w- The owner of ilio new apartment house was exhlliltliiR It to hi brother-In-law, who was an nrehltect. "I bad It built ncfonltiw tu wy own Mr-as," he nnl1. "nnd lt d built for keens. An PHrtluiunKo wonldn t bare any effort on It." "Thnt'i a pity." ontil tho brotherin law. "An oiirtlniunko might Improve It" Chlearo Tribune. Am Outrun-. Conductor-You'll have to iay fare for tbnt child, sir; he's over six. Passenger (Indignantly) Well, that's the first time I've ever b(n asked to pay fare for that baby, ami he's ridden with tot on cars for nluo years and w. L. JOIINSTON, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Office four ilixim from Hoss tlmiw, West Itaynoliliville, l'u. pRIESTEU BIIOS. UNDERTAKERS. Wnrk nnrt while funeral curs. Minn street. lU'ynoldsvllle, l'a. H. HUGUES, UNDERTAKING AND IMCTURE FRAMING. ThnU.M. Riirlnl I,OHirm litis lmon tilled and found nil rlitlit. ( lirapi'M form of In siirtinro. Sei'ure h rout met. Woodward liulldinr, lioynoUlxville, I'a. WANTED SEVEKAIj iNPt'STKlOI'H I'EK miw In each Htiitu lo travel for Imiiiho iwtuh UnIiivI r-lm-rn yesrs mid wll h li lurtfu cnpltitl, to null ujiott mcivlifini unci tiiri'iilM for hiii resHfiil nnd iimfltiilile lino. IVrnitini'iit rn Ifttirpmi'tit. AVoekly riinh Hiiltiry of f:4 mid hII traveling expense?, and hntnl otll nclvHnred In enth ewh week. KHrlenre not esneniinl. Mention reference find enclose Melf-ntlilrrHwd envelope. THE NATIONAL, Wi Hcitrborn Street, CIiIcidjo. NOTICE OP APPLICATION FOR ALTERATION IN CHARTER. In the Court of Common Picas of Jef ferson County. Notlco Ih hereby clven tluit nn apiillciilhin will he made to 1 lie Court of Common Plena of Jcirerion County, on the J7th day of June A. I)., at oYlock a. m. of hiiIiI dnv. uniler an Act of Aswtnhlv entitled "An Act to provide for the incorixiral Ion and regula tion of certain corporation." approved April SSiUh, 1x74, and the Hiipplcmcntx thereto, hy the lieynohlsvllln I'reHhylerlan Church, of Keynohlxvllln, l'n for the allowance and approval of certain amendment! anil altera lions In the charter of mild church, an net forth and contained In a certlllcato now on tile In aald court. O. M. McDonald, Solicitor. "V-OTICE OF APPLICATION FOR A CHARTER. Notice In hereby plvcn that nn application will ho made hv Charles McSherrv, ('. Holfman and W. W. Wiley, to the (iovernor of the Slate of Pennsylvania, on the 241 h day of June A. D., IIK4, at 10 o'clock n. m. of ald day under the provlslona of an Act of A somlily entitled "An Act to provide for the incorporni Ion and rciruiallon of certain corporations" approved the limit day of April A. D lh?4, and the NupplementH thereto, for a charter for nn Intended corporation, to lie called the American Production Company, the (flaracter and ohoct of which Is the manufacturing of urli. Uwof conimerco from aheet, plate, bar or cimt metal, anil cement rooHng tile, composed of cement and meial, Hlid for these purposes to have, possess and enjoy all the rlnhis, henellis and privileges by aald Act of Assembly and the supplements thereto conferred. O. M. McDonald. Solicitor. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Notice Is hereby nlvcn that letters of ad ministration on the estate of Kohort, Mcin tosh, deceased, laleof WuslitliKton township, County of .lell'erson anil Mate of Pennsyl vania, have been (trained to the undersigned, to whom all persons Indebted to said estate tire requested to make payment, and those bavlnx claims or demands w ill make known the name without delay. .lAUKSS. DorilHKHTT, n it r. Administrator. G. M. MoDonalij, Attorney for Adm'r. w jsm s-v r avfe.i-c K-" raff,. '''4 !llWilinr-iii,TWfi2J Pain in Head, Side and Back. I For yearn I suffered with pain In the head, pain In tbe aide, and In the email of the back. 1 waa nervous and constipated and eonld not sleep. The ptlla and other medicines I tried only made a bad mutter wonu. Then I tried Celery KIuk. One package cored me and made a new woman of me. Mrs, Ilk Kle lutmmer, Orotoiitm-Huuiiou, N. X. Oolery King enree Constipation and Nerve. Btoniuoli, LlvoraudKlOuey Discuses. It pAI The nime Cldredte haa eloed for Ihe v BLST In the Sewcng Midline World. m . Her Is New tlJredjei BETTER I nlrfV la EVER, and Suparior to all others. Cosine hike-up; self seU tluK uee11e; self thrcudiuK bhuttle YA4fC etdumntlc tension releuseiautumutic WaiS bobhinwlndei; positive four mutluu feed: capped neddle bar; nowclcss self adjusting; toller beatiiiK wheel, steel pltmnu! five ply laminnted woodwork., with beautiful act of Kivkelcd steel atuchinents. Ask your dealer for