THK FACTORY LASSES 8KETCHES OF THEIR LIVES IN THE SftEAT LANCASHIRE MILLS. Frnvl.te. Made ty -the Oxfnrtl Factory Owner. fT the Recreation of Their Employee ttw the 'OlrU lre. and Conrinet Thcm.el.eii. For th reprentlrm of thr1r hnrnl mills hare no provision wlmtover as a rule, that In. There are a fow exiTjitlonn, and only a fow. Cnliiiw curtninly nro the Oxford rnill at Axliton-unrier-Lyne, In connection with which the lute Mr. Hugh Mason founded ft llttlo colony. For outdoor sports thnro is a lurgo ilny ground, with swings, etc.. mid a bowl ing preen attached. When the weather is unfavorable the hands tun go to the recreation rooms. Ou the (round floor of these Is a reading room 'liberally sup plied with newspapers and .periodicals, and having a library of 700 volumes. coffee room leads nit it, nml from that again the baths are reached. Up stairs is a large lecture room fitted with desks and with platform at the end. Busts of great men are on pedestals round the walls. Scott and Burns are In a niche together as is : fitting, and near them are Homer, Shakespeare, Dante and Milton. .Michael .Angelo looks at Raphael, Bright and Cohilen. Newton and Watt, Frauklin and Wash ington all are there 4 and at intervals there are also hung portraits of in ventors and improvers of cotton ma chinery. In connection with these rooum there is a good brass baud. Hewing ami other classes, too, are held, while during the winter months concerto and lec tures are of frequent occurrence. Of all this it should be .noted Messrs. Thomas Mason & Son defray the ex penses. From other portions of the district we take the following. Tlio secretary of a cotton operative spinners' association is stated to have said: "Any girl who wants work 'cnn have it in the mills. That labor market is never overstocked. At the present time, particularly in the spinning department, some firms are shorthanded. Nowadays many girls in Manchester do not care to go into the millss they would rather work in the warehouses and shops." "There hus beeu an improvement in the lot of the factory workers?" asked the interviewer. "Yes," replied the secretary, "in every way; wages are higher, hours shorter. But, mind you, hands have to work harder while they are at it, because the machinery runs faster and they have to look after more of it. Why, in my young days a weaver tended only two looms, now she tends four." Throstle spinners, the writer adds, work with as little clothing as possible " and generally in their bare feet, though some wear slippers. Cardroom hands wear straight pinafores, cut away at the neck and with short sleeves. The dis tinctive parts of the mill girl's dress nre clogs on the feet and a small aiinwl -"handltorchief,"they are called on the shoulders. Weavers, though there is nothing pe culiar alxmt their dress, can generally be distinguished from other factory girls. They have a personal trade mark their front teeth are often bad, and besides many of them have nt times peculiar gesture. Drawing in the breath to suck weft through a shuttle causes tho ieeth to decay. The mannerism is similarly explained. In a weaving shed the noise is deafen ing. Von cannot hoar yonr own voice. 80 the weavers attract one another's at tention by a shrill "Whool" and con verse by means of signs and by watch ing tho movements of the lips. They are so prolicieut in labiomancy that they can fellow a private conversation any where if they can Bee tho speakers' faces. This circumstance explains a common observation that is otherwise enigmati cal, " Mind what tha'rt sayin' " one gossip will remark to another, glancing suspidoiisly at the object of their talk. " oo's a wayver." Some mill girls never do any house work; their ignorance in which branch of female education is consequently colossal. Hundreds cannot make a pud ding or a pie for the life of them, and the writer has heard of a lass putting a rabbit iu a dish whole and making a crust for it with suet. There are factory girls on tho other hand and these ure in the majority who take their full share of cleaning, cookery, needlework, eto. As a rule, too, the lasses are in every way respectable. When a factory loss and her sweetheart go off on a trip or take a week at Blackpool or Southport or the Isle of Man, as often as not she pays the expenses. She it is who in dne course bays the furniture aye, and perhaps the ring and all the rest Whether she will stand treat in this or not, the four loom weaver need never remain single. Among factory girls she corresponds tc the heiress of ordinary life, and as such has no difficulty in obtaining a husband. When offsprings become old enough they are sent to the mill, as their parents were before them. The typical Lanca ihire woman does not like the idea of their aiming higher. As they soon re ceive good wages their parents are rap Idly placed in comfortable circumstances more comfortable than they ever knew perhaps. This stato is the factory oper atives' snmmum bonum the position beyond which be or she very rarely goes. Cassell't Journal. D Was m Pounder. The millionaire was desirous of em ploying m slugger to protect him from dangerous visitors, and a big two fisted fellow applied for the place. "How much will you charge for your services?" inquired the cautious million aire. , "Aw, I don't know," said the slugger carelessly. "About fifty dollars a pound, I guess." Tha millionaire looked at the appli cant's knotted muscles and heavy hands and concluded that tha figures war sot too hish. Detroit Free Press. To DUnnlvo Donee. Although bones can be reduced to plant food by an easy and simple proc ess, and when done make one of the most valuable of nil fertilisers, yet of all matter nn the farm none is more neglected. Bones whole are not avail able food for plants; therefore the farmer takes no interest In them as n -mentis of plant food r.nd they are suf fered to lie about the farm unnoticed. I have practiced dissolving bones in ashes for many years. I collect all tho bones, large and small, all beef and hog bones, nt killing time. When winter comes and 1 am burn ing good wood I put in a box or barrel a layer of ashes some two or three Indies deep, then a layer of bones (you can break them with nn ax if you wish 1 never do), ntid then nnntlier of ashes and then of bones until the vessel is nearly full, then iill with ashes. I now keep this wet with water, being careful not to put enough to leak through. I use sonpsuds ns much ns I can, as it is better. I am careful not to let this mnss freeze, as tho process will stop while frozen. I also save through the winter a hopper of strong ashes in the same way it is done for making soap. When spring comes, if the bones are not dissolved sufficiently, I put Hipbones and ashes in a lnrge kettle and then pour on lye leach from this hopper of ashes and boil them until they are eaten up. When done mix it with dry earth to make it better to handle. Put away in barrels until wanted. I hnve thus made a fertilizer thnt gnve better results thnn commercial fertilizers for which I paiil three dollars per hundred ponndg. To dissolve bones in sulphuric acid is much the speediest process, but with this great enre and caution must bo oy served, ns tho ncid is very corrosive. Cor. Husbandman. Microbes from Old Grave.. It is asserted that the efforts to abolish infectious disenses, such ns scarlet fever nnd diphtheria, are frustrated by the burial of infected bodies, for though the microbes themselves may dlo their spores, or seeds, have very great vitality. Pnstenr's researches havo proved thnt earthworms ' bring tip to tho surface microlies from the bodies of infected animals buried several feet deep. Dar win showed in one case thnt in fifteen years they bnd accumulated worm mold ovor three inches in depth, and in an other case during eighty yenrs had ac cumulated nn average depth of more than a foot. In a field in the Jura, where a diseased cow had lieen buried nt a depth of nearly seven feet, Pasteur found that the mold which he collected two years Inter con tained germs which on being inrtculated into a guinea pig produced death from the same disorder of which the cow died. In a Yorkshire village part of n disused j graveyard was taken into the rectory gar- I den adjoining. On the earth lieing dug ; over scarlet fever broke out in the rec- j tory nursery and thence spread over tho ' village. It proved to bo of tho snmo I typo ns that from which, thirty yenrs i before, tho victims died who wero burie.l I in that particular part of the churchyard, j On tho opening of a smallpox burying ground in Quebec, 150 years old, siiiall- 1 pox immediately broke out among the ; workmen. Youth's Companion. The FiiKliliiimhlo Cnlllnir Curd. There is 110 more important factor in social life than tho visiting card. Ac cording to the stern decrees of fashion, this bit of pasteboard plays a tyrnut's part, nnd one might ns well bo dead ns out of tho fashion in visiting cards, to say nothing of other less important things. This season the visiting card will bo nearly square, in shape, slightly smaller thau those of last year; pure white, of a highly polished but not glazed surfaco; the name engraved in script through tho middle of the card; the address in the lower right hand corner, and tho day of receiving in tho lower left hand corner. The card should spell out tho hus band's given name in full und not give Initials, and never include a title or profession. A daughter tho first year of her going into Bociety must have her name nddtd on her mother's card. After that, if tho eldest, she may have hor own card, with Miss Jones or Miss Do Puyster, as tho enso may be. New York Iloruld. The 8'et or Ilia llrow. A Bebeo young man has demonstrated what pluck and persistent work can do. On one of the streets of that village stands a good sized dwelling house, with L, shed and stable. The house is two stories, and the set of buildings is really nice in design and finish one of the best in that place. This fact is remark able, because it is all the work of a boy (now twenty years old), who has had no means to start with. He has performed nearly all the labor with his own hands in spare time. When his money for material ran short, he would work out and earn more, thus not running in dobt for anything. He is unmarried, but the little wife, when he gets her, will have a home that ought to be famous as a monument of her young husband's fore thought, thrift and industry. Bangor Commercial. Curses and Chickens. The old man had gone over to a neigh bor's to find his wandering hens, and h was in such bad humor that his lan guage was, to say the least, not polite. "Don't swear so," pleaded the neigh bor, a pious person. "Don't you know curses, like chickens, come home to roost?" "Well," exclaimed the old man at the end of another string of emphasis, "if they are like my chickens they won't," and he used more language. Detroit Free Press. ha Had rer.;ott.n. A woman nonplussed the Information bureau man at the railroad station In Portland, Or., tome time ago by telling' him she had forgotten her destination. He called off the names of a long list of stations, but the was unable to recognise the nam of bar plaoe. Monntaln Peavaant In New York. The mountaineer peasants of northern Italy and the Tyrol are unusual among the immigrants to this country, but one now and then encounters them nponthe streets of New York, where they are easily recognized by their great stature, sturdy legs and shoulders, hard, sun browned features and felt hats, created in imitation of Kossuth's headgear, and ornamented with the scimitar like cock's feather. Their footgear, too, is dis tinctive, being eonrse leiri'ed lont, with pointed toes and high, tapering heels, such nn nrticle of apparel ns it seems no man would dare venture out with in a region or difficult footing. Philadel phia Ledirer. one allied K4laeatlnn. Mr. Specks It seems to me a college education mnkes men rather one sided. Graduate Thnt's because they always pull on the same side. They ought to change their crews around once In awhile. Good News. A VESTS Sarranarii.a Y-our fcect rcir.cc'y fcr E-rysipelas, Cat:,:, h R-heumatism, t.;...l G-crofu!a. Salt-Rheum, Sere Tyco A-bsccsses, Tumoro R-unning Sore3 G-curvy, Humorc, Itch A-nemia, Indigestion P-imples, B!otc!:e3 A-nd Carbunclc3 R-lngworm, Rashes i-mpuro Blood L-anguidness, Dropsy L-iver Complaint A-ll cured by AVER'S Sarsaparilla rrcpnrt-il liy fr..T.I Avr f'o., T.ntvrll, Mum. hulil by all lruiuiii. i'rliu I ; ix boil It a, j. Cures others, will cureyou KNOW ME BY MYWORKS A Preventive mid nre for Cholera ami Lit rlie I'loiri past history wt't'imimt hut expert the Clmli'iu titid 1..U (iiipne In our mliM In tlin ni'iir future nnd hi order that everybody miiy iiiepui-e t heiiiM'lvert for the emergency mnl knowing that I cannot treat you iMTMonnlly I ittii having printed a eon it t and never falllim formula for the prevention and euro of Cholera ami another for the euro of I, a, Urlppo which I warrant to do the Im'hI work If lined In time. In order that everylHMjy may have 11 chance to uet 1hce formulas, 1 urn havlmcthem printed In wm.nnn on, mid on nnd after IIiIh dale I will have one wrapped around every hot He of Iturironir Hyntem Renovator that leaven my olllce or hi I huh tory. Among the many humlrcdn that have heeii treated with thene piencrlpt loim I know of none that have died. Hyrtlcm Kenovutnr In a compound of 111 d liferent root and herlm that work In harmony on the human HyMeni. I will put up $l,Oiio that It lorn no eipial iih n family medicine. My capacity to-day Ih Hi. (Mi hoi t leu per moulh, and you will tlnd It In every wholesale and retail drug ntore iill.(KJper hot! le, or tl for &Vm. Have your druggist get It for you, and take no other. I will refund you the money for every hot lie that iIocn not do im I Hiiy. In the world's wonder and will he a! I he World's (mi I r In all lis glory. I have cured 47 persons of t it pc worms In the last 41 months, and cnu show more cures of cancer, catarrh, scrofula and all IiIimkI d I sen sen than all others. IUt. J. A. IU IdiOON, 47 Ohio Hi reel, Allegheny. Mut-gnnn'H remedUm for Halo lit II. Alex. Htokes. Grocery Boomers W BUY WHERE YOU CAN GET ANYTHING YOU WANT. FLOUR, Salt Meats, Smoked Meats, CANNED GOODS, TEAS, COFFEES AMD A IX KINDS Or H U T FRUITS, CONFECTIONERY, TOBACCO. AND CIGARS, Everything' in the line of Fresh Groceries, Feed, Goods delivered free any place in town. Cull on us and get priced, W. C. Sclraltz & Son. & N Advertise 1 - Advertise! ,AdperUseI Country Produce The Labor Trouble Ended! 000000000000 FULL PARTICULARS OF THE EVENT MADE PUBLIC. 0000000000 Thousands who have most carefully deliberated - declare that there la NO FURTHER TROUBLE necessary. They anticipated the result the first time they took advantage of BOLGKR BKOS. invitation to attend their AUTUMN and FALL OPENING. Looking around from ptore to ptore is a thing of the past. There is no occasion now, and another thing it was always a laborious task. The Trouble in this Direction is not at an End. People who visit our store congratulate each other for showing their good judgment in patronizing a firm that has the moral courage of selling Minus outrageous Fronts. You will find in our establishment pleasing facial expressions in every department, and the following prices are what multiplies and cultivates custom for us: We have a beautiful line of Men's Suits, Dnuc' Quito "' DUjf O OUI Lo, M.7".. t.r.o nnd up to .oo. Overcoats for the millions! We have a splendid line of IVltJIl O UVCI UUaLb, (12.00 and up to $1.00. Boys' Overcoats, r"--ssa lMhimm. In our merchant tailoring department the Best and Latest designs the market affords. GENTLEMEN: 1171 will i'iii ; Exclusive Mimhuul Ttiihr ExmUittinl 1'v'h-ik trirn tymi run rixit JlnUvr Jlnw. anil mmrr in iniiiillnhlr Jit ill il uiirimj nf.l.l ki' vi nt. Whii pi i;i fl.ftif fuv it svitrf ivhin ll'itiir Urns. Small l'rnfit SihIi in fnulilm tin m In m II it fur lit) mitn. (Viiiwiio nthi, ivhi n in nntl nf iimithinil in tlir line ( ('hitliinij, r iiihi-mmh' nr inmli ln innr nniiititir', lints nml tientkmi h Fttrnishinij (inntls, ititrmizr BOLGER BROS., Just in IT WILL , 1'AY YOU TO EXAMINE OUIt LINE OF STOVES BEFORE BUYINO ELSEWHERE AS WE CARRY THE LARGEST AND BEST LINE IN THE 2T T5TT fX pKWrT-rr.i COUNTY. Hill' i. J c rr In fact anything you may desire in our line will be found in our mammoth store. The Reynoldsville Hardware Co. Gitu Meat Market I buy the best of cattle and keep the choicest kinds of meats, such as MUTTON, VEAL BEEF, PORK AND SAUSAGE. Everything kept neat and clean, Your patronage solicited. E. J. Schultze, Prop'r. ro(1o euy Manufacturing Hubuer Hturops. Kvml for l'rtoe Llt of Outlite. to J. . W. Doi-men Co., 917 Eiutt auriumu Street. BultUuoro, MA, U. 8. A. nt (.voo, (7.00, (o.oo, (io.no, (12.00 nnd up to (20.00. KGYNOLPSVILLG. PA. Season ! THE OF THE CINDERELLA LESSENS LABOR AND THEIR ECONOMY SAVES YOU MONEY. CALL AND SEE OUR STOVES. J.s. -PEALF.R IN- Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, and Shoes, Fresh Groceries Flour and Feed. GOODS DELIVERED FREE. OPERA - HOUSE BLOCK Reynoldsville, Pa. MORROW McKce it Warnick HEAHQtlAKTEKR FOR Fancy nnd Staple GHOCEMES, Oil, Flour! Feed. An elegant line' con sisting of sour, sweet and mixed pirkles. Onions, chow chow, olives, cauliflowers and others too numer ous to mention. i 3 72 ( 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. We have no oil wagon on the road but we deliver you a 5 gal. best 150 o oil for 50 cents. Get our rates on oil by the barrel. 3 A FULL STOCK of uootl In our line tihrriH nn hnnd. Highest market prlre paid for country proditre. noons n ECF.tr En ItAILY. ' XO Ohlt GOODS FOR SALE. : McKee & Warnick, The GrocerB, Cor. lilh nd Main St . . . ReiiioldHrille, 1'rima. IN Si I want to close out my sum mer goods to make room for fall stock, and will sell r AT COST! Outing Cloth, 6 cents, Sold before for 8 cents. Outing Cloth, 8 cents, Sold before for 10 cents. Outing Cloth 12 cents, Sold before for 12.J cents. Challie, 10 cents, Sold before for 12 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 to $3.00 per suit. Children's Suits $i.oo. Now is your time to save money. These goods are all new. S". Hap.au. aniii! Cgddqs v4