KEYNOLDSVlliLK, PKNN'A., WEDXKSDAY iXOVEMHEH :MI, 1.I2. NUMBER 30. VOLUME 1. V iHtecrllrtiicoue. Q MITCH KLL, ATTOKX E Y-AT-LA W. Otlll'C 1111 West Mlllll BtMH't, OpIMMltO ill!1 t'tminirri-liil Hotel, KeynnM VUIP, I'll. l) U. n. E. IIOOVKK. REYNOLDSVIM.E.l'A. Hi'sMent UVtillst. In liiilldlim iH'nr Mi-tlio-dlst chun-h, opposite Arnold Mock, (it-title-ni'its In opi-uitluii. J JOT E L M( XX) N N E LL, KEYNOLDSVILLK. FA. FliAXKJ. Hl.ACK, l'mi-ilnr. The li'iicllio hotel of tlie town. Hi-iidiimr-tei for i-iminii-tvlnl nii'n. flciun heat, free linn, hntli rooms mill elim-tit on every floor, unnipli' rooms, lilllliird room, telephone con nections, &e. JJOTEL HELNAF, UEYNOLDSVILLE, FA. (1REEX& (XtXSElt, J'wjinVforn. First elnss In every pnrtlrtilnr. T.ocnteri In the very ri'iitri of tlie luislness purl of town. Free 'bus to timl from trains ami eoiiiniodliHis HHmpli' rooms for I'ommrri'lnl Iruvelcrs. MKHICAN HOTEL, riUOOKViLLK, FA. M'FFIXUTOXA l.OXU, I'n.ii'H. Oninltnis lo Mini from nil trnliis. Kimim-im rcsiutinnit. House lienled timl llulitt-d liy ixiih. Hot mill I'olil witter. Western 1'nlim Telciminll otllee III llllllillim. Till' hotel Is Htteu wild nil tin1 modern convciilciirc. QOMMKHC'IAL HOTEL, HHOOKVILLE, FA., J A S. II. CWVElt, Pmprtow. Hiimple rooms on tlio ground floor. House henteil ly iiiitiinil iztiM. Omnilius to anil from nil truliiH. ALLEGHENY VALLEY RAILWAY COM FA NY oomnienoing Sunday July 10, 12. Low Graclo Division. KAHTWAHII. STATIONS. Nn.l.No..VNo.D. 11)1 ion A. M.I Kcdllnnk Lawsonliiiin New llctlilchcni Oak Itlilxe Millvllli) Mnysvllle Nummcrvlllu ... Hrookvllle Fuller Kcynoldsvllle .. l'nncniist FhIIm Creek Ilullol Halmlii Wlntornlurn. .. PenHeld Tyler (ilen Fisher Itenexctto Grant Driftwood 10 411 4 :to 4 44 A IN 10 Ml II 2S II lit ll :nt li 4:1 A 211 A .'CI 12 03 A ft.' 12 v 12 41 1 Oil I mi I 17 1 :m 1 4:1 1 IM a 14 15 A II A 7 0 so 7 071 7 1.1 7 10 MM II 0 1 m 1 4i 7 1 7 2 7 40 2 III 2 II 74S 7 AA 2 iK 2 8 2 H 8 20 m im 9 00 P M A. M A. U.I P. M WKSTWAHD. No.21 No.AINu.10l 104 110 A. M A. M. P. M P. H rtrlftwood (.rant Henezctte Ulen Fisher Tyler l'enfleld Wlntcrbum .... Hiilmlu I Hi Hols FnllHt'reek Vaneoast KpynoldHVllle . . Fuller HriNikvlllti Hiinimorvlllo.... Mnyxvillo Mlllvlllp UakKldue 10 10 10 411 7 0M 7 21 7 41 10 M 11 ON 11 7 1W 11 20 11 m 8 07 8 1.1 8 27 8 4.1 8 Al 8 AMI OH II 2A 4 ' 11 4: 12 on; 7 00 7 1" 7 20 7 HO 7 40 12 OA li ia a an A 40 1 1 1 S4 1 42 1 m 1 21 K II N Al 2 mi I AH1 S 031 8 y 8 AH 8 OH 8 IA 8 47 4 00 Now )ttlilciioni n 10 LHWHonlmm.. lied Bank 4A 10 00 A. M A. M P. M.A M.IP. M, Trnlnn dally except Bunday. DAVID McCAUUO, Qrm'l. Sitpt., rittsbum, Fa. JAB. P. ANDERSON, Oem'l. Tahh. AT., VltunurK, Pa BUFFALO, ROCHESTER & FITTS BURGH RAILWAY. The Hhort Una Ix'lwoon DiiIIoIk, Kldiiwny, 1 miiiiii. ciiiniiiiiiiin, dmiiiihp. it, n 111,1,11. Nliixura Fall and point In tlio upier oil region. On and after Nov. 13th. 1K32.' nnsHen iror tralim will arrive and depart from Falls i reeic Miauon, uauy, except punutiy, ai 101 Iowh: 710 A. M. Bradford Accnmmndat Ion For polntH North between tallH t'reek and llrudford. 7:1A a. m. mixed tin in for l'linxHut-itwncy. 10:OAA.M. Hiiirnloand Rochoxtcr mall For Hrockwnyvllle, Illdpway.JohiiHonhiirir.Alt. Jewett. Itradford. Halamanca. Hiitl'iilo and UiK'heHter; connecting at .lohnsonburn with 1'. & E. train H, for Wilcox, Kane, warren, l orry ana r.rie. 10:65 A. Al. AccomnKMlatlon For DulloU. Kubu. u.,.11) ...I......!! 1 :8u P. j. Itradford Accomniodiitlon For Heechtnw, ltnx;kwayvllle, KUmont, Car mon, Kldvway, JohnsonburK, Mt. Jewett anu urautoru. :iO P. M.-Miill-For DiiBoln, 8yke, BlR Hun, PunxHUtawney and Walston. P.M. Accommodation For lluHol,Blg Hun and l'llliXKUtawnev. Trains Arrive 7:10 A. M Accommodation PunxHUtawney: 10:0A A.M. .Mull from Wal ton and Punxxutawney: 10:AA A. M., An- Accommodation from Punxxutawney; 4:fiiu r. m., mail rrom Huniiio ana itoi'iinxuiri 7:A5 P. M., Accommodation from Bradford. Tuouxand mile tlcketH at two cent per mite, KiMKi ror paxxuiee ociwppuau Htationa. j. ii. mviHTrujc, AHfiu, raiix creea, ia. J. H. BAHItlCTT. E. O. LAI'KY, General Hupt. Gen. I'hx. Agent Itradford, Pa. Hocheater, N. Y ' CHANGEABLE WEATHER ! Nature baa seen fit to have changeable weather and why not have your person garmented with a neat and nobby null made of heavy-weight material to auit the weather that ia now creeping upon us. You need a , new winter auit and as the oold -wavet are very uncertain you will be wise If you place your order now for winter wearing , apparel, o aa to have It to don when blustering weather la uuhered in. Such an Immense line of winter patterns was ' never displayed in town- as can be seen at J. C. FROEHLICH'S, t CTNext door to Hotel MoConnelL I want to flow out my pum- iner goods to make room for fall ntock, ami Will Ht'll AT COST ! Outing Cloth, Oi rents, Soldi ef ore for 8 rents. Outing Cloth, 8 rents, Sold before for 10 rents. Outing Cloth 12 (tents, Sold be! ore for 12 J rents. Challie, 10 rents, Sold before for 12. i rents Challie, 10 rents, Sold before for 1 5 rents. Sateen, 10 rents, Sold before for 15 rents. Indigo Blue prints t) 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. GO, 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. 1 liese goods are all new. 1ST. Hanau. J.S. MORROW, PRALEK IN Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, and Shoes, Fresh Groceries Flour and Feed. GOODS DELIVERED FREE. OPERA HOUSE BLOCK Reynoldsville, Pa. city 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. mado eaair Manufacturing HubborHtaintis. Hvndfor 1'rloe I.LI of Outfit, to J. W. Dornian Co., 'J17 Wt German Street, Baltimore, M4-, U. 0. A, Slier Moils lie TALKS WITH A luiUSn AN ECCENTRIC OLD EVANGELIST OF WESTCHESTER, N. Y. Winter and amnnicr He Wander Along the ItomU rnliitliig Rerlpture Text on Ilimlilf-m Nollilnn llclern film Paa Blve Wlirn Violence In tTned. Who Is the mvRtprltitia rmiiit linish vnngoliat of Wpstt'licfter county? Up mil down tlio lipitntifnl liills nnd nlong the rugKeil, rocky ronils of Wpstclipstpr for niilo nf(ir mile Ills work can ho epti. Tlie wnyf.irer rminot escape It. At every fresh turn in the rond tlie pninteil words of warning confront him. Even the most nnnoilly Kltinpr in mi New York, nfter walking a mile from the little village of White Tlainn, wonld think he was utirely on the rocky road to the New Jerusalem. Up In WentcliPRtpr tlipy call the mys terious evangelist tlie "Scripture Sling er," and they suy "lie alingg it powerful thick." So he does, and with discrimi nation rare, in paint of tlio hue of heav en's own liluo, mixed in oil. All nlong those rocky roads the fences are made of huge bowlders, out of which rough walls tire inndo, separat ing the pastures nnd bounding (he road sides. Desides there nro still other bowlders jutting out of tlio soil nlmig the roadway. On these, and on the stone fences, the mysterions evangelist nufolds his warnings. I To is a littlo man, but energetic. He is asilentman, except with his brush, made out of hairs plucked from the necks of oxen. With it ho speaks. His only name is "George." He marches, a Salvntion Army of one man, carrying a bugle to announce his coming. His sandy mustache bristles, and the lines of his face show sixty years. There bangs npon his hotid an old straw hat, summer and winter, and on the hat is a broad ribbon, bearing the legend, "Jesus is mighty to save." A cane, carved with innumerable inscrip tions, helps him over the hills as he marches on, carrying the battered hand bag in which repose his restless brash, bis pot of paint, his Dible and other little things, such as a comb and cake of soap, through the use of which he keeps him self only a semiuomad. They say there is no vanity in him, nor nny glass with a quicksilver back in that battered bag As he uiurches he spies a rock, biu and brown, half hidden behind a cl.iiup of weeds, and on which he left no me sage when lust along that way. In a moment the weeds are uprooted, and kneeling by the rock ho paints, letter by letter, "O-b-e-y t-h-e L-o-r-d." Then he marches on reading the Dible. On a smooth worn bowlilpr in the stone fence, be prints, "Repent! Believe! And sin no more." Across the road he leaves the warning, "Yon must repent or go t hell." A little farther on he kneel: again, and tinder his brash grow the words, "The wages for sinners is hell Bre." There are painted words, though along the roads more worldly than ILa ones he leave there. One of them says, "Spend yonr Snndays at Manhattan beach." On finding tliia it is said hi bowed his head a moment. Then in a deeper shade of blue than usual, mixed on the spot, he painted right alongside the words, "Where will yon spend eternityr Many of the fanners up in Westchester take summer boarders, and on a big tree in the front yard each of them nails up a sign which reads: "Pleasant summer home. Board by the day or week, Across the road from such as these the paint brush says, "Think of that bennti ful home above." So the strange evangelist goes on. fighting the world with blue paint, meas. ure for measure, and covering the sur plus space with admonition, exhortation and advice. . To him all things are of the world worldly, and therefore be knows naught of politics. This strange man sleeps by the road side, in a stable or where he may, and lor mouths eats only what is given him. Money is nothing to him. For a little while each year he works on the Sound View stock farm, owned by William A. Sammis, and it is then he pulls the hair from the necks of oxen and makes his stock of brushes. Hut paint is given him and he mixes it him self. He has been told to stop the task of covering the rocks of Westchester with blue paint, but he keeps on. By his ac tion be says, "Shall a man not make his fellow man reflect?' Township trustees threaten and re solve in vain. The mottoes multiply, Assaults do not terrify him. Once he was met by two men near the West chester fair grounds and commanded to stop painting a sentence he had begun. He turned his back to them and kept on without reply. When he had finished he began a new sentence. Then the men rushed at him and struck him down senseless with clubB. The unfinished sentence read: "Forgive thine" New York Advertiser, There were, according to the federal ceubusof 18w), l,7o!),0)0iiialo inhabitants of voting age in New York two years ago. Of these 6S5.000 were foreign born. About two-"iirds of them (410,000) were naturalized 83,000 had taken out their first papers and 183,000 were at that time aliens. The horse which carried the emperor of Germany through the Franco-German war i in receipt of a pension. A Plaa for the HnaiUldo Weeds. The foe of natural grace nnd beauty Is the rond commissioner, whoso mistak en eeal is allowed mutually to remove the grass which seeks to soften the dusty out lino of the road along its untrodden borders and gutters. This Is nn exiien sive process and wholly unnecessary, since adding to tho dust capacity of the street is the only service it accomplishes, the short, thick turf affording no ob struction to carriage wheels. This ia called "cleaning up" the street, when, as a matter of fact, it only adds to its dirt. But a worse phase of the cleaning tip mania is apparent when the Kealmis commissioner proceeds to remove from the banks of the highway what ho terms weeds namely, the graceful mantle of vegetation with which nature ever seeks to conceal the wounds which man has made. It is interesting to watch the process by which the devastations of the road cutter are tempi-red to the eye by the beautiful natural screen of vines and herbage, which, if let alone, will soon cover the rough unsightly place with a drapery of verdure when the reckless workman has left behind him a shorn and barren waste. After his inroads banks of snml and gravel are left on each side of the wido road, from which every spear of grass has been banished, the fences B;and up still and stark, the rocks protrude from the soil, the trees which cannot bo felled have their lower brunches rudely cut away, so that their trunks are gaunt and unsightly, stumps are left along tlio edges of the fields nnd the soft turf is replaced by sandy slopes to be gullied by the rain. Withont wasting an hour nature be gins Iter gentle but tireless work of transforming these ruins into beauty. Garden and Forest. Hindoo Legend of Adam and Ere. The Hindoo legend of Adam and Eve in substance is as follows: In the beginning God created Adima, the first man, and Hevn, tho first wom an, which completed life. He placed them on the Island of Ceylon and com manded them never to quit their place of abode, but to remain and propagate their kind. In the course of time in wandering over the island they saw a most beautiful land connected with theirs by lofty peaks uud ragged rocks. The land beyond was most beauteous to behold, being covered with stately trees whose branches hung with fruits of every variety. Many colored birds flit ted from bough to bough and made a perfect din of ever changing music, Adima (note that this is directly oppo site to our Biblical account) tempted and Induced Heva to violate the com' mand of the Creator and accompany him to the paradise across the rocky peaks. When they had crossed the narrow neck of land which connected their is land heaven with the mainland, they beard a loud, cracking noise and looked around just in time to see the isthmus break in two and sink beneath tlie waters of the ocean. When it was plain that their way back to their island para dise had bean cut off they turned their attention to their new home nnd found it a land of sand, thorns, rocks and brambles, its supposed beauty having been but a mirage raised by Rakokasos, the spirit of evil, to tempt them to diso bedience. For this act they were doomed to perpetual labor and final death. St. Louis Bopublic. Each Log fteven Cara Lonjr. The special train bearing the ten big logs destined for the flagpoles for the Washington World's fair building at Chicago will be run in three sections of fourteen cars each. Each of the logs equals the length of seven flat cars, though they are loaded in such a manner that the weight is carried by two of the cars. With the exception of the two largest, the logs are placed two togother on the cars, but it was impossible to load the two largest in that manner, owing to their enormous weight. The two end cars of the sections will support the load on a raised block work ing on a pivot. The other cars will be empty, and the logs will extend over them above the car floors. This arrange ment is necessary owing to the curves in the road. When the train is on a curve, the first and last cars of the section will of course not be in the same straight line, and if the logs were supported by all the cars, it would be impossible to round the curves without breaking either the logs or the cars. To overcome this difficulty the movable blocks on the two end cars are brought intq play, and while the empty cars curve around a bend in the track the pivots are also turned, permitting the logs to always retain the same relative position with respect to each other. On sharp curves the middle of the load will be entirely clear of the cars at the center of the section, and will lie parallel to a tangent drawn at the outer edge of the curve. When the curve is passed the pivots again throw the logs back to their original position. Spokane (Wash.) Review. Lift Bis Hat When Ha Votes. General Butler's voting is one of the chief incident of election day in ward six. After making his ballot, the gen eral proceed to the box those who are present hastening out of courtesy to make way for him and, gravely lifting his hat, deposits bis ballot with all the circumstances of one of the most serious acts of hi life. Lowell Cor. Boston Herald. : . i , AGE OF THE EAUTil. A FASCINATING 8TUDY THAT IS ELU CIDATING A GREAT MYSTERY. The Science of Geology Known That the Arc of the World Varlen lli-twern 7!l, 000,000 and OSO.noo.noo Vram flow TheM Cnmpntntlon Are Mndr. At the recent meeting of the British association a discourse was delivered by the president, Sir Archibald Oerkie, on ono of tho most Interesting problems in modern science the ago of the world. Over a centnry has elapsed since James nutton wrote his "Thy of the Earth, which was the first ntu nipt to formulate 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. Playfair and Kelvin improved upon IMs work, and now Gerkie and the school to which he belongs have gone beyond them. Geologists have ascertained that the rate at which erosion takes place can be measured; by applying their scalo to the Sedimentary rocks they have formed a hypothesis as to the timo which has elapsed since erosion begun. To put tho proposition in similar language, tlio sur face of tho globe is constantly wearing away under tho influence of water and wind. Tho portions which oro worn off are carried down to the sea or into hol lows, where they are deposited and form sedimentary rocks. If we can ascertain how long it takes to form a sedimentary rocl. we can figure out when the progress of wearing away and redepositing began. 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 hss been carried down as sediment in rivers has been reduced at the rate of a foot in 730 years, while in other places, where the lund was more stubborn or less flexible, it has taken 0,800 years to lower the surface one foot. Tho deposit must bo 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 0,800 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 73,000,000 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 volcanic 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 f anna 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 our 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 tho gap that divides ns from that re mote epoch! 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 carrying down diluvial floods to the ocean, and the bursting forth or mountain ranges from contrac tions of the earth's crust has been painted to the life. But no one has exercised bis 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 kiud, 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 t their shade over shiny pools and black ooze, and in the distance long mountain ranges whose fontanel had not yet closed, poured a never ceasing flood of Aava down their tides. 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 Call. ei aided Education. Mr. Specks It seems to me a college education makes men rather one sided. Graduate That's because they always pull on the same side. - They ought to change their crews around one in whU. Good News. Beauty Anion flarasna, Among the Babines, who dwell to the north of the Columbia river, a large un der lip is regarded as a typo of beauty. A small incision is mado in the lip dur ing infancy and a fragrant of bone in serted. This is replaced from time to time by larger and larger fragments, each operation being attended with se vere pain, and at length pieces of wood measuring not less than three inches in length and on inch and a half in width, are inserted, causing tho lip to protrude to a frightful extent. A similar custom exists among the Paraguay Indians, and the labnets worn by the Botocndos are inserted in a slit mado in the lower lip. A Botocndo haa been noticed to take knife and cut a piece of mi at on itand tumble the meat into his mouth. Among the Hyduhs (Queen Charlotte islands) it is considered a mark of the lowest breed ing to be without this labial ornamentof the lower lip. When a young woman and an old one quarrel the elderly dame will reproach the younger with her youth, inexperience and general Igno rance, pointing, were fnrthor proof necessary, to tho inferior size of her lip. This lip of beauty is not, however, pe cnliar to these aborigines, but is com mon nmong some of tho African tribes. The Berrys, for instance, who inhabit Sunbrint, a tributary or tho Nilo, insert in the lower lip a piece of crystal an inch in length. The Bougo women in a similar way extend the lower lip hori zontally till it projects; far lteyond the upper. Tho mutilation of .both lijis is observed among tlie women or Kadje, in Segseg, between Lako Tsad und tlie Benwe. Brooklyn Eagle. The Abate of Hypuntlstn. An army of miscreants misuse hyp notism to obtain money from their vic tims. They are constantly exposed by third parties, bnt seldom lose their power over their dupes, on account of the mesmerized condition of the latter. Lower still in the depths of sin are those who call themselves "massage magnetizers," "massage hypnotists," or tboso who advertise "electric baths," "massage baths," "magnetic baths" and "magnetic treatment. There w no rea son for their existence, unless it be in a correctional or penal institution. Last ly there are the artists, professors or fakirs, who give pnblic exhibitions of the hypnotio process. Some of throw are honest and upright, othors ure unscrupu lous and mercenary wretches. All of them, however, uro to Iks care fully avoided by sensible people. Thoy are to be avoided even morn by young boys and girls than by grown folks. If any one desires to see tho marvols of hypnotism, let him or her go to their own fumily physician, and either he or some other member of thut noble profes sion will satisfy enriosity without injury to body, brains, minds or morals. In taking interest in hypnotics in nny way, therefore, it is well to bear in mind Punch's advice to young men don't. Philadelphia Times. Expiration of Famous Copyright. Some of the good old novels are pass ing the limitation of their copyrights. ' This year the copyright expires on "David Copperfield," "Pendennis" and "Alton Locke." "The Scarlot Letter" went out of copyright early in the pres ent year, and two or three cheap editions promptly appeared on the American . market. In England, however, the event passed" without notice, as the book had long since yielded the English pirate all the -booty that could be wrung from it On the other hand. American publishers ore not affected by the knowledge that copj-right on "David Copperfield," "Pendennis" and "Alton Locke" ends with this year. Each of those volumes has been so freely appropriated in this country that the'' cessation of the author's right in it will not influence its future price with us. But in England, where might has not -been right in this matter, a keen com- petition is looked for among publishers, several of whom are understood to be prepared to flood the market ttt tlle earliest moment allowed by law with cheap editions of the popular books men tioned. Chicago Post. "Ulowad It Out, of Coussa." Asa J. Carter, of Surrey, Me., twenty five years old, registered at the Hotel Atwood in Lewis ton Thursday and went to bed early. About 11 o'clock Land lord Withee smelled gas, and he steered . straight for Asa J. Carter's room. His transom was up and gas poured over it into the corridor. After two minutes of a cannonade of boot heels on the door Asa J. Carter appeared, half stupefied ' and wanting to know, in Hancock county English, what in thunder was wanting. His room was dark and his gas jet was found to be running full tilt. "What did you do with you light? asked the landlord. "I blowed it' out, of course," said Asa J. Carter. Friday morning Mr. Carter remarked that "the way he looked at it he'd 'a . been a durned fool to waste the lie let ting her burn all night." Lewiaton Journal. A postal card was sold in Paris for rmy dollars a short time ago. It had goue aroond the world uftor tho person to . whom it was addressed and bore seveuty two postmarks. If yon wish success in any society ' avoid the belle of it. This will put you In favor with the other women uud 1 . ventoolly with the belle. '