AttlUO INTJIK DESERT SURPRISING DISCOVERY OF A TRAV ELER IN DEATH VALLEY. A Mmi Conntnieteil unit Fltlnl t'p Veavl on a Ksnily Waste Iteeame lis Want to Ho Itisily When llm Water Rises, m'ITo Firmly llellevrs It Will. "One nf Hip (nwt nnd mrmt snrprls liiK sights 1 ever Haw in nil my vrninler. Inn over tlm rllls of thl country," cnlil K. (!. Trnvrr, ft well known pros pector nnl civil engineer, n few ly nn "wns n newly constructed 1Hk ly Iiir on tlio floor of Dcnth valley. And it in there yet, no tlint nnyliorty cnu seo it "When I first saw it, I was nliiuiHt paralyzed. I could not liclievo iny eyes and thought I must have nisert through onto r.irntnl lunsentid wns not in Death Viillcy nt nil. l!nt, otter gnxliift nt, the striinu olijert n few minute nud then looking nnmnd 1110 nud seel tin tlm wastes of ImrniiiK snmU und fcoliiiK tho hot hivntliof tho desert wind, I knew that everything idiuut niowas niostrenlistio ally rent "It wan liy tho merest ehnneo that I ran across tho vessel, " said Mr. Traver, "liecnnso lind I been n few foot farther sonth I would never have seen it You gee, I had been working on tho eastern side of the alliy for several weeks with out snei-ess and concluded to go to Mount l'arwin, where I Would at least bo siiro of expense. I was crowing tho valley at tho northern end, which is quite narrow, but about tho lowest snot on tho earth's surface. I urn not exactly certain, but I think that whero tho ves sel is it is about 'MO feet below sea level. "After tho tlrst surpriso had worn oil I beau to fiKuro out how tho craft canio tliero. Thiit tho vessel was a relic of a pnst uga nover entered my head for a moment, bei nuso it was constructed on perfectly modern lines and tho wood had a yellow appcnriinco, Indicating that it had not been cut very long. I nm something of a sailor myself, nud tlm first glaneotold mo that it was tho work of soihO modern shipbuilder, but that only Hindu tho mystery greater. "Going close, I made a careful ex amination of my stritniro find. It proved to n perfect brig of about 400 tons, that had never been in wntor. Every thing nbout it was of tho best stylo of workmanship and showed plainly that the builder had put forth his best ef forts. Tho keel was laid flat on the sand and tho starboard side placed np against a small roof of rocks. The port side was supported in the usual manner. "Climbing onto the deck by a small ropo ladder, I found everything ship shape. Tho decks were as cloan and white as a man-of-war's, and every rope was in place. Entering tho cabin, I found everything noat and cloan and several bunks Vith bedding ready to sleep in. 8noh a thing, however, would have been impossible, as tho heat was simply uubcnrablo, and I had to go to the door, gasping for breath, before I had completed my investigation. The ruoro I looked the mora mystiflod I be cama It wns plain the brig bud been built whero she was, but by whom and for what? "I spent tho wholo afternoon climbing over tho vessel. I went into tho rigging nnd looked over tho surrounding coun try, but could seo no sign of a human being. When night enme on, I conclud ed to camp near by, but had no sooner got fixed comfortably when a voice from somewhere, called (ood evening!' You may bo suro I jumped, ns my nerves wero feeling ft little weak through my strango afternoon's experience. "Thero was no need to bo alarmed, though, for a good nnturod looking man, with gray hair and beard, was smiling at ma Of courso I at once concluded that he knew something about tho brig. I was right, and in a few moments ho explained tho wholo thing to mo and also showed to whnt ends a foolish idea will drivo a man. "Ho said that his name was Freder ick Evans, that ho was a ship builder by trado and one of tho California pion eers of '40. Uo had never made a big strike, but had always kept prospecting, and when the water rose in Salton lake a few years ago he was at work in tho mountains around Death valley. It was then that ho got it into his head that the water would eventually roach that locality, and he was determined to have the first vessel to float in the new sea. "Evans was not a poor man, bnt had money enough to hire a couple of men to help him lay tho keel of the vessel, put in the masts and do the other heavy work. At first the work was pushed rapidly, bnt when the water common oed to recede Evans took things easily and did all the work himself, because he tbonght the water would not come again for a year. He has been disappointed every year since, but still thinks that Death valley will become a sea, and he is ready for it "I was well treated by Evans," said Mr. Traver in concluding. "He took me to his abode, which was a deep cave few feet from the brig, with a delight-, ful temperature. I staid with him two days and found him a well eduoated man and very interesting, bnt when I left him his last words were, 'When the water rises, I will be ready for it ' " San Franoiaoo CalL M iwito to Womoa. Hitherto in France Joan of Arc has been almost the only woman to mount upon a marble pedestal, but the privi lege is being extended. At Vitres a stat ue is being raised to Mme. de Sevigne, and at Valenuiennes a similar honor is in store for Mile. Duchenois. Apropos of those foots a French writer observes, "Woman being, even in marble, m much more decorative than ourselves, on can only rejoice over the advent sT feminine atatues. " 1 Opposite. She They say that persons of oppo site qualities make the happiest mar riages. He That's why I am looking for a girl with money. Tit-Bita THE GOLDEN FLEECE. Tho nlnut HlR-lily THeim! nf All the Rurvlv In Order of Chivalry. Of nil the orders of mediieval chiv alry which liavo survived tho shock of successive revolutions on tho continent of Enropo slnoo tho great cataclysm of J 780, that of tho Golden Fleece is per haps tho most distinguished and the must highly coveted by personages of royal birth or of illustrious patrician lineage, i-itudciits of the history of tho art or science of heraldry will learn Mill interest and pleasure thnt, tho Or der of tho Toison d'Or of Rpnin having been conferred on tho Dnkoof York, his royal highness wns on Tnesdny invest ed, nt Alnrlhorough House, with tho in signia of the order by thn Irinee of Wales, himself n knight of tho order, acting in tho iintno of tho queen regent and on behalf of tho young king of Hpnln. Thn secretary of tho Hpnnlsh embassy, as chancellor of tho order, rend tho royal commission creating tho duko n knight, and the august ceremony was also attended by tho Duko of tiaxe-Co-burg (tot ha nnd tho Duo d'Anninte as knights of the order, nnd by the Span ish embassador and the Karl of lumber ley, her majesty's secretary of stato for foreign n (fairs. Tho Duko of York only received tho badge of t ho order, In tho shape of tho figure of n sheep in embossed gold sus pended from a heavy chain of gold, but at a chapter of tho order or nt great court functions nt Madrid ho would bo entitled to wear tho full robes, consist ing of a long mantle of crimson velvet, out in thn fashion of n sacerdotal cope, richly embroidered nt tho borders with emblematic devices of stars, half moons and fleeces in gold nnd lined with whito satin, over n doublet nnd hose of crim son damask. Tho full robes also com prise a "chaperon," or hood, with a long flowing streamer of black satin, but this headgear has in modern times been generally dispensed with. Originally the roles of tho order, which was founded in 1420 by Philip tho Good, duko of Uurguudy, were of crimson cloth lined with white lamb's wool, and this circumstance has some what strengthened tho theory thnt the golden fleece was instituted by Philip the Good in grateful recognition of tho immense treasure which tho Duko nf Burgundy had acquired from tho wool of the flocks reared on his vast estates in Flanders. Do it ns it may, tho woolen costume wns changed in 1473 at a chapter hold at Valenciennes for the more costly materials of volvet, taffeta, damask and gold embroidery. Loudon Telegraph. CATCH QUESTIONS. Soma PuulltiB Queries That Appear Hot Hard to Answer. If a gooso weighs 10 pounds and a half its own weight, what is the weight of the goose? Who has not been tempted to reply on tho instant IS pounds? the correct answer being, of course, 20 pounds. It is astonishing what a very simple query will sometimes oatch a wise man napping. Even tho follow ing have been known to succeed: How mnny dnys would it take to cut np a piece of cloth 60 yards long, ouo yard being cut off every day? A snail climbing up a polo 20 feet high ascends five foot overy day nnd slips down four feet every night How long will tho snail tako to reach tho top of tho post? A wiso man having a window ono ynrd high and ono yard wide, requiring more light, enlarged his window to twice its former sizo, yet the window was still only ouo yard high and oue ynrd wide. How was this dono? This is a catch question in geometry, as tho preceding wero catch questions in arithmetic. The window was dia mond shaped at first and was afterward mudo square. As to tho two former, perhaps it is scarcely necessary seriously to point out that tho answer to tho first is not B0 days, but 40, and to tho second not 20 days, but 10, siuco the snail, who gains I one foot each day for IS days, climbs on the sixteenth day to the top of the pole and thoro remains. Pittsburg Did patch. Where Woman Comes Last, An Arab moaning a tont dweller; in an equine sense the town dweller is no Arab loves first and above all his horse. No one need to recite the oft suuguffeo- tion he will lavish upon him. Next he lovos his firearm. This, poetically speak ing, ought to be a six foot, gold inlaid, muzzle loading horror of a matchlock, which would kick any man but an Arab flat on his back at every shot, but acta' ally, in Algeria or Tunis, when he lives near a city, it is more apt to be mod' era English breechloader. Yon must fly from the busy haunts of men to find the matchlock. Next to his gun he lovos his oldest son. Last comes his wife or one of his wives perhaps. Daughters don't count I mean the Arab doesn't take the trouble to count them unless in so for as they minister to his comfort, diototio or otherwise. Until some neighbor comes along and proposes to marry in other words, to make a still worse slave of one of them -she is only a chattel, a soulless thing. And yet she is said to be a pretty, amia ble, helpful being said to be, for no one by any hap ever chances to cast his eyes on one worth seeing. This disre gard for women, be it said to their hon or, does not always apply to the Bedou ins of the Syrian and Arabian deserts. New York Journal. "Cowualor Therefore." Sergeant Kelly, a celebrity of the Irish bar, had a remarkable habit of drawing conclusions directly at variance with bis premises and was consequently nick' named "Counselor Therefore." In court on one occasion he thus addressed the jury: "The case is so clear, gentlemen, that yon cannot nosaiblT misunderstand it, and I should pay your understandings' a very poor compliment if I dwelt upon it for another minute. Therefore I shall at onoe prooeed to explain it to yon at: minutely as possible. " Ureen Bag. PREMONITIONS OF DEATH. Iloliller Who Hare CJone Into Certain ltat tie Perfectly Conx-lons of Their Fate, "Soldiers had strnngo premonitions of death before going into battlo during the wnr," said an old soldier. "I could not toll you how many times I have seen my comrades foretell their dentil. They seemed to feel it was coming and went into battle fully prepared to meet their end So common was this, and so regu larly did death follow when foretold, that I often heard officers upbraiding their men for spenking nf death, remarking: 'A man never speaks of n fenr of death without death following shortly nfter. It's likn thn smallpox; tho nun thnt drends it most is snre to bo the first vic tim. ' Hut tho ollleers wero reasoning back ward. In all tho cases I saw the pre diction of death was caused by nn in wnrd feeling, telling that his end was nenr. "It wnsu't fenr, for I remember 'Boss' MeKellar, ns wo used to cull him, who came from Dutler county. lie hnd beeu a bravo soldier, serving his full three yenrs, never once failing In his duty. Tho day before his threo years wero up ho went into tho bnttlo nf tho Wilder ness. Ho was so pnlo nnd careworn nnd lacked so much tho nsunl vigor with which ho entered bnttlo that soma of his friends remarked how changed ho was. Ho looked like n ghost and wns trembling nil over. They nsked him what wns tho mnttcr. 'Why,' ho re plied, 'my threo yenrs nro up tomorrow, but I'll noverseo my service out. I will bo killed in this battle that I know.' "His friends tried to cheiT him up, betting him that it was only a morbid fancy, but no amount of talkconld en liven him. Ho went into tho bnttlo and wns nmong tho first to fall, being hit squarely in tho forehead. I nlso remem ber John Dnubnr sitting cnting crackers with nn oflleer beforo a campflre on tho evo of bnttlo. Ho hnd a sad expression when ho turned, nnd breaking tho cracker in his fingers snid In a contem- plntlvo manner, 'Well, boys, this Is my Inst night on earth. ' In tho dim fire light I saw tho big tears well up ns the oflleer inquired whnt ho meant. 'I'll bo shot tomorrow suro. ' Tho oflleer, seo- ing how deeply the man was affected, placed his hand upon his shoulder nt snid: 'Draco up, John. Don't ls fool ish. Men of Ohio don't talk liko that. ' But this only made tho soldier break down. Iu tho bnttlo next dny ho wns killed nmong tho first. I could givo yon an indefinite number of such instances, which show thnt soldiers really hnd donth foretold to thorn, but theso nro sufficient To mo it was a most solemn moment When I honrd a man sny ho wns going to be killed. It invariably turned out that way. "Exchange. FRENCH ART OF TODAY. Only the Genlns of the People Keeps It From Hopeless Debasement. For years all the art roads bavo led to Paris. It is today tho center of the art world, a model of taste, skill and knowl edge as well as a hotbed of oooontrlol- ties, lunuiierisms, stilted affectations and small trickerios. It tukes iu the world, takes credit for all its virtues and is saddled with all its vices. It is ruled by the quips and cranks of what at times seems outrngoous fortune; it is magnified nnd belittled; it is over praised and uniler praised; it scums to bo rising to lofty heights at times nnd thou again to bo sinking into tho iniro. It is nt onoo tho best and tho worst nrt cen ter iu tho world, a crucible whero all elements mix, all become alloyed, nud yet nil nverago up a respectable grade of amalgam. Thnt which keeps it from hopeless debasement is tho nrt genius of tho French people. Him thnt art genius over renched is apogee? Has it fulfilled its mission nnd voiced tho finer feelings of Franco, as painting once did in Italy and Kpain? Did we accept tho exhibit at tho World's fair as a criterion wo might think her day was about finished, that hor artists had said nil tlioro was for them to sny, bnt the representation was inadequate. Tho French stand sponsor for all the academic emptiness displayed there; for all the studio recitation, all the exag gerated realism, all the tawdry senti ment, and yot at heart they have little sympathy with them. The aendemio was foisted upon them early in life by the example of Italy and the misdirect ed energy of royalty. Poussin or Lebrun was no more Fronch in thought or meth od than Corneille. The monarchy up held the aoadomio because it smacked of heroism and the empire because it fostered the military spirit, bat the re public has barely tolerated it, and the radicals have always hated it It is the bete nolr of French art, against whioh there has been a long series of revolu tions. Why, if not that it fails to repre sent the Frenoh? They are fond enough of talking about suoh loyalists as Pous ain, David, Ingres and Cabanel, but the men they love are the rebels, Watteau, Fragonard, Delacroix, Millet, Corot, Courbet The vivacious, the decorative, the emotional, the sentimental, the posi tiveall these they love because they are national characteristics, bnt the mock heroic, the grandiloquent, the bombastic, have been more the result of foreign imitation than the outcrop of Frenoh feeling. John C. Van Dyke in Century. ITiatofrrspli of "Lip Speech." What is regarded a the greatest tri umph of the photographer was the re sent suooossf ul experiment by Professor Dameny of Berlin ' in taking photo graphs of "lip speech." By making successive negatives of the movements of the lips of a rapid talker he managed to arrange photographs printed from them in suoh a manner that deaf mutes who were familiar with "lip speech" could plainly interpret evory word that the speaker uttered. St Louis Repub lic empathy. Mauds I'm in an awful fix, I am in love with a young man who is poor. Belle Aud he won't marry you? Truth. BERLIN MANNERS. CtMtoms That Proved Itnlhe Mortifying to Two American (llrls. Two yonng girls were nindo miscrnblo by nn unwritten Inw which laid mo low not long ago, writes a lady correspond ent in Berlin. They were calling upon German women, and as they entered the room they sow that tho least comfort able sent was tho sofa, whero they natu rally sented themselves. One after an other nf tho older women surveyed them nntil they became Intensely uncomfort able, not knowing what diro accident could possibly have befallen them. At last tho hostess rose majestically, say ing: "Young ladles, will you lio so kind as to got np nud givo your sents to these older Indies?" Tho pixr things wero crushed. My own encounter with tho sofa regulation was funnier tlinn it was crushing. I went to a mnslcalo given by a countess. Two daughters of titled houses had lieen cordial in their overtures, nnd I wns having a beautiful timo wntehing litllo differences of manner and wondering if all young women were expected to courtesy nnd kiss the hands of married women, ns my vis-a-vis wns doing. As tho evening wore on I concluded what well bred peoplo wore, nfter nil, tho snmo everywhere. When supper was nil nounccd, thorn wns a slight confusion in tho placing of the guests, and I found myself in a smaller room with a few others, nmong them tho most important woman of (ho assembly. Tho table had been drawn to a sofa, and there is whero I mndu my mistake. My now friend, tho countess' dnughter, motioned mo f a tho sofa, which seemed thn liest solu tion of thn entanglement into which our hostess hnd led ns iu a moment of flurry, for a Gorman docs not approach tho ease and surety of an American hostess. At tho snmo time thn woman of ininrtnnco took it sent on the sofa also. As she ap parently spokn neither English nor French, nnd ns I hnd not boon hero long enough to hnvo acquired fluency in Ger man, her nttempt at a conversation was soon given up. When our hostess enme to see If wo wero all happy, our lady of importance asked who I wns, and on receiving a whispered reply sat np very straight nnd threw herself bnek on tho sofa, exclaim ing, "Ah mnis o'est tropl" I was seized With ft horrible fenr thnt my hostess hnd told her thnt I wns an American reporter, nnd I wns intensely unoomfort ablo in splto of my companion's friend liness. After thnt the groat lady was very stiff, nnd I fenr I was even stiffer. Looking ngain to seo if shn hnd fainted, I saw her calmly eating with hor knife and no longer felt uncomfortable. If she scorned mo for any reason, I certainly should lio ashamed of her at my own ta ble. I lonrned several dnys Inter from an American woman versed in Germnu proprieties thnt my unpardonable offense had boon In presuming to sit on tho sofa besido my lady without n European title of high rank to bock mo up. 8ITTINQ BULL'S DEATH. The Killing of tho Chief Itrourht About by IIU Son's Taunt. "Did you over know just how Sitting Bull wns killed?" nsked Lieutenant Baker of tho Twelfth infantry, U. a A. "I do not think," ho continued, "tho details wero over printed I nover saw them, and I was thero." I toll It, ns near as It can bo recalled, as tho lieutenant told It. Sitting Bull wns nt his shack with his sous, near Standing Rock agency, when ho was sent for toconio into the agency. Tho Indian police wero commissioned to bring him in, nud when an Indian po liceman gets thnt order nud finds his man ho brings him, dead or alive, un less tho man gets tho drop first Sitting Bull was disposed to obey tlio summons, but ouo of his sous, as haughty an In dian as over lived, taunted tho old mau for his weakness. Ho called him a squnw, and that epithet to an Indian bravo is tho enp sheaf of nil that Is de risive, Tho old man weakened under tho boy's taunts, and tho Indinn police did the rest Sitting Bull was all that his admirors claimed for him. When he fell, the boy who had taunted him crawled under tho bunk whore tho old man had slept. Ho was thoro when Shavehuad, au Indian from the agency, oame in. He heard tho story. He liked Sitting Bull, and when ho was told that the boy had taunted his father and was the cause of his deuth Shavehead said the boy deserved death, and he was dragged out from under the bed and killed. These dotails Lieutenant Baker says he never saw in print Chicago Herald. Quickly Armngod Foreign terms are apt to occasion con fusion in the minds of those who are ignorant of thoir meaning, because, as one old lady who thought mirabile meant a "rough, noisy crowd o folks," said, "They don't scussly ever stand for what they'd orter, jodging by the sound I" A western man wished to filo a paper for his partnor and hinisolf in the cir cuit court and affixed to the firm signa ture tho words "per so. " "I reckon that won't do," said the partner, whose education was somewhat more extensive. " 'Per so' is sin'gler and moans Jest yon, and ther's two of us." "Oh, all right t I can fix that easy enough," responded the other easily. "Gimmo the eraser. " Tho article in question was passed to him, and after some scratching and re writing he shoved the document over to his partnor with a aiuilo of triumph. It was signed, "Green 8c Wilson, per 9 o's. "Youth's Companion. The Abbe de Morolles, in one of his latest works, calculated that ho bod printed 133, 184 verses, and yet the pub lio hud not sense enough to appreciate him as a poet Spain has over 400 islands in the east ern seas, mostly comprised in the Philip pines and Molucca, THE BROOK. I tnnltf.il In the brook snil saw a fsca. Helgh-lto. btlt a i-lillrl w-nn II There wr rutin's ami willows In that plana. And tliojr clutched nt llio linsik as the brook ran by. And tlio hrrmk It ran Its own sweet way, As a child doth run In IktiIIcm play, And as it rnn 1 heard II say: "llmti'ti with me To the rolotnrlnu na That Is wroth with the Hume of the morn lnsskyl" f tontt In tht hronk and see n fnre. Heigh-ho, htlt the resra so hyl The rushes are drnd In the old time rdare, And tho willows I knew when a child wast. And the hrtsik It secincth to me to sny, As ever It stcalflh uu Its wny, Boleimily now and not in plnyi Mlh, rome with me To tlie slumbrous spa Thst Is Kray with tho peace of the evening sky!- ItciKli-ho, hut the yenrs bo hy, 1 Would lo (lod that n child were tl Chicago Kccord. IN THE DAYS OF TOM SAYER3. Lnbonrhcre fecrlptlon of Scenes at a ITIfe I'lKlit Thirty Veers it go. Among my many sins I hnvo nttended a prizo fight, nnd for tho outpour of rank blnsphemy nnd reckless blnok gunrdlsm it ran nn execution nt New gate or Horsenmnger Lnno jail vory close. Tho polico wero dend ngaiust prir.o fights, which wero excuses for a gigantic form of extortion. Twornfllans cf tho lowest clnss contracted to batter ono another nbont In order to extract thn gninens from tho swells, tho toffs and thn supporters of tho "noblo nrt of solf defense. " A programme hnd to bo se cretly arranged, n spocinl train hnd to bo secured for tho nrmy of men, tho swells nbont town nnd tho senm of tho metropolis, who lived npon tho excite ment or tho pelf of prizo fights. Thoro wns ft certain official ennntennnco to these illegnl "mills." Tho editor of Boll's Lifo in London constituted him self tho nrblter on theso occasions. This wns tho organ nf the prizefighter. The editor received the stakes deposltoi, acted ns referee nnd nf forward described thofights in a jargon delightfully humor ous. "Tapping thoclnref, " "Ono in tho bread basket," "A ronseron thocouk, " wero nil phrases invented by tho editors of Bell's Lifo. Tho night beforo It wns necessary to go to n sporting pnb to got "tho office" and to receive for n valuablo considera tion tho special railway tioket Tho vigil of tho fight was usually spent in tho "wild west, " for In those dnys there wns no closing hour. Restaurants and public houses could keep open as long as they liked. Races wero run in the Uaymurkot at 8 o'clock in the morning, aud about 4 or S tho "swolls," all In evening dress, would assumblo at the railway station, each oue In charge of a specially appointed protector. Tho sceuo nt tho rnilwny stntlon was indescribable, Tho officials mado them selves scarce, nnd the station was hand ed over to mob law. On tho platform tho pocket of evory unprotected mau or youth was emptied, nnd when the train started amid a chorus of obsocnlty and blnsphomy no one know tho destination. It might bo a deserted chalk pit, or an old qnorry, or a lonoly wood, or a river marsh. Suddenly tho train would stop, aud awny went tlio excursionists tramp ing over field and meadow. Tho princi pals wero muffled np. Tho attendants carried tho ropes nud stakes, and when tho ring was pitched overy ono who hod a sovereign left was fleeced to buy tho colors of tho favorlto a silk handkor chief that could not have cost fourponce. I forbear to desoribo tho hideous blas phemy that soiled tho moming air or tho mnd execrations during tlio mill. When n champion's eye was bunged up with a blow, his second lanced it aud thou sucked it into fighting condition. I have seen mnny a bravo young follow faint nt the hideous sight of a prizo fight soldiers, most of them, who would hnvo gouo to battlo without flinching. London Truth. WHY BUFFER WITH Sick and Nervous HEADACHE P Sou may be easily and quickly eared by taking' Ayer's Pills " I have been a victim of terri ble headaches, und have never found anything to relieve them go quickly ns Ayer's Pills. Since I begun taking this medicine, the JittiU'ks have become less and ess frequent, until, nt present, mouths have passed since 1 have had one." C. i Xewman, Dug Spur, Va. "Having used Ayer's Pills with great success for dyspepsia, from which I suffered for years, 1 re solved never to be without them in my household. They are in deed effective." Mrs. Sallik Mokkih, 125 Willow St., Phila delphia, Pa, "I always use Ayer's Pills, and think them excellent." Mrs. (J. P. Wathovs, Jackson, Fltt. Ay er's Pills Received Highest Award AT THE WORLD'S FAIR ft&iSiftisii?MiiaM?.ft Every Woman i'Jf Sometime needs a tell- 'A T nblo monthly regulating Dr. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL PILLS. Are prompt. Mfe end certain In remit. The seno Ine (Dr. I'enl'A) never disappoint. Sent supintPli 1.00. PMlMedlctnsOo.. Cleveland. O, Held hy II. Alex. Htoko, druggist. Grocery Boomers W HUY WHKHK YOU CAN CJKT ANYTHING YOU WANT. Salt Meats, Smoked Meats, C'ANNKU GOODS, TIC AH, COFFEES ANIl AM, KINDS Or Conntiy Produce Fill ITS. CONFECTIONERY, TOHACCO. AND CIGARS, Everything In tlio line of Fresh Groceries, Feed, Etc. omln tlfUvvrrd frre m place in fowti. Cull on fs mid art prlcr. W. C. Kclmltz & Son H U T & O N - e a. i 3 I Is I If- 8 PJi o A n 'ft a jS a I a "3 5 a 2.5 E 3 V v 2 2- 3-3 P S t S. S.5 2 S 5 S t 11 a. V 5 s a Z t. 2 5-- c 5? Sft 2pJ "2 fc S a 53 .,o I wiHli to call the ATTENTION of the public to the fact that I have received my Spring - and Summer Suitings, and that the cloth is the lat est and best. My prices are made to suit the times and my workmanship is guaran teed to be perfect. Yours (or honest dealing to all, J.CFroelillGtUlie Tailor, Reynoldavllte, Pa. STNext door to Hotel McConnell. First National Ban! OF HEl'XOLDS FILLE. CAPITAL $60,000.00. C Mllehell, President) Seolt .tlcflelland. Vice Pres.) John II. Kaurlier, Canhler, Directors: C. Mltehell. Beott MKiellund, J. C. King, Joeepti BtrtiUNH, Jonepti Henderson, G. W. Fuller, J. If. KuucUur. ' Does a ffeneralbAnkliiRbuslnoHsuiid eellelts the seeountH of murchHiits. profeMHloiml men, furiuers. imvhaiiieH, miners, lumbermen una others, premising the most curutul munition to the buslutws of all persons. Safe Deposit Boxes for rent. First Natlouul Bunk building, Nolan block rire Proof Vault. ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE. EsTATior John 11. Mulhol&an, Dkcsasso. Letters of administration on the estate of John F. Mulhollaii, late of Keynoldsvllle bnr ousli, lelTeriMjii county, Fa., deceased, having been granted to the uiidunlgued, all pursoua Indebted to aitld estate are hereby notlUed to make luimediute payment to the adminis tratrix, and these having claims against It will present thoiu properly authenticated, tor settlement. Mhs. K. J. Mulhollam, Administratrix of John F. Mulhollau, due'd. to 7- t - p 2 H "5 r 0 S a? ? P if P5 r5 - tl W r e M S a " IE o-2- far r--ss 3 5 s mm U, On is 5 o o ,l 2 2 az 5 u
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers