San Frnnclnco Is tho flnnnelal renter for the western half of tho American continent. It i a very Inconsequential town in deed thnt has not cither a homlelils mystery or nn exposition on hnn1. Now thnt petroleum has been dis covered In Egypt, the phrase "Egyp tian darkness" may becomo wholly reminiscent. European governments are some times in doubt ns to tho exact purport of the Monroe doctrine. They ran al ways get an efficlnl and authoritative Interpretation by applying to the Vnlted States. Wireless telegraphy may yet rob fog-bound coasts and the graveyards of the deep of their haunting terrors. It may keep tho orenn traveler In touch with the world's events. It mny be the mrnnrt of raving vessels from rllerctcr and their pnisengers from death. The Brooklyn woman who mnrrlei a former convict In order to make sure of Ills reform believes In heroic measures. If she Is disappointed, b!i will r't a precious little sympathy any where. Tor If there Is one thing absolutely established by Eoaic cen turies of experience It Is that reforma tion, to be genuine and safe, Fhould precede iniuvlar;e, not follow It, re marks the Seattle Pofit-IntelllEunec;'. Trade between the Vnlted States and nil South American countries !! Fcrioiwl.v handicapped for want of snt lsfnctory transportation facilities and by excessivo shipping rates. The transportation companies opcrntini; between the States and South Ameri can ports, as well as between Europe and South America, are none of them controlled by American capital, an-l, as a result. It costs about one thir l more to ship a ton of freight from tho Stntcs than it does from Europear ports. An Industrial arbitration law. mod eled on the New Zealand plan, has just been placed upon the statute books of the commonwealth of Aus tralia. It recognises only registered industrial unions of both employers and employees. The president of tho court must be a Judge of the supreme court. Every care has been taken to make the court an Independent and dignified tribunal. Its powers are very large and no appeal Hcb from its decision. The compulsory provisions of the New Zetland law are of course retained. , 'That the world In general is ad 'vanclng toward temperance is tho ba llet of John O. Woolley, a prohibition leader, who Just has returned to Ills home In Chicago from a seven month') trip around the globe. His expedition wag taken for the purpose of studylu.j the condition of the liquor trame in foreign lands. Ho addressed more than BO temperance meetings, speak Ing against rum In Australia, whiskey in Scotland and kava In Honolulu. Mr. Woolley says that "among all the greater nations I feel sure that Ameil ca is at present the farthest advanced in the struggle for prohibition." The supreme court of North Caroli na in a recent declbion held that 113 a trolley car cannot go around a ve hicle, a wagon must turn out for a car whether going In the same or oppa Bite direction. Another reason thru is given for the superior i-t frtita of Hi:: car is that the public demands It shall travel at a greater speed than an ur inary vetik-lo. At. eniHsinirs, liiiw ever, the rlpblg while not equal are greater in the rasa -if tlif? wic;o;i than they arc- bet ween corners. Tli.1 rlpl.t. Id reserved for pedestrians, with tho exerelsn of remsonal'ln care Id cross the track ul any point that Is convenient. The temporary weakness of the authorized leRtl authorities, when op posed to reckless lawlessness, was curiously illustrated recently at Pen tonville prison, in England. A con vict who munagod to elude the war dors, established himself on the root of the prison, and for thirty hours baffled all attempts to dislodge him. Thousands of spectators showed their sympathy for what wag in the end the under dog by giving him a timev ly warning of the movements of his would-be captors. Ladders placed against the walls were promptly thrown down by the occupant of tho roof. He collected a large pile ol slateg and hurled them at the hoadB of the ofllcera who attempted to scale the ladders. The lame and impotent conclusion wag that he surrendered for a raesg of pottage. Hunger ac complished 'more than the representa tive of organized society wer able to accomplish. Tho Writing t By Thomas Brant Dnrlvage was in the neigh borhood of 40 when ho came back to the home of his ancestors. He was a bachelor, very tall, and, dark of feature. He had been abroid 10 years, and as I, a young physician, had but Intely settled In the adjoining town. 1 had never seen him. I had heard, however, that he had visited many countries, civilized and savage, and had concluded thnt he was tired of roughing it and glad for a chance to settle down beneath the roof of bis fathers. Hf old acquaintances did not seo mm h of him after he came home. He nodded to his former friends, or passed them by without so much as a bow. Not long after bis coming home we learned that he was courting Annie Kimball, the prettiest girl of the neighborhood, already engaged, as we believed, to Steve Morgan, a young man of steady habits, but without a tithe of the wealth possessed by Brant Dmivnge. Old Kimball, Annie's father, ns dissipated, and, Just then, financially embarrassed, and tho truth is that he sold his child to Brant Dnrlvage, forc ing her to break her engagement with young Morgan, who denounced tho bargain in bitter language whenever he could find anybody to listen to him. At times ho swore that he would "get even' with the man who had come be tween him and Annie. For several weeks matters drifted rIoiik' quietly. If Dmivnge henrd of Morgan's hot wirds and threats, he fr.ld nothing. Ho seemed perfectly contented with the conquest he had won, the wedding day had been set, and Annie bad become resigned to tho fate from which there seemed no es cape. Stove Morgan had given tip his trade, but not bis daily hnbit of curs ing Brant Dnrlvage. He had lost flesh, and his eyes had a wolfish, vengeful look. In common with oth en:, I fully expected n tragedy of tome kind, and I went so far as to share my opinion wiin the constable, who nod ded approvingly. Tho tragedy came, but not In tho manner expected. At ten o'clock on the night before tho dny set apart for the wedding a man whem I knew to be Brant Durivage'g factotum, threw open my office door, and rushing in, startled mo with the intelligence that his master had Juvt been shot. Thinking immediately of Steve Morgan, I promised to repair to the house at once, and in a short time I crossed the threshold for the nrrt time. I wag conducted to an upper room, where I found the dark-faced man lying unconscious on a bed, hav ing been carried to his chamber by a servant who, standing by me, said ...at Dnrlvage had ben shot through tne open window of the library, which was on tbe ground floor. "I pulled this out of the wound," continued tho man, taking an arrow from the table, "but I'm afraid there's a bit of It left. He's shot under the left shoulder and and from behind; a jad wound, I'm thinking." And the servant shook his head. I fell at once to examining my pa tient, and discovered that while the barb had not gone deep enough tc. touch a vltul organ, the wound was dangerous, especially u uie shaft bad been poisoned. I 'found also that tho servant was right about a piece of the arraw head remaining .n the hurt, for I removed It with my forceps and laid It alongside the weapon on the table. Meantime tho people attached to the estate were looking for the person who had attempted Dmivage's life. The town consta..io had been sum moned and tho town itself was al ready in an uproar. 1 remained with Dmivnge tint 11 I could leave him to tho care of a nurae, !.nd with ar row and the dctachi d head, 1 went ttaek to my office. I was clear to m that the shaft bad como from son-) illstant land. I hud Keen ninny savaire Ircapons In collections, but never en. Hke it. Tile wut.'t proper was a 1 1 -! L rood, very slrak.lu and hard. One end had been t ill off transversely end llio ouior noi cited lu order to receive the bow sdrinnf. Next i.me r, piece of bone ner.iiy three Inches in lent;:'.!. One end of It had been unseed inm tho split, or op'-n end of the hhr, ;'t., while the other end of tho Ikiii.i w.i.: flipped a short piece- of rood, ov.-.r which, in turn, a uticiiK wrapping ..(' Intestine had In-cn placed. All till:; formed a socket for the trip head of ti.e arrow, the none merely Riving the i.liatt proper weight. 1 saw thi3 much liy tho light of my otuee lamp; but I saw more. Tho "head" was tho piece I had ex tracted trout the wound. It was of Ivory, and 1 now saw that It had been attached to the bono weight In 411th a manner as to loosen Itself when anyone attempted to pull It from tho victim's body. Under tne microscope I saw that the head of the slngub.r shaft had been coated with a sub stance resembling glue, but which I Jeclded was some deadly poison. It was bitter an nauseating when applied to tho tongue, and I had no doubt thut its virus wag then spreading Itself through out Brant Durivage'g system. 1 went back to the estate again bo fore daylight, and found my patient raving in delirium. 1 administered opiate aftor opiate, and a long time passed before the medicine produced tho slightest effect. Tho ' servants said ho bad not spoken rationally since the shot, not even during his quiet moments, and this gave mn small hopes of pulling him through. The nut morning Stave Morgan ,5 on tho Wall. C. r1arbauir.fi. wag arrested on usl Ion. Thlg dIJ not astonish mo after wb'at tho pig headed constable had said the night, before. Nobody believed the young man guilty, though he did not express any sympathy for Dnrlvage, and after a hearing bo wag discharged. He was strangely non committal during the ex amination, and when it was over ho camo Into my office and took a chair. "Doctor," said ho. leaning toward me with a smile, "they didn't ask me to tell what I saw, did they?" "I believe they did not, Steve," I answered, wondering what ho knew. "I saw the man that did it!" I looked strangely at him, wonder ing if he was not losing his wits. "I saw him, but not till nftcr tho shot," Steve went on. "I was up to the houso Inst night. I went there to ask Brant Dmivnge to listen to mo for a minute, though I don't expect he'd havo done it. Just as I wag en tering the garden, for I knew t would find him In tho library with the win dow up, I heard a sharp cry, and the next moment there pnssed a little man carrying In one hand a box. This is as true as gospel, doctor! Ho never saw me though I could have touched him while .he was passing; but I would not becnuFo I thought he hnd finished Dmivnge. Morgan then went on and described the man with a minuteness that as tonished me. He did it so well I thought I could see him beforo mo, and at the end of his story ho declared his intention cf repeating hig adven ture to no one else, not even in tho interests of Justice. '"If ho gits well, he'll marry An nie," said Morgan, savagely, "and if he dies, let him rot without being avenged!" I watched Dnrivage closely for ten days. I could seo that the secret poison was at work, and tho rase war. a queer study that opene d up to mo a new field for Investigation. During those ten days the wounded man seemed to suffer a thousand deaths. On the afternoon of the eleventh day I was hurried over to the houne by the butler, who said that Durlvago was writing on the wall before his cot. At tho foot of tho stair we were met by the nurse, who with blanched fnce cried that all was over. Bounding tip the flight two steps at a time, I rushed into the bedroom and found Dnrlvage lying on hig fnce on the floor. "You should have seen and heard him," said tho frightened servant. "He awoke and called at tho top of his voice for a pencil. 1 ran and got him one, thrusting it into his hand when I came back. As bis finger closed on It he laughed like a fiend, and rising in bed, wrote what you seo on the wall yonder, and then fell back and writhed till he pitched out upon the floor. Before this 1 was at the e-ot and with burning eyes was looking nay star ingat the writing on the wall, "K'AA K'AA K'AA." Here was another mystery. "What did he say alter that?" 1 asked, turning to the two servants, while I pointed to tho writing on the wall. "He pronounced three times some thing that sounded like "kile' or 'Kala haetlwe," " was the nurse's answer. "Beforo I could reach hint he wag dead." I was more than ever mystified. I have never heard of the written or spoken words. They were all "fireek" to mo, but I felt that they were con nected with tte awful death Brant Dnrlvage had died. During the no;t few ilns thc-.-e ran through my mind nothing but "K'na. Kan. K'aa." I had iho nurse re prat "Kala haetlwe" until 1 liEtl r.mrurrod It, ami until 1 left the Sh.-op.-Mi-o village; Mid loc.it- d In London, "it event In my cur-er which to;ik place r. y.'.ir inter, 1 did not lei the B 1 lijiU 1 r i- vc"d(! csrpe ti.t. r-uri:-!; !'.;.-; p :od t.tee Merman t'itl not ;a Lack to .tiini.-. li' v. 100 mo thai hi? wot id an: do so n.uil iho niysi-t'-ry et.norKd v.i:p l'.-i v. i.-::'.!t W: s r.nivt .:, n-id ! f iV.-nc l''c :;v'n iio:i v.uu'.i'i v.evi r ten.' and Ulna the two y a my K.v.-:k it:., Of... i', .dii 1 wa--. tii. - to iMi.'i! I ii 11 .1 v.-;i,i ;.-:d In r'n run n'.cr i:' a l.ulei:er':i 1 art near t'le r.i::d. Ho l.nd Istvr. r a !"! tt to his iV..;'nusi noar !;. nnd !.iv h'lwidy and gf.sniiii;; cm a rr.llet of diner;: rairs. The laor.nni 1 t.tw 1 !"..? nip.ii ;i cirano lh"il! tout, p.-.?-c: f t ien o.' mo. and 1 ivc.ile.l Eicve Mcrgbn'B (Uvcriptlon of t.'.o owner of the polso.icu arrow. V.'iiea I bad divs.uvl th- voen.ls made by the heavy wheels of tho cart, and bad my patient sluing up. v.li.i a hot. drink before Mm and his UllK dark fingers encircling the glass, 1 asked him who and what, he v.ai. "I'm a Bushman." said lie with a chuckle, and then, Bering the lo.'k of .litiiellef that I exhibited, he went on: "You don't think bo? I can prove it. Look here." He leaned toward bla pallet, and to my utter astonishment took from beneath the pillow of rags a bow and two arrows. 1 could not rpivsa a cry of amazement, and did not try. The dark-faced little man wbb hold ing the arrows toward me, and I could see that they were exactly like tho one which bad kilied Brant Durivago. "I had three, but I lost onj ome time ago," continued my patient. "Where did I loae it? Never mind that, doctor. I could go back to the spot, but I will not. Ho, ho. He knew what It was all the time. My little arrows are more dangerous than they look. I prick your band with cno, and all your skill cannot save your life, The marurn tree grows no where but among tho Bojeamcn, tba llttlo men of South Africa. It looks liko your elm, but It has many thorns. Its leaves are tho homes of the grub that builds liousg liko the silkworm. When we want poison for our arrowa we take a grub between thumb and finger, and make It shed Its greenish fluids upon the Ivory bead of the shaft. That is all. Tho marurn grub is death. How does the victim Ho, Vh? Ho writhes In agony. Ho be comes a giant in hig mndnesfl. Ho has few lucid intervals. It Is terrible, no, ho!" I was holding one of the arrows In my hands. "What do you call your poison?" I RFked, loklng up Into his face, which had the leer of a fiend Incarnate. "K'aa, answered the little mnn. with a laugh. Some people call It N'gwa, but K'aa fa Its name." I was calm now. "And Its antidote?" I said. "We seldom tell that It has one," grinned the stranger. "But I'll tell yon, doctor. Tho antidote Is 'Kala haetlwe,' the product of a small plant thnt in our country beats llttlo star Bhnped flowers." Tho man on tho pallet allowed hla gnzo to wander from my fnco to the nrrows. Ho seemed to bo rejoicing in spirit over some stirring event. "Your lost arrow is In my office," I said, fixing my eyes on the man. "I took the ivory head from Brant Purl vage.'g back. I now know why ho vroto 'K'aa, K'aa!' on the wall an. I died crying 'Kala hnetlwe.'" Tho man from South Africa fell back, and regarded mo with gaping month. "Why didn't he b t me alone In my lovo affair?" lie exclaimed. 1 toll him that If lie took Mina away from me. I'd follow him all over the world with my arrow tipped with K'an. He would not take my warning, ami 1 was forced to keep my word. Did bo die hard, doctor?" The next day I wrote Steve Morgan down in Shropshire all about my startling discovery, and when I ?ent an officer to look alter my patient ho was found to have gashe.l bis throat with one of hfa own nrrows, and In an hour was dead. In courpe of time. I nm pleased to relate, Steve and An r.lo b-K-ame mnn and wife, but I am told that for ninny years on the wall of a certain room In Shropshire was to be seen this singular thrilling In scription: K'AA! K'AA K'AA!" The Home Magazine. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. A man should weigh 26 pounds for every foot of his height, Mozart holds the record of having written 1124 compositions. A New York assemblyman has in troduced in the legislature a bill mak ing It a misdemeanor to "flirt on a public thoroughfare." In 1SS2 the speed record on a hlg'i bicycle was 20 mll.'s In an hour and 12 minutes. Behind a motor pacer a rider has recently covered 40 miles lu an hour. The Fkln of the muckox, which Is a denizen of the "Barren Grounds" and the Arctic region of Canada, has tak en the plate of that of the extinct buffalo for sleigh robes. It varies in price from 130 to as low an $3 for a poor article. An inimciiFO geyser has been discov ered in Kotomnliuun, New Zealand. It covers nn area an acre In extent and constantly throws columns of water to vaHt heights, some of them ascending nun feet, with e louds of steam which t;o much higher. The !own nijnenie court has nt;nl:i fixed tho limit of value thnt. may be platod on a rr-an't; lo;; ul $vJ0i). In .1 tintihu' coxo some years ngo Hie low.i tiupre.mc co:rt decided Hint a verdict for 1 12 inm was cxt c: !vp, and that it i.'.U;tlld It t ill tu'.v n to -0"il. The teh j.l: -Til c .i'Tlif,:' of Cleve- l;:n. O., p.as in: tliuo'ti 1111 inloraial ie:i ;:ra.i, jrom wniih ft'bscribcrs ifiy ei. and r.". i i. ; wh.v.ivn knowl. i;.' !:;y v!: 'i !'.,:'.; t'l'i he Mil piled from laij.,.. r' U.'cnr;- ilhva.'y. Dr.rln:; the ix, iiu'iii!: of Its o-it -ratio:', it In naid 1 !;;:ve demonstrated its M.le.e and to 1- a I'aitcvn tltiii illicit be followed in ;hi r cities. Seven miles west cf Conii'.ilhvill Ta., a poitl in of an Indian montid lias been uncovered and innumerable in terenlng relics haro hen found. A baby's lcninins bad a lit-titlaee of beads mado out o: callously wrought deer horns. Strangely-shaped pipes, many arrow heads, sr.ndr.tunn wheels, which are inipposed to have been used by the ulsortglnes for the making cf stone Imnlementti; marine shells and muny other trinkets were eUo found. Till I.ntiBimt Mmum Arch Itrlilg. The work upon the great stoho arrb. bridge whlcn is being erected by the Pennsylvania railroad across the Sus quehanna river at Rockvllle, about dvo nillea above Harrlsburg, is rapidly noaring completion. The masonry work of the bridge, consisting' of 48 70-foot spans, has been completed, and tho contractors are now putting the asphalt covering over the arches. When this is completed the work of filling In, grading and ballasting will be begun and tho four tracks put down. Work upon this, the longest stone arch railroad bridge In the world, wus begun less than two years ago. Philadelphia Record, A WOODLAND TRACEDY. Maine tli ftntjr of it otlonlnlt nntt Tiro l-'oxrn. Nothing In more Interesting to n lover of outdoor life than the self written histories of wild animals that may be read in their footprints in the snow in the winter time. Bv following these tracks one ran gain a clearer Insight Into the lives of these seldom seen denizens of the for rst than ran be bad in nny other way short of actual observation. The fox and the skunk respectively are the greatest nocturnal wanderers. Often I have followed the track of tlw latter, on interesting and much nm ligned animal, and 1 have come to the conclusion that niinly of his Journejs have been tnkrn merely for exercise, for 1 have frequently seen where he had left his den and traveled for gome distance without apparent object mid then returned to his hole. My Interest in a skunk's track bus waned since the day 1 trailed nm in'u a hollow rotten log which enved lu ns I stepped upon It. letting me down upon the skunk, wiio was still Inside. He rcMi ntcil my sudden npnt nrnn -e: in hln characteristic manner, nnd I innd; n hasty exit from the scene. It was quite Impossible for nn to be s-lf-conci Ited for several .lays thereafter. But a fox track! I nm nfinltl to My how many miles I have wcndi rod while following these, to nn, most Ins elnntlng footprints. Here be dug a hole Into this rotten log In search of grubs; hen bo dashed up nnd down this old fence In a ain effort to (r.pturi a red quiirel who-.e footprints wo enn nee on the ir.lh', n'lj who finally found a safe i"iui;i. in this hollow lug; and t'tollur on vr find where ttt ye ai-1 :n.i,le a d- toer l".to n coinnYVil, wlit -o hi. burrowed into a shock In ntnr'h .l fit 1.1 mice. Ono Incident, allowing hov: fr:xeo hunt In couples v.nn 1,0 intt resting; l i me that I v l'.t in-c to set It down. I was nut lnbblt huntim." on- win ter afternoon with n beagle, but. though the dog soon s'urte.l the i,ani . I found 1 was not to secure a chut, an tho little nnlnuil wisely kept within the confines cf an impenetrable thick et: and after a long wait I decltle.l that IT I was to dine off "Bier Ilabblt" 1 would have to hunt up another mem ber of the family. Half a milt tiwny I knew where one had Its burrow at tho foot of a largo maple. Ho had been waxing fat all winter on our sweet corn, and In Im agination I saw him on the platter roasted to a rich brown, nnd I licked my Ill's in nnlieipntlou. Herein, however, 1 was doomed, to disappointment, for on peering around a dump of evergreens near the hole I saw a more expert hunter ha 1 been there beforo me 1 walked up to the burrow and spent somo time ex. smlnln.'t the tracks around it, and this was the result of my observation: Tho previous night two foxes lin.l come along the tower log road which left the forest at a point near the bur row. They had been traveling in single file fox-fashion, number two stepping Into the footprints of number one. Whe-n they had reached a point a few rods from tin hole they either saw or scented the rabbit, for both bad dropped Hat in tho snow and crawled forward a few yards to tho shelter of a hillock, whera they evl dently laid their plans for the capture of bunny, who was out lu the corn field eating what proved to be his last meal. From the hillock one fox crept for ward pushing the light snow up In fremt of Mm, so that ho must have boon .completely hidden from view. In this manner bo made his way onward till within ten feet of tho hole, when ho made a couple of bounds that hud brought him on top of It. In Hie meantime the second fox hnd mndo a long circuit over tho bill and crept down upon tho Intended victim, from whom be v.ns hidden by a r.vl len-e. ' When opponito bunny, nud about 2" yams away, Heynnnl hud stopped tbrouph the feme i.n.l hound ed forward inward the prey, whom li-' evidently expected to come upon 11:1 nwai-.'H. "Brer Hit," however, wan not to be i :',ii;.iit nnppintr; villi a ru ii mi l a do'iliV- he hud ova led lis toe i.e.d ::-hoi nil' in the iliri'ftitm of hi.t Iinio-.v, tho hungry fox e'e.o behind; nun d-iwn nivo :s th li. i.l Hi- v l,;id : p. ,1, 1 :.:t ring n; lu or leu let at iv.:y b ill). Poor I'linry! Ili.w v.t.h he 1 1 :i i v V'-M In Pi i'ny, ly lis bnrro.v. vi' ii hud rlways proved a safe niti ; I: ' wan sealiii;; bin i.ile. i'ti'vn to t':.' fence, 1 la o'!'.;li II, into won.ei and t: . 10 within nn let of iho biirrr.v, i.i.d tho raiililt'i truck vent 1:0 fr.rth-r. Tho wi.itltiq fox bad spn'r.g out to meet him. There was a trauinlt.d sput lu tin? buoy, a little bum h cf gray fur, end a single dr;ip of blood. Thct v.-as all, yet a whole wood land tragedy v.iu written in these foot prints in the fiTost. Correspondenco In Portal and Stream. M'liftra iNaturo U Ht Her l.fnt. Maine's woods are known of all men, but few realize that, va:.t awl deep as they are, they exceed seven fold tho extent of the "Black Forent" of Germany, and cover nearly one-half (9.000,000 acres) or the area of the state. Hidden within these shaded wilds, the home of tho moose, Amer ica's largest gnmo animal, there nro more than 1800 lakes, comprising one fifth of the surface of the Ftate. Their pure, pelucid waters fairly abound In fish of many kinds. In only three or four spots on this globe may one find in the so m d area an equul number i f la ices and ponds. Combined, they rep resent a water surface of 2300 squure miles. From these sources flow OOuO rivers and streams.T-Peai-Eon's Maga-cine. I THE JEFFERSON I SUPPLY COMPANY Being the largest distributor of General Merchandise in this vicinity, is always in Fosition to give the bct quality of goods, ts aim is not to sell rou cheap goods but when quality is considered the price will al ways be found right. Its departments are all well filled, and among the specialties handled may be men tioned L. Adler Bros., Rochester, N. Y., Clothing, than which there is none better made; vv. L. Douglass Shoe Co., Brockton, Mass., Shoes; Curtice Bros. Co., Rochester, N. Y., Canned Goods; and rillsbury's Flour. This is a fair representation of the class of goods it is selling to its customers. B iiiauiiuuiuiiiiiiiuiiaiiiuiiiuiiiuiiimuiuiiuiiiiiiuiuiiss: :i3ij:m ins un Brookvilh Vn. Since 1S78. J2 FIRST-CLASS COmPflNIES, JOHN TIU'lXHvX, Solicitor, Keynoldsville, I'enn'n. BUFFALO. E3CSESTEH & PITTSBURGH BY. ! CONDENSED TIMS TABLE IN 1 I KIXT KeiV. S, 1 '01. NoliTH lltit'KI). r 1 r HASTRHN TIME. 8 I II I 2 . II. l M. j V. II. J.eiive'.l A. . A. M. I l'PMiitru Alltglu-rir I " lluil.r I.... irnltvYlllit ! Wt-st Mtwj'roYo. ... lVlin Ilnvtntl ! ... t car. 10 Ii'., T 1 iv -iu uu B 51' 6 f-V 8 '"i 11 2-2 11 !1 6 ill' 0 rut, 1'2 A') runxMitiiwne-y nr a. m. I TJ e r. M. I'uiixMiliiuiiev Iv 1 "1 I11 !.' lot 1 e.'i 7 1 7 ! 7 41 S (!f. . H l.'i P. H. ' 1 22 t !:.' 1 iV. 2 r.' Bit? H'lii '. .tc M. Jumtt.'ii IMIIIniH 0 (M 12 .'.'I 0 V, 11 Mi J Sli! 2 r, KnlW rift-lc Urm-knnyYille.... l!tt;,Mvny Jhittttilmrj' HI.Jiwcll Nf'lVlMII IlrmJtunl Ar, I, ii.: H ... I! . 4 Hi!. f. (It'll . 0 2! . f. Oil . '. . I 2 2K J 3 1U 4 14 ' Vou A. II. 7 15 V45 A. If. 7 i 7 II IS III I 1 iS 1 M ..". a m 3 so H'lffHin Af. II i H W I. Arrive.' a. 11. 1 r. i. ! r. m. 1 1 A 1-1 1 1 Ii n:: I Imln lw.vt'ii Mtnli-r for I'tmxutnT-IK'- 7:50 A. j. dully, cm-i-i t H'liiiinyi. SiiITIt l 11 'K Ii. l:Af.ri:rs T'ltr. I.envp. A. II. I a. 11. a. 11. r. h. t 7 t.'.U... C1"" Li.,"';' P. M l P. m! 12 l 8 l.'i p. 11. y i) 111 it "a. m. norli'trr . iliulu!.. .1,1. . I ... M. . t 7 4- Brnilfiinl J,v 12 4f M'tvton Ml.. I I'M MI JiihiifonburK Ktiljitv-iy ItrniikwcvvUk'... . Knlls i:reeb Illinois C. A: M. Jiim-tiii'.i. Hip- ttttn I'uiixiu Inu ht-v til I'tiiixniil.-iwiiey h ltiivlot Fi-Iiij Wi-tir. Mo'iltovc. . I'l-Mk'SVllIt' Iltill.-r ll.'irlii'-y I "limbuii; 12 ::ti: 12 M 1 42 1 fill 2 an '' 47. 2 f'.'i 6 f.11 j. 7 1'! 8 l H l-'i 8 r. 2, (i u:i 9 1:. 0 22. 9 4.' 10 (11 P. !l. 12 '.1 r.'i li' ;tn lu 4! II m II Hi II 111 ! 1 4r. a. . 1 M 2 21 2 S7 II 3 :w 3 :i4 4 on t IK 4 2tJ 4 Ml I Ii -tit 7 v 7 Sli f II 1: , 8 22 . .i.-.!. U 'liii. I1 47. 11 0" . I f. It) 0 i.- 7 ::o c j;.!, Arrjvtv a. v. ! Atlili! i.iMu- irain I'.-iivi.i !er i:s p. m. .luily, v..'i1. A. M. tint- '.in .iil!r.vi:t'y lor ( t.!:.M:i :::;.li I'ivrtinM. p. .4. i p. r. 1 : H .'ill 1 1 f l'.: f- t'j 12: 7 m! 11 i 1". Hi t V in .11 , P. V.! A. .. lii'V . ..'.-' I .1 .: vi : r. Ir. y.. I Vin'in 1 l.ili-iV :i'- ( :t . thi.ly 0 tin'!: !.,..:ri ti".,. ( I'oi ni N. V. J,: ' ;. Y. L. M.SNYDER, Tract ical Iloreo-Shoer and General Ulacksmith, lioraa-Hhnotnirdonein the nea?eit mannel mil by tho iult'itt linuroved uiutboda. He i.ulrlii V of all kintU carefully and promptly (lime. bATlhl-Al-llOX UUAUAMTEKU. horse; clipping Have ni revolved 11 cotnpluto nt of Ma chine! horh cllipoia of latest ntylo 'Vi pattnra r net hiii prepared to do clliipinn la the but ptMaililH uiiuiuer at rettHonitlile ratea. Jacimou 61. uaar FKiii, UaynoliUvlllt.Fs, The elctrlo IIrIU towers of Aurora, III., consti'iicted in 1883, and the plo- I neur lusulatlon of tbat typo, havo been 1 taken down. The number of sheep In Australia to day Is given as about 87,000,000. ajstc BUSIN"ESSTCXRDS. M MITCHELL, ATTORX E Y-AT-LAW. Offlpt nn Wi-Ht Mutn utre-e-t, opposite ths- Commeri'liil Holol, Huynnltttiv lilt), 1 q m. Mcdonald, attorney-at-law, Nolnry I'iiIiIIr, re-nl e-lnte ir(-nt, PutrnO Pi:iiiftl. rollprtimiii nmrlo nromiitiy. Olllcs I11 Nolan block, Ituynoltlxvllfu, Pu. . gMITU M. McCREIOHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, fJotury Hulillc untl I!phI Etnt Agent. Col. nt'ttoim will ropplvo prompt ntleiillon. OlMcs In Frtiphllt'li A: llnury block, auar uustoflice. lle-ynolilsvlllu l'n. C. WHEELER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. omee ujitnir1n Stoke Bulldlns, corner Miilu and I- If Hi tiui'tH. JJU. 13. E. HOOVER, KEYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Revltlent tltintlst. In the llnnvnr bulldlna net dimr to i-ito(Ili:e, Mulu lreut. Ouutl uee In opftnitlnir. jyll. U L. MEANS, DENTIST, Offlc on f r-onil floor of First Natloual bans bulltlltiK. Main slret t. D U. R. DEVERE KING. DENTIST, OfnVe on aecnnd floor KcynoldTllle Ria Kntoie llldif. Mulnetieot Httyuoldnvllle, P. jyll. W. A. HENRY, DENTIST, Offlt'e on uncond floor of Henry Bros, brlol bulltlltiK, Muln strettt. E. NEFF- JUSTICE OP THE PEACE And Ruul Estnte Agent, Keynoldsville, Pa. JT WflLN In UUUI1T.TRY find lirvd cured thoutanda et et'f m of Nervnu JiiieatM, tucK lJfii.if,ljii.r)C)i( sicpst fiei and Vftriccv-ilr, Atroby,.a 'i'hcyclrar tha brain, atrrnfjtlier tUo circuUtiun. n.ka umcitte ( M A rerfect and irrpart heUSf I' TxS "iH v'?"r he vlioln bciri;. Ait 1 'ly' tira,n Oirs tr cheeked M'flltO f Clin ttTIKnntn- Ur.kss pjiienta WllUi.ej nalili njo j,.-0nerlv eurcii. their condl tion fi(eii vrorriT them into Inanity, Conntmp tt ip or Io?i'fl. -.iIfd I'liroii pr boxj t boxrt, wiili IrrniaO lr.t Rtiirantr-a to cu' Of ft(uiiJ th ticuey, 5 oo. i-ati int (' booli. Fur Ha'. a by It. Ah'x stokn EVERY WOWAM m fVimntinica BT.1 r-fllltilo-uioiultly regulating laudulso. DR. PEAL'S X2 pENPJYROYAL piLLS A ra rirottif t. oafn and certain In reeult. The gniiu 'i. t i". ival'i, tievor Uiwppoiat, il.CO par box, Ver aala by B. Alex. BtoUa. lf 2fil ' riC7::.,Li;.si:a. YOUNG'S K PLANING MILL You will find Rash, Doors, Frames nnd Finish of all kinds, KotiRh nnd Dressed Lumber, High Grade Var nishes, Lead and Oil Colors in all shades. And also an overstock of Nails which I will sell cheap. J. V. YOUNG, Prop. 3333 TI "TTTTTTTl 'XWTT
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers