To Awaken t he Liver Coated tongue, aching head, billomnmi, indierJlion, constipation alternating with loose ness of the bowels, feelings of depression and ill-temper. These arise from sluggish torpid action ol Use liver. Kelief comes after the use of one of Dr. A. W. Chase's Kiilney anil Liver 1'iMs and cure with a few weeks use of this great i.-gulator of the liver. Wilh the liver right there is nully no dhturbaiu r if tlie digestive syslem or bowels. Thervfoie gt t al the c iiw-ifiruulilehy aw aken ing the li .it to a.ii.ni by use of Dr. A vV, Chase's Kidney nnd l.ivor Pills. Mr. Z. M. Tayiji, r.irt Chester, Md. writes: 'li iv n;; id r. A. W. Chaw's Kidney ttinl Liver V. Is fur n ni nbe.- or y.V5 I consider them the best liver rrjjnlntnf I ever used. I cheerfully recommend them to au one afflicted with headache and other Symplons of a disordered liver." One pill a dose ?s ct-i ; box, at al! ika4-'r,' r I. A W.Chase M -ilitir-C ,HuP:ilo, N. V Dr.A.Wn Chased Kidney and i s wrzi tiU .rails Fir Sale by Stolid & Foleht Drua Co HUGHES & FLEMING. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Main Street. - Reynoldsvllle, Pa. TOO MUCH WATER In ' he wrong place I nearly as tmd as too iiitib in rre rriut pmre. Ann poor piuninina; may he responsible for either condition. You'll not have any such "oiitile If you em ploy us. . . WE'LL FIX VOUR PUJMBINO , - Bo you'll have neither too much nor too little wife. We'll put In 1'oMi the right slaed sup ply and the rtuhf 'z-'rl waste pipes. Avoid ' trouble by having us do It now. C E. HUMPHREY Plumber WINDSOR HOTEL W.T. Hruhaker. Mgr. Midway between Broad Ht. Station and Heading Terminal on Fllliert at. . European I.(KI per d.iy and up. American f !.!W per day and mi. Theonly moderate priced hotel of rep utation and consequence In PHILADFI PHU Zerlfcest Rubber AND Climax Asphalt "TllE HOOFIN09 THAT NlVKR LEAK." Need no paint. Samples, prices, etc., on request. McHenry-Mllthouse nfg. Co. South Bend, Ind. Fob Sai,i bt Reynoldsvllle Hardware Co. Rktnoi.dsviixk, Pa, JjJXECUTOR'3 NOTICE. . - Estato of Steve .losvay, late of Wlnslow Township. Deceased. Notice Is unreky given that letters testa mentary on th estate of Hieve Josvav, late of Wlnslow township, county of Jefferson and state of Pennsylvania deceased, have been granted to the undfrsrgned, to whom all persons Indebted to said e.tate are re quested to make payment, and those having claims or demands will make known the same without delay. James W. Oii.ikspie. Reyno'dsvlllc, Pa., July 20, 1908. Executor- QUPHANS' COURT SALE. Estate of George Strouse, Deceased. nBy virt ue of an order of the Orphans' Court of Jefferson county, there will be exposed to public sale, at Brookvlllo, Pennsylvania, 'i ,ne,SLurt."s';n th0 Ifthday of August, A- .k'.' clock p. m the following described tract of land, situate in the Town ship of Wlnslow, County of Jofferson and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and describ ed as follows, to-wlt: Beginning at a post, corner Jonothan Strouse's land; thence wet eighty-tour and eight-tenth perches to a mall beech; thence by land of the Widow Uathers north one hundred perches to a beech; thence east eighty-four and eight tenth perches to a post corner of Jonothan Strouse s land: thence by said land south one hundred perches to the place of begin ning, containing Bfty acres and allowance of six per cent for roads, etc., being part of a larger tract of land surveyed to Dr. Wm. Catbcart on Warrant No. 349, as aforesaid. HHavIng thereon erected a good dwelling bouse and a good frame barn and other ne cessary outbuildings. This farm Is In a good state of cultivation and has a young orchard, consisting of bear ing apple, peach and cherry trees. A part of said farm Is underlaid with a six foot rein of coal and a country coal bank Is opened on the premises. Terms of sale: One third of the purchase money to be paid at the confirmat ion of the sale by the Court, and the remainder upon delivery of the deed to tne purchaser. - Joseph M. Gathers, . Guardian of Mabel Strouse. JOHW MCMURRAY. r, ... Guardian of Beulah Strouse. Reynoldsvllle, Pa., July Zl 1D08. PASTIMES OF MADMEN. Cunning and Ingenuity Di -played by the Inisns, Rome of the Inventions of (lie Iiihuiib nre of scientific vtlue. A patient 11 1 Vlllt'Julf invented a "imiilfk-utlou ma chine" by combining n bottle, n plunk mill small metallic tubes, to which lie bad fit ted 'fit Meets. Ilnt-lug set up Ills machine, 'bo produced loaves of bread the size of a man's head. The bread wns good, so good that It was decided to make the machine known. One day When It vens In action the doctor sug gested taking n photograph of It. The Inventor watched him as if petrified for a moment: then he fell upon the machine, wrenched It npiltt anil tram tileil It underfoot. The Invention, ns exceedingly useful one, was lost be cause no one bad seen him make It. 11ml no one dares speak of It to him. To allude to it Is to bring on 11 furious flttiick. Most lunatics, no matter Low content ed they may be, generally tdterjsli n furliro lunging to escape. They col lect wax. from the polished Honrs, take the Impressions of locks and make keys from empty sardine boxes, spoon han dles or anything to be found. Dr. Ma rie's nitiseu :t Include a collection of knives of ctrango and tin heard of shapes. Pome of them have bbides made from pieces of glass or slate and set In handles of corset stoels. Objects harmless In themselves become dan gerous weapons through the Ingenuity of madmen. Insane, sculptors are as common as Insane painters. The Insane sculptor hews out course statuettes,, fantastic animals, ferocious little honied anil grimacing devils. An ex-mechiinlc carves all his soup bones. That his old trade Is still In his memory Is shown by tho little screws that he makes out of the smaller pieces of bono. He works nil day nt his senseless and ridiculous task. Another lunatic, who believes he Is tho Incarnation of the soul of Beelzebub, pusses hlsr time curving toy men out of wood. Each pair of his creations nre joined to gether, now nt the necks, now at the shoulders. Helen E. Meyer In Har per's Weekly. NATIONAL CONVENTIONS. They Succeeded the System of Nomi nation by Caucus. Conventions have not always nomi nated our presidents and vice presi dents. For more thnn thirty years presidential candidates were named by a caucus made up of members of the hon so nnd the senate. This system died when In 1824 the caucus Insisted upon by Martin Van Ruren nnd other friends of William II. Crawford of Georgia defeated Crawford, which threw the election Into the house on account of the scnttorlng electoral vote caused by the entrance of Clay. Cal houn, Jackson nnd' John Qtilncy Adams In the race. This fracas elected Adams. The campaign of 1828 In consequence wns somewhat demoralized, and In 1831 the Republicans followed the ex ample the anti-Masonic party hod set the year before nnd met In conven tion In Baltimore to nominate Henry Clay. The Democrats held their first national convention in the same city the following year, nominating Martin Vnn Buren for vice president. The dominating figure of the party, Andrew Jackson, needed no Indorsement of his candidacy for the presidency. The Democrats in 1835 and 1810 nominated Vnn Buren for the presl-, dency In Baltimore, and the Whigs nominated Clay in the same place In 1844, when the Democrats named Polk. Ia 1835 Romulus M. Saunders Intro duced the two-thirds rule to the Demo cratic convention, and It was adopted. Tho customs Installed nt these enrller conventions which succeeded the tyran ny of the caucus chamber have been continued nnd ndded to from time to time, and the conventions today are merely the descendants of those that nomlnnted Clay nnd Vnn . Buren. Charles Wndsworth Camp In Metro politan Magazine. Horizon. A man calls It the horizon where the earth and the sky seem to meet, but a woman's notion of the horizon Is the families she can see moving in from behind her front window curtains. If, further, they hang out their washing In a spirit of candor, they are, of course, all the more so. The horizon Is caused by a number of things, chief among them the gregarious Instinct. Only for this next door would mean as little as tariff revision or pure food or International arbitration. It takes a star or something of that sort to rise above tho horizon, but a very ordinary woman' may feel above It Life. . Th Cult of th Hotel. "Hotel" Is n French word, but a thoroughly British Institution. If Its great hotels . were suppressed London would no longer be London that Is to say, the London of society, the theater, literature, politics, art and fashion. The hotel Is one of the essential factors of London life Milan Corriere Delia Serra. A Comparison. Mrs. Giles (anxiously asking after rector's health) Well, sir, I be glad you says you be well, but there you be one of these "bad doers," as I calls 'em (gle 'em the best o' vlttels, and It don't do 'em no good) there be pigs like that! London Punch. First Necessity. "How would yon define 'crying need? " asked the teacher of the rhetoric class, "A handkerchief," replied the solemn young man with the wicked eye. Chi cago Trlbnne. The great and the little have teed of each other. Shakespeare. GRIDLEY'S l.!AVE. Touching Seen When th Brsva Cap tain Left th Clytnpia. On Hie morning nf tliu battle of Ma nila Hay Captain Uildley was so III that tho little commodore offered to excuse hliu from duty, but gallantly, as is characteristic of the 111:111. he re plied, "Thank yon. Commodore Dewey, but she Is my ship, and I will tight her." And he did. although, figurative ly speaking, he wan a dead man before he went on the bihlge, and days hud strung themselves Into but low weeks when he was ordered home on sick leave, lie came up out of his cabin dressed In civilian clothes and was met by tlie rear admiral, who extended him a most cordial hand. A look of trou bled disappoint "lent flitted across the captain's brow, but vanished when he stepped to the head of the gangway and, looking over, snw, not tin' launch, but n twelve oared cutter manned en tirely by otllcers of the Olympla. There were men In thnt boat who had not pulled a stroke for a quarter of n cen tury. The stars and titrlpes were at the stern and a cnplnln's silken roach whip "t the bow, and when Captain Grldley, beloved alike by ofllcers nnd men, entered the boat It win "I'p oars!" and all Hint, Just ns though they were common sailors that were to row' him over to the Znflro. When he" sat down upon the handsome boat cloth thnt was spread for him he bowed his head, and his hands hid his fnce as First Lieutenant lloese, acting cock swain, ordered: "Shove off! (Jut oursl Give away!" St Nicholas. MOUNT ETNA. Its Wonders s Revealed In Tale of Travelers. Mount lCtnn has furnished more ma-' terltil for travelers' tales than any other mountain on the earth. Aston ished Knglishnicn of a century ago who fell Into the fashionable habit of climbing to Its highest peak and some did so, to I Me amazement of the Slcll bills, even In the dead of winter have left on record In the exuberant bin gunge of their day the emotions that thrilled their soul. "The man who trends Mount Ktiiu," wrote one of these, "Is a man above the world. Every river on tlie Island can be traced from Its mouth to Its sourco. "The characters," the same writer continues, "of nil tlie climates of tlie earth can be detected the frigid close around one, the temperate with Us belt of trees Just underneath and the trop ical nt the base of the mountain, with Its vineyards nnd luxuriant groves The great ocean around, with the is lands of Mpnrl, Pannrl, AllcudI, Strom boll nnd Volcano, with their smoking summits, appears under your feet, and you look down uou the whole of Sicily as upon a map." In addition to nil tlie climates, Etna Is reported to have trees that rival the giants of California, lakes that never thaw, bottomless caverns nnd salable enow that kept many nn ancient bishop well supplied with tithes. All Very "Civil." In certain sections of the country there nre much favored words which are required to do duty with a wide variety of meanings. Such is tho word "smart" among Yankees and up along the Labrador shore the word "civil." The following conversation between two natives was overheard by a traveler: "We are goln' to have lots of dirt to day," said one, glancing nt the sky. "Naw. It'll be civil," replied his companion. "IIoW did you get on with tho cap tain?" "Oh, be got civil to hunting deer by and by. ' When he went out he didn't know nothing, but he got civilized." "Did you go down the Ketchee?" "Nnw. It's too civil for him. He wanted lots of rapids, so we went down the Boomer. Them's about ns civil rapids as I want to see.'V Youth's Companion. me spurting wona. Thi Carlisle Indian football team will play the St. Louis university at St Louis on Thanksgiving day. Sullivan's Punch, famed the country over as tire sire of prize winning blue blooded Boston terriers, Is dead. Shipke, the ' Washington American's third baseman, does clean cut work with his hands. In gathering up ground balls. The 1C5 mile cruising race on Lake Ontario from Hamilton to Chaument for cruising sailboats will be started on Aug. 10. The Boston Nationals wear red caps this year, and it Is Impossible to tell whether Outfielder Beaumont has one on or Is bareheaded. Piles W are so certain that Itching. Bleeding1 and Protruding- Piles can al ways be relieved and ab- Ueolutelr cured by thia ointment that w poaitivelrgiuurantee satis faction or money refunded. to cents, rir A W r.hacft'c box at all dealers or 1 x at all " w 0 dealeraorDr.A.W.Chaee A!ni.M m4 Medicine Co..Bultalo.N.Y. NSIIllIIIIbllb For sale by Stoke & Felcht Drug Co. l A. H. DUNN f PIANO TUNING And repairing of nil kinds. Silver Medal, highest award for general excellence orork. Absolute sat isfaction guaranteed. -Leave or ders at HASKINS' MUSIC STORE a A HUMAN MACHINE. He Wis Able to Correct a Language He Did Not Understand. Wheu Max Muller was preparing hl.i edition of tlie ltigvedn he had, so tho story goes, an Illustration of tlie in stinctive wisdom of the compositor. In providing the manuscript for about 0,000 sheets of print the author nat urally tripped from time to time, v'heuevei' he did trip, theie on bis I oof was tire error queried In a en re nd hand. Surely, he .thought, some unknown scholar In the university must be overlooking his proofs with kindly Interest nnd making tho correc tions for him. Inquiry showed that this wns not tho fact The corrections were the corrections of the man who set up the type. "Did this man, then, know Sanskrit!" Muller usked. Not a bit. of it Use nnd wont enabled hltn to detect the errors lis n hungry child scents a cooking dinner. The discov ery originated through his arm rather than from any intellectual doubt, and thnt arm wns pillule!! This printer had sustained an' acci dent, leaving him with 1111 arm partly paralyzed, and ns this made hltn slow er ivllli his setting his masters turned him on to Sanskrit, with which he had hnd no previous acquaintance. IIo had to learn upward of 300 types for the work, but he learned them and accus tomed, himself to the work. Now. nnny of the letters In Sanskrit cannot follow each other or. If they do, must bo modified. In wrtng Muller some times forgot these' modifications, but they were all mnrked 011 the proof. Muller was so Interested that besought out tlie printer to ask him how he wns ablo to correct a language which he did not understand. The explann 1 tlon was remarkable: "You see, sir. my arm gets Into n regular swing from one compartment of types to , another, nnd there are movements that never occur. So If I suddenly have to tako up types which entail a new movembnt 1 feel It nnd iut a query." What a dog's life tho "nu spellng," or Artemus Ward's, which is the same ' thing, would hnve caused that marvel ous human machine! St. James' Ua tetto. Commoners Not Wanted. No commoner, however distinguished, however great his worldwide fame as scientist, nrtlst or musician, can hope to belong to the German Imperial circle ' unless he Lb first dowered by his em peror with tho magic patent of nobll I lty. No wife or daughter of a great ! millionaire, however honorable the I source of the husband's or father's i wealth, can dream of being presented to the-empress. The Prussian nobility form a caste entirely npnrt from the rest of society, . nnd Berlin, socially speaking, Is composed of many differ ent worlds, none of which mingles with the other. London M. A. P. AUCTION SALE CnUil (iUi PU&i il Thursday, August 20th, 1908 325-327 LONG AVE., DUBOIS, PA.' The best opportunity of your life to buy a Buggy at your own price. Hibner Hoover Hardware Co. will offer their entire stock of Buggies, Surreys, Hacks and Delivery Wagons at Auction on Above Date. 4 rubber tire top buggies. 25 eteel tire top buggies. 2 top slat wagons. 7 steel tire stick runabouts. 4 panel seat runabouts. 1 phaeton. 1 mail wagon. 1 cushion tire open runabout. 2 solid rubber tired runabouts. 1 steel tired Stanhope. 1 rubber tired Stanhope. These jobs are all standard, medium and high grade work in first class condi tion and will be positively sold to the highest bidder, sale to begin at 10 a. m. Terms made known on day of sale. IHR-IIOOVER IIDIVE. CO., DuDOIS, PA. Pittsburg, Summerville & Clarion Railroad Co. Special Train Schedule Account of Grand Harvest Home Picnic and Carnival at NOLAN: PARK August 19, 20, 21, 22, 1908. Supplement to schedule of May IS, 1908. No change on time of regular trains Nog. Mil No. S I'. M 2IHI I Nn. 8 No. I P. M A. M KASl'KK.N HTANDAKl) TIMK Leave Arrive No. S I'. M. No. I A M. 7 ml i 10 II Id 7 Ml 7 M: duil'iii H Ornilonvlllo .. Owmmh 7 01 4 14 1 1 1 IN II 14 11 In II Ti 1 1 2'. II 27 7 m 4 IS 7 to X II. 8 u;i 8 III 8 IV 8 17 8 1 7 I .' 4 2t t m 1 : 7 15 7 17 Ilrusli Kun Jc ... WuDirHon Hf-iiriertton Uiinnr l-'iiirriuin X ilan Piirk Arrive Nolmi Park. . . 4 .'H 4 :h 1 :i7 7 ' i 7 it 7 2 I I'll II :o 4 :i 4 :r 4 4 II V. II H7 II :r.i I 47 I 411 7 Ml 4 ll t 4 II a mi Leave R 171 H ll 4 :i" 4 41 4 II 1 .11 II 11 ,11 41 'll 4- II 5 1 8 2 lolJi-n (PaWiliiuSldlnirl... 1 M 8 21 H 3H1 8 XI Hel(lrli;k A'lon 8 U -': 31 I'. M I I 4H I Ml 2 "I uarrier Humniervllle II 55 8 : A. M. P. V A. M Arrive Nu 277 P. M ft... 275 P. M. Nn Nti. I VIA P. h. K. (CAST 211 27H I from tiiunniRrvlllt. P. M. A M. Leave 8 ft 5 I'! ft it! a ml 12 10 10 5 Hiimnii'rvlllc.., H I'll t 40 9 M 12 24 II 10 II 4- Hrookvtlle ... KcynnKlKvllle. Kiiih Creek UiiIIoIh. .. 1! 5; 30 0 4U t IS II fi7 10 0i I'. M. 1 211 P. M.I 12 tti . M P. M 'Arrive Mo. 274 P. M. No. 20! P. M No. 278 A. M VIA P. K. K. WKfT frjui Hummervllle 20 P. M Leave 8 Kl 13 9 211 9 43 6 12i II 2H ft HT ft 43 S II 8 27 7 41 P. M. 2 Oil 2 23 2 2li 2 m 8 III' Summerville... .. 9 01 9 oil, 9 17 Mnvnort Oiik ttlilxe sr w-tiilelietn. LawHonhnm Ited Bank East llradv a 04 9 44 a 10 (! 10 .17 4 00 P. M '. M A. M Arrive The following additional special through trains will be operatad Thursday, August 20, 1908, stopping at all P. U. R. intermediate stations. See Note 1. Going to Nolan Park. Leave Reynoldsvllle 7.45a. m., Brookvlllo 8.15 a. m., arrive Nolan Park 8.50 a. m. Leave Brookvlllo 1.30 p. m., arriving Nolan Park 2.00 p. m. Leave Brookvlllo 7.00 p. nt., arriving Nolan Park 7.35 p. m. Leave New Bethlehem 9 50 a. ra , arriving Nolan Park 10.45 a. m. Returning from Nolan Park. Leave Nolan Park 5 30 p. m., arriving Brookvlllo ifoo p. m. Leave Nolan Park 10.03 p. ra., arriving Brookville 10.30 p. m., arriving DuBols 11.25 p. m. Note 1. This train will stop at all P., S. & C. R. R. stations between Nolan Park and Summerville. The time of connecting roals Is shown only for the accommodation of the public; this company will not be responsible for errors or changes that may arise. Chas. F. Heidrick, Gen. Pass. AgeDt. Daniel Nolan, Supt. General Office, Clarion, Pa. 1 parcel wagon. 3 open slat wagons. 1 boulevard wagon. 11 open buggies. 3 open Concord buggies. 1 open Burrey. 2 canopy top surreys. 2 extension top surreys. 3 3-seated full platform spring hacks, with top. 1 three-seated full platform spring hack, open. 4 delivery wagons. 1 to (i Inclusive. i 2nd 2nd No. 4 No. 4 No. ft No. ll P. M. P. M. P. M. P. M. i oo iw a oo io i'i 12 M 2 SB 6 51 10 25 I. 52 2 52 S ft! 0 2i I! 4H 2 4H ft 4 10 17 l: 45 2 4 ft 45 10 11 1! 41 2 43 ft 41 10 12 12 40 2 40 ft 40 10 01 12 35 2 35 5 3.'i 10 III 11 33 2 it) ft 31 10 U! 12 81 2 31 g ill 10 Ml 12 31 2 31 5 31 9 111 12 20 ! 2!l ft 2!l V l' 12 2 2 211 ft 211 9 1 1 12 22 2 22 ft 2i 9 07 12 17 2 17 ft 17 9 Itl 12 15 2 15 ft 15 9 110 P. M. P. M. P. M. P. M. No. No. No. 2li! 2 4 2x0 P. M. P. M. P. M. 2 0!) 5 12 8 53 1 55 4 55 8 82 ' 1 28 4 25 7 5-1 1 15 4 10 7 44 12 55 4 03 7 87 P. M. P. M. P. M. No. No. No. 2iil ; 27ft 277 P. M. P. M. P. M. 12 10 S 12 8 54 1 1 50 4 50 8 Si 11 4D 4 42 i ts 11 41 4 31 8 !!7 II 12 4 04 7 57 11 W) 8 52 7 45 10 10 3 27 7 30 A. M. P. M. P. M. No. 2 A. M.I S .t'i II 31 27l 9 23 .. . P . ... V 9 20 9 1" 9 I.". (I in n oh v 9 on! 9 oo Leave Arrive 9 01 li 01 Kl y 8 57 y 8 ft 8 .VI A. M. Leave No. 27H Arrive A. M 8 431 8 8 M 7 5 7 3.'. A. M No. 27(1 A. M Arrive 8 40 S 32 S 20 S 20 Leavel A. M ! , v