THE PEOPLE WHO ARE PASSING TO AJVD FRO. Mrs. T. H r11z was io Pittsburg last week. Mrs. A " It. Schugera visited in Brook vllle last :-k. Mbw Fl v Siple visited in Brook vilo the pa' 'vl- Mine F.t'm 1 Winslow visited in Brook vllle la-t ...-k. Chart, o P. Sehulue, of Iselln, was a vlsitoi in town lest week. Vrs'L M. Harris has been visiting her parens at, Clearfield tho nast week. Mrs. Cnarlos A. Fye, of DuBoie, spent Suudiiy at home of bor parents In this plat,-.! Miss Mh iie Scott has been visiting her brother, James C. Scott, at Rimers burg the pant week. Mrs. J. J. MoCracken, of Creeksidi . ' Pa., was the guest of Mrs. Fred Stauf fer, the past week. Henry W. Herpel went to Pittsburg Monday ev.-ning to attend the funjral of a brother's child. David Hartman, who spent several months in i his place, returned to Great er Pittsburg last week. John W. Huber, of Morribell, W. Va , is visiting Mrs. W. H. Frederick and other relatives In town. Fred idcEntlre, John Coleman and Frank Kin?, students In State College, were at home the past week on a five day vacation. The Heart Can't Stand Rheumatic Acid Poisoning To Free and Correct the Blood a Uric-0 Treatment is Advised Thorn li great dangor In those sharp, shoot Inn pzir.: i'.--zz- the ehost around the region of of the heart. It means that poisonous uric and rheumatlo acid are there ready to spring and grip tightly the muscles controlling the heart's action. Dont't neglect those warnings, they arc tho clangor signals Nature flashes tT you for help. You must neutralize and drive thoso danserons poisons from the system, or sooner or later tlicy Mil overcome you. T;:oonly true way to cure Rheumatism Is ti elnilt from tho Insldo wlthUrlc-O. Itactswlih marvelous swiftness upon the muscles, kMneys amlhloo'l. Clears out the sand-like deposits lit tho umvrlns, furcns the kidneys to perform those duties for vhlcli thoy wore designed and neu tralizes thu ni-ld within the blood. Your physician will admit that this li the only trite uy to cure Rheumatism permanently, and suouiii know that Urlc-0 Is the one remedy that v ill do it succesifullyand permanently. Uric O U n I'.'Vi. 1 l iken Internally, 8 times daily, and does not c.-njsln any morphia, opium or other so-oal!ed "pain deadenors." It Is good for Ehoiimat'?ra In any form. Sciatica, Muscular, Inflammatory and Articular Rheumatism all yield readily to Crlc-O. Writs the makers of the rxirtciiy and they can tell you of many wonderful cures that Urlc-O has made light tiers In your own town. It sells for J3c and $1.00 the bottle or yon can obtain a trial bottle free by writing to The Smith Drug Co., Syracuse, N. Y. Uric O u sold and personally recom mended in Renoldsvillo by Stoke & Peiobt. HUMAN STOMACH HAS r BECOME DEGENERATE Animals Are Healthier Because of Strong ' Digestive Apparatus. An Interesting Interview was re cently obtained with I T. Cooper, the1 young man whose theory and medi cines have created such a aensation rlnrlne the cast year. Mr. Cooper, In speaking of the re markable success of his medicine, bad 1.11 io Daj VU UJD DUUJWV. 1.1 J 11 17 VI I cine regulates the stomach! That is why It Is successful. The human stom ach today has become degenerate, and Is the cause for moat 111 health. In the horse, the dog, and the wild ani mals generally, you see no nerve ex haustion, no chronic debility. They are not shut up day after day with - practically no exercise, and they are not able to stun; themselves witn food when their bodies have not had enough work to justify it The human race has been doing this for years, and look at the result halt the people are complaining of poor health, not real illness just a half-sick, tired, droopy feeling. They don't really know what Is the matter with them. "I know that all the trouble Is caused by weak, overworked atom acbs. I have proved this with my medicine to many thousands of peo ple in most of the leading cities of this country. I expect to do the same thing in Europe next year. This is the real reason for the demand for my preparation. Among those who hare recently been converted to Cooper's theory is nr. Monroe Brown of 8 Hancock Street, Winchester, Mass. Mr. Brown has this to w.y of Ms experience with-1 Miss Myrtle. Shobert Is in Pittsburg this week MissCurriH Deter visited In Putney ville last week. Miss Mn Williams visited friends in Rirtffwny l9t week. H. N. Wilson is In Pittsburg this w -k on a business trip. O. A. Bildwin and wife were in War ren a duple of days last week. ' a Dr. A. .1. Meek attended a revival meetlnjr in DuBois Friday nk'ht. Blake E Irvin, of Br-nokville, candi date for prothonotary, is in town to-day. Klausp Robinson, of New Kensington, formerly of this place, was in town Monday. Lawynr Raymond E. Brown and wife, of Brook ville, were visitors in town yesterday T T. Millin, of Oliver township, can didate for register and recorder, was In town yesterday. Mrs. Ina Free, of Waterford, Pa., was the guest of Miss Sara Corbett several days last week. E. O. Milliren, of Pittsburg, is spend ing a couple of weeks with his sister, Mrs. J. F. Hlnderliter. Miss Caroline Robinson attended the social given by the Acorn Club Id Du B i ' day night. Mrs. James Hanley is at Curwensville spending a few days with her parents, Rev. and Mrs. J. Booth. Dr. A. H. Bowser was at Walk Chalk, near Klttannlng, yesterday to see his father, who is very ill, Ward Eason, of New Bethlehem, formerly a citizen of Reynold9ville. was a visitor In town Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Oswald, of Du Bois, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Pifer, of Jackson street. Harry E. Darr, of Brook ville, can didate for the nomination for register and recorder, was in town yesterday. Misses "Lillian - Ashman, Elvle Mc Creight and Elate Kroh visited rela tives and friends in DuBois last Satur day. Miss Joan Milliren, student In the Normal school at Clarion, spent Satur day and Sunday at her home in this place. Mrs. Eugene Cochran, of BrookviHe, spent the paBt week with her mother, Mrs. John Benson, In West Reynolds ville, who was badly injured by a fall. Mr. Cochran was here Thursday night. J. O. Johns, merchant tailor, next door to National hotel. ""Yes. I am going to marry Mr. Bul lion." "Why, he is old enough to be your father!" "I know he Is, but unfortunately he doesn't 'seem to care for mother." Louisville Courier-Journal. Black Eyes. ' Miffktns It is said that aggressive, impulsive people usually have black eyes Klffklns That's right If they hmen'l got them at first they get them Inter. Exchange. the new medicine: "For over seven years I suffered with catarrh of tho stomach, and for the past year I waa lame with rheumatism. I attributed this to my stomach trouble, as my cir culation was very poor. What food I ate would turn to gas almost at once. I would have a sensation of bloating and would have to belch frequently to relieve this. My heart also became affected, and I would suddenly become dizzy and have palpitations. I was tired and dull and despondent at all times. I lost a great deal of flesh, and was nervous and depressed. This wentj on for over seven years, although t spent hundreds of dollars trying to) get relief. "When Cooper was In Boston fi heard a good deal about his ideas on stomach trouble. Next, one or tw9 friends told me thut his medicines had greatly helped them. I purchased some of the New Discovery medicines Today I am perfectly well; I sleep like a boy, can eat anything and have no rheumatism or heart trouble. I no longer have any gas on my stomach, and feel as I did yean ago. No ona could be more astonished by these facta than myself. They are remark able, but true. This Is Indeed a won dcrful medicine.' The Cooper preparations have been more widely sold and discussed since being Introduced than anything of the kind ever before sold by druggists. We sell 'them and explain their nature. ' Stoke & Felcht Lrug Co. NEGLECTED BAYBERRIES. Tone Was When the Crop Was Eager ly Harvested. Years ago when thu first frosts had come Connecticut people went out to pick the bunches of bayberrlcs to uinke the pale green wax cumlles which when burning gave out the nronmllc smell of the leaves that the pickers crushed in pulling off. We no longer pick bayberrlcs for Siinpany candles for tho winter time, xcept a few romantic souls who gath er berries enough to make a caudle or two for old ineniorlcx, a few faddists who want to try to make bay berry can dles by some discovery or other in a tungnzine and some stanch old Nciv Engluuders who love to get out in the pastures on a crisp fall day these ore all who gather the buyberric uow. Left to themselves, the clumps of bushes have spread out and iu some cases overrun whole pastures. In some parts of Connecticut the bushes have grown very tall. In Brnuford. on the coast, there ure almost bayberry trees, us many can be found growing along the highways ten feet tall ami some even taller. These bayberrlcs must be very old. You can not help wondering how many crops have been picked off them in years past As early as 171T the town records show that the gathering of bayberrles on the highways and common was for bidden .before Sept. 15. A fine of 10 shillings for each violation was the penalty. It appears that the wax from, the berries was used In making a blacking and a stilve and thut bayberry wax continued an article of-trade in Branford down to the last llfty years. Human nature being about the same one century to another, there was probably In 1717 u jrreiit complaining of people who picked Hie berries "be fore they were half ripe" or "got up mornings before anybody else bad a chance;" hence the regulation mid the tine. But what a breathless, hurried bay berry picking it must have beeu tho morning of Sept. 151 Hartford Con rant DANGEROUS FISH. Ways of the Green Moray of Bermuda and the Devilfish. Wheu one speaks of dangerous Hah the first that come to nil nil are the shark and the octopus. Hut neither of these is really formidable to' fishermen. The shark never attacks a bout and the octopus very rarely. A much worse creature thuu either shark or octopus Is the devilfish a large ray that is common In the warm waters of the Atlantic. This fJsU grows to a weight of a ton uilil a half and, besides formidable teeth. Ms arm ed with a horrible barbed and poisoned spike lu the tall. It has often been known to attack Ihniik. A Ashing party lnti launch succeed ed in harpooning one of these llHh in the bay kuowu as Arniwita Pass, Tex as. The brute towed thein eighteen miles out to sea and very nearly upset (lie launch. It was twenty Uvo Teet ong ond weighed ii.tlOO pounds. -.V very misty cUfciu.:...!' i. tin? gieeu tiioray of Bermuda. This rather re sembles a conger eel. lint I' green In color and savage beyond any lish, that swims. An English marine ollicer. Ash ing off Bermuda a year r two ago, hooked a large specimen and began to pull It In. : Mis negro boutiuaii, his eyes staring with fright begged him wildly io cut .lie line.' The ollicer at lirxt refused, :ml when he saw I lie I'.sli turn oil Itself und with a crunch of saw edged teeth bite a large piece out of Its own body be came to the conclusion that it was not a nice thing to have In a small oat. The swordHsh Is a dangerous rrea Mtro. SwordAsh are caught for the t'like of their oil mi l flesh, especially along the Atlantic coast of the United States. They ure harpooned In the Mime manner in which whitlen imed to he killed. Quiet enough until attack ed, the SwordAsh then seems to go raving mad and Aglits with unmatched ferocity. London Answers. No Recourse. f "John. I think I hear a thief In the dark closet beneath the stairs." "1 don't doubt it ' I have known it was there for some time." "Telephone for the police." "Whnt's the use. You can't arrest a gns mete??"-l-Houston Post Wise men say nothing In dangerous times. Selden. It Stops Itching HEALS THE SKIN. It it became Of. A. W. Qiue'a Ointment pouewa in remarkable degree the ability to top itching and heal law ikii, that it hai be come known the world over aa the most auc ceatful treatment for iuch dUeaiei o( the akin a eczema, and aalt rheum. Any one who it familial with the life o! " Dr. A. W. Chaw, the faraoui Receipt Book author, knowi that lew phyiiciant evef had audi an opportunity of becoming acquainted with the moit effective medical trettmenta, and nothing that the doctor evei pull u name to baa been to marvellously aucceashil aj Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment You can prove thit absolutely la any caae of eczema. Alter the firet lew appUcatioru the wretched, dinging, itching eeniatioae are teUeved, and gradually and naturally the raw ores become smaller and smaller until they entirely disappear. 50 cts. a box. at all dealers 01 Di A.W. Chase Medicine Co. Bufialo,N.Y Mr. Ed. Kenelty, Sr., Dannemora, N. Y., atntea: "I waa troubled with a severe form of eczema, idling so bad I could not sleep, but kept scratching all the time. Am pleated to state thai Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment cured me, aod 1 have hd no recurrence of the troubU. fi'i ,-5. oy btolte 4 Folcht Drug Co. Animals as T'.iey T lnk, Animals na a gt'imil ' lug drink very moderately, n 1 r "r favorite be vcrngo Is water. ; . unit which tltny drink, however. It l.!:-:ely deter mined by the cli:i:-t !?: uC the food they ent. Sheep, rnblilM and hares, for instance, require very little v titer be cause the roots uti'l vc;?;-?tal les which they eat require n laie percentage. C'ntM and dturs. If the foil t'.iey get is sol Id. roquiro a good ilnl: at least one? a day, but most lul-.e much such large qiinntillcs nl ti time that this ex ,;..) . v..y ,y m,f ,,(,,! t 0ftejlpr. It its ctiu p i a lc.:-(t tltnu v. I'.Jiout wn te". but freq: .::;! tly when the fjod they en' ! v Cry the.- T'f ft thirsty that ti- y wl ! face nny ;n rlls to o'ttaln wa te Thciv are on: ;s on record where fit vters h'.vo killed drove:'! of rats V.'.:'.!l came mr li.v !!; io a pool of r ater in a senso'i of drought to quench their thirst. It !s stil l nlsn that when It Is Impossible for Ihe ii lit iret water they will kill each other In order to obtain the blood ns it bevt.-ige. -Philadelphia Press. Conquer That Gourih Don't go around with a mortgage on Tour chest. Every day that von let it remain, the tighter Its grip becomes. The cough becomes more violent and eihauiting: the del icate bronchial passagci get Inflamed under the continual hacking: the lungs become lacerated under the constantly re curring paroxysms. With Flso's Cure thero is a soothing and beallng effect upon the entire respiratory mu coua membrane. It haa stood the teat lor nearly half a century as the one reliable remedy for con sumption, colds and all chest affections. It goes right to the origin of the trouble, removes - the cause and aids nature In restoring healthful con ditions. Fiso's Cure la absolutely free from ob jectionable Ingredients. JJ Its perfect safety, picas- YfTt ant taste and unequalled efficacy make it me laeai remedy for man, woman and child. If you have a cough drive it out today Before It Conquers You N. I DRY GOODS, NOTIONS Closing Out, ENTIRE STOCK OF CLOTHING and DRY GOODS GREAT SAVING IF DRESS GOODS One Dollar Dress Goodn for 79c 85c Dress Goods for 62jc 75c Dress Goods for 42jc 65c Dress Goods for 40c 50c Dress Goods for 39c 35c Dress Goods for 26c 25c Dress Goods for 17c Silk Taffeta that was $1.00, now 82c Silk Taffeta worth 1.25, now 95c Silk Taffeta worth 50c, now 39c Ladies Misses' and Children's Coats to Select from One-Half Off. Ladies' Coats sold for 18.00 and 20.00, , now sell for 9.00 and 10.00 Ladies' Coats that were $15.00 now 7.50 Ladies' Coats were $10 now $5 and 5.50 LadieB' Coats were 7.50 now Ladies' Coats were 5. 50 now Outing worth 10 and 12c, now Men's and Children's Clothing the same reduction. The Old I'lace-At... Ilanau's Hit's in the Bloolh Any form of skin disease denotes poison in the blood some in: purity seeking release. DR. TAYLOR'S GREAT ECZEMA REMEDIES will remove all impurities, and do it quickly. They will positively destroy the germs in the blood that cause ECZEMA, SALT RHEUM, BOILS, BLACKHEADS, PIMPLES Dr. Taylor, the father of these remedies, was one of the most successful specialists in all skin diseases in the United States. NO CURE WE GUARANTEE TO CUBE YOU of any of the affections enumerated above, and in the event of failure we rgree to refund all money received by us for medicine purchased provided the patient has strictly followed our directions. Ask for fre illustrated Booklet. Stoke & Feicht Drug , iiI'?.:Y"i if rf The Shopkeeper Talks You see, Mrs. Brown, wo can't afford to take any chunoes" no oysters. They are either very good or else they ate not fit to eat. If they are sealfbiyt they sro freph und rlpsn. snd be most wholesome food you can buy. No ice or water has . touched thtm, and no prtsei vtttlve Is eve.r ud for them that we guarantee. We refuse to handle any but Sealsbipt oysters because they are the only ones that we know to be -beyond question. Tbey come to us io a white-ename.e J cues, that is SEALED at the oyster beds. The Ice is packed around it ON THE outside. We will not offer to our customers anything but the best, and that means Seslshipt every time. FRANK'S RESTAURANT JOB WORK of all kinds THE I A X A U AND CLOTHING REYNOLDSVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA YOU COME HERE SO 3.75 $3.25 8Jc will go with NO PAY Company, Reynoldsville. promptly done at STAR OFFICE LONG AS IT LASTS. TABLE LINEN Table Linen worth $1. 25 now 90c Table Linen worth 1.00 now 79c ,r Table Linen worth 85c goes for 62 ic Table Linen 50c, in sale for 39c Table Linen worth 40c, now 29c Ladies' Winter Vests and Pants, 25c for 19c Ladies' Vest, was 50c for 39c Children's Vests were 35c, now S5c Children's Vests worth 25 go at a 19c , Ladies' All-wool Vest and Pants $1.00 for 79p Ladies' Vest and Pants were 75c, now 59o Ladies' Skirts in Panama and Broadcloth Ladies' Skirts worth $8.50 for 6.75 Ladies' Skirts worth 6.75 for - 5.00 " " 5.50 for 4.00 " " - 3.75 for 2.75 " " 2.50 for 1.50 UNDERWEAR Lamb's Down Underwear, sold for 90c now 62o Fleece-lined Underwear worth 50 and 60c, now 3 HO v "V.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers