i Free to Rheumatism Sufferers A Fall-rind 75o Bottla of Urie-O, Th Only - Absolute Cor for Rheumatism Ever Discovered 'y'. Write Fop It Today Wo want ortry man or women who auffan trom Bheumatlam and baa lost all faith In reme dies 10 wruo.ua soaay lor an Dsoratery free trial of the famous Smith Freaorlptlon, UrloO, for Rheumatism. Urlo O will aura It and euro II . to atay cured. No faith la required whlla taking this superb remedy. Too take It according to directions, and yon will be cured In spite of yourself and any doubta you may have as to Its . - efficacy. We don't ask you to buy TJrlo-O on faith. We'll buy a large 7Sc bottla for you and make yon a present of it, If you will agree to take It according to directions. We oould not afford to do this If we dldnt bavt all the confidence In the world In Urie-O, and know that after you are cured you would haveno hesitancy about recommending the remedy to all yourf rlends and acquaintances who are suffering - from Rheumatism. This Is the method that bat made TJrlc-0 famous wherever Introduced. The ure of several so-called Rheumatic Incurables In a community means a steady sale of Urlc-0 In that Ttolnlty. Urlo O Is good for Rheumatism and Rheumatism only. It acta unon the blond by driving the urlo and poisonous rheumatic acid from the system. This Is the only way Rheu I .; matlsm can ever be cured and It Is the Urle-0 S way. Most druggists sell Urle-O, but If yon ' want to test It, out out this notice and mall II today with your name and address and the name of your druggist to The Smith Drag Co, Syracuse, N. Y., and they will send yon fult sized Toe bottle free. " Urlo-O 1b sold and personally recom mended In Reynoldsvllle by Stoke & Feicht. TRUSTEE'S SALE Of a Valuable Manufacturing Plant. Bv virtue of authority vested tn nn hv mortgage, or trust deed, from the American Production Company, now Pittsburg Indus trial I ron Works, to the undorslgned as Trustee, dated December 1st, 1005, recorded in me oince ror me recording or deeds In Jef ferson county, on Jan. 23, 1908, In Mortgage Book 8, page 385, and In pursuance of a writ" ten notice or request, accompanied by a bond, of the holders of a majority In value of the bonds outstanding, as In said mortgage $ro vlded, 1 will offer for sale upon the premises by auction or outcry, on Thursday, the 7th day of May, A. I).-, 1905, at 10.00 o'clock a. m., the following real estate, to wit: All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land lying and being situate in the township of Wlnslow. county of Jefferson and state of Pennsylvania, bounded and doscrined as fol lows: Beginning at a post on the north side of the Trout Run branch of the Buffalo, Ro chester and Pittsburg Railroad, twelve foet from the center of the track opposite the point of the switch running into the Ameri can Production Company's building, thence by a ninety degree (S0i curve to the right, twelve feet from the center of said railroad, eliht hundred and seventh-six i") feet to a f ost: thence north twenty-Hve degrees east wo hundred and fifty-six feet (N. 25 degrees E. 256 ft. ) more or less to an iron post, forty eight (48) feot east of a small beech: thence north eighty-six degrees est six hundred and sixty-three feet (N. 86 degrees E. WW ft.) to an Iron post close to a small white oak; thence south four degrees and thirty minutes ast two hundred and ilfty-nlne feet (S. 4 de crees 3) minutes E. 26 ft.) to the place of beginning, and containing Ave and three tenths acres (5.3 A.), more or less; being part of a larger tract of land conveyed to the " Reynoldsvllle Land and Improvement Com pany by the Central Land and Mining Com pany, and conveyed by the Reynoldsvllle Land and Imnrovement Company to the American Production Company by deed dated June lath, 1008. The above described land lies adtacent to Reynolrtsvllle borough, a flourishing place, surrounded by a densely populated district traversed by a net-work of steam and elec tric railways, and has erected thereon one building 78 feet In width by 218 feet In length, with a one Northern Engineering ten ton elec tric crane, traveling the entire length there of, and one Cupola; also one building 05 by 300 feet, with a boiler house attached; also one two story office building with vault, and a one story brick or hollow tile building used for pattern shop. Each of the above described buildings are of tire proof construction throughout, with cement floors, metallic window frames and sash, and cement and metal roofs. The buildings are located along the Trout Run branch of the R. & F. O. R. R , with a private switch running between them. The buildings have the following machin ery, tools and Implements Installed therein, Viz: Tbreesteam boilers and stock, one 17Hx21 Buckeye engine and 200 K. W. generator, two Elr compressors, one steam pump, one Ma nning B. and M. punch and equipment, one Cleveland E. ft F. punch and equipment, one McSberry's 124 Inch squaring shears, one Bliss No. 75 vertical punch and equipment, one Sibley & Ware vertical drill press and equipment, one Snyder St Inch back geared drill press, one Hamilton 18 Inch back geared drill press, one Morgan bolt cutter and dies, one 18 In. x 18 in. lathe, one McSberry's 8 In. by 84 In. bending roll, one II Inch tool grinder two large motors, one small motor, one Brown : iionrman radial anil and equipment, one ! In. tool grinder, one Helles & Jnnns unclA shears, one 5 In. vertical punch, one Reade euearanu nuncn, one Alien as in. uapan riv eter and dies, one Northern Engineering ten ton electric crane, one Wlcpes Bros. 10 In. bending rolls, five steeUlh cranes, one wood jib crane, two air receivers, one supply tank one Mcnherry hand power shears, one McSherry's foot power punch, one Robin Son foot power folder, one Peck and Stone foot power shoars, one McSherry's 98 In. hand power break, three blacksmith s forges, tools and equipment, one. J. V. Openberg flanging . clamp, three hand forges, one Tate & June oil forge, complete equipment of drills, com plete equipment of taps, complete equipment Of small boiler maker's tools, seven pneu- . matlc riveters and dies, three pneumatic motor, five pneumatic chlppers and caulkers and tools, four pneumatic jacks, and consti tute a plant as a whole, ready to be put In operation as a plate works or as a foundry - . .and plate works. The land, buildings, ma chinery, tools and Implements, described and mentioned In and covered by said mortgage, will be sold to the highest bidder, free and discharged from taxes and liens of record. TERMS OF SALE. Thirty-three and one-third per centum In cash when the property Is knocked down, and the balance In two equal annual payments with Interest, to be secured by a bond and mortgage, which shall be a first lien on said property. The purchaser shall have the right to pay the whole ot the purchase pi Ice In Cash If he so desires. If the holder or holders of said bonds, or any of them purchase said property, they shall have the right to apply the par value, or their proportionate share of the proceeds of such sale, with accrued In terest, of the bonds held by them, on said - - purchase money. a. M. McDonald, Trustee. . . A Havana policeman went out the v other morning and suppressed the new revolution, declares the Philadel phia North American. It Is only fair, ; however,' to say that the wives of six of the patriots had refused to take In washing any longer and there was nobody left to finance the cause of liberty. . 6ays the Chicago Tribune: There has long been recognition of the principle that child labor should have ftti own laws and should not be put nipon the same plane as . that of adults. ". - Indian Courage. Catherine Beaulieu, a pupil of the Chllocco Indian school, Oklahoma, had her hand caught In the big steam man gle, and before the machine could be stopped the arm had been dragged in above the elbow. The physician was able to Bave the arm, but in order to facilitate healing it was necessary to graft fifty pieces of skin over the wound. Volunteers were called for, and the doctor reported several scrim mages among the other pupils for the honor of being the first to contribute part of their epidermis. The girl's arm was saved. The Indian's Friend. A Noisy Operation. Mrs. Boorman Wells, one of the English suffragettes, was describing at a dinner in New York a very dis orderly suffragette meeting." "The noise," she said, "can only be likened to the hubbub that I once heard coming from the nursery ot a friend with whom I was taking tea. "Terrified by this infernal turmoil, my friend and I burst into the nursery breathless. The children, In a close group by the window, the baby in- the middle, looked up clamly. . " 'What on earth are you doing?' the mother demanded. "'We've found,' said the oldest boy, 'poor grandma's teeth, and we're filing them down and fitting them on the I aby.' "New York Press. Women In the Schools. President G.-Stanley Hall of Clark VnlverBlty stirred the delegates of the Iowa State Teachers' convention In an address in which he declared that there were too many women teachers in the schools and that the American schools are becoming "ef femlnlzed." There are 1400 teachers attending the convention and nearly three-fourths of them are women. "The time has come," said Presi dent Hall, "for a movement for men's rights. For thirty years we have had 'far for women's rights, and now tlie tendulum has swung too far. This Is in age of over-feminizatlon, especially In the schools. Men should be princi pals, with men under them, so that they will be contradicted once in a while. In the schools now we find men principals. They have only wom en teachers in their schools, and the men are becoming 'sissies.' " Bookbinding a Fine Work. , Of all the fads which the American girl has taken up within the last few years that of bookbinding is the 'most Interesting as well as being for many besides the most worth while. If a girl is possessed of any talent for drawing or designing, bookbinding Is a delightful work, as it calls for all the originality and individuality of which she is capable. Naturally any one at all Interested in the best in lit erature and art will find the work all absorbing, for in no other way is it possible to come into such personal touch with an author as in the binding of his books. From a financial point of view also there is much in favor of learning the art of bookbinding. Many girls, while possessed of a fairly comfortable in come, would still like to feel that should anything dire occur they would be capable of earning a livelihood, and bookbinding is a real and Tecognized profession that once learned could at any time be turned to account. There-J Is really more to be made in getting up a dlasa in bookbinding than In the actual work itself, for a book to be well -bound by hand requires some weeks of steady and patient labor, but for a rare old edition a good price will be paid, and for a handsomely bound collection of the works of a long fa miliar author a most satisfactory sum can always be obtained. '- If it appeals at all, bookbinding is a fascinating occupation and ap a pro fession is assuredly far and . away more interesting than . the average means of earning one's dally bread, and for this very reason has it grown so tremendously popular among girls who, although at present are pos sessed of all that money can buy, nev ertheless fee that they would like to have something upon which to fall back. 1 New Haven Register. Woman's Sphere. ' William H. McCastllne, second di rector Of physical education at Colum bia University, read a paper entitled "College and the Woman." - rWomen are the homemakers of our country," he Bald. "They are re sponsible (or the home, and as far as woman abuses her powers or directs them into the wrong channels Just so far will our country drop back into a lower civilization. "Can you wonder at the many poor apologies for homes that we, have tfhen college girls are being trained In differential calculus and things like that? Woman's greatest function Is Motherhood. It has been stated that 6$ percent of our college girls marry and that 40 percent of them have fam ines, tt that is true they should be trained for that life; they should have a chance to specialize in home build ing. A good many ducators argue tbat courses in domestic science and Qe like should come outside college Hfe. I don't agree. The last two years Qf a girl's college course Bhould prepare her for life, and if 65 percent 5f those girls marry, they need cours- y in home building more than tnejr do alhematlcs. The business of this generation Is to build the . bodies of the next generation." Dr. McCastllne added that tt womea were educated along the proper lines healthier babies would be born, homes would be Improved, the In comes of medical charlatans would be reduced and the markets would be rid of the deleterious "brain building and nerve building and muscle building foods" that flood them now. "Why In my work I have met many mothers who do not appreciate the need of care In tuberculosis mothers whose children are growing up with serious physical defects because they have not learned to know the human body and do not see that those children re quire special care." New York Trib une. Taking a Man's Arm. . An old custom that has entirely passed into oblivion Is that ot a man and girl walking arm and arm in the street. Formerly it was an essential to politeness that pan should offer his arm as soon as the two left the house. Now to do so is called "country," and only when occasion arises that a woman needs a man's protection In the street during the evening Is It necessary for him to offer his arm or permissible for a woman to accept it. He Bhould not feel hurt Bhould it be refused, for many women find it eas ier to walk alone, keeping close to the escort In any crowd such as may gather be fore an entrance to a building or a station the woman should step In front of the man, not try to keep be side him. It is his place then to guard her from any roughness or pres sure from others In a word to make her going easy while he acts as guard. It is the woman's privilege always to bow first to a man, and unless she does so it Is the height of rudeness for him to recognize her. There is no exception .to this custom, for in it lies the woman's right to protect herself from undesirable acquaintances; the theory being that, though Bhe has met the man before, and perhaps even talked with him, she was obliged to do so because ot the situation, and takes the first opportunity of showing him she does not wish to continue the ac quaintance. - When two women meet in the street it is for the older to bow first. The younger must wait for recognition and keep on her way silently if she does not get it. This, however; is an elas tic rule, for the younger woman may always feel that the older has not seen her, and unless the cut is obvi ously meant as a rebuke, may recall herself to the older woman. . Men do not as a rule taken off their hats to each other except when being Introduced hy women. The courtesy then is directed toward the ladles. It is considered good form for a man to remove his hat when bowing to a cler gyman, the tribute being paid to the cloth. Little girls, when greeting an older person, must make a courtesy. This is taught in all good schools, and it is no longer considered enough for chil dren to bow. The courtesy Is repeated when leav ing. Buffalo Courier. Fashion Notes. Silver net or tulle is the pop"'' Choice for evening hats. Tiny caps of metal threads loosely woven are seen among the novelties fof decorative hair dressing. Among the loveliest of the new pins just shown are those having small bunches, of grapes done in dull gold. With costumes of silk or wool, with skirt and waist separate, beltings of heavy silk and one and three-quarter inches wide are worn. A new contrivance for 'perfuming milady's tresses has been discovered in New York. Some women there are wearing flower toques sprayed with their favorite perfume. Velvet brocade ribbon, fully 18 Inches wide, is used on dressy gowns, both high and low neck. This ribbon is sometimes edged with lace and used as a bertha over a chiffon waist Plaited skirts suit the ordinary fig ure better than skirts of plain cut, so for this reason, if for no other, they will continue to be worn this summer. Of course! the clinging circular skirt will be the leader. With tub frocks this season sashes of pale colored ribbon will be much Been. These are youthful-looking, and can be worn on almost any figure It the color ot the sash doesn't form too marked A contrast to the tone of too gown. : To keep dainty bows for linen col lars stiff and fresh looking Is a prob lem confronting many, women. One girl has solved it by wiring her bow at each end with a very small wire, which is Invisible when the bow is held In place with a bar pin. Gilt slippers for evening wear are the newest, things. A tall, striking brunette at a dance the other evening wore a yellow dress of messallne sat in, with gilt slippers, and in her hair was a bunch of gilt grape's. The whole was very attractive. On June 30, 1906, the total single track railway mileage in the United g'ates was 24,363.17 miles or 6262.13 mile more than at the end of the previous year. I To Polish Plate Glass. To polish plate glass and remove slight scratches, rub the surface gent ly, first with a clean pad of fine cot ton wool, and afterward with a similar pad covered with velvet which has been covered with fine rouge. The acquire a polish ot great brilliancy, quite free from ' any scratches. New York Press. A 8ewlng Machine Secret. Take out the screw that holds the foot plate, remove it and you will be surprised at the amount of fluff ac cumulated there. Clean the little grooves and under the whole of the plate with a penknife. The needle must he taken out before the work has begun. You will often find this is the only cause for the machine's run ning hard. New York Press. Bed Shoes. Take any small pieces of outing flannel, old woolen cloth or elder down which you may have and make bed shoes, cutting out like you would stocking feet, only coming quite four Inches above ankle; make double and Interline with sheet wadding or an extra thickness ot cloth, run elastic in. Bind or edge top with wool cro chet and you will take comfort in them. Boston Post. To 8ave Coal In Running a Furnace. Save all your ashes and wot to the consistency of mush. After shaking down, add four or Ave shovelfuls of coal let it burn up freely, then put wet ashes on top; leave lower draft open a bit, also small slide in upper door all the time, but keep cold air damper open and smoke pipe damper shut; It makes a fine fire. Add wet ashes through the day and new coal at night Boston Post. Sand In the Sink Pipe. In washing sandy vegetables such as spinach, etc., use a large pan and drain off the water carefully that the sand may not go down the sink pipe. Even a spoonful of sand will cut and wear a pipe more than gallons ot wa ter. In scouring faucets be careful to keep the scouring grit out of the jjolnts. Even the smallest particles cut away the screw threads In turning many times a day. Boston Post Care, of Umbrellas. After coming In out of the rain let the umbrella down, and stand it on the handle, that It may dry In this posi tion. The water will thus drip from the edges of the frame, and the cover dry uniformly. When placed with the handle up ward, as Is frequently done, the water runs to the top of the umbrella and the moisture is there retained in the lining underneath the ring, causing the silk or fabric with which the frame is covered to become tender and soon rot. . Ordinarily, the top ot an umbrella wears out sooner than any other part of it, and in the majority ot cases may be thus accounted . for. A silk umbrella is much injured by being left open to dry; the silk be comes stretched and stiff and will sooner split thus cared for. When not in use, let the folds hang loose, not fastened down. The creas es are less apt to pllt from such usage. New York Press. Recipes. Jellied Yams. Boil sweet potatoes until done. Place a layer of sliced potatoes in the bottom of a deep dish sprinkled with sugar and dot with butter; continue until dish is full, and fill to about one-half with -milk. Bake in moderate oven until top is well browned. Fig Pudding One teacup each of stoned raisins, chopped figs, and chop suet and one teacup of sweet milk, 2 1-2 teacups of flour, one cup of mo lasses, one teaspoonful each of soda, ginger, cinnamon and nutmeg. Hard sauce: One-fourth cup of butter, one cup of powdered sugar, whites of two eggs. Cream butter and sugar and un beaten writes of eggs. Beat all to gether- until foamy.- Sprinkle with nutmeg. ' Tomato Toast Cook down till thick half a can of tomatoes with a pinch of cloves, half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of cayenne, half an onion, minced fine, and a teaspoonful of minced parsley; have ready buttered toast without crust, and pour this over without straining. Lamb Salad Dice your cold lamb, having it free from fat and sinew. Place some fresh crisp lettuce leaves in the bottom of salad bowl, then put in a layer of lamb. Have a dressing of oil, vinegar, pepper and salt, with a little French mustard, and sprinkle the lamb with It. Strew two or three chopped anchovies over It, then put In a layer of cold boiled potatoes, diced, more dressing, then lamb, and so on, till dish is full, shaping it like a mound. Oarnisb with sliced gherkins and caper. The First National Dank OF REYNOLD8VILLE. x Capital and Surplus $175,000.00 Resources . $550,000.00 OFFICERS I. O. Kim, Vloe-Pres.' J0U H. Zadcbib, Pres. DIRECTORS JpbnH.Kaucber J.O. King John H. Ksuche Benry O. Delble j. B. Every Accommodation Consistent with Careful Banking f THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED BANK IN THE COUNTY The Peoples REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Capital and Surplus $120,000.00. Resources $500,000.00. tUemt-annual Interest allowed and compounded on Barings Accounts from date of deposit, having most liberal withdrawal privilege. J JJrafts and Money Orders on all parte of the world. . i i tQfflcersi W. B. Alexander, President. F. D. 9mlth and August Baul. -. , t dauf. Vice-Presidents. F. K. Alexander, Cashier. F. P. Alexander. Assistant Cashier. a - . tT)lrectors: W.B.Alexander, li. P. Beeler, F. D. Bmlth. D. L. Taylor. August Baldauf, Amos Btrouse, W. O. Murray, Dr. J. O. Bayerfc W. Harry Moore, James H. Bpry and John O'Hare. . OPEN SATURDAY EVENINQS. THE PEOPLES BANK BUILDINQ. ' ' ' V.. 4 Pure Sea Food Sealshlpt Oysters in Sealshipt Carriers Received fresh every morning. FRANK'S RESTAURANT MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat No. t red I M 91 Kye No. 3 7 71 Corn No. 2 yellow, esr M : 97 No. yellow, shelled HI 63 Hlxsd ear K9 67 Oats No. 8 white 51 M No. 8 white i HD iw Flour Winter patent 4 05 6 0) Fancy straight winters 91 4 75 Bay No. 1 Timothy 11 03 15 y) Clorer No. 1 18 00 15 50 Feed No. 1 white mid. ton 7 SO 88 00 Brown middlings., 86 00 87 00 Bran, bulk. 85 90 26 50 Straw Wheat 5J 10 00 Oat DM 10 00 Dairy Products. Butter Elgin oreamery I 81 81 Ohio oreamery 81 84 Fancy country roll IS 80 Cheese Ohio, new 19 17 Mew York, new. It 17 Poultry, Eto. Hens per lb ..$ ' 17 ' 18 Chickens dressed 18 IS Eggs Pa. and Ohio, fresh. IS 81 Frultt and Vegetables. Potatoes Fancy white per bu.... 70 75 Cabbage per ton U 01) 18 09 Onions per barrel 151 8i BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent J 5H S SO Wheat No. 8 red 97 Corn Mixed 71 Ti Eggs 80 81 Butter Ohio creamery 83 40 PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent I li) S71 Wheat No. red 07 Corn No. 2 mixed 71 75 Oats-No. white 44 45 Butter Creamery 81 83 Eggs Pennsylvania firsts 88 41 NEW YORK. Flour Patents... I 11 t 7J Wheat No. 8 red 1 Corn No. ! Oats No. 8 white 51 67 Butter -Creamery 49 81 Kgge State and Pennsylvania.... 811 J LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg, . Cattle. - xtra, 1,450 to 1,60) Ins I 6 SO Prime, 1..W0 to 1,40) lt ( 50 Good, 1,800 to 1.4U0 His 6 35 Tidy, 4,060 to 1,150 lbs 6 00 Common, 700 to 9JJ lbs 6 85 Oxen 4 5) Bulls 8 01 Cows 8 )) 7 00 6 75 6 50 8 6 03 8 0) 5 00 4 81 6 55 63 JO Heifers, 700 to 1, 101. 8 3) Fiesh Cows and Springers Ill Hogs. Prime heavy f ( 50 Prime inedltun weight 6 50 Best heavy Yorknr (30 Oood light Yurkers...., 6 80 Pigs j io Houghs 4 7J Stags 161 6 35 6 96 6 55 6 a 6 80 6 80 4 U Sheep. Prime wether, ollpped I t 50 7 M Good mixed t o 880 r sir mlxod ewes and wethers 6 8) 6 5) Culls and ooinmon 1 0) 8 30 Lambs ( 0) 1300 Calves. Veal calves JO) Til Heavy and thin calves , I it 5 0) E. O. Bobdoeibs, Cashier Daniel Nolan John H. Oorhutt Hammond in H. Oorbe H. Wilson u. National Bank Free from preservatives Free from contamination Free from ice and water Free from air and dirt BUSINESS CARDS. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, Pension Attorney and Real'.Estate Agent. RAYMOND E. BROWN, " attorney at law, Bkookvillk, Pa. G. m. Mcdonald, - ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Real estate agent, patents secured, col lections made promptly. Office In Byndlcate kuildlng, Reynoldsvllle, Pa. gMITH M. MoCREIGHT, " ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real estate agent. Col lections will receive prompt attention. Offloe In the Reynoldsvllle Hardware Co. building, Ualn street Reynoldsvllle, Pa. S - QR. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, ' ' Resident dentist In the Hoover building lialu street. Gentleness In operating. OR. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST, Office on second floor of the First National h&nk hullrllnir Mfttn tttrMtt. ! R. DeVERE kino, DENTIST, office on second floor of the Syndicate b ull4 ' Ing, Main street, Reynoldsvllle, Pa. HENRY PRIESTER UNDERTAKER. Black and white funeral can. Main street. Reynoldsvllle, Pa. D. H. YOUNG, AtHUllIA1 Corner Grant and Flftn its., Reynold. rule. Pa. The advocates of pooling, by the rail ways, argues the Pittsburg Dlspatclj. have tried to make It appear that the only way to escape rebates and fa voritism was to etlfle competition b means of pool, notwithstanding th fact that the most successful pools were those which united In enforcing discriminations. But the supporter) of honest and impartial rates easily showed why the rebate Is not "neces sary to secure traffic which shippers . would move otherwise." SHEETS AND PILJjOW CASES. Frilled and hemstitched sheets and pillow cases are delightful; but have you realized that they do not last as long as the plainer kinds, and that at many laundries they run up the wash ing bills considerably? Linen sheets also do not wear as well as twilled cotton ones. The lat ter are by far the best for children and for delicate or rheumatic persons. Washington Star. f L