( A Painful Persistent Cough .... . i i l portends serious results if allowed to continue unchecked. Constant hackine tears the lungs and exposes the delicate, inflamed tissues to ravaging consumption. I he most oostircuc mm au.-u.u cough is read?y relieved by Piso's Cure. No other remedy has such a soothing and healing effect upon the throat and lungs. For nrl hall i rmtiirv it has cured innumerable cases of coughs and coldi and saved many lives. For Ptso's Cure is the Frank's Restaurant No other food deteriorates so rapidly astheoystcr. Its habitation is the ocean. It requires coolness and' absolute freedom from ex posure to the air in order to retain its delicate flavor and its wholesomeness. SEALSH1PT OYSTERS Are brought directly from the choicest beds of America. They are 8hucked into porcelain-lined cases, sealed and packed in ice, which never comes in contact with the oysters. The use of the Sealshipt Carriers is the secret of their superiority. v Sealshipt Oysters Fresh Daily. FEANK'S RESTTJR-NT. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD BULLETIN THE NEW UNION STATION AT WASHINGTON All the passenger train of the Pennsylvania Railroad will enter and depart from the new Union Stattyri at Wash ington on November 17, 1907, and on the sa3neNJtate the . present station at Sixth and B streets will be closed: to traffic. The date is singularly fitting. In 1807 both wings of the Capitol were completed, and now, a century later a building even larger is opened for a great public utility, - which did not exist at that time. The railroad terminal facilities at Washington have been inadequate for years, particularly at inauguration periods and on the assemblage of other large gatherings at the Capital. Their improvement was imperative and so it has come about that by thecombined effort of the railroads and the United States government, one of the largest and "unquestionably the handsomest railroad station in the world is now provided not only for the convenience of the citizens of the United States, but as a notable architectural addition to the great public buildings of the Capital City. It is a monumental edifice and a worthy type of the future structures which will make Washington the municipal beauty spot of the world. The station, including the Concourse is longer than the ( Capitol and nearly as wide. The waiting room is larger than the hall of the House of Representatives. The con- - course, which is the train lobby, is longer th'in the interior . of the Capitol building, if it were one continuous hall, and half as wide. It is the largest building ever constructed ' for a like purpose. Within this great structure there is every convenience the traveler can desire, so grouped about the central hall s as to serve his purpose to the best advantrge. The lofty arched entrances' face a plaza as large as an ordinary city park, which will be laid out as a plaza and adorned with shrubbery and fountains. . The trackage is sufficient for all demands upoi. i&id as the entrance to and exit from the confusion and jostling of hurrying crowds moving in opposite directions will be ob- viated. . -' iD - ... The bigness of the station is impressive; its utilities obvious. Plnnll-irT Hill LiUMiiy uui an oimiiiim 1 Pnnrlc at T nee than Poet 1 8 UUULliJ Ul L-tUOO rr 1 Dotted Swiss, 25, now 17c. Dotted Swiss, 20, now 14c. - ' Dotted Swiss, was 20c, now 14c. N Figured Batiste, was 15 and 18c, now 10c. Figured Batiste, 12Vc, now 8c. Figured Batiste, 10c, now 6c. Ladies' Dressing Sacques, 50c, now 39c. Ladies' Hose 9c. Children's Hose, broken lots 15 and 18c, now 10c. Men's Dress Shirts, 50c, now 35c. Men's Dresshirts, $1.00,"now 75c. Men's Summer Underwear, 22cents. Men's Pants, 75 cents. Men's $1.50JPants for 95c. Can't quote prices on all goods, but everything re duced proportionately to prices quoted. iii'UiuiuiuuiuuimmiuiUiiiiiiiiiituuuauiiuiuiiuiiiiK throat and lung affections Ideal Remedy 'ill 0 11 TT TY" ft Yl UiUil UUJl. 3 3 N.HANAU. 1 SOUP AT $35 A PLATE. 8terlet Roe at $10 a Head and Peanut Bud Jelly at $250. Public Interest has recently beetl ex cited by a remarkable dinner party given In Loudon at which tweuty-four people sat down and which cost $15, 000. Some high class chefs who know the deepest mysteries of their business are inclined to say tlint this was really nothing nfter all. The most expensive soup that can bo served Is Chinese bird's nest soup. which can hardly be done nt less than .$35 for a moderate plate of it for each guest AVben the fish course is reached in flie menu the most expensive Item pos sible is the neweHt cavalre, made from sterlet roe and not from common stur geon. There are only one or two Lon don restaurants at which this rare delicacy may be obtained, and the charge for It Is $10 per bead. Mullet roe, auotlier rare dish, costs more than Its weight in Rllver, while those who do not wish to advance quite to this point In expenditure might be satislled with a more frequently served dish, Caribbean pompano, which has to be brought to Loudon on ice from Galveston or I'ensacola and which costs $3 to $10 a pound. A game pie, innilo of the little birds called ruffs small things with long legs nnd a ruff of feathers behind their necks, belonging to the sandpiper fam ily Is about the most expensive thing possible In this direction nnd cannot be done for less than $50 to $75. while f the ruffs are unusunlly scarce the -barge for the pie may easily run up to $100. Dunstable larks come next They nre fairly common on the tables of epicures, but It i-oxtK quite $7.50 to serve a single dish of them. There arc not s ni.iuy possibilities for- gigantic expenditure when the loluts come on the table, giraffe steak or bison ribs at anything from $2.50 to $5 a head being about the best. As for sweets, the thoughts of a millionaire host who wanted to beat the record and kuew his business would naturally fly to a Jelly of peanut buds and ginger, which would be sent to him in little pots from China at a charger of $250 a pot, one tablespoonful In each. Forced strawberries In the middle of winter are most expensive to buy and tuny run to anything from $5 to $25 a head. A great delicacy at one time was the double cocoanut or coco-de-mer, which is only grown on two small islands of the Seychelles nnd which was last sold at $200. It is, however, so extremely rare now that an enactment has been passed forbidding Its exportation un der any circumstances. London Stray Stories. ? INVISIBLE SNAKES. A Den of Reptile That Eluded the Ordinary Patter's Eye. The fact that snakes are rarely seen even when they are abundant was im pressed upon the mind of the writer one day while waiting for a train at a small station In New Jersey. A nearby culvert, where a small stream flowed muter the Junction of the railway and ii veil traveled public road, seemed a favorable- place for theiif. The stone wall, laid up without mortar, which cr; ported the apprnm-li to the" bridge ba.l n southern exfitn-tire. The i-hlnks ..Vd'.v'.ed ample hiding place, and the borders of the ?t:-pnm promised m i.l hunting for the species which live .i ;:nall fish, frogs, toads and eurtb- The tlaumnn, who for several yeurs bud passed ten hours a day at bis lei- i:ti:el.v occupation there, denied that there were snakes Id the vicinity. No mure than there be In Ireland, an' It's not me as would be tetidiu' tills cross In' If there was," he asserted?'- But a few minutes' search In the gutters and grass revealed four specimens wblcb kail fieen under his very eyes a gar ter, a worm, a Pe Kay mid a newly batched milk snake. A new flagman was installed there the following day. but crowds of people, many of whom would become hysterical at tile sight of a snake, continue to puss within three feet of the wall blissfully uncon scious that they are walking over a den of serpents. l-'rancls Metcalfe in Outing Magazine. Two rhaeee. 'I detest that .:rs.- .Ij:um S'.ie ttt- wnvs tells what till her clothes cost." Well. I detest Mrs. Brown. She- never will tell what he pays foraoy thlng." Detroit Free Press. Nervous From a Little Child Up Today the is strong and healthy as a result of the use of Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Pills. The genuine Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerre Pills put up In a round flat box with blue and yellow label never fall, when intelligently used, to cure any and all childhood troubles caused by a run down exhausted condition of the nerv ous system. They give strength, steadiness, natural sleep and general vigor. Jujit as Mrs. Mary Ballert of 121 Dearborn Bt, Buffalo. N. Y., says they did In her daughter's case. She says: "From a little child up. my daughter new 11 years of age has been exceedingly nervous, fidgety and restless even of late years, work hss been out of the question. Any exertion played her out her sleep was far from Rood and constantly broken. I was ad vised to try Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Pill. I got some and used them with line results. The - improvement was most marked today she Is in comfort feels stronc and better In every way and sleeps well. The eyesight Is better end strong?! none of the old watering of the eyes. It certainly Is a splendid medicine." 50c a box at all dealers or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. X. For Sale by Stoke & Fetch t Drug Co. SAWED OFFJTS HEAD Storm a Wooden Statue of An drew Jackson Raised. ON A FAMOUS OLD FRIGATE. A Bold Boston Sea Captain Mutilated the Constitution's Figurehead and Then Went to Washington and Defied the Authorities. The figurehead which was placed on the frigate Constitution Is now at the j Naval academy In Annapolis. It Is a ' figure of Andrew Jackson, and con nected with it is a curious Incident. The original figurehead of the Con stitution was a figure bf Hercules. This was destroyed by a cannon ball at Tripoli, and then n figure of Nep tune was erected. This also came to grief, and at the time the vessel was rebuilt there was no figurehead ex cept a billet At the time the new ship was finish ed Captain Jesse Duncan Elliott of Hagcrstown, Md., who bad distinguish ed himself In the battle of Lake Erie, was In command at the Boston navy yard. Captain Elliott was an enthu siastic Democrat and an ardent ad mirer of President Andrew Jackson. The president had Intely been In Bos ton and had been most hospitably re ceived, and Captain Elliott conceived the Idea of placing a figure of the president at the prow of the Constitu tion, believing that It would give the people of Boston much pleasure. The navy department gave lilm permission, and so a wooden figure of "Old Hick ory" was put In position on the ship. This act raised a storm of dissent in the Hub, and Captain Elliott was threatened with a coat of tar and feathers. The excitement was Intense, and the language was virulent . Hand bills denouncing the act, denouncing the president and Elliott were circulat ed In the streets, nnd the newspapers took up the cry, and In this day and generation the partisan violence and vituperation which raged In New Eng land are Inconceivable. On a dark night In July the deck of the ship was Invaded, and, although a sentry was close at hand, the bead of Jacksou was sawed off aud taken away. New England was delirious, and for a time the perpetrator of the act was unknown to the public. Six months later one Samuel W. Dewey, a Boston sea captain, took the dissevered head in a bag to the secre tary of the navy at Washington aud avowed himself as the criminal. That official was amazed at the muu's au dacity and asked him If he did not know that he would be severely pun ished. Dewey cnltnly replied that he had considered the matter and bad as certained that the legal penalty was slight and could not be applied until he was convicted by a Jury in Essex county. Muss. "And If you think a Jury In that county," be added, "will punish a man for cutting off the head of Andrew Jackson yon nre welcome to try It." The secretary.- went to the White House for Instruction, while Dewey was detained. General Jackson laugh ed heartily at the whole Incident and forbade the man's arrest Before this Captain Elliott had provided a new bead for the figure, and the wooden Btatue of Jackson that Is now at An napolis was at the prow of the vessel for forty years. Captain Elliott's last voyage on the Constitution was from the Mediterra nean to Hampton Roads in 1833. Here he wan removed from command' be cause of charges of severity to the men and of having incumbered the berth deck of the ship on the home ward voyage with Jackasses for the Improvement of the breed In the Unit ed States. Tbe Constitution finally 1 went out of commission for active service at Portsmouth, N. H., after a career of nearly fifty-eight years In the service. In 1860 she was transferred to Annapolis for the use of the mid shipmen. When the civil war began her posi tion there was deemed unsafe, and she was sent to the New York navy yard. Id 1S(I5 she was returned to Annapo lis, where she remained until 1871, when she was taken to Philadelphia, where she was again rebuilt. In 1878 she was used to transport exhibits to France for the Paris exposition of 1878, and her career at sea finally ended in 1881. The centennial of her launching was celebrated at Boston in 1807. where she was bullt-Bnltlmore lun. Narrow Eaoape. John Ton very nearly got engaged while yoa were on your tour In the mountains, I hear. Michael Precious near. But fortunately Just at the last moment I fell down a precipice. Pennon's Weekly. At the Club. Mrs. Blood good I thought her quo tation was apropos, didn't you? Mrs. Newrltch Dear me! I always sup Hed his name was Edgar Allan. Ex- WANTED A CASE OF ECZEMA. Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Psorlail or Ulcer that has baffled all doctors "kill aoAttej medlilnea Dr. Taylor's Eczema Remedy will positively cure It the worst kind 0 cat-or do pay. Bold try - For sale by Stoke & Felcht Drug Co. Ask for free illustrated booklet. RARE COPPER CENTS Coin Collectors' Theory to Asoount Foi Their 8caroity. That some of the rarest and most valuable of the United States cents particularly those dated 1790 and 1804 owe tbelr scarcity to the fact that Ful ton built the Bteamboat Clermont li the theory held by some coin collectors They believe that thousands of the ole time large copper cents went towarc making the copper boiler for the plo neer stenmboat This theory would explain the mys tery that has long puzzled coin collect ors as to the reason for the almost to tal disappearance of the cents of the dates mentioned. The first cents struck at the United States mints at Philadelphia were of large size". The copper blanks, or plant-bets, were Imported from Eng land, being sent over In kegs. Copper at this period was a scarce article In this country. With the ex ception of the small quantity pro duced ut the only copper mlues then known In tlie United States, those at Granby. Conn., nearly nil the metal used here came from England. Ruildurs of steam engines In those days were of the opinion that boilers constructed of Iron were unsafe and lmprut-tlcnble, mid us consetiuence hollers- were made of copper, all the boilers that came from' England being. It Is sii Id. constructed of that tuetal. Fulton was likewise of the- belief that copper was the only St tuetul to- be used In boilers. It Is therefore possible- that,, finding a scarcity of metal with which to cou struct the boiler of the Clermont, he .finally resorted to the most convenient source of supply, which happened to be the large United States copper cents. Of course the cost of such a holler would represent a large sum, I t.t It is on the records that the steam frigate Fulton, launched in 1815, the year of the inventor's death, bad a holler entirely coustructed of copper, which alone cost the large sum of $23, UiO. Thut the supply of cents of this pe rind was large enough to meet such a demand Is also likely enough. From 1703 to and including 1705 l.Mttti.033 cents were coined and In I7!)0 1)74,000 were struck. DINING IN WALL STREET. What Lunch Hour Meant to New York's Financial District. When one descends upon Wall street, cither from the Broadway slope of Trinity church or from the Nassau strei-t hill, at noontime any week day the air Is fraught with many conflict ing odors of the kitchen. From over the roars of the cla muring curb folk way down In the valley of Broad street there arises roni a score of cookeries and "handouts" a decided smell of the stewpot blended with the ever glori ous onion. From il:e eaves of the New York Stock llsi-hinige come the more pretentions fragrance of spiced meats nud Rtrong coffee. From the basement and attic alike, from cloud tickler and antiquated frame house as well, come all sorts of fuming evidences Unit the men of affairs are entlti-4 To realize what this luncheon hour menus to Wall street one must stop to think of the thousands of persons who ure In that small district of the city at this particular part of the day. Hundreds of restaurants meet the rush with their doors flung wide, nnd their keep ers have grown rich upon nickels and dimes that fall Into their tills like a mighty rataplan during those brief hours of midday. Men have grown rich and retired to palatial mansions in the suburbs selling cup custards and -sinkers" to millionaires, stenogra phers, clerks and bankers nlike during the busy hour or two at noon. Thou sands of pounds of meat, countless oysters and clams, barrels of gravy, unaccountable gallons of coffee and tea and tons of bread are consumed every day In a very brief period of time, and here, of all other places, the foreigner has found Justification for his criticism of Americans for fast eating; -Pittsburg Dispatch. Babies In the Eaet. In Cypress, at the linp irtaiit date of the first tooth appearlim. friends gatht er. singing songs wHillc llie child is bathed In water nnd hulled wheat Afterward " thirty-!"-" ! the Iwlled grains are strung mi a thread and stitched to the luihy's rap. which, of course, promptly produces the safe cut ting of the other teeth A pretty custom prevails mi the isle of Rhodes, for there, on the eighth day frmii blrtb. the infant, altei a Mlial bath of wine anil myrtle, is tenderly laid In a cradle sum led by lighted t:.ier while a child niM"aclies. touch es Its lips with 'hmiey and says. "Be thou as sweet as this- Honey "-Los Angeles Times. Right On. Wlsejay It must be a- great pleas ore to tell ft Joke to an. ncrobnt Soft boy Why t WlseJay Because- be turn bles so. easily. Morrlstowo (Pa.). TlmeSi. KIDNEY, LIVER AND DOWELS UekMM le aext to ImsoaelbU if rov k 5 the Kidney, urer aaa uoweu in per working- order with aa oceaelonal M t Dr. A. W. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills Mr. 8. B. Holdea, No. XMH Cm Ave., Ormad Rapldt. Mich., eaye: "I have to yesre been aubject to elugsiahaew of the Urer and coestlpatton, the kidney were also Inutlve and uuud me a great deal of pala atam mv loins. I mot some of Dr. A. W. 1 Chtee'e Kidney-Liver Pill and tber eured the Inactivity of the orguia rapidly and i eaitlT. I would not be without tnem." 16o . a box at all dulan. Writ tor a tree sample. Or. A. W. Chaee Medicine Co., Buflalo, M. T. 1 tot sale by Stoke & Feiobt Drug Co. fe Willi gHi, "f YTRAGOOn YOU'D bare to look a long- time to find an other store so cautious and, painstaking: in its efforts to give mothers the very best of vatne and good taste in boys? clothing. We're in-business to stay; to succeed! Want to make every purchase so satis factory that you'll always buy here and tell your friends about us. These are the reasons we sell VTRAsoon Whether you Buy a suit or coat; you' get i XTRACOOD the beat material and workmanship put into clothing-. We guarantee) XTRACOOD; it will prove mora durable; reliable)! anal satisfactory. Insist uponi it Russian Overcoats and Reefers for age 3 to- TO) Russians made from blue kersey and cheviot, fancy mixed goods; neatly trimmed. Reefers in navy- blue chinchilla, melton and kereey; velvet coJUr buttons close- Prices $5 to $12. Boys' Overcoat for age 7 to 16. 'Made from black--andiosJoid mel ton, fancy mixed' chevtnta. Linings superior.- Prices: $n- in to $12. MILLLRENS M INNIB N. KECK, Notary PuBiiic,- Sthkocraphek and Typewrote. ReynoldsTille.Pa. w INDSOR HOTEL,. 1217-1229 Filbert street. A Square from B me i w here" fineRfal automobile service tor ear e-nests. 8lKht-Belng and touring can. Knoeas fl.0O r day.ami up. Tne omj moderate pricea otel ot reDutatlon and consewsence ia SfStlPHILADEIiPHlA." c o 7s a 13 3 5 t3 (a O a n O 5 Tl n w If you have anything to aell,"i our Want Column. 1 tl
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers