,pENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. Schedule In Effect Nov. 25, 1908. trains leave reynolds ville : For New nothloliem, Rd Runic, and prln . rlpul liuermi'dliilB million-), Oil City nnd Pittsburg, il::u. H:(M n. m. 1:20 4:25, 8:0 (New Bethlehem only) p. m. week-days. (Sundays tJ:Mn, m.. 4:20 p. m. ...... Fur liullnis. Ilrlftwood, find principal Inter mediate stations, llarrlslmrir, Philadelphia i llnltlmnre nnd Washington, 11:35 n. m., 12:51 :0H p. m. week-clays. Hundays 12:VI p. m. i-or Illinois uuiy i: . iu. nuo.-unjo, D. m. (In v, W. V. ATTinnrnY, Gon. Manager. .T. R. Woon. Passenger Trnflle Mgt UKO. W. BOYD, General Passenger Agent. BUSINESS CARDS. ft, NEFF JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, Pension Attorney and Real Estate Ancnt. RAYMOND E. BROWN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ' BnooKViLLE, Pa. Qt m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public, real estate airent, patent secured, collections made promptly. Ulllce In Syndicate building, Iteynoldsvllle, Pa. -i V C. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Justice of the peace, real estate agent, col lections made promptly. Olllce In Byndlcat building, Ki-ynolclsvlllo, Pa. gMITH M. McCIUUGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary nubile and real estate agent. Col lections will receive prjmnt attention. Office In the Reynoldsvllle Hardware Co. building, main street lieynoicisviue, ra. T)U. B. E. HOOVEU, jj DENTIST, Resident dentist. In the Hoover building Main street. Oentleness In operating. DR. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST, Office on second flooroftheFr bank building, Main stroet. DR. R- DEVEUE KING, DENTIST, office on second floor of the Syndicate build Ing, Main street, ueynomsvuio, fa. PRIESTER BROS., UNDERTAKERS. Black and white funeral cars. Main street, Reynoldsvllle, Pa. J, H. HUGHES, UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING, The C. 8. Burial League has been tested and found all right. Cheapest form of In surance. Secure a contract. Near Public Fountain, Reynoldsvllle Pa. D. H. YOUNG, ARCHITECT Corner Grant and Fiftn sts., Reynolds ville, Pa. JOHN C. HIRST, CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER, Surveyor and Draughtsman. Office in Syn dicate Dunning, juain street. WINDSOR HOTEL, Philadelphia, Pa. ctTr?o 12th and 18th BU on Filbert 8t. Three minutes wulk from the Reading Ter minal. Five minute walk from the Penn'i B. K. Depot. European plan $1.00 per day and upward. American plan 12.00 per day, Prank M. Hchelbley, Manager. DR. GREWER Medical and Surgical Institute, Rooms 7 and 8, Poetoffice Bulldlnfj, ; DUBOIS, PA. A. J. LOWE, Physician in Charge of the Institute. DR. E. GREWER, Consulting Physician and Surgeon. Dr. E. Griwcr, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and one of the lending spec ialists of this State, Is now permanently lo cated at the above address, whore he treat all chronic diseases of Man, Women and Children. Ho makes u specialty of all form of Ner vous diseases, Blood Poison, Secret Diseases, Epileptic Fits. Convulsions, Hysteria, St. Vitus Dance. Wakefulness cured undei guarantee. Lost Manhood Restored. Weaknesses of Young Men Cured and All Private Diseases. . Varicocele, Hydrocele andRupture prompt ly cured without pain and no detention from business. He cures the worst cases of Nervous Pros tration, Rheumatism, Scrofula, Old Bores, Blood Poison and all disease of the Skin, Ear, Nose, Throat, Heart, Lungs, Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder. Itching Piles, Fistula, Stricture, Tumors, Caneers and Goiters cured without cutting Special attention paid to the treatment of Nasal Catarrh. ' He will forfeit the sum of $5,' 000 for any case of Fits or Epileptic Convulsions that he cannot cure. Consultation free In English and German ana strictly conuaentlal. write If you cannot call. Office hour i From I a. m. to 8.39 p. m. Oa Sundays i to 12 a. m. only. HOW HE SAVED HIS GOLD. J. V. Dusenberry was one of the victims of the Yosemlte bandit who held up the passengers of Dve valley stages in one continuous perform ance. Dusenberry lost only sixty cents. tut on his person when the highway man searched him were ten twenty dollar gold pieces and a gold watch and chain. Dusenberry had left the stage shortly before it reached the bandit's ambush. He was following slowly behind,' gathering wild flowers and Intending to take a cross country path later on and head oft the stage, which was obliged to follow the tor tuous road. The highway man stopped the five stages one after the other. As he stopped one he ordered the driver to pull off the road in such a way as to conceal the coach and horses from the stage following. The passengers he lined up behind a clump of trees. Dusenberry, Ignorant of the excite ment ahead, was dawdling along en Joying the beauties of nature and adding blosson by blosson to the bunch of wild flowers In his hand. He turned a Bharp bend In the road and found himself looking Into the barrel of a rifle. Behind the rifle was a tall, stooping figure with head, face " and neck swathed In cloth. Through one of the crevices in the face covering gleamed an eye. "Hands up!" came in a quiet tone of voice from another crevice. "Now, stand at the head of that line," continued the voice. The highwayman then resumed the operation of stripping the pas sengers of their wealth which Dusen- berry's unexpected appearance bad Interrupted. Instead of standing at the head of the line, however, relates the San Francisco Chronicle, Dusenberry sauntered down to the other end and Joined those who already had been robbed. Behind the friendly shelter of an old lady's parasol Dusenberry niaae a rearrangement or his per sonal property. The $200, part of which belonged to a fellow traveler, and the watch and chain he dropped Inside the waistband of his panta loons and a sudden chill around the ankles told him of the safe arrival In his socks of his valuables. It was not until all the passengers had been ordered back into the stages that the bandit remembered uusenuerry. He round the passen ger agent and demanded his money. Dusenberry gave up the sixty cents and a knife. "Better let me keep the knife,' said Dusenberry. "If you take It It might' cut friendship." The knife was returned, and after sounding the outside of Dusenberry's pockets for more coin, the highway man told him to "chase himself." While standing In line many of the passengers, says Dusenberry, threw their valuables Into the brush, They returned later to find them them gone. They had been picked up, however, by the detectives who took the bandit's trail, and were re stored subsequently to the owners, The highwayman opened the Wells Fargo box, but refrained from taking the $50 he discovered there. His modesty, he explained, was due to a dislike to Interesting the express com pany In his capture for so small Bum. Ho borrowed Dusenberry'; linen duster, spread It on the ground and on it laid all the loot he did not want. He turned this bundle over to one of the passengers for dlstrlbu tion later to the owners. "He was very cool," said Dusen berry, "but took1 no chances, either of surprise or subsequent Identifica tion. The mask he wore hid even bis hair and disguised the shape of his head. He wore a loose-fitting suit and his feet were swathed In gunnysacks. Tho detectives found that after we had left the fellow had discarded his mask and the loose fitting clothes and burned them. He was a tall man, but maintained a crouching position, and I do not sup pose any who saw him could guess his height within a couple of Inches. In the valley nobody seems to think there Is much chance of capturing him." BATTLES WITH RHINOCEROSES. Mr. William Cotton Oswell, who made his second expedition Into the Interior of Southern Africa In 1847, had two terrible experiences with rhinoceroses. His son. In the lately published biography of his distin guished father, records these adven tures. He bad one pre-eminently good horse, Stael, the very pick of all he ever had In Africa, fast and most sweet-tempered, and so fearless that he would, without whip or spur or any urging, carry his master right up to a lion and stand perfectly mo tionless within a few feet of the brute while Mr. Oswell fired. Returning to camp one evening on Stael, he fired both barrels of his rifle at a white rhinoceros. Instead of dropping or bolting, It began to walk toward the smoke. Oswell turned his hone, only to find a thick bush was against Its chest Before he could tell It the rhinoceros drove Its horn In under the flank, and threw horse and rider into the air with such terrific force that the point of the horn pierced the saddle. Bcalped his head for a space four Inches In length and In breadth. He scrambled to his knees, and saw the horn actually within the bend of his leg. With the energy of self-preservation he sprang to bis feet, but after tottering a step or two tripped and came td the ground. The rhi noceros passed within a foot without hurting him. As he rose for the second time his after-rider came up with another gun. Half pulling him from bis horse, Oswell mounted It and gal loped after and caught the rhinoc eros. Keeping back the piece of scalp with his left hand, he held the gun to his shoulder with his right and shot the brute dead. On the return Journey to the Cape he met with the most serious acci dent of his life. -Stalking two rhi . ... -..t i noceroses, ne was lying um nucu they came within twenty yards of him. The nearer of the two came near stepping on him. Hoping that his sudden appearance from the ground would startle her and so give him a chance of escape, he sprang up and dashed alongside of her to get in the rear, his hand being on her as he passed. She Immediately gave chase. A aulck turn saved him for the mo ment; the race was over In the next, As the horned snout came lapping round his thigh he rested the gun on the long head, and, still running, fired both barrels; but with the smoke he found himself sailing through the air, and it was not un til three hours later that he recov ered consciousness, to find a deep gash In his thigh eight Inches long, down to the bone In all Its length. For nearly four weeks, unable to get to tho wagons, he made his bed under a bush. PURSUED BY WOLVES, Samuel Johnson, an Indianapolis man, eighty-three years old, who was one of the most enthusiastic old set tlers at the recent reunion at White City, tells of an experience with wolves on Buck Creek that nearly ended disastrously for him "I was out on a hunting trip about twelve miles from Indianapolis on Buck Creek," said Mr. Johnson. There were thick woods all around that part of the country and few people near. I was living in a house made of logs In the midst of the woods and a fine place for wolves. I never thought much about the dan ger, though, and used to go many miles away on a hunting expedition without seeing a wolf or thinking about one. 'One day I went on a trip and stayed out a little later than usual. It was getting dark and as I got near home the air was cold, and It wolves ever are hungry they would have been hungry that night. I hur ried along trying to get In the houBe before night, and I began to wonder it there were any wolves near. "I happened to look back and saw a big patch of black moving toward me. I hurried faster and Just got Inside the door when the pack reached the house. I barred the door and kept clear out of sight, but on the outside I could hear the ani mals howling and scratching around They must have stayed an hour or more, but I did not try to shoot them and I think they lost the scent of me. Anyway, they turned suddenly and ran off down the road, and I never saw them after that tlmo." India napolis Star. THE PRISONER'S ESCAPE. The story is told of how a neatly constructed cipher saved Sir John Trevanlon's life. This cavalier was taken prisoner and locked up In Col chester Castlo to await his execution, On the second day of his confinement the Jailer brought him a letter which as far as the warder of the castle could discover was merely a note ot condolence from a friend. But the letter had been concocted on a cipher to which Sir John had the clew. Ev ery third letter after a punctuation mark of any kind was to tell. What he made out was: "Panels at east end of chapel slides." On the follow ing evening the prisoner begged per mission to pass a quiet hour In prayer In the chapel. The' request was granted, and before the hour had passed the panel had done its work and the bird had flown. Boston Post Magazine. . 'SHOT INVITED BEAR RACE. There was something doing near Appollonla, Wis., when Elmer Hill went partridge hunting. Elmer struck a nice place In the brush and started up a bird, which got away, but he shot at the second to fly np, Elmer missed the bird, but hit some thing else. A big Mack bear had been peppered, and Elmer and the bear had a merry Vace. The bear caught HH1 and wounded him five times with his claws. Hill's only -defense being a hunting knife,, as he threw away his shotgun In the race. Hfil was exhausted by the time help' beat o? the bear. Philadelphia Rec ord. A PLUCKY RUSB. A man hopelessly lost In the bush In South Australia, after wandering about tor four days, came across the telegraph line between Adelaide and Port Darwin. He had not the strength to go farther, but managed to climb a pole and cut the wire. He then made .himself as comfortable as possible and waited. The telegraph repairers were sent along the line, and they came to the wanderer Just In time to save his life. Kansas City Independent. If Pobtilar cierice fig : m The Mexican Central Railway has used concrete blocks for the roof lin ing of tunnels, being cheaper than cut stone. These blocks weighed about 108 pounds each, so that one man could handle them and place them in the arch. Delicate speed-regulating appara tus is required when a dynamo la geared direct to a windmill. In a new system the windmill pumps water Into a hydraulic accumulator, and water from this kept by auto matic valves at a pressure of seventy five pounds per square Inch drives the dynamo. A storage battery eaves the surplus power in the usual way. A wire-rope tramway for trans porting Iron ore has been built near Fort Montgomery, N. Y., on the Hud son River, for the Hudson Iron Com pany. The tramway is 6300 feet long and delivers the ore at a point 390 feet below the starting point. Its capacity Is twenty-three tons per hour. The ore buckets are perma nently attached to the rope and are loaded by a traveling automatic load er or hopper. Lord Kelvin, the well-known scien tist, has written a letter to the Times, of London, conoerning discussions be fore the British Association for the Advancement of Science. He pro tests against the Inference that he lium may be produced from radium and the Idea of the gradual evolu tlon of one metal from the other. He also expresses himself as against the hypothesis that the heat of the sun or the earth is due to radium. He believes It to be mainly due to gravi tation. M. Camilla Herrgott, a well- known French engineer, Is said to have Invented a peculiar method of charging cloth with electricity In or der to furnish heat to the wearer In cold weather. The Idea is carried out by means of fine electric wires woven into the cloth, to charge which a very fine battery Is needed. He calls his Invention tho "electric thermophile," and claims for It that it can be used in connection with all kinds of fabrics, and does not alter their ordinary appearanco or their usnal flexibility. VAST STORE OF WEALTH. Mother Knrth Has Supplied the World's Greatest Fortunes. Belt's vast wealth came from mines diamonds, gold and copper like the Immense fortune of Senator William A. Clark, of Montana; like the $25,000,000 or more accumula ted by Cecil Rhodes. The- earth was also the source ot the wealth ot both John D. Rocke feller and his brother William. , The same thing is true of Carnegie's great store ot wealth. It was really dug from iron mines iron and coal, Krupp piled up the largest estate In Germany in like manner. He made his money by manufacturing the product ot iron mines. The earth is a magnificent store house ot wealth. It has 'proved more fruitful of immense fortunes than the vast transportation business which made the fortunes of the Van derbilts and the Goulds, Hill, Harrl man and the rest ot the railroad kings. It has beaten the mere owner ship and the use ot the surface o the ground, Astor fashion, says the Cleveland Leader. Whereupon the Manufacturer's Record adds: Yes, and the great centre of the earth's storehouse is the South Think of Its coal area, nearly three times as great as the combined coal fields of Great Britain, Germany and Pennsylvania; bt its iron ore, fat surpassing in quantity that whlc'j made the fortunes of Carnegie and Krupp; of its oil, promising to ex ceed in yield all that went to make the fortunes of the Rockefellers; of Its sulphur, which dominates the world's sulphur trade; ot its phos phate, which holds the same unique position In the world's fertilizer In dustry; ot Its vast stores of cement making materials, the industry which promises to rival iron and steel: ot It's copper and other higher forms of minerals, and then let your imagin ation attempt to forecast the vastness of the wealth which this mineral storehouse of the world Is to tura loose In the South. Tested Seeds of Success. Don't fall into the habit of think ing that the world owes you a living. The world owes you Just exactly what you are willing to work for. We are all In the race men and women to get the most we can out ot life. Some of us succeed; some of us fall by the wayside, but as a rule the one who tries hard comes out well to the "fore. The way to bring yourself undei your employer's notice is by always being Interested in your work. Don't be stand-offish and taciturn. A pleasant words costs nothing and makes many a friend Home Chat. . In Honor of tlte Cloth. Clergymen all over the country are greatly relieved at the reported decision of the Oxfordshire Educa tion Committee to dismiss the head mistress of Bampton Aston School for taking hold ot the vicar and shak ing him. If tin practice had been allowf-s to proceed unchecked, the prestige of the church mlgaf have been serlouily""impalred. Punch. 25c Now Buys 6 of These Cigars Before we installed our National Cigar Stand, we were unable (as other dealers are even yet) to sell the equal of this cigar at 5c straight. College Days Cigar, 6 for 25c This cigar is perfectly made, full size, and has a mild, smooth, mellow, domestic blend which most smokers find very enjoyable. COLLEGE DAYS are sold only at National Cigar Stands. Coming direct from factory to you, we can save you the four to six middlemen's profits. Oil The bast cigars are now sold in the National Cigar Stud STOKE & FEICHT DRUG CO. MAIN STREET. Costs More Worth All It Costs Because It is made from the highest grade of the very finest wheat. Because It is milled by the best and most approved methods. Because It is constantly tested during - milling process. Because Everything is eliminated but just the cream. Because It makes better bread and more bread to the barrel than any other flour. Because The higher cost really means true economy. Try it. Sold by Quality Grocers Zterytpkir$. 8Hlt.Nl BROTHERS CO. PhllBdelphlm . PROMINENT PEOPLE. Former Govornor Georpre W. ITen flee, of Vermont, died at Morrlsville, Vt.. aged seventy-four. Lord Curzon, after attending to the adjustment of his into wife's es tate, sailed from New York for Eu rope. Pope Plus directed the Catholic clergy In France passively to resist the enforcing of the Church-State Separation law. Supreme Court Justice Harlan an nounced that he had no thought of entering the contest for the Ken tucky Governorship. Andrew Carnegie, la presenting Carnegie Lake to Princeton Univer sity, deplored brutality In football and urged cleaner sports. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, stu dent, litterateur and statesman, has dazzled Washington with the very swellest trap of the season. At a dinner of Americans in Lon don the head master of Eton said President Roosevelt was the fore most figure of the civilized world to day. General Ignacio Mejia Is dead at tho hacienda of Ayotla Mejta, Mexico. He was one of the most noted men in recent Mexican history, and wat almost ninety-three years old. .Louis N. Parker, the dramatist, was born In France; his father was an American, bis mother an English vromac; his first language was Ital ian and h was educated In Gem. any. For a food many years Speakot Cannon bu had critics galorft, but the one person on whose Judgmeul he ever depended implicitly was hit late wife. Mrs. Cannon was kindly but severe la her criticism. President Roosevelt has broken all records in the number of Cablnel changes since he first assumed the Presidency five years ago. There have been twenty-seven Cabinet mem bers under his administration. It you want poetry, look for It in the prosaic, in those who feel that which they cannot express; not in those who express that which they do not teel. is the admonition of Lou don Truths There has been such a glut ot mush rooms In Berkshire, England, that they have been retailed at 1 penny a oound. the 2,000 Drag Stares harlnf Emblem in the window. But Is LA BO It WORLD. Pennsylvania Is first and Massa chusetts is second in the employment of child labor. According to the last census there are eleven female well-borers In tho United States. The" 3000 operatives of Goddard Brothers' mills in Rhode Island will have their wages raised. There are 213 divisions of the Or der of Railroad Conductors in the United States and Canada. Of the 43,000 men employed as switchmen the Brotherhood of Rail way Trainmen controls 23,000. There Is a secret movement among Japanese workmen to secure better working conditions and an increase In wages. Toledo (Ohio) City Council will In troduce an ordinance to compel em ployers to pay their men in cash In stead of checks. In the Southern States there are sixteen local unions of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Join ers composed ot colored men. As a result of successful tests of mechanical pickers in the Pennsyl vania coal mines, one branch of the ehlld-labor evil may be eliminated. Blacksmiths employed on the Rock Island Railroad system have made a new agreement for the ensuing year. A slight . Increase in wages was talned. Sixteen subordinate unions in New fork City, Chicago, Boston, Seattle tnd elsewhere make up the Actors National Protective Union, with a membership ot about 1000. The cost of living In San Francisco aas advanced forty per cent, since the Ire, and as there are 20,000 Idle men in that city employers are taking ad ranlage by keeping wages down. The Washington Post declares ma there is not the slightest danger ol a war between the United States and Japan until Japan is ready ta defy England, too, in such a quar rel; and that will net be tomorrow. It will not be within forty years. It will not 1e until the Chinaman shall be as warlike a the Jap. This gen eration " has no concern with that When that day shall come, it is" not unlikely that war will be among tn lost arts. V A.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers