Subscription tl.OOpcr year in itdi'ance. V .t.flTKPIIKMMIIV, Kdllnrnnd I'ub. WEDNKSDAY, OCTOIIKR 5, 1 ! Anlntlenemli-nt loi'titpnprr.nti til ;iliefl every i'dneluy nt KevnoMsvllle, .Ii-iVim-soii fit. Vn., devoted 10 tin' interests of Keynolilxvllle jnd Jeffersoni-omity. Nitn-pulitlriil.wllltnMit all with fiilrnoiM, mill will lresM'eliillyf r-leml-I toward the Inhering eliiss. Oommunlrailimn Intendi-il for niibllrntlnn Muni be aei'omimnlei'. by tli writer, tmnie. not for niinlli'tit Inn, Inn fl a mmruntt'O of Hood faith. I nn r't Itiir new ItcmsHollrlted. Ad vertlnlnir rates mmlo now n en applica tion at. thlsolMVn. In((hty common!. 'Minn nnrt chnnie of t Ivertlncmrnla should relieli this otllcu by Monday noon. Subscription pr1crl.nOpcrycnr.ln ndvnnee. Addrposallfomrminlcattons toL'. A. Steph enson, KcvnolilHvllli'. I'h. Riirklrn'a Arnlcn Snl o. Has world-wide fame for marvellous cures. It surpasses any other salve, lotion, ointment or balm for Cut, Corns, Burns, noil, Sores, I'Vlons, Uloors, Tetter, Salt Rheum, I'Vver 8orcs, Chapped Hands, Skin Kruptiuns; infallible for Piles. Cure (juurnnteod. Only 25o at H. Alex Stoku's, UriiBslst. I.cltcr Llt, L'.st of unclnlmed letters remaining In po9tofllco at UeynoldHvlllo, l'a., for the wook ending Oct. 1, 1004: Mrs. Lcota Dean, Mrs. MiisrIo Wins low, John Zimmerman. Foreign Panblcenehl Giovanni, Al exander Glawacki. Say advertised and plve date of lint when calling for above. E. c. Burns, P. M. World's Fair Excursions. Low-rato ten-day conch exclusion via Pennsylvania" Iiuilrond, Oetohr 12, 19, and 20. Rate, 814.65 from Reynolds ville. Train leaves KuynoUisvlllo at 5.27 p. m., connecting with social train from New York arriving St. Louis 4.15 p, m. next day. Mrs. Acheson Calvin, of Reynolds vllle, was in Brookvlllo a few days ago, and visited the family of Enoch I.oux, whose first wife 'was h"r neice. Mr. Loux made hor a present of a plate, fully a hundred years old, that belonged to Mrs. -Calvin's mother. The plato is whole and sound, and has on It the picture of a peacock. Mrs. Calvin is quite an old lady, being 82 years of age. Brookville Democrat. Mrs. Cal vin live with hor daughter, Mrs. II. J. Pollltt, on Fifth street. Roosovolt or Parker, if elected, will warm by a "Poninsular" Hot Blast stovo. For salo at Royn oldKvilln Hard ware Co. store. PPLICATION FOR CHARTER. Notice Is hereby Ktven that an application will be niado to the Ctovernor of the Mnto of Pennsylvania on Monday, October :Mth, h4, ' by Goonro H iikIics, Morris Kelley and Mat hew Heller, under the Act. of Assembly of Un common wealth of 1'ennsylvanla entitled 'An Act to provldo for the Incorporation and Regulation of certain conionitlons." un proved April '2!iih, 1H74, and the Kuppletnonts tnerero, ror tne charter or an inienoeit cor poratlon to he called "Keynoldsvllle OUtll Jinn Company," tho cliai'ticter and oh.lect of which Is the buying, hcIUiil:, inaniifact urlnir and distilling spirits, whiskies, brandies ntnl other spirituous llmiors. and for these pur poses Ut have, possess and enloy all the rights, benelito and privileges of the said Act ot Assembly unu its supplements. OLAKK & tSTKWAHT, Solicitors, Tiios.E. Evans Contractor and Builder Has bought Solomon Shuffor's lumbor of floe and lumbor yard at this place and will continue tho lumbor business at the same old stand. Ho will sell any and all kinds of Lumber Lime, Cement, Sand or Plaster. Main St., Reynoldsville. Th3 Cure thai Cures Coughs, Cotds Grlnnc. who6plnarCouarh. Asthma' '. Bronchitis and Inolplent I Consumption la mm Bold tiy II. Alex, Bloke. SWI3IMJXG MISTAKES FEW LEARN TO HANDLE THEMSELVES PROPERLY IN THE WATER. ttrnnrnni-p of the First Principle t the Art l foiniimn DrownlnB ! on Inn He Snvetl With lint Very Little Dnnitrr to the Hrseaer. It hns iilwnys slruek me us curious that, tlioimli KtiKllshmen " toud of nil. athletic sports, tliotmh ytieht Ing, boating nud tlshltiB take so promi nent a place nmnnif our sports and amusements, wo nre such very bail swimmers. When at I'tunliriilKe I could never lliul nny one who would swim the Imlf mile with me, ntnl I doubt If there were twenty men at the university who could have swum bijlf a mile. "Hiit her not, I net so pumped!" was the nnswer always nmile to my Invitation. Yet there is no exercise which, when properly learned, "pumps" one less or tires one less. Alter a live mile race ono"s heart is not beating any faster than at the start, nor is one half so exhausted as after riding n bicycle up n steep hill. I often talked with Captain Webb about his channel swim, and he told mu that even after swimming for twenty-two hours his muscles were not very tired and that It was weari ness he felt more than exhaustion. Wo used to swim for two hours toKcther twice a week when we were both training for some nice. He was a slow swimmer, but swam In excellent style, which menus he wasted none of Ills strength, and when I knew hint he never swam anything but the breast stroke. If I remember rightly, he never was tiny good at nny of the side strokes, ntnl he certainly swam tho channel on his breast. The channel may be crossed again, but It Is not very likely, ns several good swimmer have tried and been beaten. Except for the pleasure of having to look out the Hellespont in the mnp, Hyron's swim (which Is, I suppose, more or less a historical event, ns It Is alluded to by every distributer of swimming prizes who wishes to show his learning) should be forgotten and never alluded to as a feat at all when compared with Webb's. Men nre "pumped" because so few enro to lo.irn to swim properly and nre content to flounder and splutter nbout. thinking apparently that the faster they move their arms and legs, never mind In what direction, the more mng- nlflcent their swimming. Swimming Is n question of balance. nnd that Is why when once learned It is never forgotten. Tho mistake In learning Is that to avoid breathing in water boys put their heads too far l)nck and ro keep their mouths too far above the surface. Nobody will ever swim well or with ease till he hag learned that It Is not necessary to carry his neck like a strangled giraffe. This strained attitude upsets the balance, You will see every good swimmer In the world swimming with his mouth under water till the arms separate. His body will thus be straight, very high in the water, nnd he will be bal- nueed properly. To learn to breathe properly means to learn to swim quickly and well. It Js very simple. All that the tyro nee.l remember Is to breathe outward as his Iiands go forward and to breathe In ward directly his bauds separate, which Is the moment when his head Is high est. I have found it useful when teaching to tell boys to "blow their bands from them" as a sort of memo rla technlca of the moment to breathe outward. I am sorry for lads whom I see learning to swim when they be come apparently much distressed about the proper movement of their legs and arms nud much more sorely distressed really by the amount of bath water they nre swallowing, of which the in structor takes no note, though tho pu pll does. One word more about learning. It is Important very that the Iiands In breast stroke swimming should work lu the same horizontal piano as tho body and not downward. Working them downward Is a waste of strength They nro then ouly lifting the body out of lnsteud of propelling It through the water. It is important that boys should bo taught tho breast stroke properly All boys think they can swim quicker on their sides because when on their sides they see the water pass by their faces und fancy they aro going as fast as a torpedo catcher. But It Is a mis take. The proper stroke now adopted by all amateurs and professionals for racing Is very different from what boys call "side stroke" and ought to be care fully learned after a good breast stroke has been mastered. Nothing but a good breast stroke can save you In trouble, nor can you save a drowning man by any fancy swimming. Now, for the second part of my text Can there bo a more hideous danger than that of swimming up to rescue a drowning and struggling man who, fighting for his life cud In the agony of suffocation, will seize you and clutch you nnd take you with him to the bot torn? Drowning men are said to clutch at a straw, but for choice tkey prefer something more substantial. Bummer after summer we read the same old story of the rescuer being clutched and drowned nud two lives lost, one of them cortaluly being that of u bi-.ive man. Yet it Is a mere question of three or four hours' teaching and prac tice to enable any one to rescue drowning niun with but very little dan t;er to the rescuer. It has been my painful duty to award fhe medals at the so called fife saving competitions now tuklng pluce every Bummer at our public schools. Miser able end gloomy farces they are! stuffed booby is pushed out ubout twenty yards into the water, and the soys jump in, one after another, and pull It to shore. The booby is then ' funk, and the boys bare to dive and hrtng it up, no directions being given bow. properly to do so. Anything mora uullke what one has to do wlic.i eon fronted with the danger of rescuing a struggling tnnn It Is Impossible to con ceive, nnd I hope the tiny Is not far distant when public schoolboys will be ashnined to accept a medal for such a silly competition. When you swim up to a drowning utiiu he will probably seize you by the wrists. If you turn your wrists round against his thumbs he cannot hold you for a second, and the fact of his losing his hold ou you will probably swing him round, so that you can then catch hold of hint properly and bring him to shore, swimming on your back. Sly rentiers should be a little careful how they practice this, because If they try to hold on when the wrists nre turned against their thumbs the result may probably be dlslocntlou. It Is not safe, however, to nssume that the rescued man will remain quiet, nor will he if nny water spaslies on his face, so the best way to hold him Is to place your arms under his and your hands on his chest. He cannot then turn round on you and his head Is higher out of tho water than when simply held by the head. If he seizes you by the head, which Is the next most likely part to be grasped, you must put one arm behind his back and one hand under his chin. The arm be hind pulls lilui toward you; the baud under the chin pushes his head back ward and under water. He will let go of necessity. If he seizes you lower down you must put your knee up as high as It will go, and you can easily free yourself. All this Is far eatiler to do than it Is to describe. If ouly men will tuke the little trouble to learn. If the drowning man has sunk you will generally see by the bubbles In still water whereabouts he Is. lilve down, ami be It noted that the com mon Idea that you cannot open your eyes under water, but must go down with them open, is utter nonsense, (let the body across one knee, and a kick from the other leg will briug you nnd him to the surface. A man will not clutch or struggle If he bus once sunk, but there is no reason for letting him sink. A man who has sunk Is very nearly dentl. Be It noted also that It Is utter nonsense to say that a man rises three times," nud it Is dllllelilt to know how such n very common be lief can be so widespread. If you de termine to wait till your sunken man rises again you will have to wait till the resurrection day. Bo far I have referred only to rescu ing a struggling man fighting for his life nud lost to nil sense but his own danger, but it may happen to many of us to be swimming with a friend who gets cramp or to soldiers to have to get a wounded comrade across u river, The ordinary mortnl would try to swim with the Injured man on his back and would assuredly fall. Hut nothing can possibly be easier than to help another man who will keep quiet nud has his wits about 1) tin. If be will turn ou his back and place his bauds on your shoulders you cau swim any distance with Mm without being lu the least Incommoded. I am sure no one will believe how easy this is till he has tried It. No one can say be will never find himself in tho dreadful position of seeing a fellow man drowning beforo his eyes. At the expense of u few hours given to learning how to suve life and keep his own the position would not bo so dreadful. Surely this Is worth the expenditure of a little time and a very little trouble, nnd surely this knowl edge might with advantage be given to our boys at our public and private schools. lion. Sydney Holland iu Bad miiiton Magazine. She Never Lost Money. Two Indies met in a street car the other day and began to talk about their servants. "I can't trust mine," said one. "I'm actually afraid to leave tho house for fear something will be stolen before I get buck." "Why don't you lock everything up nnd take tho keys with you?" asked tho other. "I do lock all my closets and draw ers," was tho reply, "but it's too much trouble to take the keys with me. Be sides, I hide them in an excellent pluce." ' "Where?" asked her companion. "In my box of candy on the mantel piece," was the answer. "No wonder you're robbed," exclaim ed the other. "Why, you couldn't have chosen a worse place, for your servants are Just as fond of sweet things as you are, and your box of candy is the first thing they examine after you leave the house. Now, I bide my keys In my workbox, for I know that my servants have a horror of work and that they will never think of going near it."-New York Herald. The Oatrlrlt una Its rlnektns;. When a year old, the plumago of the ostrich is usually largo enough and fine enough for plucking, which is one of the most ditllcult and dangerous operations of ostrich culture. A few of the birds are driven into a corrul when one by one tbey nre pushed into a small auguhir inclosure, and a long, ntirrow bag is placed over the heat' with a hole In the end to admit air, Then one man holds the bird whllo the operator skillfully clips 'und pulls at the feathers that ure "ripe." Blind ed, the bird becomes very tame, but ctro is exercised by the men to ovoid its kicks. The short feathers are pulled out without any apparent pain to the creature, as they are ripe and would fall otT In the course of nature if not extricated by the skilled operator. The heavy wing feathers ure cut off with scissors, the stumps being left in the skin. These stumps are ripe for ex traction about three months after a plucking takes place. THE SLY WEASEL. 0ro He Finally Trapped and Killed Monster nnt. A sawmill In an Iowa town was In fested with rats, wblch, being unmo lested, became very numerous anil bold and played round the mill among the men while they worked during the day. But one day n weasel came upon the sceno nnd at once declared war on the rats. One by one tho rnls became victims ef the weasel's superior strength until only one very large, strong fellow was left of the once numerous colony. Tho weasel attacked the big rat several times, but eoeh time tho rat proved more than n match for his slender an tagonist nnd chased the weasel to a hiding place. One day the weasel was seen busily digging under n lumber pile near the mill. lie was engaged for some time, but later appeared ngaln In the mill. seeking his old enemy. He soon found blm and at once renewed hostilities. As usual, after a lively tussle, the rat proved too much for him, nnd he ran, pursued closely by the rut, straight to the hole under the lumber pile. Ho rnn In, still followed by tint rat. almost Immediately reappeared round the end of the pile nnd again (lodged into the hole behind the rat. Neither was seen again for some time, but tho weasel finally reappeared, looking no worse for the fight The curiosity of the men In tho mill was aroused, and they proceeded to In vestigate the hole under the lumber pile. They found that the weasel had dug the hole sufficiently large at the first end to admit the rat, but had gradually tapered It ns be proceeded until at the other end It barely allowed bis own slender body to pass. When the rat chased him Into the lnrge end of this underground funnel be quickly slipped on through, nnd while the rnt was trying to squeeze his largo body Into the smaller part of the hole the weasel dodged in behind him and, catching him In the rear and In a place where he could not turn round, finished him at his leisure. HUSBANDS AND WIVES. A reserved lover, It Is said, always mokes a suspicious husband. Hold- smith. Certainly wife and children are n kind of discipline of humanity. Lord Bacon. When n man should marry n young man not yet, ihi elder man not at nil. Thnles. He that loves not his wife and chll dren feeds a lioness at home nnd broods a nest of sorrows. Jeremy Taylor. I have hardly ever observed the inai' rled condition unhappy but for want of judgment or temper in the man. Rich ard Steele. He that hath wife and children hath given hostHges to fortune, for tbey are impediments to great enterprises, either of virtue or mischief. Lord isueon. After treating her like a goddess the husband uses her like a woman. What is worse, the most abject llatterei-s de generate Into tho greatest tyrants. Addlsou. Alterlns; Stumps. No change or altciailon of any sort Should be made by a collector lu his stamps. It was a custom some years ago among collectors to erase cuucella tlon marks from their stamps In order to make their stamps better. The ef fect of the attempt was not ull that could bo desired. The erasures wore not perfect, and the stamps In the changed condition, being neither can coled nor uncanceled, were simply In fcrior damaged specimens. One of the most common ways of altering sunups at the present time Is to erase the word "specimen" from n stamp having this overprint. It cannot bo douo so that it will not bo detected, and tho stamp In tho altered condition is worthless, while as u "specimen It bad sonic, value. It has frequently happened that stamps, valuable In their original con dition, have been made wort bless by attempts to increase their value by alteration. St. Nicholas. The Koreans' White Drcsii. As the Koreans arc obliged to dress in white for three years for every case of death and as once three kings died within teu years, by which deaths mourning was imposed on the whole nation, 'tho majority of people chose rather to dress . continually lu white In order to avoid the great expense In volved by repented cimngo of clothing, Tho women make these garments, nnd every time they have to be washed they nre entirely taken to pieces and beaten for hours with a wooden paddle in order to obtain the metallic gloss wblch Is considered particularly beau tlful. Compensation, tleou ot I' unuiy l want to leave my property to my two sons-one-tenth to my elder son, John Butts, and nine tenths to my younger son, Boyal Ches terfield Montgomery do I'cyster Butts. Funilly Lawyer H'm! Ho you think thut's quite fair? Houd of Family Yes. I want to mako some kind of reparation to Boyal for allowing his mother to give him such a nnino. Lon don Mull. An Eventful Day. "Well, well," exclaimed the editor, "if thut wasn't a queer experience!" "Whut wus Unit?" said the foreman. "There wus a inun In here Just now who didn't seem to know auy more about bow a newspaper should be run than I do." "When something is very difficult to understand," suld tho distinguished professor of biology, "It is culled sci ence; when it Is Impossible, It is called philosophy." ' Old Tre Superstition.' The old Teutonic nnd Saxon rrfces In central nnd northern Europe, be fore the Introduction and spread of Christianity, had a great veneration for rees. They would never willingly damage them. Under large trees, espe cially old oaks, the great councils were held and Judgment given, nnd the graves of this people were found in groves, they always being buried un der the roots of a tree. This nil was a result of the superstition that their gods lived In those trees. In the linden tree Berehta dwelt, a benign spirit who took charge of the babies and rocked their cradles when the nurses fell nslccp; lu the oak, lonar, the thunder god; In the willows all sorts of spirits. In the elder trees the dwarfs. When ever the festlvnls of theso gods were celebrated their trees were decorate l with lights, wreaths nnd questen (tits selsi, nnd offerings were hung In the branches, which, however, were plun dered ngaln when the festival was over, the gods being supposed ouly to npproprluto tho best. The Camel as a Soldier. The camel is a good soldier, says a London writer. It mny be stupidity, nnd It may be bravery, but a camel Is as steady under Are ns a tower. The Persians mounted small cannon on the backs of their camels nnd called them rambwahs, or "little wasps." This fashion was ndopted In India, nnd aft er tho bottlo of Sobraon 2,000 of these artillery camels were captured. Jn the Indian mutiny the British nnd a cam el corps of IfiO beasts, and on the bock of each camel sat n Scotch hlghlnnder lu his kilt. In 1845 Sir Charles Napier bad a camel corps in Slndh, nud lu one duv he inarched seventy-live miles, defeated n brigand chief nnd mnrched home again. In 1S78 the British used camels against the Afghans, and the government paid for 150,000 camels that died In those campnlgns. Many or these were driven to death by their owners In order thnt they might claim the government bounty. Monster Beds. Though the beds of the royal per sonages of Unglnnd were oluboratoly carved and hung with rich curtains even so late as the Tudor period, it is recorded that King Henry VIII.'s bed contained only straw benenth all its finery. A curious order exists as to precautious to be taken agnlnst the possibility of intended mischief to the royal person In the making or tne neu, for the usher was to search the straw through with a dagger, "that there be iiouo untruth therein, and to tumble over on the down bed for the better search thereof." Tho bed of Henry VIII. wus uenrly eleven feet square, and of even more generous dimensions Is the great bed to wblch Shakespeare refers In a well known passage in "Twelfth Night," which wus twelve feet square. Tills "great bed of Ware" has been a marvel for centuries. He Sent Another, A few years ago a well known luw yer remitted In settlement of an ac count to the publisher of a paper two dtdlar bill, which was returned with tho brief statement: "This note Is counterfeit; please send another." Two months passed before hearing from the lawyer again, when he apolo gized for the delay, saying: "I have been unable uutil now to find another counterfeit two dollar bill, but hope the one now Inclosed will suit, professing at the same tiino my Inability to discover what tho objec tion was to the other, which I thought us good a counterfeit as I ever saw.' Philadelphia Ledger. Rise Aliove Your Tronhlee. No mailer what cares, anxieties or sorrows may vex or sadden you, do not prove yourself n weakling by going down before them, but show yourself noble In rising nbovo tlieni and mold lug them to life's purpose. Bather bear un I., uilt than give one; rather dry tear' than cause one to bo shed. How many celebrities we would have men would be ns anxious to make their own famo as they ure to uunmke the fume of others. Nuthlnst Left. "I have hud lots of friends who were guilty of mutilating books tbey had borrowed from me, but my latest expe rience was tho most novel of nil." "What was It?" "I lent Mrs. Blanks my dictionary few days ago, pud yesterday ,sho re turned It without a worur New ur leuns Tlmes-lemocrat. Its Beaatle. "Do you now appreclute the beauties efclvllizutlon?" "Yes." answered tho barbarian. "Civ illzntlou is a great Institution. But, u In tho cuso of other large enterprises, it's usually best to be one of the pro moters nnd get in ou the ground Boor." i " ' ! -Washington Star. He Was Afraid. The Bride Toll ino now, dearest, When you proposed weren't you a little nervous for fear I should say "-of The Bridegroom (who has married for money)-! should think I was. Why, owed nearly Ip.oon, and my creditors were getting awfully pushing. He Knew, "Squeezem Is u mean man." "What makes you think so?" "I saw blm put a lead quarter in a blind man's hut this morning." "How did you know It was lead?" "I passed It on hint yesterduy." Cleveland Main Healer. Flntlery. no-Is there anything In tho world thnt bows you more than (lattery She-Only one thing thut I know of He what Is thut? She-Not to be fluttered. Wanted! Girls for Quitting, Winding and Picking. Apply Enterprise Silk Co. He Cures Others Men, many of you folly. Your .Utility I something for vouraelf. dlsvuses, In nu.,r on t.M.n.laa ITIlkn ., UfamaWrlAw vonr wholn future rented so many cusps of tills kind that I am daylight. Once cured by me you will never loss or ammtlon or other aympuims which rob for Stlldv. hnalllHsa. nteaanre or murrtairn. M v eviis nnu restore you to wnat nature Intended menini ana outer powers complete. DR. McCLELLAN. WE KNOW WE TELL THE NAKED TRUTH When we say we have the Largest Stock and Lowest Prices of any Grocery House in the County. Good, substantial goods the kind the people live on. Be low we quote a few prices as sample. Our store is chuck full of bargains for the careful buyer. Make out your list of wants and let us quote you prices on bill goods. We are always here to correct errors and make everything right. 7 tlx. Uol led Onls 8 tt. A i buckles' CulTou Extra Fine Bulk Coffee, regular price 20 cents, 3 Cans Best Standard Tomatoes 1 Doz. Cans Best Standard Tomatoes 1 Doz. Cans Good Standard Tomatoes Best Sugar Cured Hums por lb. 5 lbs Good Rice, ' We sell Tboa. J.-Lipton't Teas Robinson W H V IS THE STANTON SEAMLESS WARM-AIR HEATER THE BEST ? ? CZt 7 I' BECAUSE it excels ail others for durability. BECAUSE it requires less attention to operate it. BECAUSE it consumes less fuel and burnscom mon slack coal perfectly. BECAUSE it is impossible for it to smoke and it is the.only warm-air heat er made that is abso lutely smoke proof. AH these are important points to be considered in selecting a warm-air heater. Keystone Hardware Go, QAUTION NOTICE. All persons r hurfhy rtutlonod not to meddle with tb following property now In poMu-mlon of F,. L. Moore on the A. 1. Pprsrne is. m In Henderson township, Jefferson County, P., vli t li tons of hnf. I tons of straw, t ho, I calves, one-half of I snret of rrowlnt buckwheat, onu-half of S acre of Krowln corn, one-half of 2 aenmnf growltif potatoes, one-half ot sll apples now In orrhnnl on A. J, Spratttin farm, the snltl buckwheat, rorn and potatoea now matur ing on the Hpraeue farm, a all of salt! prop erty enttniertttml wan purchased hy tis and Is only left with the E. L. Moore soliject to our ordor W.M. McKsk, N. V. Mimiks. Sept. 14, 1901. Why Not You? DR. McCLELLAN. SPECIALTIES: Catarrh nnd Disensta of the Ear, None, Throat, Luny;s, Liver and Nerves. Ex amination Free and Private. Now permanently located Suites 4, G, 6 nnd 7, Wingert Block, 3G North Brady Street DuBois, Pa. yERI'O-VITAL DEBILITY are now reaping the re.ult of your former falling and you will soon lie lout unless you do Thnre Is no time tji Irsie. Imuotenrv. flke ill the standstill. With It you can make no cotn- .... 1 ... . 111 .. .1 II 1 1 with mlMnrv. woe anri fll.aiiimlntinHnt! I have aa familiar with tliHrn aa vnu are with the very again bo bothered with nerrniiatiens, falling, you of your vitality and absolutely unlit you trl, ni.nl. fit. wi.ulr man will inrrmt. all tit. ma a I i hale, healthy, happy man, with physloul, Hours t a. m. to p. m. NO INt'UUABLK CASES TAKEN. 25c 4 Itis it bi'tter irritde 2T0 f)5o lOftm. Puw Loaf Lnrd 1.00 15o 2o 05c 85o 14c 7 oaken Gliw. Star or Lenox Soap, 25o 5 lbs. big fat Prunes 25o 11 lbs. Best Nary Beans. 50o 4 lbs. Best Lima Beans, 25o Best Sugar Cured Baoon 25o and 14 and 15o pound Coffees Best In the land. & Mundorff.