X Jitot IP V KEYNOLDSVILLK, PENNM ., WEDNESDAY SKl'TKJl l:EU ill, W.U. MINDER 120. VOLUME 1. 7 ittUrclhutcnue. c, M1TC1IKU., attounkyat-law. OrtVo on West Main stteet, opposite) t'onimeivlitl Motel. Ki-yniii'lhvllli-, I'll. jyll. H. E. HOOVKU, IIKYNOLDSVILLK, l'A. Hosldent dentist. Tn hulldlrm near Metho dist clunvli, opiMwIlo Arnold block, (icnlli' tifflrt in oporiit loir . JJOTEL MoCONNKLL, KEY NOLDS VI LLE, l'A. MAM J. JlLACK, Proprietor. The IrnrtliiK hotel of the town. Headquar ter for rommcirlnl mm. Weam heat, free him, Imih rooms nndoloseta on every Hour, sample rooms, hilllnrd room, telephone con nections, Ac. JOTEL BKLNAP, REYNOLDSVILLE, l'A. (1 HE EX f- COXitElt, I'mimvtor. First clns In evrrv pnrllenliir. T.nented In 1lw very centre of tlio business part of town. I r'ree 'lius to mill fmm trains and commodious snmplc rooms forconittictvlnl travelers. MKKICAN 1IOTKL, BUOOKVILLE, l'A. M'FFixarox a- loxu, rv. Otntiltm to and fit. m nil trains. Kiiroiienn rOMlutiriiiil . IIoiim' heated itmi llulited hy uim. Hot mill cold wilier. Western I'nloii Tcleirrneh olMec In liulldlllir. The hotel In lltti'll V fill III! till' tlMHllTII eoilVeilteili.'CS. JOMM EltCIAL 1 IOTEL, BUOOKVILLE, l'A., JAS. U. CLOVER, PmprUtor. Hamplo rooms on the iiround Hisir. House lien I rd liy natiiml tins, omtillitis to mill from nil tniliiM. B UFFALO. KOCHEHTEK & IUTTS- UUKG UA1LWAY. The short line between Unllols. ltlditway, Bradford. Piilaniiiucn, HulTitlo, Kis'hcstor. KliiKarn Kails mid points In the upper oil region. On nnd nftrr May C-'d, 1W2, passen ger trains will arrive and depart from KiiIIh t'reek statton, dully, except hundny, as fol lows: THO A. M. llnidford Accommodation For points North iMMween Falls t'rrok and Bradford. 7:1ft a. m. mixed truln for I'lin.xsiiiiiwiiev. lO.Oft A.M. Hull ii lo nnd Kis-hcstcr mull For llns'kw iiy vtlle, Hldirwiiy..lohiiKoiiliurit.Mt. .lewett, Itrndford, hiilaniam-n, liulTalo mid Korhester; coniuvtltiK Ht JohiisonhiirK with P. .V E. I in In . for Wilcox, Kline, Warren, t'orry mid Krlo. 10:A& A. M. Accommodation For llultols, Hykes, HIk Hun mid rillixslltawncy. 1:211 I'. M. ltrudfoi-d AceomtiiiMluilou For Kecrhti'eo, ItiiM'kwuy vllle, Kllitiont, t'lir mon, Kii!wuy, JiiIiiisoiiIiiuk. .Ml. Jewel t mid lit-iiilfiird. 4:60 I'. M.-Mnll-For Pnllnls, Sykes, HIk ICiiii, I'linxsiiinwiiey mid W tilston. 7t6Ji l'..M.A ininiiKliiilon l'or hiillolsjllic Kim nnd riiiixM.ttiu'iiey. Triilns Arrive 7-.IH A. H., AeeonimiHlntlon I'liiiMMitiittiii y: linn". A.M. ..Mull finm Wiil hlon mid FilnxMiliiwiiey; lll:.V". A. M., Ar i'onirniMliitloii from linuUm-d; l:'ll P. St., Aeeoniniodnl Inn fitim I'liiixsiitiiwney; 4 : M I'. M., Mull from HulViiln and llis'liexter; Ti.Vil1. M., Ai'i'omniiNlitlion finm llrndford. Tlioiisund mile llekeis at. twoeents tier mile. Hood for p.'iHHiiKe Immwwii nil siatlons. J. II. McIntviik, Agent, 1'iiIIn ereek, I'a. OHO. V. HAIiri.KTT. K. ('. l.AfKV, delternl Kupt. Oen. 1'ns. Alfent Hi iidfoid, I'a. KiH'hester, N. Y. LLKGIIENY VALLKY' ItAILWAY COMPANY' commoneinjj Stimlny July 111, 1HD2. Low (iriulo UiviHion. RA8TWAKI). No. l.iNo.ft.lNo.fl, lot A. M '. M. Ked Rank.... LnWHonliam . P. M, 10 411 4 l 10 Ml 11 'is, li in n ;m 4 44 New Iteililehum ft IN dak Itldxn Mlllvllle Mayavilln Hiunniervtllo .. Hrookvillu Fuller Keynoldsvlllo . 1'iinrotiHt Fulls (:rvuk.... Dii Hols Hu I mi In AVllltel'tlliuiil .. Ponfleld Tyler filen Flslior. ... Hoiiexutto (trmit Driftwood ft 2.1 ft 211 ft :ti 1 1 4:il VI 111 is av ft v. 14 J n k, ii 4:1 n m 7 n-2 1 in 1 mi 1 17 1 :m H Mil H fts J 07 7 in 10 .Vi 11 (11 1 :n 1 4T 7 i;i 7 1 1 -1.(1 7 211 7 40 1 ft. 2 01 2 11 2 i! 2 mi 7 4.i 7 V. H II") 2 .Ml a 211 II (HI P. M. A. l WESTWAIIt), STATIONH. No.2 I Ko.lll NolOI KM I no PHftW(K)U .... firant Henezetle .... (ilen l'lshur... Tyler l'enlleld Winterliurn . . Haluila D11 Hols Fulls Creelt... I'uiieoust lleynoldi,vUlu Fuller Hl'lMikvllle.... Hiuniiiei-vlllo.. Mliysvillo Mllo'llli (lakKldi-ii M. A. Ill 411! r.11 In llll P. M. ii 7 (IN 7 St I 7 41 7 K 8 07 8 II 471 1H' 8 37 8 4.i 8 HI 7 7 7 7 7 8 8 K rt 8 U y 12 ml Vi J.'il 11 :in 6 41) 17! M I! ii'.i rm! IB1 i; 8 Ml II (M 2-. V 4-.1 New llellilellum l,ltWHolilium.; Uedlimik 4Ti mi 10 M.A. P. M.'A. M.lP. M. Trains dully exeept Puudtiy. DANrt) Mc('AUUC), Ukn'l. Kitit., JAS. I'.ANDE IiSON, tlitN'i.. V'AiS! A.f'1, 1'lllsbui'K, I'll DO YOU NEED A NEW ATTIRE? J Mho, und you wunt a good Jlttiniir mid woll mmlo Biilt at a ro'Knouubltt llrufe you will re cuivu BHiuo by jAucitiy youp ordur with J. C. Froehlich, TllK AUTISTIC 'FA I LOU, . Next floi "Si Hotol MoCunnell, KKVh 'IWV1LLE, l'A, THE EARTH MUST DIE. An Illnstrntlnn Hhnwlnn Thnt the Solar 1 ftynlrm Will Innvltalily Fxplre. I Consldor a flywheel or Wockwork ns , driven ly a wcilit nnd the hent goner- j nted by friction numst tlio inotion or whenln and iiotiilulum nnd by itniwcts of teeth iiKitiiiHt the pallet of nti cncnpn ment. Our knowleilgo of jirojifrticn of matter and of modes of iiropitKntion of heat by radiation or conduction, and of the efficiency of heat m a motor, discov ered by eeveral thousand years of td ervation and several hundred yennt of experiment and dynamical theory, suf fices to show that when the weight is rnn down and the potential energy (or capacity to do work) which it had in the beginning has been all spent In the hent, this heat is not available for raising the weight and giving the clockwork a re newed lease of motivity. The solar system, according to the best modern scientific lielief, is dy namically analogous to tlio clockwork in all the essentials of our consideration. Not going back in thought to a begin ning of which science knows nothing, let ns compare the solar system as it was 8,000 years ago with the solar sys tem as it is now. Let our analogue he a clockwork which three hours ago was known to be going with its weight par tially run down, and which is still go ing with its weight not yet wholly run down. During those 11,000 yenrs tlio sun has been giving out radiant heat (light be ing included in the dcHignntion "radiant heat") in all directions, propagated at the rate of alxiut nine a'nd a half million million kilometers per year, and there fore twenty-eight nnd a half thousand million million kilometers in 3,000 years. We do not know whet her the light which left the sun 8,000 years ago is still travel ing outward with almost undiminished energy or whether nearly all is already dissipated in heat, warming the lumlni ferous ether or ponderable bodies which have obstructed its course. We may, 1 think, feel sure that it is partly still traveling outward as radiant heat, and partly spent (or dissipated) in warming ponderable matter (or ponderable mat ter and the lnminiferous ether). The running down of the weight in the clockwork has its perfect analogue, as Holmholts was, 1 believe, in reality the very first to point out in tlio shrink age of the sun from century to century under the influence of the mutual grav itational attractions between its parts. The heat producing efficiency of the fire which there would Ira if the sun were a globe of gunpowder or guncolton burn, ing from its outward surface luwiird that is to say, the work done by tile po tcntial energy of the chomical afllnity between uncombined oxygen and citYbou and hydrocarbons, attractive forces as truly forces and subject to dynamic law, as is the force of gravity itself, is abso lutely infinitesimal in comparison wit'li the work done by the gravitational at traction on the shrinking mass adduced by Ilelmholtz as the real source of the sun's heat. The whole story of energy now in the sun, whether of actual heat correspond ing to the sun's high temperature or of potential energy (as of the not run down weight of the clockwork) potential en ergy of gravitation depending on the extent of future shrinkage which the sun is destined to experience is essen tially finite, and there is much less of it now than there was 800,000 years ago. Similar considerations of action on a vastly smaller scale are of course appli cable to terrcstial plutonio energy, and thoroughly dispose of the terrestial "per petual inotion" by which Lyell and other followers of Mutton, on as sound prin ciples as those of the hnmblest mechan ical perpetual motionist, tried to find that the earth can go on forever as it is, illuminated by the sun from infinity of time past to infinity of time future, al ways a habitation for race after race of plants and animals, built on the ruins of the habitations of preceding races of plants and animals. The doctrine of the "dissipation ener gy" forces upon us the conclusion thnt within a finite period of time past the earth must have been, and within a fin ite period of time to come must again be, unfit for the habitation of man as at present constituted unless operations have been and are to bo performed which are impossible under the laws governing the known operations going on at present in the materiul world. Fortnightly Keview. Ioei That Hatha Regularly. It is only the petted and pampered ca nines who have such a dreud of the surf. The democratio curs of the town and the sensible old house dogs who have lived hero long enough to feel thoroughly at home and who feel equal to the task of looking out for themselves under any and all circumstances are of an en tirely different frame of mind, so fur as that is concerned. Plenty of them go in for their duily swita'as regularly and as unconcernedly as the most enthusiastic and inveterate bathers the town con tains, aud plenty more wuit only for tlio burest invitation to go plunging in after a stick or bull, to bring it out on the straud, triumphant at the victory over the watery element. Philadelphia Times. Au anticancer Jeagt ,veu organ ized in Paris, its purpiir ' VwtiJg to sock uieuns of rolioviug u -.unity of its most dreadful scourges. It is stated that in the lust six months ISO people have been killed by pars in Chicago, and 430 porsons were perma nently disabled from the tame cause. ' Rlllvil hjr Wringing Mnrhln. Martha Davenport, colored, twonty three years old, wns killed, nnd Daisy Miiy Brown, nlso colored, aged eighteen years, was injured, by tlio Imnvritfi; of a wringer in the bnspinrnt of the I'mpire Laundry company's lmiM'.ti,','. The wringer had been in use about three years, but wns overhntiW nnd a new. ropper "basket" put in about Ion "lays ago. This is said to be the first occa sion when any accident has happened to a wringer since the laundry wns started, twenty yenrs ago, and there are several wringers in tlio place which have been in constant use for over ten years. The constrnction of a wringer is not intricate, and ns no steam rnn enter it there seems to be considerable mystery as to how it wns possihln for it to ex plode. It consists of a jacket ninde of cost iron, about i inch thick, 4 feet high nnd 20 inches in diameter. The copper basket is about 18 inches in diameter nnd nearly the same height as the jacket, and so placed ns to revolve inside the Intter. Small holes in the basket permit the water from the clothes to pass out into tlio jackcUttnd thenco by a spigot to a pipe, through which it Bows off. The basket and jacket were burst into a thousand pieces, but the post which was meant to hold thorn in place was left standing, and although the pieces flow all over the room and into the yard none of the other machinery was struck. Slnrtha Davenport, the, woman who was killed, was about fifteen feet from the machine when it burst. Baltimore American. A I'lonerr on Kra Hathlng. As an old balhman my father and brothers having kept the "New York 3alt Water Floating Baths" at the Bat tery and at the foot of Desbroeses street for half a century, and being myself one of the first superintendents of the pub lic baths of New York city I cannot refrain from adding a few words of ad vice not only to surf bathers, but to all who bathe, either at the seashore, in the pond or even the bathtub, as there is danger in all toan inexperienced person. In the first place, never bathe after a hearty meal; always beforo, and early in the morning or late in the evening if possible. Never go in the water while perspiring freely; cool off a little and lie sure to wet tho head fii-Bt. Dive in head first if you know how and tho place is snitablo for so doing. If not, wet a towel and use that on the head, as it drives the blood down and not to the brain, and alxive all do not stay in the water over twenty minutes, and your bath will do yon good aud not weaken you, as it will if you stay in too long. As you truly Bay, the good swimmer is apt to bo reckless and careless, for getting tho treacherous "undertows," ''sea pusses" and tho fatal crumps, but lio niiui should go in bathing while in liquor. Every one ought to learn how to swim, for it is an accomplishment and very handy to have with you as you Journey through lifo either by wind or by wave. C'or. New York Herald. Advantage of Living In a Desert. A blessed country is tho arid region. From nearly every portion of it where the land is irrigated coma reports of fine crops of fruit and grain. In a few coses only are there reports of less than an av erage crop, and theso tales are few and far between. In one portion of eastoir Washingtot fears were felt for the wheat crop, but it was soon discovered that although tho straw showed the ef fects of warm, dry weather, tho hoada were filled with plump berries and the crop was safe. Clwoering reports como from Arizona and New Mexico. Tho former territory comes to tho front in great form as a fruit producer, and promises to rival California hereafter both ns tho earliest producer and iii tho quality of its prod ucts. Colorado grown berries of all kinds would seem to bo without a peer in tho world, yet eastom Washington, Idaho and Montnna.havo produced simi lar fruit gigantic in sizo aud luscious in flavor. Arid Region. filaiora Dlo on the Rama Day. Sirs. Ann Scott Mnnlsby, of Washing ton, widow of George Manlsby, medical director United States navy, died nt El beron, N. J., whejo she had gone for the jumuier, Saturday. On tho same day occurred the death at her home, at Mount Airy, near Philadelphia, of her tister, Mrs. Emma Lovett Breese, widow sf Commodore Brceso, United States navy. Mrs. Maulsby und Mrs. Breese were the daughters of tho late Colonel Lovett. the purchaser, of what ia now tho Kolorama Heights property from the Bowford estate. Ho lived thero with his Family beforo tho war and until tho time iiis property was confiscated by tho gov jru'.uent fur hospital purposes. Ho then removed to Philadelphia, whero tho family, except Mrs. Maulsby, has sinco resided. Washington Post. Odd Kl mil in with II It'll Valuea. , Many stamps attuiu a fictitious value on account of somo uccidont in their printing or publication. Tho story i:i told that wu one ocension a number of stamps were sont into Wales without tin customary perforation. Thoy were of the penny brick variety, common enough in all conscience, but it is said because the 240 of them which composed the prized pound's worth were tho only specimens ever sent out in such a manner thoy are now worih two pounds each, aud the ame queer enthusiasm exists in France, where the stamps used in connection with the balloon post of the great war oL1870 are considered worth their weight la gold.-MiUion. MARE 8ERENITATI3. There all Is waste and wild and dark anil drrar. The deepest sllencs-aiill In dentin No flying wliiu, no wlndlnit call -the ear Hears not tlio sllitlitest hrenth. All, all la wild: no sunshine fall. Alone, The very innnntnlus aeein to sleep. No pine trees rock In wavy lireere. No moan Cornea from that alienee of the deep. From Tyeho's hrnad chaotic waste to where (lassondrs crater spreads. There Inrld, darksome mountains catch lh Blare Eternal o'er their heads. Where are the souls that once those rale did (HI That poured their hearts shove Once Rushing stream, now dried up, wasted rill. Once music soft aa lover Oh, that deserted world shove! who knows What hand hath made It nor What eplo strain could ewerp In song Its woes. Divine what cause hath Inld It low? Oh, nay, 'tis nut for humnn nrt to soar That vast chaotic deep! When time Mil place and art shall be no more. Twill muse from mystlo sleep. K. T. O'lxuiKhlln In (lodcy's tally's Honk. An tiid Time Hallway ticket. Among the various exhibits secured by Chief Smith, of the transportation department of tho World's fair, during his recent visit to Europe, is a small brass pocket piece, resembling an ordinary bnggago check, which is worth a great deal mora than its weight in gold. It is of octagon shape, and on one sido is stamped the inscription, "L. & B. Rail way, Biigworth, No. Si)." On the op posite side the number is repeated. The relic represents the kind and form of tickets in uso in UitiS for "opeu carriage passengers" on the Leicester and Hwan ington railway. Tho distance covered by the main line was a trifle over nix teen miles, and the passenger fares charged were Vi pence a mile. There was one class only, and the passengers stood up in an open carriago, generally known as a tub, which was nothing bet ter than a high sided goods wagon, hav ing no top, no seats, no spring buffer. These brass tickets wore used to the various stations, the gnard of the train carrying a letter bag something in the stylo of a collection box, having eight separate divisions, one for each station. At the end of each passenger's journey his ticket wns taken up, nnd placed in the bug by the guard, to bo returned, recorded on the books and again used. Now York Recorder. VndeiuriiuiKl Wlrea Made I'selcss. The Chesapeake and Potomac Tele phone company is meeting with consider able trouble with its uudcrgrottuil system in various parts of tho city, aud have lost a great many wires. Tho principal trouble lies in the grounding of the wires, that is, tho wires become bared, tho insulation lieiug penetrated in some way or other, and the dampness causes tho current to leak into tho earth, caus ing what is known in electric parlance ns a "ground.'" This provents the use of the wires beyond tlio point where the ground occurs. Six or seven cables, containing from 120 to loll wires, have been affected within the past few weeks. All of the cables affected have been re placed with new ones without the sub scribers discovering that there was any thing wrong. Baltimore American. Thai Preventing) of Smoke. Tho latest system of smoke prevention Involves the use of tho combined appa ratus of two inventors. One invention consists of fireclay arches ' !i rough which the combined air awl giucs nre paused, and which, becoming incandescent, cause the smoke to be consumed. The other principle is tho induction of a low pressure current ! v.iv by means of steam jets, nnd tho two devices com bined give a very fiv.-d ivsv.it, more espe cially when applied to sham boilero. New York Telegram. Cottages t liar Harbor. Bar Harbor is rapidly becoming a colony of cottagers. Throo of tho larg est hotels aud several of tho smaller public houses are closed this season, while cottages are-springing upon every bnnd and there nre none to spare. Two weeks ugo one large hotel hnd forty-two guests and uiuety-six omployoesj an ther twenty-two guests and ninety-two employees, Lifo in private housos is en joyable for somo people at Mount Desert, but tho hotels us a mlo are wretched places in which to pass the summer. Bar Harbor Letter. Uuy Fever from tlia Ooldcurod. You who are lovers of flowers possibly do not know that you can bo poisoned by goldenrod, but it is so despite tho fact that it enmo near being the state flower. Any ono olllictod with hay fever (that is, a species of catarrh,) should be very careful how they handle this flower when covered with pollen dust. Al bany Journal. Au Interrupted FlRllt. Burt Revier and Charles Lemont, of Dundee, Minu., were both in love with the same girl, and they a;;reed to settle the matter of rivalry by a fight iu the presence of tho young woman. She was watching the battle from a buggy, when the horse took fright and ran, throwing her out and causing fatal injuries. l'rodiclous Fall of Ituln. In the twenty -four hours from S a.m., July 80, to 5 a.m., July 27, tho rainfall at Minneapolis was 7. HO inches the great est fail of water ever recorded by the weather bureau, aud probably the heav iest over known here. Minneapolis Tribune. A Washington Hear tVtint. Early one morning not long ngo a Mack boy going to his work was pass ing tilling the Pierce's Mlil road, near Wellington. Paying Hello intention to what wns lieforo him ho suddenly found himself confronted by a largo grizzly benr, Tho boy did what almost any ono would have done under llto sumo cir cumstances ho turned and ran ns fast M his legs could carry him. Luckily the bear did not follow, and he reached a house nnd gave nn nlarm. The news soon spread thnt a grizzly liear had escaped from the zoological garden. It would bo hard to toll how the news got abroad, because every one was afraid to go out of doors. Peoplo barricaded their doom nnd windows and kept their children in the house. Tho schools in the neighborhood were with out pupils. The superintendent of the zoological garden heard, at any rate, that his lost bear bad been seen on tho Pierce's Mill road, nnd accompanied by several well armed volunteers he started in pursuit of the animal. They canto npon him not far from the place where tho boy had seen hhn. The bear regarded bis pursuers indif ferently. The sujicrinteiident was led to hope that he might bo captured alive. "Let's surround him," said the chief of tho hunters. They proceeded to form a ring alxmt tho grizzly. This proceeding infuriated him at onco, aud he made a feroclotm attack upon ono of tho hunters. But before ho could reach the man all tho other hunters rushed bravely to tho assistance of their threatened comrade, whereupon tho grizzly, seeing himsolf outnumbered, turned tail with a growl and ran to a tree near by. Once moio tho crowd crept upon the bear, and then the animal rttjlicd va liantly at them all. This time several men fired at once, and tho yonng bear's brief period of lilierty was brought to an end. Washington Letter. "Old Sport" Cam pan a In Tears. There were traces of sorrow mingling with those of hardship and age on the face of "Old Sport" Campaua as ho niado his customary rounds of the Clark street resorts yesterday. Ho did not push the snlo of his stock of chewing gnm with his wonted activity and per sistency. Occasionally he brushed away a tear from his oyes with his rough and wrinkled hands. Tears are not rare with "Old Sport," but it was evident that those ho was brushing back yester day were sincere "What's tho matter, 'Old Sport!" muro than ono of his customers asked. "Old Sport" placed his stock of gum on tho sidownlk. Ho drew a littlo bun dlo of papt r from ono of his pockets, nnd carefully unrolling it drew from its foldn a bit of yellow paper a clipping from an eastern police journal. It told of tho sudden death in Bridgeport, Conn., of Alexander Campuna, sixty fivo years old. Ho was "Old Sport's" brother. Of his death tho veteran pe destriau know nothing until he was handed the clipping yesterday. No grave was ever dampened by warmer or more loving tears than those shed over the bit of yellow paper that conveyed tho message of sorrow to poor "Old Sport." Chicago Tribune. Vlseaae Germe In Taper Money. The possibility of infection being con voyed to a largo number of persons by moans of paper money has often been suggested, and an examination of the notes of tho Bank of Spain curront in Cuba shows that this form of currency is indeed liable to contain septio germs. The notes chosen for their experiments were some that had been in use for a good whilo, and were such as repre sented values of a few ponce only. It was estimated that two notes, weighing altogether alxmt fifteen grains, con tained more than 19,000 germs of vari ous kinds. Cultures were mudo in broth, gelatino and agar, and theso were injected into tho peritonicnl cavity of rats and guinea pigs, most of which died within twenty four hours, tho post mortem examina tion showing signs of peritonitis and congestion of the liver and kidneys. Tho blood of the heart and peritoneum was inndo uso of to inoculate solid media, in which colonies developed so rapidly ttiat it was impossible to deter inino their precise nature, many diffor ent forms being intermingled. London Lancet. The Hop Crop in Washington. Washington hops are of a high grade. nnd the yield, averaging 1,000 pounds to tlio acre, is almost threefold that of tho fields of England, Germany and New Y'ork stato. The hop louse has now made its devastating presence felt in western Washington, and . must be fought there us it has long been fought elsewhere. On account of this pest tho Puyalhip yield was reduced to 00 per cout. of what hnd been expected last year, and since the price was low, it was thought that tho revenue from hops would not bo above ( 1, 000,000. Hops bavo fetched more than a dollar a pound in tho past; of late tho prices have rnn rrom twenty cunts to thirty cents. To produce them costs less than ten cents a pound in Washington.. Julian Ralph hi Harper's, Mlstakea Oveur. George Suppose a fellow's best girl gets mod when yon ask for a kiss? Henry Take it without asking. George Suppose she gets mod then? Honry Theu you've got some other follow' tfirll New York Weekly. PILLSBURY REYNOLDS Brothers Shoes To be pold for tho next few weeks nt from CO CO 3 0 o to Ladles now is your chanca as this is the greatest slaugh ter ever made in Reyu oldflvillo on Shoes. T. 15. AltNOLD. New York Branch Bargain Store, I Iu iiuom Lttaly I I by C0L0ER BROS, Main St. lleynolilsville, Pa. No old sholf-worn goods, but all new, cloan, salable Btock and. more of them for tho amu money than you can buy ut any othor store in the town. ' If you aro looking for" something you cannot find ut any othor store, "como to The Racket Store and you will most likely got it, and you will be surprised how cheap. I'oople wonder how I can pay rent aud other expenses, soil so cheap and live Eauily explained, my friends, Just like this: Huy for cash, soil for cash; I soil for nut spot cash and I got bai'uins by paying not sxt cash for what I buy, consequently I am enabled to givo you bargains for your cah. Como Irl antj look over my stock; no trouhlo to show Ifixids whether you buy or not. Goods b.iught from mo and not satisfactory, und returned in good ordur, and reas onable time, money will bo cheerfully refunded if desired. Romembor,I posit ively stato that I have no old sholf- ' worn goods, no shinldy goods, but en clean cut a lino of ev.n-y day gijode as you will find in any store inJofforson county, und oh, how cheap. C.'omo in Ladies and take a look at my lino of lK-autiful Lacos, Wrappers, Waists, Aprons, Gloves, Mltta, Night IUilx-s, Stockings, Baby Carriage Kolx.'s.C'ulie, Rolms, Shirting.bloached and unbleach ed Muslin. I might go on mentioning tho lots of bargains but would taku too long, step in nnd tako u look for your selves. Gontlomeij, emtio in and buy ono of our beautiful paintings, .'!0x:it, gilt framo, only $1.00, aro goinj,' like hot cakes; if you want ono como quick. I ulso bavo men's IIcso, Slih-t.i, ITu.!k1-kufchlefs.bi-awoiy, Under Shirt, White Shirts, Liuon Collars und Cuffs, Glows and an eudlo.'is number of uthor things 1 for gentlemen. Como in anil hxilc fop yourselves. I will only bo to glad lo show you my stock. I have In stock hundreds of urtlcles for Ladies, Gtullo meti and Children, Hoys, Girls and Buby's that would till our town paperto mention thorn ull. This advertisement is written in tho plain American A.U.C. language so everybody that Vua road can understand every word of it. M. J. C0YLE, The Racket Store.