WOMAN 8UFFRA0E. The Question That Is Coming Prem Inently to the Front. The ladles are "kicking up Ned" In Baltimore and demanding the right to vote. From the replies of many ol the. Interviewed men prominent In political life, they'll come pretty near getting anything they ask for. Of course there are a few cynics aud cranks who profess to think women do not possess the requisite qualities to make good voters. Here are the expressions of a few of the many who recognize the worth of the gentler sex: Mr. S. Johnson Poe On all great moral questions the woman with the suffrage would swing the election the way It ought to go. Mr. Alten S. Miller If women want to vote, I guess they will get It. Mr. William L. Marbury The streets would be cleaner, the affairs of the municipality would be better and perhaps the garbage men would be regular In attendance If the wom en In every American city were given the right to vote at municipal elec tions. Mr. Eugene O'Dunne Women need not go on Juries, and their proper place In bnttle Is In the costume of the Red Cross, but they should be al lowed to vote. Governor Crothers When the wom en make up their minds they want -the suffrage I do not think there will be any difficulty about their getting tt. . ' Mayor Mahool If they want to vote let them vote. Mr. John J. Mahon Certainly, they should be allowed to vote. Dr. Bernard C. Stelner The strong est argument ngaiiiBt woman suffrage Is that women do not, as a whole, desire to vote. Opposed to Female Suffrage. The pope, addressing the Union of .Italian Catholic women, showed strong opposition to some of their ambitions. "Those who wish to make woman the equal of man in all things," said his holiness, "and give her the same rights are assuredly in error. Wom an mixed up In the agitations of pub lic life would be the ruin of the fam ily and society. Woman should be the companion of man, at the same time ucceptlng his authority, an au thority" mitigated by love, and noth ing more." NEWSPAPER SUPPORT. The Seaford (Del.) News, In an ar ticle upon this subject, has this to say: "A newspaper, If It only has brains, .conscience and muscle back of It, must continually decide between do ing Its duty and Injuring Its pocket. In any position but that of editor the public Is able to separate the Indi vidual home from the collective citi zen. But If an editor does not please them It Is at his pockets they aim. "Thus It Is the newspapers learn who their friends are. "The man who reads a newspaper and admires It all the year around, yet gives his business support to some other concern, is not a friend to the .former newspaper. Admiration alone will not run a newspaper. There are too many men who expect an editor to slave In defense of their pet no tions and hobbles, advocate their du ties against the strongest opposition and coolly withhold their business support, by which alone a ' country newspaper can live. "Talk about a newspaper having a public duty to perform and an editor having to work, for his principle cheap when others stand back and extend a lukewarm neutrality." Talks on Alveolar TEETH By E. Dayton Craig, D. D. S. INVESTIGATE MY ' METHOD I have heard a definition for a skeptic, which reads something like this, "A Skeptic is one who first doubts, then investigates," If you are skeptic in regards my Alveolar Method "Investigate" and you will be satisfied that it will do all that Is claimed for It. Investigations . are being made dally and I wonder if you, who may be reading this article, are ready to start yours. There must be merit in my method, else It would not stand the test of time. I can send you to patients who are wearing my Alveolar teeth you can talk with them and be satisfied for yourself. But first of all I would have to ex amine your mouth. No charge is made for examination and there Is no obligation to have work done. There is no two cases exactly alike, hence each case has to be ex amined carefully before I could say whether you could be supplied with these Alveolar Teeth. When by examination it Is found that you can have teeth put in that will give you absolute satisfaction, I -will be ready to proceed with your work. If you cannot call at this time, send for my booklet on "Alveolar Teeth" which explains my method fully. It Is free on request E. DAYTON CRAIG, D. D. S. MONONQAHELA BANK BUILDING, The Most Complete Dental Office in Pittsburgh, SIXTH AVE.; COR. WOOD 8T. Bell Phone Grant 362, Pittsburgh, Pa. Office Hours: 0 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. (Not Open 8unaays.) HOW THE SHIP WENT DOWN. In Harper's, George Harding, the author, writes dramatically of the sinking of the ship on which he sailed with the Newfoundland sealing fleet. His experience was uniquely perilous. The ship was crushed like an egg in the ice. . "On the bridge were the captain and 'watch anxiously awaiting the chance to head the ship out of the moving ice Into the stationary pack cf which the big sheet was part. The bowline lny on the barricade, ready tor heaving when the crew should be ordered on the floe to haul the ship's head around. Aloft, the spyraan searched the gloom for signs of a lull In the confused and tremendous waste. "Then there came a terrlfflc crush. The vessel, caught In the trench be tween the raftering sheets, was pow erless to escape, The smash of break ing timbers rose above the gale, as a great corner of Ice crushed the ves sel's side amidships. The captain and watch rushed to the engine-room; It was filled with steam, the Inflowing water having already reached the fires. A glance showed that nothing could stop the Inrush of water. The firemen were retreating: the first of them, like a creature from another world, coal-begrlmmed, undershlrt clad, reached the ice-sheathed deck, spreading panic In his path. Above the hailing' of questions and shouts that no man could understand, came the voice of the skipper he knew the situation as no other man. "'Men!' he shouted, 'the ship Ml go pack your clothes save the grub!' "Then It was confusion every where; the crew poured up the hatch way, hauling clothes boxes and bags, crowding over the side, colliding in mid-air, as they half tumbled, and half slid down the ropes, then back for food. Laboriously the heavy pork-barrels were hauled by hand from the after-hold, where men bravely tolled. Others fought their way aloft, where the sails were stowed. The canvas cut loose, belly ing out in the force of the gale, was dropped to the deck. Punts were slipped from the davits; some, hit ting the ice with a crash, were stove In. Throughout it all the captain shouting: " 'Haul them punts and grub far ther off! Farther yet! Farther!' "The water rapidly rising drove the men from' the lower hold; they retreated to the deck. Then the in flow, level with the ocean ceased; the Ice for the time held the ship in its grip. Second by second passed, bringing no change. In that brief In terval each man suddenly thought to save the thing be most desired. A wild rush was made to wheel-house, to cabin, to the ship's store-room every man for hlmBelf a scuffle to get the thing most coveted and escape to the ice. With one, It was a rifle from the ship's armory to replace the antiquated muzzle-loader at home. With another, the ship's compass or the barometer. With the after-galley cook It was the cabin dishes. In the cabin a crowd surged to the medicine chest, scrambling for liniments and pills, smashing anything that was an obstacle In their way. Such was the scene when the cry arose on deck, repeated by fifty men and echoing throughout the vessel, ' 'TIs time to take to the ice!' Then a great rush to be clear of the doomed ship as the mass of men, some empty-handed, others laden, defending their spoil from the unsuccessful, plunged on to the ice. "The ship was sinking fast. It was but a short leap for the last man from her deck to the loosening ice. The men stood on the floe, looking the ship over from the bow, lifted high, to the Btern, now below water. " 'A pity to lose the vessel,' they said. 'Wonderful hard to lose the trip o fat.' "Then came the final plunge; the mainmast, reaching over the floe, broke as the weight of the vessel pulled it under. The great anchors sliding from the bow added to the tu mult, as everything not frozen solid to the deck crashed into the house and galley for a second, a flash of flame shot from the overturned stoves then nothing save a few seal pelts and broken oars lay on the surface of the troubled hole in the floe where the Grand Lake had disappeared." - GETTING A GORILLA. . Capt. Fritz Duquesne, Nthe Boer Ivory hunter, was commissioned by a German naturalist society to capture one of each species of African quad rumana. He was entirely successful in the work, except that he could ob tain no gorilla. Finally a pigmy pointed out a portion of the dank jungle in which a gorilla had been seen.' "For four days," continues the captain, "we camped in this hotbed of disease. . Beaters went out in all directions searching for the. gorilla. At last some deep, wide scratches were found in a cluster of vines. On close examination the unmistakable Qilr of the gorilla was found on a broken twig. After some hours we found the tree where the prilla lived. We could tell it by the greasy ap pearance of the bark, made so by the repeated rubbing of the . gorilla's body. We could tell by the marks, with sap still wet, that the animal had recently ascended the tree. The scratches were short and deep, showing that it had lifted itself up and not down, which would have made a long, shallow scratch. "We spread a strong net around the tree In a circle sloping upward on the outer Bide. Around the top of the net there were drawn ropes from four directions held by half a dozen natives hidden in the bush. These were to bring the top of the net together and thus bag our game. "After waiting some hours the leaves above rustled and then opened, as a six-foot male gorilla descended unsuspectingly and entered the trap. I signaled, the four ropes were pulled at once, and we had our animal for a moment. He roared In fury, twist ing, Jumping and biting the rope into pieces. The natives were pulled about like dolls as he tried to reach first one and then another. The pro fessor jumped about in excitement, trying to focus a camera on the in furiated animal.. "At last the mighty arms of the gorilla broke a hole through the net and he tore the rest from him as though It were a rotten rag. Most of the natives fled in dismay. The professor dropped his camera and tried to escape; in a moment the gorilla grasped him in its terrible hands. "I seized my rifle and fired in the air to frighten the animal. In my position I could not shoot at blm without hitting my friend. For a moment the gorilla stood still, hold ing the now unconscious man as though he were a baby, the brute's lips drawn back from his glistening teeth. I thrust another cartridge In my rifle. As I did so there was a buzz in the air, and an arrow, shot by a native, pierced the gorilla's side. A roar burst from his red throat and he dropped his victim. Like a flash, before I could shoot, a native sprang from the leaves, and, half throwing, half thrusting, drove an assegai into the gorilla's heart. With a groan the brute fell dead. "Examining the professor, I found that his right arm was broken and that some of his ribs were crushed Into his lungs. We gave up the ef-' fort to get a live gorilla, and, placing the injured man in a hammock, car ried him back toward the east coast. He died on the road. Out on the veldt beside a native village a lonely little slab marked 'Carl Block' sticks up above the grass. It Is the pro fessor's grave. Hunting is not all exciting adventure and laughing vic tory. It has Its tears, like other things." Hampton's Magazine. ' A LITTLE HERO. The story of a little hero is told by the editorial writer in the Philadel phia Public Ledger. Joseph Smith, a negro orphan eight years of age, lived in the House of the Holy Child, in Philadelphia. The Public Ledger writer tells the story as fellows: "On the morning of New Year's Day there was a Are at the orphanage. Little Joseph jumped from his cot, calling to the other children: 'Get up, every body! Hurry!' and running to the window lowered the fire escape. It was a job for his small, unaided strength to handle the heavy counter, balancing weight and chain, and since he could not manage it with his arms alone, he jumped on the first-section of the ladder, which his weight brought slowly to the ground. Then he clambered back into the dormi tory, and with stout heart, as Little Nemo in Wonderland, marshaled the other children and led them single file down the ladder to safety. That boy will some day make a useful man, the kind who is 'all there' in an emergency. There ia no severer test of one's ability to collect one's wits and keep a clear, cool head than a fire Interrupting a Bound sleep with Its dreaded alarm. Many a grown up !s scatter-brained on a similar oc casion, and in the present Instance one of the nurses rushed, hen-mind-edly, about the building, her clothing aflame, eluding the grasp of those who could and would have helped her. Oliver Wendell Holmes once wrote of a friend . .. " 'And then there's a youngster of ' excellent pith, Fate tried to conceal him by naming him Smith.' "But this youngster of excellent pith will not be lost to view as he gets bigger and older, for he has the mak ing of a man in him.' STRANGE EXPERIENCE. The fatal net of floating seaweed which plays such a prominent part in "The Cradle of the Rose," the latest Harper novel by the author of "The Martyrdom of an Empress," while un precedented in fiction is by no means so in fact. A few months ago Lord Edward Seymour, a younger brother of the Earl of Yarmouth, and third In the line of succession to the Mar quisate of Hertford, had a narrow es cape from death in the meshes of just such a net while swimming oft Bembridge in the Isle of Wight. He was floating on his back far out from shore, when a great bed of matted weed suddenly rose from the depths and completely surrounded him. . Re alizing that he would become hope lessly entangled if he made any at tempt to free himself, he Temalned perfectly still, and presently the ghastly snare sank away from blm as suddenly as Lt had risen. After such an experience it is no wonder that, as the account has lt "the swim back te shore wanted some doing." Ia "The Cradle ot the Rose," the dragging under sea of weed appears la the first scene in the story, and in the last, with a most curious dramatic effect. L0W-BK0WED DINNER FOR TOPLOFTY RICH. Deaerlption of Banquet Whloh Was Certainly Net Spoiled by an Overweight of Intelleot. . At a dinner given in a restaurant recently the hostess planned the menu as carefully as It at home. The decorations ot the table were thought out by her. There was a low mound of orchids In the centre ot the table. Across each plate lay an American Beauty rose of the regulation size and length ot stem, but made ot satin and Bilk. On each leaf in gold letters was printed one course ot the menu. At the back of the rose was a cotton filled recess which just before the guests sat down was sprinkled with rose extract, so that even in odor the American Beauty was natural. That was surprise number one. Surprise number two came when what was apparently a croquette was put before each guest. In reality lt was made of some sort of composition and opened in the middle, showing a folded, very narrow, long strip of white paper, on which was written: "Bryan Is In the soup, not in the cro quette." As it was just two nights before election, this was timely and not displeasing to the guests,, who were all Republicans. Another surprise was the serving of dinner rolls In each of which was a chunk of lead, giving unexpected weight to the roll. It was the jol Hcst of dinners, and yet the four men present were all men of affairs past their first youth a good bit. Count ing the relishes and a vegetable entree, there were Just six courses, and the guests Eat down at 8 and finished their coffee at 10. Imagine the innocent fun of the chunk of lead in the dinner rolls. But why were the guests spared the time-honored Joke of the teaspoons of specially prepared amalgam that melts when placed In hot coffee or tea? The four men guests were "past their first youth a good bit." So we should suppose. They could not have been so very far from their second. The Argonaut. Spelling Simplified. Professor Alfred E. Stearns, prin cipal of the Phillips Andover Acad emy, said at the recent alumni dinner in New York. "The easiest way In raising funds, as in other things, Is the wrong way. I remember a man and his easy spell ing rule. In Orange in my childhood' I once complained ot the difficulties of spelling. I said that 'el' and 'le' In such words as 'believe' and 're ceive' always stumped me. "Then this man patted me on the head and smiled and said: " 'My boy, I will give you an infal lible rule for "el" a rule ' that in forty-seven years has never failed me.' "I expressed my delight and waited. The man resumed: " 'The rule Is simply this: Write your "1" and "e" exactly alike and put your dot exactly between them.' " Washington Star. A Promising Three-Year-Old. The country farmer and his wife, happening to be In Cambridge on business, spent an afternoon watch ing the seniors play their annual match. "Betsy," he whispered, "Jest you look at that fellow twirling his hat." "What about him, Brlggs?" asked his wife. "He be full six feet, bain't he?" "Aye, an' a bit over, I should say." "Weighs about sixteen stone?" "Ye're not far out." "Well," muttered Brlggs, medita tively, "football do develop 'em, that's sartaln." "Yes," said Mrs. Brlggs, approv ingly, "he's a rare well set up young chap." "Chap!" echoed Farmer Brlggs. "Betsy, I Jest heard a feller say as that chap's in his third year. Tnlk about oatmeal porridge. Why, lt ain't in it wi' football." Tit-Bits. nnrtlly a Sanctified Odor. Ambassador Lloyd Griscom, at a dinner that he gave to a party of Phll adelphlans visiting Rome, praised the well known American veneration for antiquity. "It is seldom enough," said Mr. Griscom, "that we find an American phlegmatic before the treasures ot Rome's past. I have only found one such person. "He is a Southerner, and I gave a day to showing him about. The first church we visited was, I think, the Ara Coell, on the Capltollne Hill. " 'This church, Calhoun,' said I, 'Is 800 years old.' . " 'Humph,' said he, 'it smells a lot older!"' Philadelphia Record. Wanted to Change. That even earthquakes have rivals is proved by an incident that oc curred at the time of the trembler at Charleston, S. C, several years ago. A resident of the shaken city sent his six-year-old son out of the danger and confusion to the youngster's grand father In New York. Three days af ter the boy's, arrival the Charleston man received this telegram from his father: "Send us your earthquake and take back yonr boy." Chicago Dally News. ' To Keep Children In School. In order to prevent elder children being kept at. home "to look after baby," the London County Council la trying the experiment ot appoint ing "baby-mlndera," who will take 'care of the babies in the school build ings during school hours. The human eye can discern an ob ject as small as .1625 ot an inch In diameter. Stir fine meerschaum chips with white ot egg or dissolve casein In wat er glass, stir in finely powdered mag nesia and use the cement at once. It hardens very quickly. The principal producing countries of lignite are Germany, Austria and Hungary, which, in 1906, produced 65,513,000 tons, 23,779,000 tons and 6,263,000 tons respectively, while the provisional figures available for Ger many In 1907 show a production of 61,642,000 tons, and in Austria 25, 840,000 tons. It Is announced that a remarkably Interesting discovery has been made in the catacombs ot Prlscllla at Rome in the form of the following inscrip tion: "In isto loco Petrus fult." Slg nor Marucchl, the eminent archaeolo gist, Is convinced, after careful study of circumstances, that the Petrus is none other than the Apostle St. Peter. A novel desk lamp has recently been put on the market, which con sists of a long glass tube, in which the filament Instead of being colled is stretched in a single horizontal line. The entire light is projected downward on to the desk by means of a semi-cylindrical reflector. The re sult is that the light Is distributed over a larger area, and Is more dif fused than the ordinary Incandescent bulb. There Is In BrltUh Guiana the Kal etenr Fall, a waterfall five times as high as Niagara, and almost twice as high as the Victoria Falls of the Zam besi. It has been estimated that the main fall alone can supply enough energy for many Industrial undertak ings; in fact, the power at present running to waste Is not far consider ably more than the horse power short of two and one-eighth million horse power, which is yielded by Niagara, There are also cataracts extending for many miles along other rivers which could be harnessed, not only for de veloping energy in the mines and crushing mills, but for utilizing the vast timber resources of the forests. The Best Men. "I can get an English coachman a place twice as quickly as a German or a Yankee coachman," said an em ployment agent.. "Each country, I find, is supposed to turn out one kind of workman of peculiar excellence. Thus England's specialty Is the sta bleman. "France's specialty Is the chauf feur. The cook too is a specialty of France. "Scotland Is noted for its engineers, and in the field of sport for its golf coaches. "The Swiss are considered to be the best watchmakers. It Is never any trouble to get a Swiss watch maker a Job. "The Swedes are the best sailors. "Germans are at premium as brew ery hands. "Italians are in demand as plaster workers, a trade wherein they won derfully excel." The Girl and the Lobster. Dorando Pietrl, at one of the many Italian banquets given in his honor in New York, talked about profes sional athletics. "Only the other night at one ot our gayest Italian restaurants, I over heard a dialogue that Illustrated forc ibly the age's lack of romance. "It was late. At the table next to mine a rich young Italian contractor was supping with a beautiful young girl. As the young girl played with the stem of her glass, I heard her murmur: " 'Is it true, isn't it, that you love me, and me only?' " 'Yes, yes,' said the young man, though this lobster is certainly mighty good.' " Humility. It is a curious fact of human na ture that humility draws forth from the world almost as much admira tion as courage. As in the case of courage, it Is almost impossible whol ly to condemn a character In which we see lt, and without lt the greatest virtues leave us cold. If every good word which the Pharisee said of him self were proved true, we should still dislike him. We even dislike his modern and far less offensive descen dant, the prig. Nigeria's Mineral Wealth. Sir William Wallace, the British resident general of Northern Nigeria, has reported to the home government that cannibal tribes owning hundreds of thousands of horses in Nigeria are being subdued by peaceful means and that their country contains perhaps the richest tin and copper fields in the world. While New Yorkers think ot the Panama Canal as being a great under taking because lt will require the ex cavation of 35,000,000 cubic yards ot earth and rock, theyv are less Im pressed by the building ot the city's Catsklll water system, which will re quire the excavation of 58,000,000 cubic yards ot the same material. . Eggs consumed in New York City last year required 10,288 cars to haul them, which meant that the supply was sufficient to give thirty dozes to eaoa Inhabitant. - GENERAL TRADE CONDITIONS Leading Industries Report Better Prospects Than for Months. "Summed up, the situation may be said to be a current trade, wholesale and retail, better than last year, but disappointing as a whole, while the tone for the future Is still quite mark edly optimistic. "Reports from leading Industries are rather better than for some time past. The business doing and the re ports coming from the iron and steel trades are dlstnctly better. Low prices have evidently brought out slumbering orders, and there Is talk of the bottom having been, touched and a new ascent begun. "In the textile trades quiet as to the present, but optimism as to the future, is the rule. Cotton goods still leads the rest of the market, but the strength of raw wool seems to point to confidence In finished lines. "High prices are being paid in the West for the new wool clip, shearing of which 1b active. The leather trades are strong, sole leather being active and hides higher. Shoe orders are below normal, but Improving. "Coal is in better demand, and the new agreement for three years In anthracite being signed, stability and peace are certain for a long period. Coke Is still weak and low In price. Cumber Is Irregular, despite activity In building and Southern production Is slackening. Naval stores are close to or below cost of production. "Business failures In the United States for the week ending with April 29 were 208, against 247 last week, 282 In the like week of 1908, 1C3 In 1907. 139 In 190fi and 193 In 1905. "Failures In Canada for the week number 21, against 3G last week and 22 in the like week of 1908." Brad streets. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat No. t red 1 Rye-No. 2 Corn No. 2 yellow, ear 83 No. yellow, eholled 7' ' Mixed ear 68 Oats No. S white si No. 8 white Flour Winter Vatent 6 75 Fancy straight winters Hay No. 1 Timothy 14 00 r Clorer No. 1 1200 Peed No. 1 white mid. ton 2!V) Brown middlings 270) Bran, hulk 27 00 Straw Wheat 8 00 Oat 8 00 Dairy Product. Butter SUIn creamery...; I 59 Ohio oreamery 21 Fancy country roll 19 Cheese Ohio, new 14 New York, new 11 Poultry, Etc. Bens per lb I 17 Chickens dressed JffO Bggs Pa. and Ohio, fresh. 21 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes Fancy white per bo.... 1 00 Cabbage per ton 55 0 1 Onions per barrel i 40 84 78 69 lit 51 S 80 14 so 12 SO 80 00 !!S 01 i8 00 8 50 8 91 80 80 ti 15 . 15 II 21 21 1 08 80 00 1 JO BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent f 5 79 5 M Wheat No. red ' 1 Si Corn Mixed 70 71 Eggs '. 27 24 Batter Ohio oreamery il at PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent f 5M 8 00 Wheat No. S red 1 St Corn No. 2 mixed 75 7if Oats No. t white tl tt Butter Creamery 28 28 Eggs Pennsylvania firsts u 28 NEW YCRK. Flour-Patents I 3 93 8 09 Wheat No. 8 red 141 Corn No. 80 81 Oats No. 1 white A7 58 Butter Creamery 28 29 Kgg State and Pennsylvania.... &i LIVE STOCK. ' Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLE Extra, 14W to 1800 pounds 8 50 Q I 88 Prime. 110 to 1400 nniinrifl A JW (A fl Nl Good, 12(10 to 1800 pound 8110 .4 8 80 Tidy, 1060 to 1150 pounds. 875 5 9) Fair, 9O0 to 1100 pounds BuO 4 a 78 Common, 700 to 900 pounds. 4 40 4 4 90 Bulls 850 .4 5 50 Cows 2011 5S01 BOOS Prime, neary.. 7S5 4 77) Prime, medium weight 7 8 '4 7t Best heary Yorkers 750 4 755 Light Yorker. 7 ) 4 7 so J 8 914 710 Roughs. 8UO.4 4 70 "tags. 5 00,4 5 5J SHIIP Prim wethers... 8 2"9 8 .10 Good mixed 501 14 521 Fair ml led ewes and wethers. 4 50 14 4 91 Culls and common , 8 01 14 3 50 Sprint lambs., 4 so (4 7 60 BUSINESS CKRDBJ, E.-.NEFF JUSTICE 07 THE FEACE, Pension Attorney and RealEstat Agra, RAYMOND E. BROWN, " attorney at law, Brookvtllb, Pa. q, m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Real estate agent, patients secured. eat ectlnns mad prom ptly. OSlc In Syndic villdlng, BeyaoldsrlUe, Pa. 5MITH M. MoCREIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real estat agent. M lections will receiT prompt attention. OA) In the ReynoldsTille Hardware do. bulldlBa, Ualn street Eeynoldsrlll, Pa. OR. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist In th Hootst bulldlmf Uala street. Gentleness la opsratlo. QR. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST; Offlc on second floor ot th First Ratio! Dank building. Main atrt. - DR. R. DEVEKE KINO, DKHTIST, 0(9'- on aeeoad floor of th Syndic halM ng, Mala street, tuynoluarfll, P. JENRY PRI ESTER UNDERTAKER. Black and whit funeral ear. Halasfcr BeynuldaTlU, JP a.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers