| Sa, a cone Kitty looked bewildered... . “But I—I—I— couldn’t,” .she cried. «It wouldn't have been: fdir—oh, I couldn’t. T might have told: you later on perhaps, but, oh, you know I THE 3s ICONOCLAST. : Ah, one by one, the idols that 1 worshipped in my youth Are falling, crushed and broken, by icono<iastic truth The images I thought were gold are scattered in the dust, Or if they haven't tumbled yet they very shortly must. PENNSYLVANIA Covington, T've learned that Shakespeare did not write Of other authors, too, I'm sure that we Each book, we find, is stolen, when we From some one else who stole it from That tale about bold Willlam Tell, who bravely faced the foe, They say is all an idle varn—it never happened sO. And Pocahontas did not save the lite of Captain Smith, That's such a pretty story, too, I'm sorry it's The fable of the hatchet and the cherry-tree is one Of many pleasant fictions we have tied to Washington, Who never crossed the Delaware nor camped at Valiey Forge; He did not fight the British and there was no bad King George. And Yankee Doodle, so they say, did n It’s all a piece of buncombe and we've There never was a And no boy ever tried to stand upon a I'll show that Mary never had a lamb And demonstrate that poor Old Grimes, you've heard of, isn’t dead; ‘And as an idol-smasher 1 shall take ex In proving everything is false, including this 1 write. Jurid flame that lit a battle wreck, burning deck. the works that bear his name; can prove the same. carefully explore, somebody else betore. a mytn. ot ride into town; got to put it down. as some have said, trenre deitghi — Nixon ®vaterman, in Puck. ALTO When Miss Martin- gave Jack ‘Elton her photograph, he little thought that jt was one of those trifies which some- times’ go to make the tragedies of life. i He put it in his pocket—the thin, tired face of a middle-aged woman— close to another, which rested against his heart. That other was a bonny face—the face of the girl he loved, an he was quite unconscious, as he thrust it away, that the photograph of the older woman had taken the place of the younger. “Well, you can tell her, Jack,” said Miss Martin, “that I think you're a lucky man. I always liked Kitty Tre- vor. I knew her mother years ago, and somehow, when I saw you together, I hoped it would come to this. I'm glad of it, Jack.” Jack beamed. He and Miss Martin were good friends. She was not like the usual run of old maids. She had the good sense of a man, he often thought, and occasionally he found himself addressing her as “my dear fellow.” «I'm glad you like her,” he said: «] should have been sorry if you hadn’t, and if you and she are good friends, it will be jelly. I'll give her your photograph to-morrow.” He turned away whistling like a schoolboy, for the world was a pecu- liarly happy place to him just then. He was young, and not badly off, with good prospects—even without Miss Martin, who said she meant to leave him her money-—and with the prettiest girl in the world for his promised wife. What more could a man want? But fate has a nasty way of playing a man a trick sometimes, and an hour or two later, as Jack turned into Fifth avenue, fate played him one. He came face to face with a man who stood still when he saw him, and caught him by the arm. “Jack Elton, as I live!” he cried. Jack turned, and then held out his hand. “Captain Riley!” he cried. “Why 1 haven’t seen you for years—it must be five or six.” The captain nodded. He was a mid- dle-aged man, tall and thin, and get- ting gray. Jack thought as he looked at him that knocking about the world didn’t seem to agree with ‘him, and then he remembered that he had dis- appeared from the club very sudden- ly five or six years ago, and wonder- ed if there were anything in the rumor that there had been something wrong with him. Captain Riley, however, did not look as though he had anything to hide, and when he suggested that Jack should turn in with him to the club | and have a chat, Jack went. “It’s nearly six years,” said the cap- tain, “since I went away, and I sup- pose the world has changed a bit you?” Jack’s hand travelled quickly to his breast pocket. “Everything,” he said. that could.” He drew out a photograph—the one nearest his heart, and held it for an were a treasure. 13 said, hesitatingly, “to—to—her! He lifted up his hand abruptly with ever more startled than he was. As it was he fell back sharply, with a queer gasp for breath. What he saw was a woman's thin face, with wavy dark hair parted in bitter With eyes faded, perhaps with too much weep dng. It was the photograph of Miss | the middle, with lips grown through disappointment. Martin! His bronzed face grew gray. «To marry—her!” he cried huskily. | «Good Heavens, man, you can't mean | it!” Jack drew back the photograph | i'v and thrust it into his pecke hastily, mean it,” he said stifly, why not?” The captain stared at him. there was coming back a memory past years—a memory of that sam thin it had been happie and memery i I years s ST A TRAGEDY By Annie O. Tibbits. than she treated me,” he said, bitter: ly, and Jack started, and rose to his feet. 4 « lips set. “and | | i To him/| “Well, I hope she'll treat you better | “Treated you?” he cried, hoarsely. “What do you mean?” The captain laughed, and then his | “I mean,” be said steadily, “that I meant to marry her once, and I thought she meant to marry me, but it appeared she didn’t. She altered her mind—she jilted me, as 1 afterward heard she had jilted a dozen men be- fore me. But you may have better luck. You're better locking than I was, and—and—" Jack looked at him with his face growing red and hard. “It is a lie!” he burst out at last. “It must be a lie! It's impossible! Engaged to you—" He broke off with a bitter laugh, and then stared at the captain’s bronzed face, realizing sud- denly that he was not such an old man after all—forty perhaps, that was all; and he had heard of girls being en- gaged to men older than themselves. Young girls liked middle-aged men sometimes, and Kitty was twenty-five. How did he know what had happened before he met her last summer? He had but known her twelve months. How did he know really whether she was the flirt Captain Riley called her or not? He hesitated, and the captain rose also to his feet. . “you'd better go and ask her wheth- er it is a lie or not,” he said. “Ask her why I went away six years ago! Ask hér—oh, heaven! Ask her if she didn’t once swear with her arms round my neck that I was the only man she ever really cared for, and ask if a month later she didn’t bid me go where I would! Ask her—ask her! I suppose she’s sworn the same thing to you!” Jack stood still. He had only been engaged a week—only seven short days, and even as he stood there he could feel the touch of her arms again, and see her eyes looking into his—looking so true that a sudden passion seized him at the captain’s words. “It’s a li!” he cried. “But I'll ask her. I'll go now. She’s true as steel— I'd stake my life on her.” The captain laughed again. “«] was ready to do it once,” he cried, “and now I wish I'd never seen her. 1 wish I could forget her. She could lie a man’s soul away I know, and yet, if I saw her again—I couldn’e help it—I should love her still, And couldn't at once.” Jack turned on his heel. . “Well, if you ~an hide a thing like that, you can hide a dozen other worse things,” he said in a harsh, hard voice. “It’s a good thing I found out before it was too late.” Kitty darted after him. “But I don’t understand,” she cried, breathlessly. ; He turned again. He saw her bright, girlish face, her eygs wide and inno- cent as a child’s, and ne rem=mbered the captain’s words. “If sze lied to me now—I couldn’t help it—I should love ber still.” : His face hardened. “I'm deceived in you—that’s all,” he said, unsteadily. “I thought—you were different—an¢ I’ve made a mistake.” He turned and slammed the door be- hind him, and Kitty, dazed and stupid because she did not understand, stare” blankly before her. He surely could not mean to go because she had not told him Miss Martin's love story? He must be mad! His footsteps echoed on the pave- ment outside. He strode away quickly —back to the club, and the fare that had thrown the captain across his path earlier in the day put him'there again. He was in’a corner of the club read- ing a paper. and Jack strode up to him. “I apologize,” he said, abruptly. “I called you a liar this morning. For- give me. You were right, after all.” The captain looked up. His lips were set. “So you asked her?” he said in a low voice. Jack nodded. His band traveled to his breast pocket. He took the photo- graph and threw it down on the table in front of the captain. “’ve done with her,” he cried, sav- agely. “I—I—I've done with her.” He turned away unsteadily, and the captain picked up the photograph. He 1roked at it, then started to his feet. “llere—I say, Elton, what's this?” be cried. Jack looked round. “I don’t want it,” he said. “Tear it up. I don’t want to see her face again.” Captain Riley went hastily toward him. “But this!” he cried. “This girl— what about her?” Jack stared. “I've ended it all,” he said, “or I suppose I have. I never mean to see her again.” The captain shook the piece of card- board in his face. “But this isn’t cried. “Who said it was?” asked Jack. “he captain looked bewildered. No- body had said it was, so far as Te could recollect, and he looked up at Jack rather doubtfully—as if he w=2re w(ndering if he were sober. “But this isn’t the girl you were er- gaged to, is it?” he asked. “Of course!” said Jack. Captain Riley thrust the photograph into his hands. “Then take it back,” he said. “It isn’t the one I meant. I never saw her before in my life. The photograph you shewed me this morning was the phe- toeraph of an older woman, of Miss Martin, There is a mistake some- where.” There was, and when it was clear to him what he had done, Jack hurried once more to Kitty. «1 was an awful fool, Kitty,” he said. “It might have spoiled both our lives. I don’t deserve to be forziven.” “No, you don’t,” said Kitty, “and I Miss Martin!” he I've been round the world to forget her! Go and ask her if she’s forgotten me.” | fingered his wine-glass uneasily as he shut the door. : ’ “To think of her getting hold of a since then? What has happened to boy like that,” he muttered, “ a boy like that!” Jack went as rapidly as he could “The best toward his fiancee’s house, and when » he was shown in to her, he strode heart forward impetuously, with his beating like a sledge hammer. . : > “Kit,” he cried, huskily, “I want to jnstant in the palm of his hand, and ask you something his fingers closed round it as if IU! ips almost an insult to ask you, but ev . 4 Sag a Captain Ri- Fm—I'm going to be married,” he lev—I met him in the street by acci- ’Ive just seen a man facet, and he says—" | i her cheeks. She gave a up! could somehow heal | now! She looked up at Jack with her lip parted. 1 | never been made “Captain Riley?” she asked, breath- Jack fell back. «h | “and I cailed him a liar—I thought—I | | | lessly. | | | couldn't believe—" ty rue?” asked Kitty. | don’t | ceived a dozen men, Cay col ’ he asked Jack strode away hastily, leaving | captain Riley looking after him. He It’s a lie, I know : de hesitated. Kitty had given a lit- the photograph lying in the palm, and tle start, and a color had sprung into turned its face toward the captain : without looking at it himself, His eyes were alight, and if Captain Riley had Jooked at him he might have been quick, ipvol- untary glance cut of the window. How | odd! Only an hour ago Miss Martin had been speaking of Captain Riley. If it should be tae same! If she could manage somehow to patch up the quar- rel of ten years’ standing, that had been renewed six years ago, and had If she—Kitty the breach «mhen it's tine,” he cried, hoarsely 1 Jack laughed bitterly. She had de- n Riley had shan’t do it again.” “You shall never have the chance,” said Jack. “I shan’t make such a nus- take again.” “And what about Miss Marin?” Kitty asked presently. “Couldn’t we— - couldn’t we manage somehow for her and Captain Riley to meet? You krow she told me just now it was all her fault that he went away, and that ue Work of Removing Debris Has Been nearly seven months there has been Interesting Items from All Sections of the Keystone State. DARR MINE WILL RESUME Carried on for Seven Months. December, will probably resume oper- ations in a few days, for the first time since the catastrophe. During these no cessation of work in the ill-fated mine, but it has all been cleaning up. According to Superintendent Will- jam Kelvington a total of 18,000 cars of debris has been removed from the workings. Great holes were blown in sides and. roof. looking as if a cannon had been used. So great was the force of the explosion that several bodies’ were found strewn along for a distance of several hundred feet. ; The mine is about three miles deep. and was wrecked almost from one end to the other. When in operation’ the pit will employ nearly five hundred men. Darr being one of the largest and most productive mines the Pitts- burg Coal, Company has. ANOTHER CLERK SHORT Employe of Pittsburg Bank Charged . With Abstracting $51,000. Pittsburg.—H. W. Tiers, former dis- count clerk of the First National bank of this city, was arrested on an infor- mation made by National Bank Ex- aminer William L. Folds, charging | With the abstraction of $51,000 of | the bank’s funds. Tiers furnished bail in the sum of $10,000 for a hear- ing. All the money was taken from Feb- ruary 8, 1906, to July 26, 1906. Shortly after that time the bank officials learned of the irregularities and dis- missed Tiers. He made partial resti- tution and turned over to the bank certain collateral, upon which, it is stated, the institution hoped to real- ize. Recently the many bank defalca- tions occurring in this vicinity result- ed in orders being received from Washington, it is said, to prosecute all such cases and the information against Tiers was made. , Since leaving the employ of the bank Tiers has been engaged in the real estate business. TELEPHONE COMBINATION Nine Companies Join Resources to “Give Better Service.” New Wilmington.—The Interstate Telephone Association, with a capital stock of $100,000 is to be organized by merging nine independent telephone companies in Eastern Ohio and West- ern Pennsylvania. It will have over 3,500 telephones and 1,000 miles of wire under its control. The independent companies are those of Beaver and North Jackson, 0.; New Bedford, Plain Grove, Slip- pery Rock, Harrisville, Mt. Air, Black- town and New Wilmington, Pa. It is proposed to establish uniform toll rates and get better accommodations from the bigger companies. VALUES ARE ON SURFACE Judge Holt Decides Against Overtax- tion of Coal Lands. Washington.—Judge R. S. Holt of Beaver county, in the Greene county court at Waynesburg, practically de- cided that county assessors have no right to assess land for ‘values that may be below the surface. The de- cision, if upheld by the higher court, will have the effect of lowering the assessed valuation of coal lands throughout the state. The case on which the decision was rendered, was an appeal from the val- uation fixed by the connty commis- sioners on land of A. T. Adamson. By the decision of Judge Holt the valua- tion is reduced from $11,550 to $7,760. CAR SHORTAGE TH REATENS was the only mar she ever really | cared for.” : Jack stared. They were the cop- tain’'s very words—the words he thought Miss Martin had sworn false- ly. : “And Jack, she—she told me that she was an awful flirt, when she was younger, and that it drove him away. | foolish was again! thing if we liked.” haps if they met—it might be right.” And a little while afterward it was been all round the world to forget be came his wife Weekly. S World's Greatest Airship. cost $100,000. and it will be driven by three Daimle mectors, each of 140 horse-power. i ——————— d- | Then, six years ago, he came back, and she She thought he had heard of the money that had been left her, and had come back because of that, and so she would have nothing to do with him. And yet here they are, Jack, both fnod of each | other—oh, I'm sure we might do some- Jack looked down at her eager face. “Perhaps wé might,” he said. “Per- all The woman whom Captain Riley had at last—New York Count Zeppelin’s new airship, No. 4, which is almost completed, will have It is 444 feet in length, the diameter of the baloon is 50 feet, Count Zeppelin hopes that the new on Rollina Stock. Reading.—The demand for box and | refrigerator cars is to brisk that the in order to get these cars into porarily here some time ago, for. are to be employed. ly as possible. The cement trade move the shipments. demand for cars has sprung Save Companion. ta river near Ryde station. The boys were swimming other lines. TWO BOYS DROWN to his assistance. The bodies were recovered some Gis tance from the place where they tered the water. Misses Wife, Shoots Daughter. r | ty,, George Hinnick, is alleged to hav fired a gun at his wife. The aim wa Glen | city, and was drow ned Firecracker Falls Into Powder, Caus- .| house, and hurling the children about. Reading System Rushing Repair Work Serv- ice a number of men, who were tem- suspended at the car shops have been sent It is said that several hundred ‘Shopmen are hurrying out extra box cars as rapid- is active, and a large number of cars are required to Considerable Et company is short of both. | | | up in Kaufiman Loses Life While Trying to Altoona.—Chester Hamer, 16, of Al- toona, and a young companion named Kauffman, were drowned in the Junia- in the river and the Altoona boy, getting be- yond his depth, young Kauffman went | Both went down. Uniontown.—At Hoover, this coun- : y | poor and his little daughter, standing | beside her mother, received the shot a small resort near this |g m DEATH ENDS CHILDREN'S FUN ing Explosion Which Kills Boy. 6. Those seriously injured—Jennie Fenosess, aged 2, face, body and hands burned; Gelempy Fenosess, aged 8, frightfully burned and may die; Mrs. John Fenosess, Sr., mother of the children. The accident occurred at the house of John Fenosess, a Russian miner. | ¢ The children were - exploding fire- crackers and one fell into an open |¢ powder can. Beside the can was an- other can containing sticks of dyna- mite, and one filled with kerosene oil. All exploded, tearing the top off the John died frem his’ injuries two. hours later. Mrs. Fenosess, who res. cued the:children, was burned in get- ting the young ones out of the buld- ing which was burned STUART APPROVES MERGER Eight Trolley Companies With a Cap- ital of $150,000 Unite. Harrisburg.—Governor Stuart ap- proved the merger of eight trolley lines in Western Pennsylvania under the name of the Suburban Railway Company, with a capital of $150,000 and offices at Rochester, Pa. The companies consolidated are the orig- | inal Suburban Company, the Freedom & Baden, the Sewickley & Leetsdale, the Beaver & Bridgewater, the Bea- ver Falls, the Rochester, Beaver & Vanport, the New Brighton, Beaver Falls & Marado and the Economy & Foust Makes Recommendations. Harrisburg.—The appointment of a commission to revise the food laws of the Commonwealth and to urge the passage of new milk inspection, pure drink and stricter food laws in recom- mended by State Dairy and Food Com- missioner Foust in a bulletin issued. He states that receipts from oleo li- censes are $32,549 so far this year, making a new high record for the first six months of the year. Bar Association Officers. Cape May, N. J—The Pennsylvania Bar association elected the following officers: President, H. Hampton Todd, attorney general of Pennsyl- vania: secretary, Judge William H. Staake, Philadelphia; treasurer, Hon. William Penn Lloyd. The president was given the power to select dele- gates to the American Bar associa- tion. The body requested the execu- tive committee to have the next meet- ing at Cape May. : Veteran Editor Dead. Robert Peebles Nevin, known to his intimate friends and newspaper men as “Uncle Robert,” the Nestor of Pittsburg journalism, died at his home, Vine Acre, Edgeworth. Mr. Nevin’s death was due to the infirmi- ties of age. He was 88 years old, and for the past several months had been ailing. Mr. Nevin was a man of varied accomplishments. He was a contributor to literary publications and a song writer also. Deer ion the Track. Several times during the last month trainmen on the Allegheny Valley Railroad have seen deer along the route. The crew on a southbound | freight train sighted a fawn just north | of Black Rock, near Emlenton. It came out of the woods and, ran in front of the engine for half a mile, keeping about one hundred yards in | front of the engine. —_—— i Raise Salaries of Teachers. Washington.—Although the Wash- ington school board faces a deficit and was forced to raise the millage from eight mills to 10, it voted to increase teachers’ salaries. The additional | money thus to be paid out, will | amount to almost $2,000. Practically all teachers are benefitted. The ac- tion is said to be necessary to retain first-class instructors. | | Coal Company Changes Hands. | New Castle—Through a deal just closed, a half-interest in the Thomp- son Run Coal Company has been sold | for $40,000. The purchasers are Charles S. Gause of Uniontown, J. | H. Lowry of Thompson Run and Frank H. Douthitt of Ellwood City. The company has operated its mines 12 years and employs 150 men. Sharpsville Blue Laws. Sharon.—Burgess T. W. Craig of | sharpsville, has issued a proclama- | tion notifying confectionery dealers and others that they must close their places of business on Sundays, begin- ning July- 5. Sunday newspapers may be delivered till 6 o’clock in the evening by carriers on foot, but shall not be collected for on Sunday. Will Go to Annanolis. John Byers, son of F. H. Byers of Greensburg, has been appointed a cadet at the Annapolis naval acad- my, and has successfully passed the examination. He will enter the naval academy at once. Miners Back at Work. € | Kittanning—After protracted idle- | Coal Company | put into operation employing S | ness the mines of the Great Lakes at Kaylor have been 1,400 HEALTH BRINGS HAPPINESS. Invalid Once, a Happy Woman Now. Mrs. C. R. Shelton, Pleasant street, Tenn., says: “Once I seemed a helpless in- valid, but now I enjoy the best of health. Kidney disease brought me down ter- ribly. Rheumaticaches and pains made every movepainful. The se- cretions were disor- dered and my head ached to distrac- West Newton.—Darr mine of the Canonsburg.—Through a premature i bad aiti Eat Pittsburg Coal Company at Jacobs | celebration of the Fourth of July | Hon. 1 was in a bad condition, bu Creek, where over three hundred men | here, one child is dead, and three per- | medicines failed to help. 1 lost met their death in an explosion last |sons are seriously burned. ground daily until I began with The Dead—John Fenosess, Jr., aged | Doan’s Kidney Pills. They helped me at once and soon made me strong and well.” Sold by all dealers. 50cents a box. 28 Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Kaiser Delighted. An old lady near Bromberg, whose en sons have all served in the Ger- man army, had the idea of having hem photographed in a row, and sent the picture to the Kaiser. ‘She has received a letter of hearty thanks and cordial wishes from the Imperial Cabinet by His Majesty's order. FITS, 5t.Vitus’ Dance, Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Dr.H.R. trial bottle and treatise free. ine, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila, Pa. Smallest Mammal. ; The smallest of all mammals are the shrew--nocturnal, mouselike creatures, that hunt for worms and insects in woods and meadows. would make a commodious barn for a mother and her little ones. An eggshell Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums, reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain,cures wind eolic, 25¢ a bottle Recipe for Old Age. A recipe for attaining a ripe old. age is given by Miss Ann Graham, of Norwich, Conn., with great appropri- ateness, for she is the oldest woman in Connecticut, and has brated her 105th birthday. Her maxim Harmony. is “do plenty of hard work, g0 to bed early, consider eat.” The daily routine of this cente- just cele- carefully what you narian is of interest. She rises at 6 o’clock in the morning. An hour later she eats a hearty breakfast, then lis- tens to the reading of the New Testa- ment by her nurse; after which she takes a nap for an hour. She eats her most substantial meal at noon. Then she has another nap and at 5 o'clock she partakes of toast and tea. An hour later she goes to bed and sleeps the round of the clock. Miss Graham’s hearing and eyesight are excellent, and she is a most intetesting talker concerning the events of her lohg life. —Leslie’s Weekly. Ventilating the Bedroom. Dr. Woods Hutchinson, in the Amer- jcan Magazine, gives the following ad- vice about the bed and bedroom: The bedroom should be well ventilated. All windows should be open from the top at least une, and better two to three feet, so that a gentle current of air can be felt blowing across the face. “Night air,” as Florence Night. ingale pithily remarked, “is all the air there. is to breathe at night.” It is just as pure and as wholesome to breathe as day air. The temperature of the room should be about 55 to 60 degrees Fahrenheit, if possible. The clothing should be as light as is con- sistent with warmth, the mattress elastic but firm, the pillow as high as the breadth of the shoulder, so as to keep the neck and head horizontal, or slightly above, when lying on the side. WIFE WON. Husband Finally Convinced. Some men are wise enough to try new foods and beverages and thems generous enough to give others the benefit of their experience. . A very “conservative” Ills. man, however, let his’ good wife find out for herself what a blessing Postum is to those who are distre8sed in many ways, by drinking coffee. The wife writes: “No slave in chains, it seemed to me, was more helpless than I, a coffee captive. Yet there were innumerable warnings—waking from a troubled sleep with a feeling of suffocation, at times dizzy and out of breath, attacks of palpitation of the heart that fright- ened me. - “Common sense, reason, and my better judgment told me that coffee drinking was the trouble.” At last my nervous system was so disarranged that my physician ordered ‘no more coffee.’ “He knew he was right and he knew I knew it, too. I capitulated. Prior to this our family had tried Postum but disliked it, because, as we learned later, it was not made right. “Determined this time to give Postum a fair trial, I prepared it ac- cording to directions on the pkg.— that is, boiled it 15, minutes after boiling commenced, obtaining a dark brown liquid with a rich, snappy flavour similar to coffee. When cream and sugar were added it was not only good but delicious. “Noting its beneficial effects in me the rest of the family adopted it—all except my husband, who would not admit that coffee hurt him. Several weeks elapsed during which I drank Postum two or three times a day, when, to my surprise, my husband said: ‘I have decided _ to drink Postum. Your improvement is so apparent —you have such fine color— that I propose to give credit where credit is due. And now we are coffee-slaves no longer.” and 15 and October 1 17 said. Who had ween before him, he | balloon will attain a speed of 47 miles | y OF 5 > : of | wondered? The red lips that he had | per hour, and calculates that it will be | 4 the uppe: pan of her left leg. She | en : it 1s Gi the number will ee ven pS Postun; Co., Battle e | kissed only yesterday could lie a man’s able to travel without landing for [18 eEpecLe : | soon be, increased Wellville ae k sed . The Road to r | soul away—so Captain Riley had said. about 14390 miles. Scranton. —Prof. Edward Sullivan, | Third-Class City Registration. hide) », In pkgs. There's a Rea- > | To whom had she before him? | It will be provided with search- | sg vears old, a teacher of music and | Harrisburg.—The State Department Ever read the abov 1 ° He fell back step | lights for ni traveling, and a com- organist at St. Paul's Catholic church, | announced that the registration days | one appears trom A vik A vow «3 w ntioned | plete sending and re-| dived from a hoat in the lake at |for the November election would be | ape emit | tre i ne They 3 Q sn} - ’ Ja uman interest. cities. ea bias. Fill At th en’s M Dr. Cla lege, a Robins glven © student awarde ca; a F Honora " Ul L ' The ciety i is emb one. ing the even ¢ ceed, a manne cating bowls a cert bowls a. man throug next t the gn lar pe: as if tl at our at his dislike they truth | Globe. Wk The in Wa one t the f: Parso: mover es her on th Mrs. object come her da Herbe even pears have nal of abroad give gener: of the sent, the a presel annoy dittle home she mn ing c when ative about and r keep their Press The er as that have every cept agai City thos to tl the ject The 10! I kno of 1 ligh said “Ho Art cont in a atur a m legc I a alle
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers