The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, May 15, 1895, Image 1

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    VOLUME 4.
REYNOLDSYILLE, TENN'A., WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 1895.
NUMBER 2.
Milliren's!
Cheviots, all-wool. For the fjarmente you'd have to pay $10.00 elsewhere.
Fifteen Dollars would not tell the value
and perfect fit of our Suits at $7, $8, $9 and
$10. All the newest designs in Sacks, in
Cutaway Sacks and in Full Dress Cutaways,
made of Fancy Cheviots, Imported Clay
Worsteds and Diagonals, and Unfinished
Worsteds. Their Cut, Style and Finish Com
pare with any $25.00 or $30.00 Tailor-made
Garments.
$7.00.
$8.00.
$9.00.
$10.00.
HATS1
Mention any shade and we
have it. Ask for any new style
and we will produce it. Our
assortment this Spring is Bim
ply gigantic. The amount
we sell proves that our prices
are right. Call and see 'em.
The only way that we can convince
Only Reliable Clothier, Hatter and Men's
call, get prices and see the goods.
Retinoids Block.
Get Ready!
:F0R
WARM
S
H
We have them in
them.
.American Dimities,
Belfast Dimities,
Percales, Challies,
Grenadines,
X aconet Duchesse Lawns
And many other kinds. We never had such a fine
selection and the prices are low.
BING & OO.
G
O
O
D
S
Repine Hardware Co
DEALERS IN
HARDWARE, STOVES and RANGES.
TIN, - SHEET IRON - AND COPPEUWAllE,
AMMUNITION, - HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS,
WOOD AND IRON PUMPS.
And everything kept in a First-class Hardware Store.
Roofing and Spouting Done to Order.
KEYNOLDSVILLE, PA.
Absolutely "Perfect" Clothing, as
Hold by us, has won the Patronage
of the many hundreds of stylish
dressers of Reynoldsville and vicin
ity. Rut not only haB the quality
made ub popular the price has
told and tells in our favor by a
large majority. Our recent great
purchase has again put us in the
lead, leaving our followers far be
hind. This recent purchase has
enabled us to quote prices now
(right in the heart of the season)
that others will name three months
later. The prices below will tell
their own story.
SUITS!
Q HO Will fit you out In a Bplondld HO.OO
CM.UU niue Mixed or Gray Mixed Snok
Suit, and the fit will be perfect, too, at our
store.
Q( f( Selects a suit that our pmnpotttor
OU.VFU ha,, marked down to H0.0O, his for
mer price $12.00, In Steel, Grey or limwn;
nicely made up and perfect fit guaranteed.
Q( Kf Is all we ask for a Single Breasted
OUttJU saoit Suit of Stvllsh Cut, Blnek
Trousers I
A Double Stitched Jean, guaranteed
not to rip, other dealers ask $1.00, our
price 600. Call and see the line. A
Clay Worsted Dress Pant that other
dealers would ask $4.00 for, our price
$2.25. Then we have a coarser grade
of Clay Worsted at $1.60. Other deal
ears ask $3.00 for the same thing.
you that we are the Lowest Price and
Furnisher in the County is for you to
Glenn A. Milliren.
TH
WEATHER!
all Shades. You should see
"TOOK THE WRONG MEDICINE."
Whj Thin tlearitlns o Often Appear la
th Itatljr Kewnpapm.
It is an odd trnlt in hamuli nntnre
thnt a mnn who has boon ordered by his
physioinn to tnko pnrogorio will never
toko it if there is any enrbolio sold or
prnmlo nold in the lionso that ho can
Bbnorb in preference.
Stntlnttoinni who have ntndiod the
thing declare thnt an invalid will Renroh
the whole home for a poisoncma drag
and drink it rnthnr than the medicine
ordored by the doctor. The death do
tioes in the newitpitpors in oases of thnt
kind ore generally headod, "Took the
Wrong Mediciua "
A man nrrlvod At his boino tlio other
evoning, mid glancing ou th bnrcaa
mvr a bottle of liquid that ha bad been
ordored by the doctor to tnko.
"That looki liko the staff," said bo,
"bnt I'm not sure. As I was locking an
the cellnr I saw behind an old shelf n
blue bottlo that looked as if it hadn't
been touched for years. It snid on it,
Sulphnrio Acid.' Now thnt bottlo oil
tho table looks oxnetly liko the one. I
drank ont of last niht, but still I have
an idea that the staff down in the collar
is what tho doctor means for mo. I
don't know how the dickens it got down
thero when it's meant for mo to tnke,
or bow this bottlo that isn't mount fur
mo to take got ou this bureau. Dut I'm
not going to take any chauaos. I'll Just
go down into the cellar and make sure,
and I'll throw this stuff out of the win
dow." Then he cautiously went down stairs
and took the sulphurlo anid, and be
was buried in due form after an ambu
lance surgeon had done bis best and the
coroner's physioiau had made a com
plete investigation and autopsy.
It isn't only children who make these
blunders. Doctors will tell yon that thoy
have only to label a bottle "Lotion, For
External Application Only," to make
sure of Its being drunk. If a patlont
gets a bottle of oorrosive sublimate to
put on a folon on bis great toe and
doesn't use it all, he will carefully save
it Ten years afterward doctor gives
some oough mixture to him, and then ho
goes and bnnts up the oorrosive subli
mate bottle, plays three oard raonte with
it and tho oongb mixture, gets them
thoroughly mixed up so that he onn't tell
one from the other, and then when he
feels that tightness across the ohost that
the doctor told him about be swallows
a part of the oorrosive sublimate and
loaves his widow to collect the life
insurance. By no accident is the oongb
mixture ever taken it is always the
corrosive sublimate. New York Her
ald. CURIOUS WEDDING CUSTOMS.
Bom Odd Phase of Social lAtm Ia North
ern Michigan.
Many curious customs are in vogue
among the foreign population of north
ern Michigan, especially in social mat
ters. When a French oouple get mat
ried, a carriage -or a sleigh ride is in
evitable, according to the season of the
year. The oouplos are not packed to
gether in ono wagon or sleigh, but each
follow and bis girl bave an individual
rig, the bride and groom taking the lead
and the others following like a funeral
profession, bnt there is nothing f nnereal
about it, especially the pace set After
the procession baa been riding for boon,
a dance ends the festivities.
The Polanders bave a ourious wed
ding custom that is very ingenions as a
money getter, and takes the plaoe of
wedding presents. After the wedding
feast follows a danoe that sometimes
lasts IS to 14 hours, and even longer.
The obiof honor is to danoe with the
bride, and thia ia decided in a ourious
manner. The mother of the bride takes
her plaoe in one oorner with a plate in
her lap, which she takes very good earn
shall be built after the plan of an eat
ing house coffee cup. The gallant who
wants to danoe with the bride, and all
are la honor bound to do so at least
onoe, most pnll out a pleoeof silver and
endeavor to ohip or break the plate by
throwing their money upon It, and only
those who auooeed In ohipping or break
ing the plate are allowed the coveted
honor. Let those who think it easy to
break an ironstone plat try it Few
succeed in doing it for less than 60
cents, and it ia not an unusual thing for
the brlde'a money to amount np to $75
or 100, even where the crowd is ap
parently aa poor aa a ohuroh mouse, and
it may go even higher when the bride ia
pretty and popular. All the money goea
to the bride, and in a baokwoods ooun
try $50 to $70 will start a happy oouple
nloely in housekeeping. Detroit Free
Press.
Dr. do Koran's LotUr.
At a reoent exhibition of dolls in Chi
cago a doll was shown which onoe had
a letter addressed to it by the late Dr.
de Eoven, the great Episcopal high
ohuroh loader. It was aa follows:
My Dear Wax I am glad to hear of your
birth, and thai you were named for mo, and
that you aro of wax. Yoa ouuld not bo of bet
ter stuff for a minuter. You will look sweet.
Thia will pleaae the young. You cannot tulk
too much. Thia will pluaae the old. Von can
wink at thing, whlob you will have to da
You will eut little; you will nocd but imull
y. Whon you are brained, yon oon be put on
a ahull without a word, and a doll, new, (roan,
and with red chouka, will take your plttoe. If
you have to bo a uiurtyr by llro, you will mult
easy aud save puiu to thoae who have to put
you In, but if you do good to even one little
girl like C your life will be worth a great
dual, do goodby.f roin your affectionate f riund,
J. UKK
The oil wells of Cuku cover a distrio
of country 25 uiilus loug by over half
mild ia breadth.
VIEWS OF MARRIAGE.
Vt Connnmmates Life No Single Life In
the Terfnct One.
We hear young men say, "I am too
poor to get married, " and girls, "The
man I marry must be rich." These re
marks appear harmless, and they may
have a certain business shrewdness be
hind them. Still the larger truth is that
tho speakers most often do not take nn
honest view of marriage, no matter how
honorable may be their purposes. Money
cannot insure happiness, and long ex
perimenting in the countrlos of Europe
has shown that mating for wealth is the
sure road to a lax and immoral domes
tio economy. It would soem that the
sensible view to take of marriage is
that it consummates lifo for the poor
and tho rich, the vulgar and tho refined;
that no single lifo is tho perfect life.
The future of mankind depends almost
wholly apon happy marriages mid
healthy offspring. And this suggests
that there should be no marrying of un
sound people. Greater elfisliuesM nnunot
be imagined than that which brings
children into the world doomed to a lifo
of immitigable misery, the hereditament
of those who bear their parents' burden
of disease. Shall we say that questions
arise in this connection too delioato for
discussion with young persons? Is it
better to loave tho discussion to be
raised aftor it is too late?
The sensible viow nf marriage is the
view that comprehends every conse
quence. To the young people looking
forward to a long and happy wedded
life it is of vital importance that no ele
ment of the subject shall bo a mystery;
that nothing oonneoted with the matri
monial venture shall be left to the has
ard of ohanoe. Parents must understand
that their children are to be parents;
that there is no escape from the responsi
bility, and that eduoation is Incomplete
and training inadequate whioh does not
qualify for paternity aud maternity.
The young man aud the young woman
who are fitted for marriago aro fitted
for all that a healthy, courageous and
happy life demands or imposes. Chan
tanquan. Jack's Royal Bpre.
"Kipling onght to study Jack," aald
a naval officer. "Jaok'a the most plo
turesque man on land or sea, and no
body has written about hint as he ia
"If I could do it as well as Kipling,
there is one story I know of which is as
good as tho 'Reincarnation of Krishna
Mnlvaney. '
"When I waa assistant engineer on
the San Francisco, there was a coal
passer named Tom Dolargy under me.
Be had been saving np his money for a
long time to out a big splurge when be
was discharged. I think he had about
$600 ooming to bim.
"Jack ia a royal 'spender, ' and his
shipmates all told bim that he needn't
go farther than the Bowery to bave the
most gorgeous spree.
"But Delargy wasn't going to be so
commonplace. He took time to think it
all ont, and whenever be got bold of an
Amerloan newspaper he stndiod it The
way the railroad magnates enjoyed life
atrnck his fancy.
"So when bis time was np, aud 'Pay'
turned over Dolargy 'a $000 to him, be
went and chartered a private oar and
rode aronnd the country till hia money
waa gone. Then he came back and re
enlisted. " New York Journal
Emotional Llteratoxa.
"I suppose yon see all sorts of people
in the course of a day's run?" aaid the
observant man to the train boy as he
bought a package of wintergreen chew
ing gam.
"Yoa betl" said the boy, after the
manner of hia kind. "Look aorost the
way there at that woman a-oryin over
'Unluokily Married; or, the Doom of
Mary Jane. ' When she oome on the oar
thia morn in, aha were aa pretty aa a
wax flgger, all red an white, Senoe she'a
been a-readin that novel she's cried till
her face ia all streaked and striped. The
paint'a run so she looks jest like a
aebry, " And the youth walked on, leav
ing the observant man in deep thought
Detroit Free Press.
a Wanted the Contents,
Dr. Holmes' library is valued at only
$804. Thia haa been thought a rather
email library for a literary man who
had a lifelong fondness for books. But
Dr. Holmes waa not a binding worship
er, and nearly all of the best works in
the world, in cheap, substantial bind
ings, can be bought for $804. The very
best books of the world are quite limit
ed in number. Boston Globe.
Autocrat of the Kitchen.
Mrs. Faintheart (at front window)
Officer I
Policeman Yes, ma'am. What's
wrong, ma'amf
Mrs. F. Nothing's wrong, but I
wish yon'd step into the kitchen and
tell the cook not to bum the meat as
she did last night I'm afraid ta Piok
Me Up.
Beeoher generally spoke in a conver
sational touo, with 110 groat effort at
what is oommonly denominated oratory.
When he rose to a climax, however,
his voice was equal to any omorgeuoy,
bnt even his loudost tones seemed to
oauso him little effort
billion's euro, tho grout cough urid
croup euro, ia in grout donrnnd. Pocket
sio contains twimty-flve doses, only 2."o.
Children lovo it. Sold by J. C. King
& Co,
AGGRESSIVE FROCRESSIVENESS
Is our Rule of Husiness. There ia no Pitch thing as standing
still. You must go either Backward or Forward. This
applies to everything in Politics, in Religion and
particularly in Business. Only the best
business methods will win, and we have
won them over all Competitors. If
you did not know us in our deal
ings with you in the past 90
days of our existence in
Reynoldsville you would
probably doubt the assertion,
but we feel free to make it from the
fact that you have been a frequent customer.
Since coming to your town we have this to say regarding
our success: Large Stock, Latest and Newest
Things in the Market, Lowest Prices,
Goods marked in Plain Figures; and we
are the Emporium for Low
Prices on Good Goods.
CLOTHING!
To thk Gentlemen: As to Clothing, we would like to have
you give our stock a look. We have suits built and
trimmed in the height of fashion, strictly all-wool
and the prices so low on good goods that it
would almost make one ashamed to look
Mary's little lamb in the face.
8 H 1 O 1 R I e
Trilby and Electric, in Ladies,' Misses' and Gents' wear
Nothing in the town to equal them.
Dru Goods, Notions, Hosiery,
Sun Umbrellas and Parasols,
White and Colored Kid Gloves,
Traveling Baas, &c, &c.
HfTS!
See our line of Summer Hats in Straw and Braids,
can sell you cheaper than any of our
would-be Competitors.
A. D. Deemer & Co.
E wish to inform the public that we are
41 41
Selling - Out
Our Entire Stock of
doming and Gents' Furnishing Goods
AT COSTI
We most respectfully ask that you come in and see our
prices and examine our stock before
purchasing elsewhere.
Tailor-made Suits to Order from $17.00 up.
BOLGER BROS.,
Merchant Tailors and Gent's Furnishers.
Sporting
A. Full and Complete Line of
Base Ball Goods,
Fishing Tackles, &c.
Sporting Goods of All Kinds.
We
Goods !
ALEX RISTON.