THE PATTON COURIER, SEPTEMBER 7. iy.0 " Ordinance No. 02. An ordinance amending section one of an ordinance of the borough of ordinance No. Patton, know un 82, approved i (iv jou day of Octo: | posted to advertise for Lian for ie ber, A. D. 1605, qutitied “An ordi | odin, \ and corning ul guid ance authui zug the geading, pave: |g oot weoording to plans snd & pest fons ing and cui on Beech avenue | tions niecpared. or £0 be peojared Ly from Fifth uveuue west to Sixth | him. aod to m port the bids rovetved by avenue, wut providing lection of the coset of the same.” Be it enacted and ordained by the burgess and town council of the bor- ough of Patton, and it is hereby en- acted and ordained by authority of the That section 1 of an ordinance of the borough of Patton, known as ordinance No. 82, approved the 16th same, day of October, A. D., 1905, entitled “An ordinance authorizing the grad ing, paving and curbing of Beech ave nue from Fifth avenue west to Sixth avenue, and providing for the collec- tion of the cost of the same,” which re ds us follows: “Section 1. Be it euacled wud or daineu by the burgess and towu coui- tur the col- property owners adjacent to the same and the borough of Patton according to Act of Assembly approved the 23rd day of A pridy, 1880, The borguigh engineer is Lereby Lim to the burgess and towii council at a time to be hereafter designated. Enacted and ordained by the burgess and town council of Patton borough this 30th day of July, A. D. 1906. H, 8. LINGLE, President of Council, Attest: ED S. MOORE, rough Seeretary, .| Approved by the burgess of Patton . | borough this, the 30th day of July, A. D. 1906. R¢ H. 8. LINGLE, Acting Burgess. Ordinance No. 94. An ordinance amending section one of | an ordinance of the borough of| cil of the borough of Patton, and it is | hereby enacted and ordained by au- thority of the same: That, brick or blocks. Therefore, be it enacted and ordained that said street, beginning at Ffth ave- nue, and extencing west to Sixth aye- nue, be properly graded, paved with vitrified paving brick or blocks and curbed to the width of 30 feet between curbs,” be and is hereby amended to read as follows: Section 1. thirds of .the property owners, repre- senting not less than two-thirds in number of feet of the properties front- ing or abutting on Beech avenue be- tween Fifth and Fourth avenues in the borough of Patton, have petitioned council asking that said street be graded, paved and curbed, setting forth in said petition the reason there- fore, and respectfully asking that the same be paved with vitrified brick or blocks. Therefore, be it enacted and ordained, that said street, beginning at Fifth ave- nue and extending west to Sixth ave- nue, be properly graded, paved with vitrified paving brick or blocks and curbed to the width of 28 feet between curbs, and that alley approaches be graded, curbed and paved to the width of sixteen feet. Enacted and ordained by the burgess and town council of the borough of Patton, this 30th day of July, A. D, 1906. H. S. LINGLE, President of Council. Attest: — ED S. MOORE, Borough Secretary. Approved by the burgess of Patton borough this, the 30th day of July, A. D. 1906. H. 8. LINGLE, Acting Burgess. Ordinance No. 93. An ordinance authorizing the grading, / paving and curbing of Fifth ave- nue from Beech avenue north to the intersection of Terra Cotta ave- nue, and providing for cost of col- * lection of the same. Section 1. Be it enacted and or- . dained by the burgess and town coun- cil of Patton borough, and it is hereby enacted and ordained by authority of the same, That, whereas two-thirds of the prop- erty owners, representing not less than two-thirds in number of feet of the properties fronting or abutting on ‘Fifth avenue between Beech avenue and Terra Cotta avenue in the borough of Patton, have petitioned council ask- ing that said street he graded, paved and curbed, setting forth in said peti- tion the reasons therefore, and respect- fully asking that the same be paved with vitrified brick. Therefore, be it enacted and ordained thau said street, beinning at Beech ave- nue and extending north to Terra Cotta avenue, be properly graded, «curbed with stone and paved with vit- rified paving brick or blocks to the width of 30 feet between curbs. whereas, two-thirds of the property owners, representing not less than two-thirds in number of feet of the properties fronting or abutting on Beech avenue, between Fifth and Sixth avenues in the borough of Patton, have petitioned council, asking that said street be graded, paved and curbed, getting forth in said petition the reason therefore, and respectfully asking that the same be paved with vitrified paving Be it enacted and or- dained by the burgess and town coun- cil of the borough of Patton, and it is hereby enacted and ordained by au- thority of the same: That, whereas, two- D. 1906. An ordinance authorizing the grading, Patton known as ordinance No. 83, | approved the 6th day of Novem. | ber, 1905, entitled, ‘“‘An ordinance authorizing the grading, paving and curbing of Fourth avenue from Magee avenue north to Beech avenue, and providing for collection of cost of the same.” Be it enacted and ordained by the burgess and town council of the boro- ugh ot Patton and it is hereby enacted and ordained by authority of the same. That section 1 of ordinance of the No. 83, approved the 6th day of No- vember, A. D. 1905, entitled, ‘‘An or- dinance authorizing the grading, pav- ing and curbing of Fourth avenue from Magee avenue north to Beech avenue and providing for collection of cost of the same, ”’ which reads as fol- lows: “Section 1. Be iv enacted and or dained by the burges. and town coun- cil of the borough of Patton, and it is hereby enacted and ordained by au- thority of the same: That whereas two-thirds of the property owners, representing not less than two-thirds in number of feet of the properties fronting or abutting on Fourth avenue between Beech and Magee avenues, in the borough of Patton, have petiti- tioned council, asking that said street be graded, paved and curbed, setting forth in said petition the reason there- avenue, be properly graded, curbed with stone and paved with yitrified paving brick or blocks to the width of | 30 feet between curbs” be and is here- | by amended to read as follows: ( Section i. Be it enacted and or-| dained by the burgess and town coun- cil of the borough of Patton, and ibis | « hereby enacted and ordained by au- thority of the same: That, whereas, two- of the property owners representing not less than two-thirds in number of feet of the properties fronting or abutting on Fourth avenue, between Beech avenue | and Magee avenue, in the borough of! Patton, have petitioned council, asking | that said street be graded, paved and | curbed, setting forth in said petition | 4 the reasons therefore, and respectfully | % asking that the same be paved with |, vitrified brick. Therefore, be it enacted 1 hirds a de and or- as Magee avenue and extending north to | Beech avenue, he properly graded, | curbed with stone and paved with vit- rified paving brick or blocks to the width of twenty-four feet between curbs, and that the alley approaches be graded, paved and curbed to the width | of sixteen feet. Enacted and ordained by the burgess and town council of the borough of Patton, this, the 30th day of July, A. D. 1906. N 1a he di J. H. 8. LINGLE, President of Council. Attest: — ED. S. MOORE, { Borough Secretary. Approved by the burgess of Patton borough this, the 30th day of July, A, H. S. LINGLE, Acting Burgess. Ordinance No. 95. paving and curbing of Fifth avenue from Lang avenue south to the iron bridge crossing Little Chest | creek, and providing for the col- | lection of the cost of the same. ! That grading, paving and curbing be | dained by the burgess and town coun- according to plans and specifications | cil of Patton borough, and it is hereby | { enacted and ordained by authority of | are hereby approved and made a part | the same. of the borough engineer, which plans | hereof, and that said work be done Section 1. Be it enacted and or-| il That, whereas, two-thirds of the] under his supervision as well as that of | property owners, representing not less | the street committee. Section 2. {than two-thirds in number of feet of | That the grading, paving | the properties fronting or abutting on | and curbing be done by contract. Con- | Fifth avenue between Lang avenue tract to be advertised and let to the |and the bridge crossing Little Chest | contractor who submits the lowest | creek, in the borough of Patton, have | bid, offers the best terms, and who | petitioned council asking that said | submits a bond for the faithful per- street be graded, paved and curbed, | formance of his duties under the con tracu Section 8. That the cost of grading, paving and curbing of the same be as- certained, charged and assessed to the | getting forth in said petition the reas-| [ons therefore and respectfully asking | B that the same be paved with viiritied paving bricks or blocks. Therefore be it enacted and ordained, ; borough of Patton known as ordinance | avenue and extending north to Beech | ¢ { | 39 dained that said street beginning at | with Central Railroad of Pennsylvania; at Philipsburg with Pennsylvania railroad and haffey 1 western railway. Gen’l Pass, Agt., 1% Faint ASS that said street, beginning at Lang| ~Aocvut a dozen years ago, as nearty avenue and extending south to the | #8 I remember, this young man wem bridge crossing Little Chest creek, be | properly graded, curbed and paved | with vitrified paving bricks or block to the width of thivty tet bet curbs, That grading, paving aud curbing tions of the borough engineer, wlii well he hh | call Colonel Jones. 4 1 startled a lady member of the house Ing’ that some misfortune had over yard In Scotland, century the practice of stealing bod bold by remarking that he ‘had a feel | from the churchyards for the purpose 1% of sale as subjects for dissection, whic! taken a wealthy planter whow they | was known as “body snatching,” was cured by done according to plous and specitien- | both knew very well, and whow 1 wil) The colonel was & for a time very rife. Varlous plans were made to defea plans and specifications are hereby ap-| prominent resident of the doctor's | the nefarious and sacrileglous proceed pr re s 1 y 4 anatel 1” OF “rosie. proved and made a part hereof, and | home town and had a large outlying | Ings of the “body snatehers,” or “resur that said work be done under his sup- | estate, which he was in the habit of | rectionists,” as they were sometimes | his duties under the contract, Section 3, April, A. D., 1889, The borough engineer is hereby di- rected to advertise for bids for grading, paving and curbing of said street according to plans and specifi- cations prepared or to be prepared by | him, and to report the bids received by | out trouble that the tablets were a | rave was opened and the iron arme him to the burgess and town council at a time to be by them designated. Enacted and ordained by the burgess and town council of Patton borough this 21st day of August, A. D. 1906. H. 8S. LINGLE, President of Council. Attest: — ED. 8. MOORE, Borough Secretary. That the cost of grading paving and curbing be ascertained and charged and assessed to the property {owners adjacent to the same and the | Borough of Patton according to Act of Assembly approved the 23rd day of the | some sort of fit or convulsion. ) | stir, and the police made a pretty ell by four inches long, and had orig: | Inally contained a couple of dozen to the cork. A few still vemained in the bottom, “Upon inquiry it was learned with harmless preparation of soda, and that Jones himself had bought them at a local drug store. That ended suspicion In that quarter, and, for lack of any- | thing better, the coroner returned a verdict of death from sunstroke. There was no autopsy. “Some time after Jones had sioner, “I learned accidentally of Dr. | Smith’s curious prophecy, and it set Approved by the burgess of Patton | me to thinking. Eventually I evolved H. 8S. LINGLE, Acting Burgess. (Pennsylvania Division.) Beech Creek District. Condensed Time Table. fore and respectfully asking that the | Read up : Read down same be paved with vitrified brick. {Esp Mos In effect June 17,05 ~ Ero Mull Therefore, be ic enacted and ordained, | PELE Siton am pm that said street, beginning at Magee | 900 129 Westover 636 3 701 ar Arcadia 8 4 30 100ar Mahaffey Iv 700 K 757 1281v TIOOY ar729 i219 Gazzam 7 1212 ar Kerrmoor Iv729 2 1207 New Millport 734 é 5 1202 Olanta 740 42 7 1155 Mitchells 746 42 11125 Clearfield 821 ) 35 11.00 Woodland 845 324 10 49 Wallaceton 900 515 10 39 Morrisdale Mines 910 605 1029 Iv Munson ar 918 532 1000 1v) Philipsburg ar 42 ¢ “ 325 10 50 ar § lv 500 10 24 ar Munson Iv 555 10 19 Winburne 5 Peale 947 Gillintown 1004 645 5 Shoe 1009 650 Beech Creek 1057 744 Mill Hall 1109 757 Lock Haven 18 2 Shore 5 838 Williamsport arl2z2o 910 Pm pm| Phila & Reading RR pm p m 23 50 a Williamsport Iv 12 29%11 30 {8 36 #11 30 1v Philadelphia ar 7380 650 m pm ym ain F400 lv. NY via Tamaqua ar 1040 30 900!v NY via Phila ar 1010 {902 m pm Pm am, *Daily. {Week days. ¢7 p m Sunday. {11 00 m Sunday Connections—At Williamsport with Phila- Iphia and Reading Railway: at Jersey Shore ith the Fall Brook District; at Mill Hall Y and P C R R; at Clearfield with the Buf- lo, Rochester and Pittsbu; ilway; at Ma- ley and Patton with Cambria and Clearfield vision of the Pennsyvanis with the railroad; at Ma-~ Pennsylvania and North- F. Fairlamb, W. H. Northrup, Gen. Agent, New York, Williamsport, Pa. Challenge! & We invite a practical side- by-sidetest of any other paints (hand-or-machine-mixed) with Lucas Paint A (Tinted Gloss) ; #5 ) This is a fair and con- { , { vincing way to show you that ucas Paint P covers n. .c surface, {i} ucas| andlooksbetterlonger i f than all other paints. JA Challenge on every {can with a guarantee that better value can. not be made, John Lucas & Co Sixty years of paint-making Philadelphia | Chicago h © For Sale by Binder & lv 1610 240 | for sour stomach. {9 “That suggested a diabolical scheme }20| prepared tablet. borongh this, the 24th day of August, A. | @ theory, but it was impossible at the D. 1906. | time to sustain it with proof, and for | five or six years I kept it pigeonholed | In wy brain, waiting for something to | happen. Meanwhile, to everybody's | surprise, Dr. Smith went to the dogs. | He began by drinking heavily, grad | ually lost his practice, | skipped out to avoid prosecution for | cashing a fake draft. I learned enough to absolutely confirm | my theory as to Jones' death. | Bad really happened was this: | “Dr. Smith owed the old man a con- | | siderable sum of money and had given | a note, upon which he had forged his | father’s name as indorser. The plant- | er was pressing him for payment and | had threatened suit, which meant iu- | evitable exposure. One day, while | | they were conversing, Jones pulled out | a little glass vial and swallowed ons | of the tablets it contained, remarking | | that he took one daily, after dinner, | | of assassination, which the doctor pro | ceeded to put into execution. Repair Ing to his office, he made up a duplicats | the colonel next day, asked him to let | him have the vial for a moment, so he | | could copy the address of the makers from the label. “Jones handed it over unsuspecting: ly, and while his attention was briefly | | diverted elsewhere Smith put in the | He placed it under | the top four, thus making it reason- | ably certain that his victim would take | Next morning he left town, so as to | | be far away when the tragedy was | mysterious. | 3 : | uncontrollable impulse evidently | him to make the prediction that first | excited my suspicion. located Smith in Oklahoma and was | on the point of applying for an extradi- | tion warrant when he anticipated me I thereupon returned the case to its mental pigeonhole, where it has re mained ever since.” the listeners, “but is that really a true | story, or are you entertaining us with Interesting fiction?” narrator. “But how did you learn the particu ars?’ smiling, “Smith was like most clever triminals—--he had one weak spot, He was fool enough to tell a woman. She erat. | Ate Course Dinners. | it on the fifth ‘day from that date. consummated, and some led | “When I made certain of all this, 1 oy contracting pneumonia and dying, “Pardon we for asking,” said one of “It is absolutely true,” replied the “Well,” said the police commissioner, blabbed.”—New Orleans Times-Demo A woman just arrived from Aus | tralia was recently negotiating with | an agent in London for a house in one | of the newer districts of Kensington, | She asked if it was a nice neighbor- | bood. “It is thoroughly desirable, | madam,” replied the house agent. | They are without exception soup and fish families.” It is not correct to say that a girl “renders” a song. If she lives long enough to become of some use in the | world, she may some day render lard, | but she can’t render @ song.—Atchlsoy | Globe. | The voice is the most common &nd a4 the same time the most complex of hu. man faculties. When we Hlsten to ig | we realize nothing of the many infin. | ences at work in its use. Yet it repre | sents the character, the mood, the tem- perament and the health of the individ. ual when left to run in its own way. If uncontrolled, it will develop much as a flower garden will develop; the rank and weedy nature will come to the front, and the tones of exquisite beau- ty will be obscured. Bad daily habits in the use of the voice will give it | many disagreeable qualities, If con- trolled, the voice will keep its weeds in | the background and permit only its beauties to be known. If cultivated, | the weeds will be taken out and the Starrett, Patton, Pa. flowers developed.— Pittsburg Press. been | buried,” continued the police commis: | and finally | After his flight | What | | your | came to the Azores in 1838. oe . visiting once a week, called, a very common one being the ervision a3 well as that of the street | wg, the day of Smith's singular pre | erection of rwo or vere small watch. coinmitioe, | monition he was on one of those tours | 40v.cs Ww comme Section 2. That the grading, paving | of inspection, but tailed to come buck, | the whole Land and earbing shail be done by coutract. and the following morning his corpse which the 3 decea Contract to be advertised and let to was found lying in a cornfield. He nounted gt ! * of nig {the contractor who submits the best had evidenty been dead about 24 after the fi bi, offers best terms and who submits | Bours, and from the Rppearance of the A ns i ve rol 4 a bond for the faithful performance of body seemed to have been seized with | Was to uit head of : | coffin and Lore iu it a lucge round “Of course the affair created a great | by means of a specially constructed | It was to counteract this | Who has had over 40 years of exper- | thorough investigation, but the only | maneuver that the two curious coffin. |ience in kidney troubles, having made thing they found that merited any | fike relics now lying on either side of | it a specialty, and these pills are made special attention was a small, round | the door of the ruined church of Aber- | from his own perscription. vial in the dead man's vest pocket. It| foyle, in Perthshire, were constructed. | was about the diameter of a lead pen- | They are solid masses of cast iron of | eenter bit. | enormous weight. | | top of the other, filled the little bottle | suitable derricks, tackles and chains | on to the top of the coffin, the grav was filled in, and there it was left fi | some considerable time, Later on th | plate was removed and laid aside ready for another funeral. | These contrivances still lie on the | grass of the lonely little churchyard, | objects of curiosity to the passing cy- | erist and tourist.—Scientific American. The Explanation, One morning the readers of a certain | newspaper were perplexed to see in | type the auucuucement that “the Sco | tus handed down an important deci | sion yesterday.” The afternoon papet | of the town, with which the morning | paper for years had held a bitter con- | troversy, interesting none but them- selves, laughed that day, as the poets | say, “in ghoulish glee,” and it was up | to the morning paper the next day to eaxplain that “the types” made them say that the Scotus did so and so when the telegraph editor should have known that that word was merely the abbre- viation of the telegrapher for suprems eourt of the United States. | : Loeusts Good to Ent, All native African races eat locusta. With many it takes, and has to take, the place of the British workman's beef and mutton. In a good many vil- lages sun dried locusts are an article of commerce. The Sudanese are particu- larly fond of them. Before they are eaten they are toast. ed. The wings and legs having first been torn off, the long, soft body and the crisp bead form the delicacy. I determined not to let my European prejudices influence me, but to give | the dish of grilled locusts a fair trial. I thought how John the Baptist had | enjoyed them plus wild honey. | The one I was eating was rather nice. TI agreed with my Arab servant that, should the meat supply fall short, a dish of locusts would be a very good substitute. By the time I was eating the sec ond locust it seemed to me absurd | why one should have a sort of lurking | pity for John the Baptist’s daily menu | unless it be for its monotony, and 1 felt convinced that I should get tired of honey sooner than I should of lo custe.—Current Literature. An eccentric clergyman in Cornwan had been much annoyed by the way the members of the congregation had of looking around to see late comers. After enduring it for some time he said on entering the reading desk one | day: “Brethren, I regret to see that your attention: is called away frdm religious duties by your very | natural desire to see who comes in| behind you. I propose henceforth te | save you the trouble by naming each | person who may come late.” | He then began, “Dearly peloved,” | but paused half way to interpolate | “Mr. 8., with his wife and daughter.” | Mr. 8. looked rather surprised, but | the minister, with perfect gravity, re | sumed. Presently he again paused | “Mr. C. and William D.” The abashed congregation kept theis eyes studiously bent on their books | The service proceeded in the most or derly manner, the parson interrupting | himself every now and then to name | some newcomer, At last he said, stili with the same perfect gravity: { “Mrs. 8. in a new bonnet.” In a moment every feminine head in the congregation had turned around. | Millinery Trade Review. A Mystery .of the Sea, One of the most curious finds ever | made from the sea was that which | The is- | land of Corvo was then in the posses- | sion of two runaway British sailors. | One morning there drifted ashore a craft which had evidently been frozen | In the ice for a long time. It was an | ancient and baticred brig, without | masts, bulwark or name, but the hatches were on, the cabin doors fast, and the hulk was buoyant. She had lit- | tle cargo, and that consisted of skins | and furs in prime condition. | No papers were fouud in the cabin but it was figured that she was sealer or trader, carrying a crew of | 10 or 12, and that she had been pro- | visioned for a year. The flour was | spoiled, but the beef was perfectly | preserved. She had heen abandoned | when frozen in an iceberg and drifted for years. The date of the letter found | In the forecastle showed that the brig | had been abandoned nearly half a century before. The two sailors got | out tbs furs, which eventually brought them $4,000, and two barrels of beef and then set firefto the wreck. No trace was ever found jof its nawe or owners \ 1 In the earlier half of the nineteent! When an interment took place one of | | medicinal tablets, which, lying one on | these massive slabs was lowered by | | i | | A BOON TO WOMEN. en ——— on a visit to a relative in a neighbor | They Were Once Used In a Charehe [The Dune of the Average Femnle Promply Ing city, and one afternoon, on the third or fourth day of his stay, he Elminuted hy a Simple Homedy, Backeohe, whether due to natural por the result of disease, can be h y | promntly deviated nd ultimately the use of Dr. Wood’s Kid- ney and Buekache pills, Thousands of teal women Cua Le tify to the j rush of this. | It is a purely vegetable compound and does not contain any poisons or deleterious substances. It acts prompt- ly,and in addition to relieving the pain tones up the system and makes life worth living. A trial will convince s and a trial will costs you nothing. If | they do not do all that is claimed for vhem your money will be cheerfully re- funded. Dr. Wood is a reputable physician Don’t suffer any longer, but buy a Price 50 cents at Wolf’s | box now. Pharmacy. THE SCHEME WORKED. A Scheme by Which Brown Quieted | His Wife's Saspicion, ¢ | To be perfectly honest. Brown does | got go to his Griswold street office | every night that he tells his wife he | 18 going there. The business which he says is pressing is frequently imagi- | mary and the man whom he is going | to meet does not exist. He belongs | to a club, and clubs have their attra | tions. He thought that his wife was growing suspicious, and Brown is re- ! sourceful. On the evening in question, as the ' | lawyers would say, he told her that | there was a matter of business that | eould not possibly be deferred until the | next day. About 9 o'clock she answer. ed the ‘phone and was asked if Brown | was at home, and she replied that he | was at his office. | "™Guess not,” was the alarming re- | sponse. “I was just down there and | all looked dark” | She rang off viciously, if women ever do such things, ordered a coupe, told the driver to go as fast as the ordi- nance allows, kept taking on temper as, | she went and flew up stairs to the | | office as though a mouse were in hot | pursuit. Her husband met her smile | ingly, insisted that she had given him | a delightful surprise, put his easiest] | ehalr near the light, banded her a pa- | | per and apologized for having to re-| | sume work that would possibly keep him till 3. She <ould not explain, she could not keep awake, she was ashams- ed of herself, and after lamely telling | him that she nad dreamed that he was | 1 she left. | In ten minutes he was at the club | and shook hands with a man who smile | Ingly asked if the scheme worked. | He replied that it was as good as ready | money for at least 60 days, and then each bought a stack of chips that pass | In the pight.~Detroit Free Press. | BEAUTIES OF A GLACIER. | Scenes That Are Likened to Visions of a Glorified City, | The fascinations of a glacier are as witching as they are dangerous: Apos- tolic vision of a crystal city glorifted, by light “that never was on land or | sea” was not more beautiful than | these vast ice rivers, whose onward | course is chronicled, not by years and | eenturies, but by geological ages, says | @ British Columbia correspondent of | the New York Post. With white dom- | ea show cornices wreathed fantastic | as arabesque and with the glassy | wails of emerald grotto reflecting a | million sparkling jewels, one might be | in some cavernous dream world or | among the tottering grandeur of an an- cient city. The Ice pillars and silvered pinnacles, which scientists call seracs, | stand like the sculptured marble of temples crumbling to ruin. Glittering pendants hang from the rim of bluish chasm. Tints too brilliant for artists’ brush gleam from the turquoise of erystal watis. Rivers that flow through valleys of ice and lakes, hemmed in by hills of iee, shine with an azure depth that is very infinity’s self. In the morning, when all thaw has been stopped by the night's cold, there is deathly silence over the glacial fields, even the mountain cataracts fall noises lessly from the precipice to ledge in tenuous, wind blown threads. But with the rising of the sun the whole glacial world bursts to life in noisy tumult. Surface rivulets brawl over the ice with a glee that is vocal and almost human. The gurgle of rivers flowing through subterranean tunnels becomes a roar, as of a rushing, angry sea, ice grip no longer holds back rock scree foosened by the night's frost. and there is the reverberating thunder of the falling avalanche. They diadn’t Met, A correspondent of the Hartford Cou: rant tells of a news clipping bureau which sent a letter to John Bunyan, author of a work entitled “The Life of Mr. Badman,” in care of a publisher, urging Mr. Bunyan to subscribe to the bureau. “After the decease of the late P. T. Barnum,” continues the correspond. ent, “the ‘Greatest Show on Earth’ i continued for awhile to use the magie of his name. It was coming to Hart- ford, and it sent free tickets to clergy-, men here. Among the letters contain. ing said tickets was one addressed to! the Rev. Dr. Joel Hawes, who had’ died some years before. The letter was sent to Dr. George L. Walker, then the active pastor of the First church. “On reading and pondering it Dr. Walker is credibly reported to have gaid: ‘A letter from P. T. Barnum to Dr. Hawes! Mr. Barnum is dead and Dr. Hawes is dead. It is evident thag thewy bhage not met yonder.” 8 VOL 1 PA OF Crimina ru fender Spang a Has The « present ing tha election signed and th of Ebel ton, an townsh matter. A ser of the « D. A. ‘When | nounce with th it must until tk as direc who bh: asked t 5) her co grantec plaintif Carroll it is sai on the Beca occupy James would | househ ishmen ‘ta dam did not or will during durane Sheriff lived at A cas in whic Ellen P Ellen x pay tw being a . John ter, Bei by A. I sault a and car allowed assault pay the serve tl Anni an alleg ton, wa the cost A cas cused | tion, ar fertilize ant pay alleged Spect mony i Emil Pe of bitin the def tacked teeth ii lowed. } costs di 1 Robe: wife, E and no Spangle husband with he time dic VE contrib port or them, . * he calle o’clock to live a The ¢ pay the tion be 3 stated t husband The hus strike, mines, could ni Paul ¢ nic Sun Heffron found g each in Office evening sSummotl posite tl revolve prisoner leaders covered panions Nick P prisone;
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers