Slue 8 Slfc Reynoldsville Reynoldsvflle Eu modern schools and churches, paved streets, water, gas and electric accommoda tions, convenient trolley service, high and healthful location, varied employment for labor and many other reldentlal advantages. Offers exceptional advantages fonthe loca tion of new Industries i Free factory sites, cheap and abundant fuel, direct shipping facilities and low freight rates and plentiful supply of laborers. VOLUME 18. REYNOLDSVILLE, PENN'A.. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1909. NUMBER 20 Business Men's Association Gets A Substantial Gift of Mohey Esteemed Reynoldsville Couple Celebrate Their Golden Wedding I v i w 1 1 Balance of the Fourth of July Funds Turned Over To The Organization. ASSOCIATION IN GOOD SHAPE Yesterday the treasury of the Bus iness Men's Association of Reynolds- ville was enriched to the extent of 4101.98 by the turning over to it of all the balance remaining from the Fourth of July celebration funds. When the gentlemen who conducted the big celebration this year organized for work, It was moved and carded that if a surplus remained after paying all expenses Incident to the celebration, it should be turned over to the Business Men's Association for use in conducting - Its work for the benefit of the town Through the energetic work of the various committees the celebration was made a success beyond all precedent, And through careful management the committee was enabled to hold ex lenses below receipts and emerge from , the affair with a larger surplus than ny one had anticipated. v Monday evening the accounts were audited and found correct. Tuesday the chairman of the Fourth of July -committee, Mayor JarvlB D. Williams, and seoretary, Charles S. Lord, signed the order transferring the balance, 4101.98, from K. C. Schuckers, treasur er of the committee, to C. R. Hall, treasurer of the Association, and re oelved the latter'g receipt therefor. This finally closes -the affairs of the Fourth of July Committee of 1909 a committee composed for the most part of young men of town who, when it 'looked as if there would be no celebra tion in Reynoldsville, Jumped into the breach, made up in enthusiasm and personal work what they lacked in cash, and succeeded in gaining for Reynolds ville the honor of having the biggest independence Day celebration of the year in this part of the state. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Property Changes in Jefferson County Put Upon Record. Patrick MoDonald to Mary E. Mc Donald, for 750 sq. ft. In Reynoldsville. 41.00. August 25, 1909. Point View Land Company to 8. G. iiowrey, for lot in Winslow township. $200. February 27, 1909. William H. Bowser to Frederick Weiss, for 8 acres in Winslow township. $375. August 18, 1909. Sarah Burkett, et al., to Salena Het rick, for 18 acres in Washington town ship. $300, September 7, 1909. Francisco Corsara, et al., to Joseph Marinaro, for lot in Sykesvllle. $600. September 19, 1907. L. W. Crawford to C. E. Calhoun for 225 acres in Washington township. $1. -September 11, 1909. MORTGAGES. Mary E. MoDonald, et al.. to Revn- oldsvllle Building and Loan Associa tion, for lot in Reynoldsville $1,000. August 30, 1909. Mary E. McDonald, et al., to Reyn oldsville Building and Loan Associa tion, tor lot in ReynoldsvIlle.tL$400. August 30, 1909. Charles M. Feioht to Reynoldsville Building and Loan Association, for lot in Punxsutawney. $1,000. September , 1909. Jennie E. Welsh to Reynoldsville Building and Loan Association, for lot in Reynoldsville. $2,400. September 8, 1909. - Salena Hetrick, et al., to Reynolds- villa Building and Loan Association, for 26 acres in Washington township. $400. September 7, 1909. Donate Recclue to Revnoldsville Building and Loan Association, for lot 1 w. QntrAimtllA mtwi 0 I 1 41 1909. It Saved Hit Leg. "All thought I'd lose mv lee." writes J. A. Swenson, Watertown, Wis. "Ten yean of eczema, that 15 doctors could not cure, had at last laid me up. Then Buoklen's Arnloa Salve cured It sound and well." Infallible for skin erup tions, eczema, salt rheum, bolls, fever sores, burns, scalds, cuts and piles. 25o at H. L. McEntire's. "My sister is now well after doctor said she had tuberculosis. Hyomei did if Henry Lena, 2903 St. Ann St., New- Orleans. Hyomei cures ca tarrh or money back. ' Just breathe it. Outfit including inhaler $1.00. MR. AND Game Preserve. A number of Pittsburgh business men have leased and purchased 1000 acres of woodland near Brockwayville and will stock it with fish, quail and other game, tbelr intention being to maintain a private game preserve. Fifty angora goats will be placed on the preserve as soon as It Is fenced. Workmen are n jw engaged In the con struction of a large and modern house on the tract to be occupied by the keeper of the preserve, the owners and their guests. In addition to the game brought in to Btock the preserve the woods abound with pheasant and rabbit. Even wildcats and deer are found in that section. The owners are spending several thousands of dollars In improve ments, and they propose to have one of the best equipped hunting grounds in the state. A warden will be kept on the place. DuBols Express. Gun metal shoes are good this fall. Have you seen the new ones at Adam's? The First National Bank OF REYNOLDSVILLE. Capital and Surplus Resources . . Johh H. Kauohbr, Pres. John H. Kaucher Henry O. Delble J.O.King Daniel Nolan J. 8. Hammond -tf Every Accommodation Consistent with Careful Banking The Peoples National Bank . (OLDEST BANK IN THE OODNTY) REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. MRS. ROBERT A. BONE THRILLING AUTO ACCIDENT W. E. Williams, Former Rey noldsville Man, was the Victim. Wesley E. Williams, superintendent of the Jefferson Traction Company's city and suburban lines, Friday night had a narrow escape from s-jrlous If not fatal injury, when an automobile going at a fair rate of speed, knocked him down and ran over his head. At about 7.30 o'clock last night Mr. Williams was walking aiong Mahoning street in front of the Spirit office, when the street car came along. He ran out to board It and had barely left the curb when a runabout belonging to Adam Hauck struck him full in the side, dragged him about fifteen feet, and $ 1 75,000.00 $550,000.00 OFFICERS J. 0. Kino, Vlce-Prei. K.O.Schuckkrb, Cashier DIKEOTOR8 John H. Corbet K. H. Wilson Capital and Surplus $125,000.00. Resources $500,000.00. Foreign Exchange Sold. Interest paid semi-annually on Savings Accounts, hav ing liberal deposit and with drawal privileges. . Liberal treatment "and ev ery courtesy extended con sistent with sound banking: Open Saturday Evenings. AND THIFR SONS AND DAUGHTERS. 9 i I o - i i IN PUNXSUTAWNEY tuen passed over his prostrate body, one Iront wheel passing over his legs while the other rode full over his fore' head, slewing his body around so that the back wheels missed hlra entirely. J wnen bystanders riMhed out to pick mm up, expeotlng to find him badly injured, be scrambled to his feet and with the aid of George Pierce hurried to Hamilton's drug store, where Dr. Harry Gourley examined his injuries. They were found to be slight. A small out in the back of the bead and a slight abrasion on the forehead, with Beveral bruises about the body was the extent of his Injuries. His clothes, however, were almost torn from his body. if . nrmi. ... mr. Yiiuams alleges that the auto was running at a high rate of speed, and that Mr. Hauck failed to elye any warning of his approach. Had the automobile been a heavy one, the vic tim of the first automobile accident in Punxsy would undoubtedly haye had the life crushed out of him. Punxsu tawnoy Spirit. Mr. Williams formerly resided in Reynoldsville and is known by a num ber of our people. A Word to Subscribers. A number of our subscribers are, apparently, forgetting that it takes money to run a newspaper, as they are neglectiog to pay their subscrip tions. A dollar from a subscriber may seem insignificant when standing alone, but one each from several hundred subscribers means so many hundred dollars to us. Every business Is de pendent upon its income, no matter from what source nor in what amount from each source. Without the ex pense and labor of again mailing notices to all our subscribers who are in ar rears, we hope this notice will be sufficient and that each one will pay all or part of their arrearage this month. I Eye Specialist. , D. M. Jackson, the well known eye specialist from Tamaqua, Pa., Is here this week on his 33rd visit at the Im perial Hotel, from September 21st until Monday morning next. Hours 9 to 1, 6 to 8 in the evening; Sunday 0 to 12. Any person subject to headache from bright light or fcom reading or sewing should call and see how quickly they could be relieved by properly adjusting the eyes with glasses. His prices are very moderate. Don't use any drops, Sea food at City Hotel restaurant. More for vour monev than vnu ort elsewhere in shoes. .Adam's. No More Crop Failures. Don't worry about the crops. Corn will not be up to the 1006 record yield by nearly 300,000,000 bushels, but oats will exoeed last year's harvest by 200, 000,000 bushels and wheat will top the 1908 crop by 60,000,000 bushels. The total of the three will therefore be right abreast of previous big years. Owing to the better methods of farm ing in the we.t and the enormous in crease in the acreage planted, a crop failure in the United States is now a virtual Impossibility. Who can overestimate the import ance ot this fact! In former times every three or four years would see a dead failure in crops with enormous loesoB. Now every year is a big one, and dtsplte the greater harvests the price of cereals Is steadily rising. Philadelphia Press. Kills Would-Be Slayer. A merciless murderer is appendicitis with many victims. But Dr. King's New Life Pills kill it by prevention. They gently stimulate stomach, liver and bowels, preventing that clogging that invites appendicitis, curing consti pation, biliousness, chills, malaria, headache and indigestion. 2oo at H, L. McEntlre's. Children's school shoes, the kind that wear at Adam's. Now is the time to do your roofing. Red Cedar shingles galore at the Woodwork Supply Co. storage. Special this week; men's (2.60 shoes for $1.08 at Adam's. Cloth top, patent, pointed toe shoes for women. Price (3.00. Adam's. WHY not adopt a systematic habit of saving? Save a small amount each week or each month. All of us are willing to save the hundreds, but to most of us money does not come that way. How few seem anxious to save the dimes, yet we all have dimes to save. The starting of a savings account is im portant. One dollar deposited with us will doit. 4. V We pay 4 per cent interest on savings ac counts. THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK Mr, and Mrs. Robert A. Bone Were United in England Fifty Years Ago. ENJOYABLE FAMILY REUNION One of the rare and pleasant events ' in the matrimonial life is the celebra tion of the fiftieth marriage annivers arythe golden wedding. On the afternoon of Friday, September 10, 1900, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bone, Sr., of Worth street, celebrated their golden wedding. There were about one hundred guests present, lnoludlng the relatives, and it was a very pleasant occasion. At 6.00 p. m. Mr. and Mrs. Bone stepped into the parlor and Dr. A. J, Meek performed an Impromptu golden wedding ceremony. Robert Thompson and wife, of Cleveland, Ohio, stood up with the bride aod groom of fifty years ago. The bride was dressed in cream silk. Miss Kathryn King presided at the piano and played Suftly during Dr. Meek's short but appropri ate remarks. After congratulations a sumptuous wedding dinner was served. The house was nloely decorated. The color Bcheme was white and gold. . Mr. and Mrs. Bone received a num ber of beautiful gifts, consisting of gold coins, silverware, gilded chair, gold clock, gold Inkstand, gold candlestlos, china and linen. Some of the guests took their departure early in the eve ning, but most of them tarried until after the midnight hour. There was instrumental music, singing and danc ing. It was oertalnly a happy occasion for Mr. and Mrs. Bone, one that will linger fresh in the memory of this couple during the remainder of life's journey, or until they celebrate their diamond wedding. Thomas Bone and Elizabeth Robin son were both born in England, and. at Trimdon, England, September 10, 1869, they were united in marriage. They came to Morse Run, Tioga Co., Pa., in 1863. They came to Reynolds ville twenty-one years ago last June, therefore, are well known and highly esteemed by a large number of our people. Unto this couple twelve children were born, nine sons and three daugh ters, all whom but one son, John Bone, who was killed in the western country seventeen years ago, are all living. They are as follows: Steven, of Rosslter, George, of Horton, Richard, of Reyn oldsville, Robert, Jr., of Soldier, Thomas, of Kane, Walter, of Clymer, Henry and William, of Barnesboro, Mrs. Thomas Klrkman, of Clymer, Mrs. W. Earl Phillips, of Clearfield, and Mrs. J. Leslie Schall, of Pitts burgh. All the children, but Mrs. Schall, were present toenjoy the fiftieth marriage anniversary. In addition to Mr. and Mrs. Bone's eleven children there are thirty-five grandchildren and, three great grandchildren. Besides the sons and daughters and their families the following out of town relatives and friends attended the golden wedding: Robert Thompson and wife, of Cleveland, Ohio, Simpson Walker, of Homestead, Miss Anna L. Hoffman, of Wllklnsburg, William Fawcett, Mrs. John Reay, Mrs. George Barr, of DuBols, Ephrlam Pittsley and wife, Mrs. Jacob Haag, of Punxsu tawney, John Pierce and wife, of Sykes vllle, Mrs. Henry Norrls, of Paradise. Walk-Overs better than ever for fall. Price (4.00 at Adam's.