"Easy Reading" Page. Dental Operations. I hav bin havin sum new exspeerunses for a weak or so, and as is kustomary i will brake the news to the suffrin publick with the pen whitch the immortle feller sez is mi tyer than the broad ax. My teath havin becum vary rotten and holler, and broak off sos when i opened my mowth it looked in thare like the oald snags & stumps stick in up out of Nigger pond out neer Jinninsvill. Wal, i finelly skrewed up my curridge by takein a cork skrew and removin the plug from a bottle ov 40 rod, and refreshin my inner man with •a eupple big snifters, then the dockter he interjeckted sum fluid exstrack of paralices in my gooms and then yanked the last infurnel tooth out ov my fodder trap. It wuz a grate releef to no pozitiv that i woodent never hav no moar tooth ake to harass my sole. Ivethawt about it a hull lot, and this is the way it strikes me. Natur diddent calclate that a humen bein shood be pestered with teath. When we are born into this onfrendly wurld ov tuff beef stake and inglish wallnuts we doant hav no moar teath than a new born gooce aig, but the happy parents cant be rsadis fide till thay rub our gooms, and make us naw a rubber ring. At last natur is exas perated and back we go to the primitiv, havin teath like the onsivilized woodchuck to bite and devour our pray. When the furst teenty tooth cums peepin up thru our red swelld gooms like a hill ov beans in the urley springtime, the fond parence danses a jig and calls in thair nabers to see it and rejoise with them o\|gr the wunderfull sirkum- It haint nothin to be onless yu intend a dentist ov the ba bey. He is the oanley feller that gits enny fun out ov the rellums ov humen teath. Wal, to cum back to my. subject, after a spell i went & sez to the doc, sez i, doant yu spoze i cood hav a pattern ov my mowth made and git a set ov teath on trile now all rite? and he sez, "Less see." He exzamined my mowth and sed he gessed he cood do it, so he mixt a lot ov lath & plaster and made a pare ov moulds for to kast the teath into. Then he got a gob ov beaswacks and made me bite onto it whitch hurt my gooms like the dickens. In a eupple days he had the artyfishul grinders dun, and i put em in thair respecktable plases, and i swun toman if it diddent feal as if i had swal lered long laiged lumberman and his rubber boots had got tangled up in the raffters ov my mowth and woodent go up nor down. It wuz a fealin i newer had sinse i cut my furst tooth way back in the sixtys. I coodent hardley chaw my kustomery cudd ov oald stan derd navey plug. On Sundy after meatin me 'll Mandy and the yunguns went over to Squire Roberts' for dinner. The Squire's bro ther Jonas from New York Sitty wuz thare a vizitin and his davvter whitch is a risto crat ov the noble and anshunt line ov Kodfish, and has all trimmins from a poodle 011 a string to the habbit ov sayin "New Yawk" Hur pa made his wod sellin segar stubbs to a siggaret foundry. His raw mateerial diddent cost nothin but the trubble ov fish in the stubbs out ov the kusspitters in the varyus hotells and sa loons, and besides makin him self a snug forchun, lie has the grate sadisfaxun of know in that he remooves temta shun from the path ov menny a brite yung man by causin him to die yung from smoak in the siggerets. Wal, we all sot down to din ner and the Squire ast me to ask the blessin, but i shook my hed, I diddent dast try it owin to the unsurtenty ov them teath. Finelly we got down to the okepashun ov eetin, andthats a trade i hav felt for yeers i vvuz a past master ov, but al as! i sean i wuzzent nee high to a suckin kaff at the jobb with them teath. I undertook to put a cupplej taters in my mowth and my upper plate turned a hand spring and the mowthfulll went in on top ov the hull] shootin match and thare i wuz. I coodent bite, i cood ent swaller the taters hull, i coodent say pleeze exskuze me tor i coodent speek a wurd. I sot thare in mizry a long time and when thay ast me why i diddent make out a dinner, i sed "um-m um-m" thru my noas, whitch is hog pen latten for "no." At last i got up and went out to the woodshed and paw ed the hull mess out and when the Squires dog seen the vittles and stuff', he cum and grabbed it and hoggd it down befoar i had time to say u git out!" Jolev Hancock ! sez i, he's s wall old my teath whitcli cost me lo dollers. Wot in Sam litenin be i agoin to do about it? How can i purswade him to k off'em up agin? It wuz a turrable purj-plexin problum But pritty soon the (log showed sines ov intnrnel disaster, distress and indi jesehun. He toar around and slobberd out ov his mowth, and when the Squire seen he sex, "He's got hiderfoby and wuz a goin to shoot him, but i sed it Wood be rong to shoot on Sundy, and i not bein affrade ov him wood take him to the barn and nock him in the lied, and we wood send his lied to the Pasture institoot to see if he reely has got rabbits or not. "Rabbits" se/ Jonas with a grin, "I gess yu meen rabbeys.*' Wal sex: i, mabev i do. So I 7 %/ took the dog and killed him and found my teath stuck in his tlirote. I did dent hav the hart to ware 'em no moar till i washed 'em in sope sudds. 1 desid ed the dog dide ov dogmat tix- TOMAI Y ROTT. N**w Rural Mt The L'nitod States merit has officially an menced to operate a which is Intended to rep. lty of the star route postoi. United States. The star ron. are those which are called fourtn postoffices, and the postmasters i.. chargß of these have been paid a per centage on the postal business tiiey transacted. As fast as possible wagons will be introduced throughout the United States. Each state will be divided into circuits, these circuits be ing of the length that a wagon can cover in a day. The postal clerks in charge of these wagons Issue money orders, register letters and transact a general postal business. The mail is delivered either at the houses of the people along the route or placed in what is called a rural free delivery box near a residence. The postal clerk has one key to this box and the occupants of the residence the other. In this way the posioffice comes to the peo COLLECTING MAI fj ON I'Ot'N TKY KOAD. pie instead of their going to the post office. The inventor of this postoffice wagon is Edwin \V. Shriver of Westminster, Md.. who was for years a purser on the Iron Steamboat line between New York and Long Branch. Mr. Shriver has been appointed postal clerk of the wagon which began operation last Monday. It is estimated by the postoffice de partment that about 40,000 of the minor rural postoflices will be done away with by the use of these wagons. Compllini? :> lllotioiifivy. Nearly everyone has had the bright idea that it must be a tremendous amount of work to get up a diction ary, but few have any notion of tho real size of the task. When Johnson got his famous dictionary started he calculated that, with six assistants, he could complete the task in three years, It took him nine years instead. lie re ceived the small recompense of s7.f>oo. and had to pay his assistants out of that. Webster worked -I years before h!s dictionary made its how to the world. Webster was very punctilious in his definitions, and so piirstaking that it was a wonder he completed the work when he did. The words which give the compiler of a dictionary the most trouble are th« • little one-syllable Saxon words. Their history extends back into the Saxon period, and their meaning has become twisted in many directions. Words with pedigrees are the hardest to trace. When a new dictionary is projected one man is selected as editor-in-chief and he appoints his subeditors. Then appeals are sent out to literary people in general for voluntary contributions in the nature of rare and curious worda. There are over 1.000 people • who have offered their services in the I case of a dictionary now making. They ' I are to read standard works, ancient i ' and modern, in the search for curious I words, their origin and meaning. These words, written on slips of paper, are | filed in thousands of pigeon-holes. Over I six tons of clips have been put aw.iv This means 6.000.000 words. But only 1.000.000 will be printed. The amount > of work necessary to properly sort these is evident. Stockholders Meeting. ' The annual meeting of the stock holders of Lake Mokoma Company, ! for theelection of directors anil th« , other business, will 1>» 1 held iit the office of F. \V. Meylert, , K*'!-, at Laporte Pa., on Thursday, November l(», H*oi), at ten o'clock A. M. Attest: J. Pennock; President, Edwin S. Phillips; Secretary. I ii> The Best place to buy goods | Is often asked by the pru ; pent housewife. ' Money saving advantages jarealways being searched for j Lose no time in making a »j thorough examination of the New Line of Merchandise Now on iEX H1 BITtON p ? ? ? ??? ? ? ? STEP IN AND ASK ABOUT THEM. | ' All answered at i ■ Vernon Hull's Large Store, ip&4|gir&v«i» P*.