'i independent journal devoted to the intnre.it s of Reynold sville. Published weekly. One Dollar pff year strictly in advance. VOLUME 13. RKYNOLDSVILLE. PENN'A., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1905. NUMBEB 40. WANTED TKI'HTWOTITII V MAN (U Woman to manntfu business In Ihln minify mid adjoluiittf H'l iHory fur well usiublMieM house of milltl Itiiiinciftl hIiuhIImk. $:(Hi straight rush Hiilury with till neiM'twiry cx pensi's paid wi'tikly by c Merit from Mmh1 uimrtors. Mmioy tuHunciMl for i'.xppnm'm. l wit ion pernitiitciil ; previous rxperfriuM1 nol I'MHt'titiiil. Nn In vtHtnit'Nt rcoilrt'tl. V'i furnish every 1 hlnu;, Km-lose sclf-ndili t ssh tMivulope. Allies, Milliliter, HIU C'oino iilock, Chicago, III. TOTlCE OF DISSOLUTION PAUTNKUStllP. OK Notice Is hinby tflven, that tlw purtnor shii lutely nnh;lM itr.r ticMvrt'M .1. A. Henry iitid H. J. Henry, doitii ti ufiu'iitl tri-oreiy liMint'H In the ImmoiiU of Kt-y noMsvlllu uiuier thu lit iti NHint if J. A. & t. iJ. Henry, wit- dissolved on Wui glth dtiy of Jtiniiury liuv by noittitil noiw.nt . All dobtH owltnr to siiid purl nrrHlup uni to b received by -uld S. t Henry, who will eon tinue mild business In his own name, nnd all ilmtmmla on said partnerslilp are 10 ho pre sented to ami ealU by said i. (!. Ilenrv. . .1. A. Hknhy. B. C. llKNHV. If you have anything to sell, try our Want Column. M National lianli ( mcrxoLDs villi.. Capital Surplus $50,000 $50,000 Scott Wet'li-ILtml. Irll.-ut J. I . liliiu, li-i' I'm-Mcnl; Join, II. Hauulur t It I . Directors: Bcutt McriulliiMl J.c. Kin? Miuilel Nnluti joiiii n. i.ditiimi, .1. 11. Kitiiclior O. W. Fuller , Ii. H. Wilson Ones ti irfnir:LHiuiikitiihliaiti.iaui..Ii ....m..i,. tllH tlCI!l)UlllH lit ItllH'l-llllMlD Itl'jlPllLiuijilitl I ....... turnmi-H, lnerliiinlrs, milium, lunilmrrni n mid olliorn ipronilHlnirtlie ni(wt careful intention IO 1MB UltNint'KM fif III ti..ru.,tta Niifc Deposit H0XH8 for rcnl,. lurst numuiiuI Ltunk bullilliu'. Noltin hto-k Fire Proof Vault. Practical Carpet Weaving GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. With tho spring timo most people hnve a carpet to bo woven. Now I have been hare for the lust nix years and still ready to weave your 'carpets inside of a week's notice.- The pricos are lower than over be fore. . These prices are for both weaving and chain : 1-2 pound of chain to the square yd. or 12 threads to tho lnch,'2l cents. 9 oz. of chain to tho square yard or 13 Ml threads to tho Inch. 22J cents. 10 oz. of chain to the squaro yard or 15 threads to tho Inch, 23i cents. 3-4 pound of chain to tho square yard or 18 threads to tho Inch, 2(i cents. 1 pound uf chain to the square yurc', or 24 threads to the inch, 31 cents. When you furnish the chain I charge ton cents a yard for weaving. The chain I koep on hand Is of the boat kind all of the five ply. If I should have to buy my chain retail I would not bo ablb to give you these low prices, but I buy it In Ave hundred pound lots or more, and if tho prise of cotton bhould go down I will give you the bonoflt of It. And If the picco Is 20 yards or more will make it to ordor and to fit your room at the above prices per square yard, and for out of town people will pay freight one way. Please call and see my work, or send for samples of chain. if 3 I! :vx tlx uxrzxxxtzxxxixi tiiinxniTLXXtitixxtxxcx Battlefields of Virginia. WRITTEN FOR THE 8TARj BY BION H. BUTLER. a'txnTrrmtimnmtc33.amimim'iiim.ttattii I have a few hundred yards of good Carpet for sale very cheap. Teofeel Demay One door east of Borough Hall. Box 358. West Roynoldaville, Pa. ' S tho train moves down through Virginia, tho trav eler pasi-oa over a territory which has seen one of tho greatest oyontB of human dovolopemont. It should botho aim of every American to some day visit tho scces of tho Vir ginia campaigns, for hero Is only placo whore tho effects of the war can bo fully understood. Sherman said war Is hell. Sherman know, for no oilier conquering Invader ever spread such desolation behind h'm as Sherman was compelled to 1eavo in that gigantic swath of ruin which mark ed tho route from Atlanta to the sea and from the soa north through the Carol I mis. Sherman'R til to saving has been ropeated so much that It passes as a flippant jest. But it is a terrible truth. War is hell, and more, for it is tho cul mination of all tho ills that besot man kind. We of tho North seo in war a bereavement of families, a property loss n additional taxation, and such tem porary incidentals. But where the campaign drags its blighting length through tho weary years it Is another Btory. War raged four years In Virginia In the most virulent form, and it meant morn than simply killing men. . An army of a hundred thousand men cannot move along a country road lino a Sun day school parade. When an army moves, tho trail left is like the path of a gruesomo plague. Tho track is ae wide as counties, for an army cannot move on a single track. When Virginia emerged from the four years of de struction, not only'wero hu men gono, but hor homes were burned, hor farms woro destroyed, Btock was scattered, Beed corn as eaten, farming imple ments had boon used for firewood when fencerails (W6re exhausted, railroads were pulled up, and destruction ruled supremo. Wo can still sen evidences of what war did for Virginia. Not that. Virginia has stood still In these forty years. ' 'f ho contrary is the caso. But timo has not yet been able to efface the scars.' We talk of tho readiness with Which the French re covered from the war with Germany and paid an enormous Indemnity. We should rather talk of the manner In which Virginia, left with nothing but the terrible momory of four years of fire and conscription and foraging and fighting and all tho horrors of war, has como Into a courageous prosperity and renewed her industries, created new ohes and advanced with tho other states of the nation. Virginia was the soeno'of the most destructive war ever fought. Every regiment on either side was recruited from intelligence and ability It is reputed to President Lincoln that he said that every regi ment that went to the front from the North had sufficient matorial in It to select a cabinet from as good as tho one he had. All professions and all crafts woro represented In the ranks. All manner of American inventive genius was called In to help make this war de structive. The breech-loading rillo, the machine gun, tho Iron ulad battle ship, and an Innumerable list of Infernal devic98 woro Invented and put Into practical use in the war thatdevestated Virginia. Tho whole country, tho most civilized country on tho globe, with the most limitless resources, was brought into tho service to make tho war bell. And while tho effects reached all over the South, tho persistent and relentless force swept back and forth from Rich mond to Washington which Is tho Potomac Valley of Virginia. But cruol as the theory may seem, wur has Its compensating Bide. From every great war has followed a great step In human progress. Tho Amerlean people were awakened to a wondorous now effort by tho civil war, and the strides niado since the cloning days at Appomattox aro without parallel in the history of th,e race. Thoro is a notion in the North that the war la not yet over. The wrong idea prevails, however, for In the South the struggle has" boon too costly to let lialredn occupy much time. Virginiu, liki' the other Southern Stutcs, Is busy plowing her farms, building ships anil locomotive.., sawing lumber, fattening shirk fill tin and constructing new homes, to give attention to fighting tho war over.- But in a way It Is not over, and will not ho until tho state has again reached the place to which it will one day come financially and Industrially, for Virginia Is a state of enormous resources. From Washington to Petersburg is it constant repetition of the scenes of war. After leaving Alexandria the first point, that presents tangible evidences U Fredericksburg. Tho sleepy old town has not advanced a great deal si nor Burnsidn lost eleven thousand men there In the winter of 1802 In his hope less effors to put between Leo and Rich mond. On tho hill above thu town is a cemetery kept by the National Govern ment, and in It aro several thousand Union soldiers. All over the South aro Bimiliar witnesses tp the horrors of war. Every great battlefied is perpetuated by its National Cemetery, some of the cemeteries having as high as fift.-eu thousand soldier dead buried within their walls. Fredericksburg Is a cheerless spot, possibly through the recollection of disasters that beset tho Union Army at the place. Burnside was given the army that he might make good the evil fortune that hud attended it under MeClollan. Ho lost his one great fight Fredericksburg, and asked to be re lieved from command. Hooker follow ed him, and In tho spring attempted to dislodge Lee, who still remained en camped near Fredericksburg. ' Tho ro sult wus Chancollorsvillo, with the lots of another twolvo thousand men. Next year Grant came, and he commenced his victorious campaign not far from Fredericksburg, fighting tho Wilder noss battles over the ground that had soon the battle of Chancellorsvillo under Hooker. Crant fought all 'the way down to Richmoud, and his success cost tho North sixty thousand men. Fredericksburg is a quiot old town, whore oyBters and fish aro sold, and where farmers do their marketing. I have been on many of the battlefields of tho wars of our own country and In tho Old World, but no placo sooms to hold so much historical interest as tho vicinity of Fredericksburg, for about the old town tho North twice burled Its hopes, and tbon with Grant as the com-, mander, In that same vlclointy com monced tho terriiio struggle, which ended at the surrender of Loo. Wash ington was a boy near Fredericksburg. Other eminent .Virginians have lived not far distant. While Washington and Richmond woro the goals In the great struggles Fredericksburg was tbe center line of the field. Occasional linos of earthworks and the Federal Cemeteries are the visible signs to-day. They aro enough, for the rest Is still held vividly in the minds of the older ones and told to the coming genera tions whenever history Is road. REDUCED RATE3 NEW ORLEANS, MOBILE, AND PENSACOLA. Account Via Pennsylvania Railroad, Mardl Gras. On accouutof the Mardl Gras festivi ties at New Orleans, Mobile, and Ponsa- cola, March 2 to 7, the Pennsylvania Hail road Company will sell round-trip tickets to either of these'placea from all stations on Us lines, March 1 to C, at reduced rates. Thoso tickets will be good for return passage until March 11, inclusive, on date of validation by agent of terminal line at Mobile or Pensacola, or Joint Agent at Now Orleans. If tickets aro deposited with agent at olthor of the above points not later than March 11, and fee of 50 cents Is paid, an extension of return limit to March 25 may bo obtained. For specific rates, routes, and stop-over privileges at southorn Winter resorts consult Tickot Agents. Thirtieth Anniversary. i Stoke, 'drugg'Ist, thirtieth anniver sary and. I'Red Box" salo .Thursday, Feb. 10th." . ' i JOHN C. niRST, n :, . , . CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER, Surveyor and DrauKhtsmiim Office to Sol Shaffer building, Main stroet. w. L. JOHNSTON, ; ; JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Office four donrs from Horn flouso, West HeyuolilHville, ta. - , pRIESTER BROS., UNDERTAKERS. Black and white funeral curs. Mian street. Keynolrisvllle, I'u. ' II. HUGHES, UNDERTAKING AND PICTUIIE FRAMING. The U. 8. Tturlnl hnnaue has been tested and found all rlifht. (Jhoapost form of In surance. Secure a contract. Near Public hounliiln, Keyuoldsvllle 1'a. I'rnud ExpoHed. A few counterfeiters have lately been making and trying to soil Imitations of Dr. King's Now Discovery for Consump tion, Coughs and Colds, and other med icines, thereby defrauding the public. This is to warn you to beware of such people, who seek to profit, through stealing the reputation of remedies which have been successfully curing disease, for ovor 35 years. A sure pro tection, to you, Is our name on tbo wrapper. Look for it, on all Dr. King's or Bucklen's remedies, as all others are mere Imitations. H. E. Bucklon & Co., Chicago, 111., and Windsor, Can ada. II. Alex Stoko, druggist. A. KATZEN i of the People's. Bargain Store isjnow giving Bank and Merchandise ' TRADING STAMPS- with every ten cent pur chase,, ',Vljc.n' ,bdpks are filled with $50.00 worth of stamps Mr. Katzcn will give $3 in Merchandise $2.50inCash. Don't forget to ask for a book and trading stamp when you make your purchase. Sale in the Opera House Building now going on. Btt c o be o bo o c be c 3 CO O X CD a O c .0) CO THIS GREAT S ALE COMMENCED SATURDAY FEBRUARY 18, 1905. We announce to the people of RcynoldsviHe and vicinity that $10,000.00 worth of grand new up-to-date stock, consisting of Men's and Boys' Clothing, Hats. Shoes, Underwear and furnishings, also a large stock of Dry Goods and Dress Goods of all kinds, Ladies Misses' and Childrens Ready Made Garments, Skirts and Waists, Hats, Shoes and Underwear, and also a large line of Coats and Furs. This great sale means our loss and your gain, for this stock will be sold out at sacrifice prices. Take full advantage for this is your opportunity. 1 his message does not come over the wire every day. We have found that we 'must sell out our stock at once. This sale will be the most sacrificing sale that has ever been held in KeynoldsviUc. Therefore come as early as possible it is for your benefit. Here are a few of our sale bargains ': Suits and Overcoats. Men's Clothing, Suits and Overcoats the best qualities and tbe latest styles. $18 00 Suits our salo price $8.50 15.00 Suits loss half . - . 7.00 12.00 " " , " .- - . " 6.00 10.00 " ':' . . 4.75 9.00 " " " ' - . 4.25 8.00 .... 3-00 7.00 , . . 34g 6.00 " V " - . , o 98 Long and short Overcoats reduced to less than half price. Come In and see them. It will pay you 1 to buy for next winter. ' $18.00 Overcoat our sale pi ice - - $7.88 15 00 ' . . 6.75 12.00 . . . 5.50 10.00 " " " . 475 8.00 " . . 3.75 7.00 " " " - 325 5 00 '" " " . 2.98 ' BOY'S CLOTHING RFDUCED the same. Every' suit will be sold for less thu. half. We have thousands of different articles we can not mention for lack of simce, everything will be sold at reduced prices. J Shoes. Men's, Ladies' and Children's Shoes ' $4 50 alt oak Shoe, now 4 00 Shoo sale price . 3.50 ' . " " ' 3 00 ' " " 2.50. "' ' " . . 2 00 " "- " - 1.50 and 1.75 will bo sold - ' $2.49 2.25 2.00 1.75 1.50 1.25 .99 Boys' and young MenS shoes reduced the same. You cau buy a good boy's shoe for 90 and 95 cents. Dry Goods and Dress Goods Dry Goods and DresB Goods will be gold than half. Outing flannelaiat 3 and 4c yard. Outing flannels suitable for waists and at 7 and 6c unbleached muBlin 10c best bleached muslin Lancaster ginghams All calicoes reduced to Towling reduced to . Children's heavy fleece lined, stockings $1.00 silks, our sale price , for less wrappers 5c yard 4Jc yard 6 l-2o 5o yard 4Jo yard 4c yard 60 pair 49o yard ti -- 3 jQ 3 ' 2 -o a g- ct3 a. o Ladies' Coats and Furs. $10.00 Ladies' three quarter length coats now $7.0J 10.00 Ladies' coats, our sale price 4 75 8.00 Ladies' coat, our sale price 3.50, 3.75 6.00 and 7.00 Ladies' coats, sale price 2.50, 3.00 Cbildron's Coats are reduced way below cost. $2.00, 3.00 and 4.00 coats, salo price 75c to $2.00 $8.00 and $10.00 Furs Bale price now $3 50 6.00 and 7.00 " " " " 2 75, 3.00 4.00 and 5.00 1.75, 2.25 3.00 and 2.00 " " " ' ' 1.25,1.50 1.50 and 1.25 " " " " ' 59c Now if anyperson has any desire to buy a fur now is tbe time to buy. As such bargains are not. of fered every day. EMBROIDERY and LACES reduced way down. 10c Embroidery now 4 and 5 cents. We have a full line of Ladies' and Children's Muslin Underwear, just received" We have decided to put them in our sale for less than half price. Ladles' Shoes reduced to less than half price. $3.00 Shoes, our Bale price . $1.49 $2.50 Shoes, our sale price . $1.24 $2.00 Shoes, our salo price . . 9!le Children's Shoes reduced for less than half. We cannot mention prices for lack of space. Ladies' Ready-Made Skirts. ' $10.00 skirts, less half, . $4.7a $5.00, 6.0G;and.8.00 skirts at $3!(X) and $3.50 $3.00, 3.50 and 4.00 skirts will be sold at $2.00 & 2.50 $2 00, 2 50 and 2.75 skirts will be sold t $1.25, 1.50 and 1.75. Underskirts. REDUCED FOR LESS HALF. $3.00 Underskirts, sale price now $2 60 Underskirts, sale price now $2.00 Underskirts, sale price now $1.50 Underskirts, sale price now White cambric muslin underskirts, 20 inches deep, flounce of Indian lawn, three or four rows of Valenciennes lace Insertion, $3.50. Our sale price, less half $1.50. White cambric musliniunderskirts, 20 inches deep, flounce of India lawn, three and four rows of Valenciennes lace insertion, $2.50. Our salo price, less half $1.00. White cambric muslin underskirt, 20 Inches deep, flounce of India Lawn, three and four rows of Valenciennes lace insertion, $2.00. Our sale price less half, 95o. $1.25 $1.00 95c 65c We are positive the people of Reynoldsville and vicinity will never again get such low prices as we are offering at this sale, therefore take advantage. " REMEMBER THE STORE ' Tfre New Store in the Opera House Building, Reynoldsville, Penn'a. Sale in the Opera House Building now going on. CO CO O CD X o c CO 0 DO "C 3 crq 3 O 2. 5 CfQ O 3 I