Dealers, Attention! DO NOT LAY DOWN THIS PAPER WITHOUT FIRST READING THIS. Four years ago we started in to manufacture high grade macaroni, and we have been kept busy delivering the goods ever since. Twice within the above period we have been compelled to enlarge our factory in order to supply our growing trade, until at present we have the best equipped plant for the manufacture of macaroni, noodles, etc., in this part of the country. We have been urged by our many friends in the trade to manufacture an extra fine brand of macaroni for the fancy grocery trade. We have just added this department to our already large factory and are now in position to supply the trade with a superior article along these lines. This new kind of macaroni we call our "Jeffer son Brand" and comes packed in one pound paper cartons, 24 cartons to the case. We also wish to call your atten tion to our ''Jefferson Brand" Double Egg Noodles, so called on account of us using two eggs to the pound of noodles, whereas other manufacturers use only ono egg to the pound, or at best three eggs to two pounds of noodles. These noodles come in two styles: Broad style, which is termed "Ribbon Noodles," and fine style, which we call "Fcdclina Amatasse." These noodles can be used in a va riety of ways: Prepared the same as macaroni, or with meat broth, or in any style that you use the home made , article. The fine kind can be prepared the same as oat ' meal or any breakfast food and served with sugar and milk, and makes a very appetizing breakfast food. These nood les are packed in the same manner as the macaroni, only there are 20 cartons to the case. We cannot speak too highly of the above brand of noodles and macaroni as they are the result of years of experiment along these lines. Heretofore we have packedouroutputin bulk, which, while our output is easily sold to the foreign trade, did not suit our many friends in the American trade on account of the large sized package. Now is your chance to get the finest article in its line in this or any other country. ALSO . Through our representatives in Italy, we have just se cured an extra fine assortment of pure Olive Oil, we import and pack under the following brands: 'Turity," "Jefferson Brand" and "Mannaro Brand." These goods are second to none in purity and quality. Few American people, out side of the medical profession, know the value of Olive Oil, which is so extensively used by the Italians in this and other countries. Did you ever hear of an Italian having appendi citis? No. Why? Because they use Olive Oil for culinary purposes instead of the heavier animal fats. It is also very -beneficial to the preservation of the gums and teeth. Have you noticed it? In fact it has more soothing and healing qualities than any other food known. It can be used for frying all kinds of food, especially fisli, game, potatoes and ' meats of all kinds, also in dressing all kinds of green stuff, and in making salads. Do not risk your health and life by using a mixture of cotton seed and peanut oil packed and sold as Olive Oil and more often appearing under the name of "Salad Oil." Insist on getting the genuine article from a reliable dealer. All of the goods that are packed and man ufactured by us are guaranteed to conform with the exists ing Pure Food Laws in their strictest sense. Dealers, write us for prices. We can interest you. JEFFERSON MACARONI FACTORY, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Both 'Phones. P. 0. Box 747. E X p o s I T I O N Exposition Day of Sesqui-CenUnnial Sept. 36 The biggest day in the 20 yean of success of the great show. Be ono of the 40,000 visitors. The Place for All AU Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia taking part in the greatest season ever known. The only permanent Exposition in the country. War! War! War! The SPANISH - AMERICAN engagements in all their horror all their realism in the Hippodrome. New! Startling! Model of coal fleet 40 barges. P. R. R. display, showing evo lution of transportation. Armor plate models of battle ships exact reproduction of flagship Conneticut Gallery of Notables. Electric scenic cyclorama "A Day in Japan." Moving pictures Ferris wheel merry-go-round pony track toboggan slide. J MUSIC! Sousa - - -Russian Symphony Orchestra Arthur Pryor's Band Bostonia Women's Orchestra Creatore - - -Damrosch ,. THE WORLD'S BEST Sept 9 to 19 - Sept. 21 to 26 Sept 28 to Oct. 3 Oct. 5 to Oct. 10 Oct. 12 to 17 Oct. 19 to 24 PITTSBURG Exposition Day of Sesqui-Centennial is Sept. 29, not Sept. 28 PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ' MersonCounty Fair BrookvillG, Pa. SEPTEMBER IS TO 13, 1908 Excursion ticks, will be sold September It, 16, 17 and 1ft, Inclusive, good to return until September 19, Inclusive, from Pittsburg, Oil City, Driftwood, Sterling Run, Shef field, Falls Creek and Intermediate stations, at y Reduced Rates (Minimum Rate 25 Cento) J, R. WOOD, GEO. W. BOYD, Passenger Traffic Manager. General Passenger Agent, BIG CROWDS THRONG PITTSBURG EXPOSITION SYMPTOMS OF RABIES. i FISHES' FACES. Good Music, Fine Exhibits and Novel Amusements . The Pittsburg Exposition opened Irs twentieth annual season Wednesday, Snpt. 2, In the presence ot delighted crowds, and It can be safely said that never before In Its history did Mil now famous Industrial exhibition In- eigns fay Which You May Know When a Dog Is Really Mad. j Hydrophobia Is so rare and terrifying , that its symptoms and treatment are little understood. As a matter of fact, the commonly accepted expression of i tnadness In a dog Is often misleading. The real mad dog does not shun wa- I ter, as It is said. On the contrary, mad dogs often rush to the water and drtuk It eagerly, If they are able to swallow. The mad dog does not froth at the mouth. It does not run amuck, snapping at everything In Its path. What, then, are the Indications of the mad dog? To those familiar with a given dog the surest symptom and the' augurnie a season uuuvr mutv ausiii- . - ------- clous circumstances and. Judging from ! one blch should excite closest ntten the laudatory comments heard at every hand, a record-breaking attendance Is expected. The buildings have been re enibellished and redecorated and In their, new dress present a moBt attrac tive appearance while entirely new features lu the way of amusements and many new exhibitors who make their first appearance at the cxpoal- Hon, add novelty and Interest to the j entertulnment. ' The Theodore Thomas lorchestra , was the opening musical al traction and the music hall Is packed every afternoon and evening to hfiar the con certs of this notable organization un der the direction of that talented lead er, Frederick Stock. The Thomas or chestra opened the exposition last year and It received a most enthuslastls welcome upon Its return this season. The programs are diversified and they j Include many new selections while ; some of the old favorites are retained. The Thomas orchestra will be here until Sept. 8, and the remaining con- 1 certs will Include the works of the most noted composers. The electrical display this season Is the most pretentious and Instructive ever given here. All the latest appli ances pertaining to electricity as a commercial and household commodity are practically demonstrated showing the marked progress made by this wonderful power in the past decade, ' and many new Inventions are exhib ited here to the public for the first time. The Carnegie Steel company's mod el of "Fighting Bob" Evans's flagship "Connecticut" created a great deal of In terest and large crowds who were cu rlouB to see this famous battleship. The Hippodrome Is used this season for the presentation of thtf nillitnry spectacle ot the Spanish-American war. This Is a big production put on with historic accuracy and Is attract ing large and delighted audiences. "A Day In Japan" 1b another popu lar amusement, which 1b an electrical cyclorama picturing life In a Japanese city with striking effects. The evolution of railroading during the poet century is a feature that Is attracting a great deal of attention. Afer seeing the old Conestoga wag-! ons, the canal boats, the first engine ' made for the Pennsylvania and com pares them with the palace car trains that whirl across the continent today one gets a good idea of the wonderful advacement in transportation. There are many other Interesting and Instruc tive exhibits which are a source of de light to the visitors. Then there Is the merry-go-round, theatorlum, Ferris wheel and numer ous other amusements that are daily contributing to the entertainment of young and old. The Bhow this season is greater and grander than ever and promises to go down In history as one of the moBt successful ot the exposl Hon. tlon Is a distinct nnd unaccountable change In the dog's disposition, a staid dog becoming excitable nnd a frisky one dull. That condition does not nec essarily menn rabies, but It Is sus picious, and If In nddltlon the dog has trouble In swallowing, as though It seemed to have n heme In Its throat, beware! That dog should be Instantly tied up, because if It be rubles It takes but a day or two for ferocious In stincts to develop. The uiunlHlnknlile evidence, however, of n dog with rnbles Is the sticky, whitish sallvu which covers the teeth and shows on the drawn lips. The eyes glare nnd are red; the dog has paroxysms of run ning fury, during which it barks hoarsely, which alternate with periods of temporary exhaustion. Caspar , Whitney In Outing. The Fascination They Have For One Lover of Nature. Did you ever stop to examine the - expression on the face of a flshr 1 do not mean of some notoriously gro tesque fish, but of Just any plain sen faring fish. 1 confess that the fascina tion for me is the same whether I stand In front of some great collection of little monstrosities like that In the Naples aquarium or whether I sit by my dining room window nnd contem plate the goldfish lu my little boy's glass bowl. People watch the mon keys at the loo and remark bow hu man they are, how sly and crafty the old ones, how cute and playful the young ones. But for steady company give me the fish. How restful they are with their mouthlngs, as regular as If they were governed by a balance wheel. How quiet, too, for not one word of murmured protest or of clint terlng fault finding do they Inflict upon us! How philosophical as tbey bask In the sun the livelong day or seek the occnslonnl shade of the modest sprig of greens which forms the conventional garnishing of their wa tery abode! How easily gratified are their simple tastes! Surely with their good manners, their quiet deportment nnd their stoical bearing goldfish ore the Ideal companions of the mature man. Monkeys nnd dogs nnd kittens mny amuse the children by theTr tricks and antics, but only the grown man can appreciate the solid qualities of the fish's character as written npon bis features. Atlantic Monthly. BORED AND PLUGGED. The Truthful Story of a Ship 8truck by Lightning. i "In Duluth down on -the docks some days ago some fresh waler Ancient Mariners were talking of adventures I on the raging muin," begnh an old steamship man. " 'Captain II.,' said one, 'It seems to me I've heard some where that your vessel was once struck by lightning while sailing, sailing over the bounding main?' " 'Yep, twice,' said Caplalu H. 'Hap pened off Point Aux Bnnpies 'bout fif teen years ago. We were Jngglii' 'long when a thunderstorm overtook us, and the very first flash of lightnin' struck the deck amidships and bored a hole as big as my right leg right down ! through the bottom of the vessel.' 1 '"And she foundered, of course?' j "'No, sir. The wnter begnn rushln' 1 In, and she would have foundered, but there came n second flash, nnd a bolt struck my foreto' gallant mast. It was cut of? near the top, turned bot tom end up, and as It came down It entered the hole and plugged It up as tight as a drum. When we got down to drydock we simply sawed off either end nnd left the plug In the planks.' " Washington nernld. TWO VEKSIUNS. Fatalities. "Yes," said the beauteous young thing, "when 1 asked papa If I might go mountain climbing he took my head off. But 1 had my own way, of course, and finally the crowd got start ed, and you know they made me put on a lot of wraps and things that sim ply suffocated me. 1 And about half way up I slipped and fell over a cliff and broke my neckt Indeed, yes. And when they had lifted and pulled me back on the trail I absolutely died from pain. But before long I was able to go on to the top, but by the time we were almost there I collapsed and sat down, for I could never breathe again. But they made me pull myself together and In time we got to the summit, and there It was so cold I froze to des.th! Oo-ooh! And I was glad, I, can tell you, when we came down at Inst, and as soon as they got me home I went to bed, dead from exhaustion." Independent 8tory ef the Climb as Told by the Tourist and the Guide. "He was touring the Bernese Ober- !... 1 A. II. . 1. .... ... i'T I . 1 inuu. me Bear uuiei m uuimewuiu W!ll P.n.mh., Hi. SVi.nJ. a mountaineer sat in the lmll a glass of j wbe Patrlck McGlnnagan becnme beer before him and bis feet, In their hobnailed mountain boots, extended to- ! ward the Ore. The mountaiileer bad just made an ascent of the Tiger, and he talked like this about It: " 'Well, well, well, a climb Indeed four hours of incessant step cutting a member of the Chicago police force a delegation of his friends burst In upon him while he was at dinner and presented him with a handsome night stick In honor of his popularity and their esteem. Completely bewildered by this unexpected token, the new po- vrfth an ax on an Ice slope as smooth ' nceman nevertheless struggled to his as gloss and as steep as a wall. Look feet nnd stnmmered his appreciation. Ot this buuch of edelweiss. I spied It .Frienda ve haTe upset me wl(j yr on the edge of a dreadful precipice. , kinaeBS ue BaUt flourishing the My guide refused to let me pluck it; nIght gtlck ..onl try an. do me duty aid it was madness. For bis part, he wld thl8 ,utle suillalah, and I hope an' would not risk bis life so foolishly. , thrust thot ivry man her'll live t' feel But at last, what with eloquence and (S infloolnce." an offer of 200 francs, I persuaded htm ' to come along. The advance was awful. I One misstep meant death. But I se- . cured the flower, when suddenly the guide's foot slipped, he fell and began to roll toward the edge. But I thrust my ax firmly into the Ice and, bracing myself, seized the rope that bound us together, and the man was saved.' ' "And at the same time In the hotel kitchen the guide was giving another version of the ascent in words Ilka these: " 'Well, well, what a customerl An other like that chap and I give up tha business. From the start he was faint and dizzy. In fact, wherever any real climbing began we had to carry him like a sack of meal. And meant Re fused as a single penny extra for all oar extra trouble. Last of all, be beg ged for the sprig of eldelwelss I won In my hat and I was fool enough to let him have It' "New York Times. Time to Be Diplomatic - - When a woman shows yon the pic ture of her baby remember that yon will get Into trouble, nine times out of ten, If yon say exactly what yon think. Somervllle Journal. His Idea of Him. Bill Did you go to see that boy actor last night? Jill-Yes. "Did he get n hand?" ''What he onght to have got was a shingle." Yonkers Statesman. The Alphabet. Tho great Pboeuiclan alphabet the parent of every form of European writing and of the scripts of Persia, Arabia and India as well, owes but little to Egypt It Is true that In the construction of their alphabet the Phoenicians made use of certain hier atic characters found In their trade deal ings with Egypt but this fact In no way detracts from the glory of the In vention which belongs to the "Yankees of antiquity." New York American. A Woman's Era. "If I were a man!" Is surely a very unnecessary cry these days. The epoch of the man Is past The twen tieth century Is the era of the wo man. There Is with a few very slight ex ceptions nothing that a woman as a woman cannot do, and do every bit as Well aa If aha were a man. London P, T. O. The Real Oequenoe. r Mrs. Premiere Yon always get a new gown before you go away on a Visit, don't yon? Mrs. Second No. 1 always go away on a visit after Z get a new gown. Woman's Boms Companion. Manners carry tho world for a mo ment, character for all time. Hairs In the Watch. "Well, sir, I bnd to send my watch downtown to have It cleaned out again," said an east side barber the other day. "I have to send my watch to the repair shop about once a month, and there Is absolutely nothing the matter with It, except that It Is full of hairs. I do not understand how tha hairs can get Into the works and be hind the bands and mix up In the mainspring nnd every place as they do In my timepiece. I watched myself one month ns closely as I could, and I swear I never opened the back of It. Yet at the end of the month I unscrew ed the back Ud, nnd It was full of lit tle fine hairs. I always keep It In my pocket when I am cutting hair, but I don't see how any hairs get Into the watch. Yet they must because they are always there." Columbus Dis patch. A New Definition. The class was studying grammar. "Now," said the teacher, "can any one give me a word ending with 'ous,' meaning full of, as In 'dangerous,' full of danger, and 'hazardous,' full of hazard?" There was silence lu the class for a moment. Then a boy sitting In the front row put out his hand. "Well, John," said the teacher, "what Is your word?" "Please, sir," came the reply, " 'pious,' full of pie." Vigorous Youngsters. Lady I am looking for a governess for my children. Manager of Intelligence Office Didn't we supply you with one last week? ' "Yes." "Well, madam, according to her re port you don't need a governess; yon need a Hon tamer." Hie Reasoning. De Tough I want to return this dog to the gent what owns him. I seen bis ad. in the paper. The Lady How did you guess It was a "gent" that put the ad. In? De Tongh 'Cause It said, "No questions asked." London Pick-Me-Up. A Pulling That Hair. "What innkes me really mud," said the woman, "Is to spend mlnntcs. may be hours, trying to get hohi of n white hair which shows up on my head like a dazzling light, yet which Is tnntallzlng ly elusive when I try to catch It and then when I do finally separate It from the brown hair and- give it a vigor ous pult to find -that I have snatched out a good brown hair, after all, and left the white one still shining." New York Press. A New One For Him. "The climate here Is salubrious, Isn't It?" remarked the tourist "Say, friend," replied the native, "Jest write that there word down fur me, will yer? I pit tired o' swearln' at this climate in the same old way. That's a new one." Philadelphia Press. rne Toast or an Irunman. Michael Meyers Shoemaker wrote "Wanderings In Ireland." An old Irishman read a fragment of It that related to the reader's neighborhood. He asked the name of the author. "Mr. Shoemaker, Is It?" be comment ed. "A nice gentleman. 111 go ball. Tls a fine country he chose to travel In too. May the heavens be his bed for choosing it and may every hair In his honor's head be a mold candle to light his soul to glory!" Verlbest Rubber Ahd din-tax Asphalt Meeds no palming. Nothing better made regardless of cost. Made by re liable people, sold by reliable people and backed up by quality. McHenryMlllhouse Dig. Co, South Hend. Ind. Foil Pali bt Reynoldsvllle Hardware Co. URTNor.t'Kvii.t.r, Pa. Radiators Heat Up a Houss at Less Expense Than an old style furnace. They're safe, too, as you ain't worrying about the danger ot escaping gas. Money Invested In good beat-. Ing of a home makes you comfortable, saves coal hills and keeps away sickness. Call at our plumbing "hop and get our estimate. C E. HUMPHREY Plumber ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Estate of Wilder M. Boyle, late oil Wlnslow Township. " Notice Is hereby given that letters of administration on the estate of Wilder M. llovle. deceased, late of Wlnslow townshtn. Jelfenon county, Pa., have been granted to the undersigned, to whom all persons In debted to said estate are requested to make ptiymeni., ana mose Having claims or oe mands will make known the same without delay. L. II. horl.c, Admiolstrator. Keynoldsville, Pa., Aug. 29, UGH. o DQ O w o - O fV I h 1 w -v wr j i a Are you ready ror lit You neou uo you ixnovv uiai ."ISrri? ture's Herbs noaeeseea the erv wi r j ft cream of good refreshing health; and yoa will keow VVItlfAi- Will when you take Nature's Herbs that your ttreogth " SSBtwa v V aa and Tftanty Is lOO per cent stronger and that it en ables you to brace up against the most severe 1 ww -v winter blast. You can't a (ford to go thro' II III rlr I P lr r the cold winter weatnerwitn impure Diooa. shivering with cold and feeling bad, when a O. K. for the most severe cold weather and you will feel good over lu 250 box of Nature's Herbs will flx you up all not time to get yourself ready for the coming winter. Now la the TAKE NATURE'S HERBS For sale at the Stoke ft Felcht Drag Co. store. Keynoldsvllle, Pa., at A. Carlson s store, Prwcottville, Pa., at Joseph Bate son'astore, Kathmet, Pa., and at Eaves. and Long's stor, By kesvule. Pa. and It will stand by you the year around. 1 J