The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, April 28, 1909, Image 8

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    HE READ HIS MAN.
Lincoln's Rebuke to Visitor Who
Would Not Meet His Gare. -
As I cnmo up to the railing In front
of tho president ho wns reading a pa
per that had Just been presented to
him by a man who sat in the chair
opposite him and who seemed by his
restlessness and unsteady yes to be
of a nervous disposition or under great
excitement.
Mr. Lincoln, still holding the paper
tip and without movement of any kind,
paused and, raising his eyes, looked
for a long time at this man's face and
seemed to be looking down Into his
very soul. Then, resuming his reading
for a few moments, he again paused
and cascthe same piercing look upon
his visitor.
Suddenly, without warning, he drop
ped the paper, and, stretching out his
long arm, he pointed his finger directly
In the face of his vis-a-vis and said,
"What's the matter with you?"
The man stammered and finally re
plied. ;'Nothlng."
"Yes, there Is," said Lincoln. "You
can't look mo In the face! You have
not looked me in the face since you
sat there! Even now you are looking
out that window and cannot look me
In the eye!"
Then, flinging the paper In the man's
lap, ho cried: "Take It back! There Is
something wrong about this! I will
have nothing to do with It!" And the
discomfited Individual retired. T. B.
Bancroft in McClure's Magazine.
ORIENTAL PARAGONS.
Japan's Four and Twenty Models of
Filial Piety.
Filial piety, as Is well known, is the
special virtue of China and Japan.
From It springs loyalty to the emperor,
who Is regarded ns "the father and
mother of his people." There are no
greater favorites with the Japanese
than the,, "four and twenty paragons
of filial piety," whose acts of virtue
are the subjects of Chinese legend.
One of the paragons had a cruel
stepmother, who was very fond of
fish. Never repining at her cruel treat
ment of him. he lay down on the fro
on surface of a lake. The warmth of
bis body melted a hole In the Ice, at
which two carp came up to breathe.
These he caught and took home to his
stepmother.
Another paragon, who was of the
female sex, clung to the Jaws of a ti
ger that was about to devour her fa
ther until the latter escaped.
Tho drollest of all these stories Is
that of RorasbL This paragon, though j
seventy years old, used to dress In ba- ;
by's clothes and crawl about on the '
floor, his object being to delude his I
parents, who were really over ninety j
years of age. Into the ldeahat they 1
could not be so very old. after all, as 1
they had such an exceedingly Infantile
son. Sunday Magazine.
Caught Them All Around.
A Moslem ruler spoke to his people
one Friday from the pulpit in the mar
ket place.
"People, what shall 1 preach to you
about today?" "We do not know,"
they replied. "Well, If you don't know
I shall not tell you." And down he
came from the pulpit There was no
sermon that Sabbath.
The next week the old Inquiry was
made, and the people rejoined, "We
know." When the royal preacher said,
"If you know you do not need me to
tell you." And again an abrupt close
to the services. .
The third week the people were more
wary and replied, "Some of us know,
and some do not know." And now
they expected to trap the man, but he
was wiser than they thought. "Let
those who know tell those who do not
know," came his utterance, and the
people were trapped instead. Boston
Post. -
A Rat's Tail.
A rat's In II Is a wonderful" thing.
The great naturalist Cuvlcr says that
there are more muscles In this curious
appendage than are to be found In that
part of the human anatomy which Is
most admired for Us ingenious struc
turenamely, the hand. To the rat In
fact. Its tall serves as a sort of hand,
by means of which the animal Is en
abled to crawl along narrow ledges or
other difficult passages, using It to bal
ance with or to gain a hold. It Is pre
hensile, like the tails qf some mon
keys. By means of It the little beast
can Jump up heights otherwise Inac
cessible, employing It as a projectile
spring.
v
Hurt Worse Than the Razor.
The Barber You've got a nasty, deep
lot of crow's feet, sir, and them lines
runnln' down from the corners of the
.mouth Is somethln' fierce. A mas
sage The Patient (fiercely) You're
got a tump like a camel and a chest
like a doughnut, and I don't believe,
iwlth legs like those, you could stop an
elephant up an alley, let alone a pig.
But, hang It, man, do you want to be
reminded of it every time yon get a
Shave? New Orleans Times-Democrat
Evils' of Tobaooo.
An Illustration of the evils resulting
from the use of tobacco Is found In the
life of a' Georgia man of eighty-two
years who has chewed since he was
eleven and Is now the father of twenty-five
children. Oat out tobacco,
young man. Olio (Ala.) Free Press.
Willing te Try It
"A fool and his money are soon part
ed," quoted the pessimist
"Yes," rejoined the optimist "but ltf
worth while being a fool to hare the
money to part with." Chicago News.
v Family Woectsfioe.
Kearly every family picks the wrong
member for the fool Life.
Somewhat Puxzling.
It is not at nil surprising that the
American vernacular should some
times prove a little too much for tho
Englishman. A cane In point wns that
of n visitor from London who came
to Now York lust summer and was
taken by bis host to see one of the
league baseball games at the Polo
grounds. The gnuie had progressed os
far as the third Inning without any
thing In particular happening, when
suddenly one of the Giants pounded
out a three bagger that set everybody
howling with Joy.
"That was a bird!" ejaculated the
Englishman's host after tho excite
ment bad subsided.
A moment later a foul tip sent the
ball flying back to the grand stand.
"And what do you call that?" queried
the Englishman.
. "That's a foul," said his host.
"Ah," returned the Englishman, "a
fowl, eh? Well, It seems to, me that
the language f baseball Is most ex
traordinary. A fowl Is a bird and a
bird Is a fowl, and yet yon use these
terms to describe two plays that seem
to me to be dlnmetrlcally opposed to
each other. Do you call that logical?"
The Englishman Is still trying to
think it out Harper's Weekly.
England's Generals.
There has not been an English gen
eral since Marlborough. Wellington
was born at Dangan castle, Meath, of
an old Irish family called Wesley and
christened In Dublin. Wolfe was born
at Fernennx abbey, Klldare, and chris
tened at Westerham nearly In the
same case as tho Brontes CBrunty).
His grandfather defended Limerick
against William III.
Sir John Moore and the Naplers were
Scotchmen, and so was Abercromble
(Egypt); so1 were Napier of Magdala.
Crawford and Clyde. Wolseley. Rob
erts and Kitchener are Irish; so was
Gough. The generals and statesmen
who saved India to Great Britain Were
Nelll, Nicholson, tho two Lawrences
(Irish), Edwards fWelsh) and Rose
(Scotch).
I know of Wolfe because my great
grandfather served under hltu at Que
bec. Ills Irish birth was corroborat
ed to me by Captain Dunne, once well
known In literary circles of a Queens
county family. I don't know whether
Scotchmen like. to be called English,
but certainly Irishmen do not Lon
don News.
A Queer Battle.
A traveler In South Africa tells of a
singular combat that he witnessed. He
was musing one morning with his
eyes on the ground when he noticed
a caterpillar crawling along at a rapid
pace, followed by hundreds of small
ants. Being quicker in their move
ments, the ants would catch up with
the caterpillar, and one would mount
his back and bite him. Pausing, the
caterpillar would turn his head and
bite the ant and kill his tormentor.
After slaughtering a dozen or more of
his persecutors the caterpillar showed
signs of fatigue. The ants made a
combined attack. Betaking himself to
a stalk of grass, the caterpillar climbed
up tall first, followed by the ants. As
one approached lie seized It In his
Jaws and threw It off the stalk. The
ants, seeing the caterpillar had too
strong a position for them to over
come, resorted to strategy. They be
gan sawing through the grass stalk.
In a few moments the stalk fell, and
hundreds of ants pounced upon the
caterpillar. It was killed at once.
' Taking the Step.
It happened while a marriage was
being celebrated. The bridegroom did
not have the usual happy, bashful
look. Instead he seemed to be profound
ly unhappy and fidgeted about, stand
ing first on one foot and then on the
other.
So patent was his state of mental un
quiet that the "best man" deemed It
expedient to elucidate the mystery,
"line ye lost the ring?" he solicitously
inquired.
"No," answered the unhappy one,
with a woeful look; "the ring's safe
enough, but, mnn, I've lost my en
thusiasm." London Scrap.
Impressed.
"I appear to have made something
of an Impression on that man over
there," remarked a young lady at a
wedding party. "He has been looking
at me ever since I arrived."
"If you mean that one with the
black mustache, he's the detective en
gaged to look after the presents!" said
a friend.
r
Very Little Change.
"It's three years since I was in this
city," said a stranger In a restaurant
as he was walking out after finishing
his dinner; "city looks the same."
"I don't find much change 1" respond
ed the waiter as he took up the nickel
that was left on the table.
Quite Handy.
"The automobile Is a great institu
tion." "For instance?"
"Yon can sit up in it as you pass a
friend -and crawl nnder it when a
creditor heaves into sight" Louisville
Courier-Journal. ,
' Brave Reply.
The. Sunday School Teacher And
now, children, can yon tell me, when
Balaam and his ass conversed, what
language they spoke in? Little Harry
Green Please, sir, Assyrian. Bellman.
Interested.
"Wot ye readiir about CbJmmyP
"About a guy named Hannibal. He
was de greatest general of bis time."
"Football or ring?" Kansas City
Journal.
Talent knows what to do; tact knows
what not to do.
JUDGING A CIGAR.
The Only Real Way to Find Its Quality
Is to Smoke It.
On no point Is l he average smoker so
111 Informed as that of Judging a cigar.
Nine times out of ten, upon being
handed a cigar, he will bold It to his
nose, unllghted. sniff at the wrapper
with a critical air and deliver bis ver
dict In a self satisfied manner. This
characteristic maneuver Is always a
source of amusement to any tobacco
man who happens to observe It. There
is only one way to ascertain the qual
ity of a cigar, and that Is to smoke It
No expert will pass Judgment on a
cigar until he has lighted It and
smoked It well down toward the mid
dle. The first and most Important
point upon which he bases bis opinion
is the "burn." Tobacco may have ev
ery other virtue, but If It does not bold
the fire and burn evenly It Is poor to
bacco. Next In order pf Importance
comes the aroma the smoke must
have a pleasing "smell;" next comes
the flavor the smoke must be smooth
and not "scrntchy" or bitter. Then
there Is the color rich brown. Indicat
ing a ripe leaf, well cured and last Is
workmonshlp good If the wrapper Is
put on smoothly and the "bunch" Is
made so that the cigar "draws" freely
and Is neither too bard nor too spongy,
bad If the reverse. Bohemian Magazine.
ROMANCE OF HISTORY.
These Things Read Like Legends, but
'Are Matters of Fact.
A peasant girl called half wilted did
promise to defeat the victors of Agln
court and did It; It ought to be a
legend. ,but It happens to be a fnct
A poet and a poetess did fall In love
and elpnijd secretly to a sunny clime;
It Is obviously a three volume nnvI,
but It happened. Nelson did die In the
act of winning the one battle that
could change the world; It Is a gross
ly Improbable coincidence, but It Is too
late to alter It now. Napoleon did win
the battle of Austerlltz; It Is unnatu
ral, but It "is not my fault. Wheu the
general who had surrendered a repub
lican town returned, saying easily. "I
have done everything," Robespierre
did ask, with an air of Inquiry.
"Are you dead?" When Robespierre
coughed In his cold harangue Gamier
did say. "The blood of Danton chokes
you." Strafford did say of his own. de
sertion of parliament, "If I do it may
my life and death be set on a hill fop
nil men to wonder at." Disraeli did
say. "The time will come when you
shall hear me."
The herole Is a fact, even when It Is
a fact of coincidence or of miracle,
and a fact Is a thing which can be ad
mitted without being explained. G. K.
Chesterton In London News.
No Drums In the Middle Ages.
As we come to the middle ages,
when the nations of modern Europe
were struggling Into existence, we find
that at first the drum was not used
at nil. So, although melody had been
known and practiced for many cen
turies, rhythm had been quite forgot
ten, for what there la left to us of
the music of the middle npres contains
no bars, and we know that It was
slowly and monotonously chanted,
without the least accent
In the eleventh century, however,
things began to Improve, more partic
ularly as the crusaders brought Into
Europe all sorts of percussion Instru
ments from the east. Various kinds of
drums, tambourines and cymbals were
then seen In Europe for the first time
since the days of savages, and they
have been used, with very little
change, ever sluce. St. Nicholas.
An Epistolary Hint.
In the letter from Boston was a
special delivery stamp.
"What did she send thnt for?" the
woman wondered. "The information
she wants can be sent In an ordinary
letter. It won't need to be sent spe
cial." "That stamp," said the man, "Is a
delicate hint to be quick nbout answer
ing. It Is a hurry up device used by
many men. It Is very effective. A
two cent stamp does not always spur
one on to any special effort, but a spe
cial delivery stamp means that the
writer wants what he wants when he
wants it and the most dilatory cor
respondent alive Is not going to let any
grass grow between the scratches of
his pen when answering." New York
Press.
Mantle Rays.
"There are X rays and X rays, and
there are also rays from those mantle
things that you put on gas burners to
Improve the light." The speaker, a
photographer, pointed to a batch of
fogged plates. "I know to my cost
that there are mantle rays," said he.
"For a month I stored new plates in
a closet along with a mantle, and all
of them got fogged. The mantle, yon
see, contained thorium, a radio-active
substance that penetrates a cardboard
plate box as easily as it penetrates
glass. I didn't know that till my doc
tor told me so last week. My Igno
rance cost me over a hundred plates."
New York Press.
8hunted.
Editor Is this your first effort?
Budding Poet-Yes, sir. Is it worth
anything to yon?
Editor (with emotlon)-rIt's worth a
guinea if yon will promise not to write
anything more for publication until
after this has been printed. I want
your entire output yon understand.
Budding Poet I promise that all
right When will it be printed?
Editor Never while Pm alive. Lon
don Telegraph.
A kindness done to the good la never
lost Plautus.
Field of Honor Commission,
Perhaps wit 1b stltmilitud ly a slight
derangement of tho nerves, and good
things euld on the Held of balllu uro
Bometime8 recorded. When "Itully"
Egan fought Outran with pistols tho
bulky Egan complained that his oppo
nent was ns thin as a blade of grass.
"Let my size be chalked out upon your
body," said Curran, "and any hits out
side of the line shall not count."
It was not good form, however, to
make a parade of nuifrnntilmlty, and
the coxcombical practice of firing in
the air or "dumb shooting" or "chil
dren's play" was strictly prohibited by
the rules, of which thlrty-slx were
drawn up by representatives of tho five
most eminent counties Galway, Tlp
perary. Mayo, SHgo and Roscommon
In 1777. They met at the summer as
sizes at Clonmel and seem to have
flone their work very gravely and hon
estly, Including a special rule for "sim
ple, unpremeditated encounters with
the small sword." There Is a large
element of absurdity nbout It all no
doubt, but even dueling has had Its
place as a rough, Inelllclent test of
manhood. Blackwood's Magazine.
Grand People In London In 1806.
"I came to town on Wednesday and
Intended to go to the Ancient Music;
made a Bungle about my Ticket; It
was too late to get It. The Drawing
Room was tho object yesterday. They
made a mistake In my Press. It wns
not deep enough for my Mourning,
and the glass of my Sedan Chair wns
not mended. Looked at my Lodgings;
found them Abominable. I walked all
over the Town till I was, Lord, how
tired! Looked In upon the Duchess of
Gordon while she took off her Hoop to
Dine with the Bedfords."
This wns .lane, duchess of Gordon,
who rode down the High street of Ed
inburgh on n pig's back In the days of
her wild girlhood and raised recruits
for the new hlghlnnd regiment when
other menus had failed by allowing
each man to take the shilling from be
tween her Hps. Hoops were de rlgueur
for court dress until the days of George
IV., although In private life the ladled
skirts had been growing more and
more scanty since the days of the
French revolution. From "John Hook
ham Frere and His Friends." by Ga
brlelle Festlng.
Winning a Violin.
The way M. Ysaye, the great violin
ist, became the owner of a Guarnerlus
violin dated 1742 was thus quaintly
told by himself:
"The Guarnerlus was bought In Tar
ls by a pupil of mine, a chnrmlng
young woman. I envied her the vio
lin, and fate gave it to me. I teach
this pupil, and by and by I meet her
sister, a most lovely young woman,
with whom I fall In love straightway
and marry. Soon I go to my Blster-ln-law,
who was my pupil, and say to
her:
" 'It Is time you stop fooling with
violin. You will never learn how to
play It.' I take the liberty of n big
brother, but she do not like It for long
time. At Inst she succumb to uiy ex
perience and wisdom, and she stops
playing. Then I say grandiloquently:
"'1 will lake the Guarnerlus, 17-12.'
I take It, and that is how the violin
cume Into the possession of Ysaye."
They Meant Business.
A t'lilc igo stage inn miner was tell
ing of amusing incidents of blunders
and errors caused by stage fright. In
a romantic play recently revived one
of the minor characters, a dairymaid,
conies forward nt the end of the re
cital of a love romance and comments
as follows: '
"Hope filled their youth nud whetted
their love; they plighted their troth!"
But at one of the performances the
girl who played the dairymaid was
absent without notice. At the Inst mo
ment the manager' gave the Hues to a
shepherdess, who bnd never bad lines
to speak before and who was excess
ively nervous when her cue cnmo. This
Is what the astonished audience heard:
"Hope filled their trough and blight
ed their love; they whetted their
tooth!"
The Hourglass.
Instead of being obsolete and simply
an Interesting relic, the hourglass In
various forms Is a twentieth century
necessity. A' machinist authority
points out that for such purposes as
timing hardening and tempering beats
In twist drill manufacture, where sec
onds or minutes must be gauged accu
rately, nothing serves like tbe hour
glass with the right amount of sand.
Accuracy to fractions of a second can
be bad much more easily than by
watching tbe hands of a watch.
Ha Walked.
"Good afternoon, Miss Brown! Go
ing for a walk? May I go with you?"
asked an elderly but ardent admirer of
the lady.
"Yes; my doctor says that we must
always walk with an object and I sup
pose you'll answer the purpose!"
The Exporter.
"Who is your Chicago friend?"
"He is a prominent ex-porter."
"What does he export7' '
"I didn't say he exported anything.
He used to be a porter at the hotel
where I stopped."1 Cleveland Plain
Dealer. - -
A Way They Have.
"Some men," said Uncle Eben, "has
a way of keepln' der consciences quiet
by takln' de minister's advice on Son-i
day an' de lawyer's advice all de res'
o de week." Washington Star.
A Brave Patient
Dentist (to assistant)! think I heard
a patient in the waiting room. As
sistant Yes, bnt I can't, bring him In.
He's turned the key on tbe Inside.
Meggeadorfer Blatter.
A FLOWER LEGEND. '
How the Myosotis Came to Be Called
Forgetmenot.
Dr. A. F. Thomson communicated to
Mills' "History of Chivalry" the fol?
lowing romantic account of the origin
of tbe popular nume, forgetmenot of
the favorite little flower myosotis:
"Two lovers were loitering on the mar
gin of a lake on a fine summer's even
ing when tbe maiden espied some of
the flowers of myosotis growing on the
water close to tbe bank of an Island
at some distance from tbe shore. She
expressed a desire to possess them,
when tbe knight. In tbe true spirit of
chivalry, plunged Into the wuter and,
swimming to the spot cropped tbe
wished for plant, but bis strength was
unable to fulfill the object of bis
achievement and, feeling thnt be could
not regain the shore, although very
near It, be tbrew tbe flowers upon the
bank, and, casting a last affectionate
look upon his ladylove, he cried 'For
get me not!' and was burled In the
waters. As the world Insists upon a
reason, this story Is as good as another,
but tbe worthy kntgbt must have been
sadly out of his element not to have
been able to return from a bonk on
which bis mistress could discern so
minute a blossom, unless. Indeed, we
suppose blm to have been clad In
armor, wblcb was a habiliment 111
adapted for a lover by land or water."
THE RHINOCEROS.
This Malicious Brute Is the Assassin
of the Jungle.
If tbe genius of hell used up all bis
mental energy making a devil for the
animal kingdom, be could not have cre
ated a more uncertnin, malicious and
ugly brute than the rhinoceros. This
animal has burled more hunters than
all other big game combined. It seems
to be tbe hired assassin of the Jungle.
Its success as a homicide Is not due
to the fact that It seeks Its victim, but
because Its victim falls over It If tbe
rhino knows that there Is an enemy
about It will try to get away without
being seen. If, on tbe other band. It
thinks thnt by keeping still It will be
passed unnoticed. It stays as silent and
motionless as Gibraltar, Its little bog
eyes watching the direction of the
noise and its nose snlfllng tbe air.
Should an enemy show up suddenly
In tbe Jungle the rhino charges like a
flash, nose down and horns leveled like
swords for the thrust. Its huge bulk
crushing through the brush like an ex
press train. It Is always a fight to the
death, for a rhinoceros, once In a fight
wins or dies, and It mostly wins If It
Is not confronted wltb an express rifle
in the bands of a cool, good shot
Hampton's Magazine.
The Old Time Album.
"Tbe terrors of tbe autograph al
bum" must have been more general In
the middle of the Inst century than
they are now. The volume bad em
bossed pages of various colors and
showed alternate literature and art
original verses ana drawings of ruins
and bridges heightened with white
chalk. Girls presented It for contribu
tions so universally that Charles Dick
ens was on one occasion nwh aston
ished to find none forthcoming. He
bnd nclnnlly brought with him some
verses addressed to a beautiful maid
en, op w hi.-.f parents he was calling,
and he carried them away again.
Sending them m her by post, lie wrote,
"I had meant t put iheso lines-Into
your allium, lint you. who do nothing
like anybody else, did not produce
one." Loudon Standard.
In Morocco.
In Morocco the prevailing lone Is
grayish white, men's clothes and
houses, towns, bushes, tall umbelll
ferae, nodding like ghosts In autumn
all are white; white sands upon the
shore and in the Sahara and over all
a white and saddening light as If thp
sun was tired of shining down for
ever on the unchanging life. In no
part of Morocco I have visited does
the phrase "gorgeous east" have the
least meaning, and this Is always noted
by the wandering easterners, who find
the country dull and lacking In color
compared wltb Asia, or, as tbe Arabs
call It "Blad Es Schark." "A Journey
to Morocco."
Russian Vengeance.
The Russian revlutlonarles have
absolutely no mercy on those who be
tray them. It Is well known that In
the year 1003 a " traitor caught at
Odessa was bricked up alive In a cel
lar. Regnler, a French spy in the pay of
tbe Russian police, for a long time
eluded tbe vengeance of the revolu
tionaries. But they caught bun at last
and that Just at the moment when be
fancied himself safe. His body was
found in bis cabin on a ship which
reached Antwerp. He had been suffo
cated by fumes of sulphureted hydro
gen. How this was done was never
discovered.
The Considerate Clock.
"One kiss!" pleaded a departing
lover.
- "Nonsense f exclaimed his fiancee In
a teasing mood. "Some one might see
ns."
"Whor
"Why, the clock; It has a face.1
"Yes, bnt It .keeps its hands In front
of itl"
Whan He Missed lb
. The baldbeaded man was asked If
he missed his hair much, '
"Only when some fool question
makes me so mad I want to poll IV
he replied pleasantly. Philadelphia
Ledger. . -' -
The rain fans on the lost and unjust
bnt the latter nearly always bare the
former's umbrellas-Town Topics,
Helpful Hints on flair Health;
Scalp and Hair Troubles Generally
Caused by Carelessness.
Dandruff Is a contagious disease caused
by a microbe which also produces baldness.
Never u..e a comb or brush belonging to
someone else. No matter how cleanly the
owner may be, these articles may be In
fected with miciobes, which will infect
your scalp. It is far easier to catch hair
microbes than it is to get rid of them, and
a single stroke of an infected comb or
brush often produces the cause of bald
ness. Never try on anybody else's hat for
the reason that many a hatband is a nest
ing place for microbes.
It you happen to be troubled with dand
ruff, itching scalp, falling hair or baldness,
we have a remedy which we positively
know will cure these troubles, and we are
so sure of this that we offer it to you with
the undemtandinff that it will cost von
nothing for the trial if it does not produce
the results we claim. This remedy iscalled
Reiall "9j" Hair Tonic. It is the most
scientific remedy for all scalp and hair
troubles, end we know of nothing else that
equals it for effectiveness. We know this
because of the results it has produced in
hundreds of cases.
Rexall"oj" Hair Tonic will positively
banish dandruff permanently, restore natu
ral color when its loss has been brought
about by disease, and make the hair natu
rally silky, soft and glossy. It docs this
because it stimulates the hair follicles, re-
IIIUV L 3 U4IIUI Ull , U 1.1 ill HIUl tlil ,
and brings about afrce, healthy circulation
of bl'iod which nourishes the hair rools,
c.ind'Kt them to tichten and grow nn-v hz'.r.
" Ye want everybody who has any trouble
vv.'.i 'n..ir or acilp to know that Rexall
' --J ' 1 1 air Tmlc is the best rnir tonic
n i r?-itorniivu in existence, and no one
S;i,ul;l t..:cff at or doubt this statement
until i'-ey have put our claims to a fair
l-at, vriili the understanding that they pay
n nothing for the remedy if it does not
i ve full and complete satisfaction in every
particular. Two sizes, 50 cents and Jl.oo.
Stoko & Felcht Drug Company Store
Reyntildvi";!a, Pa.
Experience in the manu
facture of Gasoline means
much to the motorist In
the use of
Waverly
Brands
76-
Motor
Stove
you are guaranteed the
greateitpossible efficiency
Instantaneous, power,
ful, clean explosion free
dom from carbon deposits
on spark plugs or In cylin
ders ready ignition. Your
dealer will supply you,
Waverly Oil Works Co.
XsSnaant Mnn
Pittsburg, Pa,
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
BOLGER, THE TAILOR
i will b.j pleased to bttve yon call
and Inspect my spring styles.
Shop on Fourth Street
LINGENFELTER BROS.
Up - to - bate Photogr aphers.
Corner of Main nod Fifth Streets
REYNOLD3VILLE . . PENN'A
BOOT And SHOE REPAIRING
First-Class" Handwork and
Reasonable Prices.
fl. KoslnskiraMaln St,
fJUGHES & FLEMING.
tirTVTPD A T TVT O FfPAO Q
Mala Street. Reynoldsvllle, Pa.
Garment Dyeing and Cleaning
By James Pontefract
West Reynoldsville, Penn'aJ
Opposite P. E. B. Freight Depot.
WINDSOR HOTEL
W. T. Brubaker, Mgr.
Midway between Broad St. Station and
Reading Terminal on Filbert 8t.
European 11.00 per day and up,
American $2.50 per day and up.
Theonly moderate priced notel of rep
utation and consequence In
PHILADELPHIA
If yott have anything to sell, try
oar Want Column.
E
XECUTRIX'S NOTICE.
Estate of John Damore, late of Reynolds
Title Botough, Deceased.
Tfotlce la hereby given that letters
testamentary on the estate of John,
Damore, late of Beynoldsville borough.
Jefferson county, Pa., have been granted to
the undersigned, to whom all persona In
debted to seld estate are requested to malts
payment, and those haTlng claims or de
mands will make known tbe same without
del.,. "LiSTtrk
Beynoldsville, Pa.
t
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