GROOMING COUNTS But It cannot make Fair Skin or a , tiloaay Coat. .1 Women with Rood complexions cannot be homely. Creams, lotions, washes and powders cannot make a fair skin. Every horseman knows that the satin coat of his thoroughbred comes from the animal's "all-right" condition. l et the horse got "off hisfoed" and his coat turns dull. Cur rying, brushing and rubbing will give him a clean coat, but cannot produce the coveted smoothness and ploss of tho horse's skin, which is his com. pkxion. Theludieswillseethepoint. Lane's Family Medicine Is the best preparation for Indies who desire gentle laxative medicine that will give the body perfeet cleanliness intcr::r.!ly and the wHoloBOinene9S that produces such skins as painters lovo to copy. THE ENGLISH POLICE HOW SCOTLAND YARD OFFICIALS TRACE MISSING PEOPLE. Kethoda of London' Detective Korea For Locution the Lost Onea, and ' Every Detail of How the Myaterlea Are Unraveled. Away along the embankment,. close to the houses of parliament, Is a big, businesslike red brick building, the headquarters of those whose business it Is to solve mysteries. ' ' Scotland Yard Is the home of thrill ing occupations and has many tasks undreamed of by those who regard It merely as the directing office of the army of blue coated London consta- ' bles, and among those tasks is that of probing the mystery of lost persons a mystery touched often by romance, of ten by tragedy and occasionally sur rounded by .a black obscurity Into which no human Ingenuity can pierce. It Is part of the work of Scothiud Yard to endeavor to extract from the be- wllderlng.huiiinn continent of London Mo Change Necessary In Gexall Remedies The new Pure Food Law requires every pat ent medicine manufacturer to tell just what dan gerous drug is in his medicine. Certain period icals interested in patent medicine reform have declared that the formulas of many patent medi cines will have to be changed before the manu ' facturers will dare conform with this law. These periodicals also declare hz the public will never know of these changes, and never know what these remedies formerly contained. This suspicion, however, cannot rest upon Rex all Remedies. You. have absolute proof that Rexall Remedies have not been changed to con form with the new Pure Food Law, because you knew the formulas of these rented is Jour years ago! The Rexall formulas were i.i:cr secret. The thousand Rexall druggists have always known all the Rexall formulas and j;i v... .li-.m to every cus tomer who asked for them. No one Rexall Remedy v.as ever claimed to be a "cure-all" each of the oUt) remedies is de signed to cure a certain human ill and does it. These 300 remedies were selected from among thousands because they were the most reliable . and successful cures in the world. Farfrom wishing to conceal ihe formulas of these remedies, ' we are proud to tell just what they are, and al : ways j ave been. That's where the Rexall plan goes further to safeguard you than does the Pure Food Law. "Even now you'll only know the dangerous drugs ,n' . inpther patent medicines, while you have always been able to know the complete formulas of Rex all Remedies! The Rexall guarantee has been .the greatest evidence of the sincerity back of the Rexall Rem edies. For four years Rexall druggists have offered to return the money to any one who brought back an empty Rexall bottle or package and said they were not satisfied.- We, as one of the Rexall druggists, feel a gen uine satisfaction in having been able to supply this community for four years with one line of medicines which the United States Govern ment by its new Pure Food Law shows were always made rigU and, sold right, and have de served every bit of the faith you have had in them. .. The Pure Food Law may necessitate changes in other medicines, but it only endorses Rexall Remetii';S'. Stoke Ci Feicht Drug Co., The ffiSaX. Store those lnrHvinunls wno nave sunaeniy walked off the track of human knowl edge, who In ordinary speech with friends and acquaintances In one hour have In the next, for no reason and without a word, disappeared. Some of these mysteries never have been solved and never will be solved, but they are astonishingly few com pared to those which Scotland Yard unravels every week. Only one case here and there Is henrd of, because the work is in the ordinary routine of the yard and the force hits no eye for ro mance, rigidly restricting Itself to prac tical thoughts and practical work. Stretched over twenty sutinre miles of London, with Its population of a na tion, are the nervous tentacles of Scot laud Yard, ever alert for the work, responding in a moment to an Impulse front that center of Intelligence the red brick, businesslike building on the embankment. Frequently throughout day and night the agents of Scotland Yard are scouring London In the search for missing persons. Tho great or ganization works like a machine. To give an Idea of the work it will be best to take an Instance of what happens in nu Individual case. A prosperous middle aged civil serv ant living at Clapham Is amazed and alarmed to find that his son, a bank clerk, aged twenty-four, does not re turn home oue night after business. He is a well behaved young fellow and has never before stayed away all night. In the morning his father hurries to the branch of the bank In Kensington where his sou is employed and finds that he left at about half past C on the night before in quite his usual manner, giving no Indication that he was not going straight home. From the time ho left the bank door he 1ms not been seen. Ills accounts are in perfect order; he was a young man on the way to pro motion. The bewildered father takes a cab to the nearest police station and relates his story to the inspector In charge. "Oh. I dare say he'll be found in a cou ple of days." says the cheery inspect or. "We'll get on to it at once. What is his description?" Thereupon the father gives a descrip tion of his son. running, perhaps, some thing like this: Height, five feet eight inches; fair hair, slight fair mustache, gray eyes, slim build, wearing silk hat, morning coat, dark striped trousers nnd glace kid lace boots. The inspector enters this In a book, together with some details as to the disappearance. Ho bands the book to n policeman ch-rk and turns to give nnotlier wo; ' of reassurance to the father. Within. a minute the latter hears the "tick. tic'.;, tick" of n telegraph Instrument lu tli'i hands of the policeman clerk. The de scription he hits given Is being tele graphed to every police station In the I.ondon area and Is ulso being sent to Scotland Yard. - Thns within n" few minutes the police depots from oue end of the metropolis to the other are on the qui vlve- for the sllui. fair haired young man." But the process has only just begun. As soon as the father has left the po lice station the Inspector calls out from another rooni two "special Inquiry offi cers," who are expert searchers for missing persons and who have a won derful knowledge of their district, with its doubtful resorts, low class clubs, boarding houses of shady character and other places where lost people drift. ' They hear the details, and they go out on their quest, starting first with Inquiries at the hospitals within their reach In order to make snre that no accident has befallen the young man. ' By the time they are in the street headquarters at Scotland Yard has the matter In baud. At Intervals throughout the day the private print ing presses nt the Yard produce a print ed sheet with the latest confidential In formation on police matters, and this sheet is distributed hot from the press to every police station In London, and as there are three or f u: I sues every flay only an lii'ir or tv elapse be tween each edition. .s a result by midday the do-i.-.riptlon v man lies been printed r distributed broadcast t Every cxpodienl is us t round quickly, and In fi of the Isolated station-; ;.. convey It from place t As soon as the Cazctt.' i young being police. , . get It of some .:t.'d men received at a station the oflicer in charge sees the description and takiM action. Every hour or two batches of constables are paraded before him previous to going out on duty In the streets. To each of these batehes be .rem's aloud the de scription of the missing man, and ev ery constable goes out to li'.s work with a picture of the fair haired, slim young man in his mind. Within twenty-four hours every member of the force has heard of timt fair linlrel Afewoftl. 800 famous REXALL Remedies, one for each human ill, are: FOK CATARRH MUCU TONE The chief ingredients of Mticti-Tone are Gentian, CuMw, CaHcara Sagrada, rineana Saisaparilla. Gentian is recognized in medicine as on- ot the greatest tonics ever discovered, it combines the tonic potters of all knon "bitters," with none of the disadvantage applying to any, Citbebs have long been recognized as a specific in the treatment ot all ratanhnl conditions. Its action is prompt ai.d its benefit almost invariable. Cascara Sagrada is especially introduced for its unapproachable laxative properties. The combination of these with (Jlycerire and Sarsaparilla make M nru-1one a remedy that attacks catarrh from every point and gradually restores the diseased tissues. Bottle, Cue. FOR NERVES AMERICANIT1S EUXIR The Rexall Americanitis Klixir is a ton ic nerve food composed chiefly of free Phosphorus, tilyaiuliospliates. Iron Pyro phosphate and Calisaya. The wonderful results of this remedy are due to the fact that it supplies Phosphor ous to the nerve cells in a condition in .which it can be immediately and easily taken up by them. The Glycophosphates, actual nerve-tissue builders, are one of the most recent and valuable additions to this branch of medicine and unquestionably a more'efti cient remedy than the well-known Hypo phosphites. The Iron Pyrophosphates are the most easily assimilated form of iron which Rive tone and color, and the combined alkaloids of Calisaya Bark have a tonic effect on al most all the functions of the body. 76c. and HM a bottle. REXALL tr HAIR TONIC The famous Rexall "93'' Hair Tonic h comiHwetl in chief of Keaorcin, Iteta Naph thol and Pilocarpin. ltesorcin is one of the latest and most effective germ-killers discovered by science, and in connection with Iteta Naphthol, which is both germicidal and antiseptic, a combination is formed which not only destroys the germs which rob the hair of its nutriment, but creates a clean and healthy condition of the scalp, which pre vents the development of new germs. Pilocarpin is a well known agent for re storing the hair to its natural color, where the kiss of color has been due to a disease of the scalp. It is not a coloring matter or )This combination of curatives mixed with alcohol as a stimulant, perfects the most effective remedy for hair and scalp troubles known today. Per bottle, 30c "REXALL" ORDERLIES Tttt New Laxattva If yon suffer from constipation or a . sluggish liver, we want you to try this newest member of tlie Kexall family. It has never failed. , "Rexall" Orderlies have all the virtues and aone of the defects of those laxatives and cathartics already known. They are harmless vanilla-flavored tablets that effect a re adjustment of Nature's functions no griping, no nausea, no purging. Pleasant to tlie taste they ive immedi ate relief. A trial will prove to you that they are the best laxative and cathartic ever pre- "wcabox el twelve; 26c a boa of Druggists young man and Is looking out for him. But perhaps there has entered the mlml of Scotland Yard the Idea that crime lies at the root of the mystery, that the young man lias been murder ed. If tlmt thought comes to Scotland Ynnl, another part of the great ma chine Is set to work. The criminal In restitution department Is Invited to lend Its aid, and a detective Inspector, with a little bund ot clever subordi nates, sets to work independently of all that Is being done In other direc tions. The young niun's employers, his relatives, his friends, his acquaint ances every person he has known to speuk to during the past week Is ex haustively questioned, and people npilimt whom there may be some kind of shadowy suspicion are unobtrusive ly watched without cessation by care less young racing men, omnibus con ductors or city clerks, all of whom tire really Scotland Yard detectives. And, while the newspapers knov. nothing, the police force of London K humming with the search for that fi.lr haired young man. Perhaps after two days the Scotland Yard squadron gets a clew, nnd, unit ing with the local special In julry oili cere, tracks the fair haired young man to a shady lodging house lu North Kensington, where, half starved, dazed with the effects of dmgs, he has been locked In a cellar for fort.v-elj.-lit hours. He has been by some pliiusll.le menus lured to the house in question and plied with drink by well dressed scoun drels, who believed lie carried keys belonging to the bunk. Flndlnj? he had not what they required, they had tem porarily locked 111 in up, with what ultimate object can only be g tessed. There are hundreds of simpler cases which are solved In a mutter of hours. It will be safe to say that the chances ore ten to one In favor of Scotland Yard finding the wheren' "v;ts of a missing person within a we"' . "rank Dilnot In I.onion Mull. POWER OF CHAn.Trit3. lto Other Clinrt-li PerhnpM So KntlrMy n House of 1'rnyi'i. I know no otli.'- chu v i s i entirely a bouse of prayer in tlie t'iinrtres cathe dral. Everybody who goes to it will tell yon the snine thing. 'Chartres has still the gift of a unique power of Impressing," Pater says, stirred by the aesthetic value of religion In such a setting. "Nowhere dop o:ie pray so well as at Clint-tres." Huysnians says, feelliijr Its power more Ir.tb.'.alely. It Is not easy to explain Just why this should he. any more than why out of un endless gallery of Madonnas, a rare canvas by I'lero delln Tninc-irn or Rel llul will catch the eye and haunt the memory. Piety would lur e been as poor an equipment for the l.u:lder of cathedrals as f.tt the painter of Ma donnas. Nor is the fact that the archi tecture of Chnrtres belongs to the pe riod of Gothic masterpieces a suiilcicnt explanation. Paris and I mrges and I.aon and Amiens show tlr. same ar chitectural perfection, they belong to the same period, but from nouo of them do you get the same impression of mysterious majesty, tlie same urgent cnll to prayer. Other cathedrals are larger. Some have the same live aisl.'s mid us spa cious an apse encircled by chapels. One at least, Le Mans, iv;i.'iit.t the Imposing arrangement of windows In the choir, and yet none can so awe you us Char tres does by the solemnity, the Bubliin Ity, of size. None can so overpower you by the height of nave and choir, by the endless vistas of aisles beyond aisles, chapels beyond chapels, columns beyond columns, by the dignity of an austere exterior, with spires pointing to h '-a von and buttresses that not even the wheel-like supports to their bold flight over the nlslc.i can make less se vere, less vigorous In tnnss. And the cat! odnil grows In solemnity and Im mensity the more you see It. Chance, it Is true, has been kinder to Chartres than to most French cathedrals In spar ing much of the detail without which the most perfect church seems bare and empty and cold. Klizaheth Rob bins Pennell In Century. The Joy of the Ever&jledea. , Our experience ivn.i that oue meets delr.y lu the Everglades, but not dan ger. The water Is pure and sweet and food plentiful ehiii-!i. I.kupklns taste like young turkeys. All members of the heron family are li!;cly t lie found In the glades, and most other birds are fair food. SuulU, which abound, arc delicacies when called periwinkles. You would pay a dollar a portion In New York for the frogs that are yours for the catching In the glades. There are pleu'.y of turtle, which pasvss all the good qualities, except cost, of the green turtle or the terrapin. A few fruits tan be had for dessert cocoa plums, custard apples and pawpaws while the leaves of the sweet bay make a fragrant beverage. Crossing the Ever glades of Florida In a canoe is not an adventure; it Is a picnic A, W, Dlm ock in Harper's. Wkea the Sea Was Fre.li -Water. The ocean was once merely brackish and not salt, as It Is now. This was when the earth was In Its first youth and before there was any land showing at all or any animal life in the water. At this time the. water w.is gradually cooling from Its original state of steam, and the salts were slowly undergoing the change ' from gases Into solids. Then came the appearance of land and later on rivers, which gradually wash ed down more and more salts, while at the iKjttoin of the ocean itself chemical action was constantly add ug more brine to the waters. At present it Is estimated there are In the world's oceaus 7,000,000 cubic miles of salt, and the toost astonishing thing about It Is lhat If all the salt could be token out In a moment the level of the water would not drop one single Inch. ARMY UNIFORMS. Ofllr-rra . Mast Spend 1,000 to Start and Then Keep It I'p. flow would you like to be forced to Invest $1,000 for clothing whether you bod the money or wunted to or not? This Is what an army officer holding a commission In T'nde Sum's service has to do much oftener than he likes. If he does not happen to have the ready cash (and many of them do not have it) he Is forced by ortny regulations to buy enough clothes on credit to tog out fifteen men. It Is an army secret, but some of the lieutenants, fresh from West Point two years ago, hnve only recently fin ished paying for their first $ 1,000 worth of clothes. Their salvation Is that their credit Is good with the tailors who ca ter to the army olliecrs' trade. All the uniforms ore tailor made. It Is nothing out of the ordlunry for nu army officer to be paying for his clothes on the In stallment plan. That Is one part of the army officer's life that will probably not appear romantic especially to the women. Put the rigid requirements make it necessary for tlie officer to spend n largo sum of money for his clothes or suffer a penalty for not having them. The pay of a second lieutenant Is $1,0-10 n year. One of the first tilings he has to do on receiving his commis sion is to lit himself with clothes to meet the required regulations. In the first place, he has to have service uni forms of olive drab aud khaki for sum mer and winter wear. There must be one kind of service while mounted and another kind while dismounted. It requires not less thnn four khaki uniforms of wash goods for field serv ice. There ore trousers for use while dismounted and the riding breeches. With the Service uniform go the boots, shoes, pigskin leggings, cap, service hat. saddle blanket to match uniform, leather equipment nnd a few other things. Then there are dress uniforms for dismounted service, with black boots mid black shoes, cap, cape, over coat, hut and helmet. There must be two sets for summer und two sets for winter of rill the dif ferent uniforms. Then come the offi cial dress uniforms for mounted and dismounted service. With the official dress go gold shoulder knots nnd a belt of gold costing about $50, cap, hat. patent leather shoes and boots. Next are the white shoes and cup. Then comes the social full dress uniform for evening wear, with hot, patent leuther boots and shoes, purely for social af fairs. Those are not all. There must be a moss jacket, raincoat of a certain color and Annuel shirts. The officers have lo furnish their own horses, saddles and blankets. They have to pay their own board and for fuel nnd lights. They even have to buy the furnishings for their quarters. Uncle Som only furnishes the shelter and the commis sion. Kven the officers' trunks have to be of a regulation size. All these things mean an Investment of about $2,000 at least to begin with. This Is more than the first year's sulory, and expenses never stop. Columbus Dis patch. The tihoat of Trtrlilnopolr. The ghost of Trlchliiopoly may be seen on most nights between the hours of 11 and 2 on the Tennur road. She Is a most beautiful creature who walks oqt of the river with her clothes all wet, water dripping from her long silk en tresses, and she carries lu her right hand no, not a piece of soap or an antiquated toothbrush merely a brass lotah. If any person attempts to ap proach her she merely points the fore finger of her left hand nt htm, nnd he dies! The ghost was originally one of the temple dancing girls famous all over the town for her striking beauty. The temple authorities raised objec tions to her bathing there nnd ordered her to creep out quietly at 11 overy tilght and bathe In the river at Tennur, where no one would see her. This she did for some time, but another temple girl gave away the secret, with the re Milt tlmt the next night when bathing ;i heard the trump of tunny feet aud on rushing out to sec what was the matter was accidentally knocked Into the river and drowned by the crowd of men rushing to the riverside to see her. Madras (India) Mall. &Jllr m l-rua,,.., "How is Ullkln " , .iV- biy getting ulongi" " "Flue. I was up there yesterday and was surprised to leant Unit he Is be ginning to talk." "Does he pronounce his words plain ly?" . . "Not very. They sound like a rail road brakeman calling out stations." Milwaukee Sentinel. Extraordinary OFFER BY TKE Dr.TaylorJlemedyCo. FcrWCureof if joe bare BCZEMA. SCROFCUs. ' FSOft lASIS. I'ljCKRS, or an? other kln-torturloi dis ease. earcbaH a set ot our irmedr from anr tfrufftst ao4 If roe are aissatlaUrd wltk the re anil, bring Jour mptr wranpera to ear efflca ad we wUt refund our none. II haa NKVca FaILBO (e CCRBtbl .WORST CASKS of skin disease. Beat tor free Booklet, , Sold by Bloke and Kelcni IImir Co., Khvu oldsvtlle, and nil i.Ukt rt-.-luta drugghiU. Ask for tree lllutitiau-d bjoklet. BUSINESS CARDS, E. NEFF JUSTICE OP THE PEACE, 1'ennlon Attorney and Ileal Estate Agent. RAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Bkookville, Pa. G. M- Mcdonald, . ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Rc-al estnte auHnt, patents unruled, col-ZtiM.mu2;i!XE$,l- o.omee '" Pyd'cate W. C. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Justice of the peace, iciil estate aeent, col lections made prompt ly. Office In Pynd cat Imildlnn. Kcynnldsvlllo, fn. SMITH M. McCR EIGHT. ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Notary public and real estnte auont. Col cetlons will rece've prjinni intention. Office In the Rcynolilsvllle hHnlwaie Co. building. Main street Keyno'dsville, Pu. DR B- E HOOVEft. DENTIST. Resident dentist. In tlie Hoover bulldlne Main street. Gentleness In operating. DR L. L. MEANS. DENTIST, Office on second floor of the First Nations bank building, Main street. DR-R- deveue king, DENTIST, office on second floor of t he Syndicate build Ing. Main street, Kcynoldsvllle, Pa. HENRY PRIESTER UNDERTAKER. Black and white funeralcars. Main street. Heynoldsvllle, Pa. HUGHES & FLEMING. . UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FR AMINO, The U.S. Burial League hus been tested I..UUU nu nuut, ineupest rorm or In surance. Secure a contract. Near Publlci ri,u.niu, IVCJUUIUHV1IIP fa. D. H. YOUNG, . ARCHITECT Corner Grant and Fiftn sts., Reynolds vllle, Pa. JOHN C. HIRST, CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER, Surveyor and Draughtsman. Office In Syn dicate building, Main street. WINDSOR HOTEL, Philadelphia, Pa. Betwoen 12tn and 13th 8ts on Filbert 8t. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter-jnlnal- Five minutes walk from the Penn'a K. R. Depot. European plan $1.00 per day and upward. American plan &.0O per day, The Colonel . Talks - Ymt flrp n Vircrininn anlv T " " ' j duce myself. I was watching you as you tasted your oysters, suh. Taste like home, don't they? You never before found one north of Mason and Dixon's line thatmadeyourmouth water like these Sealshipt oysters, did you? . , They're the real thing, suh. They have the genuine salt water tang that makes people who have lived near the coast just homesick to get back where the oysters grow. Yet I've opened them right on the beach where they were unloading them and they weren't a bit fresher or more luscious than these. Give,you my word as a gentle man, suh, I can't believe these Sealshipt oysters are bulk oysters. They taste of the shell. I come here almost every day to get oysters with the sea flavor, s "PXECUTRIX' NOTICE - - Estate of John Peter Snyder, late of Wlonlow Townihlp, Jefferson Co., Pa. Notice la hereby given that letters testa mentary upon the estate of the said decedent have been granted to the undersigned. All Demons Indebted to the said estate are re iloeMted to make payment and those having claims or demands against the same will maae them known without delay to Mb. Lautta Borirt. Keynolasville, Pa. Smith H. HcCrelght. Attorney. Frank V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers