Montour American FRANK C. ANGLE, Proprietor. Danville, l>a., Har. 31, 1910. JTmammoth FISH HATCHERY HAKRISBURG, March 30. State Commissioner of Fisheries William K. Meeliau yesterday receiv ed word that President Taft had ap proved the act turning over to the State, for use as a fish hatchery, the greater part of Presqnelsle peninsula, lit Erie. The act was passed unanim ously by congress and was signed with in three days. "The Presqne Isle hatchery will be the largest in tho world," said Com missioner Meehan, "and its pond cul ture station will be larger, probably, thau all others in the United States combined. Nothing can be done by the department until the next legislature has provided funds. We shall ask for SBO,OOO to start the work and probably $250,000 distributed through a number of years, will be needed to develop and beautify the property. "This new hatchery is of vast im portance. For instance, Pennsylvania has discovered that if the water area be large enough, it is possible to im pound sturgeon and have them spawn. One of the lakes on this new hatchery is nearly a mile long and more than a mile wide, and it is our intention to Stock this pond with lake sturgeon in the endeavor to restore the sturgeon industry to Lake Erie, which has been mined. "Muscallonge are also rapidly dis appearing in Pennsylvania waters on Lake Erie, because nothing has been done to propagate them. Another large lake on this new property will afford plenty of room as a breeding pond for this great game fish. Two other natur al lakes there will enable the State to turn out nearly half as many black bass annually as the State now turns out of trout. It will also enable the State to hatch annually as many yel low perch as the entire output of all kinds of fish at the presant time each ye&r." GIRL BASEBALL COACH. Miss Bragdon Anxious to Get ''Slab Artist and Backstop." The first young woman baseball and football coach in the Dnited States has been found at Revere, Mass. She is Miss Annie E. Bragdon, principal of Wolcott school. She turns out nothing but champion teams. She Is getting the boys ready for the baseball sea- Bon. She said the other day: "During the ball season I will be on the field during practice and watch and direct the work of the boys. I'll give them alj a tryout and then pick out the best players for tho different positions. I'm looking particularly for a good slab artist and a backstop." MOVE TO LIMIT FUR HUNTING. Siberian Traders Ask Government to Help Save Trade. The greatest market in the world for undressed furs, held at the libit fair, Siberia, where hunters' guilds and traders and buyers' associations meet annually, recently tool: an impor tant step. In view of the threatened depletion of Russia's fur supply a pe tition was unanimously adopted ask ing the government to proclaim a close season for all furred game and to prohibit absolutely the hunting of sable for two years, Convinced. •To you think a college education belps a tnuu in business?" "Sure. I've had two college boys 'here workln' for me durin' the past year, and 1 was afraid to discharge either one of 'em for fear they'd find fault with my grammar when I done it."—Chicago Record-Herald. A Reliable Remedy FOR CATARRH JI Ely's Cream Balm M/ is quickly absorbed. M 6ivea Relief at Once. S-m It cleanses, soothes, A heals and protects tbe diseased mem brane resulting fr< -m Catarrh and drives away a Cold in t lie* Head quickly. Kestores < tbe Senses of Tn-te and Smell. Full size GO cts. at I)niv»gi is or by mail. Liquid ' Cream Balm i >r use in atomizers 75 cts. Ely Brothers, s(> Warren Street, New York. fin 'T r n nmuwi) R-I PA-NS Tubule Doctors find ! A f;ood prescription For Mankind. The 5-cent packet is enough for usua occassions. The tamily .bottle («0 cents oontains a supply for a year. All drug 1 gists. ■ T. ! ■- hbMA* 60 YEARS' j EXPERIENCE S I I 9 lyiiH jKi 1 TRADE MARKS DESIGNS RFM COPYRIGHTS Ac. Anyone pending n sketch and description may { quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an ' invention is probably patentable. Comtnunlca* t tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patent* tent free, oldest apeticy forsecurmjr patents. i'atmtts taken through Munn A Co. receive wptruil notice, without clmive, lu the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. T.ar*est cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms. 93 a year ; four months, 112 L 8ol«l by all newsdealers. IVIUNN & Co. 36,B '°- New York Brmnch 0000. P36 F St. Wa»blD«lon l>. c. - SPECIAL Ff TO THE V &lij) £ filffs PUi' yiIMC * 112 MEXICAN MINING ASSOCIATION Is file tet 'my in thimml fie!d to day. ffloie oor a?i. In this Issue. Price is steadily. Large j : profits may be made in this sfoek. . 9 St ti fIZS 1 * ' 3 Los AngeScs - California r | 7 ; A RARE COIN. K Is Called a "Mlsstrlke" and Is Very Seldom Seen. i "See tills penny I got today nt the i postofflce," said the cashier. "There . aren't live other pennies like it in the United States." . He handed out a cent piece with the die impression half off the face of the k coin and with a big half moon of ' blank metal showing along one side, i "They call it a mlsstrlke," he con i tlnued. "Ferhaps once in 10,000,000 times the two little notched Angers on the minting machines that grip the blank disk and draw it forward to the die fall to spring away, lu this case the left hand finger stuck and pushed tho coin halfway over the die. That is how the impression is only half on tho disk. "You can see the raised edge on tho blank portion of the metal," the eash , ier went on as he took up his pen. "It isn't everybody knows that each coin goes under tho dies twice. The first time it Is struck with a blank, dome shaped set of dies to put an edge on the disk. Then it gets the regular die with the familiar head on it. "What's it worth? Oh, I'll say prob ably $25 or so. I see It's been in cir culation for nine years. It's a wonder some coin collector hasn't nabbed it. I'm going to keep It as a rarity."— New York Times. I Nicely Graded. It is still a tradition that the people of Manchester, England, should gibe at Liverpool with the proverb, "A Manchester man. a Liverpool gentle man;" but, it is said, classification is not so strongly marked lu Lancashire as In the old days. When stagecoach es were running a guard was once ask ed, "Who has tha' getten inside. Billy?" Billy consulted his list and replied, "A gentlemou fra Liverpool, a raon fra Manchester, a chap fra Owdham and a fellow fra Wigan." mm . 'ifn»>fin' iii>»o..A..< . ■~.-».r, v-~ •;.— ■" ■ ;»witoy—l- I &t.-0..w . 112., L . --~ *'" *—• - - ——■ —^—l- j wij. / x &>C&ij J . \ : rs.u / A %£ 4>W3 • I t»f*>.(tn. ■ ru'VnMr* fc*(l»l>s -CT«»» The famous Antigua Mines of Palniillas, Sinaloa, first opened in 1806 by the great Spanish mine operator, Miguel Felix, and now the property of the Mexican Mining Association. Association Stock is now selling at the low price of 5 cents per share in order to ' provide a working equipment for these mines and to replace the milling and smelting j plant destroyed during the revolution. We cannot maintain this low figure. "I he PALT.IIi.LAS mines of the Mexican Mining Association are in the same district as the world-famous Bonanza, Guadalupe de los Ecyes, with over 100 years of continuous production, now working 1,000 men and credited wnh a production of $100,000,000. In buying Mexican Mining Association at 5 cents you \ stand the chcnca if similar immense profits ilie ASoCCDiiION now owns seven (7) large mines in Sinaloa, Mexico, upon which more than I $30,000 worth of work has been done, as follows: t'ALMiLLAS CONSOLIDATED, consisting of three (3) mines—COLON, BALTAZARENA, and PALOS LjLC shipper.; of Gracie. and containing a large tonnage of milling silver ores. LoP v.)LA an : MAGISTRAL two {2) large copper-silver mines, the former well developed, and the two itxming a magnificent smelting proposition. •- ...:') «;•«! ; Ai!o:S;.' .3, the former a very large low grade gold mine, the latter a rich silver lead mine, | 1 -<■' "' t' .xtlier to be worked under one management ' 1; ' >s VEN inn.es will be the basis for the greatest mining enterprise on the Western j Const (l A .. i. iu • w.r operating department in Mexico, we maintain a selling organization in the great mine buying centers cf the world, London, Brussels and New York City. jt/e.i :o hac: produced to date over forty-five hundred millions of dollars in silver alone, besides hundred:: of mauons in gold , and is to be the great gold and copper producing region of the future. The \ '.it Co r t ;■ r icn, though barely touched as yet, has produced, according to our engineers' estimates, over nine ftui.d.\ I r.:l ions. Do you not want your share of this immense wealth? If so, the MEXICAN MIN ING ASSOCIATION is your great chance. INTERNATIONAL INTERNAT SS raES ca I Q -wp J T - J rrij 7"1 r\ 51fi I)OI ' GLAS BUILDING, Los ANGELES, CAL. I y_' /. v 1 .Li O Vy U • Please send me engineers' reports and additional information re- FINANCIAL AGENTS garding the Mexican Mining Association. Name s 546 DOUGLAS BUILDING LOS ANGnLES, CAL. cit y state I SOLVING A PROBLEM. i , The Green Country Brakeman Who In- | troduced the "Saw By." ' Many years ngo a green country boy 112 applied to the superintendent of a j I western railway for work and, some- ! | what against the superintendent's wish, on account of the danger to life j and limb attendant upon such occupa ■ tion, was given a place as brakeman | of a freight train. ! On one of his first trips it happened ! , that his train met another freight | train at a station where the sidetrack , was not long enough to accommodate , either of them. The conductors were } debating which train should back up | to a point where they could pass when ; the new hand ventured to suggest that neither should back; that they could j pass each other by means of the short 'sidetrack if the thing was managed right. The idea excited a good deal of | laughter on the part of the old train- , men, but the boy stood his ground. i | "Well, how would you go about it?" i asked one of tbe conductors, confident that the lad would soon find himself 1 I against a stump. ' The boy took up a stick and traced in the sand a diagram to Illustrate his 1 plan. "Good gracious!" said the conductor. "I believe that will do it!" And it did do it. Today every train man iu America probably knows how to "saw by" two long trains on a short ! sidetrack, but it is not so generally known that the thing was never done until an inexperienced country boy who became the manager of a great railway line worked out the problem ; for himself. The Producer. "Does your husband play cards for money?" "Judging from practical results." an swered ytfung Mrs. Torkins. "I should say not. Uut all the other men In the game do."—Washington Star. i FRIST ANNUAL MILITARY BALL The first animal military ball under the auspices of Company P, lath regi ment, National Guard of Pennsylvania, took place last evening in the armory, and was a brilliant success, j The affair was arranged under the j direction of a committee of the com pany composed of Lieutenant. Robert Y. Oearhart, Corporals James Churm, Harry Landau, Roy Snyder anil Carl Demott. The music was furnished by seven pieces of the Necal orchestra, of Sunbury. The attendance was large, there be ing about 100 couples present. Of these a large number were from neighboring j towns. All of the military guests ap j peared in uniform. I In the matter of decorations the com | inittee achieved an effect which has ! seldom been equalled in Danville. The j predominating colors were, of course, | the patriotic Red, White and Blue, ! which, in flags and bunting, were I draped and hung inartistic profusion. | A number of Japanese lanterns added I to the beauty of the scene. SPARED THE CHIEF. | Jackson Admired the Bravery of the Famous Indian. J Andrew Jackson was magnanimous ! In his treatment of Weathersford, the | famous Creek chieftain, when that j warrior surrendered. Weathersford had done all In his power to prevent the horrible massacre at Fort Minis, but most of the frontiersmen were bit ter against him, and Jackson himself hud sworn to put him to death If he j were taken. One day after the power of his peo ple had been utterly broken Weathers | ford came riding Into Jackson's camp lon his famous gray horse and stopped in front of the general's tent. "How dare you ride up to my tent after having murdered the women and j children at Fort Minis?" demanded Jackson In astonishment. I The chief denied the truth of the I charge, but said he: "You may kill me llf you will. 1 come to get aid for the i women and little children who are starving In the woods, if I could fight ! you any longer I would do so, but my warriors ar> all dead. Send for tho women and little children. They never did you any harm. Hut kill me If tho white people want It done." The troops, crowding began :to cry menacingly: "Kill him! Kill hlui!" "Silence!" ordered Old Hickory stern ly. "Any one who would kill as brave a man as this would rob the dead." The general treated the chief kindly and even gave htm permission if he desired to depart and continue the i war. The chief afterward settled on a plantation, where he resided for many j ears, honored alike by white men and red.—Chicago Tribune. The New Life. Maud Funny you should fail tn love with a man ten years your senior Ethel-fie Isn't. We didn't begin to live till we knew each other, so we're the same age. INQUEST HELD . _ AJJOSPITAL r Justice of the Peace W. V. Oglesby - was called to the hospital for the in sane yesterday to hold an inquest over , the body of a patient, John Mooney, who died Tuesday night as the result eof being scalded in a bathtub last - Thursday. t The patient, who was an inmate of i, the 10th ward, was a helpless epileptic, 1 being admitted from Centralia in 18i)!J. y An inquest was considered necessary 112 to bring out all the facts anil establish whether or not. anyone was responsible - for the death and whether a crime had e been committed. ? The following jurors were empanel i- ed: Eugene H. Miles, William E. j Young, John L. Campbell, George - Maiers, Newton Smith and John H. s Brngler. e Drs. Roy C. Jackson and William , H. Krickbaum of the hospital staff, i, and William E. Heller, Jesse Dunc e heskie and Charles Thomas, attend . ants, testified at tho inquest, il The jury returned tho following verdict.: That John Mooney came to | his death on March 29th, at the State hospital for the insane at Danville through having been b aided in a bath s tub in ward No. 10 on March 24, 1'JlO; that from the evidence given it would 3 appear that another patient turned hot 3 water into the tub in the absence of j the attendant who had charge of said t patient and that there was 110 evidence to show that the management of the . institution was in any way responsi 112 ble for the said accident. THE MICROBES. But For Them All Green Plants Would I Vanish From the Earth. Few persons .-an realize at first j t what an immense number and variety I of microbes there are not only around I us in the air and dust a:-1 water, but also in us and on us and in and on ( every living thing. The work, the ( huge system of chemical change and , the circulation of tho elements—car , ton, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen and sulphur—which they carry on is In cessant. varied and complex. Those ( five elements are the main and essen . tlal constituents of all living things. , Supposing there were no microbes, there would be no putrefaction, no ( breaking down of the dead bodies of animals and plants which were once alive into gas and substances soluble In water. , They by a series of steps in which different kinds of bacteria or microbes are successively concerned convert , the protelds and tho fats and sugars , of dead plants and animals into less elaborate bodies, organic acids, aro matic bodies and other compounds (some highly poisonous toman), and at last, when what were highly com plex combinations of hundreds of at- I oms in each molecule have been re- I > duced by the action of first one and | then of another kind of microbe Into j »j comparatively simple substances of! ! | twenty or thirty atoms to the mole- ! j cule, the coup de grace is giveu by I j certain special microbes, which con- 1 j vert these later compounds into still j j simpler combinations—namely, ammo j nla and nitrates, which are fairly sta- i j ble, so that the whole elaborate cliem- j • ieal fabric of living matter in a few 1 hours or days after death is broken I | down until it reaahes tho stable "mill- j J eral" condition, practically carbonate and nitrate of ammonia—smelling salts. ; If there were no microbes this would i never occur. The earth would he 1 | cumbered with the dead bodies of past i generations of animals and plants—un decomposed. And very soon all the i organic elements, all the carbon and nitrogen, if not all the hydrogen and oxygen, on the face of the earth would ; be fixed in these corpses, and the I green plants would perish from the whole world for want of sustenance, i for It Is the green plants which feed i on and absolutely must have as their j food the carbonic acid, ammonia and nitrates into which the microbes re solve all living things when dead, it 1 is the green plants which from those simple compounds build up again the ■ more complex molecules, the sugars, : fats, albumens and proteids and pro vide for the nourishment and Increase j !of the most complex of all—the living ! j matter hidden in protoplasm.—Sir Ray ! j Lankester in London Telegraph. The Perverse Comma. , 1 That curious and now stereotyped | I blunder of punctuation which gives j i j us "God rest you, merry gentlemen," I, as an inferior substitute for the . > quaint old greeting. "God rest you j j merry, gentlemen." turns up regularly every Christmas. It Is a pity for the j 1 ancient formula to be thus perverted ' j since "God rest you merry" or "Rest 1 j you merry" was a recognized form of I salutation in Elizabethan days and j may be found in the works of Shake j speare and of many contemporary j writers, while for tlitf modernized j j form, which obscures the original ! sense of the phrase, there is, of course, j no authority whatever. If any one j 1 j will have the curiosity to look up the j 1 i old Christmas carol which begins with ■ the words lu question ho will find ! ' them conv tly punctuated. Londou 1 World. I ' _ ( . Alaskan Glaciers. ( An interesting fact about Alaskan > glaciers is that some are "dead" and j others are "alive." Davidson glacier, j ' tvliich is really a tongue of the Muir * glacier, has been ascended by travel- | „ ers for a number of years. It is a dead "i glacier, having a moraine of several 1 miles between it and the sea. Looking j I at it from the boat, it represents a kaleidoscopic appearance as the sun 1 shines upon it, and the surface seetns j scratched u Ith tiny pin lines. These are in reality deep crevices, which 1 must be i.pproached cautiously, for | they are lurking pitfalls for the un- j wary.—Vaucouver Providence. Tho habit of looking at the best side j of any event is worth far more than a thousand pounds a year.—Johnson. | LOTUS CONCLAVE HOLDS BANQUET Lotus Conclave No. 127, Improved Order Heptasophs, held a bauquet in its rooms,city hall, last, night, attend ed by some three hundred people, which proved to bo one of the most enjoyable functions ever held by a fraternal organization in Danville. The banquet was one of those social affairs, spontaneous in their nature, periodically held by Lotus Conclave, which have no other object than to give expression to the good feeling and traternal instincts that characterize the members. Each Heptasoph was ac companied by his wife,sister or friend. When it is explained that the conclave j lias a membership of two hundred and twenty-five it will be seen that those present, with their companions, con stituted a goodly company, indeed. In making the arrangements nothing was omitted that would add to the pleasure of the evening. John Jacobs' Sons were caterers, so that a well-pre i pared, a well-served and sumptuous banquet was an assured fact. Music for the occasion was furnished by Miles orchestra and the Orpheus Glee Club. The guest of honor was W. L. Wain wright, Alternate District Deputy Supreme Archon of the order, who was accompanied by his wife. The ad dresses, which abounded in happy hits ami innocent, raillery constituted a most enjoyable feature,'and these, to gether with the good music and the pleasures of the feast, made the even ing one that will lingor in the minds of those present as a delightful mem ! ory. Among others of rank that attended the banquet was our townsman, Dis trict Deputy A. M. Peters, whose dil igent labors in no small measure have assisted to build up the order in this section. Among other members of Lotus Con clave whose labors have borne good fruit are: John Kilgus, archon; W. L. McClure, financier; Charles G. Cloud, secretary and Jacob Fischer, treasurer. j $3.50 Heceipe Cures Weak Kidneys, Free Reliever Urinary and Kidney Troubles, Backache, Straining, Swell ing, Etc. Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kid. neys and Back. Wouldn't it be nice witihn a week or so to begin to say good bye forever to the scalding, dribbling, straining, ior too frequent passage of urine; the forehead and the back-of-the-head aches; the stitches and pains in the back; the growing muscle weakness; spots before the eyes; yellow skin ; j sluggish bowels; swollen eyelids or I ankles; leg crimps; unnatural short ! breath; slepolessness and the despond lency? ! 1 have a recipe for these troubels | that you can depend on, and if you | want to make a quick recovery, you ought to write and get a copy of it. I Many a doctor would charge you 50 I just for writing this prescription, but I have it and will be glad to send it Jto you entirely free. Just drop me a line like this: Dr. A. E. Robinson,k4s3 Luck Building, Detroit, Mich., and 1 i will send it by return mail in a plain | envelope. As you will see when you j get it, this recipe contains only pure, | harmless remedies, but it has great j healing and pain-conquering power. It will quickly show its power once you use it, so I'think you had better see what it is without delay. I will i send you a copy free—you can use it j and cure yourself at home. WILL ELECT GRANDS PHILADELPHIA, March :so. j J The present week is one of interest ; , to the 150,000 members of the Inde- ; pendent Order of Odd Fellows of Penn- ! j sylvania. At the last meeting in ( March the Past Grands of the various j j subordinate lodges will cast their bal- j i lots for grand lodge officers. The vot- I ' iug began on Good Friday and will be j ! concluded with the lodges voting on | i Thursday of this week. The contest' for grand representative to the sover- j eign grand lodge will doubtless be the j closest in years. The candidates are J Wilson K. Molir, of Allentown, pres- I ent incumbent, and Rev. B. H. Hart, ! of Harrisburg, whose lodge member- | ship is in Huntingdon. The vote will be counted in Pliila- i delphia the latter part of April by a j board of canvassers appointed for that purpose. BAN ON TOBACCO. Pennsylvania Railroad Giving Prefer ence to Nonusers of the Weed. Employees of the Pennsylvania rail- j road at Pittsburg have been ordered to refrain from the uso of tobacco j while on duty and also have been re quested to break themselves of the habit. Applicants for positions are questioned closely regarding tobacco, j and scores who admitted themselves I continued tobacco users have failed to i get positions. As yet the order has been applied ! only to office forces and to those ban- i dllng passenger trains. I Alcohol to Children Ask your doctor how often he prescribes an alcoholic stimulant for children. He will probably sa\\ "\ ery, very rarely. Children do not need stimulating." Ask him how often he prescribes a tonic for them. He will prob ably answer, "Very, very frequently." Then ask him about Ayer's non-alcoholic Sarsaparilla as a tonic for the young. Follow his advice. He knows. j.c.AyfrCo^XowellMas^ The first great rule of health —"Daily movement of the bowels." this is not so. Then ask him about Ayer's Pills. Sold for nearly sixty years. ' Do You Get Up With a Lame Back? ■ Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everyone knows of Dr. Ki 1 mcr' 3 I Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver a:;i I ij j, , bladder remedy, be . j —— Jp? I] cause of iis remark- I 8 I 3 a ' f ' e health restoring 1 ! ft J 11 properties. Swamp "l " (•• Root fulfills uluioit *1 L/v j J every wish in over ' |\v3~\ , [|l coming rheumatism, I !v tr V") I, 1 • l'-'i'i in the back, kid ' (41 lllf ) w-, | ; Jji neys, liver, bladder ! ,3 jp I j and every part of the i 11. -eL>c_~. urinary passage. It ' ! corrects inability to • hold water and scalding pa in in passint»it, , ; or bad effects following use of liquor, wine , or beer, and overcomes that unple isant necessity of being compelled togo often through the day, and to get up many s times during the night. Swamp.Koot is not recommended for everything but if you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble, it will be found just the remedy you need. It has been thor -1 oughly tested in private practice, and has a proved so successful that a special ar rangement has been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not al i ready tried it, may have a sample bottle ; j sent free by mail, also a book telling | more about Swamp-Hoot, and how tc , find out if you have kid ney or bladder trouble. ■ I When writingmention , offer in this paper and send your address to ' i Dr. Kilmer & Co., "TT.tnt ', Binghamton, N. Y. The regular fifty-cent j and one-dollar size bottles are sold by . ' all druggists. Don't make any mistake | but remember the name, Swamp-Root, ' 1 Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Raot, and the ad s | dress, Binghamton,N.Y.,on every bottle ! RAILROAD MEN ; GET INCREASE ' More than 180,000 employes of the Pennsylvania Railroad company re ceiving less than S3OO per month, were 9 ' id Tuesday night by posted no -3 11 j, that they had been marked up for an increase of six per cent, begin ning April 1. 1 The last increase granted by the ■ Pennsylvania took place in 1900 when • a horizontal raise of ten per cent, was granted. The raise was announc ed at the time to have been unsolicit ed on the part of the men. Many of the latter declared, however, that they , were no better off after it had taken ' place than they were a few years be i fore at the old figure, the increase in , the cost of living having fully absoib ed the increase in their pay. Although the employes of the Penn sylvania refused to strike during the . winter when it becamejevident that it was part of the plan of the railroad brotherhoods to call a walk-out if : rates of pay were not increased, it has r been known for some time that there • was all along, especially among the I younger element a considerable amount , of dissatisfaction. Cooler heads among ; the older men restrained the younger employes from acting rashly and the rates paid to trainmen and other em . ployes became the subject of negotia j tions between the railroad company ' | and representatives of the men. | The increase applies not only to those employes whose organizations, 1! such as the Brotherhoods of Conduct - 1 ors, Engineers, Firemen and Train- I I men, recently made a formal demand. ; for an advance in wages, but to all i others, such as clerks, track hands, 1 i signal and telegraph operators, men in the shops and in all the other endless : lines of activity of the great corpora ! tion. It is estimated that the increas |ed expense to the company will be \ from $8,000,000 to $10,000,000 a year, as its annual pay roll is now running 1 considerably over $100,000,000. I The matter was decided upon by the | directors of the Pennsylvania railroad jon Monday, but news of it was care fully concealed, and it was not until t the brief notices were posted up Tues | day evening at important division j points all over the great system, that the employes heard of their good for i time. A Curious Error. I The Rev. Dr. Edward Everett Hale j told how u curious error crept Into the i translation of the Lord's Prayer Into [ the Delaware Indian tongue. The Eng [ llsh translator had as an assistant an j Indian who knew English. "What i» '■ 'hallow' In D#laware?" asked thetrans i lator. The Indian thought he said "bal ! loo" and gave him the equivalent. | Therefore the Delaware version of the Lord's Prayer reads, "Our Father, who j art iu heaven, hallooed be thy name." As Corrected. "Tommy." said the teacher to a bright grammar class pupil, "correct the sentence "1 kissed Jennie two I times.'" "'1 kissed Jennie three times,'" re j piled Tommy proudly.—Chicago News. His Ad. Answered. A man stopped at a newspaper office l on his way to the theater and placed an advertisement for a boy. Half an hour later one fell from the gallery i into his lap. Simple. "How do you keep your ra;:or sharp'.'" I "Easy enough. I hide It where nij wife can't find it."—Cleveland I'laiu Dealer.