Montour American FRANK C. ANGLE, Proprietor. Danville, Pa., June 10, I<XI9. . ..-at Stevenson and Dreams. I Robert Louis Stevenson owed much of his inspiration to dreams. In one (passage he attributed some of his fin est work to the "brownies" who ten anted his brain during moments of unconsciousness. "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" owes its origin to a dream. "I had long been trying to write a story on this sub ject," writes Stevenson, "to find a body, a vehicle, for that strong sense of man's double being which must at times come in upon and overwhelm the mind of every thinking creature. For two days 1 went about racking my brains for a plot of any sort, and on the second night I dreamed the scene at the window and a scene afterward split in two, in which Hyde, pursued for some crime, took the pow der and underwent the change in the presence of his pursuers. All the rest was made awake and consciously, al though I think I can trace in much of it the manner of my brownies." Oouble Quick Composing. Sir Arthur Sullivan wrote the over ture tu "The Yeomen of the Guard" in twelve hours and that to "lolantlie" in less space of time—from 0 p. m.to 7 a. m. Hut -even this capacity for speed In composition is eclipsed by M. liom pard. who for a wager composed the music to a song in ten minutes. Mr. N. Trotere, however, is the composer of whom most quick time anecdotes are told. His beautiful song "Asthore" was both written and composed in forty minutes in Blancbard's restau rant. The melody of"In Old Madrid" was the result of a sudden inspiration. It came to the composer while on his way home from the aquarium. Lest it should escape him he rushed into a small public house in Rochester row. seized a biscuit bag and on it jotted down the air. Rut Mr. Trotere holds the championship. It is said that be actually composed "The Brow of the Hill," wrote a letter and ran 400 yards ■to post it in eight minutes.—Dundee [Advertiser. He Obeyed. Murat Halstead, the great journalist of war times, went to General William T. Sherman's headquarters once for the "latest news from the front." Ilal- Ftead was armed with many fine intro ductory letters, but decided to rely mainly on one given him by Thomas Ewing, Sherman's brother-in-law. He found the general and presented Ewing's letter. The general opened it somewhat impatiently, read a few lines, folded it and said: "Ah, you come from Ewing, and you desire to have 'all the latest news,' the •next probable move' of our army, eh? Well, there's a train leaving this town for Cincinnati at 2 o'clock. Here, take this ticket and step over there and get your dinner and then get on that train." "Well, but, General Sherman"— be gan the newspaper man. But Sherman waved him off. "Go over and get a good dinner. We have plenty and always strive to treat our friends well. But be sure you don't miss that 2 o'clock train!" And Halstead obeyed. New Idea In Pensions. It is proposed in Germany to have an organization for providing old age wnd disability pensions for bank offi cials and bank clerks, annuities for their widows and education for their orphans. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Summer Outings FAR AND NEAR ALASKA-YUKON-PACIFIC EXPOSITION, SEATTLE SALT LAKE CITY , nnrrADVD w Tickets sold August 310 6, good returning to reach original start- Jl NE Ito OCTUnhK 1*» i U g point thirty day* from date of sale Tickets sold May 20 to September 39, K ood returning until October Frotn New Yorb Baltimore ... $62.55 31, inclusive, 1909. From Philadelphia.. 64.80 From Washington . t>2 55 F \RES Tickets sold and good going and returning via direct routes through Chicago or St.jLotiis, or going via Chicago and returning via St. From New Yorb $92.00 From Philadelphia . $89.40 Louis or vice versa. From Baltimore . 80.75 From Washington 86.75 LOS ANGELES Tickets sold June 23 to July 9, good returning until October 31, Tickets good going and returning via direct routes. inclusive, 1909 Tickets good going or returning via San Francisco will be sold at Krom New y ork . 80 RAT Fwm Baltimore. .. $55.40 sls 25 higher than above fares front New York and Philadelphia, and From Philadelphia 89.90 From Washington . . 85.40 „ .... AA , , , Tickets sold aud good going and returning via direct routes. at v lo. 00 higher from Bultimoie and g Tickets good going or retruning via Portland will be sold at sl4 75 DENVER COLORADO SPRINGS. OR PUEBLO a s ove frolu Y .°f k and Philadelphia, and at ' $1h.3.) higher from Baltimore and VVashington. Tickets sold June 30, July 1, 2. and 3, good returning until Sep- ST. PAUL teniber 1, inclusive. 1909. Tickets sold July 3to 5, good returning until July 31, inclusive, RATES RATES From New York ffic.oo From Baltimore $55.15 Fioui New York $42.00 From Baltimore $37.50 ti ni *i j.i iin r~ ~\ Wuoiiinntnn -,s ik From Philadelphia.... 39.40 From Washington .. 37.50 1- rom Philadelphia... .n.4 S • Tickets good going aud returning via same direct routes. Ysllnwstoiis Park #lAS =r ,c Canatjian Roekios PERSONALLY-CONDUCTED TOUR Twenty-two Days ATJCttJST Special Pullman Train 5246 ROUND TRIP FROM NEW YORK. ALL EXPENSES. Proportionate Rates from Other Points I SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS To all the principal sea.-hore aud mountain resorts of the United States and Canada will be sold June 1 to SppfproV" 30 of a!' Tick"* AfToiff. Liberal rates of fare, a great variety of routes, and accommodating stop-overs make tha*.e ticket* inilisp'-nslb . to ihe Summer wanderer who Sfj! wishes to season his outiug with variety. These tickets supply the most convenient method of satisfying Summer travel. M Apply to any Ticket Agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad for rates, routes, aud tickets. 8a J R. WOOD * GEO. W. BOYD 9 Passenger Traffic Manager. General Passenger Agent. M MISS FARRAR IN ODD PACT. Was Not to Marry, It Is Said, Without Three Other Women's Consent. Behind the brief announcement of Miss Geraldine Karrar's engagement to Antonio Scotti is the story of an anti-marriage agreement, known hith erto to only four girls, of whom the prima donna Is one, says a Boston dis patch. The other three are said to be mak ing their names famous in Milan, Ber lin and Paris. They are Maud Abram son, Elena liirmes and Elvira Leve roni, who made the agreement with Miss Farrar nearly ten years ago, when they solemnly pledged them selves on no condition to marry until each had become famous; also they were not to marry until they had the consent of the others. This agreement was putin writing and secreted in Melrose. Mass. Only after Miss Farrar had received the permission of the other three did she announce her engagement. BIG TOBACCO KIT FOR KERMIT Young Roosevelt Took It Along to Give to Natives of Africa. | Hermit Roosevelt, ns official photog rapher of his father's African expedi | tion, foreseeing that ho could win the j friendship of natives with tobacco rather than with money, laid in a gen- J crous smoking kit just before sailing, i This is what he took: One hundred and twenty-five brierwood pipes, 200 short stemmed clay pipes, two dozen long stemmed churchwardens, 500 small packages of granulated smoking tobac co, 00 pounds of cut plug smoking, 100 tins of high grade birdseye, 80 pounds of plug chewing. SO pounds of fine cut | and C.OOO cigarettes. When the package was ready for | shipment it took up a space of sixteen cubic feet, the largest consignment of } smoking material ever placed on board a transatlantic liner ns the property of 1 an individual. Will Build a Magic House. ! A contractor in Wilmington, Del., re cently began the work of constructing the most unique apartment house ever built in Wilmington. It will be an electric automatic building, so that ono room can be quickly converted into another. The structure has been de scribed as a theatrical house. By pressing a button the occupant has a bedroom, and when he touches an other button he finds himself in the sitting room, another button and he finds himself with the family at din ner. Fashion Hint In Footgear. White buckskin pumps and oxford* are correct for morning and afternoon wear at seashore, summer resorts or country home. A Rude Youth. "How do you account for this, ma'am?" And he held aloft a lump of coal which he had just dug out from j the sirloin steak. ! The landlady slightly flushed. "I suppose tho poor cows sometimes stray along the railroad track," she said. "But you must admit the steak is tender." He thumped the coal with his knife. "Yes," lie said harshly, "locomotive tender." | And the meal progressed in silence. I —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Concrete. Concrete itself is, of course, very : old. The concrete stairs of Colchestel I and Rochester castles still show the marks of the incasing boards. The i dome of Agrlppa's pantheon, which is 142 feet in diameter, is of concrete, and fragments of concrete buildings are found in Mexico and Peru.—Lon don Spectator. The Krakatoa Eruption. Perhaps the most remarkable vol canic eruption known was that which took place In August, 1883, at the is land of Krakatoa, in the strait of Suuda. Streams of volcanic dust were thrown seventeen miles high, and more than a cubic mile of material was ex pelled from the volcanic crater. The air waves started by the eruption trav eled around the earth seven times. The noise was heard at Macassa, 9GO miles away; at Borneo, 1,110 miles dis tant; in Western Australia, 1,700 miles away, and even at Rodagues, distant more than 2,000 miles. The dust and powdered pumice thrown out of the crater made the entire circuit of the earth before settling down and were the cause of the strange sunsets that were observed for many months. —New York American. A Crushor. A consequential little man entered the commercial room of a big hotel not long back and gave a vigorous pull at the bell. As no one answered he rang again more loudly than before. A maidservant then came in, and the fol lowing colloquy took place: Servant—Who rang that bell? Little Man (making most of his height)—l did. Servant (scornfully)— And who lifted you up to it?— London Telegraph. Their Troubles. "You've got no grounds to envy me," said the millionaire to the beggar. "I've got just as many troubles as you have." "No doubt yer right, boss," said the beggar humbly, "but the difficulty with me is I ain't got nothin' else." PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD BUL' ETtN JUNE ON THE GREAT I AKES. Restful, delightful, interesting, and instructive, there is 110 trip like that 011 the Great Lakes, those inland seas which form the border line between the United States and Canada. And June is one of the most charming months in the year in which to take the trip. For comfort the fine passenger steamships of the Anchor Line have 110 superiors. As well-appointed as the palatial ocean greyhounds which plow the Atlantic, their schedule allows sufficient time at all stopping places to enable the tra veler to see something of the great lake cities and to view in daylight the most distinctive sights of the lakes, and the scenery which frames them. The trip through the Detroit River, and through Lake St. Clair, with its great ship canal in the middle of the lake, thence through Lake Huron, the locking of the steamer through the great locks at the Soo, and the passage of the Portage Kntry, lake and canal, across the upper end of Mich igan are novel and interesting features. The voyage from Buffalo to Duluth covers over eleven hundred miles in the five day' journey. Leaving Buffalo, the steamships Juniata and Tionesta, make stops at Erie, Cleve land, Detroit, Mackinac Island, the Soo, Marquette, Houghton and Hancock, and Duluth. The 1909 season opens on June 5, when the Steamer Tionesta will make her first sailing from Buffalo. The Anchor Line is the Great Lake Annex of the Penn sylvania Railroad, and the service measures up to the high standard set by the"Standard Railroad of America." An -illustrated folder, giving sailing dates of steamers rates of fare, and other information is in course of preparation and may be obtained when ready frotn any Pennsylvania Rail road Ticket Agent, who is also prepared to book passengers who may desire to take this trip through the Great Lakes and back. The Joke on the Jockey. A few years ago a famous jockey was engaged to riile the favorite in an | j important race. On the way to the J j.osi lie found himself cantering along , I Bide a rank outsider, the mount of a , stable boy who had only just com i menced riding, j i "You'll have to be careful with that | brute, 8.," he remarked. "I've ridden him before, and you'll never be able tc j hold him." B. thanked the crack for the hint 3 and said that he would "do his best." t Halfway through the race the out I aider and another were ill front, v-ith , I the favorite close behind. Fan>|('>g " j that the others were in difficulties, the \ | rider of the favorite shouted: "Pull out, 8., and let me through! , | I've got the race in hand." i The crack was mistaken, however, j IxK>klng back, the stable boy replied, '• with a grin: I j "I would, but I can't hold him!" t With which the novice let his horse j have his head and shot away, the easi r | est of winners, to the chagrin of the * | crack, who finished second. An Annoying Error. That was a very annoying typo f j graphical error that crept into the pa j pers the other day, telling how a proni- I inent society man had been held up by j highwaymen and "robbed of his watch j and other vegetables." The editor has I come out with an explanation that the . i last word was not vegetables, but valu | ables.—Judge. A Diplomat. ■ | "Does lie always speak the truth?" 1 | "I guess not. All bis friends praise his judgment."—Detroit Free Press. CONSTABLES MOST BE ON THE ALERT Continued from Ist Page. both. The court felt convinced, hew ever, that DeGreen had interfered : with the health officer through ignor ance of the law or through thought- j lessness and, therefore, would exercise i clemency in his case. The sentence j was that DeGreen pay the costs of prosecution and a fine of one dollar. I DOHESTIC INFELICITY Some two hours were occupied yes terday afternoon in hearing the case of Commonwealth vs. Isaac Buck. The charge was surety of the peace, the ! prosecutor being Minerva Buck, wife ; of the defendant. j Mrs. Buck, who was corroborated by | her mother, Mrs. Winters, of Danville, | told a story of abuse and ill-treatment, ' which, it was alleged, resulted iu the wife fleeing from the home of her hus band near "Dry Saw Mill Hollow" and seeking the domicile of her par ents iu this city. According to the evidence of the two women Isaac threatened to kill his wife and on one occasion threw the bittcher knife at ; her, the dangerous missile missing her | only by a foot oi so and imbedding it self iu the door. Isaac, it was alleged also, was unduly foud of hard cider, t which he keyt in a barrel in the cellar j aud under its influence frequently got up iu the night to play the fiddle. The df.endaut, when placed on the . stand made a sweeping denial. His | wife, he taid, xefusid to bake pies aud ! preferred to lie abed in the morning while he arose aud busied himself with the farm work. The couple were mar ried last March after an acquaintance |of some three weeks. The witness de { clared that his wife did not flee from I him, but. that she went from other I motives. j Mr. and Mrs. Schoch, Mr. and Mrs. j Hartman, William Heimbach, George Heinibach and Bart Foust, neighbors of the defendant, Prothonotary Thom as G. Vincent and Calvin Garrison, the latter proprietor of the store at I Grovania, were among the witnesses called iu the case. Among the points brought out by the testimony was that the defendant, Isaao Buck, is an inoffensive person and that Mrs. Buck on the morning when she left the home gave another reason for her trip to town than fear of her husband. Hon. H. M. Hinckley, who repre sented the defendant, quoted from the ; divorce proceedings brought by Mrs. Buck's former husband to show that j the faults alleged by the present hus i band formed the basis in the divorce j proceedings. ! The court did not seem very con | vincingly impressed with the defend ant's guilt aud at the conclusion of the testimony called husband and wife before the bench. Addressing Mr. j Buck first the jutlge asked him if he would be willing to have his wife re turn to his home and resume house keeping with him on amicable terms. Mr. Buck said he was perfectly will ing. Then addressing Mrs. Bock the I court asked her if she would be will | ing to return to her husband. She re j plied that she could not, a- she was afraid of iiim. At this point the court I cut matters short. Addressing the de fendant, Judge Evans pronounced the | brief sentence : ! "Isaao, you pay the costs; I decline j to make any further order. " | Whether married life will begin j anew at "Dry Saw Mill Hoilow'' aud j will ruu more smoothly remains to be | seen, TRUE BILLS RETURNED, j Trne bills were returned by the ! grand jury yesterday as follows: | Commonwealth vs. Frank B. Maus and Charles A. Maus, obstrucing pub ! lie road. | Commonwealth vs. William C. Dougherty. Surety of the peace and carrying concealed deadly weapons, j Commonwealth vs. William Eckert Obtaining money under false pretense. TUESDAY'S PROCEEDINGS The first case taken up for trial by jury yesterday moruing was that of Commonwealth vs. Frank B. Maus and Charles A. Maus. Ralph Eisner was employed as spec ial council on the commonwealth's side. A. W. Duy of Bloomsburg rep-1 resented the defeudants. The charge | brought 'was "Obstructing Highway," Levi B. Beyer being pros ecutor The following jury was im paneled : Josiah Schivley,Samuel.Lun ger, Graut Fsustermacher, W. C. Rnn yan, Daniel Fetterman, .Tames C. Smith, Charles Kneiss, J. W. Mohr, ' Peter Mayan, George Stein, David j Haney and J. L. Krum. The first witness called was Boyd Trescott, surveyor and civil engineer j of Millville, who made the blue print j offered in evidence. The road describ ed leads westward from the Danville and Washingtonville road to Reuben Blue's saw mill by the buildings of the two defendants. The blue iirlut indicated the line of the old fence aud that of the new fence, which latter constitutes the alleged obstruction erected by the defendants. The new en ce stands along the edge of what was formerly the wagon track and is roren f<-ef from where the old fence * n". t posts have H'M, been pnet e.; .vhich stand four feit outside of, the feucf in tl e roar!. The width cf «a:ou track is now proct tally l'-M fest. The next witness called was Levi V. Beyer, one of the supervisors of Valley township. He has known the road in question since iB6O. He de scribed conditions as indicated on the Dine print. The fence which now stands were the wagon tracik former y was and acts as an obs'tuctioD was erected by the defendants Tiie wit- ! ness saw them bniid it. As supervior lie requested them to remove it bnt they refused to do RO. By relocating the fence the defendant* have reduced the width of the road from 22>£ feet to 12 1 a feet. The obstruction is dang erous. When the defendants have their horse tied in the road it is impossible to drive by. It is difficult for two vehicles to pass. The next witness called was J. A. | Merrill, another member of the board :of supervisors of Valley township He I has known the road for 22 years, dur j ing which the road was known as a j township road and the old boundaries i were always recognized. On April 27, I 1!»08, notice was first served on the de j fendants to remove the fence, which | they refused to do. Tlia obstruction jis especially dangerous at night. Iu j addition to tiie fence aud posts erected | in the road, a four foot walk has been I constructed along the fence. AFTERNOON SESSION, j The first witness called in the after- j noon was D. R. P. Ohilds, former sup- j ervisor of Valley township. He has | known the road for 50 years. The | fence as the defendants have erected it is in the public road as it used to be traveled—where the beaten track used to be. John Hendricks, a former resident of Valley township, was sworn. He has known the road for over fifty years. He corroborated previous witnesses. At this point it became plain that the Commonwealth was aiming to prove that the road in question before the lines were changed by the defend ants was a recognized public highway by prescription, accepted, maintained j and used by the public for twenty-one yeais. j Jackson Maus was the next witness. | He remembered the road from the day ; it was first opened. It is the same now |as when laid out with the exception i of the fence built by the defendants. I James M. Irland was called to the | stand to identify photographs that he had taken. ! Dennis Bright was next sworn. He ! has known the road in question from ! boyhood. He is the owner of land | abutting ou that owned by the det'end j ants. The fence as moved is six feet lor more in the road. The original fence, which was the southern bound. ' ary of the road, stood there from tiie ; time that he was a boy. It was the ! southern boundary for fifty years. { Other witnesses for the Common -1 wealth were K. P. Johnson, John Con ; way, Edward Beyer, John Winter • steen aud Abraham HendrickEon. j At Bp. in.the Commonwealth rest i ed. A. W. Ouy in outlining the de fense to the jury explained that in ! 1853 the court of what was then Col j umbia county appointed three viewers lon a public road leading from Reuben ! Blue's faw mill to the Danville and | Washlngtonville road. The viewers J met, viewed the highway and laid it j out in 1853. Unfortunately, however, | for all parties some of the records are hacking. But following a report of the viewete a fence was erected 16,'j feet from the lino of the Maus prop erty an i the tiad at the north of it, I later the property of P. P. Johnson. The new road cat through several other tracts until in came to the Maus tract when it followed the line be tween it and the land of John Blue on the north. This road 33 ftet in width, j lias been in use ever since. ! It is the contention of the defense | that Lewis Maus, the then owner, set the fence more than 18* j feet south of ! |'ie property line. This, it is alleged, i can be proven by the location of a fence, which according to old resi- I dents stood just IB, 1 # feet north of the I property line and remains of which can be found. It was to recover this tract of land that lay in the road that the defend ! ants, after any amount of trouble and j controversy with supervisors, finally removed the fence to what they hold 1b its proper location, just 16? a ' feet I south of the property line. The orig j inal fence on the northern side of the j road 16 feet from the property line, ! it is alleged, is marked by the locution of a hay shed, the posts belonging to ; a flood gate and a strip of sod that was : never ploughed up. I The first witness called by the de fense was Frank B. Maus, one of the defendants, who testified to facts in accordance with the above. A very important witness was P. E. J Maus, who has known the road since) IS7O. He said that so far as he could \ recall the fence was not set up in the ; beaten track of the road. One could j recognize the old northern boundary, | he said, and recalled an old post and j rail fence, succeeded in turn by fesceß of other kinds. Mr. Kisner contended that ; or not a road is lawful does not de- [ pend upon the report of the viewers but as laid out by the supervisors on the ground. Mr. Duy excepted to this and quoted authority to show that the opposite is true, under a recent act of the legislature. This led to a prolong ed discussion between the attorneys, authorities being cited pro aud con. Quoting the tstimony of P. E. Macs Mr. Duy contended that by moving the fence to a line 16'.. feet south of j the property line the defendants did j not encroach upon the beaten track of ' the road, "recognized by conscrip tion." Hiram Wertwrn nud W. L. ('oucrrr were called by the dsfens-.i rui ch Samuel Neihart, surveyor ani civil engineer, of Blcomsburg, was sworn. Mr. Neihart had made a draft from actual measurements ou the spotj which bore out the contention as to the property line and the proper loca tion of the road in Question. MISCELLANEOUS. In re estate of William Taylor aud itors report was confirmed nisi. In re roai! in Limestone township report of viewers confirmed nisi. Estate of Charles Mohr, deceased Petition of minor heirs for sale of real estate at private sale ordered. In re estate of Stephen C. Ellis aud itor's report confirmed m-i. Petition for road in Liberty town ship. A. J. Hitler, I. L. Aocr aud James F. Ellis, surveyor, appointed viewers. Petitions for county bridges iu Lib erty, Derry and Valley township, ap proved. In the case cf Commonwealth vs, Sara Vastine, Bertha Vastine, Joseph Lechner and Will G. Brwon the grand jury iugored the bill placing the costs on the county. The latter case, which the grand jury reported on yesterday morning, wound up the list that the district at torney had to present The grand jury proceeded to examine the public build ings, which duty it completed before the hour of noon. At 1J.15 o'clock the grand jury presented its report and | was discharged. Iu order to push the proceedings of court along and make way for the fire men's convention a session was held last night. The defense rested aud the attorneys for both sides addressed the jury. Election Notice. Notice is hereby given thai an elec tion will be held by the ttockholdeis of the "F. Q. Hartman, luc.," at their cilice in the Borough of Dan ville, Pa., on Thursday, July 15t,1909, between the hours of 5 and 6, for the purpose of electing a Board of Direct ors for the ensuing year and for the purpose of transacting such other busi ness as may come before them. F. Q. HARTMAN, INC. T. W. Cutler, Secretary. Impressed. "I appear to have made something of an Impression on that man over there," remarked a young lady at a wedding party. "He has been looking at me ever since I arrived." "If you mean that one with the black mustache, he's the detective en gaged to look after the presents!" said a friend. Very Little Change. "It's three years since I was in this city," said a stranger in a restaurant as he was walking out after finishing his dinner; "city looks the same." "I don't find mnch change!" respond ed the waiter as he took up the nickel that was left on the table. Quite Handy. "The autortobile is a great institu tion." "For Instance?" "You can sit up in It as you pass a friend and crawl under it when a creditor heaves Into sight."—Louisville Courier-Journal. Brave Reply. The Sunday School Teacher—And now, children, can you tell me, when Balaam and his ass conversed, what language they spoke In? Little Harry Green—Please, sir, Assyrian.—Bellaion. ; A Reliable Ramady FOR CATARRH Ely's Cresm Balm V Ft " R is quickly absorbed. M Gives Relief at Once. 3 "''IAI It cleanses, w>-.tkes, M'. heals and prof, its the diseased mem brane resulting from Catarrh and drives I away aCold in the Head quickly. Restores the S'-usesof Taste and Smell. Full Mze GO cts. at Druggists or by mail. Liquid Cream Balm for u-e iu atomizers 75 cts. Ely Brothers, sil Warren Street, New York. 60 YEARS" experience vWFI J J " k DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS Ac. Anvone pending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether au invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patent® sent free. Oldest agency for securmg patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive ipecial notice, without charge. In tho Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, f.'i a year : fourmonths.fi. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN &Co. 36,8r0sd * a > New York Branch Office. 635 F 8t- Washington. D. C. I R-I-P-A-N-S Tabule Doctors find A; good prescription For Mankind. ! The 5-cent packet is enough for usna | oecassions. The family (bottle (00 cents | .'ontains a supply for a year. All drug gists. I WINDSOR HOTEL S w. T. BR I'BAKER. Manager. Midway between Broad St. Station I and Reading Terminal on Filbert St I European, SI.OO per day and up flj American, $2.50 per day and up The only node rate priced hotel of I fa reputation and <*oiiM*qnet;«N« in W $ PHILADI.I.PNIA |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers