SB) REYNOLDSVILLE. PENN'A., WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, I90G. VOLUME 15. lueen Bees Hrert fur quality from select Iliilliin Block. , , , Reined In Jlnplewood npliiry and mated In a separate nmtiiiK yard. REA'S HONEY MAKERS Are a strain of tlireo Vancled Italians une.xeelled for working qualities Thov have the advantage of helm hied lu your own locality. Untested, only at present TV each. Oerman-Itallanhvbilds, obtained by re-stocklntf. Good workers. Itt orousoue yearold queens, 2flc each. GEORGE H. REA. K. F. D. NO. 2. Picture Frames? PICTURE FRAMES Splendid line of picture frames. Just what you arelooking for. Call and see our samples, make your selections and get our prices and you will be surprised how cheap you can buy a pretty frame. Hughes & Main Street. zaaz Fleming SacriHceSale of Shoes Having bought an interest in a business in Taren tum we will olose out our ENTIRE STOCK RE GARDLESS OF COST. No old shop-worn stock to get rid of but all stylish up-to-date shoes. Our Oxfords are all this season's make. Just the time of year you need them and a chance to buy . them at less than wholesale cost. Don't delay as we may dispose of our stock in bulk. No time to quote prices. Genuine Closing Out Sale and the Quality of Our Shoes is Unquestioned. SALE BEGINS TO-DAY. HARMON' Bullock's Comfort Porch Swing Child's Crib and Hammock Not an old maid's swing, but for young ladies and their best fellow. Also a special sale of Carpets, Rues. Mattines. Oil w . Cloth and Linoleums AT Woman's Wotk. Every requirement tt the house-keeper has been met, in the making uf the Prlzer Stoves and Ranges. They con tain quite a number of excellent feat ures that lessen work and add to the comfort of the household. They ur guaranteed to be good bakers you run no rk. Sold and guaranteed by Reyn oldsvllle, llardwuie Co. Pennywise on Paint ing V.. The cost of the paint, be r it good or bad. !3 the minor tl portion of a bill for painting. m " It is the paint er's time In wr putting it on t!i.;t costs. The outlay for paint is rarely rii rethan a fourth, never morethan a third. A little personal attention to the paint y " rainier uses will save you the neces ; . .j uf hiring him so often. Sterling PureWhite Lead (made by the Old Dutch Process) mixed with Pure Linseed Oil and properly applied lasts many, years. Mixtures of unknown ingre- 01. vear lients last from one ir to three, according to the propor- I'.oiis of real paint (White Lead) they : ; in them. Some mixtures have almost :io White Lead, and consequently almost navi'.ue as paint. P'.illed labor and poor material are a must expensive combination. In using T'tre White l ead you get full value for the painter's time. Henri for ft booklet containing ernrnl hnnitanrae T' rolurtlnnii ot actual hnam, offorlng valuable Aii'i;titlonff for a color arhoine In painting your hixiM). A test for paint purity la also given. NATIONAL LEAD A OIL CO. OP PENNA. Second National Bank Blitg., Pittsburgh, Pa. lEAKj For Sale by all Dealers. I HALL'S. .3 TJW mnm S PINEAPPLES. The Jalee of This Fruit la Great AM to 111 b;i-i I ii n. The word enzyme does not appear to lntve nny connection with pineapple, yet ' Is the mime of the chemical Unit givi i to the luscious fruit the remark ably digestible property which It pos sesses. The prevailing notion Hint plue upplo Juice Is exeelfent for the diges tion Is supported by medical testimony. Eat a slice of the fruit after dinner, say the doctors, and you will not suffer from dyspepsia. If you want to see what pineapple can accomplish In the wny of diges tion, you cnu e.isily test It on a piece of raw steak. The action of pineapple Juice on meat Is to transform It into Jelly and then dissolve It when In the human stomach. Place a slice of the fruit on the raw meat as it lies on a plate, and the up per surface of the steak where the fruit touches It will soon become gelat inous. Enzyme, the active principle of the Juice, can be obtained by throwing salt Into the Juice, thus producing a precipitate. A good sized pineapple contains two pints of Juice, a fact that gives an Idea of what a slice of the fruit will do for digestion. If cooked, the pineapple loses Its virtue In this respect. It may be asked whether the consumption of the somewhat woody fruit Itself Is ben eficial or not, for that can scarcely be easily digestible. Without doubt It Is the Juice which does the good, not the Hesh of the pine apple, but the property of the Juice Is so effective that the eating of the fruit itself can do no harm and may even be beneficial. Inasmuch as it takes some of the strength of the Juice to dissolve it and so prevents the stomach suffer ing from the too violent effects of the juice, THE SEISMOGRAPH. How the Earthquake Indicator Re eorda the Shocks. In Its simplest form an earthquake Indicator mlgbt be a tray with notched edges so filled with mercury that a shaking of the earth would cause an overflow in the direction of the move ment. In the Instrument used by sci ence the pendulum la employed, verti cal by aome Italians, horizontal by the Japanese, English, most European and American observers. A movement tf the earth affects everything but the pendulum, which la so freely hung ai to remain stationary, and a recording device makes the result risible. Of old with the vertical pendulum a sharp point drew the profile of the move ment! on a blackened surface. Photo graphic paper In moving strips serves the modern Instruments. The horizontal pendulum turns on a vertical axis and carries at Its extrem ity a heavy weight which earth ahoek does not reach. In the Milne seismo graph a platinum sheet attached to this weight has a silt Intersecting at right angles a silt In a second sheet under neath. In times of quiet reflected light passing through both silts makes one point and prints a straight line on the moving bromide paper. When the earth shakes the lower silt moves and the lino becomes crooked, according to strength of the shock. A clockwork wigement with shutters and a light times the disturbance. The Imtrumcnt are so delicate as sometimes to indicate shocks which no men have felt. New York World. Abraham Lincoln's Snbatftute. During the earlier days of the war It seems to have been the desire of all prominent men In Washington to have a representative lu the ranks, and Lin coln was no exception to the rule. At that time there vu a minister named Staples In Washington, one of whose sous, then aged nineteen, had a desire to go to the I'roi:;. Lincoln Beard of him and, after n conference, selected him as his representative, and he prov ed worthy, for he won honor on the field. He survived the war and finally died In Stroudsburg, Pa. The Inscrip tion on the stone ever his grave reads as follow! : "J. Summerfleld Staples, a private of Company O, One Hundred and Seventy-sixth regiment, P. V.; also a member of the Second regiment, D. O. volunteer, as substitute ot Abra ham Lincoln." Tronble In the Stadia, The walling Infant had upset the photographer's chair, kicked a bole In the paper rocks and made faces at the little bird which Is supposed to bring a smile to all youngsters when they are having their pictures taken. "Isn't he too cute for anything?" chirped the proud mother. "And Just to think I call him Tootsle." "Tootslo," grunted the Impatient pho tographer. "H'm! I'd call him Cod Liver Oil." "Why so, sir?" "Because he Is so bard to take." Chicago News. No ItCKtoreil Cn.itle for Him. "You must admit," said the earl, "that my ah ancestry dates back much farther than your daughter's." ."Yes," replied the girl's rich old fa ther. "We ain't been ablo to trace ours back any farther than a certain robber who was hanged In 1CD4. Now, I s'pose you have a clear record right back to the ape, haven't you?" Chica go Reeord-IIerald. Soldier. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Caesar Ferris, a twelve pound boy last Monday. Andre Watson, of Ernest, came to Soldier receutly and expects to locate here. - Mrs. Clura Blddle and ber father-ln-laiv, Mr. Biddle, of New Custle, are visiting in this section. Mrs. James Reddecllfl'e has returned from the Adrian hospital, where she had been for treatment. Ascension Day high mass was cele brated at the St. George church at 10.30 by the pastor, Rev. C. Wlonker. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Smith and children and Mr. and Mrs. John Ross and children visited at Soldier Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry WlnBlow, of East Brady, visited with the former's brother, C. B. Wlnslow, in this place last week. Mrs. James Uofls, Mrs. A. R. Ritchie, Mrs. A. M. Johnston, of this place, together with their friends, Mr. and MrB. Charles Johnston, of North Dakota, and Mrs. Margaret Cook, of Mildred, Pa., visited at Adrian last Monday. Twenty-eight relatives and friends gathered at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. Jainos Hoys Sunday for dinner aud to bid farewell to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnston, of Dakota, who .have been visiting in this section for some time. Monday morning Mr. Johnston and wife started for Barnesboro, where they will visit friends a few days and then will depart for the west. Sykesvllle. Miss Belle Waugh, of DuBols, visited Mrs. J. M. Loghry on Sunday. Mrs. Thomas Smith visited with Mrs. H. A. Loghry in DuBols one day last week. S. B. Long and wife visited from last Sunday until Tuesday In Arcadia with Joseph Ake and family. Mrs. George Lyle, of Cresson, Pa., visited with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Buhite, last week. Mrs. Joseph Sypbrlt and daughter, Esther, of Paradise, visited with Mr. and Mrs. V. R. Holman last week. Prof, and Mrs.' Seller Gelst spent Saturday, Sunday and part of Monday at the former's home atSprankle's Mills. I. G. Mansfield and George Walker, who are employed at Ernest, spent Sunday and Monday at tbeir homes in town. Sunday evening, June 3rd, Rev. Smith, of the Reformed church of Troutville, will preach In the M. E. church. Harvey and Miss Edna Holman were delegates to the Sunday school conven tion held at Corsica Monday and Tues day. Mrs. Mary Crawford, of DeLancey, is visiting with her daughter, Mrs. James Harvey, and son, Henry Crawford, In town this week. A union memorial service was held In the M. E. church Sunday evening. Rey. J. W. Crawford, of the Baptist church, preached a very interesting sermon. Postmaster Robbed. G. W. Fouts, Postmaster at Riverton, la., nearly lost his life and was robbed of all comfort, according' to his letter which says : "For 20 years I had chronlo liver complaint, which led to such a severe case of jaundice that even my finger nails turned yellow ; when my doctor prescribed Electrlo Bitters ; which cured me and have kept me well for eleven years." Sure cure for Bil iousness, Neuralgia, Weakness and all Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Bladder derangements. A wonderful Tonlo. At Stoke & Felcht Drug Co.'s store, Reynoldsvllle and Sykesvllle. 50 cents. LLOOTTSS For Sale on Easy Terms, Thirty fine residence lots for sale on extension of Fourth street on easy terms, to suit purchaser. Inquire of E. NefT, Reynoldsvllle, Pa. Novelties. Belts, gloves, laces, collars, hosiery, handkerchiefs and hundreds of other needful articles for ladies. Blng Stoke Co. Suits. For mon, boy's and children in the newest cuts and fabrics at our always saving price. Bing-Stoke Co. 1 Novor before has there been such a large stock of floor coyorlng9 shown in this town thau wo havo this spring. We havo over 50 patterns of 9 ft. x 12ft. rugs from $..00 to $50.00, and over 7,000 yards'of carpet from 20c to$l.G0 per yard. Como and seo our stock ; no roublo to show it. J. R. Hillis & Co. Menncns Talcum Powder, sold most places for 25c, you got it hore for 15o. Birig-Stoko Co, J Official--Reynoldsvllle. (No. 107.) AN ORDINANCE providing for the grading, curbing and paving of that part of Jackson street in said borough which lies between the West side of Fifth street where the said Fifth street crosses said Jackson street on the West and the West side of Seventh street where said Seventh street crosses said Jackson street on the East abutting on the present paved street. Whereas, a larg6 number of per sons owning real property abutting upon that part of Jackson street In the borough of Reynoldsvllle which lies between the West side of Fifth street where the said Fifth street, crosses said Jackson street on the West and the West side of Seventh street where said Seventh street crosses said Jackson street on the East, which is now laid out and opened in said borough, have presented to the town council of the said borough u petition of two-thirds of the owners of property representing not less than two-thirds in number of feet of the properties fronting or abut ting on thai, part of Jackson street aforesaid pri posed to be graded, paved, curbed, etc.. requesting that the borough by an ordinance require that part of said Jackson street as above designated to be graded, curbed and paved with brick or other suitable material, and that the council assess and collect. In the manner required by law, tno-lhli'ds of the costs and expens es of the said grading, curbing, paving, etc., from the owners of the real estate hounding or abutting thcreoL, by an equal assessment on the feet front, bounding or abutting as aforesaid, which said petition has been verified by the affidavit of two of the petitioners. Now, therefore, be it ordained and enacted by the town council of the borough of Reynoldsvllle, Pa., and It is hereby ordained and enacted by authori ty of the same : Seo. 1. That the above mentioned proposition of property owners be and the same is hereby accepted. Seo. 2. That that part of Jackson street which is designated above shall, during the present year, be graded, curbed and paved with paying brick In accordance with the plans and specifi cations prepared by John C. Hirst. Esq . approved by the town council, are here to attached and made a part of this ordinance ; that two-thirds of the costs and expenses of the said grading, curb ing and paving are to be collected from the owners of the real estate bounding or abutting thereon, by an equal assess ment on the feet front bounding or abutting as aforesaid, in accordance with the provisions of the Act of Assembly ' of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, relating thereto and regulating the same, and the re mainder of such costs shall be borne by the borough of Reynoldsvi'le. J. Van Reed is hereby designated by the counoll of the said borough, to be in charge of said work, representing the borough as to the faithful performance of the contract on the part of the con tractor, grading, curbing and paving said part of Jackson street, with power on behalf of the borough to employ a oompetant engineer, when, in the judg ment of the said J. Van Reed one is necessary in the matter of the said grading, curbing and paving. Said J. Van Reed is also designated by . the council to estimate said equal assess ment. Seo. 3. The President and Secretary of Counoll are hereby directed to ad vertise In one or more newspapers pub lished in the borough of Reynoldsvllle, and by hand bills, for bids or proposals for the grading, curbing and paving of said part of Jackson street in accordance with the provisions of this ordinance. and the plans and specifications hereto attached. All bids to be for the com pleted work, including all materials, and to be accompanied with samples of the brick proposed to be used bv the bidder. The council reserves the right to reject any or an mas. Seo. 4. The bids to be made shall be for completed work by the square yard, measurements to be from the Inside of both curbs. Said bids shall be sealed and be filed with the President of counoll not later than 8:00 o'clock p. m. on the 16th day of July A. D. 1906. Seo. 5. The successful bidder will be required to enter into a contract in writing to perform the said work and furnish the materials therefor, in ac cordance with the provisions of this ordinanoe, and the plans and specifica tions hereto attached. The said con tract shall provide for the commence ment of the work on or before the 1st day of August A. D., 1906, and the final completion thereof on or before the 15th day of October, A. D., 1906. The suc cessful bidder will also be required to file with Secretary of Council, within forty-eight hours after the acceptance of his bid, the bond of a reliable Trust Company to be approved by the council,, in the sum of five thousand dollars, conditioned : (1) for the faithful per formance of the work within the time above mentioned and in accordance with the plans and specifications, and (2) for the payment to the borough of Roynoldsville of any and all sums which may be recovered against it by reason or on account of any carelessnoss or negligence on the part of said contract or or any of his agents, servants or em ployees, together with all foos, costs and expenses incurred by said borough in defense of any and all suits or actions brought against it on account or by reason of such carelessness or neg ligence. Sec. 6. The successful bidder will also bo required to furnish, within five day9 from dato of the accoptanco of his bid, a written agreement on part of tho manufacturer of the brick to bo used in said paving warranting all brick to bo used in said paving to be equal in all respects to tho samples submitted to the council and warranting that said brick will, if laid in accordance with the plans and specifications, withstand all the ordinary and usual exigencies of travel upon said street for a period of five years from date of the completion of the work. The said agreement shall also contain a stipulation to the effect that said manufacturer will replace, at any time during said period of five, years, upon notice by tha council, all brick which shall not withstand the ordinary and usual travel on said street or which may desintegrate or brake up on account of heat, cold, moisture sr defective or Improper material in or work upon the brick themselves. Sec. 7. If the successful bidder shall fall, neglect or refuse to sign the con tract, file the bund and agreement mentioned In sections 5 and 0 in this ordinance, bis bid shall be rejected and the council shall be at liberty to either advertise for new bids or accept a bid on file made by the person who shall com ply with the provisions of this ordi nance, which the council may consider most advantageous to the borough. Seo. 8. All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith be and the same are hereby repealed. Passed and enacted finally by the council at a regular meeting held at the council chamber, on the 14tb dav of May, A. D. lilOfi, at 11.30 o'clock p.' m. J. B. Nealb Attest : Pres. of Council. L. J. McEntire, ' ' Clerk of Council. May 21st A. D. 1UUH, the foregoing ordinance is submitted to me. read and approved. L. L. Gourley, Chief Burgess. White Goods. Indications are that this will be the greatest snason yet lor white goods. Why not seleot wbiit you want now from our large stock. All styles, all prices, Bing-Stoko Co. If you want to buy ur sell anything, or lose or find anything, try our "want' column. Sure of good results. You receive the bene fit of over twenty five years banking ex perience by having your account with The Peoples National Bank Reynoldsville, enn'a Interest paid on sav ing accounts. Capital $100,000.00. Wanted GIRLS To learn Winding and Quilling. Apply Enterprise Silk Co. , Snappy Up-to-Date Wall Papers Ceiling Decoration, Room Mouldings, Paints, Oils and Varnishes. Very large stock, very low prices, at the Stoke & Feicht Drug Co. TTTTTTTTTTTtf f
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers