TWanxIcty ot tnlltlmllllormlrog to ndow llbrariei ami universities shows a very graceful rentllueM on the pact of money to pay tribute to brains. New Mexico, now Reeking statehood, as organized as a territory Scptetn tier 9, 1850. Arizona was not organ ized as a territory until February 24, jsr.3. It Is Inconsiderate for young women to mob a male celebrity In an efiort to klsn him. No kindness could ln more mistaken. The celebrity, how ever innocent ho may be, Invariably linn to take all the glama for the trannactlon. A school of Instruction for laundry Klrls Is to be established In Chicago. The School of Domestic Arts and Scl Mieea, established In that city a year and a half oro by a nir.:iler of philan thropic women, Is to bring about the Innovation, and the laundry school is to lie a department of this institution. Miss Isabel Dullard, head of the school, naya that washing is Just as much of an art as making pie or baking bread, "and as for Ironing, that is a linn art." Pinkerton, the present head of the detective agency of that name, de clares that In no country on earth do women manifest do much maudlin sentimentality for criminals as In the tnlted States. Even when tbo men have no pronounced personal charms, he says, they are not without their female admirers In tills country, who aend them flowers and other tokens ol esteem. The problem seems to be one for psychologists to Btudy and ex plain. A well known English dean recently had the misfortune to Ioro his um brella, and he rather suspected that its appropriation by another had not teen altogether accidental. He there fore ubcJ the Etory to point a moral In a sermon In the cathedral, adding that If its present jiosessor would drop It over the wall of the deanery garden during the night he would say no more bout it. Next morning he repaired to the spot and found hU own um brella and 45 others. It la said In Ohio that Governor George IC Nash has now realized the ardent dream of his life In having for the second time been chosen as chief executive of the state. At his recent second Inauguration he said: "For the future I have but one ambition, the . most sacred of my life. It Is to show my appreciation of the people who have so highly honored me by being their faithful servant during the next two years. Upon this foundation must rest whatever of fame lives after me." Numbering has been going on in Minnesota for over fifty years, during which time It is probably safe to say been cut. Of this amount perhaps $20, 000,000 worth was granted to rail roads. How much haa the United Slates received for all this plno? Be ginning with the year 1849 and np to October, 1897, the exact and total amount that the United States has -received for all lands sold In Minne sotaagricultural as well as timber land was Just $7,286,599.40. If these splendid pine forests had teen managed on foresty principles the general government would have received many more million dollars, and Minnesota herself would have been In a much better situation. In view of such a rec ord It Is not unreasonable that the public now demand that some little remnant of the pine woods be saved ma a forest reserve, observes the St. Paul Pioneer-Press. America is not the only country In which there Is difficulty In raising fnnds for memorials and monuments. England la again demonstrating that not republics alone are ungrateful when It comes to a question of con tributing money for such a cause. The fiasco made in the effort to raise a great fund for a Gladstone memor ial is still fresh In mind, and now ft haa been announced that the king will be most reluctantly compelled to ap peal to tmrliament to provide sufficient money to make up the needed balance to complete the Victoria Memorial Fund. The scheme that haa been ap proved and adopted calls for the ex penditure of about $2,500,000. Of this amount la the year since the late queen's ' death only $927,000 has been subscribed. . The same difficulty was ' found In rais ins a fnnd for the Albert mem orial, which Is mora . understandable than in the case of the beloved Victoria for the Prince consort, although a man inch honored in his adopted country, was always a foreigner. Parliament Bade grant at that time, and de apita the hnge war expenditures, will toubtleas accede to the kin it's request $ CLET1. J By Percy T. drifflth. It was noonday in a little country vl' Inge on the banks of the Hudson, well termed "the Rhine of America." From many a lowruofcd farmhouse came tho welcome sound of tho dinner horn, calling the weary liillcis in Urn fields to their mid day meal. Relieved from their Irksome studies, a merry stream of children trooped forth from the vil lage rthool, some repairing to their h i mi nearby, others (lot king together '!: K'Oiins. to eat a generous luncheon bcneaih the shade of the great over hanging oaks. Their Joyous laughter, echoing afar, rippled through the closed shutters )t a small ottage not far distant, whoso evident gloom strangely contrasted with Nature's gay, springlike splen dor. It reached tho enrs of a gronn seated In tho "bent room" of the little house n group composed of threo persons of ailed ages, whose coun tenances each expressed different emotion. One, a spectacled oltt gentleman, at tired in clerical garb, who listened with manifest approval to the matter of fact tones of a strong minded look ing woman of perhaps 40, with re pressed malice and well simulated charity struggling for mastery on her brow. The last of the trio was a slight figured child, whoso ordinary half girlish, half-boyish face, surrounded by golden, curly hair, now seemed won drounly mature and almost manly in its righteous wrath, while the old cler gyman spoke, "My child, what yon suggest Is Impossible. You could not live In this cottage all alone, now that your moth er and brother are dead. You are barely 14 years of age.and we have do. elded It to be for your best Interests to to stay with Mrs. Anderson. "You mean, sir, that we are bound out. You might as well say the words at once. Why should I fall from the status of a free citizen to that of a pauper and a slave? Did not my poor mother leave all thla property which you benevolent people have Just sold for over $300? And if I went Into this bondage, what opportunity should I have for study and improvement? You know mother always wanted me to go to college and be a teacher or a mu sician or an author or something great, hut I don't see what chance I would have If I followed your plan." "What did I tell ye, parson! What dIJ I tell ye!" cried the sharp-vlsagedl woman with uplifted eyebrows. "That's what comes of sendln' a child to school when it taln't no more than five years old anj a maldn' of It study all its life to home. What good's a person what's spent their life on booK-larnln'? Tell me that." "Oh, Mrs. Anderson," deprecated the minister, who prided himself on his knowledge, "education is surely valuable." "Yes, I know all that I alius thought bo, too. I wuz glv a good eddl cashun myself, but It warn't none of this new-fangled book-larnin' that this onstinate child's got. My mother, at any rate, warn't no fool, which is more than you can say of some people's mothers, even if they be dead an' gono though it tain't for us poor mortals to say where they're gone. I might give a mighty sure guess where Home people's mothers is gone, what never taught them nothin but book-larnin'. but then, we're all poor, frail human bein's." "Doctor Wesley," here broke In thD child, "if you think I'm going to stand here and have my mother's spotless name reviled and desecrated by that low-lived " "Low-lived, you little pauper in grate, you!" "Yes, low-lived, ill-bred, rude, un couth!" declared the angry young per son. "Oh, I know all about you, Mrs. Anderson, and I know why you've got a grudge against her and me. Did you ever hear tho name of Frauds Sum ner? Ah! you see I know I read all the letters " "Ye'vo been spyln', reading a pack o' lies, have ye? Just wait till I have the charge of ye, and I'll larn ye to spy around things what don't belong to you." "I beg your pardon. As I am the only heir to my mother's property, they are now mine. And, doctor, lot me tell you what they said. You know Francis Sumner and my mother were engaged to be married and broke it off. Do you know whyT Because " "Parson, if you don't Bhet that little liar up I will!" "Gently, gently, Mrs. Anderson," said he old man. "It's only natural for Clem to be excited after Just losing two dear relatives, and you must make allowances. Now, Clem, we'll leave you to rest after all this worry and trouble. And tomorrow morning Squire Morgan and I will come over, and we'll mako all the arrangements for you to stay with Mrs. Anderson" "I'll never go! I'll die first!" de clared his excited young hearer, pas sionately. "Ob, ye won't, hey? Jest wait. Ma and my Hlram'll take some o' thet high spirits out' of ye. - Good by, ye little firebrand. Jest wait" That night a little figure stole to the window and looked out upon 'the roaj below and the sky above. All Nature was sleeping. "How still!" It murmured. "Oh, mother! Can you see me now? Am I right In fighting against this woman who lost you your life's happiness f t And myself how can I bear living with her and her ignorant husband and rulldren?" The figure Mole, to a chest, and raising the 11 1 drew out a suit of man ifestly homemade but neat-appearing clothing, and divcRtlng itself of sev eral lighter, but Icks serviceable gar ments, was soon arrayed In the former npparel. "Poor Frank! I am indeed stepping Into a dead man's shoes! Hut he has no use for them now, and 1 I could never wear them all the way to New York. New York! it Is awful to go out into the world alone, with not a friend. Why not take mother's mon ey? It is now mine but no It would be like stealing, and then they would nave some Incentive to search for me. Hut I will take my own money out of my Iron bank thnt's$18 and they don't know I have It. Oh, mother, the lllblp, which they say gives them th? rigut to enslave and beat nie, says one must not take his own life. Buthad not the same words often dropped from your own lips, tomorrow I would be with you and Frank." The gray dawn was Just appearing In the east, when a boyish form crept out of the house and swiftly fled toward the railroad station, four miles distant. "Farewell, old house my own homo, from which strangers drive me fare well," murmured a voice trembling with emotion, and the next moment the small fugitive had disappeared in the darkness. The morrow's sun had nearly reached the mcrldinn as It poured through the dim window jinnes Into the dusky office of a prominent city lawyer, who gazed perplexlngly down upon a small applicant, who stood hanging upon his scarce formulated answer. "Why, my boy, you are much too young you could not do tho work you know nothing about office routine. You should first take some position at two or three dollars. Your parents should " "My parents all my relatives are doad. sir, and I am thrown upon my self for a living. I could not live on such wages As you speak of, and seo ing In the paper that you offered $8, I thought I'd try and get you to give mo the place. I ran write well and figure accurately, sir. Won't you gHe mo n trial?" The legal light hesitated. The plea, while earnest, had been made In such a dignified tone and manner that he could not, worldly as he was, turn the boy away as he had many another more hardy one. And then he thought of his own child, surrounded by every luxury. "Well, my lad." he said, with a sigh, "I'll see what you can do. What Is your name?" "Clement, sir." answer the bay, bold ly, though flushing somewhat. "Clem ent Travers." "Well, Clement, you can start In at once. Fuller (to the head clerk), this is the now boy. Give hiin something to do. And, Fuller" (In an undertone), "don't treat the poor llttlo devil llko you did the last ne can't stnnd It." "All right, sir," assented the clerk, respectfully, but with a sneer nt his employer's softness after the lattcr's back was turned. "Here, Just sit down and copy this off, and don't make any more mistakes than you can help!" Despite the apparent hospitality of Fuller, this was indeed a promising opening for Clement, and he set to work with such will and energy as to astonish the ordinarily somewhat easy going employes of the law firm of Johnes, Clarkes, Robinson, Smyth and Browne, who wondered "how that del icate looking kid was such a hustler." However hackneyed the authority for the assertion, it must be said that perseverance will always win In every branch of life, and the lad who had made such a favorable entry Into the celebrated law office was no exception to the rule. Before three years had fully gone by, his industry, had more than doubled his starting compensa tion. "Fuller," said Browne, the Junior partner, one morning, "Isn't today the date set for tho transfer of that town site of Pullman's?" "Yes," answered that Individual without looking up. "But he provides the customer, and wo only draw the papers." "We wero to look up the title," re sponded tho Junior partner, sharply, ' and your report guarantees Its clear ness. Are you sure there's nothing In the way? No second mortgage?" "There Is but one document recorded besides the original grant of 60 years ago," said Fuller, In the Btaccato tones of a man who wishes his words to im press the bearer. He uttered a sight of relief as his Inquisitor walked away satisfied, and, glancing around the room and meeting the honest blue eyes of Clement keen ly fixed upon him, he turned ashen pale, and wheeling his chair around, abruptly left the room. Clement withdrew bis gaze and bent It thoughtfully upon a law book before him. "You seem to be deeply Interested in something, Clement," broke In upon him suddently. He looked up. "Will you stand a catch question, Mr. Jefferson?" he eagerly Inquired of the new comer, somewhat (rrelecant "If It has a practical bearing," laughingly replied the latter, a young member of the bar, who was already noted as being the one lawyer who could always anticipate the decisions of the Judges of his circuit. "Suppose," said Clement, "a man makes out a document say a mort gagecan he draw another for tho same property upon the same sheet of paper?" "Hum that's a case that I cannot conceive of," answered the lawyer, cautiously, "why should he want to?" "What else could he do, presuming, for example, that he had no other pa per within reach?" "Now I have what I want," said Jef ferson. "Clement, yon may always con sider It a safe rule that 'in law every wrong has a remedy.' In such a case the second deed, unless Incom patible with the first, would hold bar ing fraud." "Barring fraud!" echoed the boy, as the attorney left. "But It would hold until upset by a court." "Is Mr Brown In?" Inquired a voleo at his elbow. Interrupting his revery. "Yes, sir," answered Clement rising and facing a handsome stranger, who, at first sight, scarce looked the 40 years a sharp observer would have pronounced hlra. "Then pleaRe give him my card and tell him 1 have a note of Introduction from Mr. Pullman, a client of his." Clement started. This was the "cus tomer" then. He took the card, an J glancing at the scrolled name on tho small slip of pasteboard, the words "Francis W. Sumner" seemed to brand themselves on his brain. The card dropped from his hands, and reeling, he would have fallen had not the stranger caught him in his arms. "Young man," he murmured. In a kindly but trembling voice, "where have I seen you before? Your face is familiar. Why does my card affect you In this manner?" Clement Bcanned the deserted ante room In which they were. "Will you promise not to reveal a warning If I give it?" ho whispered, and as Sumner assented, "Postpone buying this property, on any ground you like, for one week." How do you know? Why? What reason why I should?" ejaculated the astonished caller, and then, after a pause, he added calmly: "I will take your advice, but I shall want to know all before tomorrow." "Fuller," said Brown, tho next day, after a long Interview with the custo mer, whose entrance to the legal pre cincts had resulted in such a curious encounter with the young law clerk, "Pullman's buyer holds off on that deal." "What!" cried that ordinarily pomp ous individual. "What's his reason?" "Short of funds," said his employer, dryly, noting his excitement. "Not re markable for a man to find it hard to i also $50,000 all at once, is it? By the way, I've let Clement off for a day or two. You'll have to make some of tho others do his work." Two days later Clement Travers was seated opposite the individual referred to, in a Pennsylvania train speeding to New York. "Clement." said the latter, "how came you to detect the fraud In this matter? I can understand Pullman and Fuller drawing that second mort gage for $40,000 upon the back of the first one, but they had covered up their tracks so well that I don't see how you first found a clue to work on." "Oh, as to that, itwas their intima cy and something I overheard that gave me my first suspicion. At first I couldn't understand why Fuller should want to risk his position for such a sum as he could secure in this way, but of course his plan ensured secrecy for years until a thorough examination of tho title wob mode, and then it would merely appear ua if he had overlooked this second mort gage cm the back of the first, and no harm would bo done even to his repu tation. I nover, though, clearly com prehended the case until the very day you called, and then I bad Just found It out." . "You have great Intellect, Clem, for a boy." "For a boy!" repeated Clem, half sadly, half bitterly. "Oh, it was noth ing but guess work all through," ho added. "A clever guess, which has saved me that forty thousand, and I shall see that you lose nothing by it, though Johnes and company's head clerk will. By the way, Clem, you have nover told me your name. Why, what's the mat ter?" Ho peered Into his companion's face, somewhut obscured by the dusk of evening, which was rapidly falling. Clem nerved himself. "Cioment Harrison Travers," he an swered. "Clementine Harrison!" murmureJ Sumner,, in startled accents. "Oh! Clem! I'm doubly fortunate In finding yon. Your mother It must be the likeness, I see It now. Is she alive?" "Your name was the last word she breathed," answered Clem, raourn fullq. "A letter to you, the lant lines she wrote. It explained " "Needless! I always loved her, though parted by a lover's quarrel. That lotter, have you It with you?" "I have carried It constantly in the hope of finding you," replied Clem, and then in a tone of anguish, "But oh! how can I give it to you you will learn all!" "All! All what? Clement, can you betray your mother's trust? I must tee it" "Take it, then," replied Clem, sadly, "and with it my secret" funnier perused the letter with min gled grief and bewilderment. "Why, Clem, how aha speaks of you! 'An orphan to make her way' 'let her take my place!' " And then, reading tne truth In his companion's face. "Ah, Clem, why could I not see? My poor little girl! Imago of her. What trials you must have had! But cheer up. Your mother's friend will make amends ha, she's fainted!" The three years' strain and the pres ent embarrassment had been too much tor the delicate girl, and her limp form lay almost lifeless at his feet beforo his sentence was finished. "I don't understand this, Browne," remarked Johnes, one morning, per haps a year following, ns he held an open letter in his hand. "Our old iriend Sumner writes that he's sent Clement on to Europe and married his sister. He, of course, means Clement's sister." "Nothing queer about that," an swered Browne, who. In such leisure moments ns an active attorney gels, dabbled In amateur biology and was a crank on Darwin. "Clem was a bright chap, though awfully dainty, (lot rid of Fuller before he wrecked the firm for tis, and saved Sumner bis money. Why shouldn't his sister be attractive and all that. Science tells us that Inheritance " "But where did, ho get a sister?" persisted Johnes, Impolitely Interrupt Ing this flow of learning. "Clem told me ho had no relatives." "Don't believe It," answered Browne. "Survival of the Fltteit don't agree with it. Smart people and hus tlers ought, according to this theory, to have enormous families, and If evolu tion " "Fiddlesticks!" replied his partner, as he took down "The Evidences of Insanity" from the well stocked shelf and repaired to his sanctum. Waverly Magazine. OUAINT AND CURIOUS. Every Chinese woman Is practically a slave until her son marries. Then, as hiother-ln law, she begins to rule, her son's wife being her subject. The Chinese pen from tlmo Imnie morlal has been a brush made of some soft hair and used to paint the cur iously formed leters of the Chinese alphabet. From Tomsk, to Irkutsk, on tho Sib erian railway, a distance of 9.12 miles, there Is only one town deserving the name Kiasnoalrs with a population of 28,000. Berlin pays a salary to a profession al bird catcher, who keeps scientific educational Institutions supplied with birds, birds' eggs and nests. He is the only man in tho empire permlted to do so. At Montnlto, In the province of Cenon. In tearing down an old church, a small underground room was found full of art objects of tho Roman time, chiefly chiselled silver amphorao and vareB filled with gold and silver coins. Tho plow Ib certainly tho oldest and probably the simplest or agricul tural Implements, being represented among the hieroglyphics on the an cient tombs of Kgypt, dating back more than 4000 years. As early as the year 1000 B. C. the plow was described by a Greek historian as consisting of a beam, a sharo and handles. The following curious advertisement recently appeared In a Ixuidon paper: "Oentlemnn wants board residence. Ileal good home, in small family. No other boarders. Being overstout, therefore subject to many annoying re marks, advertiser prefers very stout people's company. No others need write. Referrences exchanged. Ad dress," etc. A syndicate comprising English cap italists has been formed to promote the sale of "tie silks," composed of 50 percent wood pulp and 50 percent ai li ft clal silk. Samples are being submit ted to the New York wholsnlo neck wear manufacturers, and considerable experiment is taking lAac.e. In point of price this material shows advan tage over conventional fabrics. Its luster, feol and general appearance, closely resemblo genuine silk. XVn Ting-runs' ltlrirrl for Truth. The reporter who lle'd to the Chinese minister at Washington, Wu Ting fang, about his salary, no doubt de luded himself with the thought if he gave the matter a thought at all. that it was a "white lie" that would hurt nobody. But let us seo tho Bequel: On the first occasion, when he called to Interview the minister, ho was ask ed what salary he received. "One hundred and fifty dollars a week," glib ly replied the youth. "It is too much. It is altogether too much," said the more candid than pollto Wu Ting-fang. "You are not worth more than twenty five dollars a week." The Chinese minister, it is said, learned later, through . other news paper men, that the reporter had not spoken the truth, and that. Instead of one hundred and fifty dollars a week, he received but sixty. Consequently, when he again presented himself at tho Chinese legation for Information for bis paper, he was curtly dismissed by Wu Ting-fang with these words: "You lied to mo about your salary. If you will lie about such a thing as that, you will lie about anything. I do not trust you. I have nothing to say to you. I want to revise my former esti mate of your value. Instead of being worth twenty-five dollars a week, you are not worth ajythlng, sir." Success. intnitnnnimimtiinitnffimntmniinnnnniniiiifnniinp THE JEFFERSON f SUPPLY COMPANY 1 Being; tlie largest distributor of General Merchandise hi this vicinity, is always in f osition to, give the beat quality of goods, ts aim is not to sell -vou 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. aitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiumiiiiitiiaiiiuiiiiiuuiiiiiiiuiu FIEE IINBTJIliUSrClE. Brookville Ta. 2 FIRST-CLASS COiVlPANIES, JOHN TRUDGEN, Solicitor, THE FARMER'S PROSPERITY. Nearly 50 Per Cent of the World's Products Raised Here. Forty tier cent of the people of the United States are farmers, who not only feed and clothe themselves, but all the rest or the Inhabitants, besides exporting annually 1 1 .noO.OOO.OUO worth of their products. The advant ages of the United States farmer have been shown most vividly this fall. Though many crops were small er than usual, yet our farmers will realize more than In any previous year of our history. The prosperity of the people, the splendid means of lake and railway transportations, with low freight rates, combined with a rise in value for short crops and stable prices for full crops, means more to the farmer than they have ever meant before. Here, again, Is the advant age of diversification shown. We are not a wheat-raising country nor a wool-growing people, nor are we ex clusively devoted to corn or cotton, hay or oats. A dnmage to one or even several crops Is not a national disas ter, as It is made up in the value of the whole. It the Russian wheat or rye crop falls there is a famine. If the German beet bo damaged the whole country suffers: If the Austra lian wool prlOcs fall there is conster nation throughout the Island. So it is In Austria, Argentina, and, to some extent, In Fiance. We number less than 6 per cent of the world's inhab itants, yet wo produce 78 per cent of the cotton, 75 per cent of the corn, 30 per cent of the wheat, 2G per cent of the oats, 2(1 per cent of the hay, 38 per cent of the meat, 27 per cent of the butter and cheese, GO per cent of the eggs, 12 per cent of the wool, and so on. Of the world's total agricultural product we raise nearly, If not quite, 50 per cent. fiuvu urn cnui yvsrsji na Iuy cured (houiantla ol case of Nervoui Disease, tuch as Dtbtltty, Ditiinaii . &leplt neu and Varicocele, Atrophy. 4 o They dearth brain, strength tho circulation, make, dlftitlo periect, ana Impart a aealtay vigor to tho whole belie. All drains and lottei are cheeked trong Again. rP nth. Unleia valiant oncrlv cured, their eeadi Clon often worries them into Insanity, Conauaa tion or Death. Mailed sealed. Prica It par noal 6 boxes, with Iron-clad legal guarantee to eura Off refuud tha money, f yoo. Send for Vaa book. For sals by tr. Alex Stok. Right this Way for your PICTURES, PICTURE FRAMES, EASELS, MOULDINGS, BOOKS, STATIONERY, PENS, INK, PENCILS, ETC. ' Cabinet work of all kinds nade to order. Upholstering and re pair work of all kinds done promptly. We guarantee all our work and you will find our prices right. ' Also agents for Kane patent Window Screens and lualll Blind and Screen Doom. Estimate cheerfully flYon. Norttiamer & KellocK. Woodward Building. Stain Street. s TT?TVTf TTTTT Since 1878. Reynoldsville, Fcnnj BUSIrfESS"CXRD3. 1 MITCHELL, ATTOKNEY-AT-LAf Olflee 011 Went Main street, r. Commercial Hotel, Reynolds villi Posit tb Q m. Mcdonald, ATTOnNEY-AT-LfW, Notary Public, real estate stent. Patent secured, collection made priiptly. Offlo 11 .-uiiMi uiwk, n,vnoiuHYiue, gMITH M. MoCREIGHT ATTORNEY-ATL A W , Notary Public and Real Estrtte Agent. OoU jnctlona will receive prompt attention. OrBcS In Froehllch A Henry block, near postotBc. Keynoldsvllle Pa. jyli. B. E. HOOVER, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Resident dentist. In the floorer btitldtns next door to postofflce, Main street.. Gentle neaa In ntiemt.inir. '"V J)R. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST, Office on second floor of First National bank bulldlnf , Main street. JJU. . UEVtKE KlNli, DENTIST, Effire on second floor Reynoldsrlll Rear state Bldg. Main street Keynoldsrllls, Pa. J)R. W. A. HENRY, DENTIST, tyice on second floor of Henry Bros, brloh building, Main street. E. NEFP. JUSTICE OP THE PEACE ' And Real Estate Agent, Reyrjoldsrllle, Pa. L. M. SNYDER, Practical Horse-Shoer and General Blacksmith, horse shoeing done In the neatest mannas and by tho latest Improved methods. He Hairing of ull kinds carefully and promptly dene. bUTiiirACTiort Uuabamteisd. HORSE CLIPPING flave uat received a complete aet of Ma chine horse clippers of latest style 'W pattens In.luru prepurt-d to do clipping la the best possible mauuer at reasonable rtt tea. Jackaonei. near VU U, KeynultiavUl. Pa. EVERY WOMAtf Sometime needs a reliable monthly regulaUna; rf-H-hm. DR. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL PILLS. Are nroarpt fnfn and certain ts result. Tha gem, le (lir, fuel's) nover disappoint, 41.00 per boa. Ter sal by B. Alex. Btolcav YOUNG'S PLANING TVT T T I iu L- L yn You will find Sash, Doors, Frames and 'Finish of all kinds. Roucrh and Dressed Lumber, High Grade Yar- rushes, Lead and Oil Colors in all shades. And also an overstock of Nails which I will sell cheap. J. V. YOUNG, Prop. rgcxTTCTXTTrrrTrr rzxzr,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers