THE LIQHTH0U8K ttly we rowed across the bay. She tide vu calm, anl the wind waa , fair. WTa drifted In post the Jagged rocks To the lighthouse, and anchored there. In the lonely brightness of sea and sky It seemed like some far enchanted Isle, UPhero tho footsteps of man hud never been, . And good spirits kept watch the while. . a Along the sands, and the upward path. to I im b u oush uour wo muuu vur Slav: There in the slanting shadow sat Three children, at happy play. There was no one else, on the Island's space The wind" and the waves and tho skies were all And the sunburnt children three. Unstartled. fearless, a lovely group! Brown checks, In-own eyes, and brown tangled curls They ceased from their playing to stare at us, A boy and two pretty girls.. We were MenJs as soon as we smiled and talked. WWtltttHIIWi "Jinkyswoitmaya." By C. H. It was In the spring of 1897, while I Tras employed on botanical and geo logical work In Alaska, that I made the acquaintance of "Jlnkywoltruaya,"whom yn called "Jinks" for short. He was he son of a Russian "claim-Jumper" nd an Aleut Indian squaw, and he Uvea in the little village of Nutchek, 'Hinchinbrook Island, Prince William Bound. Jinks bad bad rather an unhappy illfe, for he was, in the estimation of fclg companions, a coward ;he had that Innate fear of water, probably inher ited from his white father, cf which one finds occasional cases in the most aquatic tribes. Jinks could not be Induced to enter a canoe for any pur pose whatever, and on that account he was the scorn of tho island for tho (Aleuts sport and hunt on the sea as it it were their natural element. But Jinks is no physical coward, and this la the story of how I found it out. I had been in the village just two days, when we had one of thofe ter rifflc rain-storms that occasionally vis it the Alaskan coast late in the spring'. For three days and nights It rained In heeta. During my enforced idleness I made the acquaintance of Jinks, who could speak a little English, and speed ily became fond of me, because 1 nev er snubbed him or spoke his name with the obnoxious Aleutian adjective which means "one who Is afraid" at the end of it. Jinks was then about fifteen years old, but strong and wiry, and more than ordinarily bright for an Indian boy. It was on the third day of our ac quaintance, I think, that Jinks told me of the wonderful view from a plat eau of a mountain on the island. He aid it could be reached by about five tours' climbing. That any Aleut Should notice a view as worth seeing at ail, let alone as worth climbing for, was surprising. This view, I thought, must be remarkable indeed, and so It happened that when Jinks shyly prof fered his services as guide, I made ready to go as soon as the rain should cease. After waiting a day for the streams to subside and the wet ground to dry, we started. We carried a knapsack of food, a canteen of cold tea, a rifle, a sheath-knife apiece, forty feet of three'-eighths rope, a hatchet and a binocular. Tramping for an hour steadily west, we came to the foot of Mount Kenl, a hill some four thousand feet high, talf way up which was the wonderous lew. Then our difficulties began, The way lay through dense woods for while, the ground getting steeper and steeper. Now and then a stone would eart from our feet and go bounding down the mountain, smashing into trees, re bounding, going on again, until finally stopped by a tangle of underbrush; or, lescaping that, it would go on and on tmtil only the echoes of its crash ing descent told that it was still cn its way. The heavy rain had made the ground easy to our feet, but occasion ally the foothold would prove treach erous and we would Blip down on our faces. Several times we came to banks o iteep and slippery it seemed as If we were stalled; but Jinks could climb like a monkey, and would crawl up ahead aomehow, fasten the rope to a tree and let it down to me, that I anight haul myself bodily up after him. W finally reached the end of eur elimb, at a point about twenty-flve hundred feet above the sea-level. Here we turned to the right, on a natural road of rock, traversing a sort t miniature canyon. At the end of halt an hour's walk, we found ourselves at a standstill, trough! up against a blank rock wa!l thirty feet In height Nothing discon certed, Jinks tied the rope about his waist, kicked off bis disreputable foot wear and began to climb the wall. How lie did it I don't know, for I found It difficult even with the help or the rope "he let down to me. qpee arrived on top, I soon forgot all my tribulations In the wonderful might We were on a narrow plateau, ' perhaps fifty feet wide a rift in the 'mountain which rose In sheer rock walls on each side of us at a distance pi a quarter of a mile. A tbln line of trees was ahead of me, and beyond them the ocean. Going through the trees, I found myself on the ed;e of CHILDREN. TV a were children, too. For a lonf eweet hour . . h We aat on the sandi, and played with . them, In the shade of the lighthouse tower. "Father and sister had rowed to town. Put Ben would take care of them, Ben was brave, i.in And mother Is with us; the polntlni . hand Showed a lonely mounded grave. V". BBi h". ........ -- them life. And loved Hid left them; yet near, so near, , , Was the yearning strength of the moth er's heart, That her children ooutd not fear. The wild waBte seemed like hallowed not. And w lingered on till the sun went down. Nor pushed from shore till we saw, at last, The boat coming back from town. And often I think of that golden day. The lighthouse rising against the sky, The lonely grave, and the small brown hands That waved us a last good-by! By Madeline Bridges. bit CLAUDY. a precipice, with the Pacific Ocean spread out before me. Directly in front the rock sloped away steeply for about forty feet, then took an abrupt dive downward, going sheer to the sea in a perpendicular line, about three thousand feet. The Alaskan gulf below looked lllto a huge panorama. Away off on tho horizon I could see, with the aid of my glass the white sails of a hull down ship. On each side of me stretch ed away in limitless perspective tho Alaskan continuation of the Rocky Mountains snow-capped always. I will not attempt to describe the vast and desolate scene bver which brooded such a silence, accentuated by the oc casional single sad can of a gull. For perhaps the half of an hour we looked and said nothing. Jinks ap peared quite satisfied with my first In voluntary expression of delight at the picture, and I did net insult his per ceptions by attempting to explain to him how fine I thought it. Then we lunched, and after that I walked a rod or two along the brink of the incline and sat down on a little knoll of grass-covered earth, letting my feet hang over on the rock slop? below, and prepared to enjoy the changing lights and shadows of the clouds on the sunlight sea, while Jinks, the Indian blood in him uppermost, went to Bleep reclining against a tree directly behind me. Then it happened! As I was sitting there peacefully, my thoughts on any thing' but the recent rain-storm, the little knoll, its cohesive force loosen ed by the water it containe gently detached itself from the rock and slid, with me on it, swiftly down the forty feet of rock slope toward the brink be yond. AMERICA THREATENED IN NEAR College Boys Getting Bigger Every Year, So Show Statistics of Five Hundred Athletes in All Branches of Sports at Yale. Tho American citizen of the future is to be a giant according to the statistics of the athletic instructors, while his sister Is to be a very sturdy lassie. Dr. Born, medical director of the Yale gymnasium, made pub lic the 1908 statistics of development in the university. For the comparisons 500 athletes from the crew, the football and baseball teams, the track men and the stuCent athletes generally were measured. The general average Is compared with the averages taken In 1903, and the 1908 averages are generally higher than had been an ticipated. The new college man has grown an Inch and one-half In five years. He has gained 27 pounds in weight, and has 72 cubic inches more lung capacity than his prototype of five years before. The list bears out the assertion, commonly made during re cent years, that the American man was becoming greater physi cally than any, known race of men have ever been. Dr. Bom's Measurements. - The comparative measurements given out by Dr. Born are Height, 1908, 69.9 In.; 1903, 68.4 In. Weight, 1908, 170.5 lbs.; 1903, 149 lbs. ,Lucg capacity, 1908, 314 cu. in.; 1903, 272 cu. In. Shoulders, 1908, 17 in.; 1903, 16.5 in. Neck, 1908, 15 in.; 1903, 14.1 In. Chest, 1908, 38.3 in. ;1903, 35 In. Inspiration, 1908, 401. in.; 1903, 37.3 In. Waist, 1908, 31. Bin.; 1903, 29.7 In. IH I I Mil 1 l I As I went down that terrible slide, my first thought wag to jump to Eafe ty, my next to spread cut and attempt to catch on some projection cf rock, and my last a prayer for help. Jinks says I screamed and woko him, but 1 have no recollection of It. In three or four seconds I had arrived at the edge, convinced that another instant would see me hurtling through the air to the rocks three thousand feet below. On the very edge I stopped, caught on a small uprising bit of rock. I w2 flat on my back, my arms extended on either side of me and above my head. I was bend In the form of a bow; my body from my waist down was over the brink. ,., I did not faint arid I was not light ened, which sounds absurd, I know, but it is true. Scientists will tell ycu that In moments of great and Budden danger, the instinct of self-preservation overcomes mre fear. Be that as It may, I was coM, elm, and much alive to my very slim chance of escape I could set move. I don't mean that I was held, or that I was paralysed, but I knew that if it should try to move I must fall over the brink. My senses-were abnormally keen. I heard the cry of a gull so clearly that I thought It very close, but just then the bird came into my range of vision and I saw it was a long distance a ay. Jinks' shouting from forty feet above seemed right at my ear by training my eyes upward I could see the top of his head but as be was excited and talked Aleutian, I would not under stand him. Turning my eyes the other way and looking toward where my feet should have been, I could see a little strip of sea, the horizon and the sails of a ship. I renicmbeieo 1 had seen a ship before; I tried to tnmk when, but could not. It bothered my sense of location to see only the falls of a ship when it was between me and the hori zon, but then I reflected that its hull was In the zone I could not see. I did not think of ways to extricate myself, because In one mental flash I knew my only hope was In Jinks and the rope, and I knew he had left it tied to the tree where he had fastened It for me to climb over the rooky wall at the cud of the canyon. VA little bit of earth, loosened from above In some way, struck me gently in the face. What If a large amount should como down on me before Jinks could get back with the rope? "But it won't I'm quite sure it won't Jinks will be here in a minute now and then and then I'll get out of this mess the rope" and then a horrible thought: "Suppose the rope Is not long enough to reach!" Hope is, in a way, the father of fear, and fear came to mo now with the nearness of relief. I was cold. - I didn't tremble; I suppose I was tco much afraid that if I did I must fall over the brink. But I wns very much frlRhtened by my thought that perhaps the rope would not be long enough to reach me. Although it seemed to me that I had been hanging a long time on the edge of the precipice, I realized that I thought so simply from the swiftness and number of my impressions. I tried really to calculate the time, and final ly decided it had been nearly twenty minutes; but that estimate was exces sive. As the fright in a measure subsided my body ached in uprotest against the strained position of tho muscles; and then suddenly I forgot pain. I heard Jinks. "Comln' now, mlsser, got rope, get up minute now-" finish ing off with a long string of Aleutian, which, although incomprehensible, wa9 very comforting. I could jiot see any thing of him, except once in a while the top of hU head. It occurred to me, however, that there was really nothing to prevent my turning my head on one side. This I did, very slowly and carefully, and at last, by dint of much straining of eyes, I wa3 able to see Jinks away above me, and In a curiously Inverted and distorted perspective, working madly to. get tho rope untangled. In a moment !:e had finished and then I had the impatient pleasure of seeing the rope coming slowly down the rock face, twisting and turning, like a thin, long snake. It was surious WITH RACE OF GIANTS FUTURE. to watch, because It was all rosn out of the corner of my eye seen as one sees a dream shapeless, vague, yet painfully real. and Now I heard nothing, felt nothing, neither pain nor fright saw nothing but hls travesty of a snake coming Elowly toward me. Slowly crawling, sliding, stopping and coming on down, catching on bits of