A DIAMOND MARKET. EXPERTS IN PARIS WHO KNOW ALL THE PRECIOUS STONE3. A riic Wlicra a Stranger tVowltl n Ko Traces of llnjlna r Srlllnie Mil linns of Dotlnra ltrraontfid In One Itay'a Stork Canifil la tnrrr 1'lacra, It wns tlio AM) Hnny who siiliiprtf ! dinmomlft to the rouln-Ht 1vntment. He tised to take a lmmiiirr imJ snimli tlmm. lie did tl:o innie with inrinMs, rubies and fHipphircfi, just n if llu-y were worth nothing. By this heroic trontmeiit the Venerable nhbe diwovtivd tlint tlic broken particles of nil wlnii stones have rmrticnliir forms which establish their Renninenesd beyond nil doubt. De fore hin time it was almost impossible to tell n diamond fromabrilluint or piece of rock crystal. But no w nobody breaks pm-ions sti ines. Any dealer can take, with an indifferent air, the diamond thnt ispreseiited tohini for examination, and fay without the leant hesitation, "That weighs so much; it is a little fellows it is worth so much." And he is never deceived. At the pres ent time everybody is somewhat of n dealer, and tho consequence is that everybody can diHtinRtiish a real dia mond Among a thousand bogus stone?. On the second floor of a cafe in the Boulevard Montmnrtre tho market or bourse of precious stones is held, always in broad daylight. Very few strangers to the trade can penetrate this sanc tuary, not because the access to it is difficult, for tho door is nlwnys wide open, but because the portfolios close and the stars disappear the moment nn unknown face appears nt the threshold. Instead of animated traders the stranger only finds a few dull eyed Jews, carelessly playing a game of bezitptn. Ah, but there is a Turk there, too: the Turk that looks so much like Omdere, of the Opera Comique, except that he is yellow ami wears very loose tnmscrs, but theso trousers lire full of diamonds. Don't believe for a moment that these good Jews, the merchants in precious stones, are afraid of robbers. That is the smallest thing that bothers them. What they dread is to let the profane, and especially the small jewelers, know the real value of their goods. As soon as the stranger departs the arms stretch out and the portfolios re appear. The greater ntimWr of these portfolios are made of tin and are closed with a lock and key. In a moment the tables are covered with little bundle of white paper formed like those in which the druggists put rhubarb or sulphate of magnesia. These packages are ojen ed, and in less time than it takes to tell it oil the tables, including the billiard table, are covered with precious stones that might startle tho king of Persia. .A strange spectacle is presented by those sordid old men quietly taking from their pockets threo or four millions' wort'.i. Each one of perhaps 10,000 packages contains so many brilliants. After they are disposed of tho rare stones are intro duced. Here thoro are sapphires as big as nuts. There lies a black diamond almost as large as the twelve pearls that surround it. Here again is a necklace made of fifteen emeralds that would make as many snuffboxes, certainly not big enough for M. Hyacintho, of the Palais Royal, but too big beyond a doubt for the noso of Mile. D. "Here is a rare bargain," shouts one of .the merchants, "one of the finest pieces of ancient jewelry known! It in a necklace that belonged to Madame In Princesse do Onemcnee. Mounting, diamonds and all are ancient. Prince Proisetoiloff refused 75,000 francs for it twesty years ago." The necklace is passed from hand to hand. The merchants gaze at it with attention. The eyeglasses come into play. Indecision and doubt are painted upon some faces At last the necklace is passed to Michel. He is the great judge. He takes the thing, weighs it in his hand, looks at it with an indifferent air and says, "The two brilliants are ancient. They come with their mount ing from the Countess de Prejoan. The two others, still finer, onco formed part of a necklace which was stolon in Venice in 1804 from Mine. Morosini. This neck lace belonged later on to Lady Temple, whose husband purchased it at Candoar of Isaac Lieven. Lady Temple gave it to her daughter, who sold it three days after her marriage. As for the sapphire in the center, that comes from the sale of Mile. Schneider. The rest is new and comes direct .from Hamburg. But, after all, it is well preserved, and 75,000 francs does not seem to be too much for it" As extraordinary as it may appear there are now living five or six indi viduals who know all the costly dia monds and all the rich jewels in the world, and they are able to recognize them after a lapse of thirty years, even when they had first only seen them a moment, as certainly as a tailor would recognize at thirty paces the customer that forgot to pay him. , When a robbery is committed in the house of a well known jeweler, a thing whioh.often happens in Paris, London, Vienna and St Petersburg, if there is among the objects stolen a stone of more than ordinary value it is sure to be found again, although it may take many years to bring it back to its owner. Figaro. A War to YsuBg Faopla. Xou must be willing to bear aeverses. ou mnat expect disappointment. You must be ready to meet ill luck and to epdur poverty if need be. Don't ex pact things to make themselves unless yom help them. Whatever you have must be worked for, and if it is worth having it is richly worth working for. Ludgato Weekly. What aa Epicure Is. The term epicure means only the per son who has good sense and good taste enough to wish to have his food cooked aooording to scientific principles; that is to say, so prepared that the palate be net offended, that it be rendered easy of d'estiou and ultimately contribute to k sal th. "Cook's Oracle." A Kiaenma tor 'STttm Aanaf. A imachinn has been invented which sppnrates nshes from boiler fires Into three portions. Unbnrncd fuel, called breezo or cinders, which can bo mixed with coal and burned over again, or for blncksmiths' fires, being tho finest ma terial procurable: fine dust, useful for builders in place of sand; clinkers, use ful for roadmaking, paths, etc. Tho machine consists of a tank or com partment kept full of water. The ashes nr breeze to bo cleansed rest on a grat ing, which in covered by a line perforated copper plate. A free passage of water is allowed, and at tho same time the breeze or find is prevented from falling. Tho separation is effected by an agi tator worked by a crank shaft. At each downward plunge of the ngitutnr tho wnter is forced upward through the per forated copper bottom, causing tho ma terial to rise. The rubbish, owing to its greater specific gravity, is precipitated to tho bottom on the return stroW'i at the same time the breeze, or unburned fuel, being lighter, works to the surface. At each stroke of the crank n body of water and a quantity of clean breeze is carried to a plate, which is also per forated, so as to allow the water to fall into the machine and thence through a valve to be used over again, and the clean breeze is swept by a revolving brush over a ledgo. The clinker ac cumulates on tho perforated copper plate, and from time to time is allowed to escape by a valve in the liody of the machine, whence it is raised by an ele vator and discharged. Pittsburg Dis patch. t.nve Milking nn the fttngft. "Tho art of making love on the stage is one that few actors acquire," said nn old Thespian. "A woman naturally clings to a man with grace, grasping his nrm with cleverly implied passion or tenderly nestling on his lwisom. But a man doesn't get on to the nstheticismof the thing with the same ease and grace. Harry Lacy was a dream of a lover, though. Ho had a trick of weaving bis arms about n woman with a sinuous, se ductive movement that brought a littltt lump into the throat of every woman in the audience. He always preferred ap proaching a woman from behind and then drawing her back into arms that seemed made for thnt purpose. HofT isn't a bad lover by any means. Ask the St. Louis girls if they don't think he makes very few false moves. "Funny thing, while on this topic, but you know when Barrytnore was supporting Langtry they hated eacl other worse than poison. He declare she would put pins in her bodice to stick him, and they kept up a regular quarrel the whole time they were billing and cooing and embracing in most ardent fashion. 'Don't hold me so tight, sir; you have evidently never had your arms around a lady,' Langtry would say in a whisper. 'If you knew how thoroughly distasteful this is to mo you would never accuse mo of getting near you,' he would reply. Do people ever make love on tho stage? Not that 1 know of; it is all purely business." St, Louis Republic. A rimlnnx. A phalanx in tho military affairs of Greece was a square battalion or body of soldiers formed in ranks and files compact and deep with their shields joined and pikes crossing each other so as to render it almost impossible to break it. At first the phalanx consisted of 4,000 men, but this number was after ward doubled by Philip of Maccdon, and tho double phalanx is hence often called the Macedonian phalanx. Poly bius describes it thus: "It was a square of pikemen, consist ing of sixteen in flank and COO in front The soldiers stood so close together that the pikes of the fifth rank extended three feet beyond the front The rest, whose pikes were not serviceable owing to their distance from the front, couched them upon the shoulders of thoso who stood before them, and so locking thuui together in file pressed forward to sup port and push on the former rank, by which means the assault was reudorcd more violent and irresistible." The spears of those behind also stopped the missiles of the enemy. Each man's pike was twenty-three foot long. Tho word phalanx is also used for any combina tion of people distinguished for solidity and firmness. A grand phalanx count ed of 18.8S4 men. Brooklyn Eagle. Took Illg Chsnovs tot Tn-enty-flva Dollars. A Captain Blondell at Oxford, Ala., j iffered twenty-five dollars to any one ' who would get into a boat and allow it I o be blown up with dynamite so that Slondell might show his lifesaving I nethods. A yonng man named Neely 1 iccepted the offor and was blown about ! 'orty feet into the air unhurt, but on bis turn to the water's surface he alighted in the fragments of the wreck and re eived a fractured leg and other injuries. Uray Hair Turning Black. Just across the Berkeley county line it Cedar Grove, Va., lives Jacob Lanck. He is sixty-five years old, and one year ig'o he possessed a heavy suit of snow white hair. Since then his hair has by legrees turned to its original color black and there is only an occasional ipot of white remaining. Mr. Lanck las been in perfect health, and is unable account for the strange change. Uartmsburg (W. Va.) Letter. Boaad ta Oat His Xaaejr. A man at Peak's island, Me., dropped t nickel into the slot of a phonograph me day last week, but the machine 'ailed to give out the promised music, tliereupon the man became enraged and onashed the phonograph into bits to re cover his money. The reverend gentlemen who are en. toying their several vacations are much n luck to find "sermons in tones." The rest of us are obliged to lose more r less time when we go pleasuring. The quality of the Swedish matches n many cases is so bad that the state hv tends to resume the manufacture, and totnputes that the profits will prodnoa s vvenue of 1,MK,(N0. A Much TretM VnlUo. A valise was received at the United States express ofllco nt Jackson, Miss., several days ago showing from the hun dreds of stamps and tit;; on it that it had been in most of tho express offices in the country. It wus stuffed full of hun dreds of odd and queer articles, includ ing a human skull and the left foot of a femnle graveyard rabbit. A Ctillil Willi Two llTiilna. A few y:irs ngn, in issi, a child was born to Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kuerwitz. of Spring Creek, near Hebron, Neb., that had two well developed brains, the second and useless ndjunct being in n sac attached to tho back of the real bend by a ligament six inches in length. The child lived but two days. St. Louis Ko-tmblic. No Riimln.v VTnr't In i Tho Boer' have 1 1 r , - -: Itops Sunday l:ib.ir i ; Hie gold output, it I- i reduced by onen vi : -i. )f $375,01111 is mot..::. ' 1 r.tnttrnut. I :i law which In" ".'riiliRvn.nl. ! ( !,ir-d. will bo . intoning tt loss fpiil President V ;ll UOt Htll thO Kroger replies that Lord's day fur tntri The centennial anniversary of Frye burg academy, at Fryeburg, Me., was celebrated a few days ago. Daniel Webster is reputed to have begun his study of law while in this institutution and tnado his first public oration while principal of the academy. The fact that man has been ablo to produce many great changes on the face of the earth is a tribute to bis industry and Ingenuity. But it Is p5lbl that he is bringing about effects of equal im portance without intending them. A safety mtlfboat. with deck, sides, bottom, stern and l: el all madu out of Duo piece of metal and so constructi-d ns to huvo but otiu scam, mid that riiiiui:i; down the mils along the bottom, is tho invention of a New York gonitis. The smokestack of our oce:i'i vte::i'i. ers uro much larger than i.-i p ;:i-v.;!!y supposed. They range from fomtci'.i to eighteen fret ill diameter. Tlioe of the Etnuia are over the latter figure. A dwarf residing at Sliigakeu, Osaka, is thirty -six years old and but seventeen inches high. He is well educated and gains a livelihood by teaching penman ship. Benedict VI was strangled in the cas tle of St. Angelo by order of his succes sor, Boniface VII. who a few months later was deposed and died in exile. People Find That It Is not wlso to experiment with cheap compounds purporting to be blood -ptirillers, but which have no real medicinal value. To make uro of any other than tho old standard AVER'S Sursnparilliv tho Superior Blond-purifier is dimply to invite loss of time, money, and health. If you are afflicted with Scrofula, Catarrh, lihcunmtisin, Dyspepsia, Eczema, Running Sores, Tumors, or any other blood disease, bo assured thnt It Pays to Use AVER'S Sarsapurllla, and AYER'S only. AYER'S Sarsnpnrilhi can always be depended upon. It does not vary. It is always the same in quality, quantity, and effect. It is superior in combination, proportion, appearance, and in all that goes to build up the system weakened by disease and pain. It searches out nil impurities in tho blood and ex pels them by the natural channels. AVER'S Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. O. Ayor k Co,, Lowell, Mum. Bold by all DruggUM. 1 rice SI; ill bottloi, 5. Curesothers, will cure you J.s. -f.KALI'.lt IX- Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, and Shoes, Fresh Groceries Flour and Feed. GOODS DELIVERED FREE. OPERA HOUSE BLOCK e Reynoldsville, Pa. vavavavavavavavavav MORROW A large and complete line of HARDWARE At the Reynoldsville Hardware Co. Store. ED. GOODER, .cr- en REYNOLDSVILLE, PENNA. jf"OppoHHo Stoke's drug store. Jhe Latest Edition, A STEADFAST DETERMINATION to POPULARIZE OURSELVES In the ESTIMATION of the PUBLIC. And what in more the greatest Struggle of a Lifetime Will bo made to accomplish it. Between the column rules of all our advertisements you will always find attractions, and above all you will find our advertisements GU06K Full oi Trutmui Production. Plead for your own future welfare because this is the initial announce ment given to you by BOLGBR BROTHERS It is bona-fide, legitimate, unvarniBhed, pure and unadulterated facts. Not merely words put in print to mislead the unthinking The Spotless Reputation Of the above firm is sufficient assurance of its reliability, straightforward business prin ciples without schemes to entrap the publio combined with being THE ORIGINATORS of the SMALL PROFIT SYSTEM BOLGBR BROS., Merchants, Tailors, Clothiers, Gents Furnishers arid Hatters, ilRoynolclervill, Fei. and STOVES 9) ) HAS MADE V US POPULAR ) WITH THE PEOPLE. McKcc d Warnick , HKADQUARTF.IM FOK Fancy and Staple CKOCEMES, Oil Flour s Feed. An elegant line eon pisting of sour, pweet and mixed pickles. Onions, chow chow, olivi'a .nii1!f1mvtra v? W and others too numer A oua to mention. rs-n M C An endless variety on hand; always fresh. Try our fruit and chocolate cakes. 'Washburne's Best" leads the list; it's a dandy. Try it. We have in stock, "Our Best," "Straight," "Imperial," N. W. Patent," "Pilgrim" and others. -J We have no oil wagon on the road but we deliver you a 5 gal. best lM)0 oil for 50 cents. Get our rates on oil by the barrel. A ri'LL STOCK of fw In our line iihrtiiH on- hit ml. Jlifihexl miivkvt price fx i Ul for raitntri p roil lire. (loom ltlX'EIVEU DAILY. SO OLD (IOODS ' Fon sali:. McKoc & Warnick, Tlic3 G rocers, Cor. Jith anil Main St . . . JlrtnoltlHrille, Venna. "Vs; BARGA I want to close out my sum mer goods to make room for fall stock, and will sell r AT COST! Outing Cloth, & cents, Sold before for 8 cents. Outing Cloth, 8 cents, Sold before for 10 cents. Outing Cloth 12 cents, Sold before for 12 i cents. Challie, 10 cents, Sold before for 1 2 i cents. Challie, 10 cents, Sold before for 15 cents. Sateen, 10 cents, Sold before for 15 cents. Indigo Blue prints 6 cents per yard. Men's Seersucker Coat and Vest at 65 cents, Sold before for $1.00. Men's and Boys' Outing Shirts At 19 cents apiece. Men's suits at $3.60, Sold before for $5.00. All Men's suits reduced From $2.00 Id n $3.00 per suit. ChidrenV . ' Suits $i.oo Now s your time to save money. These goods are all new. ' Snmme tails I 1ST. Hanau.