tiie improved Kldredge "U" ana do nut huy auy wachiuc ualU yuu have cut it, ' National Sewing Machine Co. . Ut1.VllElit, Illinois, . . ','''.. V. r. UOFFMAK, AGENT. ' JReittutUlitviUe, Pa. ' : ' '' ' ' - " " J(3R NRURfN. " " rnme Characteristics of One of tke) Moat Interesting of Man. Uusklu's kindness had Its rootb In lite essential sweetness of his nature. Everything In life hnd conspired to spoil him. lie was often willful and wayward ami extravagant, but the bet- ' ter elements of his being prevailed over those which, to his harm, were to gain power wlien he was released from the controlling influence of his father's good sense and his mother's authority. The extraordinary keenness of his per ccptloiM of external things, tlio vivaci ty of his Intelligence, tlio ardor of his temperament, tlio immense variety of his Interests and occupations and the restless energy and Industry with which he pursued them, made him one of the most Interesting of men. And combined as they were with deep po etic and deeper mornl sentiment as well as with a born desire to give pleasure, they gave td Intercourse with him a charm which Increased ns ac quaintance grew into affectionate friendship. Ills mind was Indeed at this time In a state of ferment. lie was still mainly busy with those topics of art and nature to which his writings had hitherto been devoted. But bis work In the field had led him into oth er fields of inquiry, which stretched wide and dark before him, through which no clear paths were visible and into which he was entering not with out hope of opening a way. Hence forth his chief mission was that, not of the guttle in matters of art, but of the social reformer. Charles Eliot Nor ton In Atlantic. STONE ANIMAL WORSHIP. Imaares That Stand For the Baddhla Idea of Reincarnation, Frnncla II. Nichols In his Journey throiiKh the Chinese province of Shen si anw a teniplo where etono antmala were worshiped. lie anya: "In rowa of heavily bnrred brick cngeu aro atone lmngea of anlmnla. They aro all life size and are remarkably well executed. Among them are elephants, tlgora and inonkeya, whose sculptors must have secured their models a long distance from Shensl, where the originals are not found. The atone animals stand for the Buddhist idea of reincarnation. They are worshiped na snored and are aupposed, in a vague way, to bo en dowed with life. It ia to prevent them from escaping anil running away from their worshipers that the cages have wooden bars In front of them. Be tween the two temples waa a pond, where fish were fonged or set at lib erty. In Its workings the system of rouging animals has very much the ef fect of a humane society on the west ern side of the world. On the theory that any of the brute creation may be the dwelling place of the soul of a for mer human being, lame and sick ani mals become the care of the priests. In some of tbe larger temples special provision ia made for caring for sick cats and doga. To fong an animal of any kind Is considered an act of su preme virtue. To obtain good luck a pious Chinaman will sometimes pur chase a live fish and have a priest fong It This la done by placing It In the pond reserved for the purpose near the temple." Low Belllnar What used to be known as "low bell ing" was -formerly a common sport In England and an effective method of enpturing all sorts of birds which rooat on the ground, from larks to partridges. Boys still sometimes amuse themselves with It In the rural districts of Eng land, and the peasants of Spain and the south of Europe make a business of it. The only necessary apparatus is a large boll, like a cowbell or a dinner bell, and a lantern with a reflector to cast a bright rny of light on the ground. The fowler turns out on dark nights and walks the fields ringing the bell steadily and searching the ground In front with the lantern. The noise or the light, or the two combined, have such an effect in dazzling or terrifying the birds that they may be picked up In the hand. Oar First Iran Casting;. What Is believed to be the first iron casting made in tbe territory now in cluded in the United States is pre served In Lynn, Mass. Its history is well authentlcutod. It is a cooking pot weighing a little over two pounds. It was made about 1042 near Lynn, where a small blast furnace was built that year. This furnace lined charcoal for fuel, with bog ore found in tbe meadow along the Bangui river and oyster shells as flux. The furnace was operated until 1088, with some inter missions. Scientific American. Work and Worrr. It is a common mistake that to wor ry hard is to work hard. Tbe way to succeed is to work and not to worry; the way to fall is to worry and not to work. The way to neither succeed nor fall is to both work and worry; that is the way to kill' yourself. London Truth. A Good Word For Apollo. Mrs. Popley Mr. D'Auber remarked today that our Robert was like a young Apollo. Mr. I'opley Oh, that's the way with those artists. They're always try ing to muke people think well of those old classical heroes, Philadelphia Press. Looking Forward. "You must excuse tbe beef," apol ogized the liindlady. "The butcher promises to do better tomorrow." "Ah!" muttered Fltzgobler. "We are all ontored for the futurity steaks, as It were." . Don't eat when tired and dou't work when' tired. .It ,1s .mistake to work whwii not in a tit condition bad for the work and worse for you. - Drrss of Sooth African Trlheat f ashions auieng tbe native tribes of South Africa are thus described by a recent writer: "During one season the people are all wearing safety pins as earrings; the next sou son no one will look at them, for pins are 'out' and buttons are 'In.' In one tribe blue spotted cotton liiinilkerchlefs are all the rage, but fifty miles nway no one will look at such tilings they want cotton shirts. The only universal orna ment, perhaps, consists In hcuiHvork. Some tribes, such as the Klngoes and Zulus, tnlte to bemlwork more than others; the one thing they are all con sistent In Is a strangely good taste for color combination. Tlicy never indulge In a combination of gaudy colors, never affect an Inharmonious color scheme, thus bearing out ltuskin's statement that bnd taste In color does not arise In people who are loft to themselves nnd nature." Halrdrcsslng Is n prodigious business among them. The process Is assisted by a liberal use of red clay, and as the perfected work of art Is expected to last a month the head Is permitted to rest on the nti'pe of the neck only when the owner sleeps. Berlin Throuah Fnajllsh Spectacles. An Englishman writes of Berlin: "It Is the only modern city I know of Hint has managed to escape looking artificial. The labor of building greater Berlin has been most dexterously hidden. There Is very little of the deadly uni formity, the Euclldlnn lines, the prosuic precision, ono notices In New York. Ber lin is something considerably better than n mere chessboard of brick and stono nnd mortar. The streets have n curved nnd enticing spnclousless; they are shaded with avenues of trees, faultlessly asphalted and clean with a cleanliness surpassing that of Paris. The architecture Is rather too florid for English tastes, but for all that de cidedly effective, and a drive from Vn ter den Linden to ('luirlottenbnrg will take one pnst n liner succession of houses than either Loudon or New York can show." Mnd as a Hatter. The phrase "mad ns a hatter" has no reference to that respectable artist who designs the crowning article of civi lized male attire, but relates back to the Anglo-Saxon word "after" (an ad der, or viper). "Mad" was formerly used ns a synonym for violent or ven omous and Is still used In thnt'sense In some parts of England as well as In this country. The phrase, therefore, strictly means as "venomous ns a vi per," the old form, "mnd ns nn ntter," having been corrupted to "mnd as a hatter." "In that direction," the cat said, waving ts right paw round, "lives a hntter, nnd In that direction," waving the other paw, "lives a Mnrch hare. Visit either you like. They're both mad." Perils of "Self Doctoring;." Large numbers of people In prosper ous circumstances dio as sexagenarians from maladies which are evidences of degeneration and of premature senility, while mnny who pass this period go on to enter upon an eighth or ninth decade of life. The former class com prise those who have lived without restraint of their appetites and who have aought to allny some of the consequences by self medication, whllo the latter class comprise those who have lived rensonnbly and who, if an noyed by Imperfect digestion, have sought relief by abandoning the errors from which it sprang. London Lancet. Catehlns Kites In India. In India, where those largo birds, the kites, are common and fearless, boys amuse themselves by catching them in a way that is almost ridiculous la its simplicity. A Hue Is stretched tightly a little way above the ground between two posts. Boneuth It is laid a bait Tbe kite stoops and seises the bait, but when he rises from the earth hits the back of hla neck ugntnt the Btrlng. This makes him throw up his wings, with the result thut some of the quills get over the line, and he la kept a sus pended and struggling captive until the boys run up and releaso lilm. Mnalo aa an Aid to Ideas. At evening parties a man's shyness Is mitigated by music. In my own ex perience, when some struy man and I have stood together speechless, no sooner did the pluuo break Into our ap palling silence than ideas seemed to Inundate us. Tbe dumb man spoke as if by magic, and I, who hitherto had nothing to say, couldn't talk fust enough. Mrs. John Lane in Fortnight ly Review. Too Wise For Her Years. The Governess Of course, you knefw, the story we have just read Is merely a fairy tale and there are many such quite familiar to childhood. Can you tell us another, Elsie? Little Elsie Oh, yes; you once told mamma that you bad four proposals of marriage during your life! Brooklyn Life. Business and Fleasare. "So you want to chunge the door so it will swing the othnr wuy. eh?" said the carpenter. "Don't it work all right?" "Yes. it works all right," grinned tbe dentist, "but I wo tit it changed so I can have the word 'Pull' lettered on it Bee?" Indianapolis Sun. a Meaa. Mrs. Buxom Thut hateful Mrs. Knox made a very mean comment upon my age today. Mr. Buxom Did she say you were getting old7 Mrs. Buxom No, indeed. She said I "still looked quite young." Fcaee at Last. Mr. noon Scrapplngtou and his wife have parted. Mrs, IIoon-Jood gra cious! WJiat 1 the trouble? Mr. JIoou There isn't any trouble now. They have parted. Smart Bet DAGUERRE'S PROCESS. ' The War It Was Handled When It leached This Country, As soon as Pngucrrc'a proceas bo came well enough known In America for practice scientific men ami In fact "all sorts ami conditions of hteii" nt teinplitl to produce Ihe wonderful pic tures. Many homemade and very prim itive kinds of apparatus were employ ed In the experiments, Including the cigar box with n spectncle Ions. If tlio operator succeeded In pro.lucln;: an IniplVHslon that could be seen. It was carried about and shown as a great success. There were several claimants for making the first portrait by lite proc ess. A .Mr. Wolcott made Ihe claim, nnd Mr. Joseph tiixon, by li tters and other evidence, claimed that the first picture was his, for which It was said Mrs. Dixon sat with powdered face In full sunshine fifteen minutes. In March, 1.H40. Messrs. Waleott and Johnson opened a gallery In New York and, announcing their readiness to execute portraits from life, solicited patronage. This was tlio first daguer reotype gallery In the world. Other places were soon opened. The daguer reotype, although considered desirable us a curiosity, was not popular on ac count of the length of time required for n sitting, which varied according to the time of day and the strength of the light. It was seldom attempted on a cloudy day. The sitter must have full command of his expression nnd renin In perfectly still from ono to threo minutes to be successful In getting a likeness distinct enough to bo recog nized. The dnugerreotypo was nindo on a pure metallic silver surface. After be ing perfectly cleaned nnd inado sensi tive with n rouge buff It was coated In n darkened room with tho vapor of iodine, then placed In the camera and exposed before the sitter through the lens, it was still kept from the light nnd placed over tlio fumes of hot mer-, etiry, where the Imago developed. Abraham Bognrdas In Century. SENTENCE SERMONS. There Is no merit in sacrifice devoid of service. The heart's protest ngalust denth Is the promise of life. Your criticism of another is your verdict on yourself. Tho great lives have all loved some thing greater than life. Slu is always a greater wrong to the sinner than to any other. Disappointment Is not a sulllclent reason for discouragement. Holiness Is tho reaching after rather than tho arriving tit perfection. There is more In being worthy of greut placo than there Is winning it. Tlio man who is afraid of burning up Ids wick need not hopo to brighten the world. When a man sets popularity before his eyes ho Is likely to let principle out of his heart. Chicago Tribune. Kot the Same Man. A thin, nervous looking man stepped up to tho pastor as the latter came down from the pulpit. "You have had u good deal to any tills morning," he observed, "about a feller that killed u man named Abel." "Certainly," replied the pastor. " 'Tho Sin of Cain was the subject of my discourse." "I wish you'd do me the favor next Sunday," said tbe thin man, in some excitement, "to tell the folks thut the man you wero talking about this morn ing ain't no relation to the Kano that keeps a livery stable down by the mill. I don't want none of my friends to think that I bad a hand In that killing. That's all. Good day!" A Fatal I'un, An old English chronicler. In record ing the abdication of King Henry VI. of England 111 1101, quaintly says that his reign "had lasted upward of thirty fight years without his having o'neo intermeddled with public affairs." The same writer aptly illustrates tho shakliiess of Edward lV'.'s title on his succession to King Henry's throne by a story of ft Loudon grocer who lived at the Sign of the Crown and, "having Jocosely remarked that his sou was heir to the crown," was promptly be headed for tho utrocluus pun. Too Precocious. The Maiden Governess Whut year is it called wheu February has twenty nine days? Llttlo Elsie Leap year. The Maiden Governess Correct. And how often does leap year come? (No answer.) Why, Elsie, I'm surprised at your not knowing that. Llttlo Elsie Oh, I haven't reuched the age whore I keep truck of leap yeursl Brooklyn Life. t Just Worrying. "You appear ill ut ease," said the young lady. "Are you 111?" "No," answered tho young man, "but you kuow how sensitive and nervous I urn, and I'm In agony for fear thut your little brother here will repeat some of the remarks you've mudo about ' me." Indianapolis Sun. l'relty Hose to It. "Now, that phrase," said the teacher, "is an Idiom. Does any little boy know what an Idiom Is?" "Yes'm," piped little Tommy Skrupps. 'That's what pa Is when ma don't want lilm to have his own way aud he does." Philadelphia Press. KxasperutliiaT ICxperleaeee. "Two things make my wife awful mad." "What r they?"" , ' "To 'get' etly for company thnt Soesn't come and to have company come when she isn't ready." Indlun polls Journul. ' How ite fersded the Snlcida''l.iw. Lord Chief Justice Hntikforil of Eng land, who lived In n former century, not withstanding his high position became so tired of life that he determined to shullle off this mortal coll. But he feared to commit suicide, because at the tlmo a verdict of felo tie so follow ed as a matter of course and the body of the stilcldo was burled at four cross roads, with a stake thrust through It. Further, he hud to avert the, coime queneps to his relatives of . forfeiture of his poods, which was also one of the penalties for self destruction, lie adopt ed a novel expedient. Several of his deer having been stolen, he gave orders to his keepers to shoot any person they met In or near the park at night who did not Immediately stand when chal lenged. Then on a dark night he threw himself In the path of the keepers and, not answering the challenge, was shot dead on the spot. The stump of nn old oak under which lie fell still marks the scene of the tragedy nnd goes to tills day by the name of Itniik ford's oak. New York's llarlinr KokIpb, Above the pier close to It nnd to gether, ns If for comfort huddled n cluster of tugs, those curious, power ful, persistent little steam craft that I ply back and forth nnd up and down. saucily and busily Important, tlielr rows of fenders trailing In the water, their black smoke bannering out be hind. Often I had watched them nos ing In and out among the heavier craft, nudging a great ocean liner Into mid stream and singly or together pushing or pulling some lingo helpless bulk, ns an ant or as two might seize and trundle n grent dead bumblebee. Tlielr power and their Impudence Intel tilled mo with wonder. Viewing them now In repose, I was Impressed by the fact, hitherto unconsidered, that upon al most every pilot house was a golden eagle with extended wings n .symbol of power and swiftness and It whs borne In upon me that the lug In truth Is the harbor eagle, witli all other craft for its prey. Scrlbncr's. Trees nnd Italnfllll. Some persons nsk If trees alTect rain fall. Thnt question Is one on which foresters differ, but the large majority are satislled they do Induce rainfall. Vonmulere, Sclienck nnd many others nro emphatic in the claim that forests Induce rainfall. It Is certain they re tain humidity to a great extent, aud that alone would n fleet the rainfall; but tlio point on which all agree Is the value of forests for the conservation of water, preventing Moods or drought, distributing the water evenly the wholo year. It Is a matter of history In foreign countries that when forests have been destroyed the rainfall has been greatly lessened and more spas modic T. P. Lukens In Maxwell's Talisman. FollnsTC mill Colors. Tho colorings of variegated foliage plants cannot lie Intensllled hy the use of colored glass. A curious Belgian horticulturist, after a long series of experiments, concludes that brilliant light favors high coloration of foliage. Trees a ml shrubs with golden leaves, when poorly Illuminated that Is, through cither blue or red glass lie cume green or in some eases blanched. In no ease did (he colored glass have a beneficial effect, most plants nfter a mouth's exposure putting forth smaller leaves, less vivid in coloring. Ia some cases a very apparent stunt ing of the pluut's growth was observ- i able. Why ropenrn Pons. Why does popcorn pop? The depurl : meut of agriculture answers tho qnes . tlon, which was propounded to It by a small boy. Popcorn pops by reuson of ' tlln votntlll'.itL,,, n' 41, a ,11 r.,,.,1 it lo.wl ! in the kernal by heat. Field corn does not pop because the outer portion of the kernel Is more porous, permitting the escape of the oil as it volatlr.es. while In tho case of popcorn a great pressure Is developed in the kernel by the co u fined oil and tho kernel Is sud denly exploded and turned wrong side out. Boston Herald. His Torn Next. The loin (Kan.) Register tells of u little girl with the measles. Her dog was in great distress because he could not go to her, and ono day he was ad mitted to the bedchamber. Putting his forefeet on the bed he madly wagged his tall and beamed gladness from every feature. Looking at lilm a moment, the little girl said angrily, "Oh, you needn't grin; your turn will come next." Absurd. Bootmnkcr (who has a deal of trouble with bis customer) I think, sir. If you wore to cut your corns I could more eusily find you a pair Choleric Old Gentleman Cut my corns, sir! I ask you to fit me a pulr of boots to my feet, sir! I'm not going to pluue my feet down to fit your boots! Sample, "George didn't keep his. engagement with me last night," suld tho girl who was betrothed to him. "I'd give him a piece of my mind," said her mother. "Just a little sample of mnrrlod life," suggested the father. Cleveland Lead er. Widely Itead. One of the Girls Do you think your poems are widely read? The Poet Yes; noarly every editor In the country rends them. Faroe of Habit. I Friend (culling on dentist) My head i aches terribly. Deutist (absontmluded-' ly) Why don't you have It out? A man that Is young in years may be old in hours if be bus lost no time. Bacou. Gome I Take your PI6KI of our large Htoc-k of Fiirmuireidiul carpets Buyers of fine Carpets will be pleased to learn that wehavcseeurcdalargelotoffine;Carpet9 in new and up-to-date designs in Wilton, Fine Axminster, Fine Wilton Velvet, Velvet and Tapestry. Also a large line of Rugs, same grade as carpets. Remember we always carry a full line of Mattings, Linoleums, Oil Cloths, Etc. J. R. HILLIS & CO. THE SMART SET f magarlne of Ctovcrn&mm Muga.lnos should have a well-deflned purpose Uunuino entertainment, amusement and mental recreation aro the motives ol The Smart Set, the MOST SUCCESSFUL OF MAGAZINES Its novel n (a complete one In each number) are by the most brilliant authors of both hemispheres. Its nhort storle are matohloss cloan and full of human Interest. - Itsoffff covering the entire field or verse pathos, love, humor, tenderness is by the most popular poets, men and women, of tho day. Its ., ivltflinmn, Hketche, etc., are admittedly the most mlrth-provoklng. 160 PAGES DELIGHTFUL READING No pugos are wanted on cheap illustrations, editorial vaporliigs or wearying essays and idle discussions. lU'eru iHife will intereM, charm and refrenh you. I Subscribe now $2.H0 per year. Remit In cheque, P. O. ' Express order, or registred letter to THE SYVART SET, 432 Rlfth Avenue. New York. N. B. Sample copies acnt free on application. Highland Park On Electrio line at the Summit, half way between Punxsutawney and Reynoldsvllle. This Beautiful New Pleasure Resort Is now Open to the Public. BIO DANCING PAVILION AMERICAN BIOGRAPH MERRY-GO-ROUND, LAUGHING GALLERY Kcfreohmont Stunds, Lunch Counter, Eto., Etc. Tables, Scuts, abundance o! Puru Spring Water und every accommodation for picnics, with NO CHARGE (or same. Muslo and lilogrupb Afternoons and Evenings. HARRIS & GILMORE, Manaeera P. O. Addreai, Reynoldsvllie, Peno'a. r iUiM .itaS WOOD Visiting Cards ... Neatly printed In faces at The ' . Call and see samples epp SAVINGS BW Pays 4 Percent On Savings Accounts. Caaauaaanada Blilll-Asaufcily. Just as Sale and Easy to Bank by Mail as Cawing In Person. Ask Mow. ABT OVER aT.OOO.0041. AND DIAMOND STRLIliTS. PITTSBURQH, PA. many fashionable type Star Office. of the work.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers