The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, November 16, 1892, Image 1

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VOLUME 1.
KEYNOLDHVILLE, I'EXN'A., WEDNESDAY NOVEMUEU lfi, 1B92.
NUMBER 211.
Ittlarrllttttreu.
1 MITCHELL,
ATT( RX E V-AT-LA V
Offlre nn M'pnt Main Mrert, opposite the
I'ommetvliil lintel, rteynnlilsville, Pu.
jyt. ri. v.. hoover,
REYNOLDSVILLE, PA.
Keslilent climtNt. In hulMlnir ni'itr Metho
dist eliuivli, nppimttn Arnold Moi'k. I.i'iitlt
nous In npevntliiir.
Ootrle.
REYNOLDSVILLE, PA.
FRAXKJ. liLACK, Proprietor.
hr lenrilnff hotel nf the town. Ili'itrifintir
li for rnintni'ivlHl men. Pteum ht'iit, five
In. ith iimnr nnd cloetM on rvrry floor,
nnm ynotnH, hllllm-fl mom, telephone eon-
llOl'tl , &C.
JJOTEL RELNAr,
REYNOLDSVILLE, PA.
GREEXd- COXIER, Proprietors.
I'lrxt olnsn In every pnrtli'iilnr. Located In
1 litt vt'ry ivntre of I hi' l)iilntHpiirt of town.
Krr-0 'Itus to imd from Irnlns ntnl I'ommoilloiiM
fitmplt' rooni for roninti'tvlnl trawler.
MERICAN I IOTEL,
TiROOKVILLE, PA.
hVFFlXtiTOX t- LOXG, Prop'.
OmnHiih to mid fromiill li'tilii. F.ttropiin
eMmiriint. Hoiim hi'iitvd nnd lltrhtrd by
:iim. Hot nnd cold ntvr. WVMeni I'nloii
IVlvuniiih ottire til tmihlinir. The hotel Ih
Itted with nil the modern convi'iilr ih'i'h.
ret
fit
JOMMERCIAL HOTEL,
BROOKVILLE, PA.,
JAS. 11. CLOVER, Proprietor.
Hnmple roomn on tlio mound floor. House
iiputen ny nutiirui itiim. wmnimi to nnd Trotn
ill triilnn.
BUFFALO, ROCHESTER & PITTS
BURG RAILWAY.
The short line between IhiHoiM, ltliljrwny,
Bradford, Hiilnmnnrn, Hiiftnlo, liv li,"tcr,
Niuimru Falls and point In the upper oil
roftlon.
On nnd nftr Mny 2!d, iHQ, piis-ien-cer
tralim will Hi rlvonnd depart from FhIIh
'reek Hint Ion, dully, except fluidity, hh fol
low: 7il0 A. M. Hntdford Aci-omnindiitlon For
points North lietween Fall t'rrek nnd
Bradford. 7:l n. m. mixed tmln for
runxKiittiwney.
10:OA.M. Hiill'iilonnd norheMtrr nmil I'or
Hroekwnyvllle. Klditniiy,.lohnonhiirH-,Mt.
Jewell, llrHilford, Hilniimnrii, Itunalo mid
liH'hestir; conned intf lit JohiiHoiihiirtf
with 1". A E. tml ii H, for Wilcox, Knne,
Warren, t'orry nnd Krlti.
10:55 A. M. Accomtmidiitlon For PiiHoIm,
Sykew, ltltrKun and I'liriXMiitiiwney,
1:90 I'. M. lirndford Accnnimiiilni Ion-I'or
Keechtreo, Hnx k wnyvlllc, Kllmont, t'ur
mon, Uldirwny, Johimonliuru, Mt. Jewell
nnd lirndford.
4:50 1'. M. Mull For PuKols, SykeH, 111k
Knn, T'unXMititwney mid WiiMon.
,Ti6& P.M. A tmmod'ut Ion For luliolH,Hlfr
Hun and PiuiXhUtawiH'y.
Tralna Arrtvr 7:10 A. M., Accommmlatloii
PuiiXHiitnwneyi Hum A.M..M11II from Wnl
Kton nnd PiinxMitawney; ln:,Vi A. M.. Ac
fomtnndittlon fi-oni Itradford; 1:20 P. M.,
Aeenmmodatlon from PuiiXHiitiiwney; 4:.W
P. M.. Mull from Itiiirulo and Koehesier;
7:Xt P. M., Accommodation f rom Bradford.
ThoiiHand mll ttckctH nl two rontH p'r
mile, tfotxl for pnsHUKe lietwi'ii nil NtatloiiH.
.1. H. Mt'lNTVHK, Ancnt, FalNrnt-k, Pa.
3. II. ItAHIIKTT E. t'. LAPKV,
tlencrnl Hupt. Ocn. Pus. Audit
lirndford, Pa. Kochenter, N. Y.
A LLEGHENY VALLEY RAILWAY
t'OMPANY commonolnjf Sunday
July 10, 1802. Low Gi ado DivUlun.
RA8TWARD.
KTATIONH.
No.l.lNo.li.lNo.O
101
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. M.
A. M.
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LHWHonham
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Hrnokvllle
Fuller
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PancoiiHt
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Huhulu
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I'entleld
Tyler
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licneuitui
Grant
Driftwood
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firant
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Tyler
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lieynoldiivlllu
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tliLkltlilire.
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P. M.A M.IP. M
Trulim dully except Hunduy.
PAVIH McCAllOU, Gbn'i.. StTPT.,
PlttHbun, Pu.
JA8. V. ANDEUHON, Oem'l. Pahm. Aut
PiltHhurK, Pa
I
SUBSCRIBE FOR
"THE STAR"
$1.50 PER YEAR.
AN AUTUMN MEUODY.
V.lmt niiten of wlint illtty ran miiintl from h
city.
From ont nf thn ditut nnd the din,
Whrro the run' pnllld taper In dim through
the vapor
Thnt nhroudi nil I he norrnw nnd Kin?
At, ovrnlnq I lljten tlio murky lamps glisten,
Tho stars prep by two nnd by llircri
The liarslt lSnlicl nolnpn replace your sweet
voices,
Dear sen!
Yet past the fog rurtnin, I know It for certain.
The bArn roofs have enmrht the Inst rnyt
The smoke of the threshing la softly enmesh
Ing
ftrown gables with dcllrato gray:
The red leaves are falling, the plover are
calling.
The sea wind is salt o'er the wold:
The bryonies blacken, the tufts of green
bracken
Turn gold.
O scents that redouble where slow through the
stubble
The plow cleaves a pathway of Impel
O woods fading yellow, and orchards grown
mellow.
And flocks on the faraway slopel
O eca songs that mlnglo on bowlder and
shingle,
O fields that nf old time I knew!
My heart swells to bursting with Infinite
thirsting
For yon.
M. C. Clillingtnn In Chambers' Journal.
The Chimes In Old Trinity.
There is a delightful mystery ntmut
the Trinity chime. It i the oldest in
this country, except the chime of Christ
church in Philadelphia. But very little
Is known of the history of Trinity's older
bells. From the inscriptions upon them
it is supposed that the five bells that nt
first composed the chime were cajt in
London. One more, it is believed, enmo
from England in 1788, when the second
Trinity church was erected. When the
present Trinity church was built in 1843
there were six old bells in tho steeple.
The largest one was cracked and was
sent to Troy to be recant, and at the
game time four more Troy bells were
bought.
Consequently the Trinity chime now
consists of ten bells, five cast in England
and five cast in Troy. The largest
weighs 8, SOS pounds, the smallest 730,
and the whole together about 13,000
pounds. They are hung in such a heavy
wooden framework that the full volume
of their sound is never heard in the
street. Even liefore the improvements
in Grace church, Trinity's method of
ringing was considered primitive by com
parison, New York Sun.
12.1,000 lor a Hook.
The Vatican library at Rome, cele
brated for its thousands of valuable
books, contains a copy of that most val
uable of all books, the Hebrew Bible.
Years ago, in the time of Pope Julius,
about 1813 or 1314, a most remarkable
offer was made for this Biblical treasure.
A syndicate (I suppose the company was
hardly known as a "syndicate" at that
time) of rich Jews was formed for the
pnrpose of getting the Bible out of the
hands of the Catholic hierarchy. They
made many offers, all of which were re
fused, capping the climax by offering its
weight in gold. As the weight of the
book is exactly 825 pounds, that offer waa
considered as being equivalent to 12S,
000 of United Statea currency. Phila
delphia News.
The Father of Iltaraoh's Daughter.
Who was the father of pharaoh'f
daughter? What waa his name? The
word pharaoh was simply a title, and
the phrase "pharaoh's daughter" gives
no more information than "the king's
daughter" or "the lord's daughter."
Three pharaohs of the name of Thot
mes, three of the name of Amenhotep
nd two of the name of Rameses have
had their names advocated to be the
father of the princess who rescued the
infant Moses. There is a controversy
going on about it controversy revived
by the Rev. Professor Heckler at the
congress of orientalists in London.
Killed the Cat,
Several years ago a farmer and his
wife were sitting opposite each other at
a kitchen table in a storm. A cat was
lying beside them on the floor near the
stove. The lightning struck the chim
ney over the kitchen, came down, and
whirled the table about without injur
ing either the man or his wife. It
struck the stove, passing off by one of
its legs, which was melted, killed the
cat, and finally went off into the well
by way of a nail in the floor. Exchange,
Soma Dma Good.
The dressmakers of the reign of Louis
XV announced that, among other costly
goods, they had for sale sad friend's
color, doe's belly, scratched face, rat
color, fading flower, dying monkey,
gladsome widow, lost time, dead alive,
sick Spaniard, mortal sin, common harm
and chimney sweep. St. Louis Globe
Democrat Ha Knew His Opportunity.
"I like you well enough, Mr. Sapling,
but Ethel is too young to marry yet I
think it better that she should wait until
he has arrived at years of discretion, so
to speak,"
"Yes, and then she will marry some
one else." Indianapolis Journal.
gentleman who bod gone to watch
with a sick friend opened a door which
led to the cellar, but from which the
Stairs had been removed. He fell and
Was killed. What a wicked neglect to
have such a door unbarred in the front
nail 1
Antiochus Epiphanes died suddenly
nnder circumstances which gave the
Jews', whose temple he had profaned,
occasion to regard bis death as a judg
ment from heaven. '
A Very Close Hhave.
"I believe I gut into the closest place
during the civil wiir that a lnnn ever
got ont of alive," snid E. N. Harper, the
Mulhatton of Michigan, now stopping
at tin) Liulcili!. "I had been detailed
to obtain information regarding the
strengthof a di'titclimetit of Confederate
'roops stationed on tlio Tennessee l iver,
Hear Decatur, Ala. I got the informa
tion, and wits working my way buck to
camp when I was discovered nnd pur
sued by n scenting party. I hud con
cealed a skiff in the brush on the banks
of tho river, but a sudden rise had swept
it awny, nnd there was nothing to do but
surrender or swim the swollen strenm.
I plunged in, but the current was
stronger than I had anticipated, and by
the time I reached midstream my
strength wns about exhausted. 1 man
aged to get hold of the end of a floating
log and drifted down stream, While the
Johnnies made tho water around me
boil with their bullets.
"I soon drifted ont of range Bnd
crawled tip on tlio log, only to discover
that it was already occupied hy a big
water moccasin, who was inclined to
dispute possession. 1 had no weapon
but a water soaked pistol. If I staid on
the. log I would get bit; if 1 got off 1
would be drowned. Whilo debating
what I should do the log drifted within
range of the Union pickets, and they
appeared to think I had been rained tip
by a special providence as a practice
target. The first volley killed the moc
casin, and before they could reload 1
made them understand thnt I was not
trying to pull any feathers out of the
tail of the American eagle. Since my
escape from that position of fourfold
peril I have been something of a fatalist."
St. Louis Qlobe-Deuiocrat.
Kngllsh Policemen.
The police regulations in England are
very different from those common in
this country. The policeman there is
not nearly so autocratic as he is here
and would never think of using a club
or striking a man, except in self defense.
J. Gilmer Speed gives this story vf their
mild sway:
Upon one occasion a man came into
my office nnd created a disturbance. I
ordered him out. He declined to go, so I
sent for a oliceman. A sergeant came.
I said to him:
"This man does not lielong here anil
refuges to leave my office. Will you
please take him ont?'
I expected the sergeant to tell the man
he must go, and then if he did not move
on I expected to see the officer remove
him by force. Not at all. The sergeant
said, "You had better leave here, sir,"
and his tone wns as respectful and civil
as though he was asking a favor.
The man manifested no intention of
leaving, and the police officer began nn
inquiry as to his reasons for wanting to
stay. This so exasperated ine that I put
the man out myself, greatly to tho
astonishment and apprehension of the
officer.
He explained to me that I had no right
to interfere in the matter I had brought
to his attention, and that doubtless the
intruder would get out a warrant against
me and have me arrested for assault.
A Mexican Bat In a Illrdeage,
In a little out of the way alley not far
from Htuyvesant square there is a small,
dingy barroom. It is the favorite drink
ing place of a dozen or more old men,
who are cronies and have met and played
chess there for many years. The aged
proprietor of the place has filled the
room with curiosities strange stuffed
birds, autographs of old New Yorkers
theater tickets of a quarter of a century
ago, a few old fashioned collars, etc.
The old gentleman is facetious occa
sionally. He has been chuckling over
his latest joke for a week or two.
Hanging from the ceiling directly
over the bar is a bamboo birdcage The
four sides of the cage are covered with
cloth curtains. On one of these curtains
is printed this inscription, "A Mexican
Bat." Of course every customer wants
to see the animal, but on lifting the cur
tain one sees nothing but a brick sus
pended from tho top of the cage by a
string. The experiment generally costs
the curious person at least the price of
five flagons of ale. New York Tribune.
A Scheme That Works.
When yon go into the Marble Collegi
ate church, at Fifth avenue and Twenty
ninth street, you will find in the book
rack of each pew a card of the size of a
fashionable envelope. It is an "ac
quaintance card," bearing the pastor's
name and church address on one side,
with a nice little square in the upper
right hand corner in which is printed,
"If mailed, two cent stamp here." On
the other side is printed: "In order that
the pastors may have the opportunity of
seeking personal acquaintance and ex
tending to yon the courtesies of the
church, please write your name and ad
dress below, drop the card in the pas
tor's mail box, hand to an usher or return
by mail. Signed, David James Bnrrell,
D. D., pastor; Rev. Palmer 8. Hulbert,
Rev. Alfred E. Myers, assistant pastors.".
It is a sort of a drop-a-card-in-a-slot-and-teceive-a-pastoral-call
scheme, and they
lay it works well. New York Times.
The Norman-English ladies dressed
their hair in two long plaits, and when
nature was not liberal lengthened the
plaits with braids of wool, tow or horse
hair. J .
The glassmakers of Thebes forty cen
turies ago possessed the art of staining
glass, and they produced the commodity
In the utmost profusion.
THE DRYAD.
have seen her limpid eyes.
Large with frradunl laughter, rise
Through wild roses' nettles.
Like twin blossoms grow and stare.
Then the hateful, envious nlr
Whisked them Into petals.
I have seen her hardy cheek,
Llko a molten rornl, leak
ThroiiKh the leafage shaded.
Of thick chtrkaaawa, and then,
When I made more sure, again
To a red plum faded.
I have found her racy lips.
And her graceful finger tips.
But a haw or berry.
Glimmers of her thero and here.
Just, forsooth, enough to cheer
And to make mo merry.
Often on the ferry rocks
Dazzling dimples of loose locks
At me she hath shaken,
And 1're followed -all In valnl
They had trickled Into rain,
Sunlit, on the braken.
Onee her full limbs flashed on me,
Naked, where some roynl tree
Powdered all the spaces
With wan sunlight and qunlnt shade
Bitch a haunt romance hath made
For haunched satyr races.
There, I know, hid amorous Pan:
For a sudden plendlng ran
Through tho maze of myrtle.
And a rapid violence tossed
All its tlowerngo 'twos the lost
Coolngs of a turtle.
Madison Caweln In St. Joseph's News.
What One Man Saw In One Hay.
"I saw three very curious things
yesterday; remarkable, they were.
Coming in on a suburban train I sat
down behind a women as black us ink.
She was a full blooded negro, and her
hair was as strnlght as yours or mine
and as soft as velvet. I don't think
there is another sncli case in the world.
"Walking up Broadway later on I saw
an electrio wire catch fire and burn in
twain, the pieces falling to the ground.
There were no cross wires nor any wire
nor anything within ten feet of it when
it caught." He rested awhile.
"Say! Aheml When I wns eating
supper last night 1 found a worm a
black, shaggy worm an inch long in a
fresh egg. You see 1 have my eggs
served to me in the shell and eat them
with a spoon from the shell. As 1 dug
down into the yolk of one brought me at
a fashionable restaurant I saw something
black in the center, and pulling it out
discovered what I have told you. The
egg was sound as a dollar. The way 1
figure it out is that an old hen swal
lowed a worm just before the egg began
to form nnd the worm got tangled up in
the machinery and got stuck. Well, I
must be going. Good day." St. Louis
Republic.
'ear llefore the Fight.
Testimony differs as to tho feeling of
the soldier on going into a fight, and the
many experiences related by Urand
Army men to their always willing lis
teners show that in their war histories
there waa no uniformity of either fear
or daring. The major of a New Hamp
shire regiment said: "I always felt
timid when the shot began to reach us,
but an soon as we got into action I was
carried away by excitement. I am not
usually a profauo man, and I have no
recollection of talking roughly to my
troops, yet a good many of them have
assured me that all through a fight 1
would swear like well, liko a trooper."
Another man, a colonel, said: "It's
all nonsense to say that a man doesn't feel
afraid in thelieginuingof a fight and all
through it. Of course he does. He has
reason. Sherman said of General Sum
ner that he was the only man who grew
bolder as he grew older, but the only
man I ever saw who really seemed to
want to fight, and to enjoy it after he
was in it, was Custer." New York Sun
A Lawn Game.
Tetherball is a new game of Eng
lish origin which possesses the pro
nounced advantage of being played in
a few feet of lawn or courtyard. A
post eight feet high is set up, and to
this is attached a cord having at its end
a ball. The space of the grounds may
influence somewhat the length of the
string, which should be, however, not
less than eight nor more than ten feet
long. The ball is set in rotary motion,
and with tennis racquets the two play
ers endeavor in' turn to hit it. The
game is said to be exciting, and decid
edly a warm contest, as the ball proves
very elusive. Exchange.
Libraries, Museums and Methods.
Modern museum methods applied to
libraries will result in a vast extension
of their general usefulness and availa
bility for the purposes of instruction,
and in the modern museums the exhibi
tion of books has become almost as im
portant as the display of the conven
tional museum speciimns. Philadelphia
Ledger.
The Truth About Girls.
A small boy in a Brooklyn grammar
school has furnished the latest informa
tion about girls in a recent composition:
"Girls is pretty and afraid of guns.
They wear toe rubbers and look at the
clouds and say, 'Oh, how perfickly love
ly!' "New York Timos.
Of the 218 suicides reported in New
York city in one year, shooting was
most popular with 77 cases, to 48 by
poison, 87 by hungiug, 23 by gas, 18 by
knife, 10 by drowning, 4 by Jumping
from a roof and 8 by jumping from a
window.
A blind man with a hand organ has
been parading the streets of Alexandria,
Ind., with a placard on his breast which
reads, "I am blind and the father of eight
children by a horrible accident."
The Dlvlnlon nf Time.
At the poles, where all meridians con
ferge, there can be no natural standard
time, for it Is every hour of the day at
once; but the regulation of time at thene
singular poiutp has not yet become a
burning question. Were the system of
time reckoning recommended by the
prime meridian conference carried ont
In its entirety, tho minutes indicated on
111 well regulated clonk dials through
cut the world would bo tho same nt a
given instant, but the hours would dif
fer at each lSdegs. of longitude by steps
of one, twenty-four stnndards encircling
the globe. Thus, for example, nt twenty
five minutes past noon of the prime (or
rather the zero) meridian, clocks 00 degs.
E. wonld show twenty-five minutes pnst
6 p. m. (18h. 23m.); those DO degs. W
twenty-five minutes past 0 a. m. (Oh.
23m.), and those at 1H0 degs., twenty
five minutes past midnight.
The zero meridian adopted by the
prime meridian conference is that of
Greenwich, and definite time stand
ards based on hourly intervals from this
starting line have been used since 18H8
on the railways of North America. The
continent is divided into strips of 15
degs. in width, in each of which a sep
arate time standard prevails from the
Gulf of Mexico to Hudson bay. Atlan
tic time in tho eastern province of Can
ada and in Newfoundland shows 8 a.
m. at Greenwich noon; eastern time in
the Atlantic states of the Union marks
7 a. in. nt tho same moment, while cen
tral, mountain and Pucific time indicate
respectively 0, B and 4 a. m. Tho merid
ians which set the clocks ncross
America are those of 00, 73, 00, 105 and
120 degs. W. London Nature.
Commotions Produced hy Electricity.
Many effects have been attributed to
electrical commotions, but for some of
these it would be hazardous to vouch.
There are wells nnd springs which are
thrown into a state of apparent ebulli
tion on the approach of a storm. Fount
ains are said to pour out coplons streams,
even in times of drought, when Jupiter
"media nimbomm in nocte, cornsea fnl
mina malitnr dextra." Subterranean
thunders have occasionally been heard
preparatory to an aerial eruption. The
sea has cast np volumes of water, as if
volcanoes were exploding below. The
gronnd has burst open, nnd floods of
water have gushed forth from the sides
of hills or from fissures in the rocks.
Taking another class of effects, cures
have been performed by lightning; gouty
men havo been enabled to walk freely;
epileptic persons have been healed;
amaurosis has been removed and rheu
matism dispelled by a flash. But one
dare not look too closely into the sub
ject of medicnl electricity, nor venture
to recommend any one to tempt light
ning in the hope of experiencing its cur
ative powers, for its action is arbitrary
and oftener than not hurtful. Three
hundred porsons were once struck in
Charleston prison and clean robbed of
their muscular strength. Chambers'
Journal.
Pattl Sang for the Parrot.
In her castle at Craig-y-Nos Mine,
Pattt has a $0,000 parrot, which she
cherishes and pets as if it were a child.
One day there went to interview Patti a
young man who had traveled long and
far to view the beautiful Craig-y-Nos
palace. "Mine. Patti will be here in a
moment," said the door attendant.
Just then there was a rustle of skirts
and Mme. Patti swept into a room ad
joining. In a minute the most beauti
ful, birdlike notes rose upon the air, un
mistakably from Patti's throat.
"She is singing to me," said the de
lighted listener to himself, "and she is
too modest to come in aud sing directly
before me. She wants me to hear her
as she sings at home. Oh, what joy to
have this privilege!"
At this moment the heavy draperies
were pulled aside and the attendant
said:
"You may wait upon Mine. Patti
uow. She has been giving a short les
son to her parrot. She teaches him
every day. This way, Bir, if you please."
Chicago Post.
Won a Wife by Hie Skill.
Action was a Grecian painter of aboul
the time of Alexander, and he won a
wife by his great work. He painted a
picture called "The Nuptials of Alex
ander and Roxane," which was exhibit
ed at the Olympio games. It created
such a stir that one of the judges cried
in admiration, "I reserve crowns for the
victorious athletes, bnt I give my
daughter in marriage to the puinter Ac
tion as a recompense for his picture."
Action wus one of the artists who ex
celled in the art of mixing his colors; be
could not go to the nearest store and
purchase them as artists do today.
Harper's Young People.
The father of Zwingli, the great
Swiss reformer, was a poor peasant, and
the earliest occupation of the future
theologian was the gathering of sticks
in the forest for the family fuel.
The Laplander sleeps in a big reindeer
skin to keeji him warm. The East In
dian also sleeps in a bag; but it is not
airtight, and it is only intended to pro
tect him from mosquitoes.
If a gentleman is in the company of a
lady it is his place to pay car fores, ad
mission to places of amusement and for
any refreshments.
Ahab, king of Israel, was wounded by
an arrow in a battle at Ramoth Gilead,
and "about the time of the sun going
irWm It
SWAB BROS.,
(Successors to McKco A Wat-nick,)
DEALERS IN
OHfW'EniES,
FLOUK. ,
FEED,
CANNED
GOODS,
TEAS.
COFFEES,
ANP ALL KWPS OP
FARM
PRODUCE.
FRUIT!,
CONFECTIONERY,
TOBACCO
AND CIOARS. .
He wirrit a rtnuplete nnd frenh
line of (Jrnrrrle,
UihmI ilellrornl fret any plare in
town.
Vive tin a fair trial.
Swab Bros.,
Cor. Main ami Jitli Sin.
Grocery Boomers
W
BUY WHERE YOU CAN
GET ANYTHING
YOU WANT.
Salt Meats,
Smoked Meats,
CANNED GOODS,
TEAS, COFFEES
AND A 1,1. KINUS Or
Country Produce '
FRUITS,
CONFECTIONERY,
TOBACCO.
AND CIGARS,
Everything in the lino of
Fresh Groceries, Feed,
(IihhI ilellrered free anjf
place In town.
Call on nit and get jtrlre.
W. C. Schultz & Son.
H
U
&
N
city Meat Market
I buy the best of cattle and
keep the choicest kinds
of meatn, such ns
MUTTON,
VEAL
BEEF,
PORK
ANI
8AUSAGE.
Everything kept neat and
clean, Your patronage
solicited.
E. J. Schultze, Prop'r.
CHANGEABLE WEATHER !
Nature htm soen tit to have
changeable weather and why
not have your person gurraonttid
with a nuut and nobby suit
modo of heavy-woight materiul
to suit the weather that is now
ci-ooplng upon us. You need a
new winter suit and an the cold
waves aj3 very uncertain you
will be wise if you place your
order now for winter wearing
apparol, so att to have It to don
when blustering weather is
ushered in. Such an immense
lino of winter patterns waa
never displayed in town as can
bo soon at
J.1G. FROEHLIGH'S,
tJ-Next door to Hotel McConnoll.
mailooiisy Munufaoturlna'
ltulUir bUuiui. Nuutl fur
Irlce Mat of OuttlU. to
J. V. w. nornutn Co.,
'J 17 Bart Ueruiau Street,
Iiultitaoro, U'l. V. S. A.
MY