a. Th rhl!n:!clnlila Times i,.i tliat Jnpnn Is evidently making a somewhat Critical experiment In trade develop ment, and bnsfs her expectation of brilliant success upon her Imttatiun of ftrltlsh methods. A Iibrs singer nt Cohinilms, Ohio, ho has heen unable to plug well for several years, recently coughed up ft tooth, and since then lilg voice has teen excellent. 1iere are several pro fessional ringers who ought to go o'.it and rough up a tooth. The plan of tno Indiana mcrc'innt who caught his thieving cleik by act ting a camera in front of his money drawn1 will ess? the anxiety of many iinsplclous employer. All that will be necessary for them heri-nltcr will be to push the bintcn rtn.l tho police nil! do the ret. A treasury department statistician ays that the consumption of flour In the United States is about one barrel per year to every man, woman and child In the country. Minnesota has 307 mills, and can turn out about 120,. 000 barrels a day. The big mills of the city of Minneapolis produce over one Ixtli of the flour consumed by our en tire population. By the recently issued pilot chart of the navy department It seems that the shortest route from the Pacific to the Orient is from Seattle. The dis tance from Seattle to Yokohama via Dutch Harbor is 4240 miles. From San Francisco the distance to Yoko hama by the "circle route" is 4536 miles, and by the Honolulu route 5300 miles. This gives Seattle a clear ad vantage In mileage. Sir Philip Burne-Jones, the English artist, says every city has Its own dis tinctive odor. The smell of London Is particularly pungent and rather un pleasant, due possibly to the smoke. The odor of Paris is entirely differ ent, rather pleasant. The atmosphere of Venice has a peculiar flavor of tho sea. The artist's sensitive olfactories found the odor of New York not at all unpleasant. He says It approximates a perfume. Public opinion in our own country, remarks the New York Commercial Advertiser, is so many-tongucd, has reached such greatness In volume and liberty in scope that It is certainly a unique phenomenon. Not only do mere people have their say In our country than In any other, but more people have their say about more things. "Brother Jonathan" has been In danger of losing his character In the largeness of his speech. Jailor John U Whitman of Chicago said the other day In a lecture Before a woman's club on "The Cook County Jail as a Moral Hospital," that, in his opinion, if the family hlutory of a bank defaulter were examined, It Is prob able that some one of his ancestors would be found to have been a short weight grocer or a petty criminal against society. "Crime," he added, "is a disease, and its only cure is kind treatment not punishment, which has the appearance of revenge," According to a report Just issued by the census bureau there were 33,033 sawmills gnawing the vitals out of the American forests in the year 1900. An aggregate capital of $611,611,524 Is invested in these establishments. The latter are owned by 43,322 per sons. Employment is given by them to 283,260 wage-earners, drawing $104, 4140,591 In wages, and to 12,530 officials, clerks, etc., drawing salaries amount Ing to $11,260,608. Miscellaneous ex penses amount to $17,731,519 and ma terials cost $317,923,548. The total value of the products Is placed at $566,S32,9S4. But the loss to this and future generations through the de nudation of the forest lands is be yond computation. Thirty-five million dollars Is a large amount of money to be Invested In horses by one country during a period of only six years; but, according to re cent English statistics, that sum repre sents the value of the horses exported by the United States to Great Brit aln from 1895 to 1901. And this has no reference to our shipments of mules to the United Kingdom, which, from September, 1899, to December, 1901, aggregated In value over $6,000,000. During the single year ending with June, 1901, England received from America the record-breaking total of 75,000 horses, and our entire exports of horses for that year amounted to nearly $9,000,000. These figurel all the more remarkable conslt that about ten years ago, or in the exports of horses from the V: State amounted to less than $1 ? Vpo t BROTHER ABNER'S AWFUL CAT. i 4 Aimer latttier, a settler In a wild, detolate r glon of southern Wyoming, no miles I oin the railroad, captured a little fat, furry, downy ball of pale yel low mid white, not unlike a lion's whelp. Its eyes were just open; It was too young to lap from a sain ;r at first, but aft-r a few weeks It learned to lup milk, on which diet It grew up to be a docile and obedient cat, much beloved by all who knew It. Tor as he was called, was of about tN lv .(jht of an KngllFh setter, but a shorter, thicker body, covered with Kill y fur of bright amber on the back mid sld"s; underneath and on his paws his coat was pure white, decorat ed with rings of black. He had an In telligent pretty cat fnce, lighted by big amber ryes, whose pupils, mere silts of black down the center, would widen and narrow according to bis emotions, Just like those of any other cat. Aimer never taught Tom any "tricks" except that of Jumping over a broom handle, but the cat was very Imitative, and tried to do many things that he saw his master do. Thus he he often tried to drink from a dipper. He would sit up, take the dipper In his fore paws, and carry It toward his mouth, but be never succeeded in drinking the water, always spilling It on his front, whereupon he would fling dipper and all over his head. He slept like a Christian, for he would get into bed with Aimer, put bis head on the pillow, straighten out, and pull the covers up to his chin. But he purred so loud with satisfaction all the time he was awake in bed that Aimer could not go to sleep until Tom's pur ring ceased in slumber. At tho first streak of daylight he would throw off the covers, spring Into the air nearly to the ceiling and come down on Aimer, if the man did not move out of the way or else get up. A great practical joker was Tom. All the dogs in the neighborhood were afraid of him, with good reason, and he koew It. How to get them to at tack him was his problem. Sometimes he succeeded by pretending to lie crip pled, and limped along to catch the dogs' attention. Thinking their time for revenge had corr.e, they would rush nt him. Then he would suddenly sit up and knock them down with a single blow of his paw as fast as they came at him, even If there were eight or 10 of th"m. Tom sat at tho table with Abner dur ing meal times, and ate from a plate, catching up bits of food and conveying them to his mouth on one claw In a manner considered very conventional. Abner had lived alone so many years that he had become somewhat free in his table manners, and was accustomed to sop his bread in tho gravy dish. Tgm, the mimic, followed his master's example in this particular, and was very expert If. It, stinking his claws in a biscuit or a piece of bread, sopping it soberly In the (Hah, returning it to his plate. Abner was of New England stock. Ho had come west from a small town In Connecticut, where his two sisterB Elizabeth and Olive, or "Ollle," had re mained for many years niter he had migrated. Vhn Jlli s Klb.abeth was 35 and Ol ive about 25 he begun to insist that they bhould pr.y him a visit. He hoped they woulii liko Wyoming and stay with him. The 12 years since they had seen .Mi ner seemed much larger to them, be cause he was such an lndlffrcnt letter writer. There was plenty to write about, but ho thought tho lit'tlo hap penings of his life would not interest his correspondents, and so he had never mentioned Tom. "What would they care about a wild cat ?" ho reasoned. But now and then he made his letter more interesting by enclosing a money order or a check, with the request that they buy some little presents for themselves to re member him by; for Abner had a big, generous heart, and he had prospered exceedingly in cattle. One day It occured to him to go over and spend the night with Silas Hope, a ranchman who lived five miles away. Accordingly he saddled Mike, his fav orite horse, opened a window In the cabin so that Tom could come and go at his pleasure, and put things to right a little, in case some wayfarer should come In while he was gone. It never occured to him to lock the door. It any man In that locality had locked his door, It would have been considered an Insult to all the other In habitants of the place. Indeed, there was not a lock bar or bolt on any door in all the settlement. Abner Ragner supposed that his cabin would be tenantless that night, but two unexpected visitors had for some days been on their way to make him a visit. After many talks, con sultations and hesitations his two sis ters in Connecticut had made up their minds to go out and see him. Olive had proposed writting to Abner and telling him when they would arrive at Medicine Bow, but Elizabeth inter posed: "No, we'll arrive unexpectedly, I want to see Just how he lives!" They knew the mail waa carried out to Abner'i settlement from the Bow on Tuesday of each week, and so timed their trip as to be able -to ride out with the postman. On a Monday evening they arrived at the Bow, and the next Morning they left the hotel and made their way, un der the guidance of a small boy, to the stofflce store, where, they were told, ey could find Klondike, the man ner. out in the crisp air and brll hlne, the sisters looked about atoaUhmflnt at the 1 V streetless, ynrdless, fenceless, shade less, grasslesR. treeless frontier town which clung close to the railroad. When they reached the store they found Klondike busily engaged, help ing the merchant pack some boxes of provisions to take out to the settle ment. He told them very cordially that I hey were more than welcome to ride out to Aimer's ranch with him, and he directed them to sit down on a case of overshoes until he was ready to start, which would lo In a few minutes. The two women obeyed, watching the (lacking of the boxes with wonder. Surely a curious collection of things to bo taken to a farming district, as they termed tbe settlement such quantities of fruit and vegetables! When Klon dike had finished putting up a large box of condensed milk and cream, Olive's curiosity overcame her dif fidence. "Arc there no rows In Mttle Medi cine?" she asked. "Yes'm," answered Klondike, re spectfully, as he fitted a lid on the box, "there's slobs and gobs of cows, but we ain't much struck on roundln' 'em up nights." Tho sisters, not understanding Klon dike's phraseology, looked at each other In silent perplexity and In some dlfitnay. But when they were once out on the vast praries their spirits rose. Looking back they fancied the crest of white on Elk mountain resembled a stately marble palace, with turrets, towers nrd corinthlan pillars. , They saw herds of antelopes feeding, and then, whisk! puff! the creatures vanished in the open like a whiff of smoke. At Intervals they came upon bleached skulls, the only reminders of the vast herds of buffalo that once fed on the table-lands; or the desiccated carcases of sheep, which had perished miserably in the storms of winter. Looking backward, Klondike, with his whip, pointed out some of the sur rounding towns, marked by puffs of bluish vapor hovering In the clear, dazzling atmosphere. The column of black at the right was Carbon, that next to it was Manna, while far down at the left the tiny ring of smoke, like that from a man's pipe was Larlmle. Before them the wonderful prospec tive held still greater surprises. A small white sunbonnet outlined against the blue became gradually transformed Into a sheep wagon; In the remote dis tance they descried a wasp and two black ants, which on nearer acquaint ance proved to be a man on horseback and two dogs. "Well," sighed Elizabeth, at last, with a tone of ono who admits a damaging truth, "there's more sky In Wyoming than there Is in Connecti cut." "And more land," added Olive. "I believe we shall always go on like this and never get anywhere. It Is an un changing earth and an unchanging sky," she continued. In an awed voice, Vaud I feel like a little worthless atom sandwiched between tho two." "There Is certainly something In this country catrulutcd to tako the conceit out of one," said her sister. Olive, overcome with drowsiness In cidental to the high altitude, Anally crept Into tho back of the wagon, where, she slept with her head on a sack of dried apples. When Bho awoke, slio was sure they bad stopped all tho time to rest the horses, for nothing was at all changed. Tho mountains, tho plains, tho sage, everything re mained the same, while the gray bron cos pushed forward tlrelesBly on their quirk, round trot. It was between six and seven o'clock In the evening when tho two women arrived before the door of Aimer's two roomed log cabin. Elizabeth knocked. As there was no reply, she ventured to lift the latch. "Ab can't be very far off, for the door's unlocked," said Olive, as Klon dike drove away. "He'a probably working In the In the Holds," remarked Elizabeth, doubtfully, glancing vaguely over the expanse of sage brush. "There doesn't seem to be any gardon," she added gravely, "nor a sign of anything planted. I hope Abner isn't Betting BhiftlCBB." "We'll have supper ready, anyway," said Olive, "I'm simply famished." Soon they built a fire, and set the table with fried bacon, tea, and a baked dish known In New England vernacu lar as "Johnny-cake." Not knowing when their brother would, arrlvo, they decided to sit down at once, and were about to do so when they were fright ened almost to fainting. Tom leaped through the open window. They had seen wildcats in cages and In pictures. This one bore In hla hor rid mouth a struggling mountain-rat, Elizabeth screamed, but Olive scram bled up a short ladder leading to the loft, where Abner kept his shotguns, amunition and fishlng-tackel. She was speedily folowed by her sister and together they drew up the ladder. Tom, meanwhile, sat - down and watched tho erratic movements of hla visitors without apparent emotion. He had probably planned to worry the rat for a while on the cabin floor before killing It; but on scenting the fried bacon and seeing that a feast was al ready spread, he abandoned hla inten tion, and by a dextrloua shake broke tbe neck of bis little victim. Of what followed, the Ragner sis ters could speak afterwards only with bated breath. Tbe janlmal acted like one of tbe bewitched creatures of the old story-books thai tell of men turn ed into cats by enchantment, Tom seated himself at thotable, helped him self to bacon, oppeJjMi bread in the gravy and ate It, piece by piece from the end of a claw. Gradually a sensible Idea stole Into Olive's mind. "He acts like a per forming animal at a show," she whisp ered. "Hush!" quavered Elizabeth, tremb ling. Tom, having finished his supper, went back to his dead rat. Taking It up In his teeth, he approached a loose board In the floor, clawed It up and de posited his quarry underneath, with the evident Intention of serving It at some future repast. Next, he sat down In the middle of the floor and washed his fnce with painstaking care. Then ho regarded the excited women In the loft with a wide yawn that disclosed two rows of horribly suggestive white sharp teeth. He seemed to be burled In thought for a few minutes; then he approached the bed In the corner, turned down the blankets, got In, put his head on the pillow, drew up the covers under his chin, and begin to purr In loud harsh gutterals. One paw lay outside tho cover, and the watchers could see the long claws alternately tighten and re lax with tho rhythm of his song; his mouth seemed stretched In a soporific smile as he sang himself to Bleep. He had dined, he had washed, he was com fortably disposed in bed; what more could a reasonable cat wish? He was In a state of beatific somnolence. "Elizabeth." said Olive, "we are mak- Ing fools of ourselves! That animal Is tame." "He may be tame," said Elizabeth, doggedly, "and we may be fools, but I shall not expose my life to the caprices of any wild beast." So saying she doubled her feet In like a Turk, and leaned wearily against a rafter. "It reminds me of little Red Riding Hood," went on Olive. " 'What sharp teeth you have grandmother!'" You ought to he ashamed of yourself for joking when our lives are in dan ger!" snapped Elizabeth. The loft was narrow and Incommo dious and their positions were cramped and painful. "I'm going to rise a descent, any way," said Olive, at last. I'm suffering here, and I don't believe the creature will hurt me." She softly but resolutely put down tho ladder and descended. Seeing her sister was not devoured, Elizabeth fin ally followed. But they sat very quiet, bolt upright on the hard wooded chairs all night, starting convulsively ever and anon as Tom fitfully growled and snarled, pursuing imaginary game In his sleep. The sisters holding hands and half dead with fatigue, hniled with joy the first beams of dawn; but then they had a new scare, for Tom kicked off tho covers, sprang to the very ceiling, and falling back on the bed, stood and glar ed at them. He seemed to hear some thing coming. Soon tho sisters heard It, too tho hoofs of a horse. The horse stopped at the house, and a brown bearded man entered. What was tho horror of the women when the awful wild beast sprang up, put his fore-pnwB on the man's shoulders, and licked his face from brow to chin. "Down, Tom!" said Abner, good-naturedly. Then his eyes fell on his visitors, his astonishment becoming delighted re cognition. Ho took them both in his firms at once, while veritable tears of Joy rolled down his cheeks. He was so glad, so glad! But how did they get there? Were they not tired and hun gry? "I sen you have mnde tho acquaint ance of my pet wildcat," ho added. "I'm right glad Tom was here, for though there Isn't the slightest clanger of your being disturbed by anyone herenbouts, still the cat is so much company!" "We're very, wry hungry. Ab," said Olive, who was half-laughing, half crying with excitement and fatigue. "The rat ate up tho supper, and we haven't had anything since yesterday noon's luncheon." "Yes, brother, and we're about tuck ered out, too," added Elizabeth. "We sat up all night. The cat occupied the bed." "Thunder!" ejaculated Abner aghast. "What did you let him do that for? Why didn't you pull him out?" The two women looked at each other shamefaced, embarrassed. Then Eliz abeth straightened up and replied with dignity: "Why, brother, it being your cat. we thought we'd Just humor him and let him do anything he pleased!" Youlh's Companion. In Ilia Antarctic! Cirri. The traveler who attempts to pene trate inland in the antarctic circle must needs depend on the provisions which he hauls with him, and owing to the nature of the land, the elevation and the many gales which blow, be must take nearly double as much food with him. to go a given distance as would be the case In the far north. We,, who were the first men to live for a year on the antarctic continent, found these gales blowing over forty miles an hour on more than 26 percent of the days, and our exact anemomet ers registered some gales which were blowing over 100 miles an hour. Under these latter conditions It was not only difficult to move, but dif ficult to exist. During our sledge Journeys these gales often compelled ua to lie under a snow covering, while the food continued to be used up. Pro fessor Borcbgrevlnk, in the Independ ent. The Mnli it Fat Lamb. Bucking bronchos from the Montana ranges are now being bought for the use of the British In South Africa. Tommy Atkins will think the Missouri mule la a pet lamb after he has met the western cow pony on a few interesting occasion. Chicago News. SONC Or THE CAPTAIN OF INDUSTRY When I was a lad 1 mnnngml to squirm In ft office boy (or n lrkrnge nrmi 1 slenned the rug and the otiKplilnr, And at lnt bought mid iuld things on thl floor I (malted nlong so iiiCTPiwfiilleo That now 1 nin n enptntu of Induetree. I wntfhod tho ticker nnd t took chnnce, Mow nnd theu, ou a slump or a sharp ad vance) Things happened somehow to turn my way, And 1 bought out the brokerage llrm out ilny Then I wns the firm nnd the firm was ma, I'd becorao a captain of ludustrtje. I wnteheil my chnnoe nnd I gobbled blocks Of what 1 knew to he gilt-edged Mocks 1 gobbled stocks wliertiver 1 could Aud wrecked r-iails where it would do rne good ; The moify enmn rolling Into me, And so I'm cnptnlu of imluxtree. I've n mnrbln hiu'k on the nvptnie, And a lriwiitino cottage at Newport, too, I've a splendid yncht and n private enr, And my fume's wherever the rnllroiidx tire 1 hftre pulled the strlngN m succepiifuliue That now I n n enptntn of Imlustree. I liftve dined where n prlueo sat down to dine. And few bnve wads that am bigger time mine; I ponsem two hundred million plunk, When I trnvel I take along finely trunks (b I tell you whnt, It I grvnl to bo A gluriou ciiptHln of InriuKtrre. CbtcHgo Uncord- Herald. HUMOROUS. Scribbler My poems are filled with thoughts that burn. Scrawler Better not send them to a powder magaslne. Blobbs How's your mother-in-law? Slobbs Well, she's Improving, but very slowly. Blobbs I'm glad to hear that. Nell I expret my new cloak at any minute now. Belle Hark! I thought 1 heard a wrap at the door then. Wlgg Why Is It that millionaires are generally men of few words? Wagg I suppose they like to talk In money syllables. Mr. Impecune What would you say If I should ask you to marry me? Miss Mlllyuns I should say that you had a colossal nerve. Sllllcus The secret of happiness Is to marry one's opposite. Cynlcus Then a man must be a fool to marry a brainy woman. Sue The Idea of him proposing to me! Why, he's only an apology for a man! Belle Don't you think you had better accept the apology, dear? Rimer And who is your favorite pet, Mr. Kostlque? Kostlque Chat terton. "Huh! What do you find to ad mire in him?" "He committed sui cide." "I got up with an awful thirst on me this morning," remarked the infanl with the nursing bottle. "1 feel rather rocky myself," replied the one In the cradle. " 'Trans' means 'rross,'" said the teacher. "Can anybody Illustrate its tife?" "Yes'm," answered the pupil In the last row, "'Transparent,' a cross father." "Are you looking for scrap," demand ed the hired man, suddenly appearing. "Yes," responded the hobo, changing his tone; "that's It scraps. Hunks o' meat. Any old thing." "Yes," said Longbeaii, "I expect soon to bo quito a prominent figure in the legal fraternity." "Yes?" queried Fharp. "You don't seem to believe It." "Well, I've always understood that fig ures never He." "Yes, Indeed," asserted Mrs. Hen peck; "before I married yon more than one man said It was cruel In me to re fuse them." "That's where they were mistaken." retorted Henpeck, while on a dead run for tho door. "My, what a lot of books," exclaimed Mlsa Gbssype. "Does your husband read much?" "No," answered Mrs. Gad. "He buys expensive books, and he's so busy working to pay for them that ho doesn't have tlmo to read." "You'd make a pretty good clerk,'.' said the employer sarcastically, "If you only had a little more common sense." "Indeed!" replied the clerk; "but did It never occur to you that if I had a little more common sense I wouldn't bo a clerk at all?" A looil Word for Ilia " rot. Holler." The old slur upon the "pot-boiler, except when it is aimed at obviousl Insincere and conscienceless work, i without pertinence or point. Some f the greatest work In the world has haf1' its origin in the necessity of havlnfg three meals a day, or at least two. Cc tainly the impulse of the money con sideration cannot make an artist; blt on the other hand, It Is a poor artist that it ran spoil, while It has been tfhe meanB of discovering many a one f to himself. Unless we are to give (up much that the world would not wl'll lngly let die, much of Goldsmith, Scott. Hawthorne. Dickens and Thnfek- eray, and many another, we must knowledge the legitimacy of the tive, and acknowledge that a may write for money without pairing the artistic quality of work; Indeed, even with a dlgnl the sort that comes from fulfill fundamental duty to himself others. But to acknowledge the legl inac ledKf I mut of such a motive is not to ackno its supremacy. And while one not dogmatize about how th bst work is done, the butterfly of 'D.US escaping tho meshes ot the fine: !he-rfac- orles, a reader takes special s tion la the work which seems t f by the an ' au- natural, unforced product of thor's mind, Tbe surgeons wound that closes without of a rtlflclal aid that It beala "by first Intention." We perhapa do not wrench thr simile to much In trying by this pvrase to convey a quality In some 1 literature which gives it a sort ot chafm and permanence. Indeed an lnevltlbiencss. of it own. The Century. - I B ' J SUPPLY COMPANY Seine the Metfchandise th position to giJ Its aim is not when quality i ways be found i"gl'it. Its dcDartrrli-ii nniong the spctia ncd Li. Adlfrr n. 'thing, than! v.- u: mtide: vv. L,. linub-lo ass., Shoes; Q iviinos., viuuca, vj UTllCC Nj. Y., Canned (loods; TViia So. n faff n.u,4iiina nt rlnaa F goods it is selling iiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiuiujiiuimiuuiiuiuuimiil Brook villcrn. I 12 FIRST-CLASS! COMPANIES. JOHf TRUDGEN, Solicitor, SAYS FHpCHMEN ARE NOT IATINS In OrlfflJ Tha? Ara Mneh Llka Aaaarl raj. Urolaraf M. I.a Boas M. HiKhes le Roux, the celebrated French! author. Journalist, dramatis and tnr, lectured on a recent after noon if 'he Auditorium of Il'iustoil Hall brore the Cercle Francals 6f th HI rnlveil'ty of Pennsylvania. 1Kb sub iect wJs Lpb nls de France, qd9 fer ont lis!-'" "The people of France, said M. LlC n..,.r "nre nnt a T.ntlnlsorl npnUu ouli some nave oeciarca. in iraivellng through Normandy, Brittany arid va rious ther provinces of France Ji find no ttipct distinguishing characteris tics of" etistoms which would Indicate Latin) origin, with the possible excep tion Jof Averglne, where the woiVen wear the same kind of jewels ns hc RomfnB did. France Is similar Vo Amcttea or any other natl(4i'n ts Igin.l Just as in chemls-trftr varloui elennts are mixed and flieated to 6etbrrr ln 0 crucible until fi residue of a sN'nlng golden amalgamation Is pre- A clplfated, so France and fther nations are; amalgamated from various for- elgjl elements and peopl Along with its simll I rities to Am eria In origin there (fun be noticed a (Striking difference ill the character at ithe two peoples. Almerlrans lsjive' inre strength of will. Frenehiion liiro sensibility and refinement, j To Illustrate this Ihe gave as an example a race at t,e last Olympian juries ln Athens, wiere he said: "A frenchman outran by his hca-t a, erman nnu an Almerlcan both ran illng by their leg WHEfi I toodth have curad thoutanai Si et of Nervoui Vii k Debility , L)iiflnf, aln ft'aty clear tha brain, suengt the circulation, make dlaei ana varicocele, aitodbi perfect, and imparl a a igor to ina wnoio aeing. , drain and lotiea are cue mmntnilt. UnleH i aatlt ' are arepariy eurne, taai 'oarlv eurad. thafcr aal loo alien votrlel them into Inianlty, Coaaul on or veam. Mailed Maled. fnce Si aer I S none, witty Iron-clad leu I guarantee to eur refund the Hwnay. If oa. Sand ia hi eoeU For sal ft. Alex Ftok. aVAAeVA Right this N DOUliT, TRY i" I I 41 H 1. Bf ' lir L' VMM L. 'An am 1 1 h T!s ii.l v "Way for your ry I PICTURES, I PICTURE FRAMES, EASELS, MOULDINGS, BOOKS, STATIONERY, PENS, INK, PENCILS, ETC. Cabinet work of kinds nade to order. Upholsterincr and pair work ot all . kind done promptly, We guarantee all our work and you -will find our prices ngnt. Alan agent for Kane ni Window fcrecno and Iuald Mllad' ana screen iwora. Estimates cheerfully r'. Nortiiamer 4 Wadwar' ... ! . ..- Sit larpttfcistributor of General In'clnity, is always in hr't quality ot goods, sepu cheap goods but nsi'cd the price will al- ' all -well tilled, and tiVinndled may be men- ' Rochester. N. Y.. tiipr 4 none better Shoe Co.. Brockton, urfice3ros. Co., Rochester, 3 Jre)9. xvutucsicr, nd Pillsbury's Flour. ttits customers. Since 1878. , Reynoldsvillc, Tenn'a. BUSINESS-CARDS. MITCHELL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Oltlee on Wt Main street, opposite the Ooknmerclal Hotel, KeynoldirUle, Pa. m. Mcdonald, ATTOnNEY-ATLAW, Nlitnry Public, real mtnte scent, Patents 'oclirfd, collectlntui mad prom ml j. Utile 'In .xnlun block, Keynoldnvllle, Pa. IIITH M. M OCR EIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LA-tf SOt: rr Public and Real Estate A (rent. flct)ln wtl' rocetve prompt attention, OfTy 'i rfjropiiik'h a nenry Diocfct, near pontomcer j'l oiuaviue ri. B. E. HOOVER, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. RHulent dentlnt. In tha Hoover bnlldlna ext Uoor to pomorHc, Main atreat, . Geotle- e 'Jii opemtlnH. . L. L. MEANS, DENTIST, - on second floor of First National bn Ins, Miiin atreet. R. DKV ERE KING. I, DENTIST, "N. arond Boor Itevn le filllg Aiamatroet itByiiuiuftvuiart a. ; I. W. A. HENRY, DENTIST, re on eoconri floor of Henry Bros, brick -1 1 tier. Main street. NEFF. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Real Estate A Rent, KeynoMavllIe, Pa. L. M.SNYDER, ctical HorBe-Shoer aud General Blacksmith. 1T ahnetna done ln tha nearest mannat h lntMat. tmnmved m.tlhods. K itotull kinds carefully and promptly BAT Mr ACTION UUAHANTSKU. HORSE CLIPPING 1nat received a eomDlete set of fna ore clippers of latent style '06 patter) prepared to ao cnpuinn is in manner at reitAonable raiea. net. near una, Kejnoiasvm, r. EVERY WOMAN Sometime need a ralfahl aoathl regulating nMOMlne DR. PEAL'S ENNYROYAL piLLS, 'enr! certain tarwult, Th(au. uiaappoiat ti.ss per aaav H. Alex. Statu. AT UNG'S ANING I L L. nd Sash, Doors, nd Finish of all Eh and Dressed ligh Grade Var- d una Oil Colors es. Ana also aa of Nails which cheap. on accona nnor ueynouiTina. npiii f llf L nuij,r at" 1.1 W. '" n.I I r ,7 I W i i S 1 sa 1 f h ft I k 1 j)ONC, Prop. j V IT.T."iit I'.i'1