The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, June 20, 1906, Image 7

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    DISTRICTJEPORT.
Annual District Report op School
Directors or West REYNOLDS
ville dlstrkt for the school
Year binding Monday, June 4, '00.
Whole number of schools... 4
Average no. months taught.
Number of mule teachers
employed 1
Number of female teachers
employed
Average BHlury of male
teachers per month I no 00
Average salary of female
teacher per month 40 00
Number of male scholars... i
Nuinher of fetnulo scholars. JIM
Whole no. In attendance.. . 1K2
A venule dally attendance.. 124
Average percentage of at-
tendance w
Cost of each pupil per mo. . . 1 27
Numherof mills levied for
school purposes o
Number of mills levied for
chool building purposes 1
Amount levied for school
purposes M'2 51
Am t levied for school build
ing purposes.... . 828 01
Total amount levied M" Si
Rkcku-tm.
Plat? Appropriation 649 65
Hal. on hand from last year 310 11
From Collector 1,U 4H
From County Treasurer.... 4 id ,,.
From all other sources 12 00 2,2112 27
K.XI'KMUTtlllKS,
Building ft fuinlsh'g Iiouse 106 B7
Keparing 17 5lj
Teuchers waucs 1.51 ( 00
School text books 114 111
School supplies 15S 43
Fuel and contingencies... . 1.111 Hil
Fees of l.'ol. and Treasurer. 77 110
Salary of Secretary 25 00
Other expenses 78 60 2,155 6(1
Cash on hand 106 61
Am'tduerilst.f'mallsources 14 44
Total resources 121 05
P. ,T. WAiti), Collector, In account with the
School District-Went licynoldsvllle, Pa.
DR.
To bal. duo on 11102 and 11103
duplicates t 8 72 t 72
CR.
By am't exonerations 5 31
By Treas. receipts 141
0 72
DR.
To bal. due on I!X)4 dup 76 09 76 08
CR.
By am't exonerations 6 20
By 5 Col. on?ttl.88... 8 40
By am't Treas. receipts 66 80
76 08
DR.
To am't duo 1905 duo.school 1,112 61
To am't 6$ added on 1125.85 5 20
1,118 80
CR.
By am't of exonerations... 6199
By i rebate on H7H.22 33 91
By 8 Col. on fcl'8,22 20 35
By 5 Col, on !46.45 12 32
By 6 Col. on 1102.01 5 10
By Treas. receipts 870 61)
Bal. due 14 4 1
DR.
am't due 1005 duplicate
school building 325 01
Tojim't 5 added on 133.02. 1 65
326 BO
CR.
By am't exonerations 9 81
By6rel)ateonril(l.49 10 82
By 3 CM. on 216.49 6 49
By 5 CoY on f,69 3 J8
By 5 ColV, on $25.31 1 27
By Treas. rV'elpw 294 99
" 326 66
Audited Jnne 4th.
J. W. Campbell, I Auditors
A. .1. WBI.LS. f Auul,or8-
If you have anything to sell, try
our Want Column.
KEYSTONE LIQUID SULPHUR
HAS NEVER FAILED TO
CURE RHEUMATISM
It is Nature's Best Remedy
for Natures Worst Disease
A GREAT DISCOVERY
The Keystone Sulphur Co. has discovered a process for liquifying sulphur,
retaining all of the excellent curative qualities of the well-known remedy, but
eliminating the impurities found in the crude drug.o
A SURE CURE FOR RHEUMATISM
KeyBtone Liquid Sulphur positively cures every form of rheumatism. We
have cured thousands of cases, many of them heretofore considered hopeless. We
have experimented on the worst cases obtainable and have never failed to effect a
' cure after 3 or 4 days' treatment. Persons who have been bedridden for years
have been restored to perfect health through the use of this wonderful discovery.
( WHAT KEYSTONE LIQUID SULPHUR WILL DO
Kucuai axiom li win cure itneumausm witnoui any possibility ot iauure.
CATARRH Used in an automlzer as a spray it will immediately relieve
and cure the worst casos ot Catarrh.
SORE THROAT Affords instant relief to sufferers from Sore Throat when
uaed as a gargle.
PROMPTLY CURES ALL MINOR COMPLAINTS
Such as Hives, Prickly Heat, Poison Ivy, Bites of Insects, Tender, Sore or
Odoriferous Feet and all Skin Diseases. . . , ,
We are so confident of the efficacy of Keystone Liquid Sulphur that we will
make the following .
FREE TRIAL OFFER
The Stoke & Felcht Drug Co. will give you a free sample of Keystone Liquid
Sulphur any day this week. ,-,. . '
We urge you to take advantage of
regret it.
Keystone Liquid Sulphur Cure is
KEYSTONE SULPHUR GO.,
PITTSBURG, PfK.
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
Sixteen Day Excursions to
Atlantic City, Cape May, Anglesea, Wildwood, Holly Beach,
Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Avalon-New Jersey,
Rehoboth, Del., Ocean Gty,,Md. '
June 21, July 5 and 19, August 2, 16, and 30, 1906.
110 Round Trip, tickets good only in coaches. 112 Round Trip, tickets good only
In Parlor and Sleeping Cars in connection with proper Pullman tickets.
Proportionate rates from other stations.
Tickets good for passage on train leaving Pittsburg at 8.90 p. m., and connections. Sleeping
car passenger for Atlantic City only will use Special Train leaving Pittsburg at 9.45 p.m.
For stop-over privileges and full Information consult nearest ticket agent.
1?, W. ATTERBURY,
General Manager.
J. R. WOOD.
Passenger Traffic Manager.
THE HUMPBACK WHALE.
Moat Deiiaierate and nnnsfrnm of
All Marine Ministers.
A "whale factory" In always located
til souiu scu allly populated sencotist
harbor, for the odors tlmt rise from the
chimneys when it whnle Is being tiled
out would speedily n rouse un urban
population to molt violence. The Ht earn
er Is a stout Utile emit or KKJ tons'
burden, on pu bio of milking twelve
knots an hour, and In strongly built
and braced to enable It to withstand
n chance blow from Hie mighty dukes
of a maddened levlalhnn. I'sunlly a
slugle shot from the harpoon gun re
sults lu spetdy dentil, but occasionally,
when the weapon fulls to strike a vlttil
point, the frenzied monster will career
wildly about the ocean for hours, drag
ging the ship, with engines reversed,
over the water like a cork.
Most desperate and dangerous of all
marine monsters Is the humpback
whale. AVherl wounded, the humpback
will charge the ship and attempt to
destroy It, there being a case on record
where a small Norwegian whaler was
sunk and all hands lost In such an en
counter, while another steamer had a
narrow escape from a similar fate in
Newfoundland waters.
On ouo occasion an unusually pow
erful hull bluebnek, harpooned In a
nonvltnl spot, towed a whaler for
twenty-six hours around PlacenUn. bay,
doubling back and charging the ship
repeatedly and requiring three har
poons to dispatch It. Another time a
l.unipbuck made a fourteen hour light
against a whaler 'off Capo Race, the
ship's winch being demolished by the
furious tugs the creature made as It
tried to rid Itself of the harpoon. A
third Instauce was where a whaler,
having shot one "fish" Just before sun
down, transfixed another soon after
ward and spent the whole night In a
most perilous fight with his two vic
tims, whose diverse movements fre
quently threatened to overturn the
vessel.
When a whale Is harpooned he usual
ly "sounds," or dives downward until
he can go no farther. The rope at
tached to the harpoon Is drawn out
through the ship's hawse pipe so fast
that the chafing causes the woodwork
to (.moke, and it has to be sluiced with
sea water at Intervals to prevent com
bustion. The wounded monster next
bounds upward and projects himself
clear out of the sea, bellowing madly
the while and falling back Into the
brine with a noise resembling thunder.
Then he races oft furiously over the
ocean, towing the ship behind and div
ing or rising at Intervals until ex
hausted, when the whaler can ap
proach and finish him. A full grown
fish, If not vitally hit, can tow the ship
for hours and may often require a sec
ond shot to give him bis quietus. This,
however, Is more often done by launch
ing a boat with two or three men, who
row up to the spent victim and pierce
him to the heart with a thrust from a
sharp spear, when he sends up a last
snout of siir.ay and blood aqd expires
this offor atonco, for you "will never
sold by all druggists at 50c and $1.00.
GEO, W. BOYD,
General Passenger Agent,
FISHERS AND OMENS.
ODD SUPERSTITIONS FROM ALL OVER
THE WORLD.
Incidents and Frniinn Thnt Are Con
sidered Inlnrky ti- the Toilers of
the Sea Some Queer Notion Thnt
Were Held by the AnrlenlH.
Ono of the commonest of supersti
tions among fishermen Is the alleged
111 lurk caused hy woman. In the Isle
of Skye If a woman crosses thu wuter
In course of the fishing the luck Is
doomed. At Flamboroitgli, England, If
a woman happens to enter a cottage
when the men are preparing their lines
she Is not allowed to depart until she
has knelt down and repented the Lord's
I'rayer. In Lapland the fishermen
avoid spreading their captured tlsh on
thut part of the shore frequented by
women, as the next expedition would
he a failure.
On ninny parts of the coast ot Eng
land It Is considered most unlucky for
a woman to walk over the nets or any
of the Ashing tackle, although women
take an nctlvo part In collecting bnit.
Some of the English herring fishermen
have nn Idea that hy heating their
wives they can draw the fish lu. In
the Hawaiian Islands after the fisher
men have prepared the Inn nielometo
(a Mllet of wood used as a decoy) with
the proper Incantations rare Is taken
that a woman does not step over It or
outer the canoe In which It Is placed,
as lu that event the decoy would lose
Its power, and the kahuna (sorcerer)
would have to go through the opera
tion again.
The Influence of the minister Is hard
ly less adverse than that of women,
and the practices noted as connected
with the 111 omen of feminine Interfer
ence npply also to the clergy. The
herring are suld to have nil left one
part of the Irish const hecause they
heard the new parson say be was going
to tithe the fishery, and In Lapland and
on the coasts thereof fish are never
looked for where a church Is In sight
On the coast of Lancashire, England,
the fishermen have a custom of setting
sail on Sunday. A clergyman of the
town once prnyed against tills breach
of the Lord's day, as he called it; but,
to neutralize his prayers, the fishermen
made a small Image of rags and pious
ly burned the parson In effigy.
The avoldnnre of the neighborhood
of churches referred to Is necounted
for by the fishermen's belief In the
great quickness of hearing of fishes.
In Sweden, for instance, the church
bells are not rung In the brenm season,
lest the fish should take fright, and
where the pilchard are fished the peo
ple arc no less careful of their sensi
tiveness to sound.
The Romans believed that the ser
rated spine on the tall of the sting
ray was so venomous as to he capable
of causing Injury to even vegetable
and mineral substances, trees losing
their verdure and even rocks being af
fected. They also considered It bad
luck If a person with a love or Inwsult
on hand met a remora (sucking fish)
when bathing. Albertus Magnus ad
vised a suitor In a law case to place a
perch under his arm and the Judge
would thereupon become his friend.
When they catch certain species of
flat fish the Finns make the sign of the
cross. The Irish will not eat the skate,
sometimes called the maid, becnuso It
Is supposed to bear a questionable re
semblnnco to some of the grotesque
mediaeval delineations of the Virgin
Mary. The Dutch fishermen believe
that they can discern the image of the
Virgin In ench scale of the drum, and
the Swedish fishermen believe that the
pike turns Its head toward the shore
on St. Gregory's day, March 12.
The origin of certain species of fishes
arc to be accounted for in various
ways. When the Brittany fishermen
happened to catch the lotto they threw
them back Into the water, as they were
supposed to turn Into eels. In parts
of England eels are supposed to be
bred from dew In the months of May
and Juno or In other sections from tho
hairs of horses or kine which drop Into
cart ruts or Into drinking troughs and
springs and there quicken after rain.
This latter superstition Is widely prev
alent In this country. The ancients
supposed that eels were engendered of
mud or that when tired of living they
rubbed, themselves against tho rocks,
and from the detritus Issued a new
breed, while still others believed they
came from tho carcasses of animals.
Soles, nccordlng to tho French fisher
men, are bred from prawns. Tho Eng
lish fishermen think thnt the pike Is
begotten by the west wind, while the
gudgeon Is believed to- be generated
from the brains of horses.
Burn the teeth of fish you catch, or
your luck will be bad next day. Tins
found In church make good fish hooks.
In Scotland a quarrel on the beach, If
))lood Is drawn, will drive the herring
from the coast for the rest of the sea
son. In Sweden stolen tackl.o Is lucky.
In uorth Germany herrings eaten on
New Year's day bring luck all tho year
through. To witness the plunge of a
pike before noon was considered an
unlucky omen In Bohemia. In New
England If you catch a fish you don't
care to keep don't throw It back Into
the water until you have finished. If
you throw it in before It will toll all
the other fish what you are doing, and
no more will bite.
The Hawaiian fishermen sometimes
prepare a bait from the flesh of the oc
topus and the juice from the blossom
of the lllma plant. An exact number
of flowers is always used, aa the fish
ermen believe that If an odd number
were employed the bait would have) no
power.
Many of the English fishermen will
not put to sea If any one mentions a
pig while they are baiting their lines.
Should they meet a hare on tberway to
their boats they will give Tip fishing for
tha day. In Scotland the salmon la
equally nnmentlonable and Is alluded
to only as So-and-so's fish. Usually It
receives for a pseudonym the name of
tho tux coliect-jr of the n'-nre.t village,
as he is generally the one least liked:
In the Hawaiian Islsinda when the
lls!icnncu are ready to embark they are
givatly exasperated rluitild a person
etimo along and stand lu.lolently gns
Ing at tin in with his hands behind him,
lis they believe It gives them bad luck.
The car bones, or otoliths, of the lake
drum are often carried as amulets by
the negro fishermen and others of the
Eouth and are also prize! by the boys
of Wisconsin and elsewhere In the
west who call them "lucky stones,"
)::'luips hi allusion to the fact that
they are marked by a figure which re
sembles tho letter L. The New Eng
land fishermen carry a lucky bono
which they find In the head of the cod
fish. It Is shell-like and narrow, with
a lonp.tb of three-fourths of nn Inch.
The edge Is notched, while the color
Is a pearly white. Many of them con
sider It a good plan to carry two bones,
as that will make their luck doubly
sure, but they both should be from the
bend of the same fish.
In the Hawaiian Islands the appear
ance of the uliil, a small fiat fish which
visits the Islands only occasionally. Is
regarded as a -sure precursor of the
death of a high chief or one of the roy
al family.
Tho nnclents supposed that the seal
enjoyed Immunity from lightning, and
among those who borrowed the protec
tion of Its skin was the Emperor Au
gustus, who always wore a belt of seal
fur. The Idea arose from the fancy
thnt the seal sleeps most profoundly In
thunderstorms. The crab was believed
by the nnclents to grow only during the
waxing of the moon, anil this Is still a
eurreut belief, the writer having found
It lu various parts of this country, par
ticularly In Alaska. This seems to
have more foundation than the belief
thut hi thunderstorms lobsters cast
their large cutting claws. The brain
of the carp was supposed by the an
cients to grow and diminish as the
moon waxed and waned. Fearls were
supposed to he sea dew which the oys
ter drank lu and by some mystic chem
istry transformed Into gems, which
were soft until the sun shone on them,
and then they hardened. It was sup
posed that on cloudy nights the oyster
secreted dark pearls and on moonlight
nights clear white pearls.
The Japanese fishermen rarely If
ever utilise the turtles taken in their
nets, but, writing some characters on
their backs, turn them loose. It Is be
lieved that a turtle so treated will
guide the fisherman back to land
should he ever be lost at sea. New
York Tribune.
II U One Shot.
Colonel Evans In his book on Califor
nia speaks of "buck fever" ns being
one of the most violent diseases which
ever nttneked tho human system. It
has been the undoing of mnny an ex
perienced hunter, but In the case cited
by Colonel Evans It proved-to be the
making of a reputation.
A farmer In Illinois nnmed Wheeler
had never fired a gun. One winter,
however, he heard so much talk about
the sport of hunting that his ambition
became excited, nnd, borrowing a gun,
ho started out. When he came buck
he brought n magnificent buck, shot
by himself square In the middle of the
forehead. He said little about his
achievement, but got the credit of be
ing a crack shot, a reputation which,
although he went hunting no more, he
held for several years.
Then one day he told his story and
lost his name as a sportsman.
lie had seen a doe drinking out of a
creek nt the foot of n bluff about twen
ty feet high. With wild excitement he
got his gun to his shoulder, shut his
eyes, set his teeth and pulled the trig
ger. To his astonishment he saw the
doe bound away unhurt, while at the
same time a glorious buck pitched
headlong from the bluff Into the creek,
stone dead. "
The buck had been looking down at
tho doe, and Wheeler hnd not seen
him at all, but his shaking gun sent its
shot on a fntnl, although unintended,
errand.
5
Making; Sparrow! White.
The Japanese are ruthless In their
tampering with nature. If they de
cide thnt they want a bird or an nn
Imnl of n certain shnpe or color they
set about manufacturing the article, so
to speak, by the exercise of exceeding
ly clever Ingenuity nnd untiring pa
tience. Here, for example, Is how the
white sparrows nre produced: They se
lect a pair of grnyish birds nnd keep
them lu a white cage In a white room,
whore they are attended by a person
dressed In white. The mental effect on
a -series of generations of birds results
In compKely white birds. They breed
tho domestic cock with enormously
long tails after the same principle.
They first select a bird with a good
(all, giving him a very high perch to
ftnnd on; then with weights they drag
the tail downward, carrying on the
same system with the finest specimens
of his descendants till a tall almost as
long as a peacock's is produced at last
Yearly Picture Taking;.
Some families make It n enstom to
visit the photographer's yearly, all go
ing together to sit for portraits singly
or lu groups. It Is a good custom, but
has to be strictly observed or It may
begin to be honored In the breach. One
family permits no postponement of the
yearly trip to the photo gallery. A day
Is set, and every one must go. There
are no penalties for nonattendance at
this family reunion before the camera,
because there are no Infringements of
the rule. The custom began with this
family many years ago, when the first
baby came to . Today it has a com
plete photographic record of family
life for almost a generation. Some of
the children are married and an Aow
photographed with their own chtloraa,
while 'death has made vacancies la the
later groups. New York' Press.
HOW BEAST MEN AKt MAUfc.
The lIMeoan nnd Crnel Prnetlee of
Klonh Sculpture In China.
"Victor Hugo in "The Man Who
Laughs,' " said an ethnologist, "tells of
the sculptors of living flesh those hor
rible people of the middle ages who kid
naped tender little children and turned
them into all sorts of monsters, dwarfs,
hunchbacks mid the like, selling them
afterward for Jesters or for showmen's
freaks.
"The hideous and cruel practice of
flesh sculpture still continues. There Is
a tribe of Chinese gypsies who steal
children nnd turn tbeni Into so called
wild men. Tho practlco Is, of course,
Illegal.
"A kidnaped child la flayed alive, bit
by bit, and the shaggy skin of a dog
Is grafted on him. This takes a year.
At the yenr's end the poor creature Is
shaggy, like n bear, from head to foot
"The child's vocal chords are destroy
ed with charcoal In an unspeakably
cruel way. Ho can never speak there
after. Ho can only growl and tooao
llko a beast
"He Is Imprisoned In a perfectly black
hole until every vestige of reason leaves
blm. Nine months Is usually a suf
ficient confinement to accomplish this.
"Flnnlly, speechless, shaggy, lunatic,
the victim Is sold to a traveling show
mnn nnd Is exhibited throughout China
ns a genuAie wild man or beast man. I
am bound to sny he looks the part."
HOQ MONEY.
Orlffln of the Curious Old 9raa
Colna ot Bermuda.
'Hog money" Is ths name by which
tho brass money which began to be
struck la Bermuda la 1630 came to bo
known. On one face of It was a bog,
on the other a ship of that period.
These old coins are very rare and high
ly prized by collectors.
The history of this device Is curious
and interesting. A Spanish vessel,
commanded by Juan Bermudez, on its
way to Cuba with a cargo of hogs, was
wrecked there. This was In 1515. Lat
er In tho same century, when the Eng
lish discovered this land, they; found a
country Inhabited by bogs;
It Is also Interesting to note that the
English discovered It In the same way
as the Spaniards. An English ship
was wrecked there. Is It any wonder
that the treacherous coast got from
Spanish and English alike the name of
Devil's Laud? Yet It Is one of the
most beautiful coasts in the world, and
It has been claimed that In brilliancy
Mediterranean effects are not at all
equal to those of Bermuda.
Bermuda is said to be the Island of
Shakespeare's "Tempest" The strange
noises which mariners beard coming
from tills Island, and which they did
not then know were produced by bogs,
caused them to say that it was haunt
ed and to report weird things of it
Pearson's.
PUELIC IMPROVEMENTS.
Money Wlnelr Expended In Safelr.
nnd Profltablr Expended.
Beautified utility is never too costly.
Over ami over again the cost benefits
of public improvements have bee
proved, defined, established. It Is tru
of puMic betterments of a saulta:
character; it is true of public bette
meuts that look to commercial at
vancement; It Is true of public better
ments that have primarily an art val
ue. Tho pracUcal and the ornamental
betterment are alike In this that mon
ey wisely expended for good purposes
is safely and profitably invested.
The limitations of expenditures for
civic betterment are of course very ob
vious. The work undertaken must be
good lu Itself and serve some good
purpose. Money expended for a worth
less filtration plant, for example, is
money worse than wasted. Money,
spent for bad art Is not always consid
ered as so completely lost as money
that might be wasted for worthless
sanitary apparatus. The statue causes
no 111 health and may be avoided by,
passing down the next street, while an
Impure water supply brings death and
destruction to many helpless persons.
Homes and Garden.
EiiRlJxh and Scotch Precedence, m
At the coronation of Charles I, the
kingdoms of England and Scotland
having been united during tho reign of
his father, considerable friction took)
place with regard to the order of pre
cedence of tho English and Scottish!
noblemen. An arrangement satisfac
tory to all parties was finally conclud
ed. In virtue of which English peers
whilo In Enlan.I took precedence of
Scott;.':i r " of the same rank, wbilo
in Scotlnnd this order was reversed,
and the Scottish peers went first
The Shepherd' Crook.
Although most people have seen a
shepherd's crook, many do not know
the use of It Some people think that
all the shepherd carries it for is to use
it as a walking stick when be tramps
to and from the fold. But the crooked
end Itself serves a purpose. It enables
a shepherd to catch refractory sheep.
If a sheep shows signs of running
away the crooked end has only to be
placed round his leg, and ho la a cap
tive. London Standard.
A Long War Off.
Creditor (determinedly) I shall call
at your house every week until yon pay
this account sir. Debtor (In the bland
est of tones) Then, air, there seems
every probability of our acquaintance
ship ripening into friendship.
Lota of Chatter.
"What Is he playing!"
"Oh, Mendelssohn's 'Songs Without
Words,' yon know."
"Hm! Wall, the audience seems to
be doing their best to supply, the deft
clency." London Bystander. !
The words of the good art like a ItA3
la a slippery place, Hindoo HAUfa
'
Are The One to Suffer
by the "penny-wise pound-fool
fen" poller of mixing yonr own
paints. Buy Lawrence Ready
Mixed Paint prepared from
the best pigment and the purest
linseed oil with scientific accoJ
racy. Guaranteed by the maker.
Lawrence
Ready
Mixed
3
PAINT
Sold by Keystone Hardware Company.
Peoples
SawgsBank
woToHoA5TE,PITTSBlJRC.,
This Bank
The United States malls are
safe messengers and not onel
dollar has ever been lost in
transmission from a depositor
to this bank. Send to-day for
our free booklet, "Banking by
Mall."
Leech's f
i Planing Mill i
West Reynoldsville
Window Sash, Doors,
S Frames, Flooring, S
I STAIR WORK I
j Rough and Dressed Lumber,
Etc., Etc.
0 IK
Contract una- rpplr work piyen 0
0 proni)t nlirntion. 0
$ Give us your order. My prices
are reasonable.
t W. A. LEECH, FROPRIETOR.
. BUSINESS CARDS.
jjTneIt
JUSTICE OP THE PEACE,
Pension Attorney and Real Estate Agent.
MINNIE N. KECK, '
NOTARY PUBLIC,
Reynoldsville, Pa. -
(j m. Mcdonald,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Notary public, real estate aeent, patents
secured, collections made promptly. Office
In Syndicate building, Reynoldsville, Pa. -
V. C. SMITH,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Justice of the peace, real estate agent, col
lections made promptly. Office in Syndicate
building, Keynoldsville, Pa.
gMITH M. McCREIGHT,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Notary public and real estate agent. Col
lections will receive prompt attention. Office
In the Reynoldsville Hardware Co. Building,
Main street, Reynoldsville, Pa.
J)R. B. E. HOOVER, "
DENTIST,
Resident, dentist. In the Hoover building
Main street. Gentleness In operating. Cj
I)R. L. L. M EAXS,
DENTIST,
Office on second floor of the First. National
bank buildinu, Main street. t
I U"' "
j DENTIST,
' office on second floor of the Syndicate build
ing, Main street, Reynoldsville, Fa.
pRIESTER BROS.,
UNDERTAKERS.
Black and white funeral cars. Main street.
Reynoldsville, Pa.
J, H. HUGHES,
UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING.
The U. 9. Burial League has been tested
and found all right. Cheapest form ot In
surance. Secure a contract. Near Public
Fountain, Reynoldsville Pa.
D, H. YOUNG,
ARCHITECT
Corner Grant and Flftn sts.. Reynolds
ville, Pa.
JOHN C. HIRST,
CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER,
Surveyor and Draughtsman. Office In Syn
dicate building, Main street.
WINDSOR HOTEL,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Between 12th and 13th Bus,, on Filbert 91.
Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter
minal. Five mlnute walk from the Penn'a
R, R, Depot. European plan fl.W per day and
upward. American plan Coo per day, o-tasa
Prank M. Bcbeibley, Manager.