The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, May 06, 1908, Image 1

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VOLUME 16.
REYNOLDSVILLE, PKNN'A... WEDNESDAY, MAY X 1908.
MWHEK 62.
WHEN THE EARTH DIES
And When Our Other Planets and
Our Sun Are Also Dead.
STILL THE HEAVENS BLAZE.
Tha Infinite Space Shall Always Ba
Filled With Sunt and Worldi and
8ouls, For In Eternity There Can Ba
Neither Beginning' Nor End.
The earth was dead. The other
plnuota hud died, one after the other.
e suu whs extinct, but the Btnrs
were still twinkling. There shall al
ways be stars and worlds.
Ia the immeasurable eternity time,
which Is essentially relative, Is deter
mined by the movement of each of
these worlds, and In each world It Is
felt according to the personal Sensa
tions of their Inhabitants. Each globe
measures Its proper period of time.
The years of the earth are not those
of Neptune. Neptune's year equals 104
of ours and is no longer In the abso
lute. There exists no proper common
measure of time and eternity.
In the empty space time does not ex
ist. There are no years, no centuries,
but there Is a way of measuring time
upon a revolving globe. Without peri
odical movements one can have no
conception of time whatsoever.
he earth existed no longer; neither
did Us celestial neighbor, Mars, nor
beautiful Venus, nor the gigantic Jupi
ter, nor the strange universe of Sat
urn, its rings gone, nor the slow plan
ets Uranus and Neptune, nor even
the sublime sun, whose rays had for
centuries mode fertile the celestial
countries suspended In Its light
The sun was a black globe, the plan
ets were other black globes, and this
L, In-vlBlhle system continued to course In
te starred Immensity at the bosom of
ue cold darkness of space.
t From the viewpoint of life nil these
rorlds were dead, existed no longer.
They survived their antique nistory as
do the ruins of the dead cities of As
syria, which the archaeologist discov
ers In the desert and revolved dark in
the Invisible and unknown. Every
thing was covered with Ice, 273 degrees
below zero.
No genius, so snge, could have
brought back the days of old when
earth sailed through space bathed In
light, lta beautiful green meadows
Vfwakenlng with the rays of the morn
ing sun, Its rivers flowing like ser
pents through the green fields, its
woods reverberating with the songs of
4 be birds, its forests enveloped in ma'
jestic mystery.
Then all this happiness seemed eter
nal. What has become of the mornings
and evenings, the flowers and the lov-
lers, the harmonies and Joys, the beau-
lies ana tne dreams? Ail nave disap
peared. VThe nurth Is dead, all the planets are
lead, the sun Is extinct The solar
Vsteni gone. Time Itself even annul
led. Time flows Into eternity, but eternity
Vialns, and time revives.
Before the earth existed, during a
whole eternity, there were suns and
worlds, humanities filled with life and
activity as are we today. For millions
and millions of years our earth did not
exist, but the universe was no less
brilliant After our time It will be as
before. Our epoch Is of no impor
tance, t
-Xby'dead and cold earth carried in
yrtSeJi. however, an energy not lost, its
movement around the sun, which en
ergy transformed into heat would suf
fice to melt the whole globe, to reduce
It to yaoor and to begin a new history
for Tt, which, it Is true, would not last
long, for' if this movement aronnd the
sun should suddenly cease the earth
would fall into the sun aul cease to
"xlst It would rush towari it with
er increasing speed and wo :i reach
sixty-five days.
hen the earth is dead, o" r worlds
come. There will ta c' r human-
other Babylonian, o.r Thebe-
her Athenians, o'."or Romes,
'ises, other palaces, other tem-
glorles, other loves, other
heir turn, to ts f'owed by
tn. At i cr
I the future t
Milky Wtj
center of r
Lse formldaL.a r
n, whose er
tome populate 1 !
"t ti far
r aU the
. rzzh to
' i 1 form
, i.&ter of
l worlds
; l'Jign IIt
i rould i:em
v,
b us.
finite space s'-t'.l
h worlds and t'
1 eternity .tall r
tys be
j and
: rarer,
j nor
can be neltT t
Flammt-
'A Matter of "
,1s the age of i
t :i tie
' Trpted
tf rf s
r i
ner speaker.
;t me to nuzz-vt," 1
Wn courteouy,
tithe reporters y
kt last word."!
'friend are'.
French JT; :
SEA AND LAND.
The Way They Meet and Claah and
Finally Harmonize.
In "The Wonderful Adventures of
Nils," translated from the Swedish of
Belnia Lagerlof by . Velma Swanstou
Howard. Is the following pretty de
scription of how seu and land meet:
Vqii see that sen n ml land can meet
In many different ways. In nmuy
places the laud comes down toward
the sea with Hat, tufted meadows, and
the sea uieets the land with flylug
sand, which piles up In minimis and
drifts. It appears as though they both
disliked each other so much that they
only wished to show the poorest they
possessed. Hut It can also happen
that when the land comes toward the
sea It raises u wall of hills lu front of
it as though the sea were something
dangerous. Wheu the land does this,
the sea comes up to it with fiery wrath
and beats and roars and lashes against
the rocks and looks as If It would tear
the land hill to pieces.
But in Bleklnge It Is altogether differ
ent when sea and land meet There
the land breaks Itself up into points
and Islands and Islets, and the sea di
vides itself into fiords and bays and
sounds, and It is perhaps this which
makes it look as if they must meet lu
happiness and harmony.
Tliluk now first and foremost of the
sea! Far out It lies desolate and emp
ty and big and has nothing else to do
but to roll its gray billows. When it
comes toward the land it happens
across the first obstacle. This It imme
diately overpowers, tears away every
thing green and makes it as gray as
itself. Then It meets still another
obstacle. With this it does the same
thing. And still another yes, the
same thing happens to this also. It is
stripped and plundered as If it had
fallen Into robbers' hands. Then the
obstacles come nearer and nearer to
gether, and then the sea must under
stand that the land sends toward It
her littlest children In order to move It
to pity. It also becomes more friendly
the farther In It comes, rolls Its waves
less high, moderates its storms lets
the green things stay In cracks and
crevices, separates Itself Into small
sounds and Inlets and becomes at last
so harmless In the land that little
boats dare venture out upon it It cer
tainly cannot recognize Itself, so mild
and friendly has it grown.
ONE TOUCH OF NATURE.
A Display of Courtesy "In Memory of
Old Virginia."
All the scats were taken in the car
which I entered one morning In early
April. An old colored man sat next the
door. It is not often in these days that
I see that type of black man. I used to
see that kind on the old Virginia plan
tation, where he was "Ung Llge" or
"Ung Sambo" to all the household.
His days were devoted to useful toll
and his eveulngs to bis banjo and the
old plantation melodies that no one
can ever sing again as musically as
they were sung then.
"Take this seat mlstls," he said, ris
ing promptly. "Mlstls" sounded very
"homey" and pleasant to me. It had
been so long since I was "mlstls" to
anybody.
"Thank you, uncle," said I. "Keep
your seat I would Just as lief stand."
"Scuse me, please, mlstls, but 'taln't
fltten fer you ter stan'; you mus' set"
he admonished respectfully.
I took the seat thanking him for his
courtesy. Soon a departing passenger
left a vacancy,
"There Is a seat for you," I said to
the old man.
"Between the ladles, ma'am?" He
hesitated.
"Tes," I said.
He bowed apologetically to right and
left and took the vacant place. Just
before leaving the car I slipped a ail
ver piece Into bis hand, saying, "Un
cle, get you a nice luncheon with this
In memory of old Virginia."
"Thank you, my mlstls," be said,
opening his band to look at the little
gift and then closing It I left the car
with a sunnier feeling In my heart be
cause of the chance meeting, bnt with
no thought that I should ever again
hear of my old Virginian.
That afternoon I received a bunch of
arbutus which had been left for me by
an old colored man "fer the tall lady
with a long blue coat an' white hair
in memory of ole Virginia an' dem old
time days." Lipplncott's Magazine.
A Distinction Without a Difference.
Five-year-old Deborah bad been in
vited to take luncheon at a restaurant
with Miss E.
"Do yon like cocoa r she was asked.
When the answer was "Yes," the
beverage was duly brought, but re
mained untaBted.
At last Miss K. said, "Why don't you
drink your cocoa, Deborah, when 70a
said you wanted It?"
"I didn't say I wanted it, replied
the child politely. "I only said that I
liked It" Woman's Home Companion,
The Wiae Ones.
"Some people don't never seem to
learn nuthiu' as they grow older," re-mp-'
etl the Squedunk sage.
Vorne people don't need ter," re
f ' 3 the Pohlck philosopher. "Some
I ' j 1 ows It all from the start"
I :..e Courier-Journal.
COSTLY MATTRESSES.
The Kind That Are Used on the Big
Plate Glass Wagons.
Probably about ns costly a sort of
mattress as any is one that Is made
not to sleep on at all, hut to spread
on the long, broad table or platform of
the wagons built for carrying pinto
glass.
These mattresses, which ore made of
curled hair, are very thin, scarcely
thicker than n comfortable, and must
be made with tha greatest care to In
sure perfect uniformity of thickness.
A lump anywhere would be likely to
break the plate of glass resting upon
It, and there would be still greater
danger If the weight of two plates of
glass was rested ou the lump at once.
A mattress for a plate glass wagon
costs, according to size, from $00 to
$75. Iu use the corners of smaller
plates carried on It cut into the tick
ing covering, anil sooner or later It has
to be made over. Simply to make over
such a mattress costs from $20 to $25.
Ou the table topped and mattress
covered glass wagons the biggest
plates are carried with confidence and
sofetjr The table is built to remain
absolutely rigid, and the thin but uni
form mattress protects the plate from
Jar.
Before plate glass store fronts bad
come Into common use, when the han
dling of a big plate was counted as a
good deal more of a job than It Is now,
they used to carry - a great pane of
glass lu a sort of frame, which was
put on the wagon with the glass lu It.
At its destluatlon this frame or sup
port was worked carefully across the
sidewalk to the store front, where the
glass wos dislodged from It to be set,
and altogether the settlug of a great
plate of glass was then quite an un
dertaking. Now, with the settlug of such plates
a common dally occurrence and with
men skilled in the handling of them,
they simply carry a big plate out and
lay It on their mattress covered table
topped wagon and carry it to whero
It Is to go and there slide It off, to rest
It for a moment on blocks on the side
walk, and then they pick It up and
carry It to the window front.
Then they run under the lower edge
of the glass lifting straps, by which
men standing inside the window as
well as men standing outside can lift
on It wheu the glass Is put Into place
In the window frame. There again It
Is raised on blocks until the straps can
be withdrawn, and then the blocks are
taken out and the glass secured In
place, all this being done with great
care, but still with comparative ease
and quickness and with certainty, aud
In these times great panes of glass
are thus moved and set on ail but the
windiest days. Cleveland Plain Dealer.
DOG INTELLIGENCE.
The Clever "Malamutes" That Carry
the Mails In Alaska.
The Eskimo begins to train his dog
for sledge work before It is a month
old. One of the most Interesting fea
tures of Eskimo villages are puppies
tied to the pole of a tent They pull
on the rope with all their puppy
Btrengtb In the effort to break away
and Join In the frolics of their elders.
Not until a dog bred for mall service
Is one year old is It put In training for
the trail. It begins by running ten
miles with the team; then it Is dropped
out Next day it runs the same dis
tance. Gradually the distance Is In
creased until It reaches Its fifteenth
month of life, when It becomes part of
the regular service. The life of a mail
dog Is from three to four years. No
greater punishment can be Inflicted
than to lay a dog off from service.
When unruly they are often threat
ened with a lay-off, and with almost
human Intelligence they seem to un
derstand the disgrace It Implies In the
eyes of their fellow workers on the
trail. All fight to bu leaders. A con
stant spur to an uuambitlous dog Is
the "outsider," who will quickly take
away the leadership not only In the
mail service, but la teams maintained
chiefly for the pleasure of the sport
The Intelligence of the malamnte Is re
markable, Its scent wonderful, Its In
stinct, as a rule, unerring.
Some dogs are better trail followers
than others, as some are better lead
ers. In a blizzard the beat of them
lose the trail, but Invariably find It
When on the trail they never eat bnt
once a day, then at the end of a Jour
ney. After feeding, like weary chil
dren, they fall asleep and are never
quarrelsome. It takes on an average
twenty pounds of food a day for a
team of eleven dogs on a bard route
LIda Rose McCabe In Et Nicholas.
Natural!.
Towne Sleep well?
Stnbbs Like a top never lose a
wink.
"Great Scott I What do yon taker
"An alarm clock to my room and
then set the alarm for half an hour
after I ro to bed. As soon as It rings
I naturally roll over and go to sleep P
PIck-Ue-Up.
A Good Talker.
"They say her conversational pow
ers are Immense."
"Is t-at so?"
"Tes, sir. They tell me that girl once
talked clear through 'Parsifal.' "
Lonisvi:: Courier-Journal
HOLLAND MUSTARD.
Some of the Virtues Ascribed to It and
One Way to Make It.
Hollanders use enormous quantities
of mustard and thrive on the condi
ment. There is a small spot In Overys
sel. I think it Is near Uoor, where the
land slopes gently down to the river
Ijsel and Is n brown gray clay. This Is
fushioned Into the cutest little Jugs
you ever saw, holding about a pint
eurh, and the genuine Dutch mustard,
made only In that pocket borough, ac
cording to n sei-ret process handed
down for many general Ions, Is hermet
ically sealed therein. It will keep for
(cars and Is ns delicious as the finest
confection. It Is butter, cheese and
condiment to the Hollanders who can
ulford It And there Is uo other place
on earth where that mustard can he
bought
You might ask, "Why do the Hol
landers eat so much mustard?" The
answer Is: The Holland mustard is a
most delightful stomach stimulant. "It
makes the food slide down." It cures
the worst cases of dyspepsia. It keeps
the liver In line tdinpe. It Is an anti
dote for the most deadly poison cor
rosive sublimate. It Is lu large doses
a non-nnusentlng emetic. It Is the only
counterlrrltnnt handed down to us by
our grandmothers the mustard plas
ter. The Dutch girls use It sparingly
on their velvet checks to give a rosy
complexion. When a person Is down
and nearly out a drink made of pure
mustard and oil will fetch htm around.
A mustard "stoop" Is a certain cure
for catarrh In the nasal cavity.
Here Is one Dutch method of pre
paring mustard for the table: Mix
equal portions of black and white
seeds and grind to a flue powder. Boll
this lu the best vinegar till thoroughly
mixed. Orate some fresh horseradish,
squeeze out the Juice and add to the
mustard. Then 1 put In n little salt, a
little sugar, a little turmeric, a little
fenugreek and a little white hotiey.
Yon will eat this on your bread, cake,
pie, battercakes and waffles, your
meats, fish, game and poultry. New
York Press.
PRESENCE OF MIND.
A Madhouse Doctor's Experience With
His Crazy Cooks.
A celebrated Scotch physician tells a
story of a madhouse doctor whose
presence of mind alone saved his life:
"A great friend of mine was for u
Considerable time the medical superin
tendent of 11 lunatic asylum near Glas
gow. "One night In making hla customary
rounds he had occasion to visit the pa
tients In the I lli hi'ii. who were
paring the dlii'ier. Ther. v. ere revcu
of them, all big. sdml, .Vilows,
were believed fo bp harmless. T!i
keeper only looked In upon them uov,
and again, feeling (hat his cousin n;
presence was untjecmsnry.
"The doctor unlocked the lrou barred
door of the kitchen and went In
among the lunatics.
"There were five large boilers r-n
talnlng scalding water ready for mak
ing the day's dinner for the patients
"One of the lunatics pointed ut :':
boilers full of hot water and. Joying
his band upon the doctor's shoulder,
said, 'Doctor, you'll make a fine pot
of broth.' And the words bad no soon
er been uttered than the other six mad
men shouted . In a voice of delight
'Just the thing,' and, seizing the doc
tor, were In the very act of putting
him Into oue of the large boilers of
scalding water when the doctor bad
tho presence of mind to say, but not a
second too soon:
" 'Capital brothl But It' would taste
better If I took my clothes off.'
"The madmen, with a yell of delight,
said 'Yes,' and the doctor asked them
to wait a moment while be went aud
took his clothes off. But as soon as be
got out of the kitchen he turned the
key In the door and ordered the keep
er to see to the lunatics being put un
der restraint.
"The doctor's presence of mind saved
him, It Is true, from a terrible death,
but be died shortly after raving mad.
The experience bad destroyed his rea
son." Origin of the Postal Card.
In 1S69, while Professor Emanuel
Herrmann of Vienna was seeking a
vast amount of information by corre
spondence for bis notable book, "The
Qnlde to the Study of National Econ
omy," the thought occurred to him
that many advantages wonld result
from the adoption of a means of cor
respondence cheaper than the sealed let
ter. On Jan. 20 he went before the
Austrian post director with his Idea,
an open, stamped card, and his sugges
tion was almost Immediately adopted.
Within a month the Austrian postal
authorities printed and sold 1,000,000
postal cards and thus established this
indispensable means of communication.
Navy Is Never Dene.
A navy, like a railroad. Is never
done. There never comes the grateful
moment when the work can be said to
be finished and the sole task left to be
discharged la that of operation. As the
roadbed, track, equipment of a rail
road must be constantly maintained
and Improved, so If there Is to be any
navy at all equipment must be con
stantly improved and brought up to
date, even under- the policy ft "re
Dlacament and reoalr." -fT' "' ' 'Nr
A TRICK 0FJTHE TRADE.
Bear This In Mind When You Pur
chase Art Treasures Abroad.
A warning to picture buyers that
was published in Paris by tho versa
tile and fiery Frenchman, M. Hoche
fort, may well be laid to heart by
wealthy Americans and others who are
disposed to purchase works of art on
their face value aud without challeng
ing the credentials that ore lavishly
paraded. It Is of course the picture
dealers In Taris who need to bo spe
cially watched, and M. Rochefort tells
a good story In Illustration of the care
that should be used. A customer hud
bought nn authentic picture by an old
moster In nn excellent stato of preser
vation and expressed bis Intention of
taking It with him. The dealer, on the
other band, insisted strongly on send
ing It borne by one of his employees.
"If you nre afraid that we will
change the picture, you have ouly got
to write your name on the back," said
the shopman.
But the customer had his way. When
he reached home, he undid his pur
chase and discovered that a copy of
the original canvas had been nnlled
behind the genuine picture, so that If
the customer had placed his signature
on the back of the picture he would
have written It on the copy. The deal
er would have maintained that that
was the picture he had bought, and
the original would have remained In
the possession of the dealer. Argonaut.
TOO STRONG A BLUFF.
The Boy Meant Well, but Carried His
Instructions Too Far.
The proprietor of one of New York's
fashionable hotels was talking about
the crush that restaurants experience
on New Year's eve, Washington's
birthday and other holidays. "But I
must not boast," said he. "It is bad
luck. A grocer in my boyhood told
me that Tho grocer said that ho had
once engaged a new boy and had ex
horted this boy always to give custom
ers the Impression that they were very
busy.
"'Whether we are actuolly busy or
not, say we are busy,' the grocer said.
'Tell people we are, for they like to
deal with brisk, go ahead firms that
do a large trade.'
"Well, an hour or so later a brough
am drove up, and the rich judge's wife
entered. She did not stay long. The
boy looked after hor. And on her de
parture the grocer said to the boy:
"'Did Mrs. Judgo Brown leave a.
very large order, James?'
'"She was goln' to,' said the boy.
'She hod a list as long as yer arm.
But I looked mad and told ber we was
so busy I hardly seed how I could
stop to tend to ber, so she said, beln'
as she was In a hurry, she'd just go
next door.' "Exchange.
The Art of Saint Gaudena.
His angels and caryatids are not clas
sical goddesses, but modern women,
lovely, but with a personal and par
ticular loveliness, not insisted upon,
but delicately suggested. And It Is
not the personality of the model who
chanced to pose for them, but an In
vented personality, the expression of
the nobility, the sweetness and the
pure mlndedness of their creator. And
in such a figure as that of the Adams
memorial In Bock Creek cemetery In
Washington his Imaginative power
reaches to a degree of impresslveness
almost nnequalcd in modern art One
knows o nothing since the tombs of
the Medici that fills one with the same
hushed awe as this shrouded, hooded,
deeply brooding figure, rigid with con
templation, still with an eternal still
ness, her soul rapt from her body on
some distant quest Is she Nirvana?
Is she the peace of Ood? ' She has
been given many names. Her maker
would give her none. Her meaning
Is mystery. She Is" the everlasting
enigma. Kenyon Cox In Atlantic.
Fishing With Forty Foot Rode.
In sea fishing at Blarrlta, France,
some remarkably long and heavy rods
are employed. We think a twenty foot
salmon rod or roach pole Is a pretty
good length, but our friends at Biarritz
use rods over forty feet In length. In
fishing from the walk at the lighthouse
the rods are balanced on the railing by
means of a wood rest fitting the Iron
bars. A line about the length of the
rod Is used, three or four hooks and a
light sinker. At La Polnte Plate rods
of lesser length and weight are used,
but even these are not featherweights
by any means. Seels, according to
VIcomte Henri de France, are known
to these sea anglers, but are seldom
used. London Fishing Gazette.
Wrong Interpretation.
"I declare," remarked Ber. Mr. Good
ley, "I never really knew what profan
ity was until I met Mr. Tuff."
Tes," put In Dnmley. "Ain't he ag
gravate', thought I don't blame yon
a bit, for he'd make a saint swear."
Philadelphia Press.
Speaker of the House.
BInks Very few women hare any
knowledge of parliamentary law. Jinks
Ton should hear my wife. She has
been speaker of the house for the test
twelve years. Nsw York press.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Properly Charges in Jtffersoi County
Put Upon Record.
Frank E. Bussard to W. E Stormer,
for one half Interest In 20 acres 9
perches In Wlnslow township, $1,250.
April 6, 1908.
Frank P. Sackett to Robert B. Horn,
for 16 34 acres in Wlnlow township.
$1,900. April 15, 190H.
F. S. Douthlt to S. K. D .uthit, et.
al.. for 100 acres In Winalow township.
$500. January SO, 1908.
Frank Slraitwell to W. L Lingen
felter, for 100 acres in McCalmont
township. $1 00,- April 7, IWiS.
J. L. Boardman to Joseph It. Laver
ick, for 10 acres In Winslow township.
$400. April 22, 1908.
John Extrom to George K. Depp, for
lot in Big Run. $0.00. January 31,
1908.
Home Building & Loan Association
to Leon H. Hoffman, for lot In Mo
Calmont township. $1.00. April 11,
1908.
Leon H. Huffman to H. R. Martin,
for lot in McCalmont township, $150.
April 22, 1908.
Reynoldsville BulldiDg & Loan As
sociation to Charles C. Herpel, for lot
In West Reynoldsyllle. $1,800. April
10, 1908.
William J.' Morrison to Maurice M.
Raybuck, for 92.4 acres in Washington
township. $2,000. April 11, 1998.
Graduated with Honor.
Albert J. Feicht, brother of C. M.
Feicht, of this place, on Tuesday was
graduated from the Pittsburg College
of Pharmacy. Mr. Feicht took first
honors in a class of about 150, and bis
closest rival was Mrs. Pearl J. Davis, of
Pittsburg. Although a Reynoldsville
boy, Mr. Feioht'g honors will be good
news to bis many friends in Punxsu
tawney, where he has been assooiated
with bU brother. He will take the ex
aminations before the state board May
24, and bis high standing In the Pitts
burg college loaves no doubt of his suo
eess. Punxsutawney Spirit. Albert
Feicht is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter
Feioht, of this place.
Lace Curtains.
With each pair of lace curtains ooat
Ing one dollar or more we give
white oak or mahogany poles free,
Gillespies.
. 1 - t
See If you can't get your piano tuned
for nothing. Hustle down with your
order as soon after twelve o'clock as
you can Wednesday, as the first one
will be tuned for nothing. John Strauss.
Come to Adam's and have a fit.
Dry goods of all kinds at Horwitz' at
low prices.
Come In Thursday evening and see
the bargains we have to offer you In
our After-Supper Sale. Blng-Stoke Co.
'Tan and black oxfords for children
will be out 10 per 06nt Thursday, Fri
day and Saturday at Nolan's.
DR. A. W. CHASE'S OH ft
CATARRH POWDER &Dfi
la sent direct to the dimmed parts by the
improved Blower, ueeia the
oleera, clears the air punaffee,
stops dropping in the throat and
permanently cures Catarrh and
Hav Fever. Nn harmful dmmi.
26c blower free; all dealers or Dr. A.
f. Chase Medicine Co., Buffalo, N.Y.
For sale by Stoke & Feicht Drug Co.'
JJUGHES & FLEMING.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS.
Main Street. Reynoldsville, Pa.
"ubatcrlbe for
The Star
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If you have anything to sell, try
oar Want Column.
WINDSOR HOTEL
W. T. Bruhaker, Mgr.
Midway between Broad St. station and
Beading Terminal on Filbert 16.
Booms 11.00 per day and up.
The only moderate priced hptel at rep
utation and consequence In
PHILADELPHIA