I '.JcAL \iTABLES. PUSN'A. K. R. \ST. WEST. J. 02 A. M. 9.00 A. M. 10.26 " 18.10 P. M. 884 P. M 4.89 " 5.56 " 3.17 " SUNDAYS. 10.86 A. M. 8.10 T. M. D. L. & W. R. R. CAST. WEST. 7.05 A. M. 9.09 A. M. •0.19 " 13.51 P.M. 8 16 P.M. 4.88 " 5.47 " 9.16 " SUNDAYS. 7.05 A.M. 18.51 P. M 5.47 P M. 9.16 " PHILA. <S READING R. R. VORTH. SOUTH. 758 A.M. 11.23 A.M. b.66 P. M. 6.85 P. M. BLOOM STREET. 7.58 A. M. 11.21 A. M. p. 58 P. M. 6.38 P. M. JURORS FOR OCTOBER TERM The following is a list ot' the Grand and Traverse jurors for the October term of court. All have been notified by the sheriff. GRAND JURORS Danville —Daniel G. Voris, \V. G. Brown, .T. J. Kline, George Stickle, John H. Hunt, Clarence Price, Joseph Weidman, Jacob Strauser, Thomas Bartholomew. West Hemlock township—Chester Balliett, John C. Hendershot. Liberty township—Alexander Erb, Robert Auten, Joseph \V. Perry. Valley township—A. D. Stetler, S. W. Pursel, David L. Wintersteen. Mahoning township—Landis Gass. Limestone township—William .Tar rett, Joseph Muffley. Cooper township—Harvey Reiser, Alonzo Mauser. Anthony township—George F. John son, William Marr. TRAVERSE JURORS Danville, First Ward—Walter L. Gaskins, W. E. Gosh, John R. Curry, .T. O. Reed; Second Ward—Harry E. Camp, U. G. Guliek, Harry Swank, John Cooper; Third Ward—Frank M. Aten, Jacob Eyerly, Samuel Bloch, William Russell; Fourth Ward—John Roundsley, Theodore Baker, Thomp son Jenkins, Clarence Blohn. Anthony township Alfred D. Smith, Boyd E. Stead, Charles Kream er. Cooper township—John F. Krnm, James Pursel. Derry township—William Springer. Limestone township—J. A. Cromis, Jacob Rhodes. Liberty township Charles Stahl, Willard Pennebaker. Mahoning township—Thomas Good. E. O. Welliver,William Kocher, James O. Warner, John C. Foust. Valley township—Norman Kitchen, Frank A. Appleman, Levi V. Beyer, George W. Kapp, Walter Vincent. THE ONLY WAY Many Danville Citizens Have Discovered It. Just what to do when tho kidneys are affected, is a question that con cerns both young and old. Weak kid neys neglected in childhood lead to life-long suffering. People of advan ced years, with loss vitality, suffer doubly. In youth or age. languor, backache, urinary irregularity, dizzi ness and nervousness make life a burd en. There is one remedy that acts'direct ly on the kidneys and cures these troubles. Doan's Kidney Pills owe their world-wide fame to the fact that they cure siek kidneys aud cure them permanently. Follow the example of this Danville citizen and you will be convinced that this is so. Mrs. Leo Metzger, i'l-l W. Mahoning Street. Danville. Pa., says: ' I used Doau's Kidney Pills about three years ago when suffering from backache aud other symptoms of kidney trouble. A few doses of this remedy relieved me aud I was thus induced to continue its use until cured. Doau's Kidney Pills have my hearty endorsement. ' For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster.Milburu Co.. Buffalo. New York sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doau's—anil take no other. Party at Turbotville. A pleasant party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Balliet, at Turbotville, on Saturday. The day was delightfully spent, and a tine din ner served. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Balliet, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Shultz.Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Betz, Mi. and Mrs. Lloyd Bomboy, Mr. anil Mrs. Hiram Sliultz and children Mabel, Majorie and Vera, Mr. and Mrs. Chester T. Balliet and daughter Edna, Mrs. David I. Davis, Mrs. Wil liam Lobacli and son Warren, Mr. 1.. C. Sliultz, Mrs. T. M. Wintersteen, Mrs. J. N. Aude.Mrs. Wesley Dildine, Mrs. D. W. Ande, William Davis and Walter Davis oi Danville It. F. D., Mis. John McNiucb.Mrs. Maggie Dil dine, Nancy Dildine, Mr. aud Mrs. Richard Greenley aud children Grant, Grace, Burel aud Truman, Gaylord Runyan of Jerseytowu ; Tracy Petti johu, of Millville; Mr. and Mrs. Jack sou Runyan and son Voris, of Watson, town,and Kincaid Runyan,of Illinois. Safe Medicine For Children Foley's Honey and Tar is a safe and effective remedy for children because it does not contain opiates or harmful drugs. Get only the genuine Foley's Honey and Tar in the yellow package. For sale bv Paules & Co Pharmacy. Won Ribbons. Edward Oyster of Washingtonville who had ten entries of silver pencil Wyandottes at the Allentown fair wou ribbons on them all. There were forty two birds in tho class. WIDELY KNOWN COUPLE WEDDED Yesterday morning the words were pronounced that united in the bonds of matrimony two of Danville's best known young people, Mr. Paul Antrim Vannan and Miss Helen Gertrude Ir land. The ceremony was performed at the home of the bride's sister, Mrs. \V. W. Welliver, East Mahoning street, at 8 j o'clock,by Rev. James Wollaston Kirk, I pastor of the Mahoning Presbyterian j church. Only a few of the immediate relatives of the bride and groom were present and the ceremony was marked by extreme simplicity. Mr. and Mrs. Vannan left on the j 10:11* Lackawanna train for a trip to I New York City, Ithaca and a tour of j the Great Lakes, and will be at home, Jackson Terrace, Elyria, Ohio, after October 25th. The bride is the daughter of James ! M. Irland and one of Danville's most | charming young ladies. Mi. Vannan is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Van- I nan, this city, and holds an electrical j engineering position with the Nation al Tube company at Elyria, Ohio. ! Their many friends here join rn wish- [ ing them much happiness. Your kidney troublo may be of long ' standing, it may be either acute or chronic, but whatever it is Foley's Kidney Remedy will aid you to get rid oi it quickly and restore your hatural health ami vigor. "Ono bot tle of Foley's Kidney Remedy made me well" said ,T. Sibbull, of Grand View, Wis. Commence taking it now. For sale by Paules & Co. Phar macy. PRIESTLY MEMORIAL Arrangements are now being made for the meeting of the Joseph Priestley Conference in Northumberland the latter part of Octobor, at which time j the Unitarian church, recently remod eled, is to be dedicated as a memorial chapel to Dr. Joseph Priestley. This promises to be a very interesting event from the fact, that some notable div ines of the Unitarian church will particiate in the affair, among them being Dr. Samuel Elliot, of Boston, president of the American Unitarian Association and son of Dr. Charles El liot, ex-president of Harvard Univer sity. Hi will preach the sermon at the dedication, which will take place on Monday evening, October 2-lth. On Tuesday morning, October 25th, there will be an open meeting of the confer ence with reports and papers. The Joseph Priestley Conference comprises all Unitarian churches in Eastern Pennsylvania and in the adjoining ter ritory as far south as Washington, D. C. There are quite a number of min isters in the conferences. DIVIDED THE MESSAGE. I The Way a Financier's Clerk Extem porized a Cipher. ! When Wall street first caught the j fever for 'industrial combinations" | and began the reorganization of every j thing in one of the votaries of I high finance found himself iu Chicago j in extreme need of communicating i with his New York office. | He almost completed an arrange | meut for the consolidation of several j western enteri I ises, but in order to I 'get the final authority he needed from | New York lie must explain all he had j | done by wire to his partners. There was no time to write, lie had jno eiphi r codu. For a long time be ! tried to think out <omc way to send ; the information so that it would be plain to his partners and meaningless ito any one else. Ills secret was a val uable one and once sent over the wire j m! .-lit be sold out to his rivals In Wall I si feet for a large sum. I At last he decided to take the chances in plain English. Accordingly he wrote the message and gave It to his assistant to send. Half an hour later, when the assistant came back, he asked him If he had sent It. "Not just that way," said the clerk. "1 rewrote it—the first word on a Postal blank, the second on a Western Union, and so on.l sent half by each company, and neither half meant any j thing. Then I sent a second message j by one line, saying, 'Read both mes j sages together, alternating words.'" ' | The scheme was too simple for the j high financier to have evolved, but it j worked perfectly. EARTH WEIGHED ON SCALES. New Yorker Says Figures Are Seven Trillion Tons. Reinbard A. Wetzel, a young in structor in the College of the City of New York, has weighed the earth, gram by gram, ton by ton, on scales so small that If the breeze caused by a drifting feather had stirred them his calculations would have been upset and useless. The weight of this little j planet on which we live Is only 0,030,- 000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 grants, or 7,000,000,000,000 tons. Five years ago Wetzel hied himself forth to seek the weight of a sunbeam and while experimenting upon this I problem found such delight In the J thought of centering his energies on ' the other feat that he decided tempo- ! rarily to devote himself solely to fig- < urlng exactly how great is this planet, i He lins discovered It and asserts his 1 calculations are more accurate than any formerly made. Only three such ' calculations have been sent forth be fore to startle humanity. Missed Fire. Putton-Ayres—l am caviare to the general, you know. Miss Innocent Oh, are you really? My brother Is In the military too.—Boston Transcript. Grief is crowned with consolatlou.- Sbakespeare. SAFE BLOWERS AT NUMEDIA STORE To add to the long list of safe-blow ing jobs that have been done in this and Columbia counties during the laßt two mouths, the same gang entered the general store of S. R. Dyer, at Numidia.Friday night,and used nitro glycerin on his safe. The doors were shattered, but they were scared away ; before they could accomplish their I purpose. Two hundred and seventy ! five dollars in bills, lay inside the safe and this, because of their being scar ed away, was not taken. A pair of black congress shoes, size 8 1-2 are the | only things missing, j The men effected an entrance by , forcing the outside cellar door at the ! front of the building. Then they went I through the cellar and up the cellar | steps, forcing the lock on the door at | the top. | The big safe had the knob on tho 1 door wrenched off, and brown rosin soap was worked around the edge of I it, as it was around the three sides of {the door, where it sets in the safe and nitro putin with a spoon. At 3 o'clock ! Mr. Dyer heard a loud report, like j [ that of a gun, as did a number of oth- j jer neighbors. They got up, and made | jan examination. The open cellar door j ' told tho mute story of the early morn- I ing visit, and an examination of the inside explained the rest. The outer door of the safe was blown from its hinges, and the inside door was forced in against the books and j drawers on the interior. It was jam-: ; med in tight, and Mr. Dyer had some I difficulty in removing it, a bar having i j to be used. The methods used indicate that the 1 job was done by the same gang that dynamited the safes in the Pennsyl vania station, at Catawissa, the safes I in the D. L. & W. station in Danville and Bloonisburg the Reading Iron j Co., safe here, the Millville post office safe, and a safe at Watsontown. The work on the safes is identical in each instance. Determined detective work in the past has failed to gain any clues as to who committed tho crimes. Resides the shoes and the damage to the safe, Mr. Dyer escaped any loss. The Gratitude of Elderly People Goes out to whatever helps give them ease, comfort and strength. Foley Kidney Pills cute kidney and bladder troubles promptly, and give comfort and relief to elderly people. ! For sale by P»"l>>< A: Co. Pharmacy, j TIME TO PLANT TREES The following information given by Prof"ssor 11. A. Surface, State zoolog ist, Harrisburg, to a supreme court justice, will be of inteiest to all those ■ who intend to plant fruit trees: "lean say that I am certain from experience.observation and study,tl.. it , it is best to plant some of the pome j fruit or apple, pear aud quince in the' fall of the year. This,of course,should be done late iu the fall, and care should ' be taken to use trees that were matur ed iu the nursery rather than tho:>« j from which the leaves had been strip- j ped while yet green and thrifty, i j would prefer trees from which the! leaves have dropped naturally. "Some stone fruits are best planted j iu the eraly spring, if the soil is iu a t i proper condition and the planting is j done well. By this I mean, that one | should avoid planting when the soil is so wet that it will cake or pack around \ the roots of trees, which is liable to, be the result of very early spring, planting. I "If trees are kept dormant when iu j storage, they can be planted very late in the spring, but the chief objection | to this is, their lack of growth during tho shortened summer In the fall one j has more time, the soil is in better | condition, and planting cau generally ! ;be done with more care than iu the . springtime. The date of spring plant-! ing does not depend so much upon the j condition of the other trees in the vic inity, or plants of the spring, as upon j the condition of tho trees planted as < to dormancy. It should be a truly dormant tree, or, in other words, one ' in which growth has not started." The Rhtdum Sidus. An amusing story told by nnod de scribes how a country uurseryman made a large sum out of sales of a simple little flower which he sold un der the na:u<- of the Rhoduni sidus. This charming name proved quite an attraction to the ladies, and the flower ! became the rage of the season. It was one of those freaks of for , which there is no accounting. At | length a botanist who found that the , plant was not an uncommon weed re- j quested to know where the nursery- | man got the name from. He elicited j the following reply: "I found this flow er in the road beside us. so christened | I It the Rhodutn sidus." His Night Work. Cynical Friend—lf the baby is the j boss of the establishment and hlfl j mother is the superintendent, pray I what positiou do you occupy? Young Father (wearily)—Ob, I'm the floor-! walker.—Baltimore American. Jewelry Galore. Mrs. Hoyle—Covered with jewels, | isn't she? Mrs. Doyle—Yes; It is hard to tell at first glance whether she be longs to the mineral or animal klne | tlom.—Life. Want of care does more damage than want of knowledge.—Franklin. Formosa Bank Increases Capital. The Rank of Taiwan. Formosa, hits Increased Its capita) from $2,500,000 to $5,000,000 gold. BENEFIi HUME' i CLOSES SEASON i The base hall seasou "for 1910 came to a close iii Danville Saturday, wlieu the local Susquehanna league team met the Bet wick league aggregation, augmented by several players from other teauiH, iu a benefit game given for the Danville players. Those who went to see a good game of base ball were disappointed but those who were willing to laugh and have a good time, got their money's worth, and from the almost continu ous applause and laughter, there is reason to believe that the latter were largely iu the majority. Berwick hail no trouble in making j seven runs, hits and Danville errors contributing. The locals could not i locate Harned and had to be satisfied with three,one ol which was Umlaut 's home ruu, which cleared the fence just a few feet on the good side of the j two base hit line. | Eddie foster also contributed a hom er, a terrflic drive that hurdled the' I center field fence back id' the flag pole. Mclunes started pitching fur Dan ville,but in the fifth inning was struck i 011 the rigid wrist by a pitched hall He retired and Breunau took up the struggle. Sunny James had the sup remo satisfaction during his tenure of ollice of striking out the heavy hitting Foster. 111 addition Brennan also swelled Dmvill s hit column by lam • ming twice for two bases. ' In the ninth Danville made a hard try to overcome Berwick's lead of 1 four IUUS. Burns placed a terrific hit i jby first base. Ainsworth Hied out to i Sweeney. At this poiut Danville's well known pinch hitter Sam C. Kebmau, was sent iu to bat for Mclunes. Kebmau hit hard toward third base, but Flaherty, by a wonderful stop, robbed him of a hit, tossed to Sweeney at second, re tiring Burns and the double play was completed by retiring liebmau at first. The score:— DANVILLE. AB. K. H. O. A. L.1 Umlaut', ss ...41 1 ;t 1 0 Brenuan. 2b. p... 1 2 3 0 <> 0 Nipple, lb -Id 1 13 0 0 Wagner, ct.... 1 o 11 0 0 Met'arty, 0 4 0 1 N 2 0 Veith, 8b I 0 0 I 2 31 Burns, If. . HOI 0 0 1 Ainsworth, rf. -1 0 1 t> 0 0 Mclnues.p, 2b .2 0 1 2 ;i 0 | Kebuiau, * .1 0 0 0 0 0 ! Totals . 34 3 It 27 14 3 ; BERWICK, flj | AB. R. H. 11. A. E. I Patterson, lb r> 0 1 (i 0 0 Sweeney, 2b.... f> 0 0 4 4 0 I Smith, If , r > I 1 3 0 0 1 Foster, lb 4 11 2 4 0 Flaherty. 3b 4 0 0 1 I ol H. Smith 11 2 8 0 0 | Key, rf 2 3 2 1 0 0 j I.aubaeh, c 4 1 0 ? 0 0. Harned, p 4 0 2 0 1 0 ; ___ Totals 37 7 9 27 10 0! ! *Batted for Mclunes in ninth. I Berwick 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 2 o—7 : 1 Danville 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 o—3 | Earned runs—Danville 3, Berwick I I. Left on base—Danville H.Berwick! ' ti. Stolen bases— Nipple, Sweeney 2. | Two base hits—Breunau 2. McCarfy, ; 11. Smith, B. Smith. Three base hits 1 J —Keys. Home runs—Umlaut. Foster. * Double play—Flaherty to Foster to ' , Patterson Hit by pitcher—Mclnnes. Wild pitch Breunau. Time—l:3o. | Umpire—Rosenthal and Hoffman. Ice Cream Party. j An ice cream party was held at the ; 1 home of Mr. and Mrs. August Shultz, West Hemlock township, Saturday levelling A most delightful evening j was spent with mu.-ic and games. Re- j j freshmpnts were served. Those pres -1 ent were : Mr. and Mrs. Obed Wagner, | ' Mr. aud Mrs. Collins Girton, Mr. and i Mrs. Chas. Thomas, Mr. aud Mrs. ' J Sherman Sees, Mr. and Mrs. August! jShultz.Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Sees, Mr. ' j and Mrs. Clarence Shultz, Mr. aud j 1 Mrs. Harbor Shultz, Mr. and Mrs. Ben- j 1 jamiu Spotts, Air. aud Mrs. Samuel 1 i Lobach, Mr. aud Mrs. Boyd Billhime, | : Mr. and Mrs. James Boone, Mrs. ' Gertrude Girton, Mrs. Florence Wil- 1 liams and August Sawiuski; Misses j j Susie Herr, Mary Ford, Joy Billhime, ! Mary Shultz, Belle Hack, Helen Sees, | | Agnes Billhime, Ruby Shultz, Erina ! Sees, Helen Girton, Hazel Girton; Messrs. Wilhelui Shultz, Wilbur Bill- | hime, Archie Girton, David Lowrie, 1 Allen Shultz, Roy Rettiely, Herman ! Shultz, Miles Wagner, Otto Girton, j Myron Sees, Joseph Sees, Robert Gir ton, Roy Hack, Jay Thomas, Raymond 1 Thomas, Kirnber Billhime aud Am brose Hack. A Proud Moment. | "The proudest day of her life, this j | Is," said the woman who watched the third tloor bride go out dressed In her prettiest frock. I "How do you make that out?" said i another woninn enviously. "I thought last Thursday was her proudest day. She got married then." "Ah, yes, but today she goes calling for the first time and leaves one of her husband's cards with her own. Any married woman who can remember back that far will tell you that the first time she distributed the calling cards of some man who belonged to her was the day she truly felt lier lm- I portnnce."—New York Sun. When the Barber Was a Wit. In original literature the barber Is a great figure, and Arabian tales are full of him. In Italy and Spain he was ofteu the brightest man In town, and his shop was headquarters for wit and intrigue. Jasamin became fa mous as a poet In southern France and I recited his verses with razor, scissors, brush and comical gesture as he dress ed the hair of fine ladles and gentle men In his shop. He had a great run, made money, hived fame, and Smiles made a book about him. CORN Wtof IS-A BIG ONE Henry Clews' letter Saturday says: It is fundamental that the prosperity of our great country is predicated up on the new wealth produced each year by our farms. Notwithstanding the unfavorable weather conditions early 111 the summer, the culmination of the growing season has been so highly favorable, that taking our great crops collectively, the harvests of 1910 will come very close to establishing a new highwater mark,if they do not in fact do so. Every day that frost is delayed brings the king of our crops—corn— I nearer the three billion bushel mark; and the danger point so far as frost is I concerned has already been passed in by far the major part of the tremend ous area of our great corn belt. In j other words, whatever damage may now been countered will undoubtedly be local and comparatively slight; it and is not at this time, counting our chickens before they are hatched, to view briefly the benefits that may be expected of a corn harvest that for tie first time in the history id our j country exceeds the three billion ! bushel mark. Com today is selling in Chicago at more than fifty cents per bushel, on which basis the value of the cron iu dollars ami cents is very '■lose to $1 ..*>00,000,000 —an almost un thinkable sum, exceeding the value of our wheat and cotton crops combined. This will give the West, particularly, a renewal of purchasing power, affect ing not only its ability to take freely the products of our factories, but will iat the same time mean a large traffic ! for the railroads ami extend to rami ! locations far too numerous to attempt to mention in detail. Ooru today en ters so largely into food for man and beast that the importance of a trem endous production can scarcely be ov er estimated. Its uses for human con sumption are so rapidly multiplying that the transportation ol' prepared food products is each year gaining ' rapidly in importance as an item of railroad transportation. Corn, too, en ters into the transportation problem iu many indirect ways. As the real basis of cattle and provisions it be comes a particularly large item of ; transportation, to say nothing ol' coin itself, which is one of the most bulky of railroad commodities. A satisfac tory corn harvest at profitable prices, backed adequately by other favorable argicultural developments,provides an • antidote that must prove highly effec tive iu counteracting developments of a less favorable character. Mrs. Jacob Wilmert, Lincoln, 111., found her way back to perfect health. She writes: "I suffered with kidney trouble aud backache aud my appe tite was very poor at times." A few weeks ago I got Foley's Kidney Fills i and gave them a fair trial. They gave Ime great relief so continued and now ilam in perfect health." For sale by , Failles & Co. Pharmacy. Party in Rush Township. A party of young people, pleasantly ! surprised Raymond Anderson at bis ■ home in Rush township on Friday I evening. The evening was delightful !lv spent with games aud music after which refreshments were served. | Those present were Misses Mary Pegg, ' Nora Unger, Sarah Cleaver, Nellie i Smith, Ethel Shannon, Josephine Hum : iuer, Katherine Yeager, Alice Mc- Clonghan, Elsie Riffle, t'na Wilson, i Nellie Currv, Maryar 1 I'l.ny, Kath j erine Deen, Lmiua Nevius, Thurza Baynliam. Emily Prout, Messrs. Jim I Shult/., Frank Gearhart, John Boet j tinger, Howard Morrison, Guy A. I Hoke, Kim Gillinger, James Evans, 1 Bill Brietenbach and Raymond And j ersou. Fowler Reunion. ; The reuuion of the Fowler family j was held at the home of Chas. E. I Mills, Riverside, Saturday. The at- I tendance was large aud the occasion a ; most enjoyable one. Those present iwero: Mrs. Nettie Fowler, Mr. aud | Mrs. Howard Fowler, ot' Hazleton: j Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Fowler and ! sous, Robert anil Howard, of Shenaii- Idoah; Mr. and Mrs. Boyd '■>. Fowler and daughter Sarah, of Harrisburg; j Mr. aud Mrs. Abbie Snyder, David j Reed aud daughters Edith ami Tenia, of Danville; Miss Elizabeth Reed, I Miss Margaret Fowler, of Philadel jphia;Mrs. M. A. Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer E. Fowler and family, Mr. aud Mrs. Charles E. Miils and family of Riverside. Henry Clayberger Weds. Henry Clayberger, of Shamokiu, formerly a member of the Danville base ball team, was wedded 011 Satur- ! day to Miss Mabel Heist, of Blooms burg. JTlio groom is principal of the ! Coal towuship high school, near Sha- ' mokin. The bride aud groom are both [ graduates of the Bloomsburg Normal school, class of 1599. Will Attend Bankers' Convention. Mr. aud Mrs. W. L. McClure left yesterday for Los Angeles, California, where Mr. McClure will attend the j meetings of the American Banker's j Association which will be held iu that oity from October 2nd to 7th. After j the convention Mr. and Mrs McClure will tour the western states and south- ! eru Canada, returning home the latter j part of October. Spanish War Veterans at Milton. The annual reuuion of the members I of the Twelfth regiment, Spanish-Am erican War Veterans, will be held iu ! Milton this year on October 29th. the anniversary of the date of the muster j out of the regiment. I JLUTOI UI %N IN THIS ACTION \ A : I The Mahoning Presbyterian church, ' ! the oldest organized body of Christian ■ i believers in this section, will celebrate " j its 125 th auuuiversary October 2, 15 > ami 4. • j The history of the Mahoning Pres ; I byterian church is a most interesting ' j oue. It was founded in 1785 and from ii a mere handful the membership has 1 j increased until it has become one of r j the largest and most influential oon- S | gregations in this section. Up to the I year 171)0 the pulpit was filled with ■ | supplies. The first regular pastor was ; the Rev. John Boyd Patterson. His ! i | pastorate was a long one, lasting until j ' 1832. Following him in succession are j • Kev. Robert Dunlap, Rev. David M. i Hallidav. D. D., Rev. John W. Yeo mans, D. I)., Rev. William E. Ijams, | Rev. Alexander B. Jack, Rev. Thomas j ; R. Beeber, D. 1)., Rev. Robert Laird ! : Stewait, I). 1).. Rev. William Irwin , | Steans, 1) 1)., Rev. James E. Hutch- j ' insou, Rev. James Wollaston Kirk. r | A very elaborate program has been j 1 prepared for the anniversary, contain- j 1 I ing sermons and greetings by former ! ' pastors and other distinguished divines ! as well as an address by James Scar r lot, Esq. Among the prominent citizens of Danville who have been identified with | tiie Mahoning Presbyterian church as | elders are the following: William | • i Montgomery, Sr., Jacob Gearhart, ' John Montgomery, William Moutgom-! ery, Jr., Paul Adams, Hugh Caldwell, ' ' Daniel Montgomery, James Donaldson, 1 ; Richard Matchin, Samuel Yorks, Sr., Michael C. Urier, Alexander Mont r gomery, John Bowyer, Paul Leidy, ; Benjamin W. Piatt, Jacob W. Shultz, j ' Sr.. Patterson Johnson, Reuben H. j Voris, 11. H. Fuinian, Samuel Bailey, ' S. S. Sclmltz, M. I). Archibald G. 1 Voris, John Emmitt. | ' EIA'S'S CRISAM BALM has been! '. tried and not found wanting in thou sands of homes all over the country. It has won a place in the family modi- ! I 1 cine closet among the reliable house-! liold remedies, where it is kept at hand for use in treating eold in the head jus- 1 as soon as some member of the , household begins the preliminary sneezing or snuffing. It gives immedi ate relief and a day or two's tteatment j will put a stop to a cold which might, I , if not checked, become chronic and , run into a bad case of catarrh. YOUNG LIFE CLOSED The funeral of Miss Yinnie Irene i Swank, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 1 j Theodore Swank, Little Roaring Creek, j | and a nurse at the Danville State lios ; pital for the insane, took place Sun- j | day afternoon at 1 o'clock froml | Vought's Lutheran church, on the soutli side. Rev. Shannon, pastor of Vought's church, of which the deceas ed was a faithful member, conducted the services. The following female nurses from the hospital acted as pall j bearers: Misses Frances Eves, Mary j Beyer, Hattie Gelluett, Mrs. William Kester, Mrs. Annie Qaerrv and Mrs. Nell St oil lev and they were accompani ed by Miss Nettie McCormick, super I inteudent of nurses. There were a | number of beautiful floral offerings j from friends at the hospital, from j Vought's church, the Sunday school ' | and from the Christian Endeavor, in |, all of which she was a member. ! The death of Miss Swank was a very j sad one. She was aged 32 years, 2i , i months and 7 days. She had chosen to ( < | follow the profession of nursing and j 1 ! only last January had entered the! state!hospital training school. About five weeks ago she was stricken with i I typhoid fever, and although eveiv- j thing was done for her. she succumb ed to the disease on last Tuesdav. She , ' i is suivived, beside her pareuts.by two . j ' brothers and one sister. A Reliable Medicine--Not a Narcotic j Mrs. F. Marti, St. .loe, Mich., says!' ! Foley's Honey and Tar saved her lit- t ( fh boy's life. She writes;" Our lit- ( | tl<' boy contiaoted a severe bronchial I trouble and as the doctor's medicine: 1 | did not cure him, I gave hiui Foley's ' Honey and Tar in which I have great, t 1 faith. It cure.l the cough as well as | j the choking and gating spells, ami . 1 lie got well in a sluirt time. Foley's 1 | Honey and Tar has many times saved < !us much trouble and we are never t j without it in the house." For sale by Pa ules it Co. Pharuiacv. ' Entertained at Dinner. | The Ladies Aid of Trinity Lutheran church was entertained at a six o'clock | dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. i Daniel Shultz, East Market street, on Saturday evening. Those present were 1 , Mesdames J. H. Boyer, W. Wertman, i Reuben Boyer, J. E. Yingling, Peter j Ef-rger, Harry Woodside, F. Spitler, ! 1 George Leighow, Joseph Snyder, J. i C. Mincemoyer, M. Freeze, J. B. 1 j Laidaober, C. Roney, James Hend ricks, Emery Shultz.E. Thomas,Clias. ( jA. liartt; Messrs. George Leighow, j ; Reuben Boyer and Rev. J. L. Youce. IJ Optimism is sometimes due to lack > 1 of experience. s Not Coughing Today? Yet you may cough tomorrow! Better be prepared for it when it comes. Ask your doctor about keeping Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the house. Then when the hard cold or cough first appears you have a doctor's medicine at hand. Your doctor's approval of its use will certainly set all doubt at rest. Do as he says. He knows.® No alcohol in this COUgh medicine. J. C. A.yer Co., Lowell, Mass. 8 Robust health is a great safeguard against attacks of throat and lung troubles, but constipation will destroy the best of h 'tj- Ask your doctor about Ayer's Pilis. i nw its Well a* Men *. <ero a !/>' Kidney and Bladder Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, discourages andlcsseusambition; beauty, „— ■ vigor ami cheerful l'!>. j ucss SOO!1 disappear w^en the kidneys are -QMINaA !M\~~ out °f order or dis • ; _ Kidney trouble has ]J become so prevalent mon for a child to lie born afflicted with —-V s " weak kidneys. If the child urinatestoooften, if the urine scalds the flesh, or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wet ting, depend upon it, the cause of the diffi culty is kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a babit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made miser able with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, in fifty- •» Vifa cent and one-dollar size bottles. You may by mail free, also a pamphlet telling all about Swamp-Root, ~n„ m , including many of the thousands of testi monial letters received from sufferers who found Swamp-Root to be just the remedy needed. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., lie sure and mention this paper. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. NEW DISEASE OF CHESTNUT TREES Within the past few yearsau eutire- J ly new disease of the common chest' j nut tree has appeared. In some seo ' tious great tracts of chestnut trees i have been affected and many trees have already died. A strong effort should be made to arrest the progress of the disease as soon as it appears. This is not specially difficult; and now, before the leaves fall,is the time |to do it. When a tree is attacked and becomes infected the fungus rapidly spreads in the bark and growing wood of twigs and branches. It progresses so fast that these parts in larger or 1 smaller patches are soon disorganized killed and somewhat shrunken. The leaves which depend upon these parts for their water and food supply with er and shrivel, but do not fall. These twig or branches with their attached dead leaves are very plainly seen in ! contrast with the natural ones and mark the presence of this particular disease. Of course, branches may die from other causes, particularly attacks of boring insects, and mechanical breakage, but the difference is not difficult to detect. If during the next six weeks a carefnl examination is made for this disease,particularly west of the Susquehanna, and in sections not yet known to be infected, it is probable that it can be ariested or even entirely prevented. Affected limbs should he cut off well below the dead wood and burned. Any tiees, the trunks of which are diseased, should lie cut down and the bark and branch es burned. The wood could be used for any purpose desired; it will not spread the disease. How's This ? Wi offer .*IOO reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh fare. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, i). We, rhe undersigned, having known F. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and finan cially able to carry out any obliga tions made bv the iirrn. WALDING, KINNAN <v MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure i- taken inter nally, actli •.il'i'i ily -. on the blood and nuicou- *u:tai - < 'I ~ systems. Testimonials ->tit fre* Price 75c. pen- bottle. Sold ny aii druggists. Take Haifa Family PiiU lor consti pation. A Southern Colonel. A fine old southern Coloi.el and his faithful ordrelv win) ar ■ ,;i:l fighting the battles of the late w of the Re bellion and who live i i.uiuly by mil itary discipline, funiisn some delight ful comedy in the melodrama. "Billy, the Kid" which comes to the opera house on Saturday. The play itself is reported to be an exceptionally strong one, replete in highly dramatic situa tions, yet tolling a straightforward story most interestingly. When Merit Win* When the niedk ne vcu take cures your disease, tones up your system and makes you feel better, stronger and more vigorous than before. That is what Foley Kidney Pills do for yon. iu all cases of backache, head ache, nervouness, loss of appetite, sleeplessness and general weakness that is caused by any disorder of the kidneys or bladder. .For sale by Paules & Co. Pharmacy. Removing. Daniel Shultz, who has resided in Danville for some thirty years past, is preparing to remove to Philadelphia. He has advertised his goods for sale. For many years Mr Shultz was en gaged in the transfer business.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers