PROVIDENCE. Providence MionM unre eomplaln- Dotheri'd in tbu iky, Thin ono prnyln' (or the rain, That one (or the dry I On thin hore "terrestrial ball" . (I'Alrent one of any,) Trvln' (or to pleae n all, Never pleaein' any I j THE TREASURE OF THE GOLDEN GATE, j BY CEORCC NOBLE. In 1803-04 a great treasure, to the value of narly ono million dollars in gold coin and bullion, was recovered from the wreck of the Pariflc mall steamship, Golden Gate. . I have the story direct from one of the principal men of the enterprise. During the pe riod which elnp ed between the dis covery of gold in California and the establishment of transcontinental traf fic, the custom was to ship coin and bullion from San Francisco to the Isth mus of Panama, across which It was carried to Asplnwall, now Colon, on the Atlnntle.' There It would be re chipped to its destination in the Unit ed States or Europe. Thus in July, 18G2. the tide-wheel steamship. Golden Gate, wai en route from San Fraruirco to Panama, carry ing more than five hundred passen gers and a large amount cf treasure. While running aloLg the west coast of Mexico, about two miles offshore, ihe was discovered to be afire. She was headed for the beach, and when she struck the fire hnd so enwrapped her that all on board were forced to fling themselves Into the surf. There was a vicious undertow. Two hundred and twenty-eight people were lost, and of the vessel herself, in a short time nothing remained in sight except some of the tall machinery. After the wreck became known it was announced that there had been a million and a half dollars' worth of gold in the treasure-room of the Gol den Gate. The underwriters sent skilled divers to the scene to attempt the recovery of this treasure. Tho divers, after a prolonged ex nminatlon, reported that the vessel had broken in two at the treasure- toom, and that tne gold had been burled to deep in the sand, through the combined action of the surf and the tindertcw, that the recovery of any portion of it was impossible. Tho un derwriters thereupon abandoned tho attempt. A number of adventurous spirits in San Francisco, upon learning of this report, determined to make personal examination of the wreck. Thl? they did in August, 18G2, and corroborated the report of tho previous divers. A second expedition went down, and although not successful, brought back reports that furnished encouragement for a third, which started from San Frnncieoo in October, 1863. This expedition sailed In two schoon ers, tho R. B. Potter, a, former pilot boat of seventy tons, and the Naiad, a little craft of thlity tons previously used for collecting gulls' eggs front the Farallone Islands. There werj ten men on each vessel, including div ers and engineers, and there was all the necessary apparatus. The diving apparatus was put into shape; the two schooners were moored at a safe dtrtance from the breakers; the air-pump, with its attendants, was placed in position on the launch; tind one of the divers, in his submar ine suit, dropped over the side, but did not vanish. Since the water was but four fathoms deep and clear as crystal, he could easily be seen as he .walked along the bottom toward the wreck. A stream ot air-bubbles rose behind him, and fish and sharks fled from him in every direction. As he approached the wreck and found shallower water with each step. It was seen that the furious surf and the undertow forced him by degrees to sloop "ntil he was crawling along on all (ours. When he was directly over the wreck he began to employ the ingenious apparatus to which the adventurers looked for success, This apparatus consisted of a brass pipe, with a nozzle two and one-half Inches in diameter, which was at tached to five hundred feet of hom leading to n steam-pump on board the Naiad. A continuous stream ot wa ter, as powerful as that from a flre rngino, was to be forced through the 1-c.nc; and this, It was hoped, would roll the sar.d to such a state that the diver could gradjally settle down into it and lay hold of the treasure. As soon as he reached the place where he was to work, the diver gave the signal to etart the pump. ( After an hour of expectancy by those Above, tho diver signaled to stop the pump, and then came to the surface. After being relieved of his belmet, he nrew In a few breaths of fresh air and reported: "Everything U all right so far, but there is a lot more work to be done than we bargained for. The sand has accumulated ro that where we expect ed two or three feet, there are almost six. Under this Is the coal, and in It we shall find tho boxea of gold, if we . ever find 'hem. The experiment with the hose worked woll," he continued. '1 kept playing the nozzle under and about my legs, and sank throe feet easily. nut I tell you, there's danger for a diver in this thing. If the steam pump ever stops working while a man la deep in the rolled-up sand he will Je caught there cure, for the sand will (row eolid about him before he can get out." i The men had not thought of this before, but they at once saw the trutlt ef It, and arranged that every Imagin Coin' counter every day, Htnllln' now, an' soowlln't Bun the world one feller'! way, Beta another growlln'i Whnt a mixture all around! I.lte of teara on' Jeotln', Then a little spot o' ground, Daisies dust to rest In 1 Atlanta Constttnrlfra, able precaution should be taken to keep the pump working. Both divers descended on the second day, but after considerable time re appeared with no more encouraging l'ews than that ono of them had got down into the rand to the depth of his armpits without discovering any thing. During the following week the search went on with no success. The divers found trot the stream front the hose did cot thin the sand enough to enable them to bend down in It and grope about their feet. The stream made a hole for them to sink In, but It was not wide enough to rtoop In. and it was filled with a mixture of sand and water, ready to "set" tho moment the stream should stop. So tho men employe! their feet as hands, groping about for the treasure-boxes. The time passed thus until Thanks giving day. Then the hopes of the party, who had ventured most of their savings in the enterprise, were very low, but the divers were encased as ucual for their regular descents. On this morning one of them remarked: "Boys, I am going to touch the coal today if I have to go my full length for it. We're needing scmclhing spe cial to ne thankful for." It was three hours before he signaled to stop the pump. With their expec tations roused by his unusual stay, tho ethers waited easterly for a signal to fend down a bag of such implements as the diver might need to assist him in raising & box of treasure. A small, fiat bolt, containing two men and grapnels. Ice-tongs and such imple ments, was always kept moored over the spot where the diver was at work. Soon the hopes of those above wero destroyed by tho announcement that the diver was coming to the surface. The diver, however, had planned a most agreeable disappointment. He wiio tells me this story remembers being struck by tho fact that aa the diver ascended the ladder to the side of the launch, he used but one 'hand to assist himself. When he emerged, Ms friends saw a package under one of his arms, and this he handed up to those on bor.td. The box, about a foot long, eight Inches In width and four in depth, was carried over to the Potter, opened, and found to contain three thousand five hundred dollars in gold coin. To obtain this box the diver had been obliged to sink himtelf until the top of his head was Just level with the surface of the sand. Feeling some thing hard beneath him, he worked it about for a long time with his feet, until' finally, with the assistance of some hooks he had carried down with him, he had raised It to a point where he could got his hand on it. While there he had sent up several signals of assurance, which his tenners had never received, no doubt because his life-line had been burled in the firm sand which surrounded the roily hole, Great progress was now made, the next day, with the assistance ot grap nels and bags, more treasure was discovered, and then, day after day, two, three, and even four boxes, con taining various amounts, were ex tricated from the sand by the labor ot both divers. With each box they had to mount slowly out of the hole they had bored, and allow the sand to fill in and harden behind- them. Elated with success, the divers, as was natural, relaxed their precautions a little, until one of them had a perll ius adventure. Standing over the wreck, he was boring his excavation with the hose and sinking rapidly into the sanl as usual. Just as he got down to his shoulders, the butt ot the hose was suddenly torn from his grasp by the surf. As he groped about on the sand expecting to fel it, he remembered with a shock that before beginning cperations he had neglected thij customary precaution ot attaching the hose to his belt by a lanyard. The whole thing had been washed far beyond his reach. Almost Instantly the sand, no longer loosened by the stream of water, began tr. harden round him, and he realized the full horror of his situation. So quickly was he embedded that the use of bis arms was soon lost; noth ing protruded from the solid sand ex cept bis h el meted head, hands and wrists. With bis life-line buried and his arms powerless, he was unable to make any signal for relief to those above, who were quite unaware of hie dreadful situation. Besides all this, owing to the disturbance created around him by the surf and the un dertow, be might as well have been blind tor all that he could see. The pressure of sand on his chest was so severe that he began to lose breath, and resigned himself to the speedy, agonizing death which ap peared inevitable. Nearly exhausted, ho felt something touch one of his bands. It was the bight of the hoBe, which, in wunlilng about over the bot tom, had struck against him a thing uoi imeiy 10 nappen once in a thous. and times. Gripping this with his band, he siowiy edgea it along, bit by bit. un til finally he got bold of the butt and ine nozzie itself, with great difflr-ul t be turned the stream of water Into the sand, an.l freed first one arm, then the other, and gradually the whole tipper part of his body. Through the remainder of the day be was prostrated, but he plucklly went back to the work the next day, and from that time on there was no lack of precaution on his part. A later incident, In which the other diver figured. Indicates well to what a degree the success of the expedition was due to the pluck, persistence and hard work of the divers. In raising tne largo box of treasure from the hole In the land, the tongs by which he held It clipped, and ripped the cover entirely off the box whllo It was yet a fcot from tho top of the hole. But by the greatest care and palm he finally succeeded In resting It on the level sand outside the hole with out spilling" o single coin. It was hauled up to tho boat In a bag, and found to contain nearly thirty thous and dollars. Of course the weight ot these boxes In the mixture of sand and water was fcr less than It would have been In the air. Uninterrupted by other Incidents, the worn of recovery went on until the first of January, when the Increase of surf, with the change of season, made further operations Impossible. The last box of treasure was extricated on Christmas day, and although regular trips below were made dally during the week that followed, no more boxes were brought to the surface. Then the men stopped their work and left the spot, fully Intending to repeat the operations in the following year; but during the winter the party scattered far and wide, and weie never reunit ed. Many schemes for obtaining the rest of the treasure, by dredging, building breakwaters or inserting coffer-dams, have been talked about, but no ono has yet recovered a dollar of what the San Francisco sal lor men failed to lift; nor has nr.y one produced a scheme which, in the opinion of tho tuan who told me this story, will war rant the outlay of the capital neces sary to secure what is left of tho treasure of the Golden Gate. Youth's Companion. 6UAINT AND CURIOUS, A transaltlantlc steamer, carrying what Is called "a full mall," usually brings two hundred thousand letters and three hundred sacks of newspa- nve Hundred and odd sacks for other places. Mice canot exist on Papa Little, an island in St. Magnus bay, on the west of Shetland. To test the truth of this statement several mice at va rious 'times were brought there, but the soil proved so uncongenial that they soon died. Professor Albeit Mlchelson of the department of physics. University ot Chicago, has Invented a machine so delicate as to be able to measure the width of a hair. By Its means it Is said he has discovered that matter of any kind Is no more solid than water, save In degree. A cat recently took up its abode and nursed its litter of four kittens In the fork of a tree, 28 feet from the ground in the garden of Alderman Peace's residence at Castle Hill, High Wy combe, England. The kittens were removed by the gardener, but the cat speedily took them up the tree again to their strange birthplace. "Policemen at High Wycombe," says the London Globe, "are now served out with housemaid's dusters, and these homely weapons are to be used against the walls wherever ur chins, suffering from cocoethes scrl bendl' have chalked up maxims, re torts and the pleaHant ironies of the street. If there is a wag among the youth of Wycombe he will write on the walls 'A policeman's life is not a happy one.' Imagine the bobby's feel ings who has to wipe that out." An ingenious chemist has made the claim that the average human being is worth about $18,300 from the chemical standpoint. His calculations are based on the fact that the human body con tains three pounds thirteen ounces of calcium; and calcium Just now la worth $300 an ounce. It this calcium could only be extracted, what a lasting would bocome to their families. It physicians should discover a way to extract this $18,300 worth If calcium from us poor mortals, operations would Immediately become as numer ous and popular as they were during the appendicitis craze. A Lucky Knalgn, Lieutenant-Commander A. B, Wil llts, whose family lives In German' town, has written an interesting letter home from his ship, the Iowa, which Is cruising in South American waters with tho south Atlantic squadron. The officer tells how last month the squadron was halted in the harbor of a little southern city that was much excited over a lottery drawing soon to be pulled off. An ensign on a sister ship of the Iowa bought for $1 a one' tenth chance at the $100,000 prize, and then, out of idle curiosity, attended the drawing. There was considerable rig marole for a time, and a dark-skinned native posted on a board a number the winning number. The ensign looked at bis ticket and . it waa the same number as that which had won He could not, he said afterward, speak. He had to walk out Into the air. His delight waa Indescribable, The next day one of the officials of the lottery brought to htm aboard his shin a bag containing $10,000 in goM. As he la poor, and aa he la also married, he thinks the money will come In very nanay. ratiaaeipnia itecorov PACE TIIK KAISEtt SETS. ONE DAY OF HIS BUSY CAREER TELLS THE STORY. Alia Tlioae (liven to Iterreatlnn, rlaelneae, Friend, Correspondence end Dining Kren at Might He Will !tle and Write Ilia Quickness or Repartee. The London Telegraph recently, apropos of the world-wide Interest In the kaiser's personality, went Into an exhaustive study of his methods and tally activity. After discussing the kaiser's amar.lng versatility, whlrh surprises every one who comes Into contact with him, tho Telegraph con tinued: "But the average man famil iar with tin prodigy of all that tho kaiser manRges to do, wonders chiefly bow he manages to do it. Genius may exist without the Infinite capacity for taking nirlns, hut It Is the Indcfntlglble application added that distinguishes the doer from the dreamer. We shall understand the kaiser better when we follow him through a "specimen day" cf his exlstetice. The kilser attacks the morning at the outset with cheerful and vigorous alacrity. He is often tip with the lark, nnd always before the postman. Ho not seldom rises as early as 5 o'clock, and Is In any case sure to be astir be fore 7. W hen ho has braced himself with a cold bath he Invariably dons uniform, and then goes straight to breakfast. In the circumstances of the meal Is found the keynote of the way In which Kaiser Wilhelm combines n tranquil ami charming family life with all the conspicuous enorgy of his pub lic career. It is the piido of tho Ger man empress, and, indeed of her hus bnt.'l, tbat Mie regards herself in the good old Teutonic fashion as being the first housewife as well as the first lady In tho land. She herself super vises the preparation of breakfast, which, to suit the tasto of the emperor, who abliorj complex nnd Insubstantial kickshaws. Is a rather plain and ro butt meal, consisting of ten, bread and butter, coM meat and e?gs. In this, a In other things, there la quick dispatch, and before the knlser r,i'ts the table the younger children come in to bid their fnther a brief and luiBK "good morning " They are' bn. tight up with a keen discipline, but they probably knew that the knlser carries their photographs with him wherever ho goes, and there Is possibly no househoM In (he world whose mem bers are on more loving terms. Hut there is no time In the naming for dalliance, and after these pleasing lit tle Interviews all separate for work. His majosly goes straight to his study, where he confronts a mass of correspondence as Immepso and mis cellaneous as comes In all probability before any .living person. The letters ore usually several hundred In num ber, and with Ihe assistance ot bis bluff, Kaiser Wilhelm works bis way rapidly through. Petitions he puts aside to bo examined and reported up on by others. When there is some thing familiar about an envelope the emperor cuts It open himself, passing on the letter with the necessary com ment to hli secretaries; occasionally though, of course, the case is rare reserving some favored communica tion to be answered with his own band. To tlu few whom ho counts as in timates, whether on account of friend ships formed in old college days or made since, the kaiser Is known to have sometimes written letters of ex traordinary frankness, sincerity and Interest. But, with the Increasing demands upon his minutes such con fidences must be exchanged now nt In tervals few and far between. Then there are rrrorls upon a thousand matters, great and small, public nnd ptlvate. A bird's-eye view of the whole correspondence Is obtained. It is sorted out for further investigation by the ntnff, and before the emperor has disposed ot what ho wishes to reserve for his personal and prompt attention the Interviews ot the day commence. The kaiser receives his ministers, diittngulshed naval and military offi cers and other experts of the public service. Great persons arrive, tho rrabasBador) of foreign powers present themselves, and various able and re markable men, whether. B'ibJ.cts of the empercr or visitors from other countries, ure seen by invitation. It Is typical of the mind of Wilhelm II, that no subjoct is too difficult for his strong and Interse Intelligence to cope with and nothing is too minute to ex cite the lively Kuggchtivcness of his lighter talents. It, of course, goes without saying, that all this activity is not packed Into the morning's work alone. The emperor goes on receiving reports and holding audiences throughout a lorgo part of the whole day, and between visits he turns over Important papers and concentrates his mind for a few fruitful seconds tipou a topic which has engaged something or another In his unlimited interests. But the Imperative orders i f the doc tors re-on force tho kaiser's own healthy tastes, and insure a sufllcletit dally allowance of the constant physi cal exercise which keeps bis complex ion brown and maintains his vigor. When he hunts or holds a revlow, he Is, of course, abroad with the sun. But in the ordinary courso cf the routine we have sketched, the emperor leaves his study about 9, and rides or drives or walks, usually accompanied by the empress. The latter, indeed, has many glimp ses of him throughout bis busiest days, for although he detests the idea of the Interference of women In politics he knows, like a wise man, the value ot a wife's Instinct, and likes to consult It upon many matters other than thj It-sues ot high p.uicy. Upon returning from the airing In the forenoon the work of the raoinet Is resumed and continued up to luncheon. This meal la taken, in the oidlt.ary course, at about 2 o'clock In the afternoon, when the Imperial children frequently Jolfl I their parents, and a special guort sometimes appears. But In the sphero ot social Intercourse tho evening ushers In the brightest and by no means the least valutible hours of the kali it's day. Gue'ts ari always invited to the 3 o'clock dinner, where the courses are generally few, though Ihe lmprrlnl table Is splendidly set out with beauti ful flowers and precious plate. This Is the rule, whether tho company be small or lorge. Supper Is served at !, when there are more g.iests. The In terval between the two evening meals Is often spent by the kaiser with the empress and their children, and to Jt.dge by the hilarious shouts which are often heard from the. apartmrnts where thesi little reunions are held they must represent the simplest on 4 happiest moments, whlen this tremen dous worker allows himself. It Is at dinner anj Biipper that thn varied piny of a many sided mind e intlllntos from every faucet. The emperor Is distinguished among Ger mans by his nulckness of repartee, but his conversational powers are In every sense striking. Out of the fullness of his thought and knowledge he rilt courses with unhesitating and vivid fluency. But In th? desire of his end lessly receptive nnd assimilative mind for fresh Information he questions like Napoleon. Human be Is. In the old phrase, and nothing human can be for eign to hln. When the cigars and Munich beer are handed around, or when he takes nn exceptionally Inter esting visitor aside, he revenln the life of his Imagination without restraint, litver falling to learn something new from any one who haj a genuine Idea or a fresh fact to impart, but always exchanging full value from bis own mental fund. When tin long day la over the elec tric lamps i-ron the kaiser's writing table burn far into .he night He retda often by a shaded light till slum ber conies, and if ho wakes with a valuable thought, It. Is fixed there and then, for paper and pencil are always at his bedside. His Quickness of Itepartee. BUTTERFLIES, Win cm! t.nlterer Hint Court ftnnshlne The Monnrch, Viceroy itrnl t'rltlllarv. Of all the "children of the air" that gladden the day, the monarch butter fly Is one of the most noticeable. Its wings shimmer like gold alloyed with copper, as It pursues Its lazy flight In the sunshine. The mnde monarch is a true dandy and carries on each hind wing a black sachet bag containing a strong perfume, most attractive to the other sex. The monarch Is Immune from bird enemies; the callow bird ling that takes a bite from It wipes his beak In disgust, and forever af ter connects the noisome taste with orange wings a too hasty conclusion which the viceroy butterfly lakes ad vantage, and, by donning the mon arch's uniform, escapes scathless, al though any bird might find it a beak- somo morsel. Ofttlmes tho summer wayfarer notes ahead of him In the country highway a spot which seems a blotch of vivid sunshine. As he approaches it stid denly resolves Itself into many glint ing, yellow butterflies. These road side buterflles are the most familiar ol all their kind, and are therefore the widest known; however, few people ever see them when they are green caterpillars securely hidden among the leaves of clover In the flelds that border the rood. Perhaps it Is the utter retirement of the larval life that makes the adults take to the road and become such Incorrigible tramps. "The sign of the thistle," Is a favor ite lounging place for many winged loiterers. Among these may be seen a large, tawny butterfly with a wealth of silver currency of dierent denom inations scattered over the lower sur surface of bis hind wings. The name of this tree coiner Is the great span gled frltlllary. In all hlB arrogance does he perchance remember when he was a caterpillar feeding by night on the leaves of the modest violet, and hiding himself from sight during the day? It were almost worth while to be a butterfly If thereby he might re- member all the experience stored up in two previous Incarnations. Coun try Life in America. Itmi'lt fur Rummer Hoarders. Don't ask for ice water. The well water la as cold as any self-respecting tioniut h will ask for. Don't expect hall a pint of cream on 29 strawberries, Don't ask for a gloss of milk at every meal. It Is not good for you. One home-spun cow equals eight quarts ol milk, equals one quart of cream nn. three meals a day for eight people! And whero does the buby come In? Don't ask for Ice cream nine times In seven days. Thn Icehouse is four miles away. Don't wear too many starched things. Steam laundries are not found on every farm. Don't think any old thing will do to wear on the farm, bu don t "dress too much. Both ex' cremes are lu bad taste. Don't lmag ine that because country faro and wtys are different they are not so good as city things you den't see or for things out ot season. It's two miles to the atore. Don't try to be a supe rior person. It may lead to mistakes, Don't Indulge In Improving converaa tlon unless you need it. Don't sit up late or be late to meals. Both are unsanitary. Don't complain because there are no links; life is more than golf. Don't ask for sterilized milk for the baby unless you bring your own sterilizer. There are other "don'ts," but tbey can all be condensed Into the. Golden Rule. The Prophet's Chamber. .TTinfiiTTnnmnTfnuiTiHiTmmmmmtnmmmninTHTfin THE JEFFERSON fc cttddt w mnnn a ivrvr B & & B B B Being the largest distributor of General Merchandise in 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. Adler Bros., Rochester, N. Y., Clothing, than which there is none better, made; W. L. Douglass Shoe Co., Brockton, MS9., 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 luuiiuiuimuiuiiiituiiuummumuiuiiutuiuuiiumiu EPORTINC BREVITIES. Pocking horses has been declared tl crime In MWiilgau. .liinniy Michaels has determined to give up the turf iignlii and try tho cycle truck. The American nolo team Is to Invnile England next yenr ivx.iln. It will spend S.-iO.ihm in nn effort to win. Frank L. Kramer bus won the two mile open pi-nresKloiinl cycle race nt nilsluig, N. J., In 4m. 11. At the Grosse Point track, Detroit. SI loll.. Direct Hnl lias iniido a new rec ord of i.otr'i for green pacers. Kii'.'1mik1 imported U!4 automobiles nnd motorcycles In Slay hint nnd 1500 for the tirst live months of l!itui. Sir Tlumius Upton says there Is no foundation for the report that be -will (inillciige next year for the America's Cup. .lolly Bachelor, n horse without a record, has trotted In a.l.'pi; In n win ning race at the New York Driving (iiil' mooting. ('. H. feoley has defeated Bolicrt .Moore In the Until for the Con necticut golf ehiiiiipionshlii by 12 up timl 10 to play, at Hartford. Charley Mitchell lias tho locomotor ataxia. Kid I.nvlgno has the strait- Jacket, ami John L. fiilllvan well, but It's a great gnine while It lasts. The governors of the Automobile Club of America urge club members to spend half nil hour n day lu educat ing horses not to font- motor vehicles. Arnold I.nwson, a sou of the Boston millionaire, luis just brought from F.ug. lit lid Hie bulldogs, Ln Koche nnd Men- oral Iioinax, with which he expects to weep nil the American dog shows. ,T. K. (Ionium, of the Golden Gate Itlttp and Pistol Club, broke tile record In a revolver li'iudlcap nt Sen Fran cisco, On!., his score of t24 out of a possible 1000 beating by six points tho previous record of 018, held by C. S. uicuuiuiKi, or savannah, un. THE NATIONAL CAML Elmer Flick can't hit this season. Roister has made eight home rims. Tho rittshiirg team carries six pitch ers. Dolieny is pitching the best ball of bis llt'o tills summer. Keelor Is the only Brooklyn player with it batting nvorage of over .oOO. President Dreyfuns. of Pittsburg, says lie is not in favor of a return to the' twolve-cluli league system. Schre'ckcngogt'g throwing Is about as quick ami accurate as that of auy catcher uow working in either league. Tho llrooklyu Club lays claim to forty-four players now in uniform and playing ball iu many of the leading leagues. llulswitt, Philadelphia's brilliant shortstop, bus accepted more cbnucos In the Hliort mid than any other player in the league. Pitcher "Pink" Huwloy, the highest salaried player lu the KiiHtoru League, and Sliorwtop Cniiuaugliton have been released by Buffalo. In live fames "Itube" SVaddcll, thu pitcher of the Philadelphia Americans, struck nut tliirty-uliio meu and gave only Hovcti bases on balls. All of Uochcstcr's celebrated Infield of hist seiiMou have bad trials lu the National League, and only tirouilnger uml (Jeorge Smith have made good. John J. Motimw severed his counec tioii with the Kiilllmore Baseball Club us manager to become the manager of tho Now York .National League team. "Tho National League," say tho Boston tilube, "might do woll to drop Cincinnati uml take in Buffalo, as the latter city Is drnwluu ton to one better than Cincinnati." Iu tho St.Louls-Clovelniul same of June 30, u remarkable record was made. In the sixth luuiilng Lujoie, Hlekimiu and Bindley made tome run drive ln succession. The First Lady Doctor of Laws. Miss E. Temple Orme has become the first LL. D. of London. England, university. Miss Orme's success la all ihe remarkable Inasmuch as she did not prepare for the examination ln the usual manner. She took up the study of law by correspondonce, and in this manner went through the en tire course from Jurisprudence to in ternational law. Miss Orme Is anx ious that her example should be fol lowed by other girls, and that a great er Interest be manifested ln legal ttudlea. "If women entered seriously Into thn study of law." ulie says, "no doubt the legal profession would ln titno be opened to them just as ciedlr line hag been." 1 BUSINESS CARDS. J MITCHELL, ATTOn JJ EY-AT-LAW. Office on West Mnln sfreet. opnnatte the Commercial Hotel, Keynoldnvllle, f'n. Q m. Mcdonald, " ATTORXEY-AT-LAW, Notary Public, real erat scent, Patent secured, collection mnde promptly. OOloe In Noliin block. Ileynoldsvllfp, a. g.MITU M. McCREIOHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notiirv rubllo and Rel Kitate Acnnt. Ool. lert.mii will receive prompt attention. Onice fn t roehltrh Henry biuck, near pottotuce. lieynoldnvllUi Pu. jQR. 13. E. HOOVER, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. JlMlrlcnt dentist. In the Hoover building next door to poto!!)co, Main treat. . Ueotlo nes In oporatlnir. U. U L. MEAN'S, DENTIST, Office on erond floor of First National bank bulldluj, Main street. J)R. R. DeVEUE KING, . DENTIST, Office on second floor RrynnlrijTlUe Real Emiite llldg. Main street Kcynoldrille, pa. jytl. W. A. HENRY, DENTIST. OTlce on eeond floor of Henry Broe. brick building, Main street. E, NEFF, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE And Real Estate Agent, ReyooldsvUle, Pa. WHEN IN DOUUT, TRY ,iuw.i..nHVir.Hl. fid nsve curd ttioutanai of catet of Nervous DIm awt, tuck a Debility ,'Ditrlncn, Slaepleta neti and Varicocele, Atropay.fte They cirar the brain, itroitbea the circulation, B.ak digetr!e perfect, and Impart a keaithy vigor te the whole being . All drains and loatea are checked (mnir llTaln nMrr, Unleia patients llIIBBailll ... orooerlv cured. Ihebaaadl. tlon eften worries them IntoiDfantty. Coniunp. Hod or Death. Mailed sealed. Price it ft boat 6 boaes, with Iron-clad legal tusrantee to curs OS refund tbs money, tj.os. Send for fx bosh, for sale by It. Alex Stoke. EVERY WOMAN Sometimes nee. Is a reliable roootulj regulating medicine, DR. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL PILLS. Are i prompt. aafeandcertatnla result. Tbegenn. (Dr. J'eeTs) never disappoint, 11.00 per boa. ne Tor sale by H. Alex. Stoke. rarrxmm J " it (nrnccrcrr imrsjiiicpgiiH YOUNG'S PLANING M I L L You will find Sash, Doors, Frames and Finish of all kinds, Ronrjh 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. YOONO, Prop. Surprice for Ibsen. Honrlk Ibsen, the note.d author, re cently received from a village In the north of Norway a letter, with which vsa Inclosed an old, yellow sheet of paper. Examining the letter, he found to his surprise that It was the cer tificate which he had received from the church on the day of tils confirma tion. The man who sent it wrote that ho had left his watch in Tromso to be repaired, and that, when it was re turned to him by the watchmaker, it was wrapped in an old sheet of paper, which proved to be tho author's cer tificate of confirmation. How the cer tificate found its way to Tromso na one seems to know. That the slave trade Is still bein carried on at Muscat was shown re cently, when Portuguese gunboats-captured slave dhow and get free 700 laves.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers