REYNOLDSVILLE, PENN'A., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1907. VOLUME 16. NUiMMB 25. JOYS OF A COLLECTOR. Picking Up a Valuable Painting at an Auction 8 a la. j ' Collecting will always have Us ro-, payees. I know of one that occurred 6t the sale at Christie's of the effect!! Of the late Sir Henry Irving. Some i one I knew had been to see the collec- j tlon before the sale. He came across . a portrait with which he was familiar ibecause he had seen it thirty years iiefore. On consulting his catalogue he discovered that the portrait was de scribed as being ' that of a man un known, and, further, the artist was also unknown. Now, he knew that the portrait was thnt of a famous actor by a famous English painter. He longed to buy It, but decided that it would go at too high a price. Ho went to the auction with very little hope. The Whistler and the Sargent were sold, and then it was the turn of this picture. Nobody recognised It. Finally he had ito Start the bidding himself, and Hits jhe did. Only one man bid against him, fcut he soon stopped, discouraged, ami then the picture was knocked down to the man who had never expected t get It. He hurried to the desk to pay toe Email amount and to carry off hli prize. "Do you happen to know any thing about that portrait?" the auc tioneer asked him as a porter took it down to a cab. "I know it very well," leald the new owner, conscious that It 1 V. ! .. 11. t .. n W&8 nuw Bnieiy ma inuiitii,. u t, ' portrait of Buckstone, the actor, by I Daniel Maclise. There is an engraving of It In the Maclise portrait gallery ." wtfrs. John Lane In Pearson's Magazine. Started the "French Walking. The celebrated Dr. Tronchln, friend, of Voltaire, Rousseau and Diderot, was, (the Inventor of walking. In France itratll his epoch (1709-81) the lelsured class never walked either for health or recreation. Walking was only prac-, Jtlced by the Tiers Etat Folks footed It from one place to another simply (because they possessed neither coach nor sedan chair. Dr. Tronchln, an initiator In many other respects, In-, duced "les elegants et les elegantes," writes a historian, to take what Is now willed a constitutional. To stroll, ft) 1itvo A WAfl nimod "ftvinMilnai" nftor jthe inventor, and for their airings both, eexes had special costumes and shoes, ithe latter being more especially neces-j sary. The verb "tronchlner," by the. ,way, has not had the fate of our "to. iboycort," having passed Into disuse long ago. Westminster Gazette. Do You Belong , to "The This committee is made up of the men who siv around an excava tion for a new building, whittle pine sticks, spit tobacco juice on the fresh dirt and watch the other fellows work. It's all right to show interest in new build ings, in town develop ment and progress, but there's a better way. You can do more good for yourself and the community by re signing from "The Citi zens' Committee" and getting into the General Progress Committee. This committee is the one that PUTS UP THE NEW BUILDINGS, brings new business into town to occupy them. Com paints the old houses, keeps the sidewalks in good repair, beautifies the front yards, cleans up the back yards and .otherwise makes this town a better town to live in. The General Progress Committee is the Unofficial Town Booming Committee, ft really ought to be- organ' ized and made official Let all of us work together for the advancement of the town we five in, and there will be more room around new excavation for the fellows; at' work to throw out the dirt. Eternal industry is the price of progress. Let's all tali in line for the General Progress Commit teeand then JUST WATCH THE OLD TOWN GROW. Home Grown Motor. Even a book agent sometimes falls of achievement through unforeseen misunderstanding. "Colonel," said one of them affably to a Texan whose rec ord he had looked up beforehand, "those are mighty flue boys of yours." "The finest in the country, stranger," said the colonel. "The finest In Tex as." "I reckon you buy them anything they want?" "Why, stranger, I buy them any thing they need, whether they want it or not." "Then, colonel, let me sell you a cy clopedia for them. There's nothing else will do thein so much good." The colonel looked at him In nstou ishment. "Why, stranger," he said, "them boys of mine don't need any cyclopedia. They ride mules." Youth's Companion. Put Crape In Windows. rnssengers on the Second avenue elevated road witness one custom thnt seems peculiar to the people living lu the flats along that lino of travel. They frequently see streamers of crape tied to the second and third story front windows that open on fire escapes. Somehow the bereaved relatives feel that crape on the flat house door will not indicate with sufficient clearness which family has Buffered loss, so to point out exactly the rooms where mourning exists the windows are hung with crape. New York Press. Aa London 6eea Ua. In an article on smoking the West minster Gazette of London says: "At Washington senators not only smoke in committee rooms, but in the senate itself. Often a Washington 'or ator' has been known to deliver a per ipatetic speech, attending to his cigar at regular intervals, and followed by a crowd of reporters eagerly taking down his utterances." Hit Harder. "Woman Is considered the weaker vessel," she remarked, "and yet" "Well?" she queried as she hesitated. "And yet," she continued, "man is the oftener broke." Exchange. Be rich In patience If thou In goods be poor. Dunbar. The word idea formerly meant a completed performance, whether men tal or physical. lite?" $ SCOTSMEN IN KILTS. That Is One Sight You Will Not Sea In Edinburgh, A writer of the Loudon Tatter has been in Edinburgh and reports as fol lows: There is one thing that always disappoints the visitor to Edinburgh, and that is n complete absence of kilts, or, rather, the absence of Scotsmen in kilts. If you meet a man wearing a kilt in the streets of the Queen City of the Forth it will be a grave mistake to suppose that he is I lie laird of Gor muck or some olhei equally famous highland chieftain. He is nothing of the sort. As a matter of fact, his name Is Ilodgklns, and ho is employed dur ing eleven mouths of the year licking up envelopes for a firm on the shady side of Lothbury avenue, London, E. C. Another mistake which strangers are apt to make lies in supposing that the good people of Scotland talk Scotch. I shall never forget my surprise on the occasion of my first visit to Edinburgh, when a policeman nt the corner of Frederic street, to whom I remarked pleasantly that it was "braw. In-lent nlcht the nlcht, whateffer," told me to push off nnd stop asklug him conun drums. Scotsmen do not as a rule talk at all. They possess the gift of silence to u really remarkable degree. I kuow a gillie named Donald, who lives In Perthshire, In whose society 1 have sometimes spent whole days stalking the elusive stag without his ever vouchsafing a single remark of any kind. I remonstrated with him once, pointing out that such silence as his almost amounted to taciturnity. He promised to try and cultivate a certain measure of garrulity, nnd after we had walked across the heather for five hours, during which time I could see that his brain was working feverishly, he suddenly turned to me uud exclaim ed, "Yon's a fearfu' earthquake they had in Jamaica!" after which striking effort he relapsed once more into his habitual attitude of respectful silence. "OLD GLORY." The Way This Name For the Stars and Stripce Originated. The term "Old Glory." used to desig nate the flag of our country, is a favor ite, and the expression is a very happy one. It Is said by those who claim to be vll Informed that the name originat ed with William Driver, captain of the bark Charles Doggett. This statement ap)enrs in a history of the Driver family, and from tills we Uud the fol lowing facts: Driver was a successful deep sea sailor and was at the time making his vessel ready for a voyage to the south ern Pacific. In 1SIJ1. Just r.s the brig was about to set sail, a young man at the head of a party of the captain's friends saluted Driver ou the deck of the Doggett and presented to him a handsome .American flag 1'.) by 3S feet in' size. The banner was done up in :lops, and when it went aloft uud was lluug to the breeze Captain Driver. sa;s the tradition, then and there named it "Old Glory." The flag was cr.rr!ed to the south pens an.l ever aft crv.ard treasured by l.s owner. Driver removed to Nashville, Tenn. lu 1S37 nnd there die 1 in 1SSU. Before the outbreak of hosti'liles between the north and south Old Cloi-y flew daily from a window In the captain's Nash ville house, but when the rumors of war became facts It was carefully se creted. When the war broke out the precious flag was quilted into an Innocent look ing comfortable and used on the cap tain's bed until Feb. '-!". 1.S02. when the Sixth Ohio marched Into Nashville. Then the flag came out of its cover ing, nnd the captain p vsented it to the regiment to be hoiste 1 over the capl tol. The-.-e It floated r.r.i!' it began to tear in rinlions, when It -' is taken down an.l a new mut ):: .' i the building. A'r the tfer.th of ' 'iln Driver the fir. t Old Glory v. us ;,: en to the Es sex institute at Salem, whrro it is still preserved and may be seen by the curi ous. Kansas City Journal. A Frenrfi Joke Two' doctors were called to attend a man who bad suffered an accident to his hand. "We shall have to amputate' three fingers," said one. "No, two," said the other. "Three," maintained the first "Oh, well, three, then," replied the second. "We won't quarrel over a lit tle thing like that" Nos Loisiri. Eaey Permieeion. "Willie, did you put your' nickel In the contribution box in Sunday school1 today?" "No, mamma: I ast Eddie Lake, the preacher's son,- If I' couldn't keep It' an' spend it fer candy, an' he give me permission." Denver News. ' They who ' menace our freedom of thought and of speech are tampering -with something more powerful than gunpowder. Conway. What He Said. ' "I once gave a waiter a two dollar tip." "What did be anyr "To me he expressed bis thanks, but I heard him say to nnither waiter that I couldn't have real good sense." Louisville Courler-.'o'irnal . ,i P BALANCE IN THE AlrVj The Necessity For Equilibrium In Bl-d Flight. It is likely that the bird's superb ease and grace In the air are due to Its ability to maintain absolute balance. If a gull makes the mistake of bend ing until the wind strikes Its head and wings on the top It will tumble Instantly. And the sailing birds, though they make no flapping motion of their wings, are constantly balanc ing themselves, like a man on a tight rope. Some scientists have maintained that the air sacs make it possible for the bird to manage minute changes that are very valuable In restoring equilibrium. It Is known that the wing Is Joiued to the body of the bird by what is called a universal Joint enabling the erentm-e to make almost every possible motion. The body of a man is heavier than water, but If he gets Into n position of perfect balance he will float. In some such way, it Is claimed, the bird floats In the air. But as the bird would fall much more rap Idly In the air than a mail's body would sink In water the necessity for a far more subtle ability to keep the center of gravity on the part of the bird Is apparent; hence, according to this theory, the bird. Is provided for this purpose with the most sensitive equipment, made up of nerves and mysterious air ducts, many of the wing feathers perhaps acting as sentinels, warning Instantly of the slightest ap proach of shifting currents. Every body's Magazine. ENTERTAINING THE DUKE. Rudely Interrupted While He Wat Chatting With Royalty. The dally papers do their best, but not even their ubiquitous representa tives garner all the store of good things which attend a royal visit to Ireland, says the London Sketch. No paper at the time printed the cream of the sto ries which grew out of a visit of the Duke of X'oniniught to the Emerald isle. f;.''tlcoine to Ireland!" said a man as he saw the duke ou the steps of it hotel in the little western town In which h. was staying. "Welcome to Ireland, your royal highness. I hope I vee your royal highness well." "Quite well, thank you," answered the duke. "And your noble mother, the queen. I hope her ould leddyshlp is enjoyln' the hest of health?" "Yes, thank you. The queeH Is very well Indeed," said the duke, vastly amused with the easy fa miliarity of the peasant. "It's glad I am to hear it. And tell me, your royal highness," the oilier went on, "how me ail your noble brothers nnd sis ters?" Before the duke could answer an nld-de-camp appeared, with, "Here, ;.ot along there." The peasant looked up with Infinite scorn. "Arrnh! What are yen interruptln' for?" he exclaimed. "Can't you see that me and his royal highness Is bouldin' a conversation?" Explanation Vas Ncoeseary. As the Trays' dog was at last de tached from Ihe trousers leg of the :unv milkman by Mr. Pratt's vigorous efforts the victim of the onslaught be S.:n to express his mind with consider able freedom. "1 wouldn't keep u dog like that," be said Indignantly, but Mr. 1'ratt broke In before he had time to say more. "He's only playful, that's all," he In sisted, and nt the same time ho pressed something Into the new milkman's hand. The man glanced at the wad of green, and then as he transferred It to rt safe pocket his expression changed. "I guess I can take n little fun as well as anybody." he said dryly. "But till you explained It I had a notion thnt dog was in enmest when he bit that piece out of my trousers." Youth's Companion. Seeing tlio Sight3. Eveu in these days of liberal educa tion the young women sometimes show 'tow confused are the Ideas shut up in their beads. Illustrative of this Is the native blunder which Edmondo de Am his recounts in his story of a voy ::ge from Genoa to Buenos Ayres: The captain of the steamer which timbered the charming youug blun derer among Its passengers met her one morning and said: 'Slgnorlua, we cross the tropic of cancer today." "Oh, Indeed!" she- cried with enthu siasm. "Then we shall see something :tt Inst." . - . A Zulu Rain Charm. The Zulus employ a rain charm which Is very remarkable considering their usual fierceness and cruelty. They catch a bird, and after' the- tribal wiz ard has consecrated1 it and mude it a "heaven bird" they throw It Into a pool of water. Ito' spite- of their own Indifference to the- sufferings of ani mals they believe' tliat the sky. which they conceive to be' u' iiersouality, will be full of woe at the death of the bird and drop sympathetic tribute in show ers of rain.' To tell our own secrets is generally folly, but that folly Is without guilt To communicate those with which we are intrasted Is always treachery, and treachery for the most part combined with folly. Johnson. The bounty of nature Is too little for the'Kreed.v man. Seneca. AN EXTINCT ANIMAL""! The Saber Too'ied Tiger Was a For. mldabls Creature. The most remarkable of all the ex tinct feline animals are those known to naturalists as the saber toothed cats or tigers, a group comprising the greater part of all the fossil forms. They date back to the earliest times of which we know anything about the family In North America and reach down to the time of man himself. A large nnd powerful species described from the Indian Territory by Copo lived contemporaneously with the hairy mammoth, as evidenced by the commingling of their skeletons. There j can be little or no question but that the hairy mammoth was contempora neous with man in North America as well as in Europe. Its geological range Is from the close of the eocene to the latter part of the pleistocene. The chief peculiarity of the animal is the extraordinary elongated canine teeth. The tall Is of unusual length and the legs are short. The animal measures about seven feet In length aside from the tall. The lower Jaws have a downward projection in front, due to a flangelike wlden'ng of the jawbones, which doubtless served ns a protection to the teeth, preventing their Injury or loss. In some of the lnrger forms from South America this flange was not present, while the canine teeth were even more elongated than is the case with this species, attaining a length of over six Inches nnd pro truding fnr below the jaws wbeu closed. A FAMOUS ROAD. India's Tree Bordered Highway 1,200 Mi let In Length. The road I hnve in my mind Is In Indiu and stretches 1.200 miles from Lahore to Calcutta. It Is the famous Grand Trunk road. Let me explain Its nature, though one cannot do so by comparison, for there Is no road of five miles in England that is anything like it. It Is level. Indeed, there is not above a mile the whole distance where even a lady need dismount to walk. The material with which It is made is called kunker, nnd If you care to turn that word into concrete you have an Idea of what It is like. It is exceeding ly hard and as smooth as a prepared pavement There Is no dust. When I first, got on this road and 'enjoyed the luxury of easy traveling I said, "This is magnificent, but lu a little time I suppose it will become gritty and un even." I went 150, 100 miles, 200 miles, COO, 000, 700 miles, nnd It was always the same, with not even n small stone to give a Jog. Nearly the whole of the way is lined with a double row of ma jestic trees. With two friends I rode ncross India during the hottest time of the. year, In April nnd May, nnd was never serious ly inconvenienced by the heat, for at a pace of fifteen miles an hour one could create a draft. Chambers' Journal, Roadiide Wit. lie who matched wits with the au thor of "The Ancient Mariner" had in deed a lively task before him, for Cole ridge was never caught napping. The poet was so awkward a horseman that his riding often attracted comment of anything but a complimentary nature. One day he was riding along the turn pike road In the county of Durham when a wag who met him fastened upon hhn ns an excellent subject for sport Consequently he drew rein nnd said in an impertinent drawl: "My graceful friend, did you happen to meet a tailor on the road?" "I'm inclined to think 1 did," said Coleridge meditatively. "I was not sure at the moment, but he said some thing about my meeting a goose far ther along the road." The wag put spurs to his horse, and the poet jogged calmly on his way. Past Salaries of Aotort. A number of autograph letters of Edmund Kenn supply some Interesting Information about the salaries of actors early, in the nineteenth century. One relates to an offer by Mr. Ellison offer ing Kean 3 a week ns acting man ager of "the new theater in Wych street." Later this rose to 27 n month. In 1820 Kean was offered $12,000 a year to go to America, in the prime of his popularity he received 200 for a week In. Edinburgh nnd apparently reached the highest point when Mr. Bunn wrote from the Theater Royal, Dublin, on Feb. 8, 1S20. and offered him 50 a night to play In Dublin and Cork. Liverpool Mercury. Horn Influences. Each one of ua Is bound to make the little circle In which he lives better and happier; each one of us 1b bound to see that out of that small circle the widest good may flow; each of us may have fixed hi his mind the thought that out of a single household may flow lnflr. which shall stimulate the whok- commonwealth and the Whole civilized world. Dean Stanley- Got Too Important. "What has become of the mold you thought such a prize?" "Oh; I had to let her gbC repllea the second fashionable woman. "After her operation for appendicitis she thought she was one of us" rbUadel ohla Ledoer- His Dear Old Mother. "My dear aid mother, who is now eighty three years old, thrives on Elec tric Bittt-rg," writes W. H. Brunson, of Dublin, Ga. "She has taken them for about two years and enjoys an excellent appetite, feels strong and sleepS well." That's the way Electric Bitters affect the aged, and the same happy results follow in all eases of female weakness and general ikbility. Weak, puny chil dren too, are greatly strengthened by them. ' Guaranteed ulo for stomach, liver and kidney troubles, by Stoke & Felcht Drug Co. druggists, SOc, Reyn oldsyille and Syktrsville. Don't miss the closing out sale of $4,500 worth oj goods at the Cash New York Kucket Store. All goods must be sold. Going to quit business. Ice Cream In many flavors. Allourcreatns are made of the purest and best ingredients, with all fresh fruits in season. YOUR DINNER - will surely be a success, if you order some of our delicious Ice Cream for dessert. REYNOLDSVILLE CANDY WORKS, .When you want real good M-E-A-T go to HUNTER MILLIREN in their new rooms, one door east of Mc Entire's Drug Store. We carry a line of choice home dressed Beef, Veal, Pork, Lamb, Poultry, Butter and Eggs. Your pa tronage solicited. Here are some of the important things you want in your repair work of watch, clock and jewelry repairing : Best of Workmanship Best Material. Right Pricr s. Prompt Service. All these you can get when you leave your work with Gooder, the jeweler, in the Peoples National bank building. 'A