VOLUME 10. REYNOLDSV1LLK. PENN'A., WEDNESDAY, SEITEMBEIi i, 1907. M'MHKX 17. BUSY BEES MAY BE PRIVATE, BUT NOT A PUBLIC NUISANCE. A Few Remarks on the Futil ity of Passing Ordinances Against Them. Bee-keeplnir Is an Industry that can not be termed a common nuisance, therefore, cannot be prohibited by or dinance. While been may become a .private nuisance, It Is claimed by N. E. France, In his legal rights, that an or dinance cannot be levied as a mere pri vate nuisance to one or more persons. The nuisance must be public and general In character and mu t be an actual nuisance with sufficient evidence to sustain It. An ordinance by a city council, which makes the owning, keep ing or raising of bees within a city's limit ft nuisance In itself, is too broad, and Is therefore Invalid. , "All ordinances arbitrary in their terms and unreasonable and unneces .L..Min nt-i vRtn rierhts are saruy nun"". r void "Dillon. For an illustration, A bee-keeper Is located In the outskirts of J town or city, with only one family to ha annoyed by the bees. In this case they could not be consld- ired a common nuisance, as tne puouc Ai?nr sees them. Therefore, .ia nnt h dealt with by ordinanoe. "They might become a nuisance to the family nearby, but this would be a pri vate nuisance, and would have to be judicially determined whether they were or not. "-Supreme Court, Clark vs. City of Arkadelphla, Ark. I could cite to you many cases where ordinances have been passed but never enforced. And some where action had been taken, and then dropped by the City. And cases where action has been brought by the olty and case won by the bee-keeper, via: Central Lake, Mich., the judge decided the city had not the tiah ordinance. , , , Reedsburg, Wis. ino juuKtu.u the bees were not a nuisance ana me injunction was dissolved. . TjiotH rial. Case tried on con- il l w Ututional rights, and was lost by the "y- .. ' , Greenville, 111. vnj major .that the city had not the power or authority to pass sucn uniawim u.ulu- uoe. I I vnhl. Tluh. City Mayor decided they have no such right to drive an Industry from existing m u Another case broughuhy a candy manu- I fawif niai via nii nosed of by the manu facturer beinz Instructed by the court to not only screen his factory, out, me wareroom where he kept nis empty harrallgalso. J A more recent case, and nearer home, .. . n.njg manufacturer in Phila delphia who made serious complaint to the authorities, of some bees that were kept near. The owner received notice to remove them at once, but a voice fcame from a $300,000 factory, "We hrlll test it In the courts" and from the last report the bees were still doing justness on the old stand, w nue u is ponceded by myself that bees are some- imM a nubile nuisance. It is oltener ihe fault of the person keeping them t an the bees. A person Keeping oees La.cltv should in the first place secure .gentle strain f bees, should never r.twww .combs or honey through the ia&t of the dav. or 4o anything that will attract other oees and cause rob- ng among the bees, for the.-e Is noth ing that will make bees roseer. They hould not- be disturbed only wnen eoessary, and then should always be iMiuid bv a little smoke If they are tny ways cross. Tbey should not be too in number, nor have too much honev Jn store, as their honey Is some- lltpe ithelr ambition. Tou .can anno; lame at animals. Bees should always have pure honey to winter on, and then hey can-endure three or four months Lnfinpment without any Inconvenience providing, they are not disturbed In iny way. But when forced to winter in sugar syrup It is apt w cause tne potting of clothes in the spring. SECTOR -AMD VENOM. Health in the Canal .Zone The high wages paid make it a mlgh- Vy temptation to our young artisans to bin the force of skilled worktrn need- d to construct the Panama (canal, ilany are restrained however by the par of. fevers and malaria; It Is the rooting ones those who have used lectrio Bitters, who go there without lis fear, well knowing they are safe fom malarious Influence with Electric jitters on hand. Cures 'blood poison ho, bllioutness, weakness and all stom 'h, liver and kidney troubles. Guar d by Stoke & Feicht Drug Co., fruffgists. 60c. Reynoldsvllle and 'yAeevlllo. BLOOD SUBSTITUTE. Why 8aline Solution Is 8omatime( In jected Into the Veins. ! Ocrnslnnnllv In ensps nf Rtrloti9 wounds where there litis boon great loss of blood the published reports state that "saline solution" was in jected luto the veins to supply the tle llcleucy. The avernuo render, however, tins a very vague If any Idea how a solution of salt takes the place of blood. Not to go Into a complete mmlysU of the blood, It is sufficient to note that of 1,000 parts, 7.S0.13 Is composed of water, albumen 03 parts, sodium and potassium 8.3T1, coloring mattCf (supplled by the red blood corpuscle's) 133, leaving only some VI parts to be composed of fibrin, fat, calcium and magnesium, etc. Where there Is seri ous loss of blood a state of collapse Bets In because, the normal weight of blood being reduced, the heart's action is diminished, there being less resist ance for that organ to overcome. To counteract the result of shock and eollapso It is necessary to stimulate the heart by restoring the normal weight; In other words, to get It to work by giving It something to work on. As the analysis shows, of 1,000 parts of blood nearly 800 are composed of water and sodium, and therefore a plain saline solution makes a good sub stitute. The heart does not know the difference, and It goes to pumping away as usual as soou as this imitation blood gets in the veins. The saline so lution serves to tide the patient over the danger. point. As the food Is con verted into chyle, new blood Is formed, the red corpuscles are supplied rapidly from the normal tissues, and the saline solution Is thrown olT through the se cretions in the usual way. Formerly transfusion of blood was the means employed, but this always objectionable method has been sup planted. The greatest objection to the transfusion of blood from one person to another was that to supply the necessary amount to restore the wounded patient It was Inevitable that the volunteer should be almost as bad ly drained, so that tho physician would have two patients on his hands where he had one. Besides, there was always the risk of transfusing disease to the potlent with the other's blood. Dogs and sheep have been sacrificed to sur gery for this purpose, but most people prefer to use blood of their own manu facture to any Imported from beasts or their fellow creatures. ITEMS OF INTEREST. The first of the modern bank notes were made In Clftna about the year 1000 A. D. Blood In its natural state contains a surprising amount of pure air, amount ing to nearly seven-eighths of its en tire bulk. , The wasp's nest Is constructed of a first class article' of papier nmche, made from the pulp of wood, with an animal glue specially prepared by the wasps for the purpose. The honey of tho snapdragon can not be extracted by the common bee, which has not weight enough to pull down the lower Jaw of this curious flower. Only tho bumblebee has ac cess to the Interior. Tho first trapdoor was made by a species of African spider which has Its nest In the ground and closes the entrance by means of a trapdoor open ing outwardly and covered with bits of earth and grass In order to escape observation. Woman's Lov of Ugly Men. The Illustrious men In history who wore distinguished as much for the fas cination which they exorcised over the fair sex as for their talents and abili ty were, as a rule, plain and Insignifi cant In npywarnnce. Julius Caosar was a very 111 favored man, and yet when a i.irrc sti-lppllng. before his fame In Rome, girls of his own age sighed for him and mature women longed for his lore. Among the men of later times who were renowned In like manner were Sir Philip Sidney, plain almost to ug liness; Taul Searron, the comic poet, a cripple; Voltaire, unmistakably ugly, and Rousseau, whose manners were awkward as bis face was plain, while John Wilkes, who had the power to subjugate any woman who spoke to him for even five minutes, was admit ted by his own showing to be the ug liest man In Englnnd In his time. The Toe Nails. Owing to the friction and pressure to which toe nails are exposed In all per sons who wear boots or shoes there Is a great tendency to thickening on the underpart of the free growth, the por tion of the nail that extends beyond the toe point. This thickened part some times gets pressed against the flesh, and then very painful corns result The preventive treatment Is to keep the nails cut short and to remove the rather soft thickened parts with a blunt pocket knife or scissors blade. ' Pleasant "Tommy." said the young man to his prospective brother-in-law, aged five, "will you be sorry when I marry your tinder?" "Yes," 'answered the little fellow; "I'll be sorry for you." DIO NOW A SHOT Why Thousands of Indians Melt ed Away Before Forty Men. A STORY OF PIONEER DAYS. Captain McCabe Knew the Sioux Bet er Than They Knew Themselves, and the Indiana Knew the Captain's Men Were Dead Shots and Scalp Takers. In the pioneer days to reach Mon tana from Cheyenne, In Wyoming, re quired a roundabout Journey that In volved a double crossing of the Rocky mountains, with a change of base at Salt Lake City. The United States government brought about a better condition of travel by constructing a trail through the Gallatin valley along the course of the Gunpowder river, reaching around the base of the moun tains In a curvilinear form, which avoided the heights of the Rockies. To protect this route from marauding In dians three forts were built Reno. Fhll Kearny and C. F. Smith. In 1800 the murderous Sioux from the Yellowstone valley pursued a san gulnary course up through the Gallatin valley and Into Montana. It was marked by rapine and plunder. They besieged Fort Reno and killed many of Its garrison. They environed Fort Fhll Kearny and wiped from the face of the earth every human being whose walls It failed to protect. Then they surrounded Fort C. F. Smith, where 200 soldiers found themselves sur rounded by more than a thousand death seeking Indians. Escape seemed Impossible. A courier got word of this condition of affairs to General Han cock, who was then stationed at St. Paul, and he sent a messenger to the governor of Montana at Rozeinan. The chief executive of the territory of Montana at that time was Green Clay Smith. He had been a member of congress from Kentucky, but Pres ident Lincoln made him territorial gov ernor of Montana. He was seated on the porch of his residence In Bozeman when Hancock's message was handed to him. To a visitor he said: "What In the namo of heaven can I do Fort C. F. Smith Is 250 miles away. The country between here and there Is filled with Sioux Indians. Our militia force consists of exactly 42T men. Not a man of them could reach Fort C. F. Smith alive. I am absolute ly powerless. However, I will send, for Colonel Howie." At that time Colonel Nell Howie was United States marshal for the territory of Montana. It was to this man that Governor Smith addressed himself, handing him General Hancock's dispatch and say ing: "Colonel, we can't do anything for those poor devils In Fort C. F. Smith. Am I not rlght?" "No," said Colonel Howie quietly, and with the gentle 'voice of a woman. "There Is no trouble nhout that, gov ernor. We can arrange that matter and still leave the Montana frontier protected. I will need some picked men and a good leader for them. 1 think Captain McCabe is best fitted for this undertaking. I will find him." McCabe was nnother gentle voiced man, with blue eyes, no didn't make much noise. He noted, lie said to the governor: "Oh. yes; It Is easy enough. But I'll need forty of the best men I can select. . Yon can keep the rest of your volunteer force here." Governor Smith looked at him In ! amazement. So did the visitor from i the fort. They both thought he was , either Insane or a brngsart. Governor Smith said to him, "How In the name of heaven do you orrect to raise the siege of Fort C. F. Smith with forty men when yon kno-v that It Is sur rounded by more fian 1,000 blood thirsty Indians and 'hat the country between here and them I covered with thousands more of murderous Sioux 7" Said McCabe quietly: "Why, gov ernor. It Is easy enough. The Indians know us and know that we know them better than tbey know them selves. You folks from the east have an Idea that what you call Indian atrocities are simply unmeaning exhl bltions of brutality; that scalping, for Instance, Is simply a form of torture. In that yon are mistaken. The Indian believes that no man can go to the happy bunting ground heaven we call It who has been deprived of bis hair. The'- motive In scalping a victim Is to car out fiendish hatred to its utmost by preventing him from having a hap py hereafter. Therefore to deprive an Indian of his scalp is to rob him of his hope of a happy hereafter. My men tever kill an Indian without scalping him, and the Indians know that The forty men I will select for this expedi tion are unerring in their aim with the rifle. Tbey can shoot sixteen shots In sixteen seconds, and every ball means a dead Indian, and every dead Indian means a scalp, and every scalp means a wnrrlor deprived eternally of a chance of ever reaching the happy hunting ground. My forty men will walk from here to Fort C. F. Smith I without firing a shot." t "Incredible," said Governor Smith. "True." said Captain McCabe. What was the result? i Forty men walked the 230 miles from vv Vll w. 4 . OulIUl. rauimane A-ntched them on every sine, isy nays their progress wns Rlgnaled by circling columns of smoke and by night by fire from mountain tops. But not n shot was fired. When they got within sight of Fort C. F. Smith the thousand whooping Slonx who held the gni n In siege fled, and the forty frontiers men from Bozeman marched In and escorted the 200 soldiers back to tho territorial capital without the loss of a life. Not a shot had been fired. Not a scalp had been lifted. Human Camels So conveniently is the hump placed on the back of the camel for the (11s M)slllou of the pack saddles that this has not unnaturally seeiued a special design for the benefit of the nomadic Arab. It does not therefore seem to hare struck people generally that this Is tho actual result of the use to which since, at any rate. 2000 B. C. tho camel has been put by bis Asiatic masters. The certainty of this Is already appar ent from the fact, familiar to any one who has traveled In tho Interior or Algeria, that the thoroughbred ineliurl. or saddle camel, which carries no bur den heavier than a slim Arab dispatch bearer, Is losing Its hump. But tho matter is put beyond all doubt by the Intelligent researches of Professor Lombroso, the eminent Italian anthro pologist, who Identified similar cal losities miniature bumps, in fact up on the neck and shoulders of Hottentot and Malagasy porters, employed by their fellow men In work more appro priate to the hardier camel. London Standard. Reporters and Orators. There have Ix-cn errors in reporting, of course. There always will bo such errors. But Inaccuracies of this kind are usually Inslgiiflcnnt, and they are more than bulanced by the dressing up ami revision which gnnd reporters de vote to careless. Illogical and Rome times iingranmiatlcMl speeches. If It were not for the imillgned reporter, nine speeches In ten that are not de livered jfrom manuscript would read ll!;o a tomblnntlon of bad grammar and delirium tremens, as Mark Twain put It. S'lt Is the saving grace of ro portorlal revision that has made many on oratorical reputation In this coun try. The public speaker who does not recognize his obligations to the men who report him Is an lngrate. A Just punishment for him would be to print his speeches exactly as be delivers them. After two or three experiences of that regimen he would have nothing to say 'of "Inaccurate reporters." Chi cago Chronicle. A Trylnfl Patient. It was easy to see how In a commu nity seven miles away from a regular practitioner Martin Lano had won bis prefix of "Doc." When uskotl by strangers to what school of medicine ho belonged, he always replied: "I don't bang on to no school. I doctor by sense-.", ; Occasionally there came times when "Doc" Lane's methods failed to give atlsfactlon. Ho then withdrew from ;he case with much dignity aud made Mi Ktatemont to the world at large. "I don't dicker with Kben Jenkins any more." he said firmly to an ln rpilror one spring. "He'll have to get through the summer the boM way bo can. Five times now I've cured that man of dyspopsy starved It right out of him and the mlnrto he's cured he bog'ns to eat nghi. I'm done with hi in now for good and all. Such folks don't help my reputation a mite." A Sohun Story of Lincoln, . C.io of the many foreigners xvho sought my intercession was a young German count whose Identity wns vouched for by a member of the Prus sian legation. He bad a long row of ancestors whom he traced back for sev eral hundred years. He was greatly Impressed with the Importance of this fact and thought It would weigh heav ily In securing blm a position In our army. If he could only have an "audi ence" with the president and lay bl case before him, he believed the result could not be doubtful. He pursued me so arduously with the request for a personal Introduction to Mr. Lincoln that at last I succumbed and promised to Introduce him if the president per mitted. The president did permit The count spoke English moderately well, and In his ingenuous way be at once explained to Mr. Lincoln bow high the nobility of his family was and that tbey had been counts so-and-so many centuries. "Well," Bald Mr. Lincoln, Interrupting blm, "that need not trou ble you. That will not be In your way If you behave yourself as a soU dier." The poor count looked puzzled, and when the audience was over be asked me what In the world the presi dent could have meant by so strange a remark. Carl Scburs In McClure'a. Feminine Human Nature. miM ... . ....... In. 1 Lm ucic nan ctuiajo Auuniru.D ui uu- man nature uispiuveu vy me negro por ter Who said, "I always calls young ladles 'Mrs. because the younger they are the better they like It, and the old er ladies I calls 'Miss' because the old er they are Ihe better they like It." Today the Beet: One of the Illusions Is tbat the pres ent hour is not the critical, decisive hour. Write It on your heart that ev ery day Is the best day In the year. No man has learned anything rightly until he knows that every day la doomjdsjr. 8Sla,l- A GREAT BASEBALL SERIES. How Boston and Providence Battled In the League In 1884. ' Probably one of the grandest series of baseball games played by National league ciulis was that between tile Bostons and the Providence Grays In 1884. The Bostons had won the cham pionship of 1883, and It was the am bition of Providence cranks, who lived only forty miles away from the Hub, to wrest the laurels away from the Bean Enters. Every game that was played between the clubs was at tended by immense crowds, and the excitement was at white heat. . The first game of the series In 1884 was one of sixteen Innings and result ed in a tie. the score standing 1 to 1. The pitchers were Charley Radbonme and Jim Whitney, and 10.000 persons saw the battle. The next day Provi dence won by a score of 2 to 1 In nine Innings, and Charley Sweeney struck out nineteen Boston batsmen. Of the first eight games Boston won five and Providence three. When It came time to meet for the four final struggles the Providence team had won every series from the other league clubs and wanted to win the Berles from the Bostons too. Radbourne ac cordingly was assigned to pitch In all four games on four successive days. He was In such magnificent form that In all of the games the Bostons wore beaten and scored the sum total of one run. One of the games lasted eleven Innings. It was played In Boston aud was finally won by the Rhode Island ers by a score of 1 to 0. Arthur Ir win, who was the shortstop for Provi dence, drove a Jong fly toward the right field fence, and the ball went through a hole between the boards. It was n four bagger nnd decided the game. Railhourne's wonderful pitching In those days will never be forgotten by those who saw him perform. He wont Into the box gome after game n!rl pitched for nineteen consecutive con tests. It was his remarkable twirling that was Instrumental In helping Prov idence to win the pennant that year. Sweeney Jumped the club In the mid dle of the season, and Rad went along -lngle Handed. One feat that, was the talk of the baseball world In 1883 was his pitching In an exhibition game at Trenton. The home club would not allow Providence to play with tlw regulation league ball and In sisted upon substituting another of lighter weight. Radbourne, however, accepted the latter ball and proceeded to strike out every man who came to the bat until one man had been re tired In the sixth Inning. Then a play er fouled the ball, which bad not been done before. The pitching distance then was forty-five feet from the home plate. Work and Worry. "I am working too hard. My work Is killing me." The man Is mistaken. Work does not kill. Work Is medicine to the body and mind and spirit. Work Is the salvation of men. Work cures a thousand ills. Worry kills. Dissipation kills. ' Worry Is largely a matter of nerves or Indigestion or liver, or It may be a quality of temperament or It may spring from envy or some other hateful bablt of thought. In most cases worry is concerning things pure ly Imaginary things that cannot be helped. One of the best cures for the worry habit Is work, hard work of body and mind. Work requires concen tration of effort and mind. That makes one forget his troubles. Work may be made a Joy, and in the Joy of work ing there is no room for worry. Right living, right thinking, work these are specifics for most of the Ills caused by worry. Dissipation kills. Atlanta Journal. The Original New England. Not one man In a thousand living on the Pacific coast knows that as a mat ter of fact the accents of our mother tongue were heard on the beach not far from San Francisco forty-one years before English was spoken on Plym outh Rock. More amusing still is the fact that the original New England was on the Pacific coast for Francis Drake In 1.179, at the close of a month's stay, took possession of the country for big sovereign. Elizabeth, and named the new acquisition Nouva Albion (New Englnnd) because he thought the white cliffs near what Is now Point Reyes resembled the chalk cliffs near Dover. Outing. Men'e Hate In Great Britain. There Is a difference of two sizes be tween the average hats worn In Bir mingham and Glasgow, and it Is gen erally conceded that the average size In Birmingham Is smaller than In any other town in the kingdom. Taking the whole of England, the average size of hat required by men Is a 7, or nearly twenty-two Inches In circumference; In Wales 0T4 Is the average, the Irish man averages a 7 full, while the cau nle Scot's average Is Vfa. Tailor and Cutter. Where Ignorance Was Not Biles. A story Is told of a man who, cross ing a disused coal field late at night, fell Into an apparently bottomless pit and saved himself only by grasping a projecting beam. There he clung with great difficulty all night, only to find when day dawned tbat his feet were enly four Inches from the bottom. Reduced Rates to Saratoga Springs Ac Q. A. R. Encampment.. For the National Encampment Grand Array of the Remiblio at Saratoga Springs, N. Y,, September 9 to H, the Pennsylvania Railroad will sell excur sion ctlckets to Saratoga Springs from all stations on Its lines September 7 to 9, inclusive, pood returning to leave Saratoga Springs September 9 to 1", at reduced rate Stop overs at New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington will be granted on ticket reading via those titles. Tickets via New York will be honor ed by Hudson River Boat lines between New York and Albany or Troy. By deposit of ticket with Special Agent at Saratoga Springs and the payment of $1.00 an extension of the return limit to October may oe ob--talned. For full Information regarding stop overs, rales of fare, conditions of tick ets and train service eonsult Ticket Agents. JlSSOLUTION NOTICE. Nnli-e Is hereby given that the Durtoprshto heretofore existing between B. W. Sykes em 3. II. Bykes under the firm name of Hjk Woolen Mills Company lm been this dr illHsnlted. The business will lie continue by O. W. Bykes under the same mime. i fi. W. Pvkiw, Aug.M.MOT. J.H. 8tk.. ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE. EstHtrt of G. Bobren. late of the Bor ough of Reynoldsvllle, deceased. ' Notice Is hereby given that letters of ad-' ministration In the above named estate have been granted to the undersigned. All per sons Indebted to the said estate are requested to make payment, and those baring claims or demands against the same will make them known without delny to the undersigned. ' Mrs. Annie Hmhken, - O. Vf, Fr.TNN, Administratrix. Attorney. Auk list 27, 1907. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO AP PLY FOR A CHARTER. Notice Is hereby given that an applica tion will In miule to the Governor of Penn sylvanlaon Ihe2th day of September, 19117, by August Baldauf, loseph V. Welst and Clement W. Flynn, under the Act of Assem bly, entitled "An Act to provide for the In corporation and regulation of certain corpor al Ions, ".approved April 29, 1K74, and the sup plements thereto, for the charter of an In tended corporation to be called "Tim Run away Ron Coal ft Coke Co.," the character anil object of wjilch Is foT the purpose of mining, quarrying, excavating and boring for coal. Iron ore, limestone, fireclay and oth er minerals and substances Incidentally de veloped and the manufacture of said miner alt Into coke, pig metal, building and are brick and the sale of the said minerals and manufactured products: and to such an ex tent as may be necessary and convenient for said puraoees, to acquire and dispose of reil estate by sale, lease or otherwise and the ac qulrhig, possessing and enjoying of all thff rights, powers, prtvllt ges and Immunltiee conferred upon such corporations hy said Act of Assembly of April 2th, 1H7. and the sev eral supplements thereto, and for these pur poses to- have, possess and enjoy all the rights, privileges and benefits of said Act of Assembly and Its supplements , ' CLEMENT W. FLYNN. . Solicitor. JJEPOKT OF THE CONDITION or THE CITIZENS' NATIONAL BANK OF REYNOLDBVILLE, At Keynoldsvllle, In the state of Pennsylva nia, at the close of business Aug. 22, 19U7. Resources. Loans and discounts 1116,033 01 Overdrafts, secured and unsecured. 217 SO U. 8. bonds tosecure circulation.... 12,500 00 . Premiums on V, 8. bonds 44S St Banking house, furniture, fixtures . 10,(174 W Due from National banks (not re' serve agents g,009 IS Due from State banks and bankers, 4,H)iO 54 Due from approved reserve agents.. 14,172 99 Checks and ot her cash Items 57 00 Notesof mher National hanks 00 Fractional paper currency, nickels and cent 246 02 Lawful money reserve in bank, vlr: aOpec'e iS.BIM 3S Legal-tender notes 4.110 00 7,618 35 Redemption fund with I'. 8. treas-. , urer a of circulation) 025 00 Total....'. 1170,360 0 Liabilities Capital stock paid In I Sft.000 00 Surplus fund 18,86165 Undivided profits, lessexpenses and taxes paid 1,101 34 National hank notes outstanding... 12.500 00 Individual depoaltasubject to Check 86,531 39 - Time certificates of deposit 1.100(0 ' Cashier's checks outstanding 263 70 87,810 011 tl70,3 08 BUt tt Piaaiylvtaia, Citnty t Jtfirsea, ta: 1, J. W. Hunter, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of ny knowledge and belief. J. W. Hunter, Cashier, Subscribed and sworn to before me tale 28tb day of August, Iii7. L. 1. McEntirs, Notary Public, Correct Attest : ' D. Wheki.kr, A. H. Bowser, McCcrdt H oxter. Directors. EDISONJPJ For a limited time I will sell you a Edison Standard Phonograph, Flower Horn, Stand, One Dozen Edison Gold Moulded Records -all for . $26.75. The time to buy Edison Phono graphs is now, as they will be advanced in a few days. Call and hear them at Haskin's Music Store Reynoldsvllle, Pennsylvania.