HE COMPROMISED. A Slory John B. Gough Told In Hii Temperance Lectures. John B.Gougb, the temperance lec turer, wits uotod as a story teller, nut Ills stories were always well suited to Ills nrguuieut. V. A. Mowry In bis "ltecollcctlous of a New England Edu cator" recalls one of them: Compromise, compromise! What does compromise meuu'f I will tell you. A colored uiuu met a frleud oue day aud Bald: "Snmbo, Sambo, do you know dat todor night 1 was sorely tempted) IXou know I used to steal. Well, sluce I J'lucd (If I'burcb 1 stopped steuliug. but you know Mr. Joining's shoe store (Well, toder nlgbt 1 was In dat shoe store, and 1 looked on do shelf and 1 Bee o pair of boots, Jes' de nicest pair Of boots jes' my size, 9s. 14. "Dere was de debtl, and be say, 'Take 'em, take 'em.' Den de Lord say, 'Let em alone; dat's steulliiV But 1 want ed dcui boots; mine all out at de bot tom and sides. Dere was de debll and me, and we both say, "Take 'em.' But fle Lord sny, 'Don't you take 'em; dut's etenlla'.' Now, dere was a clear ma jority of two against one, "Jos' den Mr. Jonslng be leob de store, and be Iceb me all alone. Den de Qebll sny, 'Take 'era quick and ske daddle.' 1 could take dem boots and cliuck 'em under my coat and go rlgbt away an' Mr. Jonslng would neber know nottln' about It. But, bress de Lord, I 'stood de temptation! 1 com promised and took a pair of shoes In stead." HER LOST COAT. The Sequel to Ladles' Afternoon Card Party. A Dumber of women were putting on their wraps preparatory to going bonie from an afternoon card party In the upper residence district of New York one afternoon last winter when a val uable fur coat belonging to one of them could not be found. There was, however, another fur coat of Inferior quality In the dressing room, which the hostess said bad evidently been left by mistake by the woman who bad taken the other garment The avail able coat was taken away by the wo man whose wrap was missing In the hope that the mistake would be recti fied without much trouble. Several days passed, and no claim was made for the coat the guest bad worn away from the house, and the Woman took It to a dealer, where ber garment bad been purchased, hoping that some mark on the substituted coat might be ' found by which the owner could be Identified. The plaD was successful, and, much to ber amazement, she discovered that' the Inferior coat was the property of her card hostess. The "lost" coat was found, and on Its return the matter was to be hushed tip, but the promise of silence was evi dently poorly kept. No more Invita tions for afternoon card parties have ' been Issued from the bouse where the , "mistake" was made. New lork Trlb- I one. i Maori Women. Maori women of New Zealand know ! nothing about kissing Nose rubbing j Is their form of salutation, and when ' two friends meet they bold each other by their hands, bend their heads until their noses touch and then rub them gently from side to side. This form of greeting Is not confined to the wom en, but Is practiced by the men. They seldom meet without rubbing noses. In times of lamentation the Maori Women will sit for hours with their noses touching and moan for the loss of some chief whom they have In all probability never seen. The loss of a brother or friend is enough to start them off for days, all moaning and howling plteously. They are essen tially a sympathetic race, and the sor rows of one are the sorrows of all. Too Good to Waste. - A churchgoer and a backslider met on the hillside. The churchgoer was bound double quick for the church at the foot The backslider, oddly enough, was going up. "Hil You're going the wrong wayl" called the churchgoer. ' The backslider yelled back, but bis answer was lost "Say," be demanded of the church goer the next day, "did you bear what I aaidr "No." "Well, it's too good to waste. You Bald I was going the wrong way. 1 Bald you seemed to be going downhill pretty fast yourself." New York Sun. Gave Her Room. A gentleman who had a very large nose while walking In a street In Leeds the other day was subject to a few remarks abont it The height of Impudence, however, was reached When a woman stopped a few yards in front of him apparently to have good look at it The gentleman als stop lied and, taking hold of his nose with tils finger and thumb, pushed It on tone side and calmly said: "Mow, then, missus, can you past now?" She went on. London Tit-Bits. : A Pair of Bulls. Here are a coupls of Irish bulla. A son of Erin, seeing a very tiny coffin, exclaimed, "Is It possible that that coffin was Intended for any living crea ture?" An Irish Judge thus addressed A prisoner, "You are to be hanged, and X hope It win prove a warning to yon." Artlfiolal Beauty. One reason' why women suppose the men are fooled by artificial 'beauty la that most of the men are too gallant ot to pretend that they don't know 4be dlfferencev-Cblcago Becord-Her- Josephine's Many Names. 1 Josephine, empress of the French, was Yeyetla to ber intimate friends. Her name In reality was Marlu Joscphe Rose. Napoleon after the marriage exacted that she should be known as Josephine. lie had a mania for re bnptlr.lng the women of bis entourage. He made his Bister Marianne an Ellse. of Annonclade a Caroline, of I'aulette a Pauline. Among lier numerous friends Joseph ine remained Teyette. Bnrras never called ber otherwise. Tho pope was so unfamiliar jlth her name that when he sent his, bene diction the letter borne by his legate was addressed to "Our Sister In Jesus Christ, Victoria Bonaparte." In 1814, on the departure for Elba, the Debats designated Josephine under the paraphrase "the mother of Prince Eugene." At Ruell her tomb bears this simple inscription, '"A Josephine, Eugene et Hot-tense, 1825." The restoration did not permit her recognition as empress. Cri de Tarls. What Was the Master. E. A. Sothern onee told a dilemma be got Into: "I was acting In a comedy when 1 had to speak tho words, 'What's the matter?' Well, one night I was rather slow about taking my cue and was prompted. I forgot myself for the mo ment, and when tho words came, 'What's the matter?' I thought some' thing or other had occurred out of the common. I paused and looked round. Everything seemed normal, and the stage waited. Then came another What's the matter?' from the O. P. side. They were all getting anxious behind the scenes, and so was I, for that matter. I looked myself up and down and then scanned my fellow actor, but for the life of me couldn't see anything wrong. At last an audi ble whisper came: 'Go on with your lines, you Idiot! What's the matter with you?' Then It suddenly dawned on me where I was, but the bouse bad tumbled to the situation and came down In convulsions." Minneapolis Journal. The Substitution. It Is a well known fact that both Sir Arthur Sullivan and Sir W. S. Gilbert bad a horror of the titles of their operas becoming known until the very nlgbt of their performance. This fear that they might be forestalled cre ated considerable confusion at the ini tial production of "Iolanthe; or The Peer and the reri." The opera was rehearsed for weeks under the title of "Perola." It was only at the dress rehearsal that the company was in structed to substitute the name "Io lanthe" for that of "Perola" wherever it occurred in the text or lyrics. It was no easy task to replace vocally and in the dialogue a name of three syllables for one of four. Sullivan, however, said (maybe aside) to one or two of the actors who were nervous: "Go ahead and sing the music. Gil bert won't be In front" (Gilbert never attended the first night), "so use any name that you think of first if yon are rattled. No one in the audience will be any wiser." Boston Post. Young's Impromptu. To most persons Edward Young Is the author of "Night Thoughts" and nothing more, but be was also u man of the world and a shrewd and caustic wit as well as the rector of St. Mary's church at Welwyn. It was there In the garden of the rec tory that he composed some of the best impromptu verses known. He was walking with two ladles when some one summoned him to the house. His companions were agreeable, and he was in no haste to leave them. Turn ing as he reached the gate, he said: Thua Adam looked when from the garden driven And thus disputed orders sent from heaven. Tjlke him, I go and yet to go am' loath; Like him, I go, for angels drove us both. Hard was his fate, but mine still more unkind; His Eve went with him, but mine stays behind. The Alternative. "If the window had been eight feet from the ground," pouted the young wife, "instead of eight stories, I'd have thrown myself out when you quarreled with me. Then you'd have had to be sweet to me when you picked me up. A lot of wives attempt suicide, they say, Just to be petted when they come to." "Tes," said he, "but sometimes they don't come to, remember." New York Press. One For Every Day. "I've been reading about one of them rich men wot's got er suit of clothes for every day in the week," said one tramp to another. "That's nothln. So 'ave I. This is it I've got on now!" London Globe. His Precaution. The Artist's Wife, (in a whlsper) There's some one knocking. Jack. Shall I open the door? The Artist No; lfs Jabber's knock. It's a special knock I gave him, so I wouldn't let him in. b mistake. Life. :' He Wanted to Know. Johnnie Mother laVt blind, Is she? Pa Of course not What put that Into your head? Johnnie Mrs. Bow ser, who was here today, said mother 'd never see forty again. Boston Tran script Not a Crack Shot "My aim is truth always troth," said a man. . - "Possibly," rejoined an acquaintance, "but you were always a bad -marksman!" v A man's fate lies In his character and not In his conditions. Mable. NOT RELIGION. It Was Something Very Different That Animated Eliza. Mrs S. of New Orleans has for many years been faithfully served by two negro women who. although bound by the tie of common devotion to their mistress, yet detest eueb other cordially, so Ilia I the kltcliuu is the scene of continuous battle. .Martha, the cook, is a leading light In the church. At revival meetings slie was always the first to occupy the mourners' bench, the first to shout "Ilalleliilnhl" and to fall Into those contortions of body and outtllnglng ot ilmbs that to the African mean "get ting religion." Eliza, the maid of all work, on the other hand, had always been an unregenernte heathen, scoltlug at religion. Jeering at Martha and de claring no power on earth could In duce her to go inside a church. Great, therefore, was Mrs. S.'s surprise on the occasion of the last revival to tlnd that It was Eliza and not Martha who was attending the meetings. "Why, Mnrtha," she exclaimed, "aren't you going to churcbV" "No'm," answered Martha sullenly. "Why?" " 'Cause dnt Liza she goes now " "But Isn't there room for both ol you?" "No'm, dey ain't" All Martha's pent-up indignation em phasized the answer. "'Cause, Miss Mary, dat Liza she Jes" goes ter spite me. No sooner I gits up to go to de mo'ners' bench dan Liza she follers me and sets down dost beside me, and befo' 1 has a cbanst ter git 'llglon Liza she begins ter glrate around and shout 'Glory hal leluiah f and she out wtd ber fists and bits me Mm in de Jaw, and she out wld her footses and kicks me spang In he shin. But, I tell you, 'taln't 'llg lon Liza's got Miss Mary; bit's debll try." New York Times. PLUCKING BATS. A Frenoh Industry That Is Linked With the Restaurants. , "I plucked bats In Paris once at 4 francs a day," said a sailor. "Bats hibernate in the winter. What I mean to say is that they full Into a kind of drugged sleep. In this here sleep, cllngln' together in big, black, soft bunches, tbey bang from tbe roofs of caves or tbe inside of chlmbleys. See In' I was down on my luck I was studyin' art in tbem days a restau rateur over in the Latin quarter, or Cart-sbay, as we used to say, guv me a Job of bat pluckln'. "He showed me the ropes the first day. I soon got on to it It was dead easy. Just go Into a cave, you know, locate a bunch of bats and then pluck 'em one at a time like grapes and drop 'em In your burlap bag. All that win ter I'd set out from the Cart-shay with my big bag In tbe mornin', and on to ward night you'd see me staggerln' back along the Bull Meesh, as we called the Boulevard Michel. Innded down with blbernatin' bats. " 'You don't feed these to your clien tele, .Incques?' I said to tbe boss one Bight. , " 'Maybe oh. yes,' said he. 'They always figure in our fa rf a mod one' franc dinner.' "I gave him a repronchful look. " 'Bat's meat Is excellent' he says The meat is pink and very fine. Fried in butter with a parsley sauce, tbe gourmets in the Cafe Anglais could" never, never tell it from venison.' ' " 'You wouldn't catch me eatln' It.' soys I. "ne chuckled and nudged me in the ribs. ' " 'No?' says ho. 'No? And yet, nion', vteux, tbe bat largely figures in our excellent five sou navarin that you so dearly love!' "Cincinnati Enquirer. - LINCOLN'S IRONY. His Reply to a Petition For a Dishon est Boy's Pardon. . Tbe Hon. Alexander H. Rice once paid a visit to President Lincoln on behalf of a Boston boy who bad been Imprisoned for robbing bis employer's letters. After reading tbe petition, signed by many citizens of Boston, the president stretched himself in his chair and asked Mr. Rice if he bad met a man going downstairs. "Yes, Mr. President," replied Mr. Rice." "His errand," said the president "was to get a man pardoned out of the penitentiary, and now you have come to get a boy out of Jail." Then, With characteristic humor, Mr. Lincoln continued: "I'll tell you what it Is, we must abolish these courts or they Will be the death of us. I thought it bad enough that they put so many men in tbe penitentiary for me to get out but if tbey have now begun on the boys and the Jails and have roped yon Into the delivery let's after theml "They deserve the worst fate," be went on, "because, according to the evidence that comes to me. they pick out the very best men and send them to the penitentiary, and this present petition shows they are playing the same game on the boys and sending them all to Jail. Tbe man that yon met on tbe stairs affirmed that his friend In the penitentiary is a most exemplary citizen, and Massachusetts must be a happy state If her boys out of Jail are as virtuous as this one ap pears to be who is In. 'Tes, down with the courts and de liverance to their victims, and then we can hare some peace I" Boston Post . Compensation. "I must have an iron bedstead," de clared a tourist at an Inn. "Sir," answered Boniface, "I am sor ry there ain't a single Iron bedstead In the 'ouse. But you will find tbe mat tresses very nice and 'ard, sirr' Lon don Tlt-BIts. Called the Deal Off. A lad attending school craved a lit tle holiday oue morning when he started out to wrestle once again with the trials Incident to getting an edu cation. As he entered the schoolroom he hatched a plot to get the coveted holiday. He went up to tho teacher's desk and told his story., "My mother wants to know If you won't excuse me for today?" be began. "She wants mo to do some work at home and thought if I'd study at homo this even ing and make up what I'd missed mebby you'd let me off." Something about the lad's maimer kept the words from carrying convic tion. The teacher bluffed back ns fol lows: "Tommy," said site, "you won't need to go home at all. Since you started to school your mother called me on the phono to tell me that Hho bad changed her mind and for you to stay here." The lad looked ut her, startled. "Aw, well," he said, "as long ns both of us are lyln' about it let's Just call II quits. I'll stay hcro."-Clevelnnd Plain Dealer. A Wealthy Soldier's Idea. Australians still tell stories of the colonial volunteers, although tho war is a far memory. One, a member of the Stock Exchange, was left one wet and miserable night to guard a wagon load of goods. He shivered In the un sheltered place for some hours ponder ing many things, and then a bright thought struck him Just as the colonel came around on bis tour of Inspection. "Colonel," bo asked, "bow much is this wagon worth?" "I don't kuow," was the answer. "Much or little, we can't afford to lose it." "Well, but, colonel," persisted the amateur soldier, "you might give me a rough Idea of the value." "About 200," said the colonel testily. "Very well," was the answer; "I will come down to the camp and give you a check for the amount Then I'll turn in. I wouldn't catch my dooth of cold for twice that much." " What the colonel said is not record ed. Melbourne Times. Fourteenth Century Doctors. Synge's "Social Life In England" quotes a number of fourteenth century hints to success for physicians: Suppose you know nothing, say there Is an obstruction of the liver. Terhaps the patient will say, "Nay, master, it is my head or legs that trouble me." Repeat that It comes from the liver, and especially use the word "obstruc tion," for patients do not understand It, which Is Important Never dine with a patlenf who has not paid you. It will be cheaper to get your dinner at an inn, for such feasts are usually deducted from the surgeon's fee. When you are treating a wound or accident, tbe friends of the patient should be excluded, for they may faint and cause a disturbance, but some times a higher fee may be got from persons present fainting and breaking their bends against wood and the like than from the principal patient. Secret Society Among Bess Islanders. The Sese islanders have attained a peculiar notoriety In Ugnndn because of n secret society called the Bachlchl. which Is not a burial society, although Its members take n deep and Intelli gent Interest tn all deaths and burials In their midst. In tbe more retired vil lages, although greatly discouraged by tho British authorities. It Is said to be still the custom for the sorrowing rel atives to bear the body of the deceased wrapped In bark on a rough bier to some forest thicket, desolate ravine or other unfrequented spot, where It is loft unburled by tbe bearers, who nev er revisit the place again. The Bachl chl, who are denizens of a neighboring village, and distant relatives of the deceased avoid the necessity of burial or cremation and show their respect for tbe deceased by simply eating him. National Magazine. A Disappointment. "Yes," says the lady after an ac quaintance of ten or fifteen years be fore has been renewed, "I remember you perfectly." "Indeed?" murmurs the gratified man. "I nm glad to know that." "Yes; at one time I thought of mar rying you." "Oh," be replies dejectedly. "I thought for tbe moment that there might have been something that made me different from all the other men you ever knew." Life. A Stranger to His Ways. A distinguished bishop of the Epis copal church, arriving late at a small town one night found tbe hotel closed, and, hammering at the door for admis sion, a neighbor stuck his head out of an adjoining window with, "Say, Stranger, knock like the devil!" to which the bishop replied, "I don't know how." Hit Home. Tommy Paw, what . is three card monte? Mr. Tucker It's the most dia bolical, Infernal swindle that ever any body erer oh, It's some sort of a gambling game with cards, I believe, Tommy. Chicago Tribune. Not Too Often. ', "They tell me New England Is full of old maids," said the Philadelphia girt ' "Now, I suppose you Boston girls don't often marry?" "No; only once, as k rule," replied the Boston girl. Philadelphia Record. 8pots Removed While You 81eep. " Dill Has your wife a recipe for re moving spots from clothing? Fickle I should say she hadl She removed two five-spots from my trousers pocket with quietness and dispatch last night, Judge. The French Schoolboy's Hard Day. French children are often on their way to school a little after 7 o'clock In tho morning. If they bave conclud ed their lessons by 0 o'clock In tbe evening It Is only by dint of great ap plication." Young men studying for the higher professions have appoint ments with their tutors at S o'clock In the morning In summer time; other wise tbey cannot accomplish the moun tain of work that lies before them. In all branches of art the labor of the tyro la immense. At tbe conservatory the strenuous life is carried to a point wblcb provokes the astonishment even of laborious German students. Pall Mall Gazette. How High e Tiger Can Jump. For tbe benefit of tho prospective big game hunters a correspondent finally disposes of the theory that a tiger Is unable to Jump to any height from all fours. He records that he took refuge In a tree from a particular tiger. The beast, however, Jumped up to. blm, "like an India rubber bail, a good seven feet" and it was only "by letting go with my right and ramming both barrels down his mouth that I did not bave a very bad time of it." The moral evidently is that when avoiding a tiger It Is necessary to find a tree with Its lowest branch at least sixteen feet from the ground. India Field. Domestio Bliss. They had been trotting lh double harness for seven long, weary months, and the honeymoon had bumped tho bumps for fair. "John," she said, as she dished out the breakfast food, "I need a little pin money this morning." "What did you do with the $5 I gave you last week?" asked the man who had promised to love, honor and pay the freight "Oh, I don't remember," she replied. "It's so easy to spend $3 and have nothing to show for It" "Right you are," sighed John. "That was the amount I paid tbe minister for marrying us." Chicago News. Tongue Twisters. Among brief tongue twisters the fol lowing are hard to beat: "The sun shines on the top signs;" "She says she shall sew a sheet;" "Tbe sixth sick sheik's sixth sheep's sick." Some of Shakespeare's lines offer pitfalls to the rapid speaker. In "Midsummer Night's Dream" we find, "When Hon rough in wildest rage doth roar," and in tbe same play Oh, Fates, come, cornel Cut thread and thrum; Quail, crush, conclude and quell. London Chronicle. A Corsican Vendetta. Lecturing on "The Land of the Ven detta" at the Royal Geographical so ciety's headquarters, the Rev. T. T. Norgate said he bad discovered In stances of a vendetta being started in Corsica through a pig getting into an other man's Held, and this had caused the loss of perhaps hundreds of lives and had made two families deadly ene mies for upwnrd of 300 years. Tbe men who carried on such a vendetta would scorn to rob any one of a six penny piece. London Globe. Why She Opened the Letter. Willis-- I'f.i si rry your wife opened thnt l)iii' es i'-ttor I sent you, Hnrrls. Yon told me Mint she never opened your letters. Harris She doesn't, ns n rule, Willis, hut. you see. yon marked It "private." A Llttfo Too Young. -New Boarder flow's the fare here? Old Boarder Well, we have chicken every morning. New Boarder That's first rate! How Is It served? Old Boarder In tho eggs. Brooklyn Life. Peace rules the day where reason rules tbe mind. Collins. Scottish Miner's Wit. An amusing comment was made by a miner at an ambulance lecture in Elphlnstone, East Lothian. Tbe lec turer had stated that If suffocation from choking was likely to ensue tbe simplest remedy to give relief till med ical aid arrived was to take a fine pointed penknife and make a small in cision in the throat One of the miners then sbouted: "Ye dlnna ken Elphln stone folks. If I was to try that tbe morn here's what wad happen: If that man died his folk wad bae me prose cuted for murder, and If be got better he himself wad be tbe first to prose cute me for cutting his throat" Dun dee Advertiser. The British Museum. In tbe early days of tbe British mu seum, a century or more ago, the place was open for only six hours daily on five days a week during the summer and four hours dally during the rest of the year.' Nobody could remain In the building for more than two consecu tive hours, and the number admissible at one time was strictly limited to fifteen. Each batch of visitors was shepherded by an attendant Ready For H. . Young Wife Don't you admire a man who always says the right thing at tbe right time? The Spinster I'm sure I could if I ever have the pleas ure of meeting such a maru London Illustrated Bits. Crossed. "Father, what are wrinkles?" "Fretwork, my boy, fretwork." In dependent . ' , Deduction. "Tell me what you eat, and ? Will tell you what you are," boasted an amateur sage. "Well, I ate a welsh rabbit and a lemon pie last night" "You're a fool." Kansas City Journal. As Helpless as a Child; Rheumatism the Cause. Finds Almost Immediate Relief in Uric-O, tbe Remedy Recommended A'one for This One Disease. T. B. Singleton, 419 North Elizabeth Street, Lima, Ohio, advises all who suffer with rheumatism, no matter what form, to commenco at once a Urlo-0 treatment, and find In It a harm less, speedy oure. He writes as follows: "After belnjr stricken down with rheumatism for four years, in which time. I spout over $400 with doctors and treatment at sanitariums, I have found right here in my own town a remedy of wonderful merit. Through the recommendation of Druggist Vort kamp, I bave usod two bottles of Uric O, and can truthfully say that it has done me more good than ail the other medicines, baths and doctors combined. I was at times as bolple?s as a child and could not even dress myself. Since taking Uric-O, I foel as active in my limbs as ever, I am again an able bodied man. Uric-O is stvlcl and recommended by Stoke & Felcht and by druggists every where at 75o and $1.00 the bottle. Tbey will furnish samples and liter ature tinOn rpniinat. (I, noma nor, Vn I i - v, .... ... w au wo obtained by writing to the Smith Drug v,u., no amun mag., Syracuse, W. x. T H E Woodwork Supply Co. 1 RELIANCE RUBBER ROOF- ! ING does not last for ten years, i we furnish you material for a i new roof without extra cost, Come examine it before buying. Also see our patent window screen. Oheap and convenient. Don't need to take screen out to raise or lower sash, but can be taken out In a Jiffy If you want. I The Woodwork Supply Co. CITY. TVOTICE OF BOND ISSUE. -L 1 Notice Is hereby fflven tn whomever It. mta concern, that the Board of f Mrectors of the Sjhool District of the Boroutli of West Reyn oldsvllle, County of Jefferson and State of i-ennsyivama. win present thoir petition to the Court of Common Plena nf Jefferson county, on Monday, August 9th, 1909, praying for a decree authorizing tbem to borrow $11,300. and Increase the Indebtedness of said School District by such an a mount, for the purpose of erecting and equipping a new school house adequate to accommodate the schools to be held and maintained in, and for the use of the School District of the Borough of West Keynoldsviile, by Issuing bonds, In denomi nations of One Hundred Dollars each, said bonds to bear Interest at the rat of 5 oer cent per annum, payable semi-annually, and said bonds to be redeemed within thirty years from the date thereof, with the option and right reserved to said School District to re deem any number or amount of snld bonds, on any Interest date after the exnlratlon of five years, and also for leave to tile their statement as required by the act of Assem bly approved April 2uth, 1874, and its supple ments. By order of the Board of School Directors of the School District of West Keynoldsviile Borough, Jefferson county, Pennsylvania. Wm. P. WonrmiNO. Pres. O. H . Johnston, Sec. Garment Dyeing and Cleaning By James Pontefract ' West Reynolds ville, Penn'a- Op'poslte P. K. R. Freight Depot. fJUGHES & FLEMING. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Main Street. Reynolds vllle, Pa. WINDSOR HOTEL W. T. Brubaker, Mgr. Midway between Broad St. Station and Reading Terminal on Filbert st. European 11.00 per day and up. American $2.fi0 per day and up. Tbeonly moderate priced hotel of rep utation and consequence in PHILADELPHIA u O h w X H cd v o o a p-. u S o I-. p a TJ 0 3? Q O 3 o
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers