Thfl n'ciltlliig In the tlinne of the Cap Hoi at Washington, 3T5 fool above the ground, may be classed with propriety as a happening In high life. The Brooklyn Engln says that wltbln a raillus of ten blocks of hie office there are twelve abandoned churches. The population In the same era la greater than It has been at any time In the his tory of the city. President Wheeler of the University of California, snya that football la be coming more and more restricted to the RpeHallRt. that It tends to exclude even the average healthy man. and that It, on the whole, enconragpa "root Ins" talher than physical develop ment. The sale of recent translations In Japan Indicates that foreign nttthors rank as follow-H In the estimation of the Japanese: Zola, I'oyle, (losse, lJing. Bret Harte, Stevenson, (leorgo Meredith, John Morley, Pater, Thomas Hardy, Henry James, Ian Maclaren, Rnskln, Steven Phillips, Tennyson and Mark Twain. Minneapolis Times remarks that medical expert testimony In suits at law has falter. In such disfavor that judges, lawyers and physicians alike re casting about for a way to restore It to respectability. Expert testimony should be candid, Impartial and sclen tltVally true. In practice the reverse is too often the case. London's latest fad is said to be a system of somersaults for cure for fnt people. There Is no question that the turning of handsprings has a tendency to reduce obesity, but It Is a heroic cure and tho average man or woman who weighs over 2!0 pounds would be In great danger of breaking the neck to Indulge In such gymnastics. Tho recent appointment of a com mission to consider the whole question of Russian agriculture and the condi tion of the peasantry marks a new de parture In the internal policy of Rus sia. The powers accorded to the coin mission are of the widest possible, and, In fact, amount to a charge to com plete the work begun a generation ago with the freeing of the serfs. Thus the entire manner of life with the Russian mujlk will form one of the principal matters of conalderatlon for the com mission, which Is empowered to pre sent Its proposals for the bettering financially, educationally, economically and In general culture of agricultural labor In all Its phases. The Cooperative union at Milan has established the first Rowton house in Italy, a huge building with 630 bed rooms, with everything of the moBt faultless make and perfect pattern. Cooperative pharmacies are much ap preciated by tho working cluRRes. There are ssventeen general stores In con nection with the Turin Cooperative al liance, and excepting with regard to bread, the Turin alliance has adopted the old Rochdalo principle. Dread is old under current ratea. The stores are open to all tho world, and all who deal receive the same amount of divi dends, but provident benefits, free medical treatment, and education at the popular university are reserved for members only. The productive socie ties are for the most part humble. The societies of bricklayers and stone masons undertake contracts for execu ting buildings, and give general satis faction. Italian cooperatives do little a yet In respect of providing laborers' dwellings; but, on the other hand, the agricultural banking movement has spread far and wide throughout Italy, states the Economic Review. It Is notorious that the confirmed practical Joker Is the least tolerant of Jokes at his own expense. He Is never able to see any fun In being duped. This adds much to the enjoyment of those who manage to trick him. On one of the big days at the Buffalo Ex position the hotels were forced to make new arrivals double up. A drummer who was an Inveterate practical Joker proposed to have a room and a bed to 1 tlmself. He suggested to his friend the .clerk that should any applicant for half his bed prove persistent, he should toe told that tho drummer was Just con valescent from smallpox. The drum mer was aroused from his first deep aleep by a man getting into his bed. "Hold on there!" he cried; "didn't the clerk tell you I have the smallpox?" "Yes," replied th newcomer, drawing up the covers, "but that's all right I've got it -myself!" With a yell the drummer leaped from the bed, seised his clothes, dressed in the hall and pent the night In a chair, longing for - th morning so he could get himself disinfected. In the morning he discov ered that the man waa a Joker himself. The drummer was infuriated by such shabby treatment. i An Idyl of Oyster Point. i By ANNIE STECER WINSTON. Whitewash sunshine, a pervasive smell of crabs, omnipresent oyster shells and Mis. Cnrruthers. Such l my imprct'sloiilstlcs recollection of Oy ster Point. Though there were other Oyster tVnters, of course. There wns, for instance, Mr, Hprockott. Early In my acquaintance with Mrs. CnrrutlM-rs I acquired a light-headed fcfllnr ihat Mr. Spmrkrtt was with IP" o;i of the elemental facts of con f uunc.su so castml. so tnexplann-toi-y was e ven her first casual Introduc tion of his name, it so permeated In the some wny our subsequent Inter ruiirsp. And yet I never rrnlly knew Mr. Sproikett, though nft'-r awhile I accidentally became nwnre thnt tho name appertained to a sondy-holred, ml'ldlt afii'.l man of retiring demeanor whom I had dully seen passing the sort of nmn we nre always vaguely surprised to dud so far differentiated ns to hnve n name. I am not sure that I ever met him. even, for he was fur ther differentiate-.!. I discovered, by a nervous honor of any situation re quiring speech; and I mercifully as sisted his frantic efforts to escape me whenever i had occasion to call at Mrs. Carruthers' In his off hours. What his business was 1 have forgot ten, If I ever knew. I somehow as sociate oysters with him; but whether because of Ills ocupatlon or of his per sonal peculiarities I cannot undertake with any degree of assurance to say. Tho white paling of the house in which I wan for a time sojourning, continuing, formed the front boundary of Mrs. Carruthers' demesne; a similar pnllng alone divided the respective back yards of tho two establishments. A day or two after we moved in we heard wild and distressful squawking from our yard, and upon Investigation found that our chickens were being fiercely pursued by a turtle bend ap parently as little Inconvenienced by It bodiless condition as a Raphael cher ub. "What did It want with a chicken?" ! asked Mrs. Carruthers when she called with earnest apologies; for It was, It appeared, a fugitive remnant of her dinner. She did not know, but r.be seemed much surprised at my laughing. A tall, brawny woman with a deep voice, and a fnlnt trace of dark down on her upper lip, she had the small, light blue eyes of a baby, almost, and, us I nfterward found, a cheering re sponsibility of mnnner which I havo never seen In any other adult. This, howver, was on this particular occa blon overclouded by a sincere regret and chagrin at the contretemps, which all my assurances could not suffice to dispel. ''I told Mr. Spruckett," she said, "that you all certainly would think I was a poor manager leaving turtle heads running round, liko that and bothering the neighbors. But Just ns I was going to bury It my pickle began to boll over, and when I came back 'twas gone." As the call was somewhat a formal one, she wore, I remember, her Sun day best a voluminous black silk, a larger bonnet gorgeous with purplo roses, and a lace collar pinned with the gold-framed, half length pic ture (In a horizontal position) of some gentleman unknown,; unknown, I mean, to Mrs. Carruthers herself. . "I got It mighty cheap at a sale," she told me afterward; "thought it would lok sort o' dressy." I had not unnaturally supposed It to be the portrait of Mr. Carruthers (to whose decease live years before tho black silk and purplo roses wero refer able Mrs. Carruthers" natural Inclin ation being for what she called "cheerful colors.") She stared a little when I mentioned my assumption. "Mr. Carruthers!" she said. She meditated awhlla "That's so! I could have It put in If you think I ought to. I never thought of it. There was a picture of him 'bout the house somewhere that would be Just tha thing If I could lay my hand on It." Apparently sli'o found it, for the next time I saw the brooch the rather un sympathetic countenance of Mr. Car ruthers stared from the rim, looking for some mysterious reason somewuat larger than life, and crowned by a tall and inflexible bat for the accommo dation of which tho picture was por foce curtailed below, bo that the chin whiskers barely escaped. "It does lok better, I reckon," she said, simply; "and I want to do what's right as I said to Mr. Sprock ett. Mnt, lor me! Mr. Carruthers wouldn't have cared. Ho was mighty practical!" From all I ever learned of him I should have Inferred a certain lack of poetry and sentiment in Mr. Carruth ers. "I never wil get over not having any wedding," she said one day. "Not having had any wedding!" I repeated blandly. She did not notice my surprise, "I'd saved up money, and all," she went on. "I'd set my heart on a white Ilk dress, and veil and wreath and bridesmaids and everything. But Mr. Caruthers put his foot down, He said a cow would do me a heap more good than . frills and furbelowa and wedding fixings would and maybe he was right. 'Twa a mighty good cow I bought (I was teaching when he married me, cut out to teach, but think, I was really cut out to teach, but there ain't many things I" can't turn my band to in the way of work, though I say it that shouldn't). Twas a mighty good cow 4 I bought with the money I d saved up, as I was saying, and I made a heap o' money selling the milk; and after all, 'twaln't what a wedding would havo been. I don't care what anybody says!" With all his practicality Mr. Car rulhers had not been a business suc cess, and It was to her own thrift and Industry thnt his widow owed her present condition of modest comfort particularly to her exquisite mastery of the art of pickle making. To her Justly celebrnted pickles, in process of manufacture, the neighborhood was In debted for a spley fragrance, which modified most agreably the Indigenous flavor of mnrlne delicacies In an Im perfect stnle of preservation. A slight alcoholic Infusion was also occasionally observable In tho atmos phere of Oyster point, and a chroni cally In famed nose marked more than one pionilnent citizen notably the mayor, who was also tho doctor, both horse and human, of the vlllnge. Hut whatever drunkenness there was and I do not now recall any means of di version beyond alcoholic Indulgence which the place presented was car ried on, as a rule, with a sobriety, so to speak, and decent reserve, which precluded scandal and offense. One day I heard Mrs. Carruthers, ns I thought, declining chickens or other household supplies at her back door, and Idly looking out at my window. I then saw that she was speaking to Mr. Sprocket!, who, standing on the Btep, with his lint pushed back upon his hea.l at a peculiarly unbecoming angle, listened wit a countenance absolutely devoid of any expression whatsoever. "I'm mightily obliged to you, Mr. Sprocket!." she was saying, "and If I was thinking about getting married " I drew back with such III considered haste ns to bump my head loudly against the window sash, and so doubt less made my unintended eavesdrop ping perfectly apparent. I apologised when she camo over Inter In the day. "Oh. that's all right." she said, good nnturedly; "there wa'n't much to near you know Mr. Sprockett's mighty quiet, lint 1 certainly was sur prised, lie's been nfter me more than once lately about going Into the ptcklo business on a big scale; hut. I didn't know he wnnted to bo taken In or was thinking about me. Mr. Sprockelt'B mighty Inoffensive I'd Just as soon marry him as anybody but I kind o' think marrying ain't what It's held out to be. And so I thought I'd better let well enough alone 'specially as he wa'n't very pressing!" The next morning he did not appear at breakfast, and upon investigation It was found that he had not come home the previous night. "I don't think I could have hurt his feelings," Mrs. Carruthers said to mo over the back fence; "and he didn't seem to be a bit set on It! I Just hope he aln'a sick off somewhere." Tho potato man arrived as we wero talking. "Mr. SprocUett?" he said, with a grin. "Mr. Spruckett got shut up for being drunk last night. They soy be carried on terrible. He'll be up before the. mayor this morning, llo'll be up before the mayor this morning. He's up now. I nckon." Mrs. Carruthers had dropped the tu bers she was examining. "Shut up for being drunk last night!" She looked at me in a way that I did not in tho least understand, but I saw that she was strongly moved. "Shut up!" she re peated. "Before the mayor this morn ing! Go 'long! I don't want any po tatoes!" I had never seen her In a towering rage. I should hnve believed her as in capable of It as Mr. Sprockett of the outrageous, violent and truculent con duct of which I learned ho had been guilty while under spirituous excita tion conduct of which the guardians of the law could but take cognizance In the Interest of public safety. But I could not help suspecting that if It had been a comparatively "nlco of fense" It would havo "met Its com ment." What buslnes dIJ ho have get ting drunk, when he never had been drunk before In bis life, so far as ap peared? That Mrs. Carruthers was In a tower ing rage her very back showed as sho hurried into the house. I saw bor emerge In a moment, with her bon net strings tied very tightly under hor chin, and rapldiy disappear up the street. To the (unsolicited) kindness of the milkman I owo an account of what folluwed! "Things was 'most over when she got there," he said, "all out of breath; the mayor was Just fixing to fine him heavy anybody could see that when sue walked rlylit up and looked him In the eye( there was a crowd there, but they gave way), and sho says, says she, 'Look a here. Doctor Blanks,' she says, 'you let Mr. Sprocket alone,' sho says. 'What I say is,' she says, 'them that live In glass houses shouldn't throw stones,' she says. 'You ain't the one,' she says, 'with that nose, to be setting in Judgment on anybody for getting druuk,' she says, 'and you know it. You ought to be ashamed of yourself,' she says .There ain't any use in being a hypocrite if you are a drunkard,' she says, 'which Mr. Sprockett ain't and never will be! Come 'long, Mr. Sprockett!' " The case, I understood, was hur riedly, even precipitately dismissed. No one, I think, thought the ocurrence especially notable, least of all Mrs. Carruthers herself. She dropped In. to see me next day and sat fanning her self placidly, ber bonnet strings com fortably untied, and talked of i variety of topics, embracing, aa I remember. tomato catchup, .measles, thunder storms, cistern and well water, moths snd moth-exterminators, ways of util izing cold meals, the effects of tea and coffee on tho nerves, dreams and pre sentiments, mosquitoes, Mrs. Brown's bonnet, methods of pickling oysters, dahlia culture, and powdered oyster shells ns a medium for burnishing table knives. I thought sho looked a llttlo occu pied., lint motives of delicacy prevent ed my touching upon the subject which I suspected wss weighing upon her mind the woeful Inpsn of Mr. Si'i-ocki tt. All at once (we were dis cussing the uncertainty of human af fairs) site said, with sudden animation, "Now, 'who In the world would ever hnve dreamed of Mr. Sprockett's going off and getting drunk?" "Nobody,"! assured her.wlth a readi ness that seemed to gratify her. She broke Into an oddly light-hearted laugh, like that of b young Kit 1. "I never was so surprised In my life!" she snld. ' Wa'n't It romantic?" "There ain't anything for me to do, I reckon, but to give in," she added, in a mntter of course wny, but her eyes shone, 'and this time I'M have a wed ding." Womnn's Home Companion. RINGS AND ELECTRICITY. A Cntnltlnntlnn That flairs a lanr ITo man a Startling Slinrk. The diamond engagement and plain band wedding rings on the third fin ger or tho left hand of Mrs. Clara Banker formed the connecting link of a complete circuit for an electrical current when she attempted to turn off an Incandescent light, anl almost caused her death by electrocution. At though she escaped with her life, through a wonderful exhibition of fern Inliie presence of mind, her left hnnd v.as-very badly burned by tiie current and a large piece of flesh torn from the Inside of tho little Anger. Mrs. Banker is the wlfo of L. E. Banker, manager of the fiano com tuny, and resides at 2205 East Colfax avenue. When Mrs. Banker attempted to fcrasp the button to turn off the light, the rings camo In contact with tho brass casings surrounding tho upper part of the globe. In an Instant she felt the effects of tho current, and when sho attempted to Jerk her hand away she found Bhe could not remove II. She nttemtped to pull her left band from the globe by using her right band to Jerk with, but was unsuccess ful. By that time, Mrs. Banker says, her entire left sldo began to grow numb, and bIio threw herself backward with all hor force. The sudden Jerk released her hand from the Incandes cent light fixture and broke the cur rent. Mrs. Banker threw herself with such force that she fell against the door two feet behind her, cracking one of the panels. The effect of the current going through the woman's body, almost completely un nerved her, and for sev eral hours sho required constant at tention. When she Jerked her hand from the light fixture a large piece or flesh from the Inside of the little finger was torn away. The other fin gers and pulm of the hand were badly burned, the flesh looking as though it l ad been cooked with carbolic acid. Bocky Mountain News. CUAINT AND CURIOUS. According to the traditions, about JOiiu people perished In tho destruc tlon of Pompeii. The excavators have found 280 human skeletons and those of nine horses and five dogs. Divers aro able to converse under water by plnclng their helmets, which are invariably made of copper, togeth er, and shouting to one another. Tho fcouml, jliey say, is swiftly and dis tinctly conveyed. It was William Pitt who originated the Income tax In Great Britain, in 1798, as a war tax. The Napoleonic wars were fought with It. From that time to this it has been the resort of ail ministers to meet war expend!, tures. The combined ago of four brothers of the Uastien family of Galena, HI., Is 43 years; of the four brothers and two sisters, 508 years, the youngest of them being 77, and the oldest 93 years old. They are all In good health, and live within a raJius of two miles of each other. The foundations of a Roman villa have been laid bare in Greenwich park, London, by the park keeper. The space opened has an area of about 16 feet, and tho only loose materials found, so far, are some tiles. The discovery is regarded with great In terest by local authorities. Tho earliest known hot water heat ing is curiously traced to Greenland, where the strangely forgotten colony of Norwegians had increased to 190 villages in the Hth century. A Ger man author was told in 1516 of the heating and cooking by water in pipes from a hot spring. The ruins of the colony were located in 1723, and the hot spring was some years ago seen by an American artist. Two remarkable historical relics 1 ave lately come under the auction eer's hammer In Europe. At thei Kal kenhayn sale in Vienna the pen used by Czar Alexander I., Emperor Fran cis II., and King Frederick William III. of Prussia to sign the "Holy Al liance" treaty was sold for $160. In London the pale blue silk undershirt that King Charles I. took off and gave to his doctor before stepping upon thr scaffold, brought $1022. Dazzling prospects seldom make on blind to one's own Interest. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. The busy have no time for tears.- Byron. Fame la Hie perfume of herole deeds. Socrates. What frenzy dictates Jealousy be lieves. (lay. Strong reasons make strong actions. Shakespeare Whatever makes man a slave takes hair his worth away. I'ope. There Is llttlo Influence where there Ik not great sympathy. H. I; Prime, Maxims aro tiie condensed good sense of nations. Sir J. Mackintosh. Great talkers aro like leaky vessels; everything runs out of them. C. Sim mons. It Is only reason that tenches si 1 nee; the heort teaches us to speak. Hlchter. A Judicious silence is nlways better than truth spoken without, charity. lit Sales. Idleness is only the refuge of weak minds and the holiday of fools. Chesterfield. Waste of time Is the most extrava pant and costly of all expenses. Thcnphrastiis. The world Is full of hopeful analo gies and handsome, dubious eggs tailed possibilities. Georgo Eliot. PROHIBITION TERRITORY. One-tlilril of Mm I'npiilallnn l.le I'mler Ami. Saloon f.awa. It Is estimated that fully 3(1,00(1,000 people aro living In the United States timid prohibition, cither by stato law or by local option. This Is more than a third of the entire population of the Republic. The following comities have in the various states enacted prohibi tion laws: 'Alabama In no out of fifi counties. Arkansas !:i fio out of 75 counties. California In 175 cities and towns. Colorado In 50 cities nnd towns. Connecticut In 75 out of 125 towns. DelawareIn fully hair or the state. Florida In 30 out of 45 counties. Georgia The whole of the state ex ept 4 cltlo. Illl.iols In 5o cities and towns. Indiana In 140 towns. Iowa Tho whole of tho state except 25 cities. Kansas T!ie whole of the state. Kentucky In 90 out of 119 coun ties. Louisiana In 20 nut of 59 counties. Maine The whole of tho state. Maryland In 15 out or 21 counties. Massachusetts In 2(13 out of 353 cities anil towns. Michigan In 400 cities and towns. Minnesota In 400 cities and towns. Mississippi In 7! out of 75 coun ties. Missouri In 84 out. of 115 counties. Montana In a row counties. Nebraska la 250 cities and towns. New Hampshire The whole of the ftnte. New Jersey In 200 cities anJ towns. New York In 700 cities and towns. North Carolina In 60 out of 90 coun ties. North Dakota The whole of the state. Ohio In 500 cities and towns. Oregon In tho grent Indian reser vation. Pennsylvania In 60 cities and towns, and 20 counties. Rhode Island In 20 cities and towns. South Carolina Tho whole of the stato, except 10 cities. South Dakota The whole of the state, except a few cities. Tennesee In 70 out of 90 counties. Texas In 120 out of 240 counties. Vermont The wholo of the state. , Virginia In 65 out of K'fi counties. Washington In 50 cities and towns. West Virginia In 40 out of 51 coun ties. Wisconsin In 300 cities and towns. Exchange. Veni-nck TnlU In Order, The Japanese aro ruthless In their tampering with nature. If they de cide that they want a bird or an anl r.'al of a certain shape or color, they set about manufacturing the article, so to speak, by the exercise of exceed ingly clever Ingenuity and untiring pa tience. Here, for example, is how the white sparrows are produced: They select a pair of grayish birds and keep them In a white cage In a white room, where they are attended by a person dre3sed In white. The mental effect on a series of genera tions of birds results In completely white birds. They breed the domes tic rock with enormously long talis alter the same principle. They first select a bird with a good tall, giving him a very high perch to Btand on; then with weights they drag tho tall downward, carrying on the same sys tem with the finest specimens of his descendants till a tall almost as long as a peacock's Is produced at last. Tainting on Unman Skin. Marcus Ixirenzo, an Italian painter who flourished In the last century, one paid 200 francs for a piece of hu man Bkin no larger than a dlnnerplate, upon which to execute a landscape in oils. The skin, which was chemi cally prepared to receive the paint, was taken from the back of an aged woman, whose body had been sold to a medical man for dissecting experi ments. The human parchment waa 'drawn tightly over a metal frame, and the artist spent nearly seven months In producing a painting that was after wards exhibited In various salons and ultimately realized 84,000 francs. Leeds Mercury.' Tha Roar of a- Waterfall. ' The roar of a waterfall la produced almost entirely by the bursting ol mil lions of air bubbles. snmimnimninimnimnimmminnimnimnimnimmfe! I THE JEFFERSON I SUPPLY COMPANY Being the largest distributor of General Merchandise in this vicinity, it always in Fosition to give the best quality of goods, ts aim is not to sell von 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; 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. B 8 & iiiuiauiiiiiiiuiiiiuiiiiiiiuiiiiuiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiiiiit FIKE I3STS UTl Brookville I'n. Since 1S78. 2 FIR9T-CL1S9 COJV1PANIES. JOHN TRUDGEN, Solicitor, Reynoklsville, Penn'n. LABOn WORLD. All the mines iu the Tnreiiluiu (Pa.) district me closed. ltroiikl.vn (Ohio) carpenters are mak ing nn elTort to form a new union. Klectrlcnl workers at Duluth. Minn, hnve been grunted an ml v mice in wages. Advices from Mexico stnto thnt scar city or labor Is retarding railroad con struction. The witges of South Wales miners, reguliiloil on the sliding scale, are to be reduced ten per cent. The wages of miners nnd tniikmen have been reduced two nnd a half pet cent, nt Newcastle, England. Montreal (Can.) stonemasons threat en, to strike unless grunted thirty cents nn hour unci a nliie-bnur day. Itrli'kmiikers nt Detroit, Mich., con template forming a union. They want more pay nnd a uniform scale, Hoilcrmiikcrx. sheet Iron workers and liolleruiakers' helpers nt St. Louis, Mo., have nxked ror Increased wages. The tinners and sinters at Young town, Ohio, havo been grunted nn In crease of twenty-five cents a day. Tho International Union of Cnr Ituildcrs nnd Itepalrers has Increased Its membership 10,000 In less than four months. Western women golfers will play for the championship at Ouwentsia. Chi cago, during the four days, August 27 to UO. The Stonemasons' Union, of Toronto, Can., and their employers have agreed on a rale of forly-ono cents an hour for one year. The mills of West Duluth, Minn., have mnt the wage scale demanded by the lumber pliers, but refuse to recog nize the union. Tneonin (Wash.) team drivers hnve returned to work. Concessions were mndo on both sides. Ten hours con stitute a day's work and the union Is recognized. California Has Great Resources. California has a coast lino of more than 700 miles a stretch of ocean front that would reach from Boston to Carolina. It has an average breadth of 200 miles, which gives It an area of considerably over 100,000,000 acres, or about the combined extent of all New England. New York and Pennsylvania. Within these borders there are various, kinds of climate, marvelous diversities in soil and prod ucts, and conditions that excite In terest and wonder. The census shows that the Stato has increased rapidly In population; that it has taken high er rank in the value of agricultural crops; that It is first In vino culture, and that it has made most astonish iug progress In manufactures. The United States Department of Agriculture now has well-equipped la boratories for the investigation of tho diseases of plants In Washington City, Florida and California. There are also 50 experiment stations where plant diseases are studied, and In per haps half that number of colleges practical courses on plant life are given. New South Wales - attaches the death penalty to setting fire to a dwelling bouse knowing that a poison Is there. whenTn douiit. try" and hav cut-Ad thousand ai aat of Narvoua Di a m, wnch m Debility, Diuinau, ltpUa pasa ndVncocal,Autpfey,4 Thtf claartta brain, atreagthaai the circulation, ibaka aUg aaria Dartact. and imDart a ftaaiihv vigor to tha whoia baiag. All abaiaa and Iomcs ara cKackad riinirl?jln.,"'- Unlaaa patiaan -n mm. ara pra prly eurad, ihalt aaadk Ham aftrn wantn I mem into loaamty. Ho at Dwto. MaJUd Mint Prk4 (i fm htmt I aaata, wiia trUa Ugal guaraauio vara ar anaa u Baaajr.ftaa. aaaa aw mini, for sals kjr h. Alva Staka. . M - sISSSatatatBi SI S3 1 B 3 ANOE. BUSINESS CARDS. MITCHELL, ATTOHNTEY-AT-LAW, Ofllpe on Wmt Main sireat, opw Oommarr.lal Unlet, Itnynnldnvllln, Pi Qt m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Notary Public, rBl entata agent, Parnta mm, t-uiim;unH mnnn priirnimy. UDlca In Nolnn block, Keyiioldsvllfo, Pa. gMITH M. MoCREIGHT, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW , Notnrr Public and Real Eitcite A-nt. O-V iBotlonawlH rei-elvo prompt alien Inn. Ofll. t in rroniif ii it Henry block, near vwntolltca, iKjijuiuitviiia ru. R. B. E. HOOVER,, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Rfwldont. dontlBt. In tha FIoo' i-r bulMlna noxt dour to puMonme, Main it root. Uentlo nmnn in operating. D R. L. L. MEANS. DENTIST, OffWon wvond door of First National ban Diuiuing, Alum Htrout. R. R. DeVERE KING, DENTIST, Ofllra oa aacond floor RpynoHllla Real caraia mag. Ainia at.raoc KoyiioiuV!il6, fa. JR.'W. A. HENRY, DENTIST, Ofllra on second floor of Henry Broa. brlns building, Main iroet. E, NEF'F. JUSTICE OP THE PEACE And Roal Entato Agent, RaynoldaTllla, Pa. L. M. SNYDER, Practical Horse-Sboer and General Blacksmith. Hnma-hnelnKdnnain tha naatei mannel anil by the latent Improved veiboda. Ha mtlrlns of ull klnda carefully aud promptly dene. Satihfaotios Guasantssm. HORSE CLIPPING Have Juat received a complete n't of ua bine hoi-M clipper of latent my In 'I uatwra tnd am prepared to do clipping- In ma I beat puMilme Dimmer at reasonable rulen. Jackou at. near lilfiii, Kejrnoldavllls, Pa. EVERY WOMAN Sometimes need a mllahla moutlily regulating meuiolna, DR. PEAL' 3 PENNYROYAL PILLS, Irapromrvtanfeand certAtnlnreetltt. Tbegentw ..... . mj uu . u, uuupiiuiufc par 1 V aala bj B. Alex. Stoka, rpxrrr YOUNG'S. PLANING MILL You will find Sash, Doors, Frames and Finish of all kinds, RouRh and Dressed Lumber, High Grade Var-. nishes, Lead and Oil Colors in all shades. And also nn overstock of Nails which I will sell cheap. J. V. YOUNG, Prop. v ( '