J JlKYNOLDyVlIJiK, TKNN'A., WEDNESDAY, SKITEM IUCK 7, 18U2. NUMBER 18. VOLUME 1. 1 V " 1 MITlilKI.Ii, ATT( KN K V-AT-tiA W. tinlea on West Main rtwl. oinoilte the t'oimiicrclnl Hotel, Itcytiold-iYlllf , Pa. J)K. H. kTTTooV Kit. IlEYNOLDNVILLK.l'A. Mcsldmt dentist. In lnilldlna near Mctho flUI rlmri'h. iimmII Arnold lilmk. Ili-nllr-tiesa In operating. ott. JJOTKI, Mit'ONNELL, KF.YNoLUHVlU.K, I'A. VHASKJ. HLACK, 'rojirtWor. The leading hotel of the town. tfi-nitiinr-tera for commercial men. Hiriin heal, free litis, hat li room, mid i-limrta on every lloor, samnle nim, hllllard room, lclriliniin con nections, Ac. IWYNOUWVHXK, PA. OltEKXit fVIA'WKW, I'mprittor. Flrwt 1nm In wry tmrtl.nUr. In tho viry rrntrf nf tin himlnrM tmrt nf (own. Kn 'Imin tit Mini from trntim nnd comtntMllmin HHinplr riHintN for nun mm Mill trnvrlrm. MKIUCAN HOTKIj, HHlM)KVII.LKt PA. ninlntii to miM fmmnll trultiN. Knm 1 mini nl. Hon Ih-iiiim) tttnl .tiflitn KtiN. Hot it tin rtihl w nvr. W rstn 1 TVIf'tmiiili ollh'i Hi ImlMlnir. Tin hot fitted with nil tin iiuhIi'Iii I'onvrnlriH'fH. irtiN. Hot iiml nltm vi Ih QOMMKIU'IAI IIOTKU imooKviu.K, pa., JAS. i. VLOVKH. Pmptvtnr. Htimnlr rooiimon the tmmitil lloor. Hoiim lii'ittcil hy mil in al khh. OiiiiiIIhim to nml fi-otn till ImhiH. UKKAU). IMX'HKSTKlt tc 1'ITTS- HUKU ItAILWAY. The short line between lnltiiln. Klduwny, Hrailford, rialitmanca, llnflalo. Km-hester, Mii K urn rait hiiiI points In the iiiHtr oil region. On and after Mut Nd, tW, passen ger trains III unlveiuid depart fmm Kulla Crwk mnl Ion, dully, cxi-i-pl Sunday, aa fol lows: fill) A. M.-Itrndford Ari'oniniiHtetlon--Kor Kdnta North Is-twecn Kails t'reck and radford. 7:1ft u. m. mled train for I'linisulawm-y. 10:OI A.M. Hunalonnd Kis'henlcr nml I for Hrockway villi-, KliltrnnyloliiisiHilmrK,Ml. .Icwoit. lirniiroril, Hnlniuani'n, HiilTiilo mill rtiH'liMtrr; ronm'ilnu lit JolinHonhtirK Willi l. A K. train :i, for Wlliin, Kiuif, Vki-iwi, t'orry anil Vli. IO:AA A. M. Ari'ommoiliitloii- For IIiiIIoIh. HykiM. Hid Hun anil l'imiiimwiii'y. 1:B l'. 1. lti'inlfonl AccotiiiniHliition Kor ItMs-btn-o, Hroi'liwiivvllli', Kllinont, t'ar mon, Klditwny, JolniHonlnirK, Mt. Ji'xi'lt and llrHilfonl. 4:&0 '. M.-Miill-Kor DultoN, Hyki-ii, HlK Klin. PlintMiHMWiipv nml WiiImIoii. riAo I'.M. Ai'roinmiHliitlon Kiln ami I'unxNiititwiu'v. -Kor DuIIoIh.IIIk Tralna Arrlvo ":l A. M., Aivommixliitloii 1'iiiixi.uUwiicy ; lll:u A M., Mull fiim Wal aton anil I'nn.XNiitiiwni'Vi IO:A A. M., Ai coiiimiMliitlon fiimi llriiilfonl; l:l I'. M., Aminimoiliitlon from I'linxNiiiuwnryi 4:M) I'. M.. Mull from llutfulii nml ltH'li'iHtii's ?:M I. M., Ai'foninioiliitlon from llrtiilfonl. TIiohmiikI nillx ilrk-tH at two .viiIh mt mill', rood for piimuirii liotwpiMi all ntatloim. 4. II. M 1:1 NT V KIC, AKCIII, l uiisi'nvk, I'll. OKO. W. ItAHTI.RTT. r.. . t.AI'KV, lion. I 'hk. Awnt HucliOMti-r, N. Y. Oenoral Hut. Ilrailforil, I'a ALLK5HKN Y VALLKY KAILWAY 1X)M1ANY tummonclnff Siimlny July 10, ll2. Low Uradi) DlviHlon. KAKTWAHI), KTATIONR. No. 1. Nll.A. No. 9. 101 109 .... A. M. P. M. A. M. P. H. P. M KodKank 11)40 4 :) I.awMinhitm .. .. 10 M 4 44 Now H'thlilini 113s ft in Oak KIcIku II X A 2A Mlllvlll II itii 5 211 Mayavlllo II l ft : HiimmiTvlllo ... Vim AM Hrookvllle 13 2S II 14 II IA Fuller 12 :t :t A M KKynnldavllltt.. 1 (m 6 Ml 6 It! rancnaxt. 1 oil a At 7 Oi KallHrouk 1 17 7 07 7 10 10 AA 1 IH '"""i i 7 i;i 7 17 u w i Halmla 1 4a 7 29 Wlnternburn... 1 V 7 411 lVnHild 2 01 7 4A Tylur t 11 tM Gli-n Klnhnr i 23 R Oft Honcmttc i ;m H 23 Grant 2 SO N XI Driftwood 8 20 ( 00 I'. M. P. M. A. M. A. U. P. II. WEHTWAHD. Nn.2 No.6 No.10 A. M. A. M. P.. M. 1010 t 1040 7 IH 10A1 7 21 lion 7 41 1119 7 AA 1129 II 07 113.1 8 i: 11 47 H 27 12 00 7 00 0 43 1 17 7 10 8 Al 1 B4 7 20 AH 1 42 7 l 9 OH 1 All 7 49 2A 1 21 8 11 4.S t M 8 Mil 2 AM 8 Al 8 02 8 A3 S OK 8 AU 8 1A 9 10 V 47 4A 4 00 10 Oil A. U. A. W P. M. Driftwood Grant Mnneiwtto Glen Fisher Tylor l'pnHpId Wlnterburn .... Pahula TIiiHoIh KullaDrvek fancoaat KoynoldHVlllc. Kulhr.. U tVU.L W 1 1 1 A 12 OA 12 1A ft ao ft 40 Hunimrrvllie.... Aiaynviue.... Mlllvlllx. OuLVldna New Hnthichcm L.awHonliam. Uudiiaiik.... A. M.P. H Trains dully except Sunday. DANID McCAltUO, Okn'l. HrpT., JAS. P. ANDEKSON, Gek'i.V'ahh! AotT' 1'ittnburK, I'a 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 aame by placing your order with J. C. Froehlich, THE AUTISTIC TAILOR, Next door to Hotel MoConnell, KEYNOLD8VILLE, PA. A LEADER OF SLAVES. ROMANTIC niSE AND FALL OF TOU89AINT L'OUVERTUnE. A 'haraiw In fllitory Which fl. Far Ml.h4 Vhnwia for PtN anil Oratnra rtaiHilaan'a naaa Traatwi.at nt thm Great 4lnaral Rla ttatlmaly R41. Thirty yprt ami ToitanHltit IOtiTpr tnre wan a immn to conjure with. I'im-U and orntora dem'rilHHl hid rlrtnen ami hit genlua ami cttetl him an an tllimtrlimi inttiile of the rpaMllllr of hid rarn. A rmuantlclntoreiit will alwaya ntUit't to hi name. The ffu't that for flfty-fiint ymrn he Htk1 in tleMMt olmcttrlty aa i lave on a Ilaytlnn plantation ami thi jilo character of hi mtlnejnint achloe nient girt a tinge of antitie heroiam U bin hlntorjr. The Frentrh colony in Hay 11 waa lon one of the greatrfrt nlave mart in thi world. At the time of tho Fn'ticli revi Itttitm there were In llm colony 80, (KK whllea. 80,000 froe uinlatloen and ROO.OOt tare. Tho tnnlattom, many of wliotn hail been educated in Franco, tixik ad vantage of the revolution and olitninet! a recognition of their political righU from the French aaapmlily; tho whiteaol Ilnytl refnand to rncogtilrn the ilccinlot and a war broke out which waa anor complicated by an npriaing of tho whoh alavo population. On a nii'inoriililc night in AtiKUxt, I7IM, the plnntationa wert fired and many of thn whitea were mur denwl. Touiuiniut hiul not at thia time ac quired the name of L'Otiverture. Thii word, meaning "tho opctiing," waa ap plied to li i tit afterward becauae Ik opened a way for the freedom of hi ract throtiKh the chaotio ronditiona of tilt following yeara. In the dreadful warn of tho year fol lowing the upriaat of the alavea hi er traordinary influence over hi race ami hi military geniu gave him pre-eminence over all other chlefa. A deaign of freeing hi race, which could only bt accomplished by making it the ruling race of Hayti, gradually took ihape in hi mind and form the key note of hit career. France, Spain and England each bid high for hia alliance, but France de clared for the freedom of the alavea am) he finally ranged himaclf under tin French Hag. It waa evidently hia doair t maintain a deairahlo connection with a Kuropean power which would ycl leave him at lilierty to develop hia plant for Ida own race, but the realization ol hia idea required a disinterested co-operation of which no European govern ment waa capable. In a few yeara he bad been recognized by France aa commander in chief of tin army of Ilnytl and waa practically dic tator of the inland. Aa a ruler of Hayti he aurroundad himaelf with the pomp of a prince, al though personally he retained habita ol aovoro simplicity, lie ate sparingly and elopt little, being poaaeaaed of extraor dinary power, of endurance. In dignity of mitnncr he waa entirely equal to hii position, lie endeavored to reconcile conflicting races, and hia rulo waa im partial and able. Bnt Napoleon waa not the man to al low a dictator under himaelf. lie acnl an army of 80,000 mon to lluytf to re store slavery and reduce the colony tc abjection. Suspecting the true purpose of the ex pedition, Toumaint resisted the landing of the army, but finally laid down hit arms after he bad been aasnced that there waa no intention of restoring slavery and that he injured the cause ol hia race by resistance. He was still too powerful to be openly aeized, but he waa decoyed into the French quartera and waa then hurried on board a vessel and carried to France. J,"e hoped to moot Napoleon and defend liia conduct, but on landing be waa se cretly hnrried to a lonely fortress in tht Alps, where he shortly afterward died. Many wild stories attributing hia death to ninrder found credence at the time. Neglect and the change from a tropio to an Alpine climate doubtless hastened his end. By hia removal the progress of his race was incalculably retarded. While Tonssaint'a fate and place of im prisonment were still unknown, Wads worth wrote the beautiful sonnet, "To Toussaint L'Ouverture." Hia history is the subject of a drama by Lamartine, and of a novel, "The Hour and the Man," by Harriet Martinean. During the antislavery agitation in the United States he waa cited as a most illustrious example of the real capabilities of his race. A poem by Whittior and an ora tion by Wendell Phillips commemorate hia virtues and his genius. Detroit Free Presa. Bow Sir Gavan Duffy Looked. Mrs. Carlyle, in her "Journal," thus describes Sir Charles Gavan Duffy as ha looked in 1844 during a visit he paid to "the sage of Chelsea:" "Mr. Duffy quite took my husband's fancy, and mine also to a certain extent With the coarsest of human faces, decidedly as like a horse's aa a man's, he is one of the people that I should get to think beautiful." Sir Charles Gavan Duffy himself tell this story t Aa artist named Croinley painted his portrait and bestowed on him dreamy poetio face which might have passed for Shelley's. The portrait was shown to Daniel O'Connell by the artist in presence of Duffy. "Is not that very like Duffy," said Cromley. "H'm," laid O'Connell, looking from the por trait) to the original, "I wish Duffy was very like that" London Star. Aa ttlmtrlaat ttel.etlve. A clover piece of detective work. which must appeal with sad nml crush ing snggeativeneaa to the t-rook frater nity, ha been dotio In Toledo. A Imrlier for some time inissi-il rlcius from the raae in hi shop. At first only a few ciitara were taken, but presently tlm thieves became bolder ami took whole boxes. A watch wo set and detective Were employed, bnt all In vniii. At lost the barlier atrnrk on the idea of having an antoinatic ili-trcli r fixed in the shop, and ho railed in an clectrlciitn. A cam era waa iirniiiKi'il so aa to cover the cigar cane, and a flashlight nppnrattt and the camera were connected by wire with the sliding door of the car cose, ao that when the door wus opened thn wiiea would be brought together. The circuit thua formed wotihl produce a tlmli ami secure liiHtaiitancomily a piclttiu of the thieve. For twelve days the cigar were unmolested, but on the iiioiiiing of the unlucky thirteenth tho thieves were prompted to try their hand itRiiiti. The plate wn taken from the in merit and di)veloM.d, and on it waa seen a itniqtio nml intcri'HtiiiK picture, contain ing tho likencssc of two Juveniles who were in tho net of Ftciiliug the i.-iKiirs Every detail in the simp was distinctly seen, the clock showing the lime at which the youngstera' little opcrationa were Interfered will), nml the mixture of cunning and caution on tlio face of the boy who was evidently taking the activo part in securing the booty waa intensely amusing. The hoy were at once rccoKiiizod, weiu arrested, tried ami sent to a reformatory, nml the judge commended from thn bench the itigouu ity of tho melius of detection employed. New York Telegram. The Literary Ferment In Franee. I'hilareto Chasles relate in hi me moir how one afternoon, a ho wn at work in hi newspaper oillco, a younit mnn with a military nir, looking a bold a if ho were going to tho wars, knocked imperiously at the door, walked in, ant down and Raid, without further pre amhlei "Monsieur, 1 am Hugo." Then, after handing to Clinslc tin famous yellow covered hook with the password "Ilierro" on the title pngn, hi asked him if he was tin his side or not, and continued: "Monsieur, not only are wn going U changn tioclry, which need K funda mental revolution, but grammar also. What do you think nliotit our prosody! French prosody must bo completely over hauled." So it lain Franco, whore ueithercenlu riea nor year count, but only minatot and seconds, tho shock of contraries and tho violt'tico of reaction. The French must nlwaya be fighting about some thing even for Uoilcan ngalnat Ron sard, and for Nonotto ugainst Voltaire. Printers' Ink must smell of powder, otherwise life aeeiiiB insipid and thought without any aavor. Victor Iit;o'a vinit to Chasles is typical. Theodoro Child in Harper's, The Antiquity of tho Arabian florae. How fnr back do tho pedigrees run and what is tho origin of tho Arabian horse? These question it i impossible to answer .lulinitoly. Tho Uedouins themselves tielieve that Allah created the equine genus on their soil. "The root or spring of the horao is," thoy sny "in tho land of the Arab." This pious belief Is shared by a few gtinorous souls in England nnd America, a small but dovotod band, who gallantly dofund tho causo of the Arabian horse againHt his only rival, the modern Engliiih thorough bred. Chief among those faithful waa the late Major R. D. Upton, who visited the dosert himself and who has recorded his experience nnd his views. Major Upton concluded tlutt tho home was found in Arabia "not luter than about 100 years nftor tho deluge, if in deed he did not find his way thore im mediately after the exodus from tho ark, which is by no means improbable," and this probability the author tlten proceeds seriously to consider. According to Ma jor Upton and a few kindred spirits all other breeds are mongrels, and the only way to procure horseflesh in its bent and purest form is to go hack to the fountain head to the horse of the dosert. Atlan tio Monthly. Needed tho Tlarde.t. ' A young dentist who opened an office on Jefferson avenue finds a good many discouragoments. His first patient was a thin young man who wore no waint coat, and triced np his person with a pink and yellow belt. There waa a profitable hour or two in the chair, during which tho young don tist told his funniest stories as he filed and chiseled and buzzed. At length, in stead of filling up the biggest cavities with gold and charging ten dollars apiece, the conscientious beginner said: "Shall I put in a soft filling, sir?" "I board," replied the exhausted oc cupant of the chair briefly. "Beg pardon," said the dentist doubt fully. "I asked you about a soft filling. "Thunder and lightning," shouted the patient, sitting np in the chair and pull ing his mouth into shape; "I tell you 1 live In a boarding house, and if you've got any ground glass, amalgam or rolled steel caps use 'em. Soft filling, you erazy coot; do I look like a suicide?" Detroit Free Press. A ray of light which would travel Around the earth in about one-eighth of a second takes more than four hours to come from Neptune. For Alpha Cen tanri, the nearest fixed star, light makes the journey in five and a half yean, WHAT MAKES THE SWELL. Inn. Interesting Fnlnta Ahnnt Two Ap parently Wall Hreased Men. 1 wa standing In the lobby of the Adam House in lloston. A New York rlttb man twine In nml stood talking With some one In the lobby for several ntlnitea. After he bad irnnn nut thn man ho had been talking with camo over to me he waa a friend of mine and put this ques tion: "How doea Hlcka Yardly dress ao well? He hns only f),iMi0 a yenr, and yet he manage to dress himself so ns to look much better garlied than any Boa ton man I know. Ktraugn, isn't it?" Not at all. The Boston man dressed on a cash an count and an eye to color. The New Yorker's dress wa not only an art, but a science nn art because he hnd an eye to harmony) a science because he hnd a comprehensive knowledge of mean to nda, Any one know enough not to wear a red cravat and a Imttlo green coats but how many men know how to have their roata cut or their shoes shaped? They leave It to their tailor, and most tailor rut a cont thn same for a stripling of twenty an they would for an alderman. Hlcka Yardly would have informed the Boston mnn that hia lint wo too broad brimmed, hi collar wa too high in front and too low in thn bock; that hi cravat wo blue and hi violets pur ple Oh, horror of horrors! that hi cut away hnd onn too tunny button on II; that hi waistcoat bung down like nn inverted V, wheren it should bind about him like a la-It; that hi trousers were ttaht to thn knee nml loose from there down, wheren they should have been tho reverse; that his sIiim-h turned up nt the toes tho solo of thn English made shoo touches the ground from tip In heel ; that bin glove were russet, whereas they should have been brick color; that bin hair wan short on top ami long tie hind, whereas It should be long on top and short behind; that hi mustache should not bn waxed; that hi tojicoat waa loose In front and tight fitting in tho back, whereas the reverse should lw tho ense; that hi stick was a burkhorn, In the fnco of thn well known fact that no true man of tho world would enrry nowaday any other than nn all wood cane. Mr. Hick Yardly would then panne for want of breath nnd lenvn tho lobby, while thn Bostonlte drew out hi Brown ing and turned to "Homo Thought from Over tlm Bea." Frederic Edward McKay in Kale Field' Washington. lie l.lk.d FLItlna;. In tho imrformnnce of my pleasant duties nn f'ditor I nm called niam tc greet meiiilicrn of tho crnft from every part tif tlm world where angling la fol lowed as a pastime. I hare yet to meet ono who failed to respond to my eagi I search fur facts relative to the flsli In their homo waters with less eagernoai and enthusiasm than evinced by myself. I have talked and queried with tho un couth and unkempt and vth the pnl- inhed and cultivated anglers of Uw brooknnndtho books, and I have found them, each nnd nil, to be possonned ol valuable information as to tho bywayi if tK't the highways of tho art recrea tive. I hnvo been taught liy tho clodhoppoi oi Uio streaniH; 1 have gained invalu able point from the fenah whacking boy wh snatches 'mn out; thecowboy liahei of the gulch holes, the "wum" bnitun of tho Mississippi sluices, the Canadian half breeds of tho Laurentlan strenmi nnd tho malaria saturated d wollor "awaj down on the Sitwaime river" have all dropped ungliug pearls along my path way, and Inst, not leant, have I gathered consolation and enthusiasm from an in genuous remark mitdo by nn old but 11 litorato angling rodater friend when he was first told of Sain Johnson's slur. "Well," said he, "toll old Johnson foi me that, rathor than not go a-fishlng at all, I m willing to be tho worm." Could self abnegation go further in sac rifioe or enthusiasm? American Angler. Wldo Column, mnd tho Kyo.lvbt. Eye experts insist that people who wish to presorve their eyesight will do well to confine their reading aa far aa possible to round, fat faced type, and to avoid that which is tall and thin. It waa the shape of the type of the tiny edition of Dante produced at the French exposition almost on moch as its minute ness which blinded some of the persons engaged in correcting the sheets. Another important point is to avwid too wide a column or the eye is strained. Tho only way to neutralize the tendency to such strata is to turn cue bead from nido to side, nftor the mannor of short- lighted people. The width of a columa lit reading matter ought sot to exceed at the outside two inches, because that (a about the natural range of the eye when the head is kept motionless, Pittsburg Dispatch. Where Kmorald Come From. New emevuld mines have been discov ered at Vegetable creek, in New South Wales. Thoy are yielding many fin stones, but the supply is still mainly de rived from the ancient deposit in the United States of Colombia, which have been worked for more than three cen turies. There the gems are dug oat of black limestone by primitive methods, with pickax and blasting. New York Bun. The most densely peopled continent is of course Europe. The number of peo ple in Europe is known with a great de gree of accuracy. There are about 800, 600,000. ' An Aeronaut's Kinarlrnao. "I saw a balloon ascension and para chute drop down In Texnn not so lonn ago," said Ed Boeder, a well known ball player now with one of the Southwest ern league rlulm, "that waa very Inter esting. The balliHinlnt Leroy tnnde an aerial trip from a small town near Ana tin one day and wn to make a parachnt leap. When at an altitude of about 1,000 feet ho suddenly recollected thai hi parachute waa a brand now one and had never laen tested. Not raring tc rink tho thing he attached a fifty pound sack of snnd (ballast) to the pnrachnU and rut It loose. Aa he feared, the thing; failed to work right and did not open at all. "Thesnnd and parachute, dropped likl a streak to the earth, gaining momentum with every foot nf their descent until tbey struck the wooden roof of ahottnc below, crashing through it like through so much pner. The balloon soared nloft, and In due time, a the hot air gradually escaped, sank slowly to earth In tht midst of a farm several miles from tht town. The farm hands hnd observed lt coming, and when It alighted seised npon the airship, which wna a valuable oiled silk nffnir, nml claimed It aa the proM-rty of the owner of thn land lo calise It had landed there. The right of Professor Leroy, who happened to bnvo landed right with hia property, were entirely Ignored. . But tho captor were obdurate and finally the professor departed. "Ho obtained a writ of replevin for hl ballooti from tho nearest nijulre, nnd a constable shortly after restored the enp tn red airship to it rightful owner. The holo in tlm roof of the building canned by thn professor's nnndbag and tho dam ago consequent thereto had tn be re paired ami settled for at his expense. Hnd he taken tho place of bin sandbag al tho parachute's handle the funeral expensea would hnve far exceodnd the dniimgo to tho roof." Cincinnati Times Star. s.ii1iliiiro Vapor In London. No lean an authority than the presi dent of thn Inntitnte of Civil Engineer! has declared that tho sulphurous vapor produced during the combustion of coal is most beneficial to the Inhabitants of London, disagreeable aa it undoubtedly In. Aa many aa AMI tons of sulphur are thrown into the air in one winter's day, and tho enormous amount nf sulphurous acid generated from It deodorizes and disinfects the air, destroying diaagroe able amelln emanating from refuse heap. and sewers and killing the disease germs which find their wny Into the atmos phere. There may bo a good deal of trnth in this view, but there la undoubtedly nil' other side to tho question. It la an old comparison that a doctor and his drug! bear a relationship to the patient and the disease like that of a policeman to ward a householder attacked by a gar- rotor. The Milicnman lay nlmut will) his trtiucheon; sowintimes ho hits the householder, sometimes tho garrotor, and the good or ill which results from his interference will dnpnnd upon which party hapiens to got the most and the heaviest blows. Tills simile is admirably snitetl to sul phurous acid ia London fogs, for al though it may be beneficial to tho Lon don householders by destroying ml era be it certainly frequently does thorn barm by attacking their kings and bringing on -bronchitis and asthma, which sometimes prove rapidly fatal, to ay nothing of the minor discomforts ol disagreeable taste, filthy smell, stuffed .nose, husky throat, smarting eyes and bead ache. London Lancot A Ktrftrmneo of OplnVn. The "old man" was in hianlarirt aleevea, smoking a short pipe and trying to road paper. Tho "'Id woman" was looking att herself in a broken mirror -and giving every evidenoo-of self satisfaction. "Miko," sbe-asked at last "Vl'ye think Hook like a leddy?" "Not a bit," he replied shortly. "Well, there's others thinka-different," he replied. "I got a letter oday from one o them habit makers." "You don't aseed any. Yon've got nengh now." "Well, I'm thankin heaven they're not aa'bad aa yours, and there'a noae o' them a wall people wculd look the likes of you np an aend you afcice printed latter with pictarea of yachting dresses an all like that How'd ye think I'd look, Mike, in one o them taik-r made akirtar "N worse than ye do now. How'd ye get the letter?" "In the mail." "With your name in writin on the out aide?" "That's how it was, How'd ye s'pose they got the name?" "I don't s'pose'," he said, taking the pipe ont of his mouth and straightening up. "I don't s'pose at alL I've been figurin what you did with the two dol lars I gave you 'way back, an now, Mary Ann, I know you gave it to that fellie that was 'round here to put your name in the Blue Book, so's you could be in well company an get cire'lara tellin yon how you can get a mlddlin fair dress to wash windies in for $100. The next time I give yon two dollars it'll be fifty cents," -43t Paul Pioneer Press. Didn't Like the Shop. Akenside's father was a butcher, hut the poet himself in boyhood could rarely be persuaded to enter the slaughter bouse. During hia whole life he waa lame from a wonnd in the foot occa lioned in boyhood by the fall of a cleaver, Bt, Louie Globe-Democrat PILLSBURY ? REYNOLDS Brothers Shoes To bo sold for the noxt few weeks nt from CO CO o -a Q 3 0 Q 3 ID CD 3 0 o to Lnflien now is your chance aa IhiH is the greatest slaugh ter ever made in Heyn oldsville on Shoes. J. B. ARNOLD. New York Branch 1 1. 1 E.uiy 6mViiiit Bargain J Vy BOLDER BROS StOrB Main St., KeynoldHville, Pa. No old shelf-worn gotKl, hut all now, clean, nnluhlo stock and moro of thorn for tho snmo money than you can buy at any other storo In tho town. If you aro looking for something you cannot II ml at any other store, como to- The Racket Store and you will uiowt likely got It, and you will bo surprised how cheap. People wonder how I can pay rent and othor expenses, will so cheap and live. Easily explained, my friends, just llko this: Buy for cash, soil for cash; I soli for not s)S)t cash and I got bargains by ying not ajxit cash for what X buy,, consequently I am enabled to give you' bargains for your cash. Come In and look over my stock; no trouble to show gooda whether you buy or not. CoodV bought from mo and not satisfactory, and returned In good order, and reas onable timo, money will bo cheerfully refunded if desired. Itomcmhor,! posit ively state that I have no old shelf worn goods, no shoddy goods, but a clean cut a lino of every day goods as you will find In any storo in Jefferson county, and oh, how cheap. Come in Ladiua and take a look at my line of beautiful Laces, Wrappers, WaisU, Aprons, Gloves, Mitts, Night Robes, Stockings, Baby Carriage RoVx-n, Calico, I lobes, Shlrtlng,blcached and unbleach ed Muslin. I might go on mentioning; the lots of bargains but would tako too long, step tn and take a look for your selves. Gentlemen, come In and buy ono of our beautiful paintings, .10x3rl, gilt frame, only 11. (XI, are going like hot cakes; If you want one come quick. I also have men's Hone, Shirts, Hand kerchiefs, Drawers, Under Shirts, White Shirts, Linen Collars and Cuffs, Cloves and an endless number of other things for gentlemen. Como In and look for yourselves. I will only bo to glad to . show you my stock. I have In stock hundreds of articles for Ladies, Gentle men and Children, Boys, Girls and Baby's that would fill our town paper to mention them all. This advertisement is written in the plain American A. B.C. language so everybody that can read can understand every word of it. M. J.COYLE, The Racket Store.