The Herald. FODUSnED DAILY, BCNDAY KXOKITED HUKtr, ITIHT SAIOnDAT. m. a, noTitit it. c.novjsn W. J. WA.1KXSH.. f. M. Boxmt.... ....KMtor and ruhlt$her 1 , ,., r-nml Editor I , , Jlfnnaiei- BY GEQRGE W PECK COPYRIGHTED" 1 50 I SUBSCRIPTION RATES! OA.iLT.per year. ...:.......... ..............M 00 irimt, per year, -diitJiTll.fnff Itatet. Transient, 10 conts per line, first Insertion ! 6 tents per lino each subsequent Insertion, Itates lor regular advertising can be bad on applica tion st the office or by mall. The Evikiho HEIIM.D has a larger circula tion In Shenandoah than any other paper put l&sbsdV books open to all. Catered at tho I'ostotttco. at Shenandoah, Pa. for transmission through the malls as second-class mall matter. TAnEnicAM press association"! CHAPTEIl IX THE DAD BOY IN LOVE. "Aro yon a Christian!" asked tho bad boy of th,o grocery man as that gentle man was placing vegetables out in front of tho grocery ono morning. "Well, I hopo bo," answered tho gro cery man, "I try to do what is right and hopo to wear tho goldon crown whon tho timo comos to closo my books." "Then how is it that you put out a box of croat big swoet potatoes, and when wo order some and thoy como to tho tablo they aro httlo bits of things, not bigger than a radish I Do you expect to got to hearen on such small potatoes when you uso big ones for a sign?" asked tho boy as ho took out a silk handkerchief and brushed a speck of dust off his nicely blackod shoes. The grocery man blushed and said ho did not mean to tako any such advan tage of his customers. Ho said it must have been a mistake of tho boy that de livers grocorics. "Then you must hiro tho boy to make mistakes, for it lias been so every time wo have had Bwcot potatoes for five years," said tho boy. "And about green corn. You havo n fow ears stripped down to show how nice and iilumn it is. Theiib are plucit and industry and if wo ordor a dozen cars there aro enough In the soul of every American only two that havo got any corn on at . . . . . ... , ,.. ji. all, and Pa and-Ma gets them, nnd the citizen who has met with losses In the rest of ug hav(J tQ cUow C)b Do yQU present panic to pull himself together hopo to wear a crown of glory on that and go on again. Khe uses the ex- k5"?fconf' .... .. 6 e , , n . . ... ., "Oh, such things will happen," said perience ho gained in this bad blow, lt th man wlth a laughi ..But It 1b hardly worth while for Con gress toflpend time discussing whether gold is worth IS, 17. 18, lOor 20 times as much as silver. The markets of the world settle that questlou, If Congress Bhould pass a law requiring water to run up hill tho law would probably bo Inoperative. for a burglar and nearly killed, and she said sho was afraid Pa had took to drink ing again, and she asked tne if I heard any firing of guns, and I said no, and then sho put a wet towel on Pa's head." "You ought to be ashamed, said tho grocory man. "How does your Pa liko your being in love with the girl? Does ho seem to encourage yon in itr "Oh, yes, she was tip to our house to borry somo tea, and Pa patted her on tho cheek and hngged her and said she was a dear little daisy nnd wanted her to sit in his lap, but when I wanted him to let mo havo CO cents to buy her some ico cream ho said that was nil nonsense He said: 'Look at your Ma. Eating ice cream when she was a girl was what in jured her health for life.' I asked Mn about It, and sho snid Pa never laid out 10 cents for ice cream or nny luxury for her in all tho five years ho wns sparking her. Sho says he took her to a circus onco, but ho got free ticket for carrying water for tho elephant. She says Pa was tighter than the hark to a tree. toll you it's going to be different with mo. If thero is anything that girl wants, sho is going to have lt if I have to sell Ma's copper boiler to got tho money, What is tho uso of having wealth if you hoard it up and don't enjoy it? This family will bo run on different princi pies after this, you bet. Say, how much aro thoso yellow wooden pocket combs In tho showcaso? I've a good notion to buy thorn for her. How would ono of thom round mirrors with a zinc cover di. for a present for a girl? Thero's nothing too goou tor nor. will enable him to weather future ones and become a richer, wiser, happier man than he was before. don't let's talk about heaven. Let's talk about the other place. How's things over to your house? And say what's the matter with you? You are all dressed up nnd havo got a clean shirt on and vnnr shoes blacked, and I notice vour One of those disasters that have pants aro not raveled out so at tho bot- cIrHmI ro manvnlliorr.itles.ln the form toms of the logs behind. You aro notm of a widespread conflagration, paid Its 'elt Should smilo," said tho boy respects to Minneapolis, In a few hours as he looked in a small mirror on tho Bweeolmr awav two millions of lumber counter covered with Uy specks. "Agirl saw mills, and two hundred houses. Fully 1,500 people were rendered bouselesa and homeless. The terror of uch calamities can only be properly got mashed on mo, and Ma fays it is good for a boy who hasn't got no sister to be in lovo with a girl, and so I kind of tum bled to myself, and sho don't gonowhero without I go with hor. I tako her to dancing school and everywhere, and 6he appreciated by those who are the aub- loves mo liko a house afire. Say. was yon ever in lover juanes a ieuow icel queer, Jectsof them. STORH OBDBRS. A Boston newspaper reports that everywhere In that region It finds "mill owners paying their hands In store checks, which orders for provl- don't It? Well, sir, the first timo I went homo with her I put my arm around her. and, honest, it scared mo. It was just liko when you tano nom or tne nanuies oi a lectrlc battery, .and vou can't let KoJO lust na weak as a cat. I thought she had ... - i 1 A-T. needles in ner oeit ana was going vu i my arm away, but it was just like it was rfaed on. I asked her if sho felt that slonB and other necessities serve just way too, and she said sho used to, but -rood a purpose as currency." ppy New England 1 The store order 4em muK?-anj vastly better managed .ere thnn in this region. Happy be- '.111 9 A rViinnvstem "keens the wheels of rl helna to restore confidence. Primarily, wliat Is the difference be tween the store order and the bill of ex change? The order 1b a means of en larging the field of barter, and that is precisely what the bill is. But a very small part of International trade Is carried on with money, and the same maybe said with reference to inter state trade. The bill rests mainly on the confidence wbloh men who have never seen each other, men of different " nations and languages, have In the In tegrity of each other, on the confidence whldh one feels that the other will be just to him. When tarter was the rule there were 'no panics. There was not munh to go tn nnnln about, to be eure. but that r-l. l. n ' not materially alter lr, wna nothlne when you got used to it. That mode mo mad. But she is older than mo and knows more about It. 4. y Sad Double Drowning In Nnw Hampshire. The Weihs. N. II.. Auk. 18. A sad drowning accident Is reported from the otlicr side of L.ako winnimsocee. A man named GIddlngs from Boston, supposed to be a lawyer, brought a party of orphan children from Boston for a camping out in at Tuftonboro Neck. He took his guests on nn excursion on the steamer Cyclonic Whon a short distance out ono of the boys became dizzy and fell over board. Giddlngs Jumped to his rescue and held the boy above water some mln utes, but before a boat could reach him both drowned. Giddlngs was 27 years of age. The boy wns IB years olu ana Is said to have helped his blind father in his dally attempts to get a livlugintUestreots of Boston. New Jersey's Itllln Mntclics. SEA Gust. Auk. 18. The interstate nnd the Now Jersey state matches were decided at the Butts horo yosterday. The first wns captured by the EriL'Incer Corps, of Wash Ingcon, D. C, and the latter was won by the Second Now Jersey regiment. Yoster day's victory for tho Washington boys elves them threo straight victories, which entitles them to tho ownership of the prize. Will Vlllnril bo I'l-mu-ciltRtl ? NEW Yonrc, Aug. 18. Northern Pacific affairs received n largo share of attention In wall street today owing to tho publica tion of the letter of Drayton Ives severely denunciatory of Henry Villiard's manage ment of the company nnd the announce ment that a Philadelphia stockholder was movInK to secure proceediiiKS acnlust Mr. Villard and several of co-directors. An Alleged Triple Murderer Yellow Springs, O., Aug. 18. William Whnley, the colored man suspected of vMnTtV iriirlmr the riast month, "was enp Mirpd In ft barn near here. He was hur riedly taken to the county jnll at Xenia to prevent a threatened lynching. BASEBALL YESTERDAY. At. Ttnltlmore: Baltimore, 5: St. Louis, At Philadelphia: Boston, 7; Philadel phia, 3. At Johnstown: oonnsiowu, v, lng, 2. At VnrV; Allentown. 2: York, 1. At Harrlsburg (10 Innings): Harrisburg, S; Easton, 1. At Altoona: Altoonn, 7; Scrnnton, 0. Rend- THE VICE OF GrtEGARIOUSNE8S. Tli Modern Tendency Is Toward C'cn- trallrntlon of S'oclnl Ufa. In tho heart of a crowded city. In the hot month of August, I onco met n woman whon I had known somo 10 years before as a resident nt ono of the most beautiful spots In what is perhaps tho most beautiful county of New Kngland. Sho told mo that slm now lived, nil the year round, in a big uonnnng nouse on fcqunre. "Fourteen HiiuH of horse cars," she continued, not Without pride, "pass tlio door, and thero are two large hotels nearly onnoslto " Good God, tnndam," I could not helo ex claiming In pity, "how you must plno for me country v "i-ine lor itl" sho answered in astonishment. "Why, tho folks wanted me to come up and visit them this Bum mer, but I couldn't bear to leavo tho city. And I forgot to tell you," sho added, with tho air of one who cni u the climax, "thero's a brass band that practices twice a week in tho buliuing next door." When I heard all this, I still pitied tho woman, but for a different renmn. Itpr caie, I take It, was n typical one. Sho was simply a Victim to what I shall venture to call tho national vice of unduo gregarious ncis. This vice or habit, if the reader prefers that term Is a characteristic of tho age. It begins to attack even the morose and healthy nature of John Bull, but obvi ously Its manifestations are most common and most extreme In our own country. iuuny proots oi this statement will at onco occur to tho render the railroad cars In which wo travel, tho apartments in which wo live, tho continual exodus from the farm to tho village and from tho vil lage to the town, the form which our amusements take, and, above nil, the Im mense development of clubs. Almost every function of modern life is discharged through tho medium of a club. To diuoiu a crowd, to be charitable in n crowd, to nn out in a crowd to view tho fuco it nature, and, perhaps, greatest absurdity of all, to renu poetry in a crowd such aro the ambi tions of n typical American. I believe that there nre in existence so cieties of drunknrds not for loKttlmnte purposes of conviviality, but with tho weak Intention of reforming In a body. There Is certainly a club of persons whose bond of union is a desire to free themselves from the dreadful vlco of procrastination, nnd I have observed advertisements of "Best Classes" nt the sensbore for clercymen nnd schoolteachers. There nro immense sum mer towns or camps on Capo Cod where people arc herded together almost as close ly as the occupants of a tenement houso in the city, and this for pleasure. H. C. Mer wlu in Atlantic. STOCK AND PRODUCE MARKETS doling Quotations of the New York an rllllnilelpliln Kxcliancea. rNBWYoiiK, Aug. 17.-Nenrly tl,000,000 gold came In oy ioany-B jurupcau " conslRners helug no less than sliteen in num ber. There wns a reaction from yesterday afternoon's advance. Closing bids: Lchlnh Valley 31 W. N. Y. & Pa..-. 4 Pennsylvania- iM H. B. T. com... - n,n; mi H. & B.T. pref.... it St. I'aul Wi Eile.......... Lehlch Nav- - Ji- vv......!....1o.js Hooding 8. ta. 4s... 60 N. Y. Central O.M Reading 1st pf 6i-. S3 West Shore......... 8 Reading 2d pf 6s... 11 Lake Erie & W... 1M Reading 3d pf Hi... 13 New Jersey Cen. - N. Y. & N. E 17 Pel-t: Hudson-ICS the caBe. Her Pa came to let the cat in." "When I was going to leavo her at the gate, she kissed me, and that was worse than putting my arm around her. By gosb, I trembled all oyer just like I had chills, but I was as warm as toast. Sho wnnldn't let oro for much as a minute, and I was tirod as though I had been didn't want nn t , t Inrr nnl 11T1 fit HITS I ,ir,o not materially iw . - . . . , , ,. ,, - - . .... ta t,a homo at an. DUI sne saiu it wuuiu Would tuere do any pauiw uu . . t- b t ,. for m0 to 0 nome BVfctem of barter were carried out to the Kri& come again the nest day, and the n,in.ttnn.uin next morning I went to her house be- llmlt WUKU iuo iiBD' iv-- wider exchange allows ? If It were possible to make an experiment In a time of avtiage prosperity to determine bow much money la actually needed to carry on the business of a nation euccessfully, the result would astonish most persons. -We cannot eat money or wear it. A man in a desert or adrift at sea would cast lt from him as a useless burden. If we have In super abundance what we cannot eat and wear, what Is the just occablon foi fear? jDo not mistake this as an argumen t for store orders. The point of it is that the popular notioii about the amount of money really needed In business is a superstition, and out of fm-B rmv of them were up, and her Pa came to let the cat in, and I askod him what time his girl got up, and he laffed and said I had got it bad, nnd that I had better go horaj nnd not bo picked till I got ripe. Say. how much does it cost to get married?" "Well, I should say you had got it bad," said tho grocery man as ho set out a basket of beets. "Your getting in love will be a groat thing for your Pa. You won't have any time to play any more jokes on him." "Oh. I iruess we can find time to keep Pa from boine lonesome. Have you seen him this morning? You ought to havo seen him last night. You seo, my chum's Pa has got a setter dog stuffed. It is one that died two years ago, imd he thought n m-Mt deal of it. and ho had it stuffed for a ornameut. Well, my chum and mo took the dog nnd put It on our front steps aud took some cotton and fastened It in the doer's mouth so it looked just liko froth, and we smt behind the door General Mnrkets. ' New YonK, Aug. 17. State nnd western flour quiet, steady; low extras, $1.05-. "; city mills patents, Sl.S&ai.M; fair to fancy, $3.15 63.15; Minnesota clear, $2.0083; patents, $3.00 O1.30; superfine, $1.7oa.-'i: cny nuns, .i.pu 8 85; winter wheats, low grades, $1.952.15; patents, $3.401; straights, $3.3IX&4; rye mix tures, $3.90'-! $1.7n2.10; southern flour dull, steady; common tofalroxtra, $3.10 3.10; good to choice extra, $3 161.3(). Ryp flour quiet, steady: BUperfino, $83.35. Wheat lower; August, 6HW3G8Mct September. H 89?ic.: October, 72T2Me-i December. 70k 76Wo. Rye nominal; western, 55o. Corn steady, dull; September. lTHi. October, 8Vc.t No. S. l"M18o. 0ats duU' euBJ-i Anl'U6t, aiMo.; Rnnti-mber. kKc.: October, 31Hc: November, BXc; New York, SOffi45c.i westorn, 30 loo. dull; extra mess. $W08; family. S10fflV.i. Pork oulet, steady; new mess, ai uun.,. u. ... easy; steam rendered, $8.00. Butter In rood erate demand, steady. New York dairy. 17 Jo.; western dairy, nw-iw, r.ism. -w;.. New York creamery, 31S440.; western iio., 1721Hc; Imitation creamery, V'W&lpc. rrdo.oonr'rmmi do. .m.U .6 OHcs part skims, 26c; full skims, lc. Eggs quiet eusy; ?iew i ur mm j....j . , 17Mc. western, 1010Mo. II ii rrilinilP AISiT- I . J" lUUIUUll, u uvuiiil,vii Wheat firmer. Corn firmer; white oorn, by i ki. n nw do.. DV sample, tvaoje. Oats Arm. Rye ealer. nay dull; good to choice timothy, $1718. Cotton nominal at 7Mo. Provisions steady, unchanged. Butter very nrm; creamery iuhuj. . rhnVf.. zaaaic: do. imitation, 30o.: ladle, fancy, 10c.: good to choice, 1018o. packed, 1617o. Eggs scarce at 16c Injury From Illcycle Riding. Ono evil traceable to bicycllnc is the con firmed stoop which has already declared Itself in many wheelmen, a result so com mon In tho less strongly built bicyclists of tho continent as to have found its way into classification as tho "kyphosis hicycllsta- rum." Tho dorsal curvature posteriorly, which used to be rare In boys under 14 years of age, is, now that the bicyclo is so largely Ubcu, very ireuucntiy met with, particular ly among those young bicyclists whoso spinal column is developing more rapidly than the ligaments and muscles, and in whose case, therefore, tho equilibrium be tween thoso parts is more or lessdlsturbed. Were Itierely an unsightly deformity. the stoop in question ought to be combated In every way, but confirmed dorsal curva ture posteriorly has consequences of itsown quite mischievous enough to call for im mediate counteraction. Tho displacement, rested or dlseased"'devclopm'eni of fhe&'o oigans, wnicn Kyphosis Inevitably induces, ate all too berious to warrant tho slightest neglect, m reuieuying uiem. Exerclso of a kind to accustom tho snlnal column to an action directly antagonistic to the Inclination forward of the bicyclist's attitude is what is needed. The uso of tho Indianclubs or such similar means of In curvutlng the spino anteriorly, throwing oui in) tueBu uuu maintaining the head erect, inouiu oe practiced with that object. jjouiuii iuucet. Changes In the Dead Son. Tlie;ui'ious statement is published in the orgaiwi tuo I'alestlne Kxploratlon fund on tl( authority of Dr. Sorter that the DeadSea loses every day by evaporation fccvcrl million tons of water. Dr. Sorter says tis enormous mass Is easily drawn up uytaraysoi wie sun, me vauey wherein tho fcti lies being one'of tho hottest points on til globe. Thi vast basin Is remarkable ns being ,hu d(:pent expression upon the surface of the eirth. is 1 ,300 feet below tbo lovel of the Jtediterrtneun, and rooky walls rising 8,000 et in lkiglit surround it on all sides. It is nourisUd only by the river Jordan. and bero belw no outlet its entire tribute of waer ruusOje absorbed by evaporation only. Dr.Lorter tka that tho waters of the lako ire couctyWung more and more, nnd so nrut has itidwity become that thohu. man sody floats oil ,0 surface without tho slightest exertion "timuls or feet. . r ,,. nia of nil kinds In all and waited for ra to como iuwu superstltionnpanlcaorall Klnasinaii u When Pa started to coroo ages have grown, it is saie to say that, as a rule, distresses like the pres ent have come upon people not when S,ho necessities were scarce, but when ttieywereln overflowing abundance. It is not money wbloh makes wealth, up th9 steps, I growled, and Pa looked at the dog and said, 'Mad dog, by crimus, and he started down the sidewalk, and riinm barked just liko a dog, and I 'ki-yl'd' and growled like a dog that gets Hr.knd. nnd vou ousrht to see Pa rtin. "Ho went around in tho alley nnd was going to get in tho basement winnow, Jt la wealth which makes money, and nna my cmm had a revolver with somo blank cartridges, anu we worn w wealth Is tho produotof common sense directing energy. But it la not com jnou sense to say that In such a coun try as this, with Hi present teeming fuHness of, ''almost everything which j50 & requlres.there Is good reason to M eeant and hunger. It ia not moio & C.,Jcb h ne$ded,but confidence store tha baKemont. and when Pa was trying to open the window my chum began to fire toward l'a i'a uoiioreu iuui, t only him and not a burglar, but after my chum fired four shots Pa run and climbed over the fence, and then we took the dog home, and I Btnld with my chum all night, and this morning Ma said Pa didn't get home tilU o'clock, and then a policeman camo with him, and Pa Live Mock Market'- n ao- it Cattle steady for good ttook; light to medium steers, 98.85!. Hogs firm, good demand; light hos, $6358.; roughs, 4SM(.7$. Sheep and lambs dull; good larobs. $61S( fair, J1.60ffl-78: good ex port wethers, $l.2p; fair to choice sheep, $3.J3 4;culUaudoommon, $-3. ' East hinBBTV. Pa., Aug. 17.-f3attle slow; prime. $l.'t.8U; good butchers, $.dS1.60; common to fair, 3.7fil; fat cows and heifers. $S:i; good bulls, SW 7: re' Pow"- S81'1' 11ms fair; best light weights. S6.9W-3?i medium weights. $0 li heavy weights. $5.00 ; roughs, SQli Sheep dull, unchanged. Allegliitny Mountain 1'lres. Attoona. l'a.. Auii. 17. Eorest fires In vn hAMn raifiiuz an d spreadviiK rapidly on the Allegheny mountains uround this city for the iot few days and destroying a large amount of valuable timber. The flames have ubo burued a number of cabins, thus making a number of families homeless. A laige number of men aro uow flybtlrig th.- il iaic- ,iild Mtnli'C 1,1 been beun o Tie t." by the recenilv cry ,,i liinnd, , r it i -us have n ii . i a i . ( lucester o "i I'ouegantett Mlulua aud bmcltmi; uuuipuny. ifrs. Mary Sliutl Suffered Intfeely from pain In tny etomwjh and sldibe(!am8 reduced lnfleah, and Erowlng wolomovai to the Byraouae hospital was under Uraent, when I gave nood's Barsapariuiwai. i rapidly gained In flesh, can eat hearithout distress, and am now well." JIUart Bntrru, Caienovla, New orn. ? mi ni ic Shenandoah Herald i Bright, Crisp, Concise. Ik Leading Local Weekly Paper In Schuylkill County. All the Local News printed In a leadable, attractive manner, with no waste of words. EDUCED IN PRICE. IMPROVED IN QUALITY. YE A I3ST 3D"V-A.ISrCE . Somo havo told us "You can't do It." We believe wo can, and we will. Tub Hkhald In the future will be better than nt any timo during its past history, if painstaking ellbrts will accomplish that end. Send One Dollar to Tub Hkuai.d oillco and receive tho paper for one year. This ofler applies to old as well as new subscribers, pro viding all arrearages are paid. Honiembcr, these terms are Invariably In advance; otherwise $1.50 will bo charged. DoVou deslro success? All busino-H men know that tho only way of Increasing trade is talking in print Advertising I Where you nmko ono customer by word-of-mouth argument or by displaying goods, you eanmakoone hundred by bright, convincing advertisements. Don't talk hi a whisper No ono will hoar you. Don't talk in thunder tones All nolso and no facts. Don't talk without listeners Place your "ad" where it will ho read. THR HERALD Is the best medium for reaching the public, nnd profitable results aro sure to follow all advertisements placed in Its col-' umiis. Let us convince you of this fact by a trial. Our Job Oillco has always enjoyed a reputation for excellent work, second to none, which is maintained by strict attention to every detail of the business and a thorough equipment of the latest printing ma terial. Our Job oillce has just been refurnished with a new line of typo of tho latest and most artlstlo design, and have In our press-room all the latest and Improved ham Printing Itresses; Otir facilities for lurnlngjmt ilrstrdass work are unsurpassed. When you need anything in the printing line call at the oillco of Rheumatism. Lumbago. Sciatica! Kidney Complab Larno uacKji Dri. SM1DEI1'5 ELECTRIC BE With Electro-Magnetlo 8USPEN80R ... .... all llnmtnn.. twxllltillir fL OT4nutiunot iMum irho foil-in. eivnweorul rueuniatlam, kiuiiur, jer anu umuuc v..-jt; unoback. lumlioiio. stwtii-ii, el femola coinplW n.ni Hi l.a!il,T This rlertrw CUt ountol InKinlly fultljy wear, r or vo ( r(. il s'?u,iuJlA wlllouiunll.it thu ai.i.Tq di . ; i or oi!y?J aand. have lioen cured b" tuln maivcl. ua (""003 otttTalleitliorn-mi-ii" - f.u-1 arU 8 eivo liuoonsn ortesttmnntniswiJ ' B"ui i-t ll First National Baiiktf THE ATMS HUILDINC lieiumdoitlii v a. CAPIT Al- . W. LEISENUINQ, Prolden P. J. PGHUU ON, Vic- 1. R. LEUJENRINO, Caahler. 9. W. YOST, Aselstan- eln- Open Daily From P 3 PER CENT Interest Paid on Savings Ocposi Wim HEEBNER Gi7 PORT CARBON . MannTaoturiTp k SL -S4-, IfpocieSiJ s p cc 8 1,1 1 Wags, Baoges, Caps, Rega rn, S-FINF.ST ROODS LOWEST PRtU'S.-f. Write for catalogues. CorroaponaelicoBollnlic ' 1 33. hojjhwsa ryx'P) ffse mir.'QMB ArotheoMiUn arip5". 1 n it, i Varlrorete, llydn r f'Min1. : n!, , Trentinont l? Jn r unrr -t. ( i uunlrutlons aarr .iv'-'ti'ii uti ; tamp' ilunh. OHlfp Iiouim; ' V r i ' - . o,o' ai All da f.n i 4 Evervtbine mo(lle after Ureen's (alo, Fhtlaile'ph!, ta S Main &t SUenatuloall The leasing place In tmvu. Has lately been entirely rcn.i at(A livery tlilnB now, clein and tresh. The flees line- nf Wines o;tf Liquor Cigars, Ac, foreign and do mestic. Free lunch scrvi d oachovenlng. Big eehoori -ra ot frcph.Heer.Portor, Ale PP081TE : TE70 : TffFM - ret Ve S'.CU 0. ' -u: an 5 11 tul d or 1111 iss liui 0,7 oni ghi llei 43. Po- at, dl Fo e Foi JOHN COSLET' Main and Oak BtreelH, Bhenandoah, Pennu., GREEN GROCERIES Track and Vegetables. j Sultry, Ganio, Fisli and 0y& ct In Biaason. Orders left at, the store wll recAlvo prnmp- atti-ntmn RETTIG'S Beer and Porter T AM AGENT for the -1- Clius. Itettig's Cele brated Beer and 1'orter in this vicinity, also iiergner & Engel'a celebrattwl India Pale Ales and Old Stock. Orders will recelvo prompt attention. Finest biands of Liquors and Cigars. SOLOMON HAAK- 120 South Mam Street. Fo. m Fo Po 211,1 i-0 FRED. ISZEITI-inSH 101 North Main street, Bhenandoah, l'a., WHOLESALE BAKSR ASD CONFwJTIONEH Ice Cream wholebale ndrn -IL Picnics anil parties eupplloi' in s! i.rt notlc Fo .08 ; Po Fo 51, 1 .m Fo ha: Fo )el 27. Tr to. .05! .U3, Lc '.05, m Le Le 1.06 Tr IJree Fc pelc tlav liJetl 2 30 Fc Fc Delf Lc 1. re Lt 9.30 Lc a.m. Chris. Eosi ler'n saloon and 'au mm (Mann'Bold sU. d) 104 Noutft mail- BU ?el. Finest wines, wblRlteys nnd cigar always li toclc. Freth IJeer, Ale aad Porter on in L0RENZ SCDBQDT'S bBlehaW Foiter, Ale and Bee Maasrijr Shenandouh Uranci A. T JOE WY.V1TS muOoK AND RESTAURANT (Christ. lloDsler'g old Htand.) wain 011 rt coal th HlieMirtinH Dest beer, alo nd nortc.r on lan. The flnee Brands ot whlsltoys and clears Pool room t !att's Popular Safoon (Tonnerly Joe VfyMt'a) md 21 West Oak Street J SHENANDOAH, PA. fir stocked with the beat beer, porter, ales 4U110B, nrancues, wines, eto. reseat cigars tne bkrtttached. Oordlil invitation to il SNEDDEN'S : LIVERY Horses and Carriages to Hire. Uaullng of all kinds nrouititiy attended to. -aJrS!ulIl.toiol,''', "" Masks, Foot Balls, Ti dati Oils Vol nde) a. tr villi Fi Caa and tow ate Ti I0:4i Hun Li 11:4 itl L Pot 410 at 8 F at 1 Hi. pre 2 30 10 0 515 (lie 12 0 F stat 4 U. Sui jr 83 car l'ul 70U diij 7 40 1166 K dal T ont an Wa daj eve T Eli Nle da En ro-anc Our I'g.trM Iprf4 IU.HB1C SrtJTXMnT. ' th4 ffrent;.t boon ev.-r uti rea v in mi t, ruifc z1"" EaTttiMi ii.., uwfk ovauInj Hi u iwiSi muncil PLEOTPIO CO. t- a r-m -n . T rr, J Klveu that persxts destroy EAST COAL STREETer "eB8 wllV be prosecuted Act ot Assfembiy approved were' Aisijoolatlon. jBIIabLOXX45t3ac5LOtl3 unt 1181, A full line of Htatloncry, IJluuk Books, etc- $0, 4 NORTH MAIN Ci V.. n ' Vul Sfltlt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers