He VOLUME 3. REYNOLDS VI LLK, PENN'A., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMI5ER 21, 1(51)1. NUMKER 2K. Children's Reefer Suits rou Mens' All-wool BOYS' bona Pants Suits Children's SUITS FOR 53-50 S'2.00. Boys' Knee Pants Suits with extra p.'iir $3.00. Hoys Knee l'atits SUITS FOR $1.00. OUJL 1 O for $6.50. MeiiH1 (tood Business SUITS for $8.00. Mens' Good Black Suits for Dress $10.00. Remember we have one of the Finest GUTTERS in onr Merchant Tailor Depart ment. Suits for $20.00 and up. Men's, Boy's and Children's SUITS - STZJ3 - OR - STYLIS! Single Breasted Sack Suits, sizes from 33 to 48, lilue or Black. Cutaway Frock Suits, Blue or Black. Regent Cutaway Suits, full long style. We buy all our suits from the finest manufactory of men's suits and if you find any of our clothing to rip we ask you to bring the suit back and we give you a new tuit. Match Us If You Can. TIlP ONI V oilier, Hatter llluUNb and Furnisher. Mens' Prince Albert SUITS r-oii $15.00. G. A. R. Suit, the Best in the world, for 9IO.OO. Two sets buttons Gents, Call and ex amine our All-wool Pants FOR J.OO. A WOMAN'S WAY. Hats! Hats! For tbo Children, Hats! Hats! For tho Mon ami Hats! Hats! Hats! For Kvuiyono. Make a Base - Hit and come to Bell Our Fall Stock of Overcoats are coining in daily. Under- Under- Price Wear, 75c. per suit. STYLES and PRICES to suit the times. We have them for you. Wed a Neck tie to your Col lar. We will tie the knot for OOMI INI Where? TO THE "Bee Hive" store. WHERE L J. McEntire, & Co., The Groceryman, deals in all kinds of Groceries, Canned . Goods, Green Goods Tobacco and Cigars, Flour and Feed, Baled Hay and Straw. Fresh goods always on hand. Country produce taken In exchange for goods. A share of your patronage is respectfully solicited. Very truly yours, Lawrence J. McEntire & Co., The Croccrymcn, J. S. MORROW, DEALER IN Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, and Shoes, Fresh Groceries Flour and Feed. GOODS DELIVERED FREE. OPERA HOUSE BLOCK Reynoldsville, Pa. Important to AH ! To Save Money qo to the People's Bargain Store. Cut prices in every department. Fine line children's cotton underwear from 10c. up; children's all-wool red flannel underwear from 8o. up; heavy quilted ladles' Jersey shirts at 23o.; men's merino underwear 00o. per suit; men's all-wool underwear $1.40 a suit; big line top shirts from 45o. up; dosli-a-able line of men's fine pants from B5o. up; every customer buying a suit of boys' clothes will get a 50o. hat free; fine assortment of shoes at reasonable prices; men's first-class gloves from 25o. up; handsome table oil cloth at 17o. per yard; big lino hats and caps at prices to suit every customer. Call and be convinced that we always make quick sales and small profits. . A. KATZEN, Proprietor. Botnctlmcs slm mine rlrht out nnd says Hln. line. mt Invn n'.e lint, I smile nntl think It wouldn't du Fur mo to U 11 In r tlmt. And Mim.-ttt'-n wh'-ti I ti- her shop Hho culls me .tn lil. Miv, Jnit thtnlil Hiip!isi. I'd llli.Ttlmtl Phi'Wl Hnw '(would in:ik" her cryl And .unit-tltm-s when I chtm n kta She turns me nil", "Nny, my ! " But, nli, wlmt tmulilc It -'iil'l nmliB It 1 ahnuld ni't tlmt wry! If !n- v.fiuld i.nly I' t ni" f' i Tlmt 1 h:id win In r. tin n I'd Im mnrn .rltli-d Ih-.n I um. I'd net IDu nthi r nu n, And y 1 1 hnt to own It an I'm hut n inun, you know Buiiumi my tii i l liviu iuu this way Is why I Invu Ip r i lit. Louis t''.'I)tpatrh. A (JKAXD COACILUAN. HE 13 AT THE HEAD OF THE LOH!J MAYOR OF LONDON'S STAULE. A Mlg Mnn I'liyili ully nnd In oihi-r lie. .ptirt. Tim Cnrrlngn fttiil llnriM-M - f.oril Mnyor AIhjt Inina mid flu, hut the Condinmu . Mxtitrn, An antediluvian spectacle wns pro (mred for me in tho studies of the lord mayor of London. In a vnst courtyard nil enormous carrlago mnilo of gold, to which wore harnessed six magnificent brown horses; harness ornamented with massive copper, chiseled liy mi artist, if not with tiiHtu ut least with a great doal of care, nnd n multitude of ribbons and cockades of a cherry color. On tho soot, nix feet above tho earth, the concliiiinn, but wlmt a coachman, my friends! A coachman tho brood of which bus boon lost since tho time of Louis XIV. Ho wore a wig with a box tuplo linn of curls symmetrically ar ranged, hurl a bicornorcd hnt on his head, and hn woro his livery oh Welling tou after Waterloo niiiNt hnvo worn his uniform. His livery bus a grund uir. It is black nnd gold. Tho frock is ton or nuinnntal. The blac k vnlvnt of it disap pears under a thick embroidery of gold wheat and fluid flowers of purplo silk, but the chest on which it is opened is so nniple, nnd the large epaulets, with gold fringes, fall with a nobility so im posing on arms so fat and so firm, that one cannot find this exhibition of wealth excessive. Tbo enrringo is a poem. It is of the purest rococo style. Mumivoiu the low er part, tho panels of which nre orna mented with allegoric paintings, the box ts exclusively formed of looking glaHsos held together by a light frame work of gilded wood. Everything is gilded, from tho Cupids which hold tho box to tho chimerical figures which or nament tho platform where the grooms stand; from tho Tritons which hold with their strong arms tho seat where tho corpulent Phaothon is enthroned to tho shell where ho places his feet; from tho hub to the tire of tho wheels. Only the interior of the carriage is not gilt. It is ornamented with red cuhIiIoiih. "Have you seen everything?" asks tho fat num. I say "Yes," anil Master Wright descends from his perch. Ho putB axido with sacerdotal slowness ouo by one his biooruerod hat, his wig and his frock. As lie becomes a simple mor tal he talks and smiles. I smile, too, bucmiNO hu strangely resembles Coquo 1 in. llin trumpet shaped uomo is particu larly a success. Master Wright is not too proud of it lie is proud only of his size. Ho talks of it with evident conceit "Do you know," he says confiden tially, "that I uioaHaro from shoulder to shoulder 4? inches? To become a member of tho lioynl guard, whore there are splendid mon, you need only 43 inches. Home of thorn moasnre 49. There are some who measure 44, but there is not one who measures 47. " In the harness room in a special room of which tho first coachman alone has the key Wright hands to me one of the sots of harnoss. Its weight is fabulous. Each horse carries 110 pounds. Add to this the enormous mass of the ear, and yon may understand why It is that ordinary horses will not do for the annual parade. The livery man who has charge of the stables of the lord mayor is compelled to sonrch for two months in advance in order to find the sis horses destined to drag dur ing this momoruble parade the formida ble machine. The rest of the year there are ouly sis horses in the stable. They are all beautiful, but of smaller size. Four of them are harnessed to the seo ond oarriage, the lord mayor's dresi carriage. Two are harnessed to the semi state carriage. The carriages are not the property of the lord mayor, but of the city of Lon don. They are rented by the year. The price is very high, as the coat of arms and the painting on the panels must be changed every year. The second car riage costs 800. The arms of tho oity of London are of chiseled copper. An elegant and fine gallery at the top of the wagon is made of the same metal. There are four beau tiful octagonal lanterns at the four cor ners The panels are black and gold. The ooachinau's seat is oovored with black and red velvet The service of the stablos is composed of a head ooaohuiau, of a soooud ooaoli man, more especially devotod to the lady mayoress; of a private coachman, footman, a groom and two stable boys. Their total wages are 10 a week. "I would wagor," said Wright, with mocking smile, "that von win n.v this uniform was paid for' by the lord niavor only recently. Its cost was 1011. " "Fortunately, " 1 raid, "you do not renew it every year " "Yon nro mistaken Every lord may or has n lively different from that chosen by his predecessor. We change livery every year "And does tho lord mayor havo to pay for all this?" "Certainly, uir. It is adigiiilyf;;cry body may not have. Hut ymi must re tnemher that the most parsimonious of Jonl mayors never Kpcnt less than t'20, OOn a year. iJo you know how much the city allows him? No? Well, the city allows him only 10,000 a year " "How is it, "said I. "tlmt you are not cluing! d as well hh the lord mayor" Master Wright stood up with inflcxi ble riu'idity lie .aid- "Kir, we are ollieeis tit the city of Loudon iipointed by (lie city to our modest fin lion.--, we serve it in the person of s lirnt magistrate, nnd w nervo it fai ifully. but we are not the servant! of iliu lord mayor Lord may ors come and go. Wo remain '' After this suletnii phrase Master Wright cordially extended his hand to me. I shook it, and when he put it back in his pocket it was not empty. Thielmlt-Kissou in Temps. THE SETTER DOG. DROPPED FROM THE CLOUDS. Its ntln' Fowrr I. So Fin . to II. Kource of Wonder. Ths seonl ing power of a well bred, well trained setter fs a thing wholly beyond human conception, mid tho mnr volous exhibitions they givo of this power cau scarcely bo credited. Indeed it would not be wise to seriously dis cuss the qnality of a dog's nose wcro it not possiblo to verify the stories that might bo told of this wonderful power. Who would beliovo that a dog going at a goud gallop, with a dead bird in its mouth, couid scent a livo bird on the ground several yards to one side of his course? And yet there are few sports men who havo not seen a dog point a live bird with a dead bird in his month. It would seem as if the scent of tho bird so near his noso would provent the dog from scenting another bird of tho same variety lying eloso in tho grass several yards from him. A man with a bunch of roses in his face, would not pretend hu could smell a bunch of similar flow ers a foot away. If ho did, no one would believe him. Yet thore is no donht about the set ter being nhlo to smell and point livo birds on tho ground while ho holds a dend bird in his month. He goes fur ther than this. lie points a dead bird on the ground with a dead bird in his mouth, nnd ho knows tho instant ho feels tho scent that it is a (lend bird. This fact ho expresses in his manner of pointing, nnd if it is a wonudod bird ho knows that, too, nnd indicates the fact Most dogs nro taught to point stanehly a livo bird nnd not to point a dead bird. Tho dog will go nt f nil speed right up to his dead bird nnd never pause, a mo ment. If there is a live bird near, bo will poiut that stanehly, nnd tho promptness mid certainty of his deci sions show that the instant ho catches a scent ho knows whether the bird is alive or (V'nd. Ho makes a distinction, too, between a dead bird, a livo bird and a wounded bird. Ho points tho wonndod bird differently from what ho does tho livo bird nnd nsnully springs in nnd entches It. What thero is about a wonnd od bird's scent that ho cun recognize instantly Is a pnzzlo to every ono who hns thonght much of tho question. Chicago Tribune. In the Yarn Itnalnru. Two years ngo Clara and Ethel were of the nluiniiin of the normal school. Uoth were engaged to be married, and they parted with mutual hopes for fu ture happiness. Recently they met and flew into each other's arms. "Oh, Clara, I am so happy I Fred is so good to me. " "And I, Ethel, am happy-and have a lovely hubby, and he has splendid income. He's junior member of the firm of Hustle, Catchnm ft Co. What Is your hubby's business?" "Oh, Fred is in the yarn businessl" "Ho is a manufacturer, then?" "Ob, no; he's a country editor I" Bidgewood (N. J. ) News. To Soften Hard Water. To soften hard water take spirits of wine, a quart; orange flower water, a pint; marine soap, 1 )l pounds. Shave up the soap and put it into the OTange flower wator, hont till the soap dis-' solves, thon add the spirit. A table spoonful of this put into the bottom of the basin will completely soften the wa tor that is put into it for washing. A LHt BMort. The latest story about the weather ooraes from Pontypool, where an old farmer, exasperated by the falseness of' his barometer, which was steadily ris ing while the rain as steadily fell, got np solemnly, took down the glass, and carrying it to the door showed it tho weather. Pick-Me-Up. The serpent moves by elevating the soalea on its abdomen and using them to push tho body forward. Tho wind ings aro always horizontal. The artists who represent the sinuosities as vortioal have never observed the animal in mo tion. It ia Impossible for it to move in that way. The whole of the land on the globe above wator level, if shoveled Into the Pacific, wonld only All one-seventh of It How titu Its florsa Prytonln Won SJROO - For i.imn miu l.owrry. Tho caprices of fortnno ever consti tute a subject for special wonder, bnt' tin glorious uncertainties of tlio tnrf nIToril perhaps a wider scope for rnflco-: Hons on tho tips nnd downs of life than almost nny other spliero of notion. Karl Lowrey, formerly of Pittsburg, but now of Chicago, tells n story I lint illustrates this conclusion very well. On tho morning (if tho day tlmt Itey El Kanta Anita won Ibo American' Derby at Washington park Lowr-y'u little girl, whilo looking over n pro-, gramme of tho events which hn had cnrelessly left about the limine, was struck with tho iiamn "Peytonia," tho. unmn of nil entry in tho flrr.t rnco of tho day. So deeply was slin impressed with, it that she asked lur fa'h: r to phice lu rj taviiif.s of small cliango on Peytonia, tho total nmomit being 2, which ho agreed to do. On nrrlvnl nt tho park hn! ut unco discovered that Peytonia's chances for victory appeared to l.o very, slim, ono bookmaker offering 400 to lj uguinst her. Lowrey, nothing daunted, placed tho $3 per order, and in doing so provoked a smilo from tho mnn on, tho block, which so nettled him that ho promptly placed f5 moro at 40 to 1 for the place. As lias so often happened bo-' fore, Peytouia fnirly "dropped from tho clouds" when the horses were fnirly straightened out in tho stretch, nnd to, the amazement of every one won tho race with comparative ease. Miss Low rey 's fondness for tho namo Peytonia; therefore netted her S00 in cash, while the head of the family was $300 better off for aoting as her commissioner. Pittsburg Dispatch. Dr. Ilolinr. and the Reporter. A young newspaper man, just out of Harvard, who has since made his way. In tho world with entire credit to hira-i self and the college, was sent down to Doverly Farms to interview Dr. Holmes on his birthday. Tho young man, being a gentleman, was a little afraid that he was committing what would be a very uuwelcomo impertineuco, but there was, no wny out of it, except by a way which also led out of his situation. Bo he went with fenr and troinbliug. He found the, doctor ns gracious as could be, and whon tho interview was over the autocrat himself drove the young man down to' the station, chatting pleasantly all the way. At the station there was some time, to wait, and Dr. Holmes, with a twinkle in his eye, snggosted that ho and the, young journalist go over to the store and be weighed. The young man was very, nearly of tho same height and build as' tho doctor, but nt tho time was in rather poor health. Dr. Holmes made the jour nalist get on tho scales first. Ho weigh-, ed exactly 130 pounds. Then Dr. Holmes himself got on and tipped the beam nt 140 nnd was very much pleased. It was plain cnongh that ho had "sized up'" tho young man ns about of bis own pro portions and had guessed that he could outweigh him, and it had tickled his fancy to find himself nt tho ngo of 80 a "hotter man" than the youth. Boston Transcript. Knew tho llopn. Street car conductors aro very often inclined to bu too independent. Ono of this class received a wall merited lesson several days ago. A tall, broad shoul dered follow wished to alight, bnt failed to catch tho conductor's eyo until tho crossing was almost reached. When the conductor did notice his signals, ho growlod out n surly, "You're too late; wait for the next crossing." Without a word the bij fellow Jumped to the rear platform, jammed down tbo brake with u jerk and pulled the trolley from the wire, bringing the car to a stop with unpleasant suddenness. Thon as he lei surely stepped off he pleasantly remark ed to the discomfited conductor, "You top the next time an old railroad man tells you to. " St Louis Post-Dispatch. : Th. A.hs of Paler, In the year 663 A. D., while work men were engaged in trenching tho salt mines in Prussia, they unearthed a tri angular building in which was a col umn of white marble. At the side of the column was a tomb of freestone and over it a slab of agate inscribed with these words, which were in Latin: "Here rest the ashes of Peleg, grand architect of the tower of Babel. Tho Al mighty had pity on him because he be came humble." won.. It has been found that pigeons bred in a long low barn fetch a higher price for shooting matches. Tho birds from early habit, learned in their nesting place, when loosed from the trap start immediately on a long, low flight, in stead of wheeling in air, as some pi geons da The habit makes them more difficult to hit than other birds and en hances their volne. . A ConiiiarUoa. Thomas Sheridan, the father of Lady; DufTerin, once displeased bis father, who, remonstrating with him, exclaim ed, "Why, Tow, my father would neve have permitted me to do such atbing!" "Sir,"said his son in a tone of the greatest indignation, "do you prcaunu to compare your father to my father? Son Francisco Argonaut Bungalows may be built of stud walla on a brick foundation, covered external ly either with tiles, weatherboarding oreoBoted or staiued and varnished, with rough cost or half timbered work. In side the Walls Should h nlutorod