The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, October 24, 1906, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    flt.l..llllJ.II.II....J.I...I S.I....I ...',..11... a
Uncle Peter
By EDITH M. DOANE
Copyright, 1908, by P. O. Eastment
pi"M""ii"'iiii'nii'iir"iir"ii!i"iiii'iiimin
. Thomas Coleman, cold, reserved, am
bitious,' sat at the head of tlio heavy
library table. . Beside hlra his pretty,
fashionable wife drummed softly with
ber finger tips on the polished mahog
any and watched her husband sideways
out of her dark, inscrutable eyes.
The other Coleman, Elizabeth, stood
by the window, a letter with a queer
South American postmark In her Hand.
"Poor, lonely old man," she said soft
ly. "Listen, Tom. 'I'm kind of hun-
gerln' for the sight of a face that be
longs to me,' and this 'I Jest want to
get acquainted with my own folks'-
Isn't that pathetic?"
"'I ain't beholden.' she went on.
scanning the letter swiftly. 'I don't ask
no favors, but I'd kind of like to feel
that them that Is to have the little
something I leave will have a kindly
feellu' tov the old man who scraped It
all tJKether, when he's gone.' "
She looked up with swift comprehen
sion at the tense attitude of the other
two. "You do not suppose that 'little
'something can be a fortune, do you?"
she said half.nervously.
"It might be as well," Thomas Cole
man suggested, "to acquire more defi
nite Information concerning It before
ah committing ourselves." Thomas
Coleman was a man whom his friends
called "level headed."
"May be nothing In It," he added.
"But If there should be?" suggested
his wi: Ft ill c'niniiniug softly on the
polished wood. Only his wife knew
how fearfully Thomas Coleman had
been hampered In money matters
lately.
"Vi'hether there is or not, he has a
claim upon us." put In Elizabeth, hotly.
"He's a p'jor. lonely old man our
father's brother."
Tliomtw ''-ilcman raised a remon
strating I'm 1. "Be reasonable, Eliza
beth. We (".: not know him. It Is not
to be supposed that we can offer him
"I HAVa. COHH TO TAKE YOU BOMB WITH
MB."
a home Indefinitely unless we receive
some little ah remuneration in the
end."
"Although It would be In line with
Elizabeth's quixotic ideas to do so,"
said Tom's wife, sharply.
Elizabeth was a standing grievance
with her sister-in-law Elizabeth, who
was supremely Indifferent to the value
of money Elizabeth, tall and straight
and splendid, who preferred a self
supporting life in a tiny Hat to de
pendence in her brother's beautiful
home, and who proposed to "throw
herself away" on a fellow whose only
lack was that of money.
She confronted them now indignant
ly. "It is a shame!" she flashed, look
ing like an enraged princess, with her
flan. Ing cheeks and heavy, red gold
lull:-. "A lonely old man begs for
affection, lie freely offers us all he
has. le It niiu a or little, it is t. II. In
return you weigh and appraise and
calculate. Oh," she broke off, "I am
ashamed of yon. Let us make him lion-
estly welcome, whatever he brings."
And in that first day, while the
others held aloof, it was Elizabeth
who, in warm hearted, Impulsive fash
ion welcomed the little old man en
veloped In a shaggy greatcoat, who
regarded his "own folks" with shrewd
blue eyes which looked out rather
wistfully from under the shaggy
brows.
On the second day Uncle Peter ap
proached Thomas Coleman.
"Some morniu' when It's convenient
I'd like to go downtown with you. I
Want t find Willie Moore's office," be
added apologetically.
Thomas Coleman looked up quickly.
William T. Moore, the lawyer?"
The old man nouded. "Willie Moore's
1 n,A 1 ....... 4n41lnt. nwt
I always had considerable confidence
In Willie. I've got a few papers I'd
hinder like him to keep," he added.
The few papers turned out to be $5,-
000,000 worth of shares In the El Jua-
rea gold mines.
Uncle Peter's welcome was assured.
For six months he was the recipient
of every attention which the solicitude
of bia beloved and happily surprised
nephew and his wife could devise;
!
Wrw
then, one day, like a bolt from a clear
sky, the storm burst.
The El Juarea mines were flooded!
The rumor started in the Mining Ex
change when stock thnt hnd been $150
was quoted at $'2f a share; then the
reporters got it and the Journals
flaunted great headlines of 'Tunic In
Wall Street!" "El Juarer. Mines I'lood
ed!" Later the report was confirmed,
and by 3 o'clock the shares of the El
Juarez mines were not v -"th the paper
on which they were wrl.. :i.
The old man to whom the mines had
been a lifelong companion stared des
perately at the flaunting headlines,
then, covering his face with his rough,
worn hand, gave way to his grief with
the abandon of a child.
"Them mines was Jest like my own
child," he sobbed. "I knowed they
wasn't actln' up Jest right when I left
'em, but I never susplcloned they'd
fetch up where they iiev," and again
i teni'8 "owed unrestrainedly down the
furrowed cheeks.
Disappointed, luiblttered, almost uiad-
i doned by the loss of sorely needed
wealth Just within his grasp, Thomas
Coleman broke the silence.
"Don't worry," he said coldly. "You
are not too old yet to find some suit
able employment."
t'nelo 1'eter looked up In astonish
ment, then as the meaning of the cruel
words dawned upon him his face went
suddenly and pitifully white,
"I kinder thought if I was ever In
t -0111)16 I could depend on my own
folks." The old voice quavered plte
ously as the curtains parted and Eliza
beth entered the room. Sweeping past
the others, she tool; the oM man's
hands in her young ones.
"I have come to lake you homo with
me," v'.io said simply.
"But tile mines," he said unsteadily.
"Never mind. There Isn't much room
in my little flat, but there's a loving
welcome, and soon" she blushed hap
pily "there will be a little house In
the su -urbs."
"But how about that young feller
you're gain" to marry V" questioned the
old man doubtfully.
"He told me to come for you," an
swered Elizabeth, with proud, happy
eyes.
The old man rose aud, still holding
Elizabeth's hand, faced Thomas Cole
man and his wife.
"You said I wasn't too old to find
suitable employment," he said. "audl
ain't. I've found It. I'm goin' to buy
that house out In the suburbs, and It
won't be no little one, either. An' I'm
goln' to set the young feller ttp .In
whatever business he'wanls to be set
up In, an', what's more, I'm goln' to
give Elizabeth n million dollars In gov
ernment bonds fer her weddln' gift. I
ain't through with the other million
yet, but when I am she an' her chil
dren gits It. My money wan't In them
mines. I told Willie Moore how they
wuz actln' up, an' he took it out fer
me three months ago. I ain't deuyln'
I felt bad about 'em, but 'fv.arn't the
money I wuz thiukin' of.
"Xo," he repeated, "I warn't thlnkiu'
of the money, an'" he patted her
hand lovingly "neither wuz Elizabeth,
but," he added slowly, with n shrewd
glance at Thomas C'Jltvuan's white,
baliled face, "it kinder lojks as though
there's others that wuz."
Pnnrtnrlns; n Fnllncy.
The barber applied the rich brown
dye with a fine tooth comb, combing It
evenly Into the grizzled locks of the
old man.
"Hair dye, sir," he said. "Plain, un
varnlched hair dye Is the base of that
absurd fallacy about people turning
gray In a single night.
"If you investigate those yarns you
find that Invariably they concern per
sons In prison. Orsinl, pining In Jail,
bad his hair go back on him. Marie
Antoinette, languishing In a cell, found
the deep hue of her hair changing to
an ugly gray. Raleigh, imprisoned in
the tower, developed grayish streaks
with Incredible speed.
"The secret of all that, my dear, Is
this:
"These prisoners In order to conceal
their gray hair dyed It, using a poor
sort of dye, one of those sorts that
have to be applied every day or two.
In prison, naturally, they could not get
hold of this dj'e, ond hence their locks
whitened nt a miraculous rate. When
people said of them pityingly that
then' terror of sorrow had turned
their hair gray In a single night they
acquiesced themselves in the , decep
tion, for is It pot embarrassing I leave
It to yon, sir, Is It not embarrassing
to explain to the world at large that
one uses hair dye?" St. Louis Globe
Democrat. Well Timed Puns.
A southern clergyman, on inveterate
punster, says that while he Is well
aware that puns belong to the lowest
order of wit he is seldom able to resist
the temptation to make one when op
portunity offers.
On one occasion after preaching an
eloquent sermon be was met by two
friends, one of whom began to praise
bis discourse In enthusiastic terms.
When he paused for breath the other
man said, with a laugh:
"Well, doctor, can you stand as much
soft soap as that?"
"Indeed I can if there isn't too much
lye In It," returned the minister
quickly.
At nnother time he was present at
the marriage reception of a young cou
ple of tae name of More. The occasion
J was somewhat stiff up to the time of
i the minister's entrance, and he quickly
' discovered the Btate of affairs,
j "Madam," he said, with his radiant
; smllo, addressing the awkward young
bride, "how fortunate you are! There
' are so few people who can say with
truth, "The More I want the More I
; have.' "
The laugh which followed put the
company at ease.
THE ANNUAL ROMANCE.
They met beside the tossing waves.
This summer lad and miss,,
Ths first ev 'neath the glistening moon
1 3 I
sat somewhnt like 5
I The second evening Cupid came,
And life was filled with bliss.
Fair Luna smiled as she looked down
5
I
If
October came around, and so
This summer lad and miss
Broke nil the tender vows they made,
i s
3 .
B -
And i
$ this.
Pcrrlne Lambert
Bier AdvnntRse.
''A man's vocabulary Is always larger
than a woman's."
"Yes, but a woman's Is more persist
ent." Philadelphia Press.
Arltlimrtlcnl History.
Mrs. Russell Sage often speaks of
the days before her marriage, when
she taught school.
In an address thnt she made last
winter before a charitable society Mrs.
Sage said:
"That method of giving was not sat
isfactory, was it? So vague and un
certain were Its results Indeed thnt 1
was reminded of the answer that a
pupil of mine once made In a history
lesson.
" 'How mnny wars,' I asked this pu
pil, 'did England fight with Spain?'
" 'Six,' she answered.
"'Six? said I. 'Enumerate them,
please.'
" 'One, two, three, four, five, six.'
said the little glrI."-Phllndelphla Bul
letin. Very Little to Say.
"Yes," said Bragg, "I've decided to
have a long talk with the boss and tell
him Just what 1 think."
"Is It possible?" replied Knox.
"Why, don't you believe I've got the
nerve to tell him what I think?"
. "Oh, yes! But If you tell him Just
what you think how are you going to
have a long talk?" Catholic Standard
and Times.
A Counter Irritant.
"Have you mode arrangements to
prevent frnud In the election?"
"No," answered Senator Sorghum.
"I couldn't quite manage that, but I've
done the next best thing to defeat the
opposition's inquiry. I've made ar
rangements that'll make their fraud so
Insignificant by comparison that It
won't be noticed." Washington Star.
Friends No More,
"Do you believe that disease germs
are transmitted by kisses?"
"I don't think they are."
"That young man who came to see
me Ia3t night has a theory that they
are."
"Don't you believe It. He was Just
lying to you to keep you from kissing
him good night." Houston Post.
Taking; In the Coin.
"Talking about Inventions," snld the
business man, "1 have a little machine
in my place that would make me a mil
lionaire If I could only keep It going all
the time."
"What is It?"
"A cash register." Philadelphia
Ledger.
.
Haw, Hair!
Larry 'Twas th' funniest Joke ,OI
ivcr hur-rud In all me born days.
Faith, Oi laughed all day long.
Denny Yez did?
Larry Yls. Ivery bone In me body
flit lolke a funny bone. Chicago News.
A War to Balse Money.
Physician's Wife I need a new even
ing dress.
Physician All right, my dear. I'll
look over my ,11st and find some fellow
who can afford an operation for ap
pendicitis. Boston Transcript
More Essential.
De Style At last we ore in our own
tittle home.' I suppose the first thing
t must get you Is a good cookbook.
Mrs. De Style (wife of a week) No
er you'd better get me a strong can
opener. New York Press.
Usual Thins;.
"What Is It a sign of," asked the In
nocent maid, "when a young man be
gins to tell a girl his troubles?"
"It's a sign that be will soon ask her
to share them," nnswered the pretty
widow. Judge.
A Prospective Snub.
Edltii You would hnrdly know Bob
ble since he got back from Europe, ne
lost nil lis money there, and
Ethel Hardly know him! Why, - I
shan't, know him at all! Detroit Free
Press. -
POLICE OF PARIS.
How the Third Ilrlitade Spies Upon
the Whole Force.
Vance Thompson describes In Every
body's the famous Third brigade of
the Purls police, whose business Is to
supervise tho police. It is composed
of an officer de palx, a principal In
spector, a brigadier, five subbrlgadlers
and about seventy-five picked men.
About half are assigned to watch the
patrolmen. He Is a bold policeman
who commits any of tho little sins
dear to the patrolman's heart. There
Is hardly a chance that he will not be
detected In time. Reprimand follows,
after that flue and lastly dismissal.
There Is always a long "waiting list" of
candidates, sound young fellows fresh
from the army, and the city can choose
Its new servants among tho best.
The other half of the Third brigade
Is engaged In work of n more typically
Latin kind. It Investigates nil com
plaints made against the patrolmen
by chiefs and citizens, and it main
tains a regular system of espionage
upon tho private lives of all police
men. "This, of course, Is the Latin way
of doing things," writes Mr. Thomp
son. "Wrong as it may bo in principle.
It serves to weed out the men of bad
character and bad habits and bad as
sociations, and It prevents that mon
strous alliance of the police and the
lawbreakers."
The Third brigade In turn Is watch
ed by a smnller body of detectives,
who report directly to tho prefect of
police.
DESERT THIRST.
Its Five I'hnxes, Two of Which Mean
Certain Death.
Half of the people dying from desert
thirst perish In thirty-six hours, a quar
ter within forty-eight or fifty hours and
all others of which the history lu known i
within eighty hours.
The phenomena of desert thirst may
be arranged In three stages namely,
normal thirst, functional derangement
and structural . degeneration. These
three stages are made up of five phases
the clamorous, cotton mouth phase,
the shriveled tongue, the blood sweat
and the living death. There Is hope In
saving the lives of the victims whose
thirst Is diagnosed In the first three
phases, but for the fourth und fifth
death Is certain.
The clamorous phase of desert thirst
may be relieved by water, or In some
Instances fruit acids or similar sub
stances. The second, or cotton mouth,
phase should be treated by giving the
victim quarts of water taken In small
sips and Hooding his body. Practically
the same treatment may be applied to
the third, or shriveled tongue, phase,
with the addition of a medicine to
counteract the fever and a tonic for the
heart. Water would only prove a
damage In the fourth, or blood sweat,
phase, and even If It were possible to
satisfy the thirst of the victim his
mental condition would never be clear.
Death from thirst is often painless.
Los Angeles Times.
The Valley of Qulllola.
"Whoever," says Charles Darwin in
his "Voyage of the Beagle," "called
Valparaiso the valley of paradise
must have been thinking of Qulllotn."
Qulllotn Is a thriving town twenty-six
miles from Valparaiso In a northeast
erly direction. Any person, he de
clares, who sees only the country
around Valparaiso, barren of vegeta
tion, would never Imagine that there
were such picturesque spots In Chile.
"As soon as we reached tho brow of
the sierra the valley of Qulllotn was
Immediately under our feet. The pros
pect was one of remarkable natural
luxuriance. The valley Is very brond
and quite flat and is thus easily Irri
gated iu all parts. The little squure
gardens are crowded with orange and
olive trees aud every sort of vege
table." According to Contract.
A man who was very miserly hoard
ed up his stacks of hay year after yenr
In the hope of making double the price
he was offered for them. A well known
hay nnd straw buyer In the district one
day asked the price of a stack. An
enormous price was asked, which the
buyer accepted.
"How about the terms of settle
ment?" asked the old miser.
"Well, yon see," said the buyer, "my
terms are to settle when I fetch the
lost load away."
"That's a bargain," said the miser,
slapping the other's hand. The old
chap watched every load go a way ex
cept the last, nnd that the buyer never
did fetch away. London Standard.
No 8alnte For a Dirty Prince.
The crown prince of Germany had
as a child a great dislike of being
washed. The emperor tried various
means to cure him, and he at last hit
on the right one. - The young prince
came running to him one duy in a
great rage, saying the sentry had not
saluted him as he passed.
"To lie sure," said the emperor. "I
gave orders they were not to salute a
dirty prince, but only a clean one."
The child's pride was hurt, and be took
to the bath.
He Must Have Had Faith.
The church was packed, even the
aisles lined with chairs. Just before
the benediction the thoughtful clorgy
ninn, who loved order as he did the
gospel, thus admonished his hearers:
"In passing out please remain seated
until the ushers have removed the
chairs from the aisles." Llppincott's
Magazine.
Man often feels himself Independent
of nil the f'fili, but let the sunshine
and rain fail for a little while and ho
realizes how meanly dependent he Is.
Salisbury Democrat
THE FRENCH HUSBAND.
Always, as a Rule, Anxious to Do the
Ao-recnhle Thins.
The French husband has a faculty
that amounts almost to a genius for
bestowing the delicate attentions
which cost little except tho exercise
of a modicum of tact and thoughtful
ness, but which enrry Joy to every
true woman's heart. He not only
thinks to take home to her often (In
the absence of the means to make a
larger offering) a ten cent bunch of
violets, pinks or roses from the flower
market or the Itinerant flower vender's
barrow on his route, but he presents
them gallantly with tho compliment
and the caress the occasion calls for,
and this mukes them confer a pleasure
out of all proportion to their intrinsic
worth!
He remembers her birthday or fete
day with a potted plant, a bit of game,
a box of bonbons, a cake from the pas
try cook's or a bottle of good wine.
He Is marvelously fertile in expedients
for making the time pass quickly and
agreeably for her. He has a thousand
amusing aud successful devices for
helping her to renew her youth. He
projects unique and Joyous Sunduy
and holiday excursions. Ho improvises
dainty little banquets. Ho Is n past
master especially In the art of conjur
ing up amiable mysteries and prepar
ing charming little surprises. And In
all these trivial enterprises he vindi
cates the old French theory that true
courtesy consists In taking a certain
amount of pains to so order our words
and our mnnners that others "be con
tent with us and with themselves." ,
Tho American husband Is particular
ly solicitous to do the proper thing;
the French husband to do the agree
able thing. Independent.
WATER IN TURKEY.
Host Meet Mnny Condition to De a
Perfect Hcvernire.
"Turks are extremely particular,"
writes a traveler, "in regard to the
quality of the water they drink and
are willing to be at much trouble and
expense to obtain water of the kind
they prefer. To be a perfect beverage
water must Issue from a rock', fall from
a height, bo of medium temperature,
flow rapidly and copiously, taste sweet
spring iu high und lonely ground and
run from south to north or from east
to west. The excellence of any water
is accordingly determined by the num
ber of these conditions It fulfills. It is
remarkable how much pleasure Turks
find in visiting n famous spring In the
country, to spend tho whole day beside
It under the shade of trees, doing little
else than drink carafe after carafe of
the water as the elixir of life. Resorts
of this description abound on the shores
nnd In the volleys of the upper Bos
porus under such names ns the Water
of Life, the Sliver Water, the Water
Under the Chestnut Tree, the Water
Beside the Hazels. The spectacle of
the great gatherings there on Fridays,
arrayed In bridal colors, seated tier
above tier on the terraced platforms
built against the green slope of the
hill, the women nbove. the men be
low, all iu the deep shade of the
branches meeting overhead, forms a
picture beyond n painter's power to re
produce. Chicago News.
Hot Drinks For Thirst.
It Is a mistake to suppose that cold
drinks are necessary to relieve thirst.
Very cold drinks, as a rule, Increase
the feverish condition of the mouth
and stomach and so create thirst. Ex
perience shows It to be n fnct that hot
drinks relieve the thirst and cool oft
the body when it Is lu an abnormally
heated condition better than Ice cold
drinks. It Is far better and safer to
avoid the use of drinks below 60 de
grees. In fnct, a higher temperature is
to be preferred, and those who are
much troubled with thirst will do well
to try the ndvnntages to be derived
from hot drinks Instead of cold fluids,
to which they have been accustomed.
Hot drinks also have the advantage
of aiding digestion Instead of causing
debility of the stomach aud bowels.
The Harshness of Orators.
American political orators are often
charged with being unduly harsh to
the other side. The following extract
from n speech of the late Earl of
Shaftesbury, published In his memoirs,
shows that If our stump speakers ex
hibit harshness they come honestly by
It The noble carl thus described nnd
prophesied: "When Gladstone runs
down n steep place, hia Immense nia
Jority, like the pigs in Scripture, but
hoping for n better Issue, will go with
him, roaring in grunts of exultation."
Boston Transcript
Noah's Advantaxe.
Mrs. Noah was complaining thnt her
clothes looked as If they hnd come out
of the ark.
"On the contrary," returned her
spouse,- "they have Just come across
the water."
Herewith be congratulated himself
on the cheapness of imported gowns.
New York Sun.
As the Boy Saw It.
An Englishman tells the story of a
boy who saw an exceedingly bowleg
god man standing In front of a hot fire.
Finally he could restrain himself no
longer nnd said, "Hey, mister, you'd
better get away from there; you'so
warpln'."
Politeness.
The greatest thing In the world Is
politeness. And no schooling is nee
essary to bo agreeable. Simply have
a little consideration for others and be
quiet nnd modest Atchison Globe.
There Is no virtue in the Sunday that
makes children say, "I wish It was
Monday."
The paint that lasts proof against all
weather conditions. The maker does
the mixing and guarantees it to be.
satisfactory, too.
LAWRENCE
READY MIXED PAINT
Sold by Keystone Hardware Company.
GREEN
BONE
An excellent feed
For Your
Chickens
i
during winter. It saves
grain, produces results
where grain fulls, hoi pi
the hens to moult and
makes thorn winter lay
ers. Try it.
We grind green hone
and keep It constantly
on hand at
Hunter &
riillireiVs
MEAT MARKET
REYNOLDSV1LLE, PA.
I
I
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD.
Schedule In Effect May 27, 196.
trains leave reynolds ville :
For New Bethlehem, Red Blink, und prin
cipal Intermediate stations, Oil Oily and
Pittsburg, 8:30, 8:08 a. m, 1:30, 5:07, 7:68 (New
Bethlehem only) p. m. week-days. Sundays
6:30 a, m.,4:20 p. m.
For Dubois. Driftwood, and principal Inter
medium stations, Harrisburg, Philadelphia
Baltimore and Washington, 0:30 a. m 12:52
6:25 p m. week-days. Sundays 12:59 p. m.
For DiiBols only 11:42 a. m. week-days, 9:5
p. m. daily.
W. W. Attebbuhy, i.R. W003,
Oen. Manager. Passenger Traffic Mgr
Geo. W. Hoyd,
General Passencer Agent.
BUSINESS CARDS.
E
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,
Pension Attorney and Real Estate- Agent.
JJAYMOND E. BUOWN,
attorney at law,
Brookville, Pa
(j. m. Mcdonald,
' ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
mnury punnc, real estate agent, patents
secured, collections marie promptly Ofllce
l Q.,nll...ta l...ll,lt Da
C. SMITH,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Justice nf the peace, real estate agent, col
lections made promptly. Ofllce In Syndicate
building. Keynoldsvllle, Pa.
gMITH M. McCREIGHT,
ATTORNEY-AT-LA W
Notary public and real estate agent. Col
lections will receive prompt attention. Office
In the Reynolclaville Hardware Co. building,
Main street, Keynoldsvllle, Pa.
DR. B. E. HOOVER,
DENTIST,
Resident dentist. In the Hoover building
Main street. Gentleness in operating.
)R. L. L. MEANS,
DENTIST,
Office on second floor of the First, National
Dink building, Main street.
DR. R- devere king,
DENTIST,
office on second floor of the Syndicate build
Ing, Main street, Keynoldsvllle, Pa.
pRI ESTER BROS.,
UNDERTAKERS.
Rlack and white funeralears. Main street.
Keynoldsvllle, Pa.
J. H HUGHES
UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING'.
The U. 8. Hurlal League hiis been tested,
nd found all right. Cheapest form of In
surance. Seeure a contract. nesr ruuuc
Fountain, Keynoldsvllle fa.
D. H. YOUNG,
ARCHITECT
Corner Grant and
Flftn sts., Reynolds-
vllle.Pa.
JOHN C. HIRST,
CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER,
Surveyor and Draughtsman. Office In Syn-
aicate puuaing, main street.
WINDSOR HOTEL,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Between 12th and 13th Bts on Filbert St.
Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter
minal. Five minutes walk from the Penn'a
R, R. Depot. European plan 11.00 per day and
upward. American plan COO per day, a
mDH ill. OUUOIUHSJ, mUdsai.
CHARTER NOTICE.
Notice Is hereby given that an application
ill be made to the governor of Pennsylvania
on Friday. November ttth, mm, ny .lonn w.
Im.ws.nn. II. Alex Stoke and W. II. Moore, un
der the act of Assembly, entitled "An act. to
provide for the Inrornnration and regulation
ofcerialn corporations" unproved A.jrll2!lth
1K74. and tho supplements thereto, for the
charter of an int ended corporal ..,u to be
called the Keyneldsllle Amusement Comp
any the ehaiaeter nod ot)ict of which Is
i rtlng and maintaining an Opera House
id & iiW.-n of fntfrrainment nr"! amuse
ment, and for these pul pites to have, ooa-
ses and enjoy all the rign. Bene
fit., ami ttrlvllpiTMa nf said act of a-LublV and
supplements thereto.