TURNING OF THE WORM. Hit Plain, Blunt, 8tright to tha Point t t the Moat MaVvelous Maohlna In Tlk to Hit Wi(e. J the World. "Mrs. I.nnibort, I think "we will Imvo Tim hmiinii brain la the most iniir to cut down expenses," remarked Mr. I velons machine In tlio world. It oeen- Lambert tliulitly. To hla Intense surprise she made no reply. Then be ttrew bolder. .'"Ami 1 nni certainly of the opinion that you nre spending ton much money on gowns nnd lints." ;Agnln no answer. His bravery Jump ed up another notch. "'And, Mrs. Lambert, I nui.d s.iy fur thermore that '.we will have no more tpns or receptions." ISIIetiee. Mr. Lambrt jtrow. dni'lnK, cpuraeons.' j"lt i9 simply an otitntKO the way you lavishly expend my hard earned niiin pjr. You havo no consideration and nl- 1 low yourextrnvnirnnt Ideas to carry you off, your feet. Io you realize that we aire living beyond our means?" JS'o answer. ."Do you know that I am making WOO a month and you nro dellliei'iitoly spending $200? Can't yon see the fam ily Is bound to land In the pnorhouse?" . .Silence. Mr. Lamberts fortitude Is unbounded. .f'l have Blood your impositions Ion;? enough, Mrs. Lambert. Do you under- Bland? You have henpecked me until 1 ltjfo is now unbearable. Now I Intend to take hoM of the reins. 1 will man- ( tvge nffalrs and yon will oliey." i There was a sudden crash, then n yell. Mr. Lambert's bend came Into rtnl(i.if will, lltn lui.li,f A 1ra T.ntil. rvuilllli.t ..lilt UIW ..ate. ........ - tort shook blin furiously, nnd she ex- ' Claimed: I "Can't you keep your mouth stmt when you nre nsleep? What In the world nre you dreaming ntiont any way? It la simply barbarous the way you disturb my rest after I work so hard nil day keeping the bouse In or der. And you know I am worn out from tea this afternoon, yet" And Lambert realized It was all a dream and began nursing the slowly swelling bump on his head. Bohemian Mngnzlne. MUSIC LOVING NAPLES. It Has the Poorest and Happiest Peoplo In the Wo'rld. ' It Is estimated that n quarter of a t million neonlo In Nanles live from hnnd to mouth, and there nre hundrftln I' of children who subsist out of the kur 1 bnffo boxes nnd who sleep In chiirClioa and on doorsteps. The taxes In Italy to provide war ships nnd to keep the nation on a war footing with the other powers are real ly stupendous. There Is a tax on ev erything, says the Delineator grain In the field, fruit on the vine, old bottles. Fuel nnd foodstuffs nro very dear. Only labor is cheap. For the very poor meat is n luxury unheard of, nnd even mncnronl Is too dear to be Indulged In often. There nre any number of per- ambulating street kitchens, where va- .l.. 1 . I . . I .. . , . t C t .... I iiuub tiiuua hi nuu, iuiit?n nun iiuni. are sold In portions costing 1 cent. And yet these people seem very happy. Itnnils of musicians are nlwnys play- Ing In the streets; the guilnr and the , mandolin nre to lie heard everywhere 1 n the boats. In the hotels, nnd the stranger Is lulled to sleep by n soft serenade ufider his balcony. The story teller thrives in Naples ns there nre so many idlers there. He col lects n little crowd nround him nnd proceeds In fie most dramatic way, gesticulating v. lldly nnd working his fnce Into the most excruciating ex pressions, to relate stories of adven ture or other event 4, much to the edi fication of h'.v hearers, who to 8hoy their appreciation nro often ItotrnyeoJ Into giving n sou which might havo, been better spent for bread or polenta. The public letter writer is another Btrect dignitary of Importance and l: jreat demand, especially, with timid and buxom maids of nil work who have themselves neglected to learn the nrt of writing. Of such the public letter writer holds all the secrets, of their loves and Is often their adviser as well ns amanuensis. Pineapple Juice. Garlic eaten raw will cure a cold In the head, grip or Influenza In the first Btflcres. but tn enses when nrelmltrwl people refuse to test Its virtues Irish moss lemonade made nfter the well known flaxseed lemonade recipe nnd taken for both meat nnd drink stands fjext on the list. Pineapple Juice will relieve Inflamma tion of the throat In the most advanced and chronic cases and will cure nil or dinary attacks. In both membranous croup and diphtheria pure pineapple Juice either caw or from the canned fruit will cure when the entire apothe cary shop has been tried and found wanting. National Magazine. Von Hutten'a Misery. Very sad was the fate of L'lrleh von Hutten, one of the greatest writers Germany has ever produced. Unable to earn a living, he was reduced to tramping through the country, begging food and shelter from the peasants. One bitter winter's night both were re fused, and next morning be was found frozen stiff and cold in the drifting now outside the village. "The only thing be died possessed of besides the rags be wore," says bis biographer, Zuinglin, "was a pen" The Nub of the Thing. "Man runs to cliques," audibly rumi nated a grizzled citizen. "He thinks pretty well of bis country, of bis State or province, of bis town, of bis own street, and then we get at he nnb of the thing the man thinks pretty well of himself." Kansas City Newsbook. When a man Is being operated on by a barber It is best for bim to keep bis month shut The case is different when tbe patient is in the dentist's chair. THE HUMAN BRAIN. plea less space In proportion to its capabilities than nuy machine It ever Invented. It sends n special nerve to every ultimate fiber of somo 500 iiiiih cles, to many thousand hranchlnu twigs of nrterles, to every plnhend area of the numerous rIuiiiIs which keep the machine properly oiled, heat ed or cooled, to boiiic sixteen simiiro feet of skin, which Is the onlpost guard of Its castle, with inch complete ness that the point of a pin cnuuot find an area unguarded. It possesses special quarters for the reception and translation of n constant si renin of vi bratlons that nro the product of all things movable or Mill In the outer world. On the retina of every open eye Is a plcturo of the outer view, n focused Imprint of every ray of light nnd color, and In the vIhiuiI chamber i of the mental palace stiiinln a vlbra scope, a magic lantern thnt receive . the retinal plcturo In Its billion speed Mg Mrlos of light waves a:id throws them upon Its menial screen as a llv- lug moving picture of light and shade 'and color. In the chamber of sound Is n vibraphone, over wliose-iicflve wires passes every wave of sound from the dripping of the dew to the orchestral fortissimo, from the raucous screech , of the locomotive to the sighing of the ! wind through the meadow grass. In II. a l I ....... ,.l r.. ....... .....1 mil vllllllll',1.. H,-l 11)11111 MM nilTlll illl.l tnsto nnd touch nro the secret service gunrds to report upon the nlr and food which give sustenance to the palace and upon the solid qualities of the tac tile world. And, wonder of nil won ders, tills complex human brain can think In nil languages or In no lan guage nnd even conceive Its own phys ical mortality. Edward A. Ayres In Harper's Magazine. Where the Tips Go. "Hut I can tell you something yon don't know about the tipping system lu tlio cloakrooms of some of the large cafes," remarked n midnight diner to his wife. i 'Why, don't the small boys Just I pocket nil they get?" Inquired she. "Pocket! Their uniforms nre made without a sign of n pocket so that none of the tips can dud a lodging there. Those; bbis get nothing but a salary, which Is. paid by a man who has pur chased tuo check room privilege for as high ns live thousand a year. Tho tips are all turned Into li I in. You can Imagine What tho privilege Is worth when he can pay down that sum for the right," New York Tress. The Oldeet Encyclopedia, Tiie most ancient encyclopedia ex tant Is riiny's "Natural History," In I thirty-seven books and 2,i!)3 chapters. I fitfi, I llliy rt f n,.atiirirt'i uliv nul t'liii.ttnv meteorology, geography, geology, hot- .. . t ! I .1. ....... 1 . 1 . .. uuj, nit-'iiii'iiiu, uiu m in nun nuuj in-lli ly every other department of human thought known nt the time. I'llny, who died 70 A. I)., collected bis work In Ills leisure Intervals while engaged lu' public nffalrs. The work was a very high authority In the middle nges. The Child's Advice. Little Arthur stood peering down Into the countenance of tils baby sister, 1 whom the nurse was singing to sleep, j '"Say, -nurse," he finally whispered, "It's nearly unconscious, Isn't It?" Tbe nurse, nodded tn the affirmative and sang on. j "Then don't slug any more or you'll kill ftr'-TJpplUCOtt'B. j Freed from Piles THE JOY OF. IT. The utter misery end despair of the lufferet from piles or hemorrhoids can nerer be des cribed. Not only the intense itching and ttingir.3, not only the dreed of a surgical operation, but the whole system seemi to be I undermined by this horrible disease. The joy which cured ones experience on being freed from ildiing, bleeding and protrud ing piles is told in thousands ol idlers received in regard to Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment You need not tell the writers of these tellers that there is a case ol piles which Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment will not cure, for they will not believe it. They alone know how lliey suffered, and also know that lliis ointment cured them. It brings relief at once. 50 els. a box, at all dealers or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., bulialo, N. Y. Mr. John Auer, East 5th St, Marys ille, Ohio, (tales I "For twenty years I could get no relief from kching piles, either from doctors' or other treat, menu. One box of Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment pc;itive!y cured diem, to stay cured and the relief and comiort is too great to be described." For Sale by Stoko & Feicht Drug Co. DR. A. W. CHASE'S OCft CATARRH POWDER &UUi ia aen t direct to the d iseaaed part by the improved ciower. ilea, is tne ulcere, clears the air passages, atops droppinga in the throat and permanently curea Catarrh and Nav FtM. Kn harmful il.in 25c. blower free: all dealers or Dr. A. uiaae Medicine Co Buffalo, N.Y. For sale by Stoke & Felcbt Drug Co. HUGHES & FLEMING. FtJNERAL DIRECTORS. Main Street. Reynoldsvllle, Pa. WINDSOR HOTEL W. T. Bruhakftr, Mir. Mid way between broad St. Station and Reading Terminal on Klllwrt at. Rooms Sl.UO per day and up. The only moderate priced hotel of rep utation and consequence ia PHILADELPHIA 1 BIRDS ASJHEY SLEEP.' Quail Form a Dene Circle With All Heads Facing Out, Tho nlghlcnp preparations of the chubby little quail nre very Interesting. Kncu evening the covey forms in a new place, nnd this selection of the spot entails serious efforts. Itobwhlte nev er quite lows remembrance of the many dangers which make his life in u wild state one grent fear. A while throated male wllh soft clucks calls together a dozen of his comrades, iiud for n few minutes they n4l huddle to gether, but soon from the farther end of tho aviary n clenr "Whew-liobwlillel" rings out, and off scurry the whole band, this time perhaps to settle for the night In tlio new place a dense circle of little forms, tieads nil facing out, Just as In their native slubble they rest facing In every direction, so that nt the first hint of danger from any point of the compass the covey may explode nnd go booming off In safety. 1'oor little fellows, their wild lire Is strenuous Indeed! Well for their race that every nest holds from ten to eight een eggs Instead of three or four! The woodpeckers sleep resting upon their tails, even the nickel's Invariably following this custom, although during tho day the flickers spend much i their time perching In passerine man ner, crosswise upon a twig. Small birds, such ns thrushes and warblers, Bleep usually upon some Niunll twig. Willi heads tucked behind wings lu orthodox bird fashion, but they occa sionally vary this In a remarkable way by clinging nil night to the vertical wires of their cages, sleeping apparent ly as soundly In this as In the usual position of rest. A bluebird In n small cago nlept thus about one or two ulghls out of each week. Any explanation or tills voluntary and widespread habit among perching birds would bedllflcillt to suggest. Tho little hanging parrakeets derive their name from their custom of Bleep ing nlwnys in a reversed position, nni when distributed over their roosting tree they resemble somo strange, peii'l nnt, green fruit rather than sleeping birds. Outing Magazine. THE BLUE JAY. Why Should Hs Be Selected as Sand . Bearer to Satan? It Is said and lipllovod ly many that all tho blue Jays disappear every Fri day, and not one can lio seen until tlio next day, and this dlHitppcnrnnre Is lie counted for by tho statement that the birds arc under a compact with Satan and that they devote ench Friday to delivering him a supply of Rand to beat bis caldron at tho point of tor ture. Itttt why should tho blue Jay be select ed as sand bearer to Satan when there nro bo many birds of stronger ami fleeter Vflnft? There nro many super stitions that have a rcanotilnu; nnls, but this particular 0110 bus nntliluR whatever to ro on. The origin of It lies In the fart that tho bluo jay Is n most particular hn'.m1 builder. lie knows how to build bis house, nnd ho takes a great pride in It. IIo doesn't hang his nest to a limb nor glue It to n tree. , Instead ho selects a substantial fork or crotch of a limb, lays down n few twigs of goodly size and strength, nn i on those bo superimposes a strong foundation of clay, with layers of pa pers between, and when his nest Is fin ished It is ns substantial In proportion ns one of our modern steel structures. Thus fitted nnd finished, It is admi rably adapted to tho rearing of a strong nnd healthy brood, nnd the blue Jay goes about bis business with tho earnest energy thnt characterizes all bis movements. IIo raises his young and leads them about from tree to tree nnd from bush to bush until they have tried and found their wings, nnd then, his re sponsibilities being over, be proceeds with his career of gayety, a veritable, practitioner of rough fun and stage humor. Uncle Remus' Magazine. ' Pounds and Weights. Here Is a question thnt will tax the arithmetical powers of n youth. Sup pose that for some reason or another a shopkeeper - who sold goods by pounds nnd half pounds, but never In quantities exceeding twenty pounds nt a time, was told thnt he must transact all this business with four weights only, what must these four weights be? Tbe answer Is half pound, one and a half pound, four and a half pound and thirteen nnd a half pound. With tbe?e It will be readily seen that nny weight from half a pound to twenty pounds may be determined In pounds and half pounds. Gateway Magazine. Pleasant Anticipation. Tbe Itcv. Dr. C. M. Lamson, once president of tbe American board of for eign missions, was called as a pastor over a parish nnd was undergoing ex amination before a council when the question was asked him, "Do yon be Utve In a bell?" Tbe retiring clergyman of tbe parish sat beside him and, giving him a nudge, said: "Tell them yes. If you don't now you will before yon have been here six months." Argonaut Just the Other Way. Fortune Teller Beware of a abort, dark woman wltb a fierce eye. She is waiting to give yon check. Visitor (despairingly) No, she ain't She's waiting to get one from me. That' my wife. Baltimore American. Carries Weight. "Pa," said Freddy, "what la a social cale?" "Generally speaking," replied pa, "lt'a a place where tbey weigh money." Bohemian Magazine. Advising Is easier than helping. Rochefoucauld. SHAKESPEARE'S , TOMB. Ita Would Be Dejeoratora and the Poet's Imprecation. The fact that would be dcsecralors of Shakespeare's tomb have not dared to risk tho falling of tin curse Invoked in the lines cut upon bis tomb is a strik ing testimony to the powerful effect upon mankind of such au Imprecation. J. O. llalllwell riillllpps, writing In the eighties, said: "Tho nearest approach to au excava tion In tlio grave of Shakespeare. was made In tliu slimmer of the year 171)1) In digging a vault In the Immediate lo cality, when tin opening appeared which was presumed to indicate the commencement of the site of (lie hard's remains. Tho most scrupulous care, however, was taken nut to disturb tlio neighboring enrlh lu the slightest de gree, tlio clerk having been placed there till tho brickwork of the adjoin ing vault was completed to prevent any one making an examination. No relics whatever were visible through the Ftiiall opening flint thus presented Itself, and as the poet was burled in the ground, not In a vault, the great probability is that dust alone reiuiilns. It is not many years since 11 phuliuix of trouble tombs, lanterns and spades In band, assembled In the chancel at dead or night, Intent on disobeying the solemn Injunction that the bones of Shakespearo were not to lie dlsturhed. But the supplicatory lines prevailed. There were some among the iiumlier who at the last moment refused to In cur tho warning condemnation, and so tho design was happily nliandoued." A correspondent of tho London Athe naeum wrote in 1.H8I : "I remember on a visit to tlio grave of Shakespeare In 1827 or W2H remarking that it was llt tlo. creditable to' tho authorities that tlio raised covering to tho tomb should have been allowed to fall Into such de cay, for 1 could see Into the grave through the hole formed by the sinking of tho stones. The reply was that, 'on account of tlio Hiiathemn Inscribed upon tho tomb,' 110 workmen could be per suaded to ineddlo with It." An earlier Incident is thus set forth by a contributor to tlio Monthly Mug nziuo of Feb. 1, ISIS: "Notwithstanding the anathema pro nounced by the bard on any disturber of bis bones, tlio church wardens wero so negligent a few years ago as to suffer tlio sexton in digging tho ad joining grave of Dr. Davenport to break a large cavity into the tomb of Shakespeare. Mr. told the writer that be was excited by curiosity to push bis head and shoulders through the cavity, that be saw the remains of the bnrd and that bo could easily have brought away bis skull, but was de terred by tho curso which tho poet In voked on any one who disturbed bis renin Ins." The nttonipfnt a later day to med dle with tho tomb bad no more effec tive ending. New York Tribune. Big Tips For Little Favors. ";t is sut'iirlsliiR," said n veteran Pullman porter, "bow bg n tip a por ter sometimes gets for doing a very llttlo tiling." He added: "A passenger once tipped 1110 extra because ho snld I did not leave Mm shoestrings colled up Inside Ills shoes after I bad blacked them. He snld nothing made III in mndder than to slip 011 bis shoes in a hurry In a sleeper only to find thnt bo bad to take tliein off ngnln beenuse the shoestrings were Inside. Ever Blnce that tlmo I havo been careful not to leave shoestrings Inside of tho shoes I black, and more than one passenger has thanked me for being thoughtful. But It wasn't tne that did tho thinking. The tip did that for me, nnd I never forgot It." Les lie's Weekly. THE OLD FAVORITE JSlTHEiBEST For over a quarter of a century Five Brothers' has-been the best1 pipe tobacco made. There's never been a tobacco to eqlaHtwad,there never will. That's why men who want the best always smoke mm Pipe Smoking Tobacco (A Good Chew, Too) Get the new, dust-proof, foil Don't let anyone fool) you J package, 5c, and smoke the clean-1 you know that Five Brothers is) est, choicest and best .tobacco , on . best-osee thyou getit.' the market NEW SIZE' Sold Everywhere a m w sar .am An Uncons:loue Touit. , Lord Clyde one day nfter dinner ask ed a chuplaiu to one of tlio regiments In Itidla fur a toast, who, nfter con pluVrliifr gome time, r.t length exclajin ed, with great simplicity: "Alas and alack adayl What can I giver "Nothing better," replied bis lordship. "Come, gcutlemeu; we'll give a bumper "to tbe parson's toast, 'A lass and 0 lac day.' " . A lac menus 100,000 rupees, or $25, 000, which U certnlnly au Income to make one happy. Loudou Chronicle. Exaroleing the Dog. "Justin," said Mrs. Wyss. "Yes." replied Mr. Wyss. "Will you speuk a kind word to Fldo and make him wag his tall? IIo hasn't hud one bit of exercise all day."-' ' c II ARTE R NO I'ICE. Notli'u la hi'li'liy Klvpn, Unit nil llililli'nl lim will lie 111 In tlm tlovi" nor i.f I'dimy I- V II ri I II mi I'lllhiv, .lllnfi Illlh, IIIIIN liy W. II. Ali xiinl r. K. M. (.hiri'ii, lllmrlm M. Mllllp'ii mill John (I'ltiiie, ntiiler tin A'-l of A hhiiii, lily milllli'il ' An AH to iiiiivIiIm fur Hie Im-iiri dr ill Ion mill ri'iiiilitl Inn of tun 111 nl mm cum linuli M." iii)iiivi'il IhiiVlllh lliiv of Miiy, A. I. IfHl. mill tin, niiiili iii' iiIh Hii'ifM, fur the i-lim tiir of 1111 Inli'iiili'il nil iiiilHllnri, to liu rilliil lim Km lor (ill mill (Inn I'niiipiiiiyi the rliiinii'ler mill nliiil nt wliluli U tin ihn 11111 )'iM nf iiiu'liii'lii r, ili'iiHim In, triinsiiiiriliiK, Hlnrlnu mill tipilyiiur miluml kiih to i'iiiikiimi mn In I hi) viii'lnlis tjiwimhlpx 11 "il Iiiii'iiukIih In liu- ri.rliiiliis of .liiMtHMiii mill Uli'inUHd. strut for IIii-ni! iiin pnHi'S to linvi-, pii.,isH mid ei'.loy ill I lie riflilr), he ii'llw imi pi IvIIi-kiih ef wild Ai;i of Ah-iiimIJv iiihI Hiitipiletn.-msi lliitri'tii. (1. M. MrlliiNlMi, 'nlli-Hor. r . Put Kv anize on Your Floor I . 1 f MM Jl Let it dry two ckys then test it. i jnitch it if you can. Mar it if you can. Make It flour (show white) if you can. Yau CAN'T, because KYANIZI2 FLOOR FINISH i3 r.ado to endure and it do -i endure. No door finish ever miule? U anywhere near wearproof as KYANIZE. Hie jrrrn Reantlfiil Cnlnrs are lost ai durable as the clear. 1 1:1 are all good lor Fornlture as tiell as Floors W. A. LEECH PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Sixteen Day $10 or $12 to $12 or $14 to Tickets nl tho lower rato pood only In coaches, TickotB at the blpher rate pood In parlor or sleeplnir cars In eonnr-o'.lon with proper Pullman tickets. June 25, Jul 9 and 23, August 6 and 20, and Sept, 3, 1908.' Train leaves Reynoldsville 4:25 p m. Tickets (rood for pa3sap;o on train" lecvlnar Plttsburp; at 8.50 p. m. and 10 45 p. in., the latter train carrying Pullmnn fbeplncf enrj only to Philadelphia and through to Atlantic City, nnd their coniectrons going, and all regular trains returnln? within sixteen days. For stop-over privileges and full information consult uearest ticket Agent. J. H. WOOD, -Pdwscngor Trafllo Manager. 7? TUB6t9 i. ERPTHERS t Smoking' Tobacco! JOHN TINZtR (V BBOS. ejakaMt)i L0UISV(LLB,KY. M 'THE AMERICA NT0HCC0 CO. Succeator mm Piles We are no eflrtafn that 'iiinK, iiicmn.T ana Psvitdnlln OU..- ..I - ' uiesiiai. iiva (.-nil nx la ' wrnys do rwlKwed nml Mb- fij . . .... wiii.wiijr cured ny inie ointment that we pofiliively gijartntee atif lacti'm or monuy mfunde!. Dr. A.W. Chase's ilnlr or Dr. A. W Chruin MeUlelne Ca,Buirak,N.r. Vliliment For sale by Stoke A Feloht Drug Co. QUARTER NOTICE. Notice la hereby irlven thnt mi application will lie nindn to tlm (liivenioriif the Common wfnlih of IViiimylvHiiln on TlnirHdnr. the Illli liny nf. tune, A. II., mm. by ll. . Viiuiik. (J, II. I'lillnmmi unci H. M. MrdrnlKlii, nnUnr tin; Artnf Aiwmli'y of thn !iiiiriioiffeiiltli of hiniiiylvnnlii, eiilltleil "An Aet to ivni.kle for the liiinirpoiiii liiii mill rnKiilnl lnii nt rer tttln roi poiiifloiiii." ii)inii.il April iv, IH7t, mid tlinmitiiihmii'ntailii-into, for the eharter of nn Inli'iiili'il ciirp ru lion to Im cullixl The WiMMlwiirk Supply I'limpiiny, thn i-hisrueter mill ohlwtnf whli-h ' to riiiiniifHCtii-e, deal In unit null Innilii'K null liiillilnrH1 Mippltim, mill work nnd inch nrllrhw ns are iirdlnisrlly iniiiln In 11 plmiliiK mill, mid lo r'orilniet, tor the I111II1II11K mid miction of IiiiIIcIIiikh of nil klndi, of wiHid.nlmin, lirli-k, Iron nnd other miitnrliiln, mill for thin punnine to hnve, pun. hhwi mid enloy nil the ilxhin, himellin anil iirlvlli-iicR of the amd Arlof Asseinhly nnd lis siipph inviiu, ; , f Mini M. McUhkiout, , Puiit-itor. OT1CE. Notire In hereliy glynn Hint on tho TIM la dnyof May, A. I), IIHW. the MiiIkuiIhk t'ow ner (loiiiimiiy fpi'ii In the ('unit ol Common Plena of Lu lu. wnimn roiinty Its pwltlnit lo iiyliiK for it ilt-i'ine of (IInmiIiiiIihi, null I hat lii-urltiK upon mild nipllrnl Ion for dissolution has lii'en fined hy mild rourt for the hilli dnv of June, hum, m 11 n'idiH'k A. m., tvhtui rind .... ... .... , , , ,,, ,,,nj miruil mid show i'huhh HKHlrmt I he irrniil lriK of ti.e prayer of I lie siild pi-llllon If lliey no ilimlre. mi. -m 11 1 1 iitTsiiii iiiiiTimiwi mny Mllpnil 1YF.I.I.KH nnu 1 OHHr.T. Bolleltiir fur Pulilloner, ' Excursions ATLANTIC CITY, CAPE MAY AiiKli-seu, Wlldwood, Holly lleneh, Ocenn City, Hon Inln City, Avnlon, N. J., Iirliolmtli. Hid., and Ureun City, Mil, ASBURY PARK, LONG BRANCH Went End, Klhnron, Doul Heurli, Allenhiimt, North A tin ry Turk, Or.enn drove, llrndlny Beiu-h, Aron, llflmnr, ('onto, Hprlng Luke, Sen (Hit, Miinmiiiuiin, Hrlellii, Point rirrisant, nnd liny Head, N, J. - GEO. W. BOYD, General Passenger Agent.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers