The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, December 08, 1909, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Are Microbes
- in Your Scalp?
It Has Been Proven that
Microbes Cause Baldness
Professor Unna of Hamburg,
Germany, and Dr. Sabourand, the
leading French dermatologist, dis
' covered that a microbe causes bald-
ness. Their theory has time and
again been amply verified through
research experiments carried on
under the observation of eminent
scientists. This microbe lodges in
the Sebum, which is the natural
hair oil, and when permitted to
flourish it destroys the hair follicles
and in time the pores entirely close,
and the scalp gradually takes on a
shiny appearance. When this hap
pens there is no hope of the growth
of hair being revived. '
Dandruff is a contagious dis
ease, which i3 largely due to a de
structive microbe, which when left
, to pursue its course causes itching
scalp, falling hair and baldness.
Dandruff is caused by the microbe
affecting the glands which produce
the sebaceous matter, which latter
then unnaturally dries up and scales
off. .
We have a remedy which will,
wo honestly believe, remove dan
druff, exterminate the microbe, pro
mote good circulation in the scalp
and around the hair roots, tighten
and revitalize the hair roots and
overcome baldness, so long as there
is any life left in the hair roots.
We back up this statement with
our own personal guarantee that
this remedy called Rexall "93" Hair
Tonic will be supplied free of all
cost to the user if it fails to do as we
state.
It will frequently restore gray
and faded hair to its original color,
providing loss of color has been
caused by disease; yet it is in no
sense a dye. Rexall "93v Hair
Tonic accomplishes these results by
making every hair root, follicle and
pigment gland strong and active,
and by stimulating a natural flow
of coloring pigment throughout the
hair cells.
Rexall "93" Hair Tonic is en
tirely free from grease or sediment,
is exceedingly pleasant to use and
will not gum the hair or permanently
soil the clothing or pillows.
We exact no obligations or prom
ises we simply ask you to give it a
. thorough trial and if not satisfied
tell us and we will refund the money
. you paid us for it. Two sizes,
prices 50 cents and $ 1 .00. Remem
ber you can obtain it only at
The Rexall Store.
Stoke & Feloht Drug Company.
gBERIFP'S SALE.
By virtue of a writ of Fieri Facias, etc., Is
sued out of the Court of Common Pleas of
Jefferson county, Pa., and to me directed, I
will expose to public sale or outcry at the
court house In Brookvllle, Pa., on
Friday, December loth, 1909,
At 1.00 o'clock p. m., all the following de
scribed real estate, to-wit:
" All those two cert ain pieces or lots of land
lying and being situated In the borough of
Hykesvtlle, county of Jefferson and state of
Pennsylvania, bounded and described as
follows:
First. Beginning at a post at corner of
Grant street and an alloy; thence south
seventy jegrees east one hundred and fifty
feet to a post at an alley; thence north
seventy degrees and forty-six minutes east
fifty feet to a post; thence north seventy
three degrees west one hundred and fifty
feet to a post on Grant street; thence south
sixteen decrees forty-six minutes west fifty
feet to a post, plao of beginning, containing
seven thousand five hundred square feet,
and being lot No, til of town plot of Sykes
vllle, made from land of J. B. Sykes.
Skuond. Beginning at a post nn Grant
street and at corner of lot No. tW; thence
north sixteen degrees and forty-six minutes
east along said Grant street ten feet to a post
on lot No. 70; thnce south seventy-three de
grees east thiough said lot No. 70 one bund
red and fifty feet to a post on an alley;
thence south sixteen degrees forty-six min
utes west along said alley ten feet to a post
at corner of lot No. Hit; thence north seventy-
tnree aesrrees weir along line Ol lot No. ou
one hundred an x fifty feet to a post, the
place of beginning, containing fifteen hund
red aqua e feet. Being the same two pieces
of land conveyed to Gulsenpe Mazsa by
Lutltla Mausfield and J. B. Sykes, by deeds
dated August 3rd, IK and January 10, 1(108,
recorded In Deed Books Vols. 101, page 1H1,
and page 813, respectively, and same land
Conveyed by A. W. Pykes to said Gulseppe
Maria by deed dated October tab. 1908, re
corded In Deed Book Vol, 121, page 80.
Having thereoD erec ed a dwelling house
containing six rooms; a good barm chicken
park and necessary outbuildings! all in good
repair, and a good well of water with pump.
Excepting and reserving all coal and coal
rights, and all minerals, oil and gas as fully
as same have been excepted and reserved
from conveyance for said land by prior
owners.
Belted and taVen In execution and to be
old as tfte property of Gulseppl Mazza at
the suit of Antonio Crlstlano.
Fl. Fa No. 48, McDonald.
TEKM8:
1 'Thet following must be strictly complied
with trben property Is stricken down:
1. When the plalntift or other lien credit
ors become the purchaser, the cost on the
writs must be paid, and a list of liens, Includ
ing montage searches on the property sold,
together with such leln creditor' receipt for
the amount of the proceeds of the sale or
such proportion thereof as he may claim
must Be furnished to the sheriff.
See Purdon's d nest, oth, Ed., pageiW.
Smith's form, Page 984.
2. All bid must be paid In full.
All sales not settled Immedlattoy will be
continued until two o'clock p. m., of day of
sale at which time all property not settledior
will again be put up and sold at the expense
and risk of the person to whom first sold. All
writ staid after being advertised, the cost of
advertising must OAMKATH
November IB, 1V09. Sheriff.
JJXECUTOR'S NOTICE.
Estate of J. D. Woodrlng, Late of West
Beynoldsvllle Borough, Deceased.
Notice Is hereby given ' that letters testa
mentary on the estate 'of J. D. Woodrlng,
latof West Reynoldsville borough, county
of Jefferson and state of Pennsylvania, de
ceased, have been granted to the undersigned.
All persona Indebted to aald estate are re
quested to make payment, and those having
claims or demands against Ihe same will
make them known without delay.
W. P. Woodrino,
I 3. M. McDonald, Executor.
Attorney for Fxecutor
Public Schools Close Third
. MontlTlri ExccllchrCondition
Reports of Various Rooms Shows Increasing Interest and But
Few Instances of Absence or Tardiness.
Dnnu HI-PORTO iron THIRD MONTH. O
Room 1. Perfect in attendance and
punctuality, 18 boys, 9 girls, total 25.
Per cent of attendance, boys, 97, girls
95, average 90.
Room 2. Pupils perfect In attend
ance and punctuality third month, 24.
Percentage of attendance, 95, 98, 97.
Room 4. Per cent of attendance dur
ing third month, 84.
There were 38 pupils who were neith
er tardy nor absent during third month.
RusboU Headley and Everett Black
had perfect spelling during third
month.
Room 5. The following were perfect
in attendance and punctuality for third
month: George Armagost, John Fred
erick, Darrel Fuller, Lawrence Davis,
Harry laontle. Elizabeth Armagost,
Margeorie Best, Kathryn Freas, Flor
ence Marshall, Mary Reddecliff, Olive
Scott, Lena Stormer, Lena White.
Percentage of attendance, 92.
Room 6. No cases of tardiness for
third month. Pupils neither absent
nor tardy, 23. Per cent of attendance,
98.
Room 7. The following have been
perfect in attendance and punctuality
for the third month: Edward Love,
Gerald Miller, Cyril MoCrelght, Albert
Schultze, Alton Weaver, Curtis Mcln
tyre, Arthur Harris, Esther Spears,
Olive Parrlsh, Mildred Fuller, Vena
Swab, Berna Kunselman, Amy Barrett,
Leila Dunlap, Melva Guthrie, Emma
Llnginfelter, LaRue Patterson, Ruth
Milllren.
The following have been perfect in
spelling for the third month: Mildred
Fuller, Edward Love, Cyril McCrelght,
Esther Spears.
Percentage of attendance, 95.
Room 9. Thirty-two of the pupils
have been perfect In attendance during
the third month of school.
John Cunningham has been perfect In
spelling.
The percentage of attendance for the
month is 97.
Room No. 10. Twenty-Bix pupiU
haye been perfect in attendance and
punctuality during third month.
Percentage of attendance is 94.
Isabelle Barrett has the highest
monthly average.
Room 11. Per cent of attendance,
boys 94, girls 92.
Number of pupils who missed no days
during the month, 23.
The' following pupils stood at the head
of their class, with average given:
Ethel Riggs, 94; Andrew Meek, 93;
Clara JoneB, 93: Dean Milllren, 92;
Lloyd Cathcart, 92; Harry Patterson,
92; Hazel Scott, 92.
' Pupils perfect in spelling evory day
during month, Walter Wlsor, Clara
Jones, Andrew Meek, Martha King,
Paul Cochran, Paul Gourley, Alice
Rhoads, Ethel Gray and Hazel Scott.
Room 12. Number of pupils perfect
In attendance and punctuality, 25.
Pupils who missed no words In spell
ing during third month: Zelda Snyder,
Hazel Stnuee and Margaret Love.
Pef cent of attendance for tbird
month, 93.
Mildred Love has highest average in
Room 12 for third month.
Room 12f Number perfect in at
tendance and punctuality, 34.
Per cent of attendance, 98.
Number tardy during month, 1.
N umrer tardy during term, 4.
The following schools were perfect In
punctuality last week: Rooms 4, 6, 8, 9,
10, 12, 12i and 14.
A Thrilling Rescue.
How Bert R. Lean, o! Cheny, Wash.,
was saved from ft trigbtful death is a
story to thrill the world. "A hard
cold," h writes, "brought on a des
perate lung trouble that baffled an
expert doctor here. Then I paid $10
to tl5 a visit to a lung specialist in
Spokane, who did not help me. Then
T went to California, but without bene
fit. At last I used Dr. King's New
Discovery, which completely cured me
and now I am as well as ever." For
lung trouble, bronchitis, coughs and
colds, asthma, croup and whooping
cough its supreme. 50c and 11.00.
Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by H.
L. McEntlre.
s
TOCKHOLDERS' MEETING.
You are herebv Informed that the annual
meeting of the stockholders of the Bumnur-
ville 'reiepnone company win ne neio at tne
general nmce or tne company in Hroouviiie,
Pa., on Wednesday, the 12th day of January,
A. D , 1910, at the hour of ten o'clock a. m.,
for the purpose of electing a board of direc
tors for the Oomoanv for the ensnlng year.
and for the transaction of inch other
meeting. 4. amtovs,
J. S. Hammond, 'President.
Secretary.
A Hen's Idea of Conservation of Natural
Resources, or Graft Which ?
On election day I bought some hens
from Rev. A. D. McKay and Blnce then
I have, been getting shelless eggs. Now
for my bens to produce shelless eggs is
either their Idea of graft in not produc
ing the proper egg to stand the trans
portation (oftentimes) from the nest to
tne house, after they have been fur
nished with the proper amount ol ma
terial bo to do, or It Is teetr Idea of con
servation of natural resources. Prob
ably Rev. McKay saved the lime or
shell making material to enrich his
farm in Illinois, or he might have in
structed the hens to lay shelless eggs to
facilitate the work in bis wife's culinary
department. Now if a ben can produce
a shelless egg can she not produce an
eggless shell? Of course an eggless
shell is not so valuable in commerce as
a shelless egg; they may stand the
transportation better than the other
kind. The other morning I found some
eggless shells In nests. I thought that
my bens were surely on to the graft
game, and I fully decided to decapitate
them and go Into the squab business
(as I promised Thomas Reynolds some
squabs three years ago, and he told me
a few days ago he was still looking for
tbetn) when my boys told me they were
glass eggs put there to fool me and the
hens. I kuow now that Rev. McKay
did not teach his hens the graft Idea.
Dr. B. E. Hoover.
A Salutary Lesson.
"Now, remember your Balutes," said
the English corporal when posting the
Irish recruit on seutry. "If you see a
lieutenant he wears one star on bis
shoulder slope arms; if a captain
two stars slope arms; If you see a
major a crown present arms; if the
colonel stars and crown present and
turn out the guard."
rat pondered his orders carefully,
but presently he was awakened from
his reverie by the approach of the gen
eral. That worthy son of Mars surveyed
the cross swords ou the gallant offi
cer's stMilders and as he was not in
cluded Si the corporal's category sim
ply nodded cheerfully.
'Well, my man," said the genial gen
eral, "and who are you supposed to
ber
"I'm supposed to be a bit of a sen
try," said Patrick. "And who lire
you?"
"Oh, I'm supposed to be a bit or a
general!" snld the latter.
"A glnernl, Is it?" cried the startled
rat. "Then ye'U want something big.
The corp'ral tould nie about the oth
ers, but nothing about yourself at all,
at all. But hold hard a minute, and
I'll give ye the bayonet exercise, If
that'll do."
A Resourceful Woman.
"I think it is a foolish fashion tbnt
so many women indulge, that of tell
ing their age wrongly," snld the wo
man with the premnturely gray bulr.
"I can honestly say that I never prac
tice it myself."
"No?" said her friend, with ninny
meanings in the monosyllable.
"Well," snld the first speaker, with n
smile she was a woman with a sense
of humor "the fact is I don't have to.
I have a way of making myself out
younger tlinn I am if I wish to with
out telling a Bb at all."
"Really?" Inquired the other rurlou
ly. "In wbnt wny?"
"I put the burden of the fib all upon
the questioner. You see. when one ol"
my dear women friends It Is alVi.VK
women who are curious on this point
asks me how bid I am I say: 'Ob, I'm
a year of two older than you, you
know, my dear at least a yenr older.
Let me see, now, how old are you?'
And then she always knocks more off
my age than I should ever have the
nerve to do myself."
A Bee That Digs.
Dr. John B. Smith gives the name of
"digger bee" to a blue green bee hav
ing a metallic sheen, which may be
seen flitting about sandy places during
the first heats of May. With the aid of
liquid plaster of paris poured into the
holes that it makes In the ground he
has followed the bee through a won
derful course of digging. The work Is
done by females, and its primary cl
Ject is to provide protected cells in
which the young are bred. The bee
makes a tunnel a quarter of an Inch In
diameter, which after starting for a
few inches on a slope ruus straight
down into the ground. At the depth of
a foot or more short lateral tunnels are'
driven, and n't the ends of these are
formed the breeding cells. Having pro
vided for her young, the bee "contin
ues to dig down and yet farther down
Until she is four feet or even more be
neath the surface, dying from sheer
exhaustion about the time her first
progeny begin to make their way to
fhe -surface." London Mail.
Gout Defined.
"What is gout?" asks a correspond
ent. Well, It is an infliction If inher
ited, but is often a source of pride
-when acquired. St Paul Pioneer Press.
The Camel.
Why'W a came . easily angered? Be
cause It 'always bas its back up.
Nobles In Mean Attire.
Where did etiquette require nobles to
appear before their sovereigns meanly
rlud? This singular ciixtom character
ized court ceremonial In tini-lt-iit Mexico
under the Aztec dominion. When the
native lords and grandees bud occasion
to seek the presence of Montezuma
they were under the obligation, as To
rlbio de Benevente, who accompanied
the Conquistador Cortes, tent Hies, of
assuming a voluminous mantle of poor
material (una mania grosera y pobrei,
with which they covered and concealed
their ordinary robes, in token of sub
jectlon and humiliation. These were
manufactured out of the leaves of (be
aloe tree by the commoner classes.
Etiquette required the strict observ
ance of this custom by all those who
came Into the etnppror's presence, with
the except Ion of persons of the royal
blood. Any one seeking audience of
the emperor 9 1 to don these common
clothes on Ins arrival at the palace.
Barefooled mid wretchedly clad, he
was led before the sovereign and with
downcast eyes made his request, with
every outward sign of abject subserv
ience. I
It Came Back.
"John Burroughs, the naturalist,
dined with tne one night," said a mag
azine editor of New York, "and among
my guests was a young nature writer
of the new school,
"This young man told a wonderful
story about the Intelligence of oysters.
He said he was going to put the story
lu his new book. Mr. Burroughs gave
a dry laugh and said:
" 'Let nie tell you about a cat. This
story is quite as authentic as the other
one, and it should do for your book
nicely.'
"The venerable student paused Im
pressively, then said:
"'A SprlngBeld couple had a cat
that age had rendered helpless, and
they put It out of Its misery by means
of chloroform. They buried It lif.tbe
garden and planted a rosebush over
Its remains. The next morning a fa
miliar scratching took them to the
front door, and there was that cat
waiting to be let in, with the rose
bush under its arm. "
Curious Village Names.
There is in Dorset a group of villages
which in some form or other have as
their eponym the stream in whose val
ley they are situated. The stream is
named 1'uddle, and the villages bear
the names of Puddle Hlnton, Puddle
town, Tulpuddle, Affpuddle, Turner's
Puddle and Bryan's Puddle. One is
reminded of the riddle about the letter
"m." Some, like Queen Mary, "have
It before;" some, like King William,
"have It behind." Poor things, poor
things: v "The inhabitants of these vil
lages,' says Marcus Dlmsdale, who
writes in the Cornhtll Mugaziue on
"English Village Names," "sent to a
former postmnster general If 1 am
rightly Informed, Cecil Kaikes a re
quest that thpy might be allowed to
change their names and replace them
with more euphonious substitutes
which they obligingly supplied. Back
came the offlclnl reply, curt, overbear
ing, inexorable, 'Puddle you are, and
puddle you must remain!'"
Dr. Hale's Day.
Dr. Hale and the late Bishop Hunt
ington of New York were fast friends.
The latter had been a Unitarian, and
his shift caused a sensation, says the
Christian Itegistcr. The Episcopalians
have saints assigned to the various
days In the year. Wheu an Episco
palian minister writes a letter on any
day for which there Is a saint he al
ways writes the name of the saint at
the close of the letter instead of the
date. Bishop Huntington learned all
these things quickly and began to prac
tice tbetn at once. The first time he
had occasion to write to his old friend
Dr. Hale after joining the church he
placed "St. Michael's day" after his
signature. A reply from the doctor
came, and a Her his name he had writ
ten In a full, round hand, Vnsb day."
A Little Awkward.
"Nearsightedness must be very em
barrassing at times," remarked a
Brooklyn resident to an acquaintance
thus afflicted. ' "The other morning,
for example, a nmu addressed me on
a crowded bridge trolley, and in the
course of conversation he roundly
abused a chap whose political and
business methods he disliked equally.
In fact be became acutely personal
In his denunciation.
"Before he left the cur he Was in
formed by a frituid near htm thut I
was the man he had been abusing. It
didn't worry ine at all, but it must
bave been a bit disconcerting lor mm,
don't you think ?"-New York Globe.
The Sun.
It bas been stated that no one bas
ever seen the sun. A series of con
centric shells envelops a nucleus of
which we know nothing except that it
mutat be infinitely hotter than the Here
est furnace and that it must amount to
more than nine-tenths of the solan
mass. That nucleus lc the real sun.
forever bidden from us; The outer
most of the enveloping shells is about
6,000 miles thick and is called the
"chromosphere." It is a gaseous flood
Prompt Rebuke.
"Orlando, you mustn't put your arm
around mv wnlst."
"Why, Glorlann, it's been there for
half an hour."
"Well, I didn't notice it till Just
now." Chicago Tribune.
The Real Victim.
After a man has been sick a week
bis wife looks worse than he does
from taking enre of him. Atchison
Globe. .
Advantage is a better soldier than
rashness. Shakespeare. ,
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Property Chai:;c in Jefferson County
Put Upon Record
Joanna Crlbbs, et. al., to Mary
Crlbbs, for 19,789 q. feet. In Wlnslow
township; (75. October 5, 1900.
Perry Hoover to Wlllltara Johns
ton, for 2 5 acres in Wlnslow toweshlp.;
1300. November 11, 1909.
D. T. Dennnlnsnn, et. al., to Maude
Marsh, for 11.75 acres In Washington
township; $550. May 3, 1909.
Emma Ritchie, et. al., to Teofil
Brezenkle, for lot in Wlnslow township;
$1. November 12, 1909.
J. H, Painter to Buffalo, Rochester
& Pittsburgh Railway Co. for .716 of
an acre lu Washington township; (1,000;
November 17, 1909.
J. W. Bennett to Alfred Carlson,
et. al,, for two pieces or lots In Wlns
low township; $200. October 20, 1909.
Samuel E. Sbankle to Alfred Carl
son, et. al., for 2 pieces or lots In
Wlnslow township; (200. October 27,
1909.
David A. Smith to Charlie Labord,
for lots in Sykesville: $50. November
24, 1009.
Buclgln Stalnslaw to Lulgi Foreldori,
for lot in Washington township; $1.
November 10, 1909.
Ml-on-a is guaranteed by Stoke &
Feicht Drug Co. to cure Indigestion
or money back. Relieves distressed
stomach, belching of gas, etc., In five
minutes. Large box, 50c.
H, Adelson
JUNK DEALER
Whose storage house was
destroyed by fire Decem
ber 2nd, will continue in
business.
He pays the highest
cash prices for
' Scrap Iron,
Old Rubbers,
Boots and Shoes,
Beef Hides,
Sheep Pelts,
Horse Hides.
534 Jackson St.,
Reynoldsville, Pa.
The First National Bank
OF REYNOLDSVILLE.
Capital and Surplus
Resources . .
John H. Xaoobib, Pres.
John H. Kaucber
Henry O. Delble
Every Accommodation Consistent with Careful Banking
imsf
It Costs Just
a Post Card
to learn
income
JV ,
t 7
GAS ENGINE OIL
Absolute freedom from Carbon, leave no depoelt. Light la color flow easily,
WAVKRLY never smuts, clogs or gums, but keep your motor In perfect ruooiag
order. For your protection ask any dealer.
"Ptrftct Labricatloa Without Carbon Deposit."
Wavorly OU Works Co. IndopoaJoat Oil Refiners, Pittsburg, fa.
BUSINESS CARDS.
E. NEFF
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,
Pension Attorney and Real Estate Agent.
RAYMOND E. BROWN
attorney at law,
Bbookville, Pa.
q. m. Mcdonald,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Real estate agent, patents secured, col
lections mucin promptly. Office lu Syndicate
building, Reynoldsville, Pa.
MlTirM?MRElGHTi
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Notary public and real estate agent. Col
lections will receive prompt attention. Office
in the Reynulilsvflle Hardware Co. building
Main street Reynoldsville, Pa.
2reThooveiX
DENTIST,
Resident dentlHt, In the Hoover building
Main street. Gentleness In operating.
DR. L. L. MEANS,
DENTIST,
Office on second floor (ft the First National
bank building, Main street, lj ...J
jqrTrIdeVeREINgP
DENTIST,
office on second door or the Syndicate build
lng, Main street, licynoldsvlUo, Pa.
HENRY PRIESTER
UNDERTAKER.
Rlack and white funeral cars.
Reynoldsville, Pa.
Main street .
HERMAN J. HOELSCHE, Opt. D.
Eyesight Specialist.
' Glasses Scientifically Fitted.
Difficult Cases Solicited.
Office In Matson Block. Brookvllle, Pa.
JJUGHES & FLEMING.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS.
Main SirW. Reynoldsville, Pa
, WINDSOR HOTEL
W.T. Hrubaker. Mgr.
Midway between Broad St. Htatlon and
Reading Terminal on Filbert st.
European 1.00 per day and up.
American tl.HU per day and up.
Theonly moderate priced hotel of rep
utation and consequence In .
PHILADELPHIA
pUBLIU NOTICE.
Notice Is hereby given that on Monday,
December 20th. WOT, at 10 o'ch.ck a. m John
O'Hare, of Reynoldsville, Jefferson county.
Pennsylvania, will present his apDllcatloa
and bond to the Court of Quarter Sessions of
said county for the transfer of his Wholesale
Dealer's Liquor License, heretofore granted
to him at No. 8, January Sessions, 1U09, to that
certain store room and the buildings appur
tenant thereto, situate In the Borough O
ReynnldsvillH, County of Jefferson and State
of Pennsylvania, on that certain lot of land,
bounded and described as follows, tc-wlt:
Beginning at a post on Main street, the
North-East corner of the land hereinafter
described, thence along Main st. North 30f
degrees West fiftren (151 feet to a post, thence
along lands of Mary E. McDonald south 59i4
degrees West one hundred and five (1061 feet
to a post, thence along same land North 3
degrees west two (it feet to a post, thence
along same land south degrees west forty-five
(4f) feet to Gordon alley, thence along
Gordon Alley South HOU degrees East seven
teen (17) feet to a post on land belonging to
O. H. Hoyles, thence along lnod of the said
O. H. Boyles North N4 degrees East one hun
dred and fifty (150) feet to the place of be
ginning. BliARI E. IRVIN,
Clerk of Said Court.
$175,000.00
$550,000.00
OFFICERS
J. O. Kino, Vlce-Pres. K. C. Scddckbrs, Cashier
DIRECTORS
J.O.King Daniel Nolan John H. Corbett
J. 8. Hammond R. H. Wilson
how to increase your
your
and
on vour savings
how to bank by mail and how
to. insure your banf deposits,
without cost, with a fund, of
ten million dollars, i - -
, Write today for Interesting
Free Booklet x ,
Capital and Surplus, $10,000,000.00 '
"In Capital and Surplus, there b Strength."
Tnt(opfl ALlRVST (oMPANY
(SAVINGS BANK) ,
pitt:3wc.m, pa.
WAVERtYM
i
- -vl -
I