Paroxysmtof Coughing yield immediately to Fino's Cure It allays the inflam mation slowa tlm - coueh and beats the lacerated sur (ace. I'iso's Curt can be de pended upon to Rive most hen elicial rcsiilm in all coughs, colds, bronchitis and lung affections By its faithful use many advanced consumptive coushs have been Permanently Cured All lamp troubles are " done away with when GOOD OIL is used FAMILY FAVORITE OIL gives the highest possible efficiency in light without any of the troubles of ordinary tank wagon oil. By the most careful process known all the heavy paraffine and light-destroying substances are removed ami all the volatile oils evaporated, leaving just the pure illuminant Family Favorite. No better is made Ask your dealer WAVER LY OIL WORKS InJcivctidcnt Ktfmcre OILS FOR ALL PURPOSES Pittsburg, Pa. BOOKLET SENT PRE! If you have anything to sell, try our Want Column. Frank's Restaurant N other food deteriorates so rapidly as the oyster. Its habitation is the ocean. It requires coolness and absolute freedom from ex posure to the airjin order to retain its delicate flavor and its wholesomeness. SEALSHIPT 0YSTER5 Arebrought'directly from the choicest beds of America. They are sliuckedjinto porcelain-lined cases, sealed and packed in ice, which nevercomes in contact with the oysters. . The use of the Sealshipt Carriers is 'the secret of their superiority. , Sealshipt Oysters Fresh Daily. FHA.lSrK'S RESTA.TJRLlsrT. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD BULLETIN THE NEW UNION STATION AT WASHINGTON All the passenger trains of the Pennsylvania Railroad will enter ami depart from the new Union Station at Wash ington on November 17. 1907, and on the same date the present station at Sixth and B streets will beclosed to traffic. The date is singularly fitting. In 1807 both wingi of the Capitol were completed, and now, a centurv later a building even larger is opened for a great public utility, which did not exist at that time. The railroad terminal facilities at Wasliinylou 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 find 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 mnnicipal i beauty spot of the world. The station, including the Concourse is longer than the r 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 than the interior of the Capitol building, il 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 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 upon it and as the entrance to and exit from the confusion and jostling of hurrying crowds moving in opposite directions will be ob viated. 1 ; The bigness of . the station obvious. CAISSON WORK. How Foundation of Great Steal Structures Are Built. The foundations for the great steel structures are built by meatus of cals wits In which tint men can work under I (treat pressure of air. It Is a very Interesting sight to watch tbeui, and (lie best of It Is that any one may see thoni at close range from an adjoining i.itb-wnlk. The cnlssou Is a hollow steel cylinder open at the bottom apd Just large enough to permit a man to work. The workman climbs down a ladder In this tube and digs away the earth at the bottom. As the earth is taken away the steel tube Is gradually low ered. The earth Is taken out by a bucket, which Is lowered and raised by a tall derrick at one side. As the caisson sinks, air Is pumped Into the compartment containing the man. This In to force back any water or dirt that might All the hole from the outside as fast as the workman removes It from within. The pressure of this air Is of ten so great that a man carl work but nu hour or so at a time. At the top or the caisson Is a steel cylinder with ( Hit air tight door at either end, which . .11.. .1, 4 Via Helves US II Klliu VI vtrauuuiu iv uiv tube below. When one of the caisson workers starts to go to work he opens the door or lid at the top and climbs In, when the opening is once more tightly clos t 1 This door or lid is air tight Aft er the opening to the outer air has been closed the workman opens the door at the bottom o'f this steel com partment and lets In compressed air from the caisson below. It takes a few minutes to become accustomed to breathing this atmosphere, for the heavy air makes the hend ring. As sum as the workman can do so he climbs down Into the funnel below, closing the lower door of the steel nuteroom as he does so. All this must be done In the dark. If the workman wishes to signal the outer world he may do so by striking the steel sides of his narrow prison with his shovel. He usually signals In this way when the bucket Is to be raised" or lowered. is impressive; its utilities - HOW THE MOON LOOKS. Queer Variance In Impressions as tc the 8ame Object. I asked my meu to rmnparv the size of the full moon to tlt.it of some ob ject held In the hand tit arm's length. 1 explained the qiiestlou carefully and said that they were to describe an object Just large enough when seen at arm's length to cover the whnlo moon. My list of answers lieglus us follows: ijttiirter of a dollar, fair sized canta loupe; at the horizon, huge dinner plate; overhead, dessert plate; my watch, six Inches In diameter, sliver dollar, hundred times as large as my watch, man's head. Ilfty cent piece, ulue Inches In diameter, grape fruit, carriage wheel, butter plate, orange, ten feet, two Inches, one cent piece, schoolroom clock, a pea. soup plate, foil titti In pen. lemon pie. palm of the hum!, three feet In diameter enough to show again the over- Uelmlng man ll'oldness of the Impressions received. To the surprise of my rentiers per haps It may be added til o:ice that the only miiu who wus right .us the one who compared It to a pea It Is most probable that the results would uot have been different ir I had asked the question on n moonlight night with the lull moon overhead The substitution of the memory Image lor the Immedi ate perception can hardly have Im paired the correctness of the Judg ment;!. If In any court the size or a ; distant object were to be given by I witnesses, and one man declared It as large as a pea itntl the second as large as a lemon pie anil the third ten feet In diameter It would hardly be fair to form an objective judgment till the isvchologlst had found out what kind of a mind was producing that esti mate - Professor Hugo Munsterberg In McClure's. Clean Chopsticks Sure. 'Seeing these until toothpicks done up In paper envelopes in the hotels here," said the man from the far east. remluds me of the Japanese eating iiluces. In the bigger hotels or restau rants they hand you the chopsticks done up In a sealed envelope I his Is with the Idea of convincing you that rliev' never have been used liefore. which Is not always so In the cheap er restaurants they have n much hot ter plan for setting your mind at rest. There you get a piece of wood us broad us two chopsticks split to with in an Inch of one end When you take Ibis niece of wood von split it the rest of the way, and there you have the two sticks. Yon can lie sure then that no other person has used them." New York Sun. The City of Glorious Sunshine. Of all the living work of man which have visited 1 think untie is the equal of Moscow In Interest and lieiiuty It is a city of glorious sunshine, of gold en domes and silver crosses and of multicolored cupolas, of palaces and temples. In It are found all the re finements of the west and ull the cu rious fusclnatloitR of the east. Even the Incidents of ordinary commonplace civilized life are touched by a flavor of -omauce. Wide World Magazine, Pale, Sickly Girls HAVE ANAEMIA. Your mirror will tell you if you are anaemic, for the unnatural pallor of the gunu and inside of the lipa and eyelidt indicate thin, watery blood. You may alio have indication, dizzy, fainting spells, severe headaches, and feel ings of irritability and extreme lassitude. The blood is lacking in the very elements that are contained in condensed and easily assimilated . form in Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Pills This great restorative sharpens the appetite, invigorates the nerves which conliol the diges tive fluids, strengthens the head's action and gradually and naturally restores the sufferer from weak blood to health, strength and vigor. See that portrait awl signature of A. W. Chase M. D., the famous Receipt Book author, are on the bos. you buy. 50 cts. at all dealers or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co.. BuHalo. N Y Miss Elsie Faiter, 47 Main Street, Onconta. N. Y., states i "Last summer I was all run down in health no appetite, poor digestion, could not sleep, felt tired and languid, was pale and weak, Docton could not help me but Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Pills thoroughly cured me and restored strength and color. ' For Sale by Sloke & Felcbt Drug Co. NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS Iu the matter of the estate of E. A. Gourley, deceased, in the Orphans' iXiurt of Jefferson County. Notice fa hereby given that D. O. Gourley, Administrator of the estate of Bald decedent, will present to aald court on the loth day of December, 1U07, at two o'clock p. m. of said date, his petition for an order to sell at private sale for the payment of debts, all that ct-rtaln messuage and tract of laud of which the said decedent. died seized, lying, IwlnR and situate In Uavld K ynolds' adultlou to the BnrouKh of Keynoldsville, county of JenVrson and state of fennsylvaiilu, bounded and described as follows, to-wlt: ' Beginning at a pot on lira -it street, corner of lots Sim. 61 and Si; thence North thirty and throe-fourth degrees West 'forty-eight and rlfty-five-one hundredths feet to aoost; thence South tlfty-three degrees West to Willow Alley; thence South thirty and three fourth degrees East forty feet to line of lot No.M thunce North tifty-nlne and cne-half degrees Kast to tirant stroet, the place of beirtiinlnn; containing six thousand nix hun dred forty-one and one-fourth square feet. Being the eastern half of the parcel or lot of land conveyed by M. W. Smith to E. A. Gourley, the said decedent, by deed dated February ID 1UU7, recorded In the Ki-corder's orHce In and the said county of -Jefferson, In Deed Book Vol. 114, page 11. for the price or consideration of Twelve Hundred i4l2ut)) Dollars, payable as follows: (One Hundred tiioui Dollars htvInK already been paid to the Administrator lu pursuance of u writ ten agreement for the Mile' of aald land, subject to the approval of theOouru; Three hundred (ffOu Dollars upon delivery of deed, mid the remaining Eight Hundred (10) dollars in two equal annual payments,wiih Interna, (.ecured bv bond and mnrtiraKu. at which time, if any exception Is taken, or objection made to granting the order of sale as prayed for, the Court will take action on sala petition. W. N. L'onhad, Attorney for Petitioner. SQUARED ACCOUNTS. Also Won a Reputation and Saved Himself Further Trouble. Press agents, like other individuals, have their troubles, but there Is one In Philadelphia :vbo has fewer of them than the ordinary man. Asked one day how be managed so well to get uloug with everybody, he explained: "Well, I won H reputation. You see, when a press agent Is able to give n man heart disease from which be ac tually dies his troubles cease If persons have a proper regard for their lives. I was the press agent for a German singing I'est. I naturally used the Ger man papers. "There was one editor who hud the Idea that he wasn't geltlug all that was due. Nevertheless he published column after column of type nnd pic tures. "Afterward the malingers of the show received a bill for $820 'for ad vertising.' They were In a rage. "What shall we do?" they demanded. 'Dou't get exclled,' I cautioned 'em. 'I'll fls that all right.' "1 went to the offlce of a friend, and, going, to the type cases, 1 stuck the finest billhead you ever laid eyes on. I printed It In two Inks. It read, 'The Two Continents Engraving Company; John Smith, manager.' Next I wrote tills account. 'To Peter Jacob Sehnild thoisor. Dr., to cuts for German festi val. $S00." 'When Schmldtlielser received the bill he fainted. He revived and sent for me. " 'Fer vot Is It you scharge me for tier cuts vot I could puy fer 40 cents hhlece. yet?" he demanded. "That's nil right, old iuan,-l as sured him. 'You might buy those cuts from anybody else for 40 cents apiece, hut uot of me.' "lie refused to pay the bill, but not long afterward he was stricken with heart disease and died. Ills executors found the bill, with Its balance of $70 In my favor. They asked me what I'd take to settle, nnd 1 told them $50. They paid It cheerfully, and since then I haven't had any trouble." Sim Fran cisco Chronicle. PINEAPPLES. A Time When They 8old For $10 Each In San Francisco. In 1851 pineapples were rare lu San Francisco. One day In that year one of the passengers who had crossed the Isthmus of Dnrlen before leaving Pan ama purchased from one of the na tives of thut place a dozen pineapples for a quarter of a dollar, nnd when be landed In San Francisco he had six left. lie was carrying these from the landing place at the foot of Vallejo street, where there were boat steps at the cud of a twenty foot wharf, which new arrivals npproached by Whitehall boats from the steamers that In those days anchored In the stream 300 yards from shore. The' man was accosted suddenly by a stranger who asked him what be wanted "for that lot of pineapples." ' 'They are not for sale." "But I want them," said the Cali fornia n. "I'll sell you three," said the new ar rival,, who on the voyage had heard that San Francisco people were liberal buyers, and he added, "but they'll cost you $5 each." "Take em," was the curt reply, and the fruit changed owners, the resident passing over a Spanish coin known then as a gold "ounce," worth $16 In trade. Before the new purchaser had mov ed across Battery street, where the transaction had token place, he was accosted by an acquaintance, who ask ed him to let htm have the fruit A dicker followed for two of them, the ticiinalntance paying $10 apiece for them. Later In flip day the first pur chaser was boasting of the rapid man ner by which be had cleared $5 and still had a fine pineapple for supper. San Francisco Call. Protest of the Fat Mar. "My friends." said the fat man plain tively, "moved, I Buppose. by a desire to appear jocose, always comment on my weight wheuever they run across me It Isn't that they note any aliirm f n ir change In the number of pounds 1 curry about, for 1 have been what my labor politely cnlls 'substantial' these u. any years. By the same token I have got so that I don't mind relict t Ions on my size that Is. I'm not particularly sensitive about IL What does Jar me, however. Is the mental vacuity evi denced by the would be humorists. One i omes to think that their linpres tlo'.ts of n person don't extend heyoud his avoirdupois, and the sense of fun which leads them to voice these Im pressions is certainly rather primitive. And,thls Is tiring." the fat man con cluded. New York Press. An Appropriate) Tablet. A l.idy wrote upon u window some verses Intimating her, design of never marrying. A gentleman wrote the fol lowing lines underneath: The lady whose resolve these words be token Wrote them on sines, to show It may be broken. fpis f ITCHING, I! Dl I Q BLEEDING on IU 1 WaJ PROTRUDING II We guarantee to either cure or refund the money to any sufferer from Itching, Blaedlog or Protruding Piles who faith fully and properly uses Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment Rev. T. B. Roberta of 103 Marshall St. Syracuse, N. Y., saye: "For bine year I suffered from Itching and protruding piles which were ao bad that they necessitated my absence from professional duties. 1 used numerous remedies and anderwent one opera tion without relief, but by using Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment I am now permanently cured." 60o a box. All dealers or Dr. A. W. Chaw Msdlcine Co., BuHalo, N. Y. For sale by Stoke & Felcht Drug Co. ONLY NECESSARY TO TREAT THE STOMACH Claim of Central Figure in Recent Contro versy Is Novel. The new theory advanced hjr I T. Cooper relative to the human stom ach has attracted such widespread attention that the public In cities visited by the young man has been Joined by many physicians in a dis cussion of his beliefs and medicines. Mr. Cooper says that human health Is dependent almost entirely upon the stomach. He says that no dis ease can be conquered without first alleviating all stomach disorders. He further Bays that most men and wom en of this generation are half-Blck, owing to degenerate stomachs. And luBtly, he claims that his New Dis covery medicine will rejuvenate the human stomach In 90 days. Cooper has been traveling from one city to another, conducting In each what he calls a campaign of education. For the past year he has met the public In the larger cities of the country, and his success has been phenomenal. Thousands of people have flocked to his headquar ters wherever he has gone, and the sale of his medicine has been beyond anything of the kind over before witnessed. - Possibly the most Interesting fea ture of the attention this young man has attracted is what his army of followers, whom he has converted to tls beliefs through his medicines, have to say on the subject. The fol lowing statements are from two well known residents of Chicago and Bos ton, respectively, and th enthusiasm of these Is characteristic of Cooper's admirers generally. Mrs. H. B. Mack, of 8201 State street, Chicago, says: "I have been suffering for 13 years from a com bination of stomach troubles, catarrn and constipation. I had a gnawing pain In the pit ol my stomach, a sort Decide to Buy XTRAGOOD Clothesl .tt (LYou'll find rio-ht clothes. the rirrhfc nrices. the rio-httrpatmentat store all you can astc. IT Bv rftrht clothes we -u, - - 0 mean better ana more sud stantial boys' garments than the ordinary kind, more real wear for the price we ask. Bv rip;ht clothes also mean XlEA-SofiD. W. If you want quality, appearance, auraDiuty you do insist on naving XiRAoopD. Patronize the store that sells it. V Decide to got it and permit no inducement or influence to change your rninti. be more than with tho service it give. You'll naver buy any $5 up to $12 MILLIRENS II tmnnimnmtmmtmnmmmmmmmmmmmmmn i Closing urn-ail bummer fer I Goods at Less than Cost I i IS Dotted Swiss, 25, now 17c. Dotted Swiss, 20, now 14c. Dotted Swiss, was 20c, now 14c. S Figured Batiste, was 15 and 18c, now 10c. Figured Batiste, 12y2C, now 8c. C . Figured Batiste, 10c, now 6c. t Ladies' Dressing Sacques, 50c, now 39c. j Ladies' Hose 9c. Children's Hose, broken lots 15 and C: 18c, now 10c. S Men's Dress Shirts, 50c, now 35c. Men's Dress Shirts, E $1.00, now 75c. 5 Men's Summer Underwear, 22Jcents. S Men's Pa'nts, 75 cents. " Men's $1.50;Pants for 95c. IS Can't quote prices on all goods, but everything re duced proportionately to prices quoted. s TOCKHOLDEKS MEETING. You are hereby Informed that the annual meet In ot the stockholders of the Surnraer vllle Telephone Company will be heldatthe office of the Company, on Main afreet, in the Borough of Sammervllle, on Wednesday, the 8th day of January, A. D., 1908, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m.,Jor the purpose of elect ing a board of directors for the company for the ensuing year, and for the trannactlon of uch other hunlnem aa may properly come before said meeting. J. K. Buown, 1, 8. Hahmokd, President. Secretary. of a dull pain that I could not quite on- aerstana. i lien there was a auu neaa ache, and my mind seemed to be wandering continually. I could not eat, and 'what little solid food I did eat I could not retain on my stomach. I tried every remedy I could think of, and also tried out a number of patent medicines, but without any apparent result It was through one of my friends that I heard of Cooper's prep aration, and I immediately decided to try some of it. It is two weeks since I took my first dose of it, and I feel like a now woman. The head ache seems to have disappeared, and the pain in my stomach along with it The medicine is worth its weight In gold, and I want to thank Mr. Cooper for what he has done for me." Mr. Edwin P. Morse, of 20 Oakley street, Dorchester, a suburb of Bos ton, says: "For three years I had not a well day. My stomach was In frightful shape; the mere thought of food would nauseate me, and I really had a horror of anything to eat All solid food would cause me extreme Indigestion, bloating and gas on my stomach, and nothing tasted right Some time ago I got some of this Cooper's medicines, about which there is so much talk. ' I actually feel as well and strong as a hoy ever since the first bottle. Every sign of stomach trouble has disappeared, and I have a hearty appetite and eat three square meals; every thing seems to taste good. Anyone who knows what chronic Indigestion is can appreciate what this means to me. I consider this the most remark able medicine I ever heard of." We sell Mr. Cooper's medicines, and find them to be all be claims. Stoke ft Feicht Drug Co. " the this . i - we good ana . You 1! satisfied thing else. ill will I i ssMMWisiii lull 3 3 3 N. HANAU. 1 ubcrlbc tor The -X" Star If you want the New : "" ' t I I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers