ITou Should ItOokYor 'Thin Edges VOU will always find them on the ' best made clothes. The ability of master tailors is judged by them. The thin, even edge is one of the distinctive features of Clotlfcraft Clothes. It enables the cloth to lay flat CLOTIiClAFT All-Wool Clothes 10to25 Our spring line of Clothcraft is now complete. Let us show you. ' t Bing-Stoke Company. REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Northampton Hard Vein Roofinrj Slate A superior product, does not absorb moisture, is unchangeable in color and does not fade, rust or decompose. A roof of Hard Vein Slate needs no repair.' Sold by THE WOODWORK SUPPLY COMPANY REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. t Wherever you may avail yourself of the unexcelled facilities offered by this strong bank. Uncle Sam's mail car riers Will bring your deposits from any part of the world. We will cheerfully mail you booklets ex plaining our system of giving to out-of-town accounts precisely the same care as those of local residents. FOUR PER CENT AND NO WORRY. PITTSBURGH BANKSAVINGS 4thAVE and SMITH 'FIELD ST. PITTSBURGH PA. ASSETS OVER, 16 MILLION DOLLARS Write for Booklet CM. Niagara Falls Five Day Excursion $4.00 Saturday, May 28, 1910 BUFFALO, ROCHESTER & PITTSBURGH RAILWAY Train leaves Falls Creek 2.32 a. m. and 1.06 p. m. PENNSYLVANIA BULLETIN SUMMER VACATIONS. j The time is coming for summer outings. Have you j thought about yours yet? , No other country on the face of the globe contains so many delightful summer resorts as the United States, with its near neighbor, Canada. The Pennsylvania Railroad will issue its popular Fummer Excursion Book on June 1, and you will find it a wonderful help in plotting out your summer trip. It contains descriptions of about eight hundred of the leading resorts of North America, lists of hotels and hoarding houses at these various places, a map, routes and rates from the principal stations on tbe Pennsylvania Rail road, and other valuable information. If you have grown tired of the resort you have v isited for years, you may make a selection from this book for u stay of a day, a week, a month, or the whole summer. You may plot out ah extended tour covering mountain and seashore, or a fishing trip, or a hunting jaunt, by rail or boat, or a combination of both. Any Ticket Agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad will be glad to furnish a copy of this valuable bpoV for, ten cent9, or it will be mailed yu postpaid on receipt of twenty-five cents, by Geo. Boyd, General Passenger Agent, Philadelphia, Pav between the buttons one result or sciennnc tailoring. We select them from over a score of different lines to offer you, because we know them to be the best tailored pure wool clothes and selling at a sensible price. These clothes will satisfy you, no matter how particular you are." With each suit you get a signed guarantee that every thread is wool and . the style and thape will last you until the suit id "01 n out. You Live RAILROAD . HE NEVER MISSED. t A Well Paid, Fiery Job That Wears a Man Out In Fifteen Yeari. Tbi) man n ho Btoud at the lever bail a story tlint Is common all over Amer ica.' Ten years before lie lind been a peasant luil In a dull little village In Ireland. Drunn up and along by the einlgrunt tide, be bad drifted to Chi cago, and bere In tbe works be had caught the true spirit of tbe place, which Is to strain every nerve and rise, tie bad risen. II U pay was $90 0 week. He worked every nllit from 0 p. m. to G a. in., twelve vigilant hours. Watching those three mam moth tanks, by the tints and hues in their columns of (lame be could tell Just wheu to wrench back a lever. This he did over a hundred times In the night, and if he missed by so much as thirty seconds he spoiled thousands of dollars' worth of steel. He never missed. To bold this Job Is to Jiitn the strength of a lifetime Into fifteen years at $'J0 a week. The man recog nized this as a mutter of course,' only qualifying It by the remark that be knew of a redheaded Scotchman at Homestead who bad held It seventeen years before breaking. That bis Whole life had bwu changed; that tbe little Irish village, the misty bog and the bovels were back hi another age, on another planet all this be felt vague ly and summed It up. with a twinkle. "Shure," be said, "It's a terrible quick spin this ould wurld Is aftber takln'." But be loved the fiery Job, called the huge tanks "me dnrlln's" and said be would rather be what be was than be president Ernest Poole In Every body's. . (vi COLORS IN FLAGS; ' Red Is the Most Frequent, and' After That Cornel Blue. It Is entirely appropriate, of.furse, that red, tbe war color, should' -ijipear so frequently In tbe flags of tue vari ous nations. Of the flags of tbe coun tries of tbe eastern hemisphere .there is only one that pf Greece which does not show the murtlul color. In the western hemisphere, however, we And several stauilurds not showing red. Tbe flags of the Argentine ite publlc, Brazil, Nicaragua, Guatemala Uruguay and Honduras contain no red. In this country there Is no red In the union Jack or In the flags of the secretary of the navy, the admiral of the navy, the rear admiral senior in rank and the rear admiral Junior In rank. Ited appears In the pennnnt of the rear admiral second In rank aud the pennant of the revenue marine. Tbe United States mall flag also shows red, and that color is also found in tbe pennants for the vessels of the lighthouse sen-Ice, the yacht ensign, the ensign of tbe revenue marine, tbe president's and the seeretnry of war's standards. The flags that are almost entirely red. except for tbe devices shown thereon, are those of Austria-Hungary, Egypt, Morocco and Japan. Tbe flag of Turkey Is practically of a solid red. After red tbe prevailing color In flags Is blue. narper's Weekly. , Something Wrong. The balloou pilot landed In tbe little backwoods village and told tbe loiter ers the thrilling story of bis escape. "Aud at one time." he related, with dramatic force, "1 was In a storm and sweeping over a vast desert. There was nothing to do but throw out sand and prepare for tbe worst. Gentlemen, at one time I felt as if I had lost my bead and gone plumb crazy." Tbe oldest inhabitant slowly lighted bis pipe and drawled, with a sarcastlo smile: , "You must have been plumb crazy, bub, to throw sand on a desert Didn't you think there was ebough sand there already?" Chicago News. .p ' What Intermittency Means. Intermlttency Is that form of i'Jifgu larlty in which tbe pulse appears to drop a best occasionally. In some in stances it occurs regularly and two or three times per minute for several hours. Sometimes also it ' is very ir regular and Is noted a number of times within a few seconds and not again for a minute or more. This pe culiarity generally causes much un easiness. Yet, while It may be a very serious symptom and associated wltb grave and incurable disease of the heart. It often signifies merely a func tional disturbance whlcb Is In nowise dangerous. Why He Got Up. It was only about noonday, but the commuter yawned. He yawned heavi ly two or three times. i- "Got up at 6 o'clock," be explained. "Bad to catch my train. Wben my wife waked me I said to ber: 'Six o'clock! Tbe chickens haven't begun to crow yet, have they? Wby must I get up before the cblckena do, I'd like to know.' " 'I don't know,' she said, -unless it's because you're no chicken.'" New York Press. Fatal Curiosity. . "How did they manage to get such a fine thumb print of the burglarr " "The bouse bad beeo painted that day, and he Just couldn't resist tbe temptation to feel of the paint to see If It was dry." Houston Post Her Worry. Mrs. Hoyle You seem unhappy. Mrs. Doyle I am. I don't believe that If I were to die my husband would wear as deep mourning as be did for his first wife. New Tork Press. Scruples too rigid are nothing else but concealed pride. Goethe. A MONSTER WHALE. One Wy In Which It resembled Tiny Sptcisj of Fijh. One wlhii-i Miine' win nyo 11 liirs I Willi IP HII- till. I'll drill Ul'i- of Hi h A i lillill Mi'iifi'i Is lis rrr:i- hum tiilii'l asllltl l'. in.-IISHll mi IV. I' II:" CHI'S inn' transported lilt IiiIiiihI in elites ivhen a uliiile nil:- it riTii"ii,v I hill penili would pay In see II van liei essiii'j'. i.' course. I Inn ilie i-r III1 ill Inns should I given III tiulieiile.l ImiK uml us It mi a cold I HUT Hie wliiiie kepi III il fair l.v goml stale ill n-sei i Mtlmi (or II col. slderulile niniiliei ol neeks before I' became luipeiiillt e lo close the ainiise nii'iil season so l:i r as tlml p:irilciili. celiiceau ns coin e.'iied While 'It was nn exhibition In Chicago a nier chant from u Utile town In southern Illinois, wlni happened to lie In Hie cm on business, went to se Il W hen to returned home he ron Id talk nf noil) lug else. . "You nni.v think you've seen big fish.' be sn Id, "Inn unless you've come ucrosr a whale somewhere you haven't." "How long was It. JeffV" somelnnh asked him "It was mighty close lo ninety ftx' and about tin ecu feet thick It Wie the biggest I III nn I ever saw nut of the water that swims In the water." "Well," said the village doctor, "you didn't expect to find it a smelt, did you ?" "No." he answered hesitatingly, "but It did. Just a little."-Exchange. FACE PATCHES. They Became a Society Craze at One Time In England. i'laster patches were Introduced in England In the reign ot Kdward VI. by a foreign lady who In this manner Ingeniously concealed a wen on her nec k. They becume such a craze and were carried to such exaggerated lengths that they -urn- liuiilly lam pooned out ot sight The men, as well as the women, sluck themselves over with these beauty spots. No lady of fashion coiihidered her toilet complete untll she was equipped with her little box of patches cut in her favorite de sign. If one happened In come off in company she hurriedly replaced It with a fresh one-from t be box. At length patching in England went so far that party spirit was symbo lized by the position of the patches. A letter In theipaper on June 2. 1711. tells of u visit to the II ay market and the discovery by Jhe writer of three classes of women In the boxes nil dlf ferently pntchul Upon Inquiry he discovered that those who patched on the right side of the forehead were Whigs and thosi who favored the left were Tories, while those who patched Indifferently on either side were a neutral party, whose faces had not yet declared themselves. London Sal turday Iteview. A lazy Race. ! A lazier man than the average Pur ' man It would be extremly hard u And. Wheu It Is absolutely necessar for blm to work he generally lilts upon some method which will save til in a I. i I of exertion. If be wishes to cultivate a piece of ground he sets light to the brushwood as a cheap, easy and elhVa clous method or preparing the soil For two or three years he cultivates that piece of land, and then he sets light to another spot, allowing the Jun-' gle to grow In the old place, which will be ready for reburnlng when the other ground wonts a rest. ICIce growers dispense with plows, turning loose Instead a number of buffaloes, which cut up the saturated soil with their hoofs. Wben a Burma n has earned a little money ne immediately proceeds to spend It all, for the Bur mese bafe no ambition to be rlcb and never board: consequently there are no large landowners, and,, there being no aristocracy, the people ore as near being on an equality as possible. A Poser. A vegetarian writer nnrrated in a' recent address a "poser" that bis little son had put to blm. "My little boy," said tbe speaker, "often turns away from bis lentils anil expresses a Jonglng for chops and roast beef. "The other day at table I explained to blm that we become what we eat tbat by eating vegetables we become mild and placid, but by eating meat we become savage and gross. "Well, papa.' said tbe lad. 'If It's true that we become what we eat. why don't cannibals become mission ariesT " Fishing For Plunder. A visitor to one of tbe hotels at re kin was awakened during tbe night by tbe noise caused by tbe fall of a roll of paper. Getting out of bed. be saw wltb astonishment .a pole, to which were attached a Ashing line and hook, moving about the room, collecf lng various objects and removing them through tbe window. Upon going downstairs he was beard by tbe bur glarious Chinaman outside to whom the rod belonged and who escaped, leaving bis Ashing line behind tilm. An Effectual Cur. "She wants to be a sister to me." "Yon can easily get her out of that notion." "How?' "Treat her aa you would a stater." Kansas City Journal. -- Her Guess. . Hubby There's another chap com mitted suicide because his home was unhuppy. Wide I dare soy it will be happier now. Illustrated Bits. A cruel stor runs on wheels, and every hand oils tbe wheels as they run Oulda. i A Useful Remlndor. An M. 1'. wbo in bis magisterial capacity periodically visited a private lunatic asylum told tbe story of a man of some position in tbe legal world wbo went to see a patient wbc bad occasional lapses Into sanity. The patient made a greut impression on bis visitor as a well informed, healthy minded gentlemau and was assured that bis case should be Inquired Into. On leavlug, the grateful patient' courteously conducted his morning caller to the front dour, affectionately pressing bis baud at parting. ' "You won't forget what I've told you," be pleaded, wltb tears in bis voice. "No," responded the visitor, turning round to descend tbe rather long flight of steps. ' "I don't think you will," said the pa tient dreamily, "but lest you should you know" And. lifting up his foot, be gave tbe unsuspecting, defenseless visitor a kick behind that sent blm spinning down tbe stairway and sprawling on the gravel. Pearson's Weekly. A Bird's White Feathers. Tbe occurrence of white feathers In a bird's plumage Is very common. It Is, of course, due to lack ot coloring matter and Is liable to appear in both young and old birds. 1 have known of several old birds to exhibit this pe culiarity (mostly In tbe wing feathers, however), and it may be due to imper fect nutrition and circulation as tbe bird ages. I have also noticed It in young birds In a number of instances. The phenomenon thus cannot be said to occur simply as a result of old age, but Is rather one of those slight changes in the bird's system the causes of whlcb we do not know. There is tills much more to be said, however when a young bird starts out with a few white feathers they are usually retained throughout life, molting each time in a similar man ner. Old birds may exhibit this loss of coloring at any time. St Nicholas. Patrick Henry's Fee. It is said of Patrick Henry that dur ing his practice of law In the Virginia courts and wben be was familiarly ad dressed as "governor" a man wbo bad been arrested for stealing a bog and wbo was out on ball went to tbe gov ernor to have blm defend him. The governor said, "Did you walk away wltb that shoat?" "1 don't like to say." "Out with it" "Yes, sir." "Have you got the carcass?" "Yes, sir." "You go home, you wretch, cut the pig lengthwise in half and hang as much of it In my smokehouse as you keep In yours." At court tbe governor said, "Your honor, this man has no more of that stolen shoat than I have." . Tbe man was cleared. National Monthly. The Generous Barber. "II ere, 1 sn.v! Be a bit more careful with that razor. That's tbe second time you've cut me." "Well, well, so it is. Hut there! 1 always deduct a ha'penny for every cut. Wby, it's nothing for a man to go out of bere having won fourpence off me." Ixmdon Tatler. Might Be on One's Nose. . "Don't get down in tbe mouth, old nian.V said the optimist. "Look on the bright side of things." "That's all very well," mournfully re plied tbe sufferer, "but what is tbe bright side of a eumboll?" The First National Bank OF REYNOLD8VILLE. Capital and Surplus Resources . . OFFICEK8 J. 0. Kino, Vl.-e-Pres. DIRECTOkf J.O.King Daniel Nolan 1. S. Hammond Inus H. itAdcasn. Pret. John H. Kaiioher Henry C. Delhi Every Accommodation Consistent with Careful Banking Strong Efficient Experienced The Peoples National Bank REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Continues to offer to a consfantly growing body of de positors adequate facilities and perfect service derived from thirty-six years successful bankingexperience. Let us dem onstrate to you. Interest paid on Savings Accounts, hav ing liberal withdrawal privileges. The Ideal OH for either l!r- ceolcd or water-cooled Ma chine. Distilled from Penn ylTanla Crude Oil light in color, whlcb means absolute Sieeilon) frons carbon. WA VERIFY SPECTAIp la thin OIL feeds freely through id-style lubricator, ana wtii not onceel in u coldest weather. tEsreraroW; Anfir I jySSOLUTION NOTICE. Notice Is hereliy given tlint the partnerMiln lieretAiore ex lut ing between (leorue C. Ilmilei- and Joseph It, Mllllrmi, doing business umlnr the, firm mime of nunlar Mllllrmi, omii niiukiil, Iti-ynoldsvlllii, ln linn linen dissolved t,y mutual numert (Ji'omB U. Humor rmlilng. The business will hereafter no conducted by Joseph It. MlllliBii, All ouiHliuidlnic luHiimiu lire due and pup ils to II Minor & Mllllrmi mid must be puld within thirty diiys. Any bills urhIiihI ,c uiu nun niiuuiu uw prcNfnii'u promptly. IJKil II llriM'rv,, April 28th, 1010. JOS. K. Mll.MHKN. JgXECUrOR'3 NOTICE. . Estate of tlio Into Mrs. Sarab Welsh, of Itoynuldsvllle. Notice Is hereby glen fliat letters testa mentary on the esliitn of Mrs. Surah Welsh, lute ol UeyiioldsvlllB borough, county of J ii Iter sun and slate of Pennsylvania, de ceased, have beea granted lo the under signed, to whom all persons Indebted to said estate are nsiinsUid to make payment, and those having claims or demands will make known tliesume withoutdelay. rrj .. J. Kbhii, Executory JOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. The stockholders of the Jefferson and Clearfield Coal and Iron Company, a corporation organlced and existing under the laws of the Oommonwealih of Pennsyl vania, with lis prlni'lpitl olllce at Keyn oldsvllln, Jefferson county, Pennsylvania, are hereby notllled that a meeting will ho held at 10 o'clock a. ni., on the twelfth dav of July, A. I). 1UI0, at the general office of aid company, to take action cn the approval or disapproval of the proposed Increase of the Indebtedness of said corporation, In pursuance of the following resolutions, which wore adopted by a majority of the entire Hoard of lllrentors of the Jefferson and C'learlio d Coal and Iron Company, to wit: "RESOLVED, That, the Indebtedness of the Jefferson & Clearfield Goal & Iron (Jom- Rany be Increased from Two Million, One lundred and Forty-one Thousand (ti,l41,000) Dollars to Four Million, Six Hundred and Forty One Thousand (4,641,01101 Dollars." KEHOLVED. That a meeting of the stockholders be called to convene at the general office of this company on the 12th sy of July, A. I), lino, to take action on the approval or disapproval of the proposed Increase nf the Indebtedness of Inls com- fumy, and that the secretary be and Is here y directed to give notice thereof, as required by law." Attest: Lewis fsKi.is, may iu, imu. Becretary. CONSIDER THE PVANTAGES OF m i-HTrai n i w u an WATER A WEATHER PROOF, FIRE RESISTING. Will not melt, rot, tear or corrode. Contains no tar, oil or paper. Outlast! metal and shingles. " Pliable-can be easily fitted Into ratters, valleys, etc., thereby laving expense of tin and copper. Any handy man can apply Rnberold Lengthens the life of any building. Writ! for fricetand taiHflrl. Woodwork Supply Co. Reynoldsvillc, Pa. I you have anything to sell, try nur Want Column. HUUHKc ft FLEMING. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Vain Street. Reyooldsville, Pa $175,000.00 $600,000.00 K. C. SCHDCKKRS.Gasbier John H. Corbet K. H. Wilson Capital and Surplus $125,000 Resources $550,000 IfToa have any difficulty in obtaining Waverly Special from your dealer or (at age cent manicate with ae at once and w will mtm that yon are supplied, rerftct laartcatiea w-B-mt earkem deeeeiu Waverly Oil Vlmts Ct Ptttabarca.'; .V