' ' . 1 ' . Japan has acquired the American Ulnlng car syatcm at a Jump without pausing at "e railway sandwich stage, Brooks Adams belteres that warn, flnnnclal pai tea and revolution! are the efforts of society and readjustment after Its equilibrium ' has been de stroyed. 'A crusade against the adulteration of milk has ben started In Paris, In the hope of decreasing the great mor tality of Infants, which Is attributed to this cause. General Joseph Wheeler told a boy's brigade In Philadelphia the other night that his earnest hope Is that we shall never have another war, and he adJed that there wll never be any necessity for one "If all persons will be good." The foreign born clement In New York City numbers 1,270,069, of whom Great Britain has contributed 365,452, Scandinavia, 49,061; the Teutonic countries 397,642, the Latin races 161, E96, the Slavonic countries 245,144, and Astatic countries 8964. Who can set bound to trolley ex tensions In these days? Within a wonderfully short time surface elec tric cars will be running without breaks, it is claimed, between New York City and Boston, Washington nJ other large cities. No 'one of these lines, however, should be per mitted to ruin the boulevards and pleasure drives In suburban districts. The trolley companies should pur chase the right of way,'"as the steam railroads lo, contends the New York Tribune. Asia Minor suffers as greatly from earthquakes as Mexico, perhaps mora so. The calamity which has now overtaken Shamaka, over near the Caspian sea, was paralleled at Acbal kalek about two years ago. About 600 people were killed at that time. Only a few months before 1500 lives were lost In the province of Smyrna, on tho Mediterranean. Shamaka has been particularly famous for such shocks, but in spite of them was long a place f official residence, and even now is the centre of a large silk industry. The Btory Is told of a New England r, about 70 years old, and apparently a vegetarian, who, having learned that Henry Van Dyke, author of "The Rul ing Passion," made occasional expedi tions to Canada and elsewhere in search of big game, recently sent to 'him a pen drawing made by himself of a stag a charming piece of work for a man of such years and under neath placed ibis motto. In large let ters: "Thou shalt not kill." Dr. Van Dyke, in acknowledging receipt of the drawing, thanked his friend for his kindness, and sugested that under cer tain conditions a more appropriate text would be Acts x, 13: "Rise, Peter, kill and eat" Anent Mr. Rockefeller's declaration that honesty, perserverance anj indus try are the essential requisites for business, light on the accuracy of that contention may be cast by the follow ing facts: In a British colony close to the newest of our insular posses sions there lives a certain Portuguese person who is a sugar planter, and who has made a remarkable business success. While bis neighbors have slowly drifted down from wealth into something desperately close to hope les ruin, this man has prospered, he has added estate to estate, and, de spite the competition and barriers, he has gone on steadily piling up money. He began life as a plantation laborer without a shilling; he is so illiterate that he cannot sign his name or keep even the rudost of accounts. His neighbors admit that he performs his contracts, but they credit him with no remarkable honesty, and neither bis Industry nor his perseverance is at all beyond the ordinary tropical standard. The fact is that he had a natural genius for raising sugar in that par ticular island, ami fate was kind enough to carry him to what Is prob ably the one place in all the world where his special ability could be fully developed. The world is full of Just such cases, and aide by side with them are other cases, of men honest, indus trious, and persevering, who haven't the knack of making lots of money. They are good men, hut they are not good .business men an4 what real difference does It make if they are Dot? Certainly It doesn't prove that they are failures, nor doe It give rich men the right to enrage them by de-, clarlng that men get rich by the exor cise of honesty, industry, and perse verance when the; don't do any such thing, no matter how honest, industri ous and persevering they may be, ex claims the New York Times. INDIVIDUALISM. Each man, a world to other wirldi half known Turn on a tiny axis of his owni Mis full life orhlt In a pathway dim To brother planets that revolve with htm. William H. Hayne, In HaClure's. MISS KATE. J - t Bt Jex E. 8omtaToff. 81ender, but not slim, with soft. harel eyes and long lashes, pale com plexion, light brown hair, with hero and there a strand of gray, not pretty but attractive looking, simple In man ner, speech and dress that was Miss Kate. That she was an old maid was be yond dispute. Her most Intimate friend would not have denied It if he could; though for the matter of that he could not, belonging, as he did. to the feline species, and not being blessed with the power of speech. She was "turned" 35 If she was a day, and the most hopeful of that social scourge as match makers had long since scratched her name off their list of possibilities. Miss Kate lived in her own cottage, and the lawn In front of it was the neatest In Orantley, as the little par lor Inside was the tidiest. The rat that monopolized the hearth nig in the parlor of evenings was as sleek an could be, and exceptionally well be haved. The furniture was old-fashioned, but the easy chairs wero com fortable, and the room certainly had a cozy appearance. That Miss Kate had a good heart and a kind one I ran vouch for, and sn could many a barefooted lad and many an overworked factory girl. There was no Sunday school teacher In Grantley as beloved by her scholar?, and they all knew the flavor of her fa mous cookies. I was not surprised to hear one day that Miss Kate had had a bit of ro mance in her life that the younger generation had never heard of and tr.e older ones had nearly forgotten. Thero had been a certain handsome young man who had courted her in the old days and not unsuccessfully. He had been practicing law for three or four years and his prospects were bright. He w-as genial In his manner, but proud to a fault. He was tall and broad shouldered, had very black hair and fyea to match. He had never been a lady's man, and despite the fact that many jaunty caps were set for him, he had not responded until he met Kate Morton at a church festival. From that evening he war a determined wooer ,and although she did not apparently reciprocate at first, his youth, good looks and a win ning tongue were Anally successful. So at laBt she loved him In return and tho gossips began to wonder when the day would be set and to surrul?o among themselves that it had been set and was still a secret. Whether it really had or bad not ben Seth Gray knew and Miss Kate knew, but the gossips never found out. Of the matrimonially Inclined young ladles who had set their caps for Seth Gray before tue fateful church festi val, none had set them so art fully and hopefully as Barbara Martin. She was a pretty girl, with sparkling black eyes and wont to deck out in tho gayest colors and ribbons Imaginable. She had Spanish blood in her veins, and was proud of it, and proud of her temper, too. Although Seth had never paid her any serious attention, she had ap peared atractlvo to him until he met Kate. If it had not been for that there is ho telling what might have hap pened. Miss Martin was not a young lady to submit to a total eclipse calmly, and one day, about the time that the gossips had setled it satisfactorily, among themselves that the day had finally been set, she came to the con clusion that matters had progressed far enough, and mado an afternoon call on her successful rival. She left her pretty airs and graces at home with her gay ribbons that day, and was a sad enough figure when her hostess ushered her into the parlor the same little parlor, although Miss Kate's mother was living then, and it was brighter to her then it was In after years. Barbara Martin told her story well, and wept seemingly bitter tears over It. She told how Seth Gray had wooed and won and bad promised to marry her, and how the day had been named, and bow he had kept up the cruel de ception ever after be met Kate her self, and how heartlessly be had finally thrown her overhand laughed at her. Then, when she saV that the girl at her side appeared sorely troubled, she became remorseful and vowed that she ought not to have told ber. Then she grew hysterical and railed against all men, and despised herself for an idiot to have trusted one of them. Her audlor was very quiet through It all, but Barbara Martin knew that her shaft had been a straight one, and went home exulting. After she baj gone, Kate did what many another girl in her place would have done ; she had a hard cry. She did not tell her mother. She could not have told any one. She hated to think that even Barbara Martin knew the man she loved, in such an altered light, but the mere fact of thinking of htm softened her and she hoped ay, in the loyalty of her heart she trusted that Seth had been misunderstood. There snould be no. misunderstand ing between them. She determined to tell him that evening, when he called, all. that she, had heard. But tangled gh her trouble was a sore feeling of disappointment that Beth could have -even carelessly trifled with an other girl, and the feeling, too, of un conscious Jealously In the thought that he had prolonged the farce after he had began wooing of herself. It was a feeling akin to resentment against uim, in JiiBtlce to herself. When he entered the parlor a few noura later, he knew at once that something was wrong and Kate did not leave htm long In doubt. She told him the whole story, only withholding the name of her informant She kept back her tears, too, and the effort made her voire hard. She waited for htm to speak when she had finished, and If they had been siting nearer to each other would have touched bis band. I said that Seth Gray was proud, and if ever a proud man was humiliated that man was himself. No other proof than her own voice rould have made him think that this young woman rould believe for a moment such a base falsehood against bis manhood. The feeling of deep Injury and Indig nation was uppermost In his mind. Without a word he rose and turned to go. At the door he paused nn In stant to look at her; then there was a quick, firm step on the gravel walk, the gate shut noisily, and he was gone. From that night Kate never saw Seth Gray again. Never saw him again? How many times she saw him In that doorway, when the cat was purring contentedly on the rug and the little earthenware teapot was singing cheerfully on the hearth, only Miss Kate knew. How many times that last reproachful glance looked In upon her during the lonely nights of the long years that folowed, when the whole -bitter truth was before her, only Mine Kate knew. How utterly drenry the tidy little par lor was at times during the long, long hours, when the thought of that last night came Imrk to her; how often the soft gray eyes wept bitterly when she thought of the wrong that she had done him, and that she could never undo now. Miss Kate and only Miss Kate knew. And that was the story of her ro mance. A late train, Westbound, car ried Seth Gray away that night. She lived her life as best she rould, and be fore her little world the thorns In her path were trodden unflinchingly. Whenever a woman's hand was need ed, there was Miss Kate; wherever rhatlrable duties was the hardest. In the coldest winters, among the worst class of people; there was Miss Kate; and although her purse was not a large one It was open constantly. I think that It was this ronstant do. trig of good, this never ceasing heal ing of bodies, minds and hearts, that kept tho harj lines ofT her face, even when the early gray strands glisten ed In her brown hair. If there was one weakness for which she bad no compassion. It was tho weakness of drunkenness. If there were any medlcants Hint left her door empty handed, they were those who went there with the fumes of alcohol on the breath. Truly the drunkard In her eyes was detestable. And so the summers and the win ters pased until the time came when Miss Kate had become an old maid be yond dispute. New lives came into the little town and old lives went out. Girls In pinafores and small boys In trousers grew to be women and men, married and set up for themselves: but to Miss Kate one year was but a repetition of another and It sometimes seemed to her that she was contin ually going around In a circle that had long since become monotonous. If Mis Kate ever thought that she might have made her lire happier, sh'j guraded tho thought well; and if the smiling matrons ever occasioned tho slightest envy In her breast, they could as easily have lcarnod it from the exterior of the neat cottage as from Its prime mistress. One wlntory March morning Bho started out, with a basket on her arm, to visit a sick family, and she noticed a small crowd of men and boys a short distance from her gnte. The gibes that reached her ears and the incoher ent profanity that followed, told her that a drunken man was the center of tne group. Slio knew that she would be obliged to pass them, but with the determina tion not to be doterod from her pur pose by such an unworthy cause, ho held her head a trifle higher, involun tarily drew her skirts closer about her. and walked on. As she neared tho group slio saw that the man was reel ing; he was a wretched looking creat ure, with unkempt beard and much worn clothing. She gave him one look and the basket dropped from her arm. She walked straight up to bim, laid her hand on his frayed sleeve and led him to her own gate, up the gravel walk and into the old parlor, which was looking very comfortable this cold morning. She cried over him and bathed bis face with cold water, and finally cook ed him the 'daintiest breakfast imagin able. . Who would have thonght it of Miss Kate? And what would the peo ple say? Little she cared for Mrs. Grundy then! Notwithstanding ber tears, there was not a lighter heart in the world that day than hers. If thore bad been one bright spot In her lonely life, It had been the hope of this return; and as the yoars came and went she had sometimes felt that she was hoping against hope. And now be bad come back What did it matter how he bad come? He bad come and that was enough. At first Beth was dazed and Insen sible to his suroundlngs, but when tho breakfast was brought into him hn ate like a hungry man. Miss Kate, wise woman that she was, bad boiled some black coffee, so strong that its very aroma might have bad a sobering Influence, and when Both had drank two big cups of it, hn bccr.ii to look around him. The llttlo parlor had not rhangod so very much In all thtmu years, and remembering how he had Innded In Grantly the night before. It begun to dawn upon him where' he really was. Then his eyes rested on Miss Kate and he knew It all. He buried his face In bis hands and sobbed. But the arms of a woman were about the worn coat, and the tired head was on her breast, and the uncombed hair was anointed with ber tears. Did they marry? What a question! Of course they did! 8eth Gray was not a habitual drunkard. He reform ed, and with reformation came health and success. There never was a bet ter huslmnd, and the happiest wire la Grantly is Miss Kate. Waverley Magazine. FARMINC IN JAPAN. frnite Implement Still lard la fnltl. THtlns til Snll. Twenty-seven hundred years before Christ the Emperor or China Intro duced a system or agriculture Into his country. The soil bad always been cultivated in an Inferior way, but this enterprising ruler saw the need of other methods, and made every effort to enforce their general adoption. In order to Impress the matter upon the peas ants he plowed a small plot of land and sowed it with tiio five most im portant cereals. For this he was de fled arter his death and madJ god of the crops. For more than 4,000 years the rulers of the empire have followed hla example in tho matter of plowing and sowing. When these new modes of cultiva tion had been well established, and every hillside and valley were smiling ready for harvest, the Islands of Japan became known to Chlnn and they sent their missionary priest over to this country. They took with them the entire civilization of China their arts, pclences, philosophy. Industries, and among the later their well-tested methods or 'enriching the soil. The Japanese farmer had many dis advantages that made the process of better cultivation very difficult. The entire country Is or volcanic forma Hon. and only one-twelfth of tho land is sufficiently flat to admit of farming. Added to this the soil Itself Is nata rally of a very poor quality and re quires special treatment both by ways or enriching and Irrigation. The great est advantage of the farmer Is the fact that he bas divided the land Into very small sections. Perhaps It would be more accurate" to say that extreme poverty makes It Impossibla for a farmer to possess more than a good-sized potato patch. At any rate, the smallness of the farms has Its advantages, and tho toll or the farmer ot today Is not to be mentioned when compared with that or his ancestors, who took the virgin soil in all its pov erty and Invlshed no end or energy and strength to bring It up to Its ptv ent producing capacity. Yes, the farmer of today has entered Into a rich heritage of hills already terraced and plains finely irrigated, represent ing the patient, steady toll of many centuries. The first turning of the soli on a well-conducted plot Is done by a cru lo plow liarnesse.i to a bullock or horse, usually the former, t A crooked piece of wood forms tho central feature of this ancient structure. To one end Is attached a sharp bladd, anil lo fne other a crossbeam, used for the double purpose of tethering the bullock, which Is harnessed with indescribable rope trappings, and also furnishing a means by which the farmer may guide the plow. After this Bort or plowing the soil is loottened by a long-handled spade and the process or planting be gins. The crude manner or tho prepara tion of the soil is of little moment when compared with the harvesting. The Blckle is scarcely larger than a curved breadknlfe, and upon this the farmer depends for gathering every thing that Is not uprooted. Spring field (Ohio) Farm and Fireside. Fpoed of Ilia Carrier rieon. Some years ago Grlfllt made some observations (recorded in the Flold, February 19, 1887,) in a closed gallery on the speed atalned by "blue-rock" pigeons and English pheasants and partridges. Tho two first mentioned flew at the rate of only 32.8 miles per hour, while the partridge made but 28.4 miles, and these rates were all con eiderably In excess of what they made In the open. The carrier pigeon Is rather a fast-flying bird, yet the aver age speed Is not very great. Thus, the average made In eighteen matches (The Field, January 22, 1887.) was only 36 EnglUh miles an hour, al though in two of these trials a speed of about 55 miles was maintained for four successive hours. In this coun try the average racing speed is appar ently about 35 miles an hour, although a few exceptionally rapid birds have made short distance flights at the rate of at from 45 to 52 miles an hour. The longest record flight of a carrier pig eon was from Pensacola, Florida, to Fall River, Mass., an air-line distance of 1,183 miles, made in 15 1-2 days, or only about 76 miles a day. Til Exploration or Kentucky. The country now called Kentucky was well known to the Indian traders. many years before Its settlement. It however, remained unexplored by the Virginians till the year 1769, when Colonel Dnntei Boone and a few oth ers, who conceived it to be an Inter esting object, undertook a Journey for that purpose. After a long, fatiguing march over a mountain wilderness In a westerly direction, they at length ar rived upon its borders, and from the top of an, eminence "saw with pleasure the) beautiful level of Kentucky." PEARLS OF THOUGHT. True boldness never blusters. The wrost getting is that which hinders giving. Most men may be known by the way they use money. I Fleeing from responsibility Is hid ing from reward. Comon sense Is often but common sympathy with all. Suffering fails when it does not teach us long-suffering. To get acctiRtomed to evil Is to bo come assimilated to It Crystallzed virtues are apt to be cutlng rather than kind. The frivolity of fashion Is the soil In which corruption flourishes. When a man wears his success with pride it Is often made of paste. When prosperity falls on the evil heart it but nourishes its weeds. Time will not make the great man, but he cannot be made without It You may know a man's principles by the things he hns an Interest In. Not pain but right pleasures is the best cure for tho love of wrong ones. Put your stumbling block where it belongs and It will become a stepping stone. When your kindness Is only Intend ed for coals of fire It will certainly burn your own fingers. Ram's Horn alnpanean I'nlnt llrustie. The Japanese artist has made a most careful study of how to convey truths in the most pleasurable way; how to make his lines most beautiful, aa though a speaker would use but wor ls or moBt exquisite sound. To do this he has cultivated his "touch" until It Is but mockery to compare with that or his European brother. He hn learned to handle his brush with a di rectness and precision which is a thing or wonder, and he has studied v.lth a patience be yond compare the possibilities of each particular kind or brush. He knows, for Instance, that ono kind of brush may be used to express a bam boo stem and that another brurh will be less efficacious. He knows how to fill each particular part of that brush with a certain amount of color or of water, so that a single movement of the hand over the paper will point the stem. Its light and shade, Its peculiar characteristics, complete. And to the perfecting of that single movement or the hand over the paper he and his an cestors have given years of study. Listen to a description by a Japan ese. He Is not an artist himself, but Is explaining ttow artists use a certain brush : "The brush with color Is passed over a piece of pnper with a heavy stroke that spreads the bristles or the brush at the same time bending them at the tip. The brush Is then turned so th:it the bristles curve toward the artist, and a light stroke. will produce the halr llke lines. This Is one or tho wnys of painting the hnlr or fur of animals." The Independent. llnaalnfi Methods. Persistence mny be a good quality, but Judgment Is a better one, and the young American In tne follow Ing story, told by Frederick Palmer, evidently became convinced of it: An American drummer, fresh from our direct methods of business, called on Monsieur de Wltte, the Russian minister of finance, to get certain In formation necessary for the sale of his goods. The minister refused it. The young man persisted. The minis ter still rertiBcd. Then the young man declared: "You are the only man that can give mo what I want. I'm not going back to my folks and tell them that I couldn't do any business. I've got to know. I could get the same thing in two minutes in America, and I'm not going to leave the room until " The minister pressed an electric but ton. In walked two guards. The min ister Bpolie to them In Russian, and directly the young man found himself walking down the Ncvesky Prospect with an uncongenial escort. As he thought the mater over In Jnll. he concluded that hie hand was not strong enough, as ho put It, to bluff tho whole Russian empire. Within an hour he was lod hack Into the presence of De Wltte, who told him that a de cent apology would save further trou ble. After the young man maJe It, Dn Wltte gave him the information, and with it a reminder that It was not wise to be rude, even to ministers of state. Mill TVIll.tl. Useless. The largest whistle In the state, it is said, Is to be placed In an Indian apolis manufactory. It Is to be so big as to be easily beard all over the city, a three-inch steam pipe furnishing the noise-making power. Why? Why should it all be so? Why should there be a whistle of this size or any size In this factory or In any other? Thero was a time when whistles were as nec essary as a bell on the farm is today. But today it is a poor man indeed that bas not some sort of timepiece. Tbete are a dozen ways in which the sup posed need of a whistle In an indus trial establishment can be supplied, Simple gongs In every department, to be touched by electricity, would sup; ply the place. Whistling by railroad locomotives Is forbidden in the ctty. Whistling, by factories ought likewise to be forbidden. Indianapolis News. Titer Mul Be Fancy Free. An Atchison business man refuses to keep an engaged girl in his employ; as soon as she begins to display en gagement symptoms by doing care less, absent-minded work, he gives tier a wedding present and pays her off. Atchison (Kan.) Globe. I THE JEFFERSON p SUPPLY COMPANY Being the largest distributor df General Merchandise in this vicinity, is always in rosition to give the beat quality of goods, ts aim is not to sell ou 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. Adlcr Bros., Rochester, N. Y., Clothing, than which there is none better made; W. L. Douglass Shoe Co., Brockton, Mass., Shoes; Curtice Bros. Co., Rochester, N. Y., Canned Goods; and Pillsbury's Flour. This is a fair representation of the class of goods it is selling to its customers. aiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiiiumiiuiuiuuiiimiuiiuiaiiiuiumm FIEE XN"STTEAaS"CE. Brookville Pa. Since 1878. 2 FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES. JOHN TRUDGEN, Solicitor, Keynoldsville, Fenn'a. Too Little for Too Marh. When the late ameer of Afghanistan was troubled with a bad toothache he sent for his European dentist in open court. The dentist examined the tooth, which , was nothing more than an old stump, and advised that the ameer should take laughing-gas and have It out. The ameer inquired into the effect of the gns and replied: "I can not risk being a dead man for five seconds, much less five minutes." So, while the whole Afghan court surveyed the operation, tho dentist ptruggled with the tooth, and the stout old ameer never moved a muscle. The quality of common sense which characterized this ruler once averted a war between England and Russia. A representative of lha nmner tnlrl him that the Russians had taken Afghan territory, but as England had guaranteed him against aggression he could easily depend on England to go to war If he said the word. The nmeer sat quietly for a few min utes, stroking his beard, and then called for a map of Afghanistan. When It was brought he asked the representative to show him the ter ritory that had- been seized. Then tracing the llttlo frlnsA of mnntrw and sweeping with bis finger the great Fpnce inai ttooa ror tne rest or bis kingdom, he said: "It Is so little that It is not worth making a great war about." Youth's Companion. Fnrllnraents of the flrltlsh. There are nineteen parliaments Id the British empire ten in British North America, seven In Australasia and two in South Africa. ' WHEN IN IfuOjilTjTRY ZES Ttwy faro stood the tcitof yaara. ad have cured thousands of cas of Ntrvout .Diseases, such asDebility.Diifinti, SUepltii nest end Varicocele, Atropay.fte Tbey dearth brain, itrengthtra the circulation n.ake digestion perfect, and impart a health v vigor to the whole being. All draina and loaiet are checked UUI1& Agallli .ra Draoerlv cured, their oe edi tion often worries there in to Insanity, Contump tiot or Death. Mailed sealed. Price $1 per boa tf bovae, with Iron-clad legal guarantee to cur off (efuud the money, fooo. Send lor Ma book, Foraala by h. Alex Stoke. Right this Way for your PICTURES, PICTURE FRAMES, EASELS, MOULDINGS, BOOKS, STATIONERY, PENS, INK, PENCILS, ETC. Cabinet work of kinds nade to order. Upholstering and pair work of all ki re- kinds done promptly. We guarantee all our work and you will find our prices right. Also agents for Kane paten Window tfcrvene and Inside blinds and Screen Doom. Estimates cheerfully given. Norttiamer & Kellock, Woodward Building, mala Street. BUSINE33TJARD3. c MITCHELL, ATTORNEY-AT-ltAW. Office on Wert Mais street, opposite thJ Mimworom uuuii, neynoiasviue, fa. m. Mcdonald, ATTORN E Y. A T.T. A OT. Notary Public, real estate agent. Patent secured, collection! made prompt!. Onto In Nolan block, Reynoldsvllle, PitT , gMITH M. MoC HEIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary Public and Real Eitate Agent. Ool. I lections will receive prompt attention. Office n Froehllcl; A Henry bioclc. near postofnee, lejnoldavtlle Pa. JyH. B. E. HOOVER, v REYNOLDSVILLE.PA. Ronlflenr, finrit1ir. Tn th IfnnvA fcutMink next door to ptmtofflco, Main a treat,. Gentle tieii la operating. D U. L. L. MEAN'S, DENTIST, Office on second floor of First National bank bulUllnif, Muln Htreot. J)R. R. DkVERE KING, DENTIST, Office na second floor Keynoldavllla Real Estate Bldg. Main street Keynoldsrllle, Pa. J)R. W. A. HENRY, DENTIST, Office on second floor of Henry Bros, brick building. Main street. JjJ NEFF. ' JUSTICE OF THE fEACE And Real Estate Agent, Reynoldsvllle, fa. L. M. SNYDER, Practical Horse-Shoer and General Blacksmiths home- shoeing done In the neatest mannet Slid by the luret Improved methods, lie oiildun of nil kinds cnrufully and promptly done. bATiitrACrioN Ouahahtehd. HORSE CUPPING Pave jual received a complete set of ma chine hore clippers of latent style '0B nuttura riulsm prepared lo do clipping In Cue beat poh)l,U luniuier at reiuionaule rules. J season st. near Fifth, KejnoldsvUle, Pa. EVERY WOMAN Sometimes needs a) rellabl monthly regulating- ij-i, DR. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL PILLS. re,PrPPV,lfe nd certain la result Tbtnrni. e (Dr. rVal'.J never disappoint, 1.M seaosv Tor sals by B. Ale. Stoltav YOUNG S PLANING MILL You will find Sash, Doors, Frames and Finish of all kinds, Rouh and 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. mm. .