V V f I r- T t t 11 4 hor iOVH, i Rr A v m Ashe W A. W SJ JMK tV V A 4 By W. 8. w V Four o'clock In tho afternoon. Pro !le who were nolng down Cort Jnndt street stepped qnlrkty lo one Bide. Those who were coming up did likewise. This no tion made a free pnssReway (or a man who was hastening at the top of his speed to the ferry. When he ram to where another street Intersected Cortlandt he dodged In and out be tween the wagons with surprising agll Ky and without perceptibly slackening his pace. He was a peculiar-looking man. Scarcely five feet tall, with shoulders of the breadth of a large and portly man, a large head, set upon a thick, short neck, a derby hat two sizes too large resting on his prodigious ears, and exposing a broad, bulging fore head; small at the waist, with slender legs bowed almost to deformity, and toes that lapped over each other as he ran, he attracted scrutinizing atten tion. Some of the people who made way for him stopped and gazed after him un til he was lost to sight by the filling up of the gap which had been made to let him pass. Even the stalwart po liceman, who carefully guards the foot steps of the almost constant throng of pedestrians to and from the ferry, momentarily relaxed his vigilance, as the dwarf shot by him, and rushed into the ferry house. If the people who saw the dwarf bad suspected his errand he would have been surrounded as by a mob. He passed the ticket punchers lie fore they had time call upon him to halt. By the time they thought of their duly, tho dwarf was tapping a man on the arm. This man stood near the gate leading to the boat, which was Just coming in. The man whom the dwarf tapped on the arm was fully six feet tall. He was dressed In the Bomewhat worn and Ill-fitting garments of a laborer. Over his right eye was a green patch. His beard was two days old, and he had been clean shaven when a razor last touched his face. His slouch hat was pulled well down on his forehead. The dwarf spoke to the man as he turned about and bent his head down ward. "But I cannot come, Jimmy," he eaid. Again the dwarf spoke to him In a whisper. Then the two turned away together. They went directly to the 8ixth avenue elevated station, the dwarf walking behind. When they reached Twenty-eighth street It was dark and rain was falling. They went briskly toward Fifth ave nue, where they turned up town, walked a few minutes, and the dwarfs companion paused. When Jimmy came up he said: "Von must go in." "But I cannot." "She is wal'ting for you." The men went up the step3, reaching the threshold Just as tho door openrd. He stepped ln3lde. The .loor closed. Jimmy waited until he heard a sob just as the door was closing. Then he hur ried away. His work was only partly done. He walked briskly, and in a little while ascended the steps of a residence on Madison avenue. The door opened beforo he had touched the bell. He went Inside and a young woman closed the door. The dwarf followed her up one flight of stairs into a sitting room, which was evidently her own. When fie had closed the door she said: "Well,.JImmjr? "He la with bis mother." "Thank you, Jimmy. You may go." When the dwarf bad gone the young woman stood looking apparently at the figures of the carpet at her feet. But If she had ever known what the fig' ures were, they were then as far from her thoughts as the date of tho dis covery that the world was round. This young woman was Elizabeth Dalow, She was not beautiful. Hex face was too strong for beauty. But a novice in character reading must have seen that , she would be impressive anywhere. Passing Into another room, she quickly returned In a mackintosh and was ready to go out 8ho passed quietly down the stairway, opened the door gently, and a moment later was walking swiftly down the avenue. Later she passed up the steps where the dwarf bad left the man with the green patch over his eye. The door opened at her touch. She, too, was evidently expected. An elderly woman conducted her to a room at the rear of the hall, smothering her sobs as they went Before she touched the door knob she turned In response to a hand upon her shoulder. Elizabeth poke only a word: "Courage." . Then they entered the room. Both stood looking at each other. The eyes of the elder woman were suffused with tears, those of Elizabeth were filling, but her face was no longer stern, Elizabeth spoke: "He Is here?" "Yes." "Shall I see him?" "Yes." Mrs. Julia Gaylord was 60 years of age. Her face was sweet, pure, woman' ty such a face as a boy who loves his mother never forgets, aa a man in atlnctlvely trusts, and is better for the - trusting, as her husband had been, and Who had died leaving a smile In return (or a kiss that had opened for blm the eates to the visible sunshine of eternal day. Mrs. Gaylord left the room, soft ly closing the door behind her. la a few minutes the door opened 1 J TT W .v ann Hnnnr. VJ W JLA AAV U V W SNYDER. V v and a young man entered. He was neatly and carefully dressed. Tall, slender, pale, and with his eyes upon the floor, he advanced to the middle of the room. His face was clean shaven. Elizabeth sobbed, but her ourage did not escape. ' She arose, went up to him and said: "I am glad you are here." He raised his bend. He could not peak at first, however hard he tried. Tears came to his eyes and then ran down his face. Again Elizabeth said nnd there was that In her voice to give a much weaker man strengtu: 'Courage." Young Onylord'a voice came to him. He said: "This means State prison." Elizabeth shuddered, but William o.d not. For a moment he was the stronger of the two. At length she said: "Not yet!" Young Gaylord looked at her as if he scarcely comprehended. Then she added: "There Is always hope." This roused him and brought him bak to himself. He said; "Not for me." "Let us see. Tell me all." "Have you not heard?" "Something from my father, but per haps not all. Tell me" In four words: I robbed the bank." Yes. I know. But that Is not all," and Elizabeth gently laid her hand on his arm. "I have come to see you," she added, "to help you, If I can. Will you not trust me? I am, I know, only a womnn but, I trust, a true woman, and one who must be convinced that her Ideal of true manhood Is unworthy of her faith before she will give that ideal up. .My trust In you tells me that there Is something yet to be uncovered, and may not one as leal as I am claim all loyalty from you? Tell mo all, William, and then I can decide f- myself that which I cannot permit even you, under a cloud beyond which I cannot see, to decide for me. Come, then, tell me all." The young man looked at her stead fastly a moment and then sal J: I will tell you all. But, why should 1? It may break your heart for, sure ly, It will shatter your faith where I had rather be adjudged a felon than have it broken. Besides, you may not believe me. Your father is the presi dent of the bank." "But I will believe you I must be lieve you. My faith, unto the pleading of my heart, Is pledged. My trust In you Is Immutable until you have made my mind turn traitor to yourself, and led It to doubt my own sincerity. Do, William, tell me all." "Why should I break your heart, and destroy In you a trust which must make you miserable for life, and make you despise me forever? It Is better that I should bear this burden alone, for by so doing I may retain, or at least some time regain, some share In your estesm." "William, I love you! Now, tell me all." Young Gaylord hesitated only uni.i he had looked Into her pleading eyes. Her hand now clasped his own. He saw her love in all Its sweetness and purity unfolded as plainly as he had an hour before seen tho anguish upon his stricken mother's face. He spoke: God forgive me If I do wrong! You remember, Elizabeth, that two .years ago I was made cashier of the bank by your father. My hands were then as clean of crime as my mother's name was above suspicion. I worked faith fully. My salary was small. I do not plead luis in extenuation of my error. but it was wholly out of comparison with my duties. The directors were close fisted men. At the end of a year I asked for a larger salary, "The directors said they could get competent and more experienced men for what I was receiving. My good mother had only Income enough to sus tain her properly, and my salary bare ly kept me decently. I saw no pros pect of- making a home of my own. But I plodded along. Eagerness to ad vance In the world sharpens the wits. One day I discovered that the directors, your father Included, were speculating In a mining trust. One discovery led to another. I was not long finding out thrl they sometimes used' the bank deposits to add to their personal gains. "It was easy for me to persuade my self that If 'the officers could make money in this way, I could not fall to do so. Six monuis ago I began to use my own money. I had saved nearly a thousand dollars. I went Into the min ing trust. At first I made a little money, and I had (1500. Then I went deeper. Meanwhile the bank's officers were speculating. The trust began to go backward and I began to steal. The officers were doing the same. They could keep going because their oppor tunities were better. They bad easier access to the funds. "The deposits were running low. Three days ago the officer called me into their private room. They had discovered my speculations and told me so. I confessed, and asked for three days In which to make my losses good. Tbey knew that they were, like my self, guilty, and perhaps mistrusting how much I knew, tbey granted my re quest. Then I thought of you. Your father must go with the crash. I could not drag him down and disgrace you. I determined to run away, and before I went one of the directors, more bold than the rest, came and told my mother that I was a defaulter. She would not believe him. but I was in the house, and when confronted by .them 1 cot tensed my guilt, but made no explanation beyond the mere con fesslon. This afternoon, I, having cleanly shaved my face two days be fore, procured a second-hand suit of clothing In exchange for others, and was In the- ferry house when Jimmy found me and urged me to come back. Why I did not resist him I do not know, only that you bad sent him. I simply could not go, and I returned. Tomorrow my mother will beggar herself to try to save me. If she falls and I almost pray Heaven she may t must go to Jail." Here young Gaylord broke down com. plctely. Elizabeth did not. She still clasped his hand, but tthe almost choked as she raid: "And this Is all?" "All." "And my father was as guilty as the rest?" Gaylord bowed his head. Then Elizabeth said: "I believe you. You shall not go to Jail." "It was for me you hid my father's crime. Surely my love can save you, and In ft you csn never again go astray. If you could do this much for me, my womanhild would be false hearted to falter In my duty. Walt here for me until tomorrow. I will come. I will go to your mother now." Mrs. Gaylord's pillow was wet with tears that night, but they were the tears of gratitude, and peace came to her like a ray of hope that never leaves a sombre shadow, from the Giver of every good and perfect gift. The remainder of this story Is quick ly told. What Elizabeth said to ber father will never be repeated In words, but It had its full and -perfect effect. She returned to young Gaylord the next evening, and this Is what she said to him: . "William, my mission has been R suc cess. I relieved you and I know that you told me the truth. You are a free man. Beforo I rested last night my father, confronted with your words, confessed all. I went with him to the bank today and faced the directors with him. His head was only one of all the rest that burned, suffused with shame. I demanded your freedom, and my father then admitted that the trust had advanced again and that the bank was now as solvent as It ever had been. Even your Investment had made no loss. "Indeed, there was something said about the profits gained, and I then demanded a promise from each sepa rate Individual that not one penny of this gain should ever be touched by a single officer of the bank. The prom ise was made, and, William, you will promise, too? I know, my love, you will." And as he promised her, tears mingled with his own, while Mrs. Gay. lord lifted up her voice from a heart, overflowing with gratitude to Him who has promised to be mindful of the widow's son. Wlllinm Gaylord and Elizabeth Dalow, his wife, are living In the West, happy and as nearly well contented as loving man and wife can be, she still doing him honor, and he as proud of ber as an honest man can be of a pure and loving woman. If any man or woman is disposed to doubt the truth of this story of real Ufa In ull essential details, let It be said that It is true, and tliat there are men for the Incident Is not of remote date who can verify It almost within reach of the writer's hand. This is but one Incident of Its kind. Are there any more? New York News. HOW BEETLE JEWELRY IS MADE. neaatlrnl Ornaments fjavlaed! from the Mielle ml Nlearasuan laseeie. There seems to be no connection be tween statesmanship and fashions, at least at first sight. As a matter of fact, nearly every move In the world's diplomacy Is accompanied by novelties and changes In woman's attire. Tho entente between France and Russia revolutionized modes and replaced the corsage with the Russian blouse. Our growing Intercourse with Nicara gua has brought into the market some of tho odd beetle Jewelry for which that country Is famous. Not alono Nicaragua, but all of the Central American republics are wonderfully rich In insect life. Both butterflies and beetles are marked by the most magnificent colorings known to ento mology. The aborigines utilized many of the booties for decorative purposes and their Spanish conquerors adopted t) beautti'ul'ornaments. The favorite beetles the writer has found to be of three classes. One is about the same shape and size aa the Egyptian scarab, though a trifle flatter and very much stronger. It is coated with a green enamel of metalic lustre which Iooks like a gem from some other planet The Indians cure the beetle by dry ing and smoking, and mount It wit golden legs. This Is set upon a disk of white stone, carnelian, milk quartz, or even porcelain, which. In turn, Is rimmed with gold. This la employed as a brooch, cuff-button, or brcast-pln. Sometimes the beetle is mounted upon a thin plate of gold or silver, and Is used an as ear-ring. The second class of beetles are, of the same general outline as the tumble-bug, but their wing cases are ot rich, changeable purple, blue and green, with metallic) lustre, The tint varies with the aiigle at which light strikes the surface, They are not as strong as the scarab, and are employed for making necklaces and bracelets. Three or four are fastened together so as to form a bead, and a number of these beads are strung upon elastic cord or gold wire. When around- a snowy wrist or neck they make a wonderful striking display of color and light. ' OUTLA W TKAGY'S CAREER i MOST REMARKABLE MAN HUNT IN THE ANNALS OF CRIME. A Urn anil Death Chase Across renntr Whleh Lasted PlrtT-elht !? and tended Over Two States A Powarlnl Man Thonth of Vary Slight Hallil. The death of outlaw Tracy by his own hands ends perhaps the most re markable man hunt in tho annals of crime, and closes a llfo and death rhaso which lasted without cessation for 68 days and extended over the greater part of two states. Since June 9 last Tracy, hunted by Indian trackers, bloodhounds, hun dreds of authorized officers of tho law, the state troops of Washington, and unnumbered volunteer bands of vigi lantes, with a price on his head that amounted to a fortune, traveled over about fifteen hundred miles of wild country, and defied capture to the last. From the moment of his daring es cape from the Oregon state peniten tiary to his last stand In the swamps of Lincoln county, near the eastern border of Washington, he killed six officers of the law, slew bis fellow fugitive, David. Merrill, In a duel fought while men and hounds were on his heels, wounded nearly a dozen other officers ot pursuing par ties, and terrorized the people of two states. living on the country he passed through, Tracy rode down stolen torsos without number, robbed farm er of food, clothing, and money need ed for his flight; crossed and re crossed rivers, hiding when ho could and fighting when too hard pressed. Six times he shot his way through pursuing parties which surrounded him, and struggled on In his desperate race against death for liberty. The criminal exploits of Frank and Jesse James, tha Younger Bros., Mur rell. and all the horde of desperate outlaws of the west pale beside the determined daring and reckless cour age of the Oregon convict. On the morning of June 9 Tracy, then serving a sentence of 20 years' Imprisonment for robbery and shoot ing a sheriff's officer who had attempt ed to arrest him, made his successful dash for freedom from the Salem pris on, aided by his fellow-crtmlnal, David Merrill, who was serving a term of 13 years for complicity In the robbery of which Tracy was convicted. That there was aid for the two des perate men from the outside Is cer tain, for on the morning of the day of their escape, two repeating rifles were left In the Jail corridors, where Tracy and Merrill easily could reach them aa they marched with the other pris oners from their cells to their day's work. Tracy believed all along that Mer rill, who flrst was arrested for the rob beries they both committed at Port land In February, 1899, had betrayed him to the officers of the law, but nev ertheless he consented to plot with Merrill to break prison, and their plans were carefully made. As they passed tho guns left for them each seized a weapon and made a rush for the walls around the peni tentiary. The guards attempted to stop them, and Tracy, a dead shot, killed Guard F. B, Farrell and wound ed Frank Ingraham, a llfo convict who attempted to aid the guards. Then, In the face of a heavy fire from other guards, Tracy and Merrill raised a ladder and escaped over the wall, stopping long enough to return the fire directed at them, a third shot from Tracy's rifle killing Guard S. B. T. Jonee. Then the escaping des peradoes made a rush for the prison outer gate, where they encountered two other guards, whom they mado prisoners, meaning to keep them as hostages should the other guards not cease firing. The latter, however, kept up tho hail of bullets, and Tracy, who had compelled his captives to walk before him. shot dead B. F. Tiffany, while Merrill fired at the second captive, who dropped, and, pretending to have been hit, escaped. Then both escaped. Twenty guards frdm the prison were sent In pursuit, and from that begin ning grew the famous chase which closed with so dramatic a setting. Eluding their pursuers, the two out laws captured ' an Involuntary host, J. W. Stewart, whom- thoy made ex change clothes with them, and also pressed Into service an expressman whose attire they likewise appropriat ed. Both Stewart and the expressman were held captive until tho next day, when after having spent a comfortable night and been well fed, the fugitives stole two horses from another Salem resident and started for the north. On the second day of the pursuit bloodhounds were pressed Into service and the chase grew hot. Within a day there was set on the heads of the fugi tive pair a price of $8000. Neither of the bandits was heard of for some day, till, at a place called! Gervals they further altered their attire by robbing a man named Robert of his clothing. A cordon of several hundred men were thrown around Gervals, but Tracy and hi companion easily broke through after an Interchange of shots. The fugitive next were heard ot six day after the escape, on Juno 15. when they held up a boatman and compelled him to row them across the Columbia river. The Impressed boat man landed the runaway convicts In Washington near Vancouver, formerly the home of Merrill, where they un doubtedly expected to find friend and shelter. Again bloodhound were put on the trail, but, aa before, the outlaw threw the dog oft the scent by taking to the water of the swamps and doubling back on the trail. It was at this point j in xne man mint uiai snmnr-r vicum fell, this time one pf the pursuing party being shot by his own friends In mistake for one of the outlaws. Willie the pursuit still was making a dragnet search through the swamps, the fugitives, traveling with Incredible swiftness, made their way 100 miles north to the line of the Northern Pa cific railroad, which connects Port land with Puget Sound. At this point In the flight Tracy and Merrill were known to have been to' gether, but when Tracy next was heard of he was alone and In the close neigh borhood of Olpmpla. A few day later the dead body of Merrill was found further back on the trail with a bul let wound In his back. After this discovery, the facts of tho killing of Merrill came out In the boasting of Tracy, who said he had killed him as he had suspected Mer rill of having betrayed him at Port land. They had agreed, he said, to duel, the strange condition of which showed In a striking manner the na ture of the outlaw. According to Tracy the quarrel arose over the fact that Merrill was rated as his equal In newspaper re ports of the escape and flight, and as he held Merrill to be the Inferior, they had come to words and agreed to fight. They were to walk, back to back, a certain number of pace and then turn and fire, but Tracy, fearing treachery on Merrill s part, ctopped short of the agreed number of steps, and, turning, deliberately shot the oth er In the back. At Olympla Tracy vlsltod a fishing camp In the neighborhood and held up the camp, making Ave men prlponers and pressing Into his service a naph tha launch which lay at anchor there, leaving two of his prisoners tiej up on the shore while the ot'uers were compelled to man the launch and take him out toward Tacomn. The launch crew gave the alarm as soon as he departed, and Tracy withla a few hour was trailed to a clump of tim ber. The sheriff of the county, Edward Cttdlhee, a noted mnn-hunter, was ab sent, but his chief deputy, "Jack" Wil liams', took up the pursuit, and with a posse surrounded Tracy's retreat, only to have the outlaw slip through his Angers, after having added one more murder to the list by the killing of Detective Frank Raymond and wounding Williams himself. When Tracy renewed his flight bloodhounds again were put on his track, but the crafty outlaw had pro vided himself with red pepper, and this he strewed over the ground a he passed, with the result that the dogs had their noses filled with pep per and were thrown off the scent, until Tracy had time to get to water, where he obliterated his trail effec tually. Cttdlhee took up the hunt when he learned of the disastrous defeat of his deputies, and promptly with the return of tho Sheriff, Gov. McBrlde of Wash ington ordered out the Washington National Guard aud set 200 soldiers on the chase in addition to the numer ous bandd of county and state officers who already were hot on the murder er's hcols. Tho story of the pursuit of the out law after this Is a long and exciting one. only a few Incidents can be glv cn here. Tracy was run to earth on July 10 In a thicket near Covington on Green river, but when the pursuer were sure they had him he burst through the lines, and after two In terchangca of shots slipped away, leav. Ing one wounded deputy behind him. The trail then was lost for two days, and when picked up called for another outing for the bloodhounds and Indian trackers, but with the same results. Then Tracy was lost for four days, till an old-time criminal seeking a share in the reward In. formed the sheriff's officer thatTraoy had submitted to a surgical operation performed by one of his companions with a razor, but the nature of the wound that was so treated was not known. There was a long break In the hunt thereafter, and It was but a few days ago that be was heard from moving toward the point in eastern Washington where he was run down Tracy' real name, or at least the name of hi father, la said to have been Garr. As a boy of 12 years In 1890 he was arrested In Dillon, Mon where he spent his boyhood for steal ing a keg of beer, and his record ever since has been criminal. In 1897 he appeared in Cache county, Utah, in company with a robber named Dave Lant, and the two together commit ted many thefts, tho burglary of a store In Cache county finally causing the arrest of both and their conviction and sentence to the Utah penitentiary for terms of eight years. Tracy escaped by taking a revolver away from a guard and marching the guard out of the linos of the prison work before he released him. He next was connected with two notorious band of young robber In Colorado, In a fight between officer and the Robber Roost gang, headed by George Curry, Tracy and a companion shot and killed a deputy sheriff named Valentine Day, but both were wounded and their capture followed. They were taken to Aspen, Cat and placed In jail, but In a few day overpowered the jailor and regained their freedom. That was in June, 1897. and tor the next two years Tracy kept out of jail, though wanted In sev eral states. His conviction to tho Salem penltcn tlary was obtained in April,, 1899, for robberies committed in Portland In February of the same year. When he began his sentence of 20 year in Salem prison he was registered a 25 year of age. Tracy was a powerful man, though ot rather slight build. fir (V .iTJ Extraordinary ! ! "LOVELY GIRL" ORCHESTRA -i a AT T H E i .. .i - 1 ft 1 ' A " ; . ri... ar-f f n r-LX New This remarkable, organisation, filly strong, ha taken Boston by alarm lor tho past Ian weeks, and II win o lh same with Pittsburgh's audiences. YOU MUST HEAR THEM II 127 Superb Exhibits 10 Star Attractions Music Hall Beautifully Re-decorated Eaeurslans, at on far for lha round trip aro ran avar araefc from this ally ta Pittsburgh. THE JEFFERSON SUPPLY COMPANY Being; the largest distributor of General Merchandise in this vicinity, it always la f osition to give the beat quality of goods, ts aim is not to sell jou 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, K. Y., Canned Goods; and Pillsbury's Flour. This is a fair representation of the class of goods it is selling to its customers. B B B B luiiiiauiuiuiitimiuiuiaiimiiuiauimiiimiuiuiiuuuui LOVELY GIRL ORCHESTRA' NEXT. 18 The attendance thut f.ir at the Nm Exponilion has exceeded all expectations, ml liotieslly ipeaking, there it just one verdict, viz, that from every viewpoint the present exhibition ii hcjcl and shoulder above anything ever belore een in 1'ittn- tnirl, or tor that matter in anv other city. The general "spick and tpan'' appearance of all the builtling, the larger number, and great variety of exhibits and the tiperior beauty ot the booths housing them have brought forth almost endless ad jectives of admiration. Mechanical hall, especially has been the recipient of lavish praise, since here the scheme of display has been entirely changed, and the whole structure tastily decorated and dazxlingly illuminated. The growth of the New Exposition can best be gauged by the fact that there are forty-two more exhibitors than last year making a grand total of one hundred and twenty-seven, and occupying an area of one hundred and twenty-five thousand square feet. Notable imonj! the new exhibits are "Two Model Bath Rooms," constructed at a cost of four thousand dol lars; a superb electrical showing; cereals, fruits, minerals, etc., of the Southern Rail way, the finest of cut glassware; the novel steam-turbine-engine-whecl, and many others. The musical attraction from September 17 to JJ. inclusive, will be the Fade;tes of Huston, fifty strong, otherwise the "Lovely liiri orchestra," an organization that the past summer has set cultured Boston aflame with enthusiasm anil wonder. It is some tiling new to find large bodies of women playing together, but the results have been so satisfying that the New Exposition management felt constrained to champion the new cause and show its clientele what man-clous progress woman has made in the field of music. Aside frcm the lovely quality of their music these fifty women, each clad in white or tome delicately colored gown, will make a fas inating stage picture among the flowers, green I 'alms and pale blue lights of the newly ami leautifully redecorated Music hall. Sub urbanites ran not arlord to miss hearing this superb body of players. Just word as lo the special attractions. There ire ten of them each more interest ing than the other, and all together so en joyable to the visitor that they have become the talk of the town. Excursions are being run to the New Exposition each week during the season of forty days and every person in this citvnwes it to himself and hit family to makt use of the privilege. WHEN IN D0UIIT.TRY .2a i i Ills atood tha taual vaan. Sad hvf curW saaussaaa i as i of Narrows Disaasaa, saca. as Dabtlin. DlulaMa, (ImdUm aisaadvaricccsls.Alroaay.as Taas-claarlha knJa.atnastaaa tha slrouUtioa. suika oiiMttas partsct, sad Uapsrl Ktallkf la tha wkola fcalaf. All Mas atwa wtarriat that famlaMaltr. Caataass tuwarDaath. kUlWd sulsd. Prk. ( pm Urn; aaaaa, vita baa-clad kajal suaraaiaa H mm ar aAiadthaasMttM- aW iat Isaa kaak. For sals k. Alt Stall. a Ts . -ftBstsMMl Exposition 3 9 BUSINESTCARD3, MITCHELL, ATTORHEY-AT-LAW. OfTJra on Went Main ttrMt. opposite ska Oommarclal Hotel. Keynoldtrllla. Pa. Q M. MCDONALD, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary Public, real Mtsts scent, Patents secured, collections made promptly. Ofilcv In Nolan block, ReynoldiTllfe, Pa. s MITH M. MoCKEIOHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW , If otary Public and Real Estate Asens. Col lections will receive prompt attention, Offlaa In rroebltch A Henry block, oear poetofflo. BejooldtTllle P. . . !T D R. B. E. HOOVER, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Resident dentist. In the Hoover bulldlnf next door to pontofflce, klaln street. .Qantla aeaa In operation. D R. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST, Offlcs od second floor of First National bask building. Main street. a a Da V ERE KINO, DENTIST, Office oa second floor ReynoldsTllIe Real Estate Bldg. Main street ReynoldtvlUe, Vm. jyn. W. A. HENRY, DENTIST. Office oa second floor of Henry Bros, brlos building. Main street. NEFF. ' . JUSTICE OF THE PEACE And Heal Xatate Agent, ReyaolcltTlUe, Pa. t0 EVEF f 5 frxnettmes EVERY WOMAN wads a lagulatlag DR. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL PILLS, Are prompt aafe aad oartlo (a result. The na fee ar, rWi) nevar disappoint, 1.M xwraa Tarsals ay . Alas. Itoka. lanann YOUNG'S g PLANING I ir t t t 1 ATA 1 Lr Li You will find Sash, Doors, Frames and Finish of all kinds, Roujjh and Dressed Lumber, High Grade Var nishes, Lead and Oil Colors in all shades. And also an overstock of Noils which I will sell cheap. J. V. TOUNO, Prop. D AT KeaUDsQaQBataSCU X