CLEVER SHOOTING. RESULT OF TWO SHOTS LEARNED AFTER TWENTY-NINE YEAR8. An InrMrnt In th Practice Work of Southern Field tiny flow Colonel Rleh ftrdson Came to Know Thnt He Unit Dona Plnme Itamng;. to lilt Kneiules. When ths Wmhlmrton artillery wns at Morgan City, there were many strik ing Incidents thnt sprang ont of the cer emonies of dedicating Fort Star and of practicing with the iolid shot. Tlie whole day the war and Its memories were kept before the people, tmt it was not it reawakening in which the bloody shirt had any play, but more of a thoughtful retrospection, In which the recalling of battles was not with bitter ness, but with an impartial sndnesa Among the happenings of the day none was more singular and noteworthy than one which ocenrred to Colonel Richard son, the commander of the battalion. It was during the time when the bat teries were firing shell at the two tar gets, which looked like tiny handker chiefs on the water, they were so far away, A good shot was fired, and the spectators were applauding the excellent marksmanship, and the colonel stepped up to the gun to commend the gunner, when without canse or without knowing why the memory of a similar shot which had been fired 29 years ago almost to the very day flashed into his mind when he had stopped up to a gunner and compli mented him in much the same style. It was when he was at Fort Malone at the siege of Petersburg, which was known as Fort "Damnation," when the hot 29 years before had been fired, and the Fourth of July was almost the anni versary of the very day. Instead of white targets for a mark it had been the tops of two Sibley tents which peeped over the ramparts of Fort "Hell," just opposite Fort "Damnation." They were the tents of the Federal officers. He knew that from a deserter who had Informed him, also that the officers of the whole command held a daily consultation there, and that he could tell the time from the fact that they bitched their horses around the tents. Colonel Richardson was then a cap tain in the Washington artillery, and he conceived the idea of scoring a point on the Federals by firing on the tents just at the time of the daily consultation. He selected the best gunner in his com mand and told him what he wanted him to do, and that was to load and prepare the guns for a special shot which he was going to direct them to make the ensu ing, day. The young captain was sure that he had gunners he could depend up on, and to make his triumph complete he asked General Malone to be present when the shots were to be fired. It was noon the next day When the horse of the Fedoral officers were seen collected around the two tents. The gunners were told to train their guns upon them And to be certain to make their shots tell. Those two shots were made the center of the interest of those in Fort "Damnation" for that day, for the word was passed around that the de struction of the officers' tents was to be attempted. After a deal of preliminary arrange ments the two shots were fired, and the tops of the two Sibley tents disappeared like cardhouses in a gale of wind. The success of the shots was the signal lor cheering on the part of the Confederates. General Malone complimented the ac curacy of the rlillerymen, and it was then that the captain stepped to the gun ner and expressed his approbation in much the same way that he used to the one that had made the good shot at Mor gan City. But there had always been a tinge of dissatisfaction about that shot at the Federal tents, and that was that he had never ascertained whether any one had been hurt in the tents, and for the 29 Intervening years that one thought had pervaded the whole incident. With these thoughts in his mind Colo nel Richardson turned away from the gunner at Morgan City, And at that mo ment one of Morgan City's prominent citizens, Mr. Gray, stepped to the colo nel's side and said: , , "Isn't this Colonel RioaardsonT "Yes." "Well, I hav been wanting to meet yon for many years, ever since I heard yon had been is Fort 'Damnation' at the same time that I wasisJTort 'Hell.'" "Yen?" said the colonel, "and when were you in Fort 'Hell?"' "In July, 1804. In fact, Just 29 years ago today," answered Mr. Gray. The oolonel instantly thought of those two shots and wondered if his curiosity was to be satisfied. "Do yon remember a day while yon were opposite me in Fort 'Hull' when the tents of the officers wens taken down by two shots which were almost simultaneous?" The stranger did not reply for a full minute. A shadow seemed to Call over him, his eyes grew dork, and he stepped 'back and surveyed the colonel from head to foot Then he broke out feelinglyt i"D n yout I shall never forgot those shots. They swept away the flower of my corps. My first lieutenant was killed, 'and the leg of my second lieutenant was shot oft, and five others were killed. And did you fire that shot?" The deep feeling of the man was evi dent, but a moment later he said, "Well, 'colonel, you ore now teaching your young soldiers to serve the flag for which my officers laid down their lives." New Orleans Times-Democrat Too Var OK He had wandered about into dozens of stores hopelessly trying to match a piece of goods for his wife. At last he quit 'and leaned np against a post with the ample in his hand. ' "What's the matter?" asked passing friend. "Sick?" "Yes. I guess I'll have to go to heav en," ho replied, sticking the sample out aimlessly toward the inquirer. "What do you mean?" : "Well, they say matches are made in heaven, and I guess they're right. IH swear they're not made anywhere around here," Detroit Free Press. A Terrible Lasklna ria. A well known gentleman of Seattle the other day banded to a reporter a curious looking scarfpin, the head of it being of the size of a small marble, such as is need by boys. In color it was a peculiar reddish mler, and seemed to contain a strnnge lifelike heart, from which a drop or Dlood appeared reaily to rail. "A heart of fire bedreamed with haze. "What is it?" asked the reporter. "It is an eye taken from a mummy, was the reply. "Where was it taken from?" was asked. "I was at Arica, Peru, in 1882, and took It from mummy myself," was the reply. "A number of young men and myself one day were out for sport snd dng np a dozen mummies for the sake of seeing what they bad been buried with. We found money, pieces of pottery, etc.. but did not strike a gold mine. Nearly all the better class of mummies seemed to have these eyes in them, and I took this from one of them. I could not learn what it was. Some people in Peru contend that it is the natural eye pre served and hardened in some manner, while others think it a fish's eye. They do not bother their heads much about it down there, however. The fact that these eyes are found in mummies is suffl cient for them. I have never heard of any tradition connected with them. "I took the eye to a jewelry store in Ban Francisco and tried to get it pol ished, but could not, although half a dozen men worked on it. The powder arising from it while they were at work would make them deathly sick and also get in their eyes and blind them tern' porarily. Yon see that it has scaled off in places. I finally had it set in this pin as yon see it" Seattle 1 toss-Times. Where the Beaton Hotels' SlWer Go. The fad of collecting spoons for sou venirs has ramifications little dreamed of by those who toy curiously with the quaint little products of the silversmith's art as they sip out of dainty porcelain the fragrant brew from my lady's tea ball. Harvard boys are faddist as well as their sisters and sweethearts, but they do not seek the uttermost ends of the earth for their treasures. The famous and hospitable hostelries of the neighboring Hub are where they carry on their dep redations. The more thoughtful and honest first make sure that the obliging waiter does not have to replace the missing article. and then they slyly slip a fork or a spoon into a pocket and no matter what the check may amount to the spoony sopho more is nappy, for he has added an other to his collection with which to mystify his fair friends. This accounts for one who at a little spread took tea from an Adams House spoon and salad from a fork bearing the word "Parker s." If the student has been industrious. every individual of a party uses silver from a different hostelry. Boston Her ald. . Photographing In Colors. Color photography has attracted much attention during the past year or 18 months, and the experiments in that line have been startlingly successful. Pro fessors Lippmann and Vogel are the pio neers in this branch of the photographio art, and both are enthusiastic over re cent results. Lippmann's investigations have proven that on a layer of albumen he could take brilliant photographs of the spectra, nor was it necessary to bring ont the colors one at a time by a laborious application of specially pre pared chemicals. On the contrary, they ail -came out at once, even red, and that too, without the interposition of colored screens. In a letter to a society of pho tographers Lippmann says: "Announce the most wonderful discovery of the age. I have brought out colors more brilliant than the tints of the rainbow after an ex posure of less than 80 seconds. Alas! I grieve to tell yon that there are certain colors in the rainbow that I have not sucoeeded in chaining to my plate." St Louis Republic The Atlantis Ooean. The area of the Atlantio is about 80,' 000,009 square miles, less than half the area -of the Pacifio and between one sixth and one-seventh of the total sur face area of the world. It wonld form a circle 4,180 miles in diameter, which is rather more than double the distance from Liverpool to New York. Its depth is mnch better known than that of the Pacifio and averages more than 2,000 fathoms, probably about 14, 000 feet or about 2 miles. The height of Mont Blanc is about three miles. The cubic contents are therefore near ly 80,000000 cubio miles, so that the At lantic could be contained bodily in the Pacifio nearly three times. The number f cubio feet is 117 followed by 17 ci phers, a number that would be ticked oil by our million clocks In 870,000 years. Its weight is 825,000 billion tons, and the number of gallons in it is 78 trillions. A sphere to hold the Atlantio would have to be 688 miles in diameter. Long sum's Magazine. Entertaining the Batcher. Little Mary is the daughter of a Pres byterian clergyman in a pretty village of western New York. One morning a corpulent butcher called at the parsonage with a roast of beef for dinner. Mary answered his knock at the kitchen door and proceeded to entertain him until her mother should arrive. The pastor's wife on her way down stairs overheard this conversation: "This is a very lovely day) Mr. Mea aon." "It Is indeed." "Do yon like roast beef?" -Yes." "Do you eat it every day?" "Not every day. Why?" "Nothing, only your stomach seems to be larger than ours." New York Times. Acquiring and foneeilng treagth. In childhood we study mathematics and languages to strengthen our mind. When we get older, our mind is so strong that these things are driven entirely out of it Boston Transcript Senator Stanford'! Ultimo. An Intimate friend of the Stanford family relates an incident in the sena tor's life in Washington: A policeman on duty one evening on K street, within a block of the Stanford residence at the national capital, found a man lying un conscious on the sidewalk. He was about to ring In an alarm for the patrol wagon when a gentleman came np and recognized the unconscious man as Sen ator Stanford. They succeeded in get ting the senator into his house without any one else knowing what had hap pened, and nothing was ever said about it The first question the senator asked when he regained consciousness was Whether the newspapers would know all about it, and he appeared to be greatly relieved when he learned that it had been kept a secret. The gentleman who knew of this incident said that the sena tor's sudden death was no surprise to him. San Francisco Chronicle. A Novelty In Trolley Road. In an electric road recently construct ed in England a radical departure from American methods has been made. A trolley wire is suspended from arms pro jecting from steel columns. No guy wires are employed, as the steel wires are especially designed to withstand se vere strains. At the corners the trolley wire, instead of following a curve of the same radius of the track, as in ths Amer ican systems, is turned on an angle, the whole system depending on the flexibili ty of the trolley arm, or side collector, as it is called, which automatically en gages the trolley wire in any position from two to twelye feet from the side of the car. Another change from American prac tice is the adoption of a pressure of only 850 volts. The cars are only 22 feet long and are equipped with two motors of 15 brake horsepower, running at 400 revo lutions. Philadelphia Press. Teetotal Sailor. A large number of the crew of the ill fated Victoria were teetotalers in fact. a lodge of the Independent Order of Good Templars the Victoria's Lifeboat Lodge A. D. had been established on the ship. Not one of the names of the members of the lodge is included among the list of the saved, so that the lodge has no longer an existence. A curious fact is that a whole lodge of the same order was lost in the terrible disaster that overtook the Eurydice in 1878. London Tit-Bits. How, This I Fishing. Frank Vinton and others caught a 800 pound sturgeon last week and made the line fast to a young tree standing on shore. Later, when they went to draw the big fish to land, they found it had i caped by pulling the tree up by the roots and taking over 80 feet of small rope along. The fishermen have three other big fish tied up at different places along the stream. Asotin (wash.) Sentinel. The latest fad for the owner of dogs is to make them wear shoes in the house to protect the polished floors. The shoes are made of chamois skin. A Mr. Veal and Miss Ham were mar tied in England a short time ago. This marriage is meet for rejoicing among newspaper enmonsts. itttacrllanrou. MITCHELL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office on Went Main Htreot, nppmiHe the Cnnimi.tvlul Ui.vn.il, l.ivillm P. jyn. B. E. HOOVER, REYNOLDS VILLE, PA. HcbIiIi'tiI dentist. In building near Mpthn dlM i'IiiiivIi, ilte Arnold lilork. (jentle- III 111 0M!l'aUllC. JJOTEL MuCONNELL, 1 IE YNOLDS VILLE. PA. Fit A XK J. It LACK, Proprietor. Tlio leading lintel of the town, lleadquar tent fur roninii'ivlal men. Hleam heal, free Haniple tiiuniH, billiard room, telephone con. nut, nuill non)M niwi mi(l mi nvnrv limn. JJOTEL BELNAP, REYNOLD3VILLE, PA. OREEXA- CVXSER, Proprietor. ,,r, . i.irw. ,,ic,i-, hll I 1,1111,1. lK-Hlt'U III the very centre of the liiiMlneHH part, nf town. ITreA 'hiitt I.. miri fmm tMiln. un.l .uiMnil,... .ample roonm lorcoinnien-ial Uuveli-nt. COMMERCIAL HOTEL, BROOK VILLE, PA., PHIL P. CARRIER, Proprietor, lilinililu svmma r tm. n-K..mi1 11.,. 1 hfuul hy nuiurulnus. Omnibus to and from till truin. urns System Renovator CURES ALL Liver, Kidney L "w Stomaeh F DISEASES. BTttem Senovstnr I the only remedy In the world that trulv taurine the blood and actsUD- on the kidneys, liver aud bowel without making them weak. Moat medicines undertake to eleunse without building up. This Is wrong, snd It weakens the organs. Renovator builiU up while It Is cleansing the system, frloe, fl.uo par uuiue, or BIX lor to.uu. After years of suacea at his office. Dr. Bur' goon has concluded to put up his tape worm remedy In such a manner that patients can treat themselves at their own homes. This Is a messed boon to autferers from this terrible snilo Uon who live at a distance. Write. Mir. Uurioou' a Hutnaioat Cancer Cure oai no equal on the lace or tue earin. it positively cures all kind of canoers Internal snd external, without the use of the knife scro fula, syphilis, aud all sorts of blood poisons aud humors. This remedy Is In the reach of all. A M-ouuoe bottle, an s-weeka' treatment, for ts.OO. These medicines are fully endorsed by the beat puysiuiauB. wiiu eacn oi mem mere is a guar antes to cure or monev refunded, lfvourdruir gist does uot keep tueut, Insist that fie does, oil VIWM HIWI IKUUI DM J. A. BUKUUON, . Mir renu Ave., Pittsburgh Bend stamp for book of lustruotlons.. t-Vfor uio at 11. Alex Htoke's drug "tore. Town Talk I Bargains ! The general topic of the people ia Where iky get tlicir llaraiiis. Their reply re-echoes from the woodland and the valleys: -RT THE- RACKET STORE. You know they are always busy in every town where there is one. Why? B6C31IS6 prices are the same to all. " goods are of lst-class quality. " money is always re refunded if not natisfactory. " an apportionment of of goods ishandled that is in daily use. " they buy for cash and sell for cash, which enables you to get ROCK BOTTOM PRICES, and you do. Yours Respectfully, M. J. Gome, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. The First National Bank oi Reynoldsville. CKPITHL 9SO.OOO.OO. C. OTIK'lirll, Prraldrntl Scott Mcrldlnnd, Vice Prra. John II. Kniirlipr, aolilrr. Director: C Mll.-licll, Hi'ott. MoCIHIiind. J. ('. Klutr, liWM'nh HtriniHN, Jotenh llfnderwm, 0. W. l uller, J. If. Kawht r. IW n ircnrrHlhiiiikinirhiiKlncNHiind wiMcIIh the acromitauf nierehatilN, pmfiNlonitl nion, fiirnitirM, meWiatilcN, mlnerH, lumtH'rmrn and (itliera, itmtnlNliitf iho nuwt cart'ful attention to the btiHlnt'HH of all ihtkoiih. Temporary quarter In Centennial Hall HiillilliiK, opposite llolel Helium. ,THE (UNSCCTARIAN) NO PAPER LIKE IT ON EARTH Unique not Eccentric Witty not Funny. Religious not Pioui. Not for Sect but for Souls. WHOLE SERMONS IN A 6ENTENCE. Send a dime In stamps for three peeks trial. THE RAM'S HORN, 1W WOMAN'S TEMPLE, Read Per Year. CHICAGO It ones. ONLY PAPER THAT EVERYBODY LIKES ReynolQsvlllB Harflware Co., DEALERS IN HARDWARE, STOVES and RANGES, TIN, - SHEET IRON - AND - COPPER WARE, AMMUNITION, - FISHING TACKLE OF ALL KINDS, HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS, WOOD AND IRON PUMPS. And everything kept in a First-class Hardware Store. Roofing and Spouting Done to Order. REYNODSVILLE, PA. N. HAWAII, No Fancy Prices, Though quality is the best. We make the statement for the benefit of those who are not our customers, and so may not know it: Or it rnicKs MAKE CUSTOM KKH OF ALL Wilt' COME. A full line of Dress Goods, The Best and Cheapest ever brought to Reynoldsville. A full line of Henrietta at 25c. in all shades, 40c, 50c, and $1.00. Silk warp Henriettas. Summer Silks for 50c. per yard. Ladies Coats and Capes the finest and cheapest in town. A nice line of Children's Jackets from 2 to 12 years. doming, Men's suits the best and cheapest you ever saw for the money. We don't say so except we can convince you. Men's Suits, four button cutaway from 10, 12 to $15, worth 14, 1G and $18. Men's straight cut worsted for 10 to 12.50, .worth 16, to $18. Children's Suits 2.75, are worth 3.50 to $5.00. A fine line of Boys' and Men's Negligee Shirts. N. Hanau. Grocery Boomers W BUY WHERE YOU CAN GET ANYTHING YOU WANT. FLOUR, Salt Meats, Smoked Meats, CANNED GOODS, TEAS, COFFEES AND AIX KINDS Or Country Produce FRUITS, CON FECTIONERY, TOHACCO. AND CIGARS, Everything In tho line of H U & Fresh Groceries, Feed, Etc. . OomtH delivered free any place in town. Call on iM rtiirf get prlcex. W. C. Sclraltz & Son N "ASK'FOR MX. PINE CANDIES. IN SEALED PACKAGES AT H. ALEX. STOKE'S. THE LEADING DRUGGIST, Reynoldsville, fm. GENTLEMEN ! I am positive Hint 1 have omethlnff rich In store for ynu If you will c 11 nt my tBllor shop. I huro reoelvcd an ex cellent suh-ntlon of Spring and Summer Goods. 1 can show you tho flnput selection of (foods In this city. All fits guaranteed to bo perfect. Ono trial of tho excel lent Roods snd work Is convincing for all. Hoping that I may receive call, I remain Your obedient servant, J. G. FROEHLIGH, Reynoldavllle, tm. WNoxt door to Hotel McConnell. Giuj Meat Market I buy the bent of cattle and keep the choicest kinda of meats, such as MUTTON, VEAL BEEF, PORK AND SAUSAGE. Everything kept neat and clean, Your patronage solicited. E. J. Sclmltzc, Prop'r. J. S. MORROW, TiKALKtt IN Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, and s Shoes, Fresh Groceries Flour and Feed. GOODS DELIVERED FREE. OPERA HOUSE BLOCK Reynoldsville, Pa. LOOK! FOR THE People's Bargain store. Quick Sales and Small Profits. General stock of Ladies' and Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods and Shoes. A. KATZEN, Proprietor. Subscribe for "The Star." $1.50 per year.