ll 3 Lorn Wl og Se = Fas 2 5a x. sr Reading Fortunes. One of the newest fads in enter- taining- at luncheons, teas, etc., is to engage the services of a woman who is clever at reading fortunes by tea Jeaves. ing functions, lunch parties, etc., and, in fact, any time or plaée swhere wom- en congregate over the teacups and . desire a ‘novel York Telegram. Choice of Hats. Among the between season hats , pretty shapes to choose from, all equally is the natty, there are three really sensible fashionable. There smart turban in horsehair, erushed novelty braid or jet for the elderly woman, A neat little high crowned narrow brimmed hat, becoming to the figure possessing small fea- And the bowl shaped toque or hat, named ac- petite tures, but lacking height. cording to its size—for it may be an inverted bowl or an immense mush- room—that will suit the tall figure. ~—New York Telegram. The Real Home. The real home is built on a founda- tion of love, and when it has this stable base it will endure, and the atmosphere of home will pervade it as the perfume lingers in the flower. “Home is where the heart is,” and it matters not if it be a brownstone- front, or an humble cot. We have seen homes, so-called, with every lux- ury—a beautiful house, elegant furni- ture, costly drapery and rare pictures ~—that had not the faintest atmos- phere of home about them. They were abiding places, where the family lived and had their being, but did not merit the sacred appellation of home. . The real home—that cherished spot whose gentle influence follows the girls and boys through life, though they be many miles from it, is, more often than not, an unpretentious place of abode, but within its sacred confines no jarring words are ever heard, no unkind thoughts are ever known, and there, in that place, is always a loving consideration for each At a girls’ tea party recently this amusement was the greatest hit of the afternoon, and now this wom- an is in great demand at girl graduat- amusement.-—New easy to comprehend why happiness awaits the woman who, after half her life has passed, enters wedlock. When the woman of thirty-five goes to the altar it is without one of the illusions of youth. She has had time to see the reverse side of romance; she is not filled with the belief that married life is one “long, unbroken period of bliss. On the contrary, she knows that as soon as the honeymoon has waned she will descend to the commonplace. She knows that mar- ried or single life in the main is made up of cold, hard facts. She is ready ‘for sacrifice and she has lived long enough to understand the whims and oddities of man. Besides, in nine cases out of ten, the woman of thirty- five marries for companionship and a home, and is fully alive to the value of both. So, after all, the Ger- man professor has merely dwelt upon a truth which we all know.—New York Press. Dark Goivns For Evening. It is interesting to watch the wide- spread acceptance of the decree that dark shades are for evening and light ones for day wear. The fashionable woman now buys a coat suit of Chinese blue cloth for afternoon wear and one of intense peacock blue for her evening gown. Paris - has always insisted upon a brilliant contrast between the gown and the bare neck and arms, but the majority of people have stood for pastel tints in the evening. Since the former fashion has been adopted over here by well-dressed women the observers have instantly seen the brilliancy of the result. It is certainly true that the neck and arms are made whiter and love- “lier by being placed against satin and velvet in intense dark tones. The English fashion of allowing the line of the material to come against the skin is not adopted over here yet. The French method of drap- ing the material with flesh-colored tulle is the accepted thing. In many cases it must be admitted that the result is quite startling. A brilliant dark tone of satin ending at the bust line, with the remaining inches of the bodice made of this Jugged Gravy.—Take two pounds of shin of beef, three chopped up. Our Cut-out Recipe. Paste in Your Scrap-Book. catsup and soy. the top. with paraffine or buttered paper, vent the steam escaping. for eight or ten hours, then strain off the gravy. When cold carefully remove the fat from slices of lean ham, two shallots, half a head of celery, one blade of mace, a bunch of sweet herbs, one carrot, a little salt and some whole peppers, one quart of water, a table- spoonful of catsup and one of soy. or bacon into small pieces and put them into a stone jar with alternate layers of the spices and herbs, the latter Pour in a quart of water and cover the jar Cut the beef and ham tying down tightly to pre- Set the jar in a moderate oven Add the gther’s little “hobbies” and peculiari- ties of disposition. Here, after the burden and heat of the day, is found love and peace. And here the wan- dering one, when tired of his fruit- less battle with the world, finds a real haven of rest. Such a home is a hal- lowed spot, and the sweet memory of it dwells forever in the heart of each member of its family. — Indiana Farmer. - Alexandra's Ban on Diaries. Queen Alexandra has exacted a promise from her maids that they will not keep diaries. This is like im- posing a hardship on posterity, for many important conversations and little happenings of the courts of for- mer days would have been lost to his- tory had it not been for the diaries of ladies in waiting with a keen sense of news values. Fanny Burney's diary of the court of George IIi. is an interesting document and gains in value every year. Alexandra, like King Edward, is cautious and diplo- matic. She knows that in court there are many ‘conversations which in after years might make intéresting and none the less embarrassing read- ing. So she has impressed upon her maids that any secrets they may feel inclined to give to the world must be set down after they have severed their connection with the court. These maids are all women of title, and several of them have strong lit- erary tendencies. It is said the Queen exacted the promise after the dis- covery that one of her attendants had a diary containing comments of both Alexandra and King Edward which were the reverse of complimentary to other reigning heads in Europe, and also on certain men at the head of the English Government. The Queen is said to havé demanded the diary, together with a large bundle of notes for elaboration, and de- stroyed them all, as an object lesson, in the presence of her full company of waiting maids.—New York Press. Women Who Marry at Thirty-five. A German professor, after a long life spent in observation, says the woman of thirty-five is the one most likely to find happiness in marriage. He says when a woman waits to be thirty-five for marriage she is prac- tically proof against such an anti- climax as divorce.” Probably the pro- fessor is right, still there are few women of the temper to make the experiment, At thirty-five there is the chance that the wom -~n will not Lain, it is find a husband at all. flesh-colored tulle, which is the only thing that drapes the shoulders, does give the appearance of being un- clothed from the satin up. The colors chosen for evening gowns now are black, peaceful blue, fir green, bishop’s violet, American Beauty red, King’s purple, cerise. In contrast to these the colors chosen for afternoon wear. in coat suits, as well as kowns, are Chinese | blue, old pink, malachite green, pale wistaria and white.—Philadelphia Ledger. ‘There is a growing possibility of pleated skirts again. Gold tissue will be very much used for sleeves and yokes. Satin of the palest pink is the new color for evening wear. : The “flower-pot” crown of 100 years ago bids fair to be a favorite millinery shape. It is said that light hued stock- ings will be worn, even with dark shoes or slippers. Colored net over silver or gold net forms sleeves and guimpes in some recently imported models. Colored foulard with a black dot in place of the more familiar white | dot has found favor in Paris. ‘White braids, ornaments and but- tons are being considerably used upon serge and cloths of light color. A new shade of blue has made its appearance in millinery under such names as Bosphorus and Danube. Embroidery in cross stitch and in bold colorings is seen upon some of the smartest new models in linen and pique. The modish linens for the new sea- son are very soft and rather heavy, in order that they may be readily adapted to the prescribed frock lines. Raffia has been woven into extraor- dinarily smart bags and belts, the straw often being oddly but delight- fully studded with semi-precious stones whose color shows attractively upon the soft shade of the straw. Among the band trimmings in em- broidered net are some tartan plaid effects produced by darning with coarse silks. The colors are delight- fully blended and the trimmings would be distinctively effective on a certain type of frock or blouse, N THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DEAN HODGES. Theme: Defense of the Faith. Brooklyn, N. Y.—Sunday evening, at Holy Trinity P. E. Church, the Very Rev. George Hodges, dean of the Cambridge Theological School, deliv- ered a lecture on the early church. The subject was “The Defense of the Faith.” Dean Hodges said: The first antagonist of the faith was prejudice, crowned in ignorance, growing up into contempt and then into hatred, and resulting in preju- dice whereby the Christians were ac- cused of atheism and sedition, and of immorality. Of atheism, because they had no images in their sanctu- aries and because they worshiped in a fashion unknown among the relig- ious of their time; of sedition be- cause they refused to acknowledge the divinity of the Roman Empire; and of immorality because they held secret meetings, and not knowing what took place at these meetings, everybody might guess what he chose —and the mind of man is so consti- tuted that under such circumstances some people will guess very unpleas- ant things. So, by virtue of ignor- ance, in almost entire absence of facts, there grew up around the Christians a thick atmosphere of prej- udice. It is astonishing, remember- ing all that afterward happened, that Christianity should have existed for one or two centuries almost unno- ticed, and then only with derision and antagonism. There was Lucian the satirist, who makes one of his char- acters, Perigrinus Proteus, profess to be a Christian, and when he is put in prison ig visited by prominent Christians, who reverence him be- cause he is in danger of martyrdom, and then says of them: ‘These mis- guided creatures have so persuaded themselves that they are going to live forever that they have lost all fear of death;’” and he says, again, that ‘they have been taught by their Master that they are all brothers, and they love one another in an amazing manner.”” It is a friendly comment, but mingled with contempt. There was Celsus, the critic, who wrote a long and substantial book against the Christian religion, in which he decried it first on the ground of his- tory. He says it is not historical be- cause it is filled with accounts of mir- acles, and miracles cannot happen; and so he begins with the virgin birth and the resurrection, and dis- credits miracles, which he says Christ was able to do by meais of tricks He learned in Egypt. And, second, of philosophy. He says the incarnation is impossible because God is Intangible, and unnecessary because God is good. It is absurd, he says, to think that God cares for any little company of people and services on this planet, and he praises the Greeks, who put their trust in reason over against the Christians, who put their trust in faith. There was Marcus Aurelius, em- peror, philosopher, moralist, the one man in the pagan world whom we would have said beforehand would have appreciated the Christian relig- ion ard wouid have gone out to meet it. He views them with a far-off contempt and refers with some de- rision to the alacrity with which Christians go to martyrdom. This religion, which within a few centur- ies was to take possession of the Roman world, which was to be the most notable fact in the history of the race, began in obscurity, an ob- scurity amazing to us. When Chris- tianity came to be a little known there came in its defense against its antagonists the Apologists, chief of whom was Justin Martyr. Born at Sychar, in Palestine, of pagan par- entage, at an early age Justin devoted himself to philosophy. In his desire to learn the relation between God and the world, he in turn sought this knowledge from the Stoics, the peri- patetics and the Pythagorians, and finally turned to Christianity and died martyr at Rome. From some writ- ings of his we learn that in the mid- dle of the second century the Chris- tians had no creed and no recitation of the creed, and no formulation of the truths of their religion. Justin made some inferences from the Bible in the direction of faith. He laid great stress upon the argument from prophecy, and had much to say about devils, with whom he identifies the gods of the Pagan world, and he be- lieved in a literal millenium. There was a lack or order and formality in the church, but they took collections, he says, and describes a service at which there was a reading of the Bible, a long prayer, a hymn and a sacramental feast of bread and wine. The second antagonist of the Christian faith was Heresy. The time came when men of education and learning began to be atiracted toward the Christian religion, and there was a natural desire on the part of Chris- tian teachers to prove the Christian religion to those persons, to make it reasonable to their cultivated minds, and the result was sometimes heresy. Heresy, I suppose, is almost always the result of that kind of purpose. 1 These heretics were the Gnostics, whose aim it was to make some kind: of a combination between Christian truth apd the other kinds of truths floating about in the minds: of men. Gnostics found two great difficulties in religion: One, the difficulty of re- conciling the New Testament with the Old Testament, partly on the ground of morality, which is taught from so much higher a plane in the New Testament than in the Old Testament, the difficulty emphasized by the teaching of St. Paul, wherein he seemed to set a new system of grace over against the old system of works. How to reconcile these discrepancies between the Old and New Testaments perplexed them. And the other per- plexity was, how to reconcile the bad world with the good and mighty God. These they met with a series of prop- ositions. They said there are two antagon- istic facts. ‘““There is matter which is essentially evil, and there is a spir- it which is essentially divine.” They also said, “There are two worlds: the lower world, in which we live, clothed in matter, and thereby hav- ing our spirit hindered by this envir- onment of evil; and a higher world, where God dwells, remotely distant ‘ponding amount of protection.” and having between Him and us a long series of spiritual being, ema- nations from Him, called aeons, and at the end of this long line of aeons reaching down is the Demiurge, a pretty poor kind of aeon.”” The Dem- iurge was the maker of the world, and he was responsible for all this evil matter, and the Demiurge was the God of the Old Testament. Every- thing that takes place in the Old Testament is under the control of the Demiurge, not of the Supreme God, and we may deal with it with all the freedom we like ." The Supreme Aeon, they said, was the Christ who came to redeem man from the tyranny of the Demiurge; and Christ redeemed man, not by the sacrifice of His death upon the cross, because, matter being evil, Christ had no body. That was only an appearance. There was no incarnation, no resurrection, or any of the rest of it. He saves man, not by the death of ‘the cross, but by illumination, by the shining in of His Spirit upon the spirit of man. The third antagonist of the faith was Competition. There came into existence two great new religions, on the one side the religion of Plato (a revival of philosophy), and on the other side the religion of Mithras (a revival of Paganism). These came in the way of a revolt from the pro- sai¢c religion of the Roman Empire. It had in it no emotion. It was a bare contract between man and God, wherein man said, up and dewn, “I will give you a certain amount of ritual if you will give me a Spires: had in it no sense of mystery. It was just as commonplace as the mor- ality. Now, ths world was longing for some appeal to emotion, for some satisfaction of its sense of mystery, and these two religions came at the place to do that work. Neoplaton- ism, a revival of philosophy, found its exponent in Plotinus. From frag- ments of books he wrote we get some idea how he tried to bind together all, the truth there was into one sys- tem, except the truth of Christianity. And then opposed to Neoplatonism was an ideal, an ideal and not a per- son. Mithraism was the most for- midable competitor that Christianity ever had. It seemed at one time as if it were likely to become the relig- ion of Europe. It entered very little into literature, and scarcely anything was known about it until men began to study the ruins of Mithraic shrines and read the inscriptions and gradu- ally to find how far spread it was and what it meant. It came from Persia and its supreme god was Mithras, who was the representative of the in- visable and eternal deity behind and the mediator between Him and us. He was supernaturally born, and His first appearance was to shepherds. He fought with a wild boar that was ravaging the country which He killed whose blood became a vine and whose marrow sown in the earth became the wheat. After His victorious battle He dined with the sun. He was to come again in a second advent and hold a general judgment of all man- kind in which the good went one way ar.d the bad another—into heaven or hell. They had a baptism of blood and water for newness of life followed by a sealing an anointing of confirm- ation, and after that a holy commun- ion of bread and wine. They had sanctuaries. in which liturgies were chanted by vested priests ministering at altars adorned with lights. This day .on which we meet is called Sunday because of Mithras. When Constantine gave out his edict in the days when the empire became Christian he decreed that the first day of the week should be kept as a day of rest and they called it by its Mithraistic name, the venerable day of the sun. Why is Christmas kept on the twenty-fifth of December? No- body knows when our Lord was born. Even the season of the year has to- tally departed from the memory of man, The only indications of the time of year point to the summer when the shepherds were abiding in the fields. Christmas is kept on the twenty-fifth of December because it was Mithras’ birthday. That was Mithras’ birthday kept as a day of rejoicing among the votaries of this religion scattered all over from the desert of Sahara to the glens of Scotland, where shrines of Mithra have been found. When Christianity became victorious over this religion she found it wise to say tg the con- verts, “Keep on with your domestic rejoicing on December 25, but do all these joyful things in remembrance of Jesus Christ, our Saviour.’ The essential defect, however, in this re- ligion of Mithra was that there was no Mithra; he was only a Mith. Nos- ticism was founded on an idea; not a person. Mithraism was founded on allegory, not a person. But the hu- man soul cries out for some manifes- tation of God in the form of actual, historic personality. There were the four men who de- fended the faith.pre-eminently in the second and fourth centuries: Justin, the apologist: Irenaeus, the theolo- gian; Clement, the instructor. and Origen, the commentator. These were the men who defended the faith against the three agnostics—preju- dice, heresy and competition. re rn re —— A Prayer. Our Heaveniy Father and truest Friend, who hast so loved and saved us, the thought of Whom is sweet and always growing sweeter, come and dwell in our hearts; then Thou wilt keep watch cn our lips, our deeds, and we shall not need to be anxious either for our souls or our bodies. Give us charity, sweetest of all gitts, which knows no enemy. Give us in our hearts pure love, born of Thy love to us, that we may love others as Thou lovest. Loving Father of Jesus Christ, from Whom floweth all love, let our hearts, frozen in sin, cold to Thee and cold to others, be warmed by this divine fire. So help and bless us through Christ, Thy Son. The Lord’s Mandate. “The White Man's Burden” in its highest and noblest aspect is, surely, the duty that our Lord has committed to us of evangelizing the world. The time—*“the set time”’—for doing this has come. Happy are they who can discern the times, and respond to the call of God and man. Blessed are they who sow beside all waters.— Rev. F. W. Macdonald. » Condemnation of Sin. Sin against the body must be con- demned as severely as sin against the soul. ‘ries of officials in counties of PENNSYLVANIA Interesting Items from All Sections of the Keystone State. STATE LEGISLATURE. Amending the acts fixing the sala- more than 500,000 population. Allowing a reduction of 5 per cent on all borough and township taxes paid within 90 days from date of mno- tice that duplicate has been issued. Validating elections on municipal indebtedness held since April 29, 1901. Senate bill authorizing a brief form for mortgages. Providing that candidates for elec- tion or nomination whose expenses were less than $50 need not file ex- pense accounts. Empowering common pleas courts to require a defendant to furnish the plaintiff with a bill of particulars. One bill was presented in the house by unanimous consent. It was by John Reynolds of Philadelphia, pro- viding that in a libel suit the plaistiff must enter a bond of $500 to insure payment of costs in event of a verdict for the defendant. The house passed finally the follow- ing bills: Authorizing the department of for- estry to grow and distribute young forest trees. Fixing the salaries of treasurers of counties whose population does not exceed 150,000 at from $1,200 to $4,500 per annum and abolishing all fees for such offices. Authorizing state aid in rebuilding condemned or abandoned turnpikes. Providing for the protection of game animals and game, song, insec- tivorous and other wild birds. Requiring the board of grounds and buildings to bonds of State officials. Imposing a penalty of $20 fine and 30 days in ail upon any minor who obtains intoxicating liquor from a li- censed dealer. The following bills finally in the senate: Allowing the court or jury to fix the penalty for murder at hanging or life imprisonment. The Murphy pure food bill. Extablishing a State board of civil service examiners. Creating a legislative reference bu- reau is the State library. public pay for were passed Harrisburg.—The house passed fin- ally the following bills: Senate bill requiring prothonotaries to certify the election of aldermen and justices before commission shall issue. Fixing fees of constables. Senate bill providing for the sup- port and maintenance of law libraries. Repealing the township fire warden act of 1907. Joint resolution in reference to col- lection of money due the State for care of insane persons in State insti- tutions. Providing for treatment of persons injured by rabid dogs. Providing for payment of damages in condemning any bridge across a Bovigable stream between' two coun- ies. Creating the office of first assistant district attorney in counties of more than 800,000 population. Senate bill authorizing the acquisi- tion at the cost of the State for the use of counties of bridges over 1,000 feet in length erected over creeks and rivulets by corporations. Senate bill authorizing the consoli- dation and entering a single judgment on a scire facias to revive and con- tinue the lien in certain cases. Empowering first-class township commissioners to contract with water companies for hydrants in villages. Providing that religious opinions shall not affect the credibility of wit- nesses. Providing that the offices of justice of the peace and notary shall not be incompatible. Providing for the regulation ies. (The vote was later reconsider- ed and the bill postponed.) The judges salary raiser. vote was later reconsidered bill postponed.) Providing for a tax on stock trans- fers, Repealing the trust company taxa- tion act of 1907, which act was sev- eral weeks ago declared unconstitu- tional by the Dauphin county court. (The RECEIVER IS ASKED Secretary of Claims Action Not Necessary. Wilkes-Barre.—Application for holders. The company was formed | about 12 years ago by merging nine | large breweries in Luzerne and Lack- | awanna counties. \ ear —— 1,600 Return to Work. New Castle.—After an plant, affecting 1,600 men. Nearly all of the old employes were on hand. Within two weeks the cold roll de- partment will begin work. NEW BURGESS LEADS RAID Business Men Said to Have Been Caught in Gambling Joint. Waynesburg.—J. H. Zimmerman, Waynesburg’s new burgess, accom- panied by several policemen, raided an alleged gambling joint early Sun- day morning, making 12 arrests, cluding well. known business The proprietor tried to escape, but was captured and his entire gambling outfit was confiscated. The establi ment was on the third floor of a ness building. BIG GLASS DEAL National Company Holdings Sold for $200,060 to Ellwood City Glass Company. Rochester.—A deal has been closed whereby the entire holdings of the National Glass Company here, includ- ing the Keystone factory and Roches- ter Tumbler works, have been sold by the bondholders to the Ellwood City Glass Company for $200,000. Business men of Rochester and Freedom will be asked to raise a bon- us of $20,000 for the Ellwood City Glass Company and to dispose of $70,- 000 worth of stock. A mass meeting will be held here next Thursday evening, when arrangements will be made for raising the bonus and dis- posing of the stock. As soon as this has been accom- plished the Ellwood City Glass Com- pany will dismantle its present plant at Ellwood City and remove the equipment to Rochester. With re- sumption of the wprks here 600 men will get employment. MRS BOYLE WAIVES HEARING Wife of Alleged Whitla Kidnaper Has No Lawyer Present at Proceeding, Sharon.—Without waiting to get the advice of her lawyer, Mrs. Helen Boyle, wife of James Boyle, alleged kidnaper of Billy Whitla, went before Justice of the Peace Thomas McClain of Mercer ad waived a hearing om the charge of kidnaping. Bail was fixed at $25,000, the same as that ask- ed of Boyle. When the justice asked if she could furnish it Mrs. Boyle replied, “Not that I know of.” The hearing was conducted so quietly that it was all over before many knew of it. When Mrs. Boyle's lawyer, former Judge Miller, learned she had waived a hear- ing he was inclined to be angry, but Attorney T. C. Cochran, Mrs. Whit- la’s counsel, said the prisoner might withdraw her waiver if she desired. In case she decides to do this a hear- ing probably will be given in about 10 days, or when the Whitla family re- turns from Atlantic City. THREE KILLED Two Electric Cars Collide on Pitts- burg and Butler Line. Pittsburg.—Three persons were killed, two probably fatally hurt and fifteen others sustained injuries that necessitated their removal to their homes in a head-on collision between two electric cars on the Pittsburg and Butler street railway, near Bry- ant station, this county. The dead—H. J. Cross, aged 35, of Mrs. Pa., conductor on the south- bound car, died of internal injuries while being removed to a hospital. Alfred W. Snyder, aged 27 years, purchasing agent of the Pittsburg and Butler Street Railway Company, his home being at New Haven, Conn. Albert Heindman, aged 40 years, this city, fare collector on the north-bound car. BLOWN FROM BUNK TO DEATH Dynamite Fuse Lighted by Unknown Enemies of Belfore. Shamokin.—While asleep in a bunk car near Treverton, Salvatore Bel- fore, a section hand on the Philadel- phia & Reading Railway, was blown to pieces by dynamite placed be- neath his bunk by supposed members and the | | members of the order and their wives, Big Brewing Merger | | sion the | appointment of a receiver to manage | the affairs of the Pennsylvania Cen- | tral Brewing Company was made to- | day in the United States district court | at Scranton by one of the large stock- | | special idleness of | nearly nine months operations were | resumed in full at the Greer tinplate | in- | men. | of the Black Hand, who escaped aft- er lighting the fuse. Two other Italians also asleep in the car were blown some distance from the wrecked car by the force . . | of the explosion. The following bills were defeated: | of | home and foreign insurance compan- | Bellefonte After Masonic Home. Bellefonte. Center county will | make a strong effort to get the $3,000-, | 000 home to be built by the Grand Lodge of Pennsyvania Free and Ac- cepted Masons for aged and feeble | and the immense school for the orphans of Masons which is to be built in connection with the- home. The Bellefonte lodse has appointed | a committee to select a suitable site | and press the county’s claims. Renort on Canal Possibilities. Harrisburg.—Governor Stuart trans- mitted to the Legislature a report made by the State railroad commis- on the great possibilities of water and rail transportation afford- ed by abandoned lines to this State. In the 100 years no less than 98 com panies were chartered to build can- als, but that only 28 ever became operative and of this number but 19 built canals. Old P. R. R. Man Dead. Harrisburg. — James McConkey, agent of the Pennsylvania railroad, died here, aged 65 years. Mr. McConkey had been with the com- pany from boyhood, and was for Years superintendent of the New York, Philadelphia & Norfolk rail- road. Later he was chief clerk of the Philadelphia division of the main | line. ] Many Men Get Work. New Kensington.—The American Sheet and Tin Plate Company plant here has resumed operations in full after being closed six months. Five hundred men are given employment. Two additional furnaces at the plant of the pany American Window Glass Com- were fired. Poorly Put. Sympathizing Friend—Kate, I Sorry ar that your gone Kate— nn | | am husband has 11, where did you want Tapa Asia EE EE RETR \
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers