mm The Jefferson Macaroni Factory Now handles some of the finest grades of flour ever brought to Reyn olds ville and has the ex elusive agency in this section for some lines never before sold here Have a special brand "Crown "made express ly for us. Flour is sold at retail and a special in vitation is extended the public to stop at the of fice in Evans building, Main street, near F rank's New Tavern, and see their line, whether you wish to buy or not. They also call attention to the fact that they are selling the finest Pure Olive Oil to be had in Reynolds ville. It is an imported product the best the old country can produce guaranteed absolutely pure and bears the gov ernment stamp of excel lence. All goods sold by the macaroni factory are reasonably priced and of first quality. Send orders for family use by mail or 'phone. Both 'phones. C. & J. Marinaro, Props. "DR. GREWER Medical and Surgical Institute, Roomi 1 and 8, Postoflice Building, DUBOIS, PA. , DR. E. GREWER, Consulting Physician and Surgeon. Dr. E. Orewer, a graduate of the University -of Pennsylvania and one of the leading spec laltsti of thi State, Is now permanently, lo cated at the above address, where he treat all chronic disease of Men, Women and Children. He makes a specialty of all forms of Ner vous diseases, Blood Poison, Secret Diseases, Eplleptlo F1U. Convulsions, Hysteria, St. Vitas Dance. Wakefulness cured undei guarantee. J ' Lost Manhood Restored. Weaknesses of Young Men Cured and AH Private . Diseases. Varicocele, Hydrocele andRuptur prompt ly cured without pain and no dotontion from business. He cures the worst cases of Nervous Pros tration, Rheumatism, Scrofula, Old Sores, Blood Poison and all diseases 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 Odhsultatlon free In English and German and strictly confidential. Writ If you cannot calL Office hoars i From t a. m. to 1 .38 p. a. Oa Sundays 9 to 12 a. m. only, "It would be better for the country If there could be a greater dispersion of the immigrants," suggests the Pittsburg Post. "Various States of the interior are offering Inducements to attract them from the Atlantic coast, but these have not been very effective. The great congestion of aliens in cer tain portions of the country is cer tainly cot beneficial either to them or to our own people," New York City. Each fresh varia tion of the blouse waist finds Us place and its welcome. Here Is one that Is distinctly novel and that shows most becoming and altogether satisfactory lines, while it Is adapted to so many materials that it becomes .available again and again. In the Illustration pongee, in one of the pretty dull blue shades, is combined with chemisette of cream colored lace atfd is trimmed with frills of the material and with handsome applique. But the simpler materials of wool and even of cotton as well as those of silk are appropri ate and the chemisette can be of lace or in lingerie style with the trimming almost anythlne that one may prefer, while again ths-dox pleats can be left quite plain, when the waist becomes almost transformed and is really ex tremely simple. There Is a fitted lining and the waist itself consists of the front and the backs, with front chemisette por tion. The baoks of the lining are faced to form the back portions of the chemisette, but the front portion is Joined to the waist, which is arranged over the foundation. There are box pleats at front and back and again in the sleeves and the frills make an ex :eedlngly dressy finish. When liked deep cuffs can b added, making the sleeves full length, and In any-case they are finished after an entirely novel fashion at the elbows. ' The quantity of material required for the medium size is four yards twenty-one, three yards twenty-seven or two yards forty-four Inches wide, with five-eighth yard of all-over lace or one and one-eighth yards If long sleeves are used. Bodice Trimmings. v It Is on the bodice that most of the trimming is lavished, and these are, tor the most part, either in "Jumper" styles or variations that suggest this ever popular model. Chenille Spotted Veils. The net veil with the kilted frill has been done to death, and wUl shortly give place to a plain Brussels net with a beautiful lace border, spotted with chenille. Fnnry Blouse. The demand for the fancy blouse is ever present. It is constantly appear ing in some new and effective guise and it is so thoroughly becoming, so thoroughly satisfactory a garment that each one meets with hearty wel come. Illustrated Is one of the lat est that is really most charming and that Is adapted to all seasonable ma terials, while It allows a choice of the elbow or full length sleeves. In the illustration chiffon voile,, in one of the new shades that Is known as rose of the Alps, is trimmed with bands of taffeta In matching color and with fancy buttons and Is combined with a yoke of cream colored lace over chiffon. The whole effect Is an ex ceedingly charming one and the blouse is simple at the same time that It is novel. The effect of the lace over chiffon is always dressy and charming, but there Is ample oppor tunity for the exercise of individual discretion in the selection of mate rials. The yoke might be made from any pretty inserted lingerie material or from a tucked or embroidered silk, or, indeed, from almost anything In contrast that may be liked. , The waist Is made over a fitted lin ing and itself consists of front and backs. It is laid- in pin tacks at the centre front and from the shoulders with two wide ones at their outer edges and over these wide ones the quite novel trimming straps are ar ranged. There also are trimming portions arranged over the fronts and the yoke and the closing is made in visibly at the back. The sleeves are of moderate fulness and are finished with turned over cuffs whether they are cut off at the shoulders or ex tended to the wrists. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and five- eighth yards twenty-one, three and tnree-rourtn yards twenty-seven or two yards forty-four inches wide, with one-half yard of all-over lace for the yoke or one yard if long sleeves are used. . Ornamental Beading Durable. Ornamental beading heads ruffles of embroidery on underwear with good effect, and is exceedingly dur- Easter Time Would Seem Very Odd Without Them. ' f TtfTVWf t sit ft fifssfiWlsl Great Favorites With Children. The TTnre That Lays the Raster Errs. Why. do hnres nnd egfis always figure on Easter emblems? The religious sig nificance of hnres and eggs at Easter time is very misty, if not absolutely non-existent. Every year tales are told concerning the use of eggs In solemn services nil over the world in all time. Easter eggs have no historical founda tion, and we wonder when the true history of such observances will be written. Learning and leisure alike seem to be unavailable in our day, and so we must have this hash of old wives' fables or nothing. The German story of the hnre and the eggs is amusing. It Is said that a family of strangers had found a home In an obscure valley where poultry and eggs were unknown till after they came, when some poultry were brought and eggs followed as a matter of course. The lady of the new family wished to give some children a trent. and, owing to a hint she got, had eggs dyed in different colors for a surprise. The children were told to make nice nests for the occasion In the pine wood, which was done, and when the proper time came the Juveniles went to the nests and found in them lovely eggs of beautiful colors. i The children expressed aloud their astonishment aud Joy, and one snld: ,"The birds do not lay such beautiful eggs; the hare must have laid them that Jumped out of a Juniper bush and ran away Just' as I had finished my nest!" This took their fancy, nnd the cry was: "The hnre lays the varie gated eggs!" An Enster Preacher. Easter s associated with 'b'enuiy more thau any other festival of the year. In a season of flowers the world Is (filled with music. Through the eye and the ear the seuse of beauty Is stimulated nml satisfied. The very symbol of brightness Is "the sun upon an Easter clay." Phillips Brooks, in one of his poems, expressed the mean ing of Easter as being that death Is strong, but life stronger. Men of all creeds can Bliaro tnat religion of the fulness of llfo. The eloquent preach ing of It, with surli spiritual intensity, made Phillips Brooks a force never to be forgotten by any who have once been under his influence. The greatest American preacher of his day felt no kinship' between holiness and gloom. Faith to him was the source of Joy. tils charity was unbounded. Ills sym pathy with llfo was universal. lie, as far as our experience of him went, never took the more severe spirit to ward the lighter side of human nature, as In this bit from a sermon by South: "It were much to be wished for the zredlt of tholr religion as well as the satisfaction of their conscience that their Enster devotions would, in some measure, come up to their Enster Jress." The negative was not the side from which truth' was approached by Mr. Brooks. lie did not spend words on whether this or. that was wrong. lie breathed out fulness of life and love of uon. Ho looked on noth ing scornfully, or with rancor. Unlike Mncauley's Puritan, if Mr. Brooks hated bear bulling, it was not because It gave pleasure to the spectators. Most Df his religion was Included in the Ser mon on the Mount Collier's Weekly. The Little Moknvlsns. A beautiful old custom In the Mo ravian church, both in Europe and America, is to rise very early on East er morning and go to the "God's Acre" of the church, there to uvrult the ris ing sun. "God's Acre," you know, is a beautiful name for the cemetery, which always used to be beside he church. Here beside the long rows and rows of the silent dead the people children as well as adults watch for the rls Ing sun, the emblem of life and the Resurrection. As the gin rises, flood- ing the sky with light nnd the earth with warmth and gladness, the watchers greet it by singing some of the beautiful and curious old hymns that are an especial inheritance of these people. ' ' ; U ,,I,v I V.iV.'W b "1, -aw'! . , mm mmm irr" Tim , Otto Schllck, the noted marine engi neer of Hamburg, now proposes that a heavy wheel be mounted on a verti cal axis, so as to prevent the rolling of the ship acting on the principal of the gyroscope. A new allov which serves electricians as a substitute for platinum, consists, of 16 1-2 ounces of silver, 4 1-2 pounds of nickel, one-half ounce of .blsbuth, and fifty-three pennyweights of gold. The cost Is about one thirtieth of that ct platinum. The strength of a grindstone ap pears from recent tests to vary widely with the degree of Its wetness or dry ness, stones, that are dry showing ten sile strengths of from 146 to 186 pounds per square Inch, but after soaklns over night breaking under stresses of 80 to 116 pounds per square inch. The protection of buildings from lighting, seems to call for a special branch of engineering. Mr. Alfred Hands, a British engineer, points out that safety cannot be had from any set rules, as each case must be studied separately, and Its systems adapted to the complications of metal about the structure. The efficiency of the con ductor depends almost entirely on the way It is applied. The composition matters little, and choice between cop per and iron is chiefly a question of cost and durability. Mysterious poisonings that occur oc casionally in farm stock have been traced to the development of prusslo acid in fodder plants. Dr. J. W. Leather, In India, has found that green Jowari (Andropogum Sorghum), flax, the Rangoun and certain other beans, and the tapioca plant contain gluco sldes that produce prusslc acid when acted upon by a particular enzyme, and that this ferment becomes active only uader rare conditions, when the or dinarily wholesome plants become sud denly poisonous. Young Jowari that had proven fatal to cattle showed 1.25 grains of prusslc acid to the pound of green fodder. THE NUMBER OF THE STAR 3. One Estimate Puts It at Sixty-Four Millions. Some of the best authorities in as tronomy Simon Newcomb among them declare that the number of the stars cannot be less than a hundred millions. These figures are almost beyond human comprehension, and yet the stars are believed to be suns, like ours, some larger than others, but all of them enormous globes of flro. According to an English astron omical magazine, "The Observatory," a well known writer on such subjects, Mr. Core, has been making a fresh es timate, and is disposed to reduce the figures about one-third. To obtain his results, Mr. Gore made a number of counts on the pho tographio prints given in the late Dr. Roberts's volume of stellar photo graphs, and found that the average number of stars the square degree was 4137 In the Milky Way, 1782 near the Milky Way, and 408 in the non galactic regions. Combining these-re-suits with the estimated areas of ga lactic and non-galactic regions pub lished by Professor E. .C. Pickering (an American), he obtained as the grand total of visible stars the num ber 04,184,757. This is probably small er than the actual total, as some of the fainter star Images would prob ably be lost in the reproduction of Dr. Roberts's photograps. In its comments on Mr. Gore's com putation, -"The Observatory" says that clusters and nebulae were avoided in making the counts, so that Mr. Gore's total will have to be increased on this account In another count the avet age richness of the irregular clusters dime out as 6752 stars tr. 3 square de gree, but this is far below the average richness of the globular clusters, one of which, Omega Centauri, shows 25, 000 stars the square degree. Ten-Inch Snow Makes One of Water. The first man to whom It ever oo curred to find out how much rale was represented by a given fall ol snow was Alexander Brice, of Kirk newton, who In March, 1765, made I simple experiment with the content! of a stone Jug driven face downwari Into over six inches of snow. What he learned was that a greater or lest degree of cold, or of wind, whenvth snow falls, and Its "lying a longer oi shorter time on the ground," will oc caslon a difference In the weight am) In the quantity of water produced; ''but if," he added. "I may trust to the above trials, which I endeavored to perform with care, snow, new'.j fallen, with a moderate gale of wind freezing cold, will produce a quantltj of water equal to one-tenth part ol Its bulk." So that a fall of snow ol ten inches represents a rainfall ol one Inch. London Chronicle. When the Wire Tires. "Messages," said a telegraph opera tor, "always slide over the wires battel on Monday than on any other day. Tht wires, you see, have profited .by theli Sunday rest "It is a fact that inanimate as wel' as animate things get tired and need vacation occasionally. You know ho true this is of razors, of automobiles oi locomotives and It is Just as true ot telegraph wires. "A wife," after its Sunday re3t, give a quicker, 'fuller and a laore delicaU transmission. It U like a piano thai has Just been tuned." Uianeapclii Journal. BUSINESS CARDS. E.-.NEFF JUSTICE OP THE PEACE, Pension Attorney and RealJEstate Agent. RAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Bhookville, Pa. m. Mcdonald, ' ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Heal estate agent, patents secured, col lections made promptly. Olliceln Syndicate building, Uoynoldsvllle, Pa. V". C. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Justice of the peace, real estate agent, col lections niade promptly. O 111 co In Syndicate building, Keyuuldsvlllu, Pa. SMITH M. McCREtGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real estate agent. Col lections will receive prjmpt attention. OfHcs In the Reynoldsvllle Hardware Oo. building, &lalu street Keynoldsvllle, Pa. I)Et. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist. In the Hoover building Main street. Oeutleuess In operating. I)R. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST, Office on second floor of the First Natlonat bank building, Main street. DR. R. DEVERE KING, DENTIST, office on second floor of the Syndicate bulU Ing, Main street, Keynoldsvllle, Pa. HENRY PRIE3TER UNDERTAKER. Black and white funeral cars. Main street. Reynoldsvllle, Pa. HUGHES & FLEMING. UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING. The U. 9. Burial League has been tested and found all right. Cheapest form of In surance. Secure a contract. Near Publlo Fountain. Keynoldsvllle Pa. D. H. YOUNG, ARCHITECT Corner Grant and Flftn sts., Reynolds Hie. Pa. JOHN C. HIRST, CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER, Surveyor and Draughtsman. Office In Syn dicate building, Main street. "WINDSOR HOTEL, ' Philadelphia, Pa. Between 13th and 13th Sts on Filbert St. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter minal. Five minutes wnlk from the 1'enn'a it. K. Depot. European plnntl.GOperdayand upward. American plan 2.00 per day, A PPLICATION FOR CHARTER. Notice Is hereby given that an application will be made to the Governor of the State of Pennsylvania, on the 5th day ot April, IlWf, liy McUurdy Hunter, J. O. Smith, John W. Stewart, Robert K. Morrison, James Dough erty, Harvey Cooper and J.J. McCurdy, un der the Act of Assembly, entitled "An Act to provide for the incorporation and regulation of certaincorporaMons," approved April 28th, 1874, and the supplements thereto, for the ' charter of an Intended corporation to he called "The Beech Woods Telephone Com pany," the character and object of which Is tor the pumose of constructing, maintaining, easing and operating telephone lines for the private use of individuals, iirms, corpora tions, municipal or otherwise, for general business purposes, and for these purposes to have, possess and enjoy all the rights, bene- insnnti privileges oi saiu aci oi Assemoiy and the supplements thereto. ClemkntW. Flynh, Solicitor. INCREASE O F C A PITAL STOCK. Reynoldsvllle, Pa., March 11. IW7. I hereby certify that the following resolu tions were adopted by a majority ot the entlri board ot directors of the Keynoldsvllle Brick and Til Company at a special meeting held at the principal office of the company, on the eleventh day of March, 1007; Resolved, That the capital stock of this company be Increased from I&j.OiO to S75,otK), to accomplish and carry on and enlarge the business purposes of Ihe Reynoldsvllle Brick and Tile Company; and It was further Resolved, That a special meeting of the stockholders be called to convene at the gen eral office of the Keynoldsvllle Brick and Tile Company, at its works in Wlnslow town ship, Jefferson county, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday, May IS, 1W7, at 2.1)0 p. m. of said day to take action on the approval or dis approval of the proposed Increase of the cap ital of this company, and it was further re solved that 1 tie secretary be and Is hereby dirncted to give notice of the same as re quired by law. Attest: Clydx C. Murray, CHAiiLBs 9. Lord, Secretary. ) Leech's Planing Mill 1 West Reynoldsville jjj Window Sash, Doors, Frames. Flooring, i STAIR WORK Rough and Dressed Lumber, Etc., Etc. 1 Contract and repair work glyen 3 prompt attention. Give ub your order. My prices 5 are reasonable. ' 2 W. A. LEECH, Proprietor. Meat Market Bids for Your Trade Recently opened in Syn dicate building with a new line of choice fresh and smoked meats, lard, butter and epgs. We . promise you prompt, at tention to all orders and solicit your trade. FRANK BUSSARD , ' Proprietor, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. I A NEW I - i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers