disclose any cause of action. This was a lame aud impotent con clusion. One would have liked to know what consideration determined the jury's judgment. Did it think that the assault alleged had not been proved, or was it of opinion that a stolen kiss is wrothless unless the theft is condoned and approved by the party of the second part? Other juries have been contrary minded. A case is on record in Wisconsin where five kisses were appraised at s'sooo each, which is certainly a pretty stiff tariff. At the other end of the scale a Miss Theresa Harvey, of Newark, who wanted |3OO for six more or less chaste salutes — surely a modest appreciation—receiv ed from an unfeeling tribunal no more than six cents. In yet another case tried at Ballston Spa, a suit to recov er damages for breach of premise, in the conrse of which it was shown that 1330 kisses had been given and receiv ed, resulted in a verdict for S3OOO, which was at the rate of $2.42 per kiss. This case, hiwever. is not on all fours with the rest, as the dam ages awarded were based, not on as sault, but ou a breach of contract. It is evident that no guiding prin ciple can be deduced from the recorded precedents, but the view of sensible men will be that a kiss which is not reciprocated is not worth a continent al cent. SpeaK Well of Your Town, Speak well of the town in which you reside or do business. If in all respects it is not up to your high ideals, pass over its defects aud emph asize its good points, doing, at the same time, all that you can to improve its unattractive features. Nothing so" unfavorably impresses a stranger in his r estimate of a town as the croaking of its citizens about its unfavorable conditions. If you cau't find some favorable feature to discuss don't say anything about the unfavor able ones. Remember that there is only.one perfect place audit is nt ces sary to die before von are eligible for admission there. If yon intend to keep alive you must stay on earth and abide in some place that has only earthlv characteristics. If you don't like the place in which your lot is cast, move out or stop croaking about it. There is no law which oorapals you to remain. It differs from the penitentiary in that respect. But while you stay boom the town. Insist that it is a good place to live;that its business men are alive and up to the present minute; that it is a Rood place to trade; that its peo ple are courteous and oordial to strangers; that the town is improving in many respeots and that in our town in particular life is well worth the living. If you can see only the bad j features of our town: are sure that al! | of its officials are grafters; that its I merchants are not so enterprising as ' those of some other city; in fact if 1 everything about the place has an on- j favorable appearance to you, the ! chances aro that your liver needs at tention aud the sooner it receives it the sooner life will take on a brighter look. The pessimist believes that every- j thing is rotten ; tlia optimist thinks that conditions are simply ripe. Put j up your hammer. Try to whistle. If you can't whistle, sing, ylf ou can't j sing, just smile. Anybody can do that j and if everybody smiles the town will j look better to you. JiIHY GHOBBN FOR JANUARY TERM Kulli.« |i u I* the Imt nt Jamr* *el ». i i| fur the H"*f lerttt of cotirl. which will convene on .lanitnry I Nth: (IHANt) JCHoH* Ptnville, l*t ward (teorge W. Hut, Alexander «lr«,ne, Ittin V»n ll* 11. ,I nun* H Wntmitt, Jimeph H "Ciller 9ml ward : Ale*alidrr llnfTiiPt, .lame* Mailpy, 'i'howia* Swank. Hr I ward:- Thotiia* J. linger*, tl. F lliitidinaii. 4th w»rd John M. Mong, Mficit Y-trick, .1 M Ke!*o. Derry Township :-- Charley H"\et'* valauble noon *kln r 'bp, dangling from the surface nf whli-1i were pome fifteen health*-look■ lug coon tall*, each representing a m parate pp|t. which some time or otb er had fallpn a« a trophy before the titiPirltig aim of Mr H"iir'» gun In a group around the stolen article* sat half a down well-known men from HIP country, who had been called in as witne«e*. The information, lodged hy Char lei Beyer, of West Hemlock township, set forth that "on the night of December 18th, at the bam of William Fensfi r maelier in Valley township. Kobrrt McOormick did steal, tnke and carry away, a coon skin rube aud a blanket at the value of flO and upward, prop erty of Charles Beyer; also a halter aud whip of the value of #1.2-i, prop erty of Daniel Hillmever; also a blank pt and pair of arctics valued at *<> 50 property of Howard Vognetz. Ii the office of Justice Oglesby, while waiting for the arrival of the defendant,who had been placed in jail when arrested, the witnesses assembl ed good-naturedly discussed the stirr ing incidents of the night before, in volving the discovery of the theft and the capture and detention of McOorm ick. Briefly told, the facts are as fol lows: Ou Friday afternoon there was a puhlic sale at the farm ot William Feusterniacher in Valley township Following custom in the eveniug a party was held. Among those attend ing were a number of young men, who had driven to the place with their buegies. Among the latter was Charles Beyer, who during the eveniug walk | ed over to the oak tree hotel, leaviug i his horse aud carriage at Fenstermach ers. Some time later William Brittain jot Derry township, came along. Rob | ert McOormick, who attended the sale i and had tarried at the party, was just : ready to leave. Mr. Brittain asked to ride along aud McOormick assented. The night being cold and Mr. Brit j taiu being without gloves he wrapped ! Ins hands in the lap cover. He found I this to consist of several thicknesses I In order to find the beßt protection for his hands he placed them between the two blankets and to his surprise came in contact with one of the coon tails on Mr. Beyer's robe, which was snug ly sandwiched between the blankets. This robe, with its dozen or so of dangling coon tails, is famous over a wide section. Mr. Brittain at once • became suspicious that something was wrong. Stopping at the oak tree ho tel aud ruuuiug across Mr. Beyer he communicated his suspicions to him. The latter slippedjout TtoVthe bupiy and rnado a quiet investigation. He felt convinced that the coon ekin robe was no other thau his own. j Charles Beyer is a man of powerful j physique and is jußt as brave as he is i strong and good natured \Mien he suggested, therefore, that to clear up the mystery they would go back to William Fenstermacher's and see whether his robe was where he left it, opposition was unavailing and there ; suit was that in a few minutes Robert , McOormick accompanied by Charles Beyer and William Brittain was o his way back to the Fenstermaeher ! farm. Arriving at the premises Mr. Beyer fonndfhis worst suspicious ei i - firmed. His valuable was miss ! ing. This set others investigating sujd they found that divers articles®! above enumerated in the information i had been transferred from their own vehicles into that driven by the de fendant. , Mr. Beyer took McOormick into cus tody and held him while Howard Vognetz, one of the victims of the rob bery, drove down to Mausdale aud ! called Chief-of-Police Mincemoyer up by telephone. At the chief's sugges tion Mr. Vognetz drove into Danville and took the otlicer out to Fenster macher's farm,where Me' oimick was delivered over into his custody. By this time it was near the hour of midnight. Arriving at Danville Mc- Oormick was placed in jail and the loot was unloaded to be used as evid ence. At the hearing McOormick pleaded "not guilty." Charles Beyer, William Brittain, Daniel Billmeyer and How ard Vognetz, all testified in accord ance witli the facts as set forth above, each in turn selecting from the pile on the floor and ideutifiying the goods stolen from him. At the hearing it developed that William Beyer had missed a blanket, which waß later found on McCormick's wagon and identified. McOormick'made no attempt to dis puto the evidence that the stolen art icles were found iu his wagon but he said he had no idea of how they got there. The justice considered the evidence adduced sufficient to hold the defend ant and lie fixed bail at three hundred dollars. McOormick failing to secure a bondsman be was committed to jail to await court. Cases have been known of men who have permitted business to interfere ■with golf, but tliey are rare, and cer tainly It would be extremely difficult to find an Individual bold enough to in cur the odlnm of his fellow golfers by admitting the impeachment—Golf 11- lustrated. GEO. SNYDER ARRRSTRI) Bllfttllr aftet III* •tltrtllK xpUnrle (tl tn*n*Mp an it I *M*f Mtticfri"* j*r hart landed hi* man In Jail Ofl|c»t William K Vnnna mad* a mml a*n*a Mount arr»«t on I'ln* afreet The officer *a» on lila beat wli*tt In p*rr*ir*rt a man waking Ma war nlnng tli* *tr**t carrying **r*ral article* It wa« w*ll nn tnwarrt muni 111; an nti heard of Innr for a nun to be taking Imme pnreliaw* mart* at ant rif tin •tore* Tli* 1 ffi -er lmlbrt th* man. "What hav* yon not tl.ir*?" li* a*l ert " Noun of jrnnr huaiticsa. " wa* tie roplv, or ratinr It wa* substantially tli* reply, a* thorn wore peroral art jectlren employed more profane than elegant, which are omitted. "We'll make it onr basineta,'' *aid th" officer a* lie laid hold of the niau. Alone in I In- night a desperate *tru • gle then took plane between O '<> > r Young and the belated man. The fel low wa* unable to giro any t-atfafact ory account of how lie obtained the good* and wa* bent upon getting away. The officer came not victorlons.lioM - ever.and landed the fellow In jail The man arrested proved to lie (Jeo alias "Snorgo" Snyder. Poring tlie day .Teaae li Wyant lodged iufotuia tlou before Ju«tice Ogle*by charging Snyder with the larceny of about h gallon of oysters, about twenty-five clauis anil a stew pun,the \alue of the whole being estimated at five dollars. Mr. Wyant Htated that the oyster* were stolen from the rear porch anil were obtained by breaking open a tub that had jnst been received. The oth er articles stolen were also obtained from the rear porch. The defendant pleaded "not guilty." | He said the oysters aud the other art icles bad been given him by a "hobo." 1 In default of S3(H) bail he wascoroniit trd to jail to uvait court. What Do They Cure? The above question Is often asked cou ecrnm-' Dr. I'icnc'- two leading modi | cines, "Gulden Medical Discovery" and | "Favorite Prescription." The answer is that "Golden Medical Discovery " is a most potent alterative or j blixid-purltier, and touic or invigorator and acts especially favorably in a cura tive way upon all the mucous lining sur faces, as of the nasal passages, throat, bronchial tubes, stomach, bowels and blaidefc cnrlnj a large per cent, of catar rhal caVea whether f u| In affect- Is'1 s ' u n is u powerful yet gently acting invigorat ing toni- a:i.l nervine. For weak worn out, over-worked women—no matter wlctt nap caused the break-down, "Favi '• [ i'le-ci iptioii" will be found most eilec.i\ in building up the strength, regulating 1 the womanly functions, subduing pa. 11 , : and bringing about a healthy, vigorous condition of the whole system. * A book of particulars wraps each bottle giving the formulae of both medicines and ; quoting what scores of eminent med- i ' leal authors, whom works ara consulted by physicians of all the schools of practice as guides in prescribing, say of each In gredient ontorlng into theae medielnea. > The words of praise bestowed # on the j several ingrodlouw enturlng Into Doctor . ' 1 I'lerco's ineillclriei by stieh writers should 1 have more weight than any amount of < , non - professional testimonials, bewauae ; such men are writing for the guidance of 1 . their medioal brethren and know whereof they speak. | Both medicines are non-alcoholic, non ) | secret and contain no harmful habit- | , forming drugs, being composed of glyceric j extracts of the roots of native, American 1 ' medicinal fore«t plants They are both 1 | sold by dealers in medicine. Yon can't , ' afford to accept as a substitute for one of - these medicines of known composition, t j any secret nostrum. lJr. I'ierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated, 5 easy to take as candy, regulate nnd I& vigoraU) stomach, liver and bowels. r ; An Invincible. When Alcibiades was told that his countrymen had pushed sentence of I death upon him for being at the head . of a conspiracy to overthrow there | UplouK and political constitution of Athens he aald, "1 will show them I ' still live." He obtained from Sparta assurance of personal safety and went hither. He delighted and charmed the Spartans, as he had the Athenians in I ; his earlier years. He adopted their customs and dress and was the strlct- I est Spartan of them all. He wore his ( hair short bathed In the Icy waters of the Eurotes and ate their black broth and barley bread. They believed j that he had been misrepresented. In ■ truth, as Plutarch said, "he changed i color more quickly than a chameleon." In Sparta he was grave, temperate 1 and fond of physical exercir.e; in lonia he was easy going, luxurious and mer ry; In Thrace he was drunken, in j Thessaly he was devoted to horsernan i ship, and in the court of the l'ersian satraps he surpassed Tissapheraes I j himself In magnificence. As Sparta : 1 ! was to be the prize of the Athenian | victory, he showed the people their . i danger, advising them to begin active I operations against that city. No bet ter advice could have been given them, : and they profited by It 1 ; Moths do not cat furs or cloths. I I | Thoy lay their eggs In these rich I . s uffs, and It is the worms from the i i that do the eating. The Indians who live by the Amazon | river use a lonfe blowpipe "to shoot j J birds. The pipe is a piece of palm j | cane with the pith pushed out of Its ' center. The blowers develop extrnor '! dinary lung power and are able to | bring down their victims from great ! heights. Frozen Frogs. I have seen frogs frozen into the j middle of solid lumps of ice in the ' j laboratory. Drop the lump on the j floor, and the frog would break out j 1 like a fragment of the ice itself. And ! I this has happened more than once to 1 j the same frog without causing him the : j least apparent suffering or inconven -1 leuce. lie would come to aud croak ' | and look as wise as ever. Dallas i Sharp in Atlantic. home Love la Beet. Rr lANfi LUDLUM I F.fi. < 'nt« rlttii»«l l*»T. tit I", r Kanlment ( y O "Mlm Khnrt, I want ymi to lw tny wlf* 112 want lo take yroi t<» my hum# In (lennmiy anil trarh fnn to lore my ppnpl* a* they will love you Will you ha vp m»f' The** word* fell from the llpa of a hnnrtanm* rjt-rmnn who staying «t the Kllwood Inn for the summer and who for week* had been devoted to the !••••• ntlful Kloaimr Hlmrt. helrosa to a cool million "Oh, fount Andrea, tluitik you *n much. liut I am nut for other land* I'm a home girl pure nnd simple. Yoor people would not love tne I had hoped you would go without iiiuklug me any thla." "You knew, then, that I would ask you ?" The girl drew herself up with a atately manner and replied: "Since you do not spare me why ahould I save you? Yea. I knew that you would." "Americana do not know the mean ing of home." sneered the count. "I "DEAR HEART!" UK MURMURED. could not have gone without asking you. Miss Short, because —well, it does uot matter now. I am sorry 1 asked you, and 1 trust you will never regret your answer. You will hear of me again." And with a stiff bow he left her. Eleanor, once more on the piazza, dropped iuto an armchair and rocked slowly back and forth. It was a beau tiful night, a night for happiness, uot for tears, and why should she cry? Yet tears would come to her eyes. She did not love the man who had just left her, and she did love some ono else. She did not want a German home nor a German husband, and she resented his attack on the American home. She leaned forward on the rail and sighed. A shot rung through the stillness of the night air, followed by a piercing scream. In an instant the conservative pa trons of Elwood inn became a clamor ous crowd, surging 011 the piazza from every direction. The men rushed thla way and that, and In a few momenta the lifeless form of a woman was car ried into the hotel lobby Miss Short had been shot in the back, perhaps fa tally, and her slayer was still at large. While the doctors worked over the Injured girl searching parties were or ganized to find the assassin. The grounds were carefully guarded, detec tives were called in and went through their usual methods of cross question ing the employees of the hotel, and hours dragged by with no trace of the man who had fired the shot. Bulletins were issued from time to time regard ing the condition of the patient, and by morning symptoms showed that there was a chance for her recovery. With the recovery of consciousness came speech, and her first rambling words were. "Oh, how could he!" An anxious mother leaned over her and gently said: "Who, Eleanor, dear?" The injured girl gasped, "The count!" and again lapsed into unconsciousness. Hut one count had been at the hotel, and It aid uot taKe long 10 una uuu m his room and place him under arrest He was placed under heavy bail until Miss Short either recovered to face him at the trial or died. Days intervened while the patient huug between life and death, but final ly she began to pick up the broken threads and was well on the road to recovery. Her mother, sitting by the bedside of the girl, fondly caressing her, said: "Jack has been here every day, dear, asking and pleading to see you, and we have promised that he shall be the first Can you see him today? The poor boy is almost frantic." "Yes, mother; I want to see him whenever you say I may." "He has been waiting in the other room for two hours, so 1 will call him." A well built, brown faced man ap peared at the door in answer to the mother's call and knelt down by the side of the girl, slipping one strong arm about ber shoulders and nestling his bronzed face close to hers. "Dear heart!" he murmured. "Why, Jack, mother is here looking at us!" said Eleanor as the color came to her pale cheeks. "Your mother knows all about it, dear. Haven't I been telling her every day for the past two weeks? If she don't know It It's not my fault. You see, I couldn't tell you, so I bad to tell some one and thought your mother a safe repository for confidences. But you mustn't talk, dear. You are Just to get well, and then I'm going to take you away for months and months just you and I, dear." Eleanor proved a good patient and each day found her stronger than the one gone by. Jack was in attendance M oae*fcc=.:-7 aa tuj 1.... Mr* Khnti «n(i many f»*ft»y nmm M Ml her, tlth Iwt IIMII nfi hi* •hmiMi'f * Hit#" he f»«r1 *lmM OB# •In♦ a* the tallltht appmaehed ah* Irnne.l Mfef *11(1 . In*rd the tmnk that he « a* rending dear yon ImK not tnld «!<• that ynti Ininl fti#'' Why, Kleannr. how ran yea ant thai II *a* the la-l thin* I aald laal r\enlrig « ben fntir mother turned m* Ml," "I remember no* but that wa* ye* terday," ahe aald a* aha ne*tl««d rlnaet to him "That *a« a whole twenty four hour* ago" "Dear h<-art," he ■•aid. with a auille "aa Mrh twenty 112. nf Itotira elapae I Inve vn(t that tntich more Vott know that dear. and I itna't *ee why «• have to wiill untll yon get entirely well Why not IN> married tly, right Iter* In lhla Utile mom, where wr have been ao happy with Mrh other, and let lite mine voti liai'k In health?" "Why, Jack, yoti selfish man! Not have a wedding, no bridesmaid* and no lon*, white aatin dreaa with a train! oh. how could yon even aug Rent It? But If you want me to I will, dear, for when you go far itway from me the whole Itght aeema togo out of my life, and It'a been dark aueh a loiik time." Jack'a answer wan to take her In hla atrong aritta and hold her close to hla heart for n moment as lie whispered "Darling!" ".lack," Eleanor murmured. "I want to ask you a question that haa been on my mind ever aluce 1 regained con •ciouaneaa I wanted to ask mother, but feared to worry her. But if you will hold me tight I will ask you." "What is it, dear?" answered Jack. "Who shot me?" And her eyea closed •s she asked the dreaded question. "The poor count did not do it 1 happened to be coming up the grounds that night as he left you, aud 1 stop ped to watch him. lie walked down the front steps aud sauntered over to the big elm tree at the south end of the grounds, when from the buahes the form of a woman appeared, and in an instant she leveled a pistol and shot at him. She missed him and the bullet struck you. It all came out in a few days. It has since come to light that the woman was bis wife, whom he de serted in Germany." "Oh, Jack! What suffering that wicked man has caused?" "Yes. But be opened my eyes to how precious you were to me. I had taken you for granted, dear, not as a special blessing. We men aro so selfish." "Not you. Jack," she murmured as his arms closed around her. American Names. If we have some growing sense of a desire to touch with poetry the termi nology of our American towns, we have succeeded so far only in securing a slightly picnic grove atmosphere such as is given off by Lakewood or River side. The rich sentimentallsm of the real estate dealer has done what It could, considering the hurry he is In. If we have a new manufacturing sub urb, the chances are we shall bo too lazily anil flatly patriotic, call it Lin coln aud be done with it, or too crude ly romantic. In which case the secre tary of the company will report to the directors that he lias had the place Incorporated as Ivanhoe. With the slightest dash of poetry In his soul he might keep true to the strenuous char acter of the place, with all its prospec tive labor agitations, and at the same time give a tinge of beauty to the sit uation forever by calling It Fretley, or If It is a place where hammers are to ring t* ; morning to night why not call Stroke instead of naming it Smithvllle after the present chief stockholder in the concern?— Atlantic. Taking No Chances. "It is a rule to which good lawyer* usually adhere," says a Philadelphia attorney, "never to tell more than one knows. There was an instance ID England not many years ago wherein a lawyer carried the rule to the ex treme. "One of the agents in a Midland re vision court objected to a person whose name was on the register on the ground that he was dead. The revi sion attorney declined to accept the assurance, however, and demanded conclusive testimony on the point "The agent on the other side arose and gave corroborative evidence as tc the decease of the man in question. " 'But, sir, how do you know the man's dead?' demanded the barrister. " 'Well,' was the reply, 'I don't know. It's very difficult to prove.' " 'As I suspected,' returned the bar rister. 'You don't kuow whether he's dead or not.' "Whereupon the witness coolly con tinued: "I was saying, sir, that I don'l know whether he Is dead or not but 1 do know this: They buried him aboul a month ago on suspicion.' Ilarper's Weekly. Pretty Pert. A baldhea'led man writes: "The most impertinent child I ever tnet was a boy of ten years of age. On leaving his widowed mother's house I at tempted to pat liini on the head in a fatherly manner. At this he pushed my hand away and said. 'Grow some hair of your own, old man. If you want to pat It!'" JUTW, nunc,- sum tne o-onaay school teacher, "read the next verse." The little girl read, "Cast thy bread upon the waters." "Why should we cast our bread upon the waters?" asked the teacher. " 'Cause the fishes have to be fed," was the reply. Degrees of Pity. The Bachelor—Don't you pity us old bachelors? Young Widow—Yes, but I don't sup pose I pity you as much as the old maids do.—Chicago News. A Reliahls Rsmady CATASiiiI Ely's Cream Balm is quickly absorbed. M Gives Relief at Once. M It cleans, ■», soothes, M : , c\S heals aud protects the diseased mem brane resulting from Catarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. Restores the Reuses of Taste aud Smell. Full size 50 cts. at Druggists or by mail. Liquid Oreum Balm for use in atomizers 75 cts. Ely Brothers, S(J Warren Street, New York. SOME coon REASONS WHY «• n and •*< nr». tour trade b* keeping a« tin# a stn< fa of gmwl* a* t,e ran pro '■re, anil In- Is n a>lt In aell his gorel* at | rlees which i ompare fatorald* with those of nnl .if town merchant* Yonr hnßn merchant pai* h « shara I 'ward tha > i|ieuee of maintaining tha tn niolpal government, thus prosing that he iaaclliren interacted in the growth aud pri-perltt of Danville Ynttr homi merchant i* a nitlßen, a hetiever in and worker for a greatai Danville, and as soch he i« entitled to the support 'and encouragement of those who buy household goods and article* of wearing apparel Yonr home merchant should unt he coni|ielli'd to enter into comjietitiou with the mail order linns*, which pas not one cent of tax iu the city nor do they pay a license for the privilege of dealing with the citizen*. Yonr home merchant is a ri-preaeiiU live of the commercial interest* of Danville, and a* sncli gives his time and attention to the upbuilding of the city. Your home merchant sell* you goods at a reasonable profit to himself and stands ready to make good any defect* or exchange an article which does not give entire satisfaction, while the mail order houso asks yon to take it* goods on trust, declining to correct errors and frequently sending you inferior goods, which you'must keep. Your home merchant is one of you a man with whom you are acquainted and to whom you can go with the as surance that if you deserve it you wili j receive credit, while you must pay ; cash to the mail order house for an article you do not see until you liaai | it from the railroad station. Your home merchant spends a great deal of his money in your town, help ing to increase its advantages and ad vance its interests, while the mail i order house takes the money from the town and makes no return whatever, except to give you goods which are ! seldom dependable. Yonr home merchant deserves your support because yon know that by pa tronizing him you are aiding to build up the town in which you make your living, and because you know that ev ory dollar you send to mail order houses is a dollar taken from circula tion in the city, thus working an in jury to the community in which you live. Don't he misled by the false state ments of the mail order houses, hot buy of your honie r merchant and show your loyalty to tne community in which you live and in which you de rive your income. Some people think you mean the snow when you the "great white plague. " A New York woman has been order ed by the courts to pay an expert in I heraldry SSOO for tracing her lineage to Alfred the Great. Notice In Divorce. Anna C. Williams Mcnroe | Williams. In the court of Common Pleas of Mon tour County. No. 2!i May Term, 1907 Divorce'a. v.m. To. John Monroe' Williams, Respondent above named : You are hereby duly notified and required to be and appear in the Court of Common Pleas of Montour County on the first day of the next term thereof (the same beins.' 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, aud to ; show cause, if any you have,why you should not be divorced from the bonds of matrimony entered into with the s"nTd Libellant according to the prayer lit tfie petition or libel filed in the above-stated case. fD. C. WILLIAMS, Sheriff, Sheriff's' Office, 'Danville/Pa., Nov. j 25til, 1907." R-I-P-A-N-S Tabule Doctors find A good prescription For Mankind. ! The 5-cent packet is enough for nana ' occassions. The family bottle (60 cents : oontains a supply for a year. All drug j gists Windsor Hotel 1217-1829 Filbert Street. ••A Square From Everywhere." Special automobile service for onr guests Sight-seeing and touring cars. Koonis SI.OO per day and up. The only moderate priced hotel of reputation and consequence 1U r „ Philadelphia, Pa. W. T. BRUBAKER, Manag