VOLUME 1. REYNOLDSV1LLK, l'KNN'A., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10,1892. NUMBER 14. Uttecrlttiuroit. Q MITCHELL, ATTOUN E Y-AT-LA W. OnVe on Wont Miiln ptrcrt, opnoltc 1 ('ommerrlnl Hotel, HcynoliNvlllo, Ph. D n. B. E. HOOVER, REYNOLDSV1LLE, PA. Hcsldrlit dentist. In Imllcllitir near Mi'tho dlHt rhurt'li, opposite Arnold hlork. Heiitle ni'KK In opcrntlnK. iOotrle. jjotel McDonnell, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Fit A XK J. ' II LACK, Pvopriifnr. The Iradltin hotel of tlie town. 1l-iliiiir-tcrs for rnnifm'irliil mi'ii. fK'iim hi'iit, free 'hits, Imtlt rooms mid cIomi'Im on every fliMir, sample rooms, lillllittd room, telephone con nections, Ac. JJOTEL HELNAP, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. UHEEXit- CUXXEIt, Pmpmlor. Hirst. elms In every pnrttculiir. Located In the very centre nf 1 lit IiiIihmh part of town. Free 'him to mid from trnlim mid eointnodloiiM Miimpleroonm fori'ommrrt'iul traveler. ERIC AN HOTEL. HROOKVILLE, PA. huvtixorox f- l.oxu. r i OmnlbiH to mid from nil trains. Etiroiietin tvNtuiiriinl. Hoiihc heiited mid lighted by irus. Mot nnd cold wtiter. Western rnlon Teleimmli otllee In htilldlinr. The hotel Ih fitted Willi nil the modern convenience. COMMERCIAL HOTEL. BROOKVILLE. PA.. JAS. U. CLOVEIt, I'ropriitor. dimple rooms on (he irround floor. House heated ty iiiitiirnl khh. OmnlhliH to and from all trains. BUFFALO, ROCHESTER & PITTS BURG RAILWAY. The (diort line between DiiIIoIh, Ifldirwny, Hradford, Hnlttmnncti, lliitiulo, ItorlieMter. NliiKnru I'hIIs and point In the upper oil reitlon. On nnd lifter Mny !!-'! , IKIIJ, pnsscn Ker truliiH will inrlviiHiid depart from Kails 'n'k Htutlon, dally, except Sunday, hs fol lows: tilO A. M. Hradford Aeconinioilatloti For flnts North Is'tween Falls t'reek and Iradford. 7: lii n. m. mixed train for lunxsutawney. 10:0ft A.M. Hiiliulo nnd Itochcstcr mall For Hnx'kwayvllle, ltl(ltfwiiylohnsoiilitiiit,Mt. .lewett, Hradford, Hiilnmitncii, Itiilfalo and HiM'hester; connect In at .loliiiHohlmru; with I'. A F.. train , for Wilcox, Kane, Warren, I'orry and Krle. IO:5A A. M. AcconimiMlatlon For Tullols, Sykes, ltlKlinn and I'lliixMltawney. I :!ltf I'. M. Hradford Accommodation For Beechtree, llrockwuyvlllc, Fllmont, Ciir nuiii, Itliliiway, JohiiHonburK, Ml. Jewett nnd Itradfonl. 4:50 I'. M.-Mnll-For Diillols, Hykes, HIk Kim, l'unxsiiliiwney and Walstoii. ft55 P.M. Accommodation For lluliole.ltlg Kun and I'linxsiitawney. Train Arrive 7:10 A. M., Accommmlatlon I'linxsiitawney; 1M:M A.M., Mull from Wal Hton and I'unxsutiiwnevs H):M A. M. .Ac commodation from llradfordt 1:21) I'. M., A imniodntlon from I'linxsiitawneyi 4:M) P.M.. Mall from Hiiliulo and ItiH-bester; 7:(W P. M., AccommiHlallon from Bradford. Thoiisiind mile tickets at two cents per mile, irood for passage ltctwccn all stations. .). II. McIntyhk, A(ent, Full creek, Pa. Gko. W, Hahti.btt. E. V. Lai-kv, Uvnernl Nnpt. Uen. Pus. Airent Bradford, Pn. Kochestur, N. V. 4 LLEOHENY VALLEY RAILWAY COMPANY commencing Sunday July 10, 18112. Low Grado Division. KAHTWAIll). STATIONS. No. 1. NO.S. No.B.j 1(11 1MI . h.Ip. m.'P. h HedBank 10 40 4 m Lawsonham 10 M 4 44 Now Bethlehem 11 2N A is Oak Ulilxti It ill A M Mlllvtllu 11:111 ft 2-1 Maysvlllo II 4:1 A XI Summervlllo ... 12 m AIM Brookvlllo 12 2. 0 14 A lft Fuller 12 4H B 82 (t .'14 KyuoldHVtllo.. 1 (Nl AMI B 2 Pancoast 1 Hill A AS 7 02 Falls .'rook 1 17 7 07 7 10 10 Aft ISA IlnHols 1 ;) 7 la 7 17 11 Oft 1 45 Kabula 1 4:1 7 at Wlnternhurn... J Aft 7 40 PenHuld 1 01 7 4ft Tyler 2 II 7 Aft filen Klsher 2 22 KM Henotette 2 HO H 22 Orant 2 AO ft iM Driftwood 8 20 9 00 P. M. P. M. A, M. A. U. P. M. WKSTWARD. STATIONS. No.2 No.R INo.101 10B 110 P. M P. U Driftwood Orant Hetiezctte Glen Fisher Tyler Pentium Wlnterburn .... Panula DuBols Falls Creek Pancoast Rev noldsvllle . . Fuller Rrnokvllle Hiimmervllle... Maysvllle Mlllvllle OakKldire.. New Bethlehem I.tkwsonham.... Red Bank A. H.A. 10 10 10 40 10 Al 11 ON 11 II) 11 20 11 aft 8 aft 7 Osi 7 21 7 41 7 Aft H 07 8 l:i 11 47 12 00 1 17 1 34 1 42 1 AH 2 21 2 H 2 AH 8 02 8 06 8 1A 8 47 8 2' 7 00 7 10 7 20 7 HO 7 49 8 4:i 12 Oft 12 lft! A HO S 40 8 Al 8 AM 8 OH 2A 4ft 8 II 8 80 8 Al 8 Aft 8 AH 9 10 4ft 4 00 10 (HI A. M A. M Train dally except Sunday. DAN1I) McCAKGO, Qbm'l JAB. P. ANDERSON, Okn'iJ. . StlPT., Plttsburn, Pa. Pass. Ajt., I'liulmrn, Pa DO YOU NEED A NEW ATTIRE? If so, and you want a good fitting and well made suit at a reasonable figure you will re ceive same by placing your order with J. C. Froehlich, THE AUTISTIC TAILOR, Noxt. door to Hotel MoConnoll, BEYNOLDsVlLLE, PA. A' MESSAQIi ' FROM PARAdlSlL Why mean yon by t his weeping To break my Tery heart? We both are In Christ's keeping. And therefore cannot part. Yon there I here tliotiuli severed. We still at henrt are onei I only jnst In lunnhlne. The sh.idowe scarcely ftnne. What if the elands surround you. You can the brightness see, Tls only Jnst a little way That leads from you to me. 1 was to rery weary. Surely you could not mourn, That I a little sooner Hhould lay my burden down. Then weep not. weep not, darling) God wipes away all tears, lis only "yet a little while," Though yon may call It yean. Exchange. Binding the Officers. Here is an amusing description nf one of Balzac's periods of impecunloslty. Mery, the poet, a great friend of Bal rac'i, wat an inveterate gambler and rarely left the card tnble before day break. Hi way lay past the Cafe do Paris and for four consecutive mornings he had met Balzao (trolling leisurely up and down dressed in a pantnlon a pieds (trousers not terminating below the ankle, but with feet in theni like stockings) and frock coat with velvet facings. The second morning Mery felt surprised at the coincidence, the third he was puzzled, the fourth he could hold out no longer, and nuked Balzao the reason of these nocturnal perambula tions roundabout the same spot. Balzac put Ills hand in his pocket and produced an alumnae showing that the sun did not rise before 8:40. "I am being tracked by the officers of the tribunal de commerce and obliged to hide myself during the day, but at this hour I am free and can take a walk, for as long aa the sun is not up they cannot arrest me." A Plucky Captain. A yeomanry regiment of Devonshire was enacting a sham fight, when a Cap tain Prettyjohn was ordered to retreat before a charge of the enemy. "Retrait! what doth that mane!" in quired the captain. "Retrait meanta rinning away, I zim; then it shall never be told up to Dodbrook market that Cap'n Pridgen and his brave men rinned away." Accordingly, as the enemy came on, bearing down upon him at a rapid trot, he shouted to his troop: "Charge, my brave boys, charge! Ua baint vozea and they baint hounds I Us'll face 'em like men!" The collision, as one might guess, was awful. Men, horses and accouter meats strewed the ground on every side, and several troopers were more or lees injured. Youth's Companion. Mack Costumes In Parle. There's a black rage in Paris; it's the style to look as if you were in light mourning there, whether it's so or not. All the toilets one sees -are black of some description or black and white that is, all but the hats. A woman may go out deeply and solemnly robed in a garment that one would surely suppose to be worn as a token of grief until one's eyes reached the headgear, when its light and brilliant coloring would imme diately dispel the effect. They're not a bit consistent in gay Paris, else one might think they had at last reached a period of sobriety and common sense; that they had concluded to be more like their English sisters and settle down in quieter and more snbdued colors. But when a woman wears a black gown and a hat containing several colors of the rainbow in height display there is little foundation for the belief, after all. Paris Letter. How to Get Poatoffiee. There are a great many interesting facts and figures connected with post offices and their masters. For instance, when a countryman is tired of walking or driving several miles for his mail and concludes that the government should bring it nearer, he should state that fact to the first assistant postmaster general, whose clerks will furnish him with in structions and a blank petition for the neighbors to sign. If he wants the new office bad enough to make the govern: ment think it a necessity, he will doubt less get it. , ' At the same time he will be told that in naming it prefixes such as "east," "center" and the like, the suffixes "boro," "burgh," "city," etc., are equal ly objectionable. Short, characteristic names are preferred. Kate Field's Washington. Meters for Measuring Eleetrlolty. In a discussion in London on meters for measuring electrical energy it was shown that in the Frager meter the energy could be made from 800 to 400 times greater than that indicated by the meter by simply closing and opening the circuit at proper intervals. With a Thomson meter it was said to be very easy to force the readings with the aid of a strong magnet applied outside the meter boxes. Fraud is therefore very easily practiced upon such meters, pro vided one understands them. New York Telegram. Speaking of tha Late Queen. James I disliked to hear encomiums lavished on his predecessor, "Le Eoi Elizabeth," as the French called her, and always depreciated her when possi ble. On one occasion some one speak ing of the late queen as a "most wise princess," James said sharply, "Bite had wise counselors." "And, please your majesty," said the speaker, "did ever a fool choose wise counselors?" London Standard, How We Feed Other Nations. The advance statement issued from the treasury department of the exports of domestic breadstuff from the United States for May, 181)2, furnishes much in teresting information. As compared with May of last year, such exports have increased to an astonishing degree, be ing valued at f 100,850.084 in May, 1801, and 1272,478,028 in 1802. Taking these two months, we find that with the exception of barley the exports of all the breadstuff's have grown enormously. For instance, corn, $3,072, 093, as against 1,431,988; oats, 178,052, as against 12,2S3; rye, 443,446, as against nothing; wheat, $0,642,414, as against $8,667,808, and so on. Not less interesting is it to notice which are our leading ports of export for breadstuff's. Of course New York takes the lead in this, there having been shipped from here breadstuffs to the value of $3,508, 810. During the same time there were exported from the following places breadstuffs valued as follows: Balti more, $3,103,500; Philadelphia, $2,808, 917; New Orleans, $1,184,010; Boston. $1,014,081; San Francisco, $328,984; Du Inth, $458,278; Newport News, Va $.125,271, and Chicago, $244,974. These shipments from Newport News were undoubtedly to the countries south of us, which, under reciprocity treaties, are taking more of onr breadstuffs than formerly. But see how Duluth, "the zenith city of the nnsalted seas," looms up as a plnce of export for breadstuffs, beating Chicago in tills respect two to one. New York Mail and Express. The Largest Flower Known. In Mindinac, the farthest southeastern island In the Philippine group, upon one of its mountains, the volcanio Apo, a party of botanical and ethnographical explorers found recently, at a height of 2,500 feet above the sea level, a colossal flower. The discoverer, Dr. Alexander Schadenberg, could scarcely believe his eyes when he saw amid the low growing bushes the immense buds of this flower growing like gigantio cabbage heads. But he was still more astonished whei, he found a specimen in full bloom, a five petaled flower nearly a yard in diameter, as large as a carriage wheel, in fact. This enormous blossom was borne on a sort of vine creeping on the ground. The native who accompanied Dr. Bchadonberg called It "bolo." The party had no scale by which the weight of the flower could be ascertained, but they improvised a swinging scale, using their boxes and specimens as weights. Weigh ing these when opportunity served, it was found that a single flower weighed over twenty-two pounds. It was impossible to transport the fresh flower, so the travelers photographed it and dried a number of its leaves by the heat of a Ore. Pearson's Weekly. Why People Lose Weight In Bummer. To most persons the summer season hi a time of excitement instead of quiet rest, as it should be. With the approach of warm weather most people begin to lay plans for vacations and enjoyments, and in a little while have worked them selves into a state of excited anticipa tion. Not only this, but they undertake excursions requiring considerable travel. either by land or water, so that during the heated term they have completely departed from the quiet paths of life trodden so steadily all the rest of the year. Now It is a well known fact that the mtijority of people lose weight during the summer. This loss is generally ac counted for by the smaller quantity of food consumed during warm weather, bnt we should Bay that the excitement incidental to vacations and traveling was as much responsible for it as the other. It is a question if our Indian summer, the most charming season of the year, would not make a better vaca tion period for the majority of people. Boston Commercial Bulletin. All In His Bye. A man calling himself Dr. Henry vis ited the house of Mrs. F. K. Brewster, in Suffolk, Conn., on Thursday, and rep. resenting himself as the assistant 01 Dr. Morgan, of Boston, who bad been treat ing her for an eye disease, announced that he was sent to perform an opera tion. Mrs. Brewster, who is seventy- five years of age, gave her consent The bogus doctor said she had an abscess on the eye and he would remove it. Be produced an instrument, made twe or three motions with it over the old lady's eyes and then exhibited in the palm of his hand as the removed abscess a substance which afterward proved to be beefsteak. Then he collected twenty' eight dollars from the old lady and left. Hartford Letter. A Glacier in California. A glacier has been found In southern California, and now American pride ought to be satisfied. For many years tradition has told of such a phenomenon of nature, and recently an expedition was sent out to investigate the matter. The tradition was verified, for upon the levels.of Greyback mountain, the great est of the San Bernardino range, a gla cier one mile long and on the average of 800 feet in depth was found. The icy mass, according to computations made, ' moves downward at the rate of forty seven feet a year. Los Angeles Herald. Cold Water Without lee. ( Get a common earthenware pitcher, the commoner the better, as it will be the wBre porous, wrap it all around, leaving no inch of it bare, with wet1 flannel. Keep the flannel wet and tha water will shortly be as cold as is good for drinking purposes, almost ice cold, rieklag' Ont'Thleres by Their Eyes, The eye always indicates the charac ter of the roan. This is particularly true of thieves, for the expert detective ran tell in almost every case whether or not a man is a thief by simply looking him squarely in the eye. A well known detective in speaking of this matter, said: 'Yes, I can pick out a thief every time. I can't tell yon what it is that gives the man away except that it Is the expres sion of the eye. In thojfirst place, there are few thieves that will look yon squarely in the eye unless they are obliged to do so. They will avoid your glance as long as they can, nnd even when they do face you nndaze steadily at you it is always with the same ex pression. Although their eyes may be wide open and the gaze apparently . eivauy yuu will eve, 11 yuu iuuk uiueviy, -1 1 J, I . 1 a 1 1 , 1 that there is something away back through the corner trying to avoid you. I have picked out numbers of thieves by this little dodging movement. I never saw a thief who was free from it. "Everybody has met that man who resolutely refuses to meet a steady gaze for more than three or four seconds at a time. It is not fair to say that all such persons are dishonest. In many cases this peculiarity is a direct result of bash fulness. A little close observation will enable the observer to put persons in tlio class to which they belong. The man whose eye is almond s)iaied is al- 1 most always dishonest at heart, if not I in overt act. The eyes of some of the most notorious thieves in the country ' are of this pattern, and the expression given the face by this sort of eye Is very striking." Pittsburg Press. Eugene Hue's Vanity. Notwithstanding the extraordinary : literary success which he enjoyed when : his works were the vogue, Eugene Sue i posed much more as a man of fishion , than a man of letters. After his dinner at the Cafe de Paris he would gravely j stand on the steps smoking his cigar and : listening to the conversation with an air 1 of superiority without attempting to ' take part in it. His mind was supposed to be far away, devising schemes for the social and moral improvement of his fellow creatures. These philanthropic ! musings did not prevent him from pay ing a great deal of attention too much perhaps to his personal appearance, for even in those days of beans, bucks and dandies, of Counts d'Orsay and others, men could hot help thinking Engene ' Sue overdressed. He rarely appeared without spurs to his boots, and lie would no more have done without a new pair of white kid ; gloves every evening than without his ' dinner. Other men, like Nestor de Roqueplan, Alfred de M asset and Major ' Fraser, did not mind having their gloves cleaned, though the process was no so ' perfect asit is now, Eugene Sue averred ' that the smell of cleaned gloves made him ill. The unhappy man finally fell into poverty, was quietly cashiered from his fashionable clubs and died in ob scurity. Chicago Post. Strange KOTeets of Extreme Cold. Dr. Moss, of the English polar expe dition of 1875-7, among many other things, tells of the strange effects of tha extreme cold upon the candles they burned. The temperature was from 85 to 50 degs. below zero, and the doctor says he was considerably discouraged when upon looking at his candle he dis covered that the flame "had all It could do to keep warm," It was so cold that the flame oould not melt all of the tallow of the candle, bnt was forced to eat its way down, leaving a sort of skeleton candle standing. There was heat enough, however, to melt odd shaped holes in the thin walls of tallow, the result be ing a beautiful lacelike cylinder of white with a narrow tongue of yellow flame burning on the inside and sending out many streaks of light into the darkness. St. Louis Republic A Cruel Tee. A good looking, well to do young was being teased by the young ladies of olnb for not getting married. He said: Til marry the girl of yonr clnb whom, on a secret vote, you elect to be my wife." There were nine members of the clnb. Each girl went into a corner, and used great caution in preparing her bal lot, and disguised the handwriting. The result of the vote was that there were nine votes cast, each girl receiving one. The young man remains a bachelor, the clnb is broken np and the girls are all mortal enemies, united in the one de termination that they will never speak to that nasty man again, Detroit Free Kress. Country Folk Are Tender with Birds. Real country folk are very tender in their dealings with the birds that live near them. In the course of my experi ence, extending over many years, I have never known a case of wanton cruelty occur in regard to wild birds. The la boring man, whose work so often lies far from the haunts of men, seeks com panionship with the birds. Of these none is more friendly than the robin, who is sure to appear, however lonely the place. Cornhill Magazine. Phosphate anil Eggs. A farmer of North Mahoning town ship, Pa., purchased some phosphate a few months ago. It was not all used and several pounds remained in a barrel, where a nest was made for a hen. ' The hen hatched thirteen chicks in sixteen days. Another hen was set at the same time, but it took her the usual time three weeks to bring out her brood. Exchange, Fluorine Gas. Fluorine gas is of a yellow color, with a smell resembling bleaching powder. It has not been liquefied, and still re mains gaseous at 140 degs. Fahrenheit. Every precaution has to be taken in studying its action on other bodies, both on account of its dangerously irritating action on the eyes and mucous mem brane of the operator and its marvelous and wonderful energy, far exceeding that of anything hitherTi discovered. There is hardly a gas, liqnid or solid, that it does not attack, usually with the greatest violence; in fact its mere con tact with any other substance is nearly always signalized by the sndden evolu tion of intense heat and light and fierce detonations. It almost realizes the fond est dreams of the alchemists, and might fitly be their long sought liquor, alka hest, or universal solvent, for even dull, inert flint takes fire instantly it is ex posed to the vapor, and uie whole mass becomes luminous with a grand incan descence. As a supporter of combustion it leaves oxygen far behind. Lampblack bursts immediately into brilliant flame and gets red hot in a current of fluorine gas; and charcoal is made to give an inter esting exhibition of its porosity by first filling its interstices with the gas and thon burning spontaneously with spar kling scintillations. The diamond, how ever, is able to withstand its action even at high temperatures. Chambers' Jour nal. - The Danger of Metaphor. Metaphor and simile, poignant wea pons in the armory of a skilled debater, produce disastrous effects in the hands of the inexpert. Certain figures, orig inally of force and freshness, cause a bleak sense of depression from the fre quency of their employment by halting speakers, and one who desires to engage the understanding of an audience ought, at whatever sacrifice, to take a pledge of total abstinence from such outworn phrases as "the thin end of the wedge," "oil on the troubled waters," etc. Some times, it must be confessed, the audience derives unexpected and lasting enjoy ment from the delightful incongruity of figurative discourse. The pages of Hansard bear, or at least ought to bear on record, the poetio flights of a certain honorable baronet, who became in parliament the very dar ling of postprandial debate. Those who were fortunate enongh to be present on the evening when be was denouncing the course taken by one of his colleagues In the representation of Ireland will re member the rich brogue in which he re ferred to him as "the young sea serpent from County Clare," and how he was promptly called to order by the speaker 1 for using the expression. "Very well, Mr. Speaker," he rejoined, "I bow to your i ruling of course and beg leave to with ' draw the sea serpent." Blackwood's Magazine. The Migration of Reindeer. The annual migration of the reindeer from Lapland in search of food has now 1 become a serious matter. In the first : place, It necessitates the migration of 1 man, for If owners want to keep their i deer and their property they must fol j low them wherever they wander. Sec ondly, the migrating animals travel in j such great herds that they do not a little 1 damage to the meadows, plowed lands j and forests. There seems to be no stop- ping it. The deer migrate with more or less regularity, and within a week or : two of the usual time a hundred thou I sand reindeer come to TrOrasoe, which is j the meeting point. The owners simply see that their herds do not get away. But this invasion of reindeer is viewed with alarm by Scandinavian farmers, who have their crops trampled down. The farmer may sue for damages, but if he obtains a judgment in his favor how is he to find the defendant? Some seven or eight years ago a special law was passed to meet the case. The country is divided into districts, and if the own ers of the destructive animals cannot be found the district is held for the dam age, each family paying In proportion to the number of reindeer they possess. J. L. Vance In Our Animal Friends. Handel, the Composer. Oeorge Frederick Handel, who was a composer at the age of nine, and had written three operas before he was fifteen, was a man of uncommonly large appetite, and it is told of him that when ever he stopped at an inn or elsewhere where the host was not familiar with the greatness of his hunger he wonld order dinner for three. Upon one occasion he gave his order for three as usual, and when the hour for dinner arrived he called to his host: "Ees de tinner rettyf "It will be served, sir, immediately npon the arrival of yonr company," was the response. "Achi" said Handel, with a laugh. "Den you may pring It np right avay. I am de gompany." Harper's Young Peo ple. A Mat Made of Jewels. The costliest mats in the world are owned by the shah of Persia and the sultan of Turkey. The shah and the sultan each possess a mat made of pearls and diamonds, valued at more than $3, 000,000. The largest mat ever made is owned by he Carlton olub, of London, and is a work of art. New York Sun. The North Side of Tree. The side of a tree on which most of the moss is found is the north. If the tree be exposed to the sun, its heaviest and longest limbs will be on the souti tide. Boston Globe. :- IN OUR : Shoe Department 4 Ae carry only reliable makes, nnd we could fill the one side of tliia Ume with testimonials in re gard to the wearing qual ities of our shoes. What is termed among shoe dealers as cheap shoes, "for instance, "shoes that sell for one dollar a pair, we do not handle, for the simple reason that goods of that kind will not build up our shoe de partment. We buy no shoes from what is called "Jobbers," but place our orders three and four months in advance, with the best shoe manufac- turers in the country. C 3ur dry goods depart ment is full of spring fabrics, at prices lower than the lowest, and all we ask is that you give us a call and Compare Prices and Quality, don't forget the quality, as that goes a long ways as regards price. Quality first, price second. J. B. ARNOLD. New York Branch Bargain Store, I In Boob LsUly OocopUd I I by B0LOER BROS. I Main St., Revnoldsville, Pa-. I No old shelf-worn goods, but all new, . clean, salable stock and more of them . for the same money than you can buy at any other store in the town. If you are looking for something you cannot find at any other store, come to The, Racket Store uud you wrti most likely get it, and you will be surprised how cheap. .People wonder how I can pay rent and other expenses, sell so choap and live. Easily explained, my friends, just like this: Buy for cash, sell for cash; I eell for net spot cah and I get bargains by paying net spot cash for what I buy,, consequently I am enabled to give you. bargains for your cash'. Come in and look over my stock; no trouble to show goods whether you buy or not. Goods bought from me and not satisfactory, and returned in good order, and reas onable time, money will be cheerfully refunded if desired. Remember,I posit ively state that I have no old shelf worn goods, no shoddy goods, but as clean cut a line of every day goods as you will find In any store In Jefferson county, and oh, how cheap. Come In Ladles and take a look at my line of beautiful Laces, Wrappers, Waists, Aprons, Gloves, Mitts, Night Robes, Stockings, Baby Carriage Robes.Calico, Robes, Shirtlng,bleoched and unbleach ed Muslin. I might go on mentioning the lots of bargains but would take too long, step In and take a look for your selves. Gentlemen, come in and buy one 01 our oeauunu puintlngs, iiox-lu, gilt frame, only $1.00, are going liko hot cakes; If you want one come quick. I also have men's Hose, Shirts, Hund kerchlofs.Drawers, Under Shirts, Whlto Shirts, Linen Collars and Cuffs, Gloves and an endless number of other things for gentlemen. Come In and look for yourselves. I will only be to glad to show you my stock. 1 have in stock hundreds of articles for Ladltw, Gentle men and Children, Boys, Girls and Buby's thut would till our town pujxtr to mention thorn all. This advortiHeinent U written in the pluin American A.B.C. language so everybody that can read can understand every word of It. M. J. C0YLE, The Racket Store.