Me VOLUME 1. REYNOLDSVILLE, PEXX'A., WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 9, 1892. NUMBER 27. Ultecrllttnreu. Q MITCHELL, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW. Offli'p on Vrt Main wtrrrt. nprMwlto the Commt-n-lnl Hotel, Itvynolclsvtlli-, Pa. jju. n. e. hoover. REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Nr-sldi-nt dcntlNt. In bttllrtltijr nt-ar Mrtlin fllst rliurrli, oppoHltc Arnold hlix-k. Gentle ness In operutltiK. tfotcle. JJOTEL McCONNELL, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. FJIAXKJ. BLACK, rnrirlnr. The lending hotel of tlietown. Hendftmr ter for enmtm'reiiil men. Meant heat, five bus, Imtli rtxtms tinrl etowetH on every floor, sample room;, hlltltird room, telephone- eon nectlotm, ttc. JJOTEL BELNAP, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. GHEEX& COXXEIt, I'min-Mom Flint elms In every pnrtli'iilnr. Located In the very eentro of the iMislneMMrmt-t of town. Free 'tin to tirifl fnm trnlie und eomniodloUM wimple room for ennimerelitl triivelers. M ERICA N HOTKU BROOKVILLE, PA. JlVFFlXaTOX f JAJXff, V,v'. Omnitu to nml from nil train. European restaurant. House heated and lhrhted hy inis. Hot and cold witter. Western I'nlon Teleurrapll olhce in ImlldltiK. The hotel l Hlted with fill the modern eonvenleneex. COMMERCIAL HOTEL, BROOKVILLE, PA., JAS. II. CLOVER, Proprietor. Sample roomsnn tlio ground floor. House heiiteil hy natural gas. omnibus to and from all train. B UFFALO. ROCHESTER & PITTS BURG RAILWAY. The short line between Purloin, Ttlditway, Bradford, Hiiliimnm'a, Huftalo, Hoehester. Niagara Falls and points in the upper oil region. On and lifter May 22d, 1R03, passen ger trains will arrive and depart from KiiIIh Creek Ntatlon, dally, except Munday, uh fol low: JilO A. M. Bradford Accommodation For points North between Kails Creek and llrmlford. 7:15 a. m. mixed train for I'unxsutHwney. 10:05A.M. Hutlalo and Rochester mall For Krni'kwiiyville. l(ldirway,.lohnsonbiirK,Mt. A Jewell, Bradford, Salamanca, Huffalo and KorhcHter; eonnectlliK at JohiiHonbiirK with 1'. E. train . for Wilcox, Kami, Warren, l.'orry and Ki le. 10:65 A, M. Accommodation For IIiiIIoIh, ykes, HIirHiin and I'liiixsiitawney, 1:20 1. M. Bradford Accommodation For Heechtrce, Hrm-k way Mile, Kilinont, t'ar- mon, Kldtrway, JoluifioiiburK, Mt. Juwett and Bradford. 4:60 1'. M. Mall For DuBols, Hvkea, Bid Hun, l'uiixsiitawney and Wnlston. T:SS I'.M. Accommodation For DuBoIh.BIk Kiln and I'liiixsulawiiey, Tralna Arrive-7:10 A. M., Accommodation i'linxHiitiiwuey: llitin A.M. .Mali froniWal- Ntou and I'linxHiitawnev; 10:fiii A. M., Ac. commodatlon from Bradford; I: Ml I'.M., Accommodation from I'linxsiitawucy; 4:50 1'. M., Mail from BulTttlo and llochester; 7:fi 1'. M Accommodation from Bradford. Thousand mile tickets at two rents per mile, iiood for passage between all stations. J. 11. MoIntyhh. Agent, Falls creek, l'tt. J. II. Bahhktt K. ('. Lackv, General Hupt. Gen. I'as. Agent Bradford, Pa. Korhestvr, N. Y. A LLEGHENY VALLEY RAILWAY COMPANY commencing Sunday JulylO, 181)2. Low Grade DiviHlon. EASTWARD. STATIONS, No.l.lNo.S.INo.H, 101 1(H) Red Hank Lawsonham Now Bethlehem Oak Hlilgo Mlllvllle Maysvlllu Hummervlllo ... HriMikvlllo Fuller Reynoldsvlllu .. I'anconst Falls Creek IluBols Habula WiiiternburnA .. I'eulield Tyler (ilen Fisher HeueRette tirant Driftwood A. M '. M P. Ml 10 40 4 Wi 4 44 5 IS ft 25 ft 211 ft ill ft l 14 :ci u (VI 5 7 07 7 lit 10 M It 2 11 ill 11 an 11 4.1 12 in VI 2S 12 4:1 1 (m 1 011 1 17 1 HO 1 4:i 1 M 8 IS HI 6 ft! 7 OS 7 10 7 17 7 211 10 M 11 0f 1 lift 1 45 7 40 2 01 2 II 2 tl 74ft 7 fv. 2 HM H 2: 2 Ml 8 20 V Ul l M. WKHTWAItU. RTATIONH. I No.2 N0.6 INo.lOllOil 1110 A. M. A. II P. u P. U. 10 111 10 40 t) il 7 OMI P. U r s Oraut I Beneuitte .... I (ilen Fisher... I ' Tyler I Fenlield Winterburn .. 10 ftl 11 ON 7 21 7 41 11 111 11 211 11 .W 7 M ft 07 8 1:1 8 27 8 411 riiitiula IluBols Falls Creek ... I'ancnast KeymildHVlllu Fuller Brookvllle.... Humninrvllle,. Maysvlllu Mlllvllle OakUlduo 11 47 12 00 7 00 7 10 7 20 7 30 12 Oft 12 IS 5 0 6 40 1 17 1 S4 1 42 8 Rl 8 Mil V ON 9 21 V 4i 1 Mil 7 411 2 21 2 811 2 Its 8 11 8 110 8 ftl 8 02 U Ul 8 1.1 M 47 4 00 8 K 8 Ml 9 10 0 4.1 10 Ul New Bethlehem lawsonham. lied Bank.... A. A. H P. M.A M.IP. U. Trains dally except Hunday. DAVID McGAHUO, Oich'i,. Hitpt., Ilt tHliurif Ptt JAS. P. ANDEKBON, Oen'l. 1'ahh. Aui., ' I'ltlaburic, Pu K t SUBSCRIBE FOR "THE STAR" $1.5( PER YEAR. , J VAVAVAVAVA VAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVA AGE OF TJIE EARTir. A FASCINATING 8TUDY THAT 13 ELU CIDATING A GREAT MYSTERY. The flcfenre of Clpnloiry fthm-s That the Aire of the World Varies lletwprn 13,. 000,000 anil 080,000,000 Yean How These Computation Are Made. At the recent meeting of the British BRSoriuMon n disronrso wna delivered by the president, Sir Archibald Oerkie, on one of the most interesting problem in modern science the nge of the world. Over A centnry hn elapsed since James Hntton wrote his "Theory of the Earth," Which was the first attempt to formulate a chronology of creation in accordance with the discoveries of science; since then knowledge has made vast strides, and his followers have access to a mass of information which he did not possess. Playfnir and Kelvin improved upon bis work, and now Oerkie and the school to which ho belongs have gone beyond them. Geologists have ascertained that the rate at which erosion takes place can lie measured; by applying their scale to the sedimentary rocks they have formed a hypothesis as to the time which hns elapsed since erosion began. To put the proposition in similar language, the sur face of the globe is constantly wearing away under tho influence of water and wind. The portions which are worn off are carried down to the sea or into hol lows, where they are deposited and form sedimentary rocks. If we con ascertain how long it takes to form a sedimentary rocl: wo can figure out when the progress of wearing away and redepositing liegan. Sir Archibald states that on a reason able computation the stratified rocks at tain an average thickness of 100,000 feet. The material of which they consist was all washed down from high planes, de posited and left to stratify. By the in spection of river banks it is found that in places the surface of the land which has been carried down as sediment in rivers has been reduced at the rate of a foot in 780 years, while in other places, where the land was more stubborn or less flexible, it has taken 6,800 years to lower the surface one foot. The deposit must be equal to the denudation. Thus we find that while some of the sedimen tary rocks have grown a foot in 730 years others have taken 6,800 years to rise that height. Thus the period of time that was required to build up 100, 000 feet of sedimentary rock has varied according to locality from 78,000,000 years to 680,000,000 years. It follows that the active work of creation lasted for a cycle intermediate between these two figures. The cycle varied with end less succession of periods of disturbance by volcanio force and glacial action, and the frequent submersion of dry land, alternating with the emerging of continents out of the seas. These may have retarded the growth of sedimen tary rocks, but they cannot have accel erated it. A study of fossils teaches the steady uniformity with which the work of creation proceeded. Since man began to observe there has been no change in the forms of animal and vegetable life, A few species have disappeared not one new species has been evolved. Not only do we find the fauna and flora of ancient Egypt as depicted on monuments which are probably 8,000 or 10,000 years old identical with those which are found in that country today, but shells which in habited onr seas before the ice age and grew in an ocean whose bed overlay the Rocky mountains are precisely the same species that are fonnd in the Bay of Monterey and the waters of the Chesa peake. It is evident that there has been no essential change in the conditions of life since these animals and these vege tables were first created, yet how vast the shortest period which we can assign to the gap that divides ns from that re mote epoch I Little by little the geologist is lifting the veil which covers the prehistoric record of our planet. The era which preceded the age of civilized man, with its vast rivers carryiug down diluvial floods to the ocean, and the bursting forth of mountain ranges from contrac tions of the earth's crust has been painted to the life. But no one has exercised his pencil on that preceding age, when the forests made way for clumps of stunted birch and willow, incessant snowfalls covered the plains, glaciers crept down from the north, and gradually a vast sheet of ice half a mile thick drove man kind, with the mammoth and the rein deer, to those fortunate regions which, like California, escaped the agony of the last ice age. Nor have we any distinct perception of that subsequent age when the ice melted or receded to the pole, or dense tropical jungle grew up in the morasses it had left, swamps steaming with trop ical heat swarmed with uncouth ba trachian and reptile life, trees of mon strous growth shed their shade over shiny pools and block ooze, and in the distance long mountain ranges whose fontanel bad not yet closed, poured never ceasing flood of lava down their sides. This is a page of history which is yet to be written, but the materials are accumulating, and the historian will not be long wanting. San Francisco Coll. , Teaching Darning. , In some of the private schools of the city teaching the minuet is a part of the course of physical culture. Skirt danc ing will be an easy translation from this, and it may expected to be Included In the course shortly. New York Times. ARE MUSTACHES ORNAMENTS? A Tonns; Woman Writer lllsrotinten on an Important Tart of Mnu. Why do young men take such pride in their mustaches? It is, I snpposp, lie cause they think a mustache is orna mental. Is it? Why do men have clean shaven lips when they cotild grow mus taches? And why do mm wear hnlf a dozen straggling hairs when they ought to have them shaved off? Why will men continue to spend hours every day in training tho hair on their upper lip, when it doesn't ltmke them look any more handsome, when it is annoying to their sweethearts by scratching their cheeks, when it prevents a cigar being smoked more than half through, and when it shows a horrid propensity for getting mixed up with the food? I don't think mustaches are orna mental. The ideal mustache has yet to be invented. It must not draggle, nor be used as a shield to hide one's bad teeth, nor be fierce. And oh, it must not be waxed or leaded! What do men say of women who use grease? When yon are enjoying a spoon don't you think it takes all the romance out of the thing by having a nasty, cosmeticized piece of hair edge its way against your lips? And isn't it exasperating when your lover leads his mustache and never tells you? Yon go home with your face like a metropolitan extension map, and feel very uncomfortable when father and mother say there have been a lot of smuts about, for your face has got quite dirty. No, mustaches are neither useful nor ornamental. Were I a man and capa ble of growing a most luxuriant mus tache I would cut it off. A clean shaven man looks much the nicest. Girls like a beardless face. They are content to know that whiskers and all the rest could be there if they were wanted. You see, a man with a mustache is generally a bit of a fop, and girls don't like fops. If a man doesn't keep it trimmed it gets straggling and ragged; if he does keep it trimmed then he appears conceited. He is eternally twisting it this way, giving it a curl that way, stroking it and patting it, un til he loses all character for manliness. Now, a clean shaven man seems to be dignified. Women love dignity. Why is it they are always so fond of curates especially high church and actors? Simply because they shave. Women want in men a smooth, clear cut face not with a great bunch of hair stuck out under the nose. Whoever heard of the Greeks having mustaches? Whoever saw a statue of a Greek god with a mustache nnless he were an old god and wore a beard as well? Mustaches are not ornamental, be cause they rarely suit the face, liecause they are a protuberance and hide the outline of the month, and liecause, with a mustache, a man is frightened to laugh, as it disarranges it. Only a few women care fof them. Men think all women do. That is a mistake. "A Fair Critic" in London Tit-Bits. An Old Rosebush. As long ago as the year 823 Hildes heim is mentioned in history. In that year we are told Louisv the Pious, Char lemagne's son and successor, made it the seat of the bishopric intended by his father to be established at the neighbor ing town of Elze. Less than a century before Charlemagne had brought the heathen Saxons into subjection and Christianity was yet new in the land. Gunther, the first bishop, had been can on at the cathedral at Reims. Three years after his elevation to the aew episcopal see he consecrated the first chapel, naming it in honor of the Virgin Mary, The chapel is supposed to have occupied the site under the present cathedral, whore the crypt of the new church is built. A pretty rosebush that now clings to the outer wall of the cathedral choir is said by tradition to have grown there since the days of Louis the Pious him self. In the Twelfth century, when tho choir and crypt were being enlarged, a protecting hollow wall was built around the rosebush, in order that the vine might continue to grow about the build ing when the new wall had been com pleted. A bit of the old arching may be seen behind the altar in the crypt. This is the present Toucher for the great age of the rosebush, and it must be admitted that many traditions repose upon a less solid foundation. Architectural Record. Eating- 81ue Bash. In London a century ago it was no uncommon practice on the part of the "fast men" to drink bumpers to the health of a lady out of her shoe. The Earl of Cork, in an amusing paper in The Connoisseur, relates an incident of this kind, and to carry the compliment still further he states that the shoe was ordered to be dressed and served np for supper. "The cook set himself seriously to work upon it He pulled the upper part (which was of fine damask) into fine shreds and tossed it up into a ragout, minced the sole, cut the wooden heel into thin slices, fried them in batter and placed them round the dish for garnish. The company testified their affection for the Iudy by eating heartily of this ex quisite impromptu." Ancient Wire. Wire is no new thing; specimens of metal lio shreds dating as far bock as 1700 B. C. are stated to have been dis covered, while a sample of wire made by the Ninevites some 1800 years B. C. is exhibited at the Kensington museum in London. Both Homer and Pliny al lude to wire. Chambers' Journal. QUEEN MARY'S HOUSE AN HISTORIC OLD MANSION IN THfi ANCIENT TOWN OF JEDBURG. In This OM Fashioned lliilldlng the Queen of the Rents Held Court and for Three Week Lay Kick of a ferrr ..ep Kear Approach to Death There is one honse in Jcdburg to Which, above all others, strangers who visit the ancient town are sure to find their way, and that is the old and an tique mansion known as Queen Mary's house. Many will therefore be pleased to learn that steps are aliont to be taken for the better preservation of this his toric edifice, and for the improvement of its surroundings. On Oct. 8, 18,10, Mary left Holyrood to hold assizes at Jed burg, the magistrates having been pre viously instructed to "prepare meat, drink and lodgings for men and horses, and she arrived next day. The queen was accompanied by her ministers of state, her law officers and by many of her nobles, among whom were the Earls of Moray, Huntly, Argyll, Rothes and Caithness, and the Lords Livingstone, Seton, Yester, Borthwick, Arbroath, Hume mid Somerville, besides a num ber of barons and bishops. What a stir thcro must have been in the old bonier burg on that occasion, and what anxiety it would cost the worthy pro vost and magistrates to keep up the good name of their town in the presence of so many great personages, and even royalty itself! The assizes continued for six succes sive days, and terminated without a single execution. Mary presided at a privy council held on the 10th, and at another held on the following day. On the 16th, after the pressure of business was over, she rode to Hermitage castle to see Bothwell, who had been wounded by "Little Jock Elliott," of the park, a noted freebooter, and after conferring with her wounded lieutenant for two hours in presence of several of her nobles who accompanied her on the journey she returned to Jedburg the same evening, having ridden more than forty-eight miles. Next day Mary was attacked with an intermittent fever, which kept her prostrate for over a fortnight. On the same day she took ill the sum of six shillings was paid to "ane boy passing from Jedburg with one mass of writings of our sovereign to the Earl of Bothwell." The room in which Queen Mary lay during her serious illness is, according to tradition, a small two windowed apartment in the turret, but Miss Strick land, in her "Lives of the Queens of Scotland," soys in reference to this point that "the spacious suite of apartments on the opposite side of the staircase, one of which still bears the name of the guardroom, is more likely to have been occupied by royalty as anteroom, privy chamber and bedroom." It is, however, the small back apartment that is pointed out to visitors as Queen Mary's bedroom, and it was there, if we are to credit tra dition, where she lay nigh unto death, attended by her French physician Charles Nau. On the 26th she "lay for dead" three hours her limbs cold and rigid, her eyes closed, her mouth compressed, her feet and arms stiff, every one supposing that the vital spark had fled. Master Nau, who was "a perfect man of his craft," would not, however, give the matter up, but resorted to friction and manipulation, which he continued for some hours, until the queen recovered again her sight and speech and got a great sweating. When her illness had assumed a mortal tendency she expressed her willingness to resign her spirit to God. She wished to impress on her nobles the necessity of living in unity, and that they should do all in their power to protect the iufunt prince her only tio to life. To Du Croix, the French embassador, she made a request that he would ask his royal master U, protect her dear son, and she also recom mended his protection to Queen Eliza beth, as her nearest kinswoman. On the 38th Darnley arrived in Jed burg, but left again the next day, and it is not certain that he was ever allowed to see Mary. When she was recovering the wearisome hours were beguiled by one John Hume playing to her on the lute and John Heron playing on the pipe and "quhissil," the former receiving forty shillings for his services, the latter four pounds for his. As a thank offer ing to God for her recovery she caused twenty pounds to be given to the poor of the burg, and the same day she wrote a letter ordering materials for a new dress, which letter was to be sent to Ed inburgh "in all possible haste." What a curious Old World pictnro! But the scene again changes. On Nov. 9 exactly a month after her arrival Queen Mary left Jedburg, accompanied by her nobles, among whom was Both well, and with an escort of a thousand horsemen. She arrived on the 20th at Craigmillar castle, with sorrow, suffer ing and captivity in the near future, and in the distance the bloody scaffold of Fotheringay, "Four months after her departure from our ancient burg," says a local chronicler, "her husbaud, Lord Darnley, was murdered; three months more and she was the wife of Bothwell; yet twelve months, and she was lodged as a prisoner in the Castle of Carlisle. As time rolled ton and the clouds of misfor tune were rolling dark and thick around her, she was often heard to exclaim, in the anguish of a wounded spirit, 'Would that J had died in Jedburg I' "Scotsman. FALSE TEETH ARE COMMON. Artificial Teeth Are o Cheap That No body Need He Toothless. "We sold 1,000,000 more false teeth last year than we ever disposed of be fore in a twelvemonth," said the man ager of the greatest dental supply es tablishment in the world to a reporter Vesterdny. "I don't imagine that it was because people are losing their teeth more rapidly now than heretofore, al though it is unquestionably the case that the enduring quality of the human chew ing apparatus has become progressively less from generation to generation in this country. "It is more the fashion now than it has ever been in the past to wear false teeth, partly for the reason that the pnb lio has come to realize whsr a.xcellont substitutes they are for real ones, and partly owing to the fact that vsothless ness excites much more disgust than it did in old times, when snch an affliction was commonly observed and was regard ed as unavoidable. "It is very rare to see a person now adays, whether a man or a woman, visi bly disfigured by the absence of teeth. Anybody whose grinders fall out will in nearly every case go to a dental surgeon and procure artificial ones. They don't cost much. You can get a complete double set from sixteen dollars to seventy-five dollars. Probably a fashion able dentist will charge you the latter price. His margin of profit is consider able, inasmuch as the teeth themselves cost only from fifteen to eighteen cents apiece. They are made of porcelain, of kaolin usually, baked in an oven. "For tho plates the material best op proved is rubber. The handsomest plates are made of celluloid, and they have the advantage of lightness in weight, but the celluloid does not resist well the acids with which it comes into contact in the mouth. Aluminium has been tried, but it is affected by vinegar and salt as well as by other substances that are eaten, the result being the de velopment of a salt of aluminium which is thought to be injurious to the system. "The enamel of artificial teeth is composed of metallic oxides, and the finishing processes to which they are subjected are so delicate that no two teeth produced can be made exactly alike in point of coloring. Among all the hundreds of thousands of teeth which we keep in stock probably no two would match to absolute perfection. But those that ore most nearly alike are put togethor so that the eye of nobody but an expert would detect any difference. After all natural teeth exhibit marked dissimilarities in any individual. "It does not do to make false teeth look too handsome, lest they appear un natural, and dental surgeons commonly carry their imitation of nature so far as to make teeth in many instances look more or less defective, the better to carry out the deception." Washington Star. Forest Fires and Mosquitoes In Alaska. Miles and miles of blackened stumps marked the ravages of forest fires. The Indian, when resting on his journey and suffering from mosquitoes, sets fire to the twigs and leaves around him, cre ating a smoke which keeps the pest at a distance, and when refreshed he straps on his pack and moves along the trail, of course without extinguishing his fire. In announcing his approach to friends at a distance, he sets fire to a half dead spruce or tamarack tree, and the column of thick, black smoke is the signal, to be acknowledged in the same manner by those who see it, so as to direct the traveler to their camping grounds. In the summer everything is crisp and dry, and the timber is saturated with tur pentine. The trees left to smolder are fanned into flume by the slightest breeze; the flames creep among the resinous trees and spread till whole forests are destroyed. These forest fires and the mosqnitoeB account for the scarcity of game, Oter the vast untraveled region that we vis ited there was a remarkable scarcity of wild animals. We saw only a few ground squirrels and some grouse and ptarmigan. The Indians say that all the larger animals retreat in summer to the hilltops, where, exposed to a con stant breeze, they are free from the tor ments of insects. E. J. Glave in Cen tury. Belled II. s Looks. I remember being at table in the Astor House, New York, when a gentleman entered who was an almost exact coun terpart, so fur as personal appearance went, of Duuiel Webster. The shape of the head and fade were the same, the expression much alike. I was pro foundly impressed and resolved to make his acquaintance, I did so and found that he had for years conducted a dark alley saloon in the oil districts until a lucky strike made him a man of wealth, but left him mentully where it found him but little better than a fool. No, you cannot judge a book by the cover, but you will generally find that the showiest covers are put on the most worthless books. Interview in St. Louis Globe-Democrat. . A Chauoe for a Bora Tongue. Mrs. Poots What are you looking so glum about? Poots Oh, there's a confoundedly tender spot on my tongue from resting against a broken tooth. "Humph! -You're always grunting about something. Funny I never have anything like that the matter with my tongue," "Nothing funny about it Your tongue is never at rest." Texas Sittings. SWAB BROS, (Successors to McKee & Wat-nick,) DEALERS IN GKOCKH1KS, FLOUIt, FEED, CANNED GOODS, TEAS, COFFEES, ANP ALL KWPS OF FAHM I'KODUC'E. FRUITS. CONFECTIONERY, TOBACCO AND CIGARS. We rnrvif a mmitlettr find froth line of (irot rrlcM, (loot! ftrllrcml fret ; pltiee in town, (lire mx f fair trial. Swab Bros., Cor. Main and tith St. Grocery Boomers W BUY WHERE YOU CAN GET ANYTHING Y'OU WANT. Salt Meats, Smoked Meats, s ' CANNED GOODS, TEAS, COFFEES AND ALL KINDS Or H U FRUITS. CON FECTIONER Y, TOBACCO, AND CIGARS. Everything in tho lino of Fresh Groceries, Feed, EQto. (mhIh delivered free any place In town. Ctdl on uh and yet price. W. C. Sclraltz & Son. N Gitu Meat Market I buy the best of cattle and keep the choicest kinds of meats, such as MUTTON, VEAL BEEF, PORK ANL SAUSAGE. Everything kept neat .and clean, Your patronage solicited. E. J. Schultze, Prop'r. GHflNGEflBLE WEATHER I Nature has soon fit to have changeable weather and why not have your person garmented with a neat and nobby suit mudo of hoavy-woight material to suit the weather that is now creeping upon us. You nood a I new winter suit and as tho cold waves ai"e very uncertain you will be wise if you place your ardor now for winter wearing, apparel, so an to have it to dot when blustering woathor is ushered in. Such an immense Hue of winter patterns was nevor displayed in town as can be seen at J. G. FROtHLICM'S, sfirNext door to Hotel McCohnoll. made easy Manufaoturlnc tuhber bUwiv. Hcnd tor 'riue List of Oiuuts, to 3. V. W. Dormau Co., 917 Bust German Street, Btiitituore, (., U B. A, Country Produce MUNEY