The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, November 28, 1906, Image 3

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    Canning's
Cruise
By CLARENCE O DELL
Canning, miming clown the bench,
looked fjr lie fittulllar blue niul
white tmban. Hoiuohow he had come
to expect the Right of the odd little
bathing enp, and It wns with a gesture
of Impatience that ho searched the
beach and tho llttlo knot of bathers
dinging to the life ropes.
Ever since the girl had first appeared
on the beach (.'nnnlng luul been Inter
ested, She whs a splendid swimmer,
vastly different from tho girls who
clung to tho ropes and gave llttlo
bricks every time n wave rolled In.
She bended straight for the rnft with
strong, steady strokes and kept away
from tho flirtatious group In the shal
lows. Canning admired her for It, and he
was frequently found on tho raft
Til ONB
watching the llttlo bend bobbing
through tho surf to the same goal.
He never hnd a chance to speak. She j
was not tne Kind or gin a limn spoke
tc without excuse, lint of late there
bad been a sort of friendliness In her
1Pfrr.ee as she hnd climbed to the raft.
More than oneo Canning hnd wished
that she might have a cramp Just a
tiny little one so thnt he might go to
her rescue and thus break the conven
tional Ice.
Bhe was nowhere In sight today.
The wator was unusually rough, and
the life guards were pacing the bench
restlessly Instead of occupying their
tisual perches, but rough water could
not prevent her from taking her dally
dip, and Canning wondered whnt the
matter was.
Then suddenly he caught sight of a
blue and white dot out on tho water,
and he strode Into the surf. It wns
reckless for the girl to try to make tho
raft in this sea. He wondered thnt the
guards hnd not called '.icr buck.
Once In the water, he advanced with
powerful strokes, following the girl
ahead. It wns no ensy matter for hiin
to make headway at llrst, and he won
dered how she wns faring farther out
She must have been making slow
progress, for he could see thnt he was
gaining on her. She wns not more thnn
a hundred feet from the rnft now,
and he was some llfty feet behind her,
when suddenly she threw up her arms,
with a cry, and disappeared under the
water.
He fought his way desperately to
ward the spot where she hnd disap
peared and came up to her Just a she
rose for the second time.
"Turn on your back," he command
ed. "I will get you to the float. Don't
be afraid."
He caught her just In time, and
Slowly he paddled with one hand to
ward the rnft. It wns a difficult mat
ter to get bcr on the raft unaided, but
the realization that he would have to
work quickly gave him new strength.
She had lost consciousness, and bis
first care was to administer first aid.
It was several minutes before ber eye
lids fluttered and be knew that be bad
won that battle. When at last be was
assured that she was all right be sank
down on the boards beside ber to rest
before even trying to signal the life
guards.
"Yon seem to be more exhausted
than I am," she said after a moment
"It must have been bard work getting
me on to the raft."
"The swell made It difficult," be ex
plained. "Once or twice I thought I
bad lost you, but I held on."
"I suppose we can get them to send
out a boat for us," she commented. "It
would not be easy to swim back."
"It would be out of the question," he
declared.
"It looks longer than ever before,"
she said, with a little shudder as she
glanced out over the heaving water.
"The hotels seem so much smaller."
Canning glanced op for a moment,
then sprang to his feet, with a cry.
Presently he turned to her with a grave
face. "Do not bo alarmed," be said
quietly, "but I am afraid the raft Is
loose."
"But It was moored at four corners!"
.she exeln!med. "How could It get
loose?"
"The logs rot In the water. I sup
pose I raised tho edge out of water as
I climbed on, and the swell tore It
loose. At any rote, we are In for a
cruise unless we ran signal the shore."
They stood up together and waved
frantically, but apparently tho little
tragedy had passed unnoticed on shore,
and there was no answering signal that
they could perceive. At last, tired by
their exertions, they sank down on the
raft and faced the situation.
"The coastwise steamers come close
In to shore here," ho snld reassuringly.
"There will be a good chiinee of being
taken off liefore night, l'erliaps at the
turn of the tide we may drift back."
"I hope something happens," nho shiv
ered. "It seems so dreadful to be car
ried out to sen."
"We at least have a raft," ho com
forted. "Suppose you hnd to keep
swimming?"
"I should have given up long ago,"
she said. "As It was I should be dead
now had it not been for you."
"I wns afraid you would have oino
trouble," ho snld, "when I saw whnt
you had undertaken to do."
"Did you follow me out on purpose?"
sho asked wonderlngly. "I didn't know
any one hnd seen me. Tho guards
warned mo against trying, but I want
ed to see If I couldn't, and I did al
most." '"Hint wns the only reason that
brought mo out," he said. "I saw your
bathing cap, and I knew It wns you."
"And I am the reason for your being
out here?" sho asked wonderlngly. "I
nin responsible for your danger too?"
"Not nt all," ho protested warmly. "I
rm only too glnd thnt I wns In time to
be of service."
"I thought It wns becnuse you want
ed to come," she explained. "I have
noticed that you were such n good
swimmer."
"I have wished hundreds of times
thnt I knew you," ho admitted. "I
have admired your swimming ever
since you cnine."
"My iinnio Is Hoso Wilcox."
"I am Harry Canning," ho respond
ed formally. "I'm glad to meet you.
Miss Wilcox."
Their hands met In hearty clasp. She
colored when sho perceived that ho was
still holding It, and for a moment she
moved away. Then she drew closer to
him again, and they sat there and chat
ted while their eyes searched the
horizon for the sign of sail or steamer.
They soon found that they knew
common friends, and this swept away
Hose's lust barrier of reserve, and she
gossiped on as If they hnd known each
other for years.
So engrossed did they become that
they forgot the peril of the situation,
forgot everything save the fact that
they found each other wonderfully con
genial. It was with a start that they heard
a panting behind them and turned to
see a steam yacht drawing alongside.
In a few minutes they had been taken
off and, with the raft towing behind
the yacht, turned back to shore.
"I llko this style of cruising better,"
laughed Hose as they sat on the deck
wrappeil In blankets. "And just to
think thnt we were In sight of the
yacht for half an hour and never
thought of turning around."
"It never occurred to me that they
would have to telephone the Inlet for
a boat," he explained, "though I might
have known."
"I'm a little sorry the cruise stopped
so suddenly," she confessed shyly. "I
hnd even forgotten that It wns getting
near lunchtlme." '
"Let's make the next cruise In a
yacht." he suggested.
"We could get up a party," she as
sented. "I don't wnnt a party," he declared.
"A party would be de trop on a honey
moon." "Yes," she admitted shyly, her color
deepening.
But later he managed to obtnin n
less vngue acquiescence to his proposal.
Stopping; Rom on Ilnnks.
Huns on banks, as nil tho world
knows, nre often stopped or restricted
in the oddest wnys. A rich bank knew
that a run wns to set In on n certain
Monday morning, for It had been rob
bed of some postage stamps on Satur
day night and the robbery had been
exaggernted In the newspaper reports,
and if tills run wns not kept within
reasonable limits the bank would have
to close Its doors. It hnd plenty of
money, but not plenty of ensh. It
needed twenty-four hours' time. Bo
fore sunrise on Monday morning a man
pt a fresh coat of paint on the front
Oors of the bank, on the wall panels
And on the counters. The result was
thnt people who made the run on Mon
day made rather a walk of it They
wanted their money, but they rushed
no one. On the contrary, they came on
with caution and deliberation. So
careful were they lest they get paint
on their clothes that It took longer to
pay off one of them thnn It would have
taken ordinarily to pay five. This Is
one of many odd tricks whereby, In a
run, a bank has saved Itself from
wreck.
Tka Oldest Religions.
Judaism Is the oldest existing re
ligion. Brahmnnlsm is second, Bud
dhism third and Mohammedanism
fourth. Buddha was born In the sixth
century B. C, at Kapllavastu, In In
dia, near the Himalayas. He was
named Siddhartba and Gautama and
was the son of a wealthy Sakya chief
tain, called a king In modern poetry.
Buddha lived to he very old. Brahma
Is the all pervading soul of the uni
verse, the creator of tlje universe, his
brother gods being Vishnu and Siva.
Mohammed was born at Mecca, In
Arabia, In 570 A. D., and died In Me- ,
Ulna, Arabia, June 8, 632. No one can
lay when the worship of God began.
It Is probable -that the very earliest
man worshiped some unknown power,
who wns bis God. The religion of the
Cbaldenns antedated the Jewish re
ligion.' Noah worshiped God; so did
Abraham. Judaism did not begin un
til late in Abraham's life. I
PERSIAN CUSTOM OF BAST.
Melhmt of IllirMlnar Wronsa Is In.
convenient to l.ea-ntlnns.
In Tersln there is the strange custom
known ns "bast." It simply means that
any one having a grievance by taking
refuge on the premises of n nobleman
mny demand thnt the nobleman take
up his cause as though the bastee ware
one of his own hoiiseholif.
There seems to be no limit to the cus
tom, for the petty criminal often takes
refuge, or bast, In a mosque, where he
Is snfe, If his friends are allowed to
feed him. If the police want htm they
must starve him out.
There was a man who sat for eight
years In one of tho legations hero pa
tiently awaiting a settlement of a
small claim that he hnd against the
1'erslau government. Ministers came
and went, but he stayed on. At last
his claim was paid, and he died cele
brating his victory!
I'ew legations would have the cour
age to put a man out, as It would bring
down no smalt amount of opprobrium
upon them.
The other day every shop In the
great bazaar In Teheran clued, ami be
tween fi.nnonnd O.OIK) men -merchants,
nrtlsnns nnd some priests went Into
the Rngllsh legation nnd Informed the
netlng minister that they were there
to remnlu until tho Englbh govern
ment took up their ense with the Per
sian government.
Fortunately the grounds nre lnrgo,
but nt best great diunnge must bo done
to the benutlful gardens by the 5,000
nnd more men camping on them.
A short time ngo these people would
have gone to the, Itnsslan legation, but
today It Is pnssed by and forgotten,
while the streets surrounding tho Brit
ish legation nre tilled with crowds who
do not hesitate to say thnt England cnu
have the country if she wants It.
The whole city seems to be on a
strike. Only tho malls, butcher nnd
linker hnvo not been Interfered with.
Hnlf a ton of bread dally Is required
to feed those within the legation com
pound. All day long the Koran Is read
and Allah Is appealed to for help. In
dependent. Cork For Insnlntlnsr.
A new Insulating material has re
cently been Invented by a Portuguese
firm of cork merchants. It has for Its
principal component granulated cork
nnd Is called cortlclte. Its application
Is unlimited, for It will resist the cold
of a Siberian winter and the rays of
a tropical sun; also the attacks of In
sects, even the white nnt being power
less against It. As a nonconductor of
sound It should be useful In city flats.
On boiler tubes nnd boilers it Is snld to
reduce tho temperature of tho boiler
room to an agreeable one. It Is not
Inflammable nnd may be generally
adopted for partitions and linings of
bouses. Bricks and slabs of cortlclte
are made for tills purpose and can ha
sawed and bored like wood. It would
seem to possess special advantages for
use on warships, taking tho place of
wood as far as possible. New Orleans
Times-Democrat.
One I.eRired fjlrl Dancer.
In a combination concert garden and
dance bull near the entrance to Pros
pect pnrk, Brooklyn, mny bo seen near
ly every night a girl with one leg danc
ing merrily over the polished floor.
Her dexterity with n crutch Is nlinost
marvelous, and there Is never a break
In her perfect time with the music.
Waltzes, twosteps and other round
dances nre Indulged in, nnd the girl
never lucks for pnrtners. In fact,
many who have danced with her any
she Is lighter on her feet thnn most
girls with n full set of limbs.
The girl Is pretty and, for that sort
of plnce, very ladylike. In ninny re
spects she Is a mystery, as few know
her nnme or history nnd why she re
tnlns her love for dancing despite her
handicap. New York Press.
Cotton Pnper,
Some recent experiments bnve dem
onstrated thnt all grades of paper
can be manufactured from cotton
stalks nnd In addition to this a variety
of byproducts, Including alcohol, cotton
fiber nnd smokeless powder, can be se
cured in commercial quantities. On
the estimate that an acre of land pro
ducing a field of cotton will also pro
duce one ton of stalks, 10,000,000 or 12,
000.000 tons of raw material can be de
pended upon annually. Some enthusi
ast claims that In addition to Increas
ing the value of the south'! annual cot
ton crop by $100,000,000 the removal of
the stalks from the fields early In the
fall will mean the extermination of the
boll weevil. Farming.
City Without Fires.
Cardiff, Wales, a city with 105,000
Inhabitants, has such thorough protec
tion from fires, according to United
Btates Consul Daniel W. Williams, that
there Is very little demand for appli
ances to extinguish them. All the pub
lic buildings, many hotels and large
residences are supplied with appliances
for prevention and early discovery
which are frequently tested, those at
the theaters being tested every night
In consequence of wholesome building
Jules and the street fire regulations
there were only 123 fires In 1005. Of
these only five were serious and not
one was caused by a defective flue.
An Old Cent.
A Massachusetts cent dated 1788 was
found on a mountain In Bolton, Yt, a
short time ago by a driver of a team
belonging to W. II. Stevens of thi:t
town. The coin was uncovered by oik
of the horses' feet. No road has ever
been In the place where it was found,
so the circumstance of Its discover
was very peculiar. Besides tho date
on the back of tho cent is the word
"Massachusetts" in a circle, with the
cut of an eagle and the words "oru
cent" In the center.
UNITED WORKMEN.
How For Orsranlsnllon Work Notes
of the Fraternity,
All the great questions of the order
are now settled. There are no more
dlllleultles, no more fears, no more
misunderstandings to net ns a hin
drance to the work of the order. The
only thing thnt now remains to be done
Is to begin to grow again. The lodgo
Should nssunie tho position of a sort
of social center In the community In
which It Is located. It should afford (o
Its members the very best of enter
tainment features, so that when a
member has once attended a meeting
of the lodge he will be loath to miss
another one. These features should bo
of a character to niako the melnbers
tnlk nbout them when at their dally
work or nt lunch or dinner. These
thoughts nbout the lodge meetings nnd
tho questions they involve should Just
tome bubbling up out of a member's
Inner consciousness as though he were
full to the overflowing of these mat
ters. When this sort of condition has
been established then It Is time to send
a good deputy Into the community
where the lodge Is located. His work
will then be easy and the harvest will
he great.-A. O. U. W. Kmblem.
The Jurisdiction of Washington had
7.540 members In good standing nt last
report.
Tho total amount paid by the grand
lodge of Michigan to the lieneflclarles
of deceased members since separation
from the supreme lodge amounts to
$8,004,212.
A person holding a flnnl enrd holds
Identically the same ns though he hnd
never lieeu a member.'
The grand lodges of Tennessee nnd
Wisconsin adopted the Montreal rates.
In New York city are lodges where
oue may see the degrees worked In
German, French, Italian, Spanish ami
Danish. The tenth Masonic district Is
composed of lodges speaking four dif
ferent languages and Is often referred
to ns the polyglot district. The pres
ent district deputy Is a linguist, pro
ficient In many tongues, who follows
the occupation of court Interpreter.
One less familiar with European lan
guages would have a hard time of It
as district deputy.
During the past year the grand eoiu
maiulery of New York lost 259 mem
bers by death, 32.'! were dropped for
nonpayment of dues and 104 were
dropped for nonnfllllntlon. The num
ber created during the year was l,;i;t!!.
Beaches lodge of Toronto, organized
only a yenr ngo, recently laid the cor
nerstone of a new $7,000 Masonic tem
ple. Tho Masonic temple of Kewanee, III.,
wns recently dedicated on the fiftieth
anniversary of Kewnneo lodge. The
building cost $50,000 and In a benutl
ful structure.
Little Rock, Ark., is to be the alto
of the Masonic home In that state,
though the exact locution In the city
hns not yet been decided. The ground
will be selected soon and the building
started.
Garden City lislgo of Chicago Is the
Inrgest Mnsonic lodge In the Jurisdic
tion of Illinois. It has 1,111 members,
which number shows a net gain of 10.1
for the year 1005.
Every neighbor who hns taken the
trouble to Induce a stranger to become
n member of his enmp should see to It
that he remains In the camp. What
good Is It to the camp, snys the Wood
mai.. to see twenty members brought
lu during a term and thirty dropped
for nonpayment of assessments and
dues? There ought to be less Indiffer
ence In the camps. The man who
brings a stranger Into camp should cer
tainly have sulllcleut Influence to teach
him that It Is his duty to keep himself
in good standing so that his loved ones
shall be fully protected.
The gain In membership this year
promises to be larger than in any year
since the society was organized.
The head banker of the Modern
Woodmen of America Is tinder bond of
$1,000,000.
The order has had a most prosperous
year In Missouri, which is now the sec
ond largest jurisdiction In the order.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS.
Treatment of Visitors to the Lodae.
Pythian Briefs.
Treat the visitors of your lodge as
you wish to be treated when you visit
a strange lodge. There Is a want of
sociability In some lodges, and It Is a
very simple matter to correct. It Is
often thoughtlessness or timidity on
the part of some members and of ac
tual Incivility on the part of others.
In some lodges there are special com
mittees whose business it Is to re
ceive, examine (if necessary) and in
troduce visiting brethren, to welcome
them and make them feel at home.
When there are no such committees
some thoughtful brother can make the
visitor feel at ease by stepping up and
giving him a vigorous handshake and
telling bim how glad he is to see him.
Then introduce him to other members.
The grand domain of New York has
a Pythian home fund of over $80,000.'
The grand domain of i lorida hns
over 5,700 members lu good standing.
A large numlier of tho Illinois lodges
are donating the sum of n dollar per
member for the orphnns' home.
The grand domain of Colorado has a
membership in good standing of 7,000.
fillip
TAJ I IMPROVES 110 ADS
FINE RE9ULT3 FROM EXPERIMENTS
AT JACKSON, TENN.
lUarhwara Thus Trrnteil Stnnd Wear
and Tear, Are Daatlraa and Iti-ne-
elal to I'ntillo Health How the
Tar la Applied.
Experiments In tar and oil for road
Improvement at Jackson, Tcnn., are
described In a bulletin l-mrd y
Vulted States department of agricul
ture. During the spring and summer of
1005, says the bulletin, the office of
public roads co-operated with Sam C.
Lancaster, city engineer of Jackson
and chief engineer of the Madison coun
ty good roads commission, In making a
series of careful experiments to de
termine the value of coal tar for the
Improvement of macadam streets and
roads. Tests were also made of the
utility of crude Texas oil nnd several
grades of Its residue when applied to
earth and macadam roads.
The macadnm streets In the business
center of Jackson were built originally
of the hard siliceous rock known as
TAItlUNO A IIOAD AT JACKSON, TENN.
tovaculito. About May 1, 1!Hi5, after
fifteen years of wear, repair of these
streets became necessary. The old sur
face was first swept clean with a horse
sweeper so as to expose the solid pave
ment beneath. This was done because
tar will not penetrate a rond surface
which In covered with dust and loose
material. Next, the surface was loos
ened by menus of spikes placed In the
wheels of a ten ton steam roller, the
street reshaped aud new material add
ed where needed. The road was theu
sprinkled, rolled, bonded and finished
to form a hard, compact, even surface
and allowed to dry thoroughly before
either tar or oil was applied, for nei
ther substance can penetrate a moist
road surface. The best results are ob
tained when the work Is done In hot,
dry wenther, and accordingly the tar
was first applied In August. It may be
well to add that the novacullte used In
the construction of the roads Is an al
most nnunbsorbent rock.
The tar used was a byproduct from
the manufacture of coke and was prac
tically free from moisture. It was
brought to a temperature which gener
ally reached 210 degrees F., but when
placed on the road It was reduced to a
temiierature from 100 degrees to 100
degrees F. The hottest tar produced
the best results. It was spread with
hose.
Laborers, with street cleaners'
brooms of bamboo fiber, followed the
tank and swept the surplus tar ahead.
They spread it as evenly and quickly
as possible and lu a layer only thick
enough to cover the surface. One side
of the street was finished at a time
and barricades placed to keep off the
traffic until the tar hnd had time to
soak Into the surface. The time al
lowed for this process was varied
from a few hours to several days.
From the results obtained It can be
stated that under a hot sun, with the
road surface thoroughly compact, clean
and dry and with the tar heated al
most to the boiling point and applied
as described above, the raad will ab
sorb practlcnlly all of It In eight or ton
hours. A light coat of clean sand,
screenings or the clean particles swept
from the surface of the rond may theu
be spread as evenly as possible and
rolled In with a steam roller.
After more than seven months, In
cluding the winter season of 1005-00.
the tarred streets and roads are still
In excellent condition. They are hard,
smooth and resemble ns;halt, except
that they show a more gritty surface.
The tar forms a part of the surface
proper and Is In perfect bond with the
macadam. Sections cut from the
streets show that the tar has penetrat
ed from one to two Inches, and the fine
bine!: linos see:i In the Interstices be
tween the Individual stones show that
the mechanical bond has been re-enforced
by the penetration of the tar.
The tar Is a matrix Into which the
stones of the surface are set, forming
a conglomerate or concrete. A second
coating applied a year after the first
would require much less tar than the
first, as the Interstices of the rock
would then be filled with tar.
A tarred street Is dustless in the
same sense that an asphalt street Is
dustless. though a fine sandy powder
wears off, as In the case of asphalt
It can tie swept or washed clean. These
streets have since been swept regularly
and the city government Is In favor of
treating all of the streets with tar.
The cleaning that would soon ruin an
ordinary macadam road does not in
jure the tarred surface, as the stones
are not torn up or disturbed. The tar
Itself has antiseptic properties; hence
its use would be beneficial both as a
germicide and as a means of securing
cleanliness.
ArornntCBt For Good Roads.
It is estimated thnt the summer
travel of Maine anuually brings Into
the stnte between ?15,00O.Ot nnd $16,
000,000, nnd It is argued that it could
be Increased by the addition of several
millions more if Improved roads were
universal.
When you ssk for the
BEST COUGH CURE
and do not get
Kemp's Balsam
Yon are not Rotting the best and will
be disappointed. KEMP'S BALSAM
eosts no more than any other cough
remedy, and yon are entitled to the
best when you ask for It
Kemp's Balaam will slop any oongh
that can be stopped by any medicine,
and cure coughs that cannot be ourod
by any other medicine.
V la always the Best Cough Cure.
At all druggists, 25c, COo. and $1.
Dont accept anything else.
GREEN
BONE
An excellent teed
For Your
Chickens
(luring winter. It. naves
drain, product results
where Aral a fulls, Imlpi
the liens to moult nnd
niHkes tlntm winter lay
ers. Try It
We grind preen bone
nnd l.oi-p li. constantly
on hand ut
Hunter &
Hi Wren's
MEAT MARKET
HEYNOI.DSVIIXE, PA.
I
1
It Bats Up Rust.
6-5-4 will make an old. rusty
Stove, or Stove Pipe, look like new,
because it eats up rust. When you
set up your Stoves, this Fall, give
them a coat of 6-5-4; 11 applied
like paint, will not rub off and
SHINES ITSELF. It also
r Saves
Hard
Work
If your dealer hasn't It, blng-Btoke Oo.has
I BUSINESS CARDS.
, NEFF
JUSTICK OF TUB PEACE,
Pension Attorney and KeaUF.slate Agent.
RAYMOND E. BHOWN.
attorney at law,
Bkcokville, Pa.
(, M. MCDONALD.
ATTORNEY-AT LAW,
Notary public, real estate cagent, patents
secured, collections msrle promptly. Office
In Syndicate building, lleynoldsvllle, Pa.
V, C. SMITH.
ATTORNEY- AT L A W,
Justice of the pence, teal estate agent, col
lections made pr'tmutly. Office in Syndicate
building. Knynoldsvllle, pa.
gMITH M. McCUEIGHT.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Notary public and real estate. aient.r"f!ol
lectlons will receive prjniptaltenlion. Office
tn the Reynoldsvflle tlR-dwnre Co. building,
Main street, Ueynoldsvllle, Pa.
DR. B. E. HOOVEK,
DENTIST.
Resident dentist. In the Hoover building
Main street. Gentleness In operating.
)R. L. L. MEANS.
DENTIST,
Office on second flooroftheFrs
bank building, Main street.
Dr. a devere king,
dentist,
office on second floor of the Syndicate bullet
Ing, Main street, Keynoldsvllle, Pa.
pRIESTER BROS.,
UNDERTAKERS.
Black and white funeral can. Main street.
ReynoldaTllle, Pa.
J, H. HUGHES.
UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING,
Tbe D. 8. Burial League has been .teste!
and found all right. Cheapest form of ln
urance. Bee u re a contract. Near PubllA
Fountain, KeynoldsTllle Pa.
D. H. YOUNG,
ARCHITECT
Corner Grant! and Flftn tts., Beynolds
Tllle, Pa.
JOHN C. HIRST,
CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER,
Surveyor and Draughtsman. Office in Syn
dicate building, Main street.!
"yiNDSOR HOTEL.
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. ,
Between 12th and 13th 8ts on Filbert St.
Three minutes walk from the Readlnn Tar
minal. Five minutes wallt from the Penn'a
R. R. Depot. European plnn 11.00 per day and
upward. American nlan tt. Klper d.iy,
Prank M. tcbelbley, Manager.
If you have anything to sell, try
our "Wart Column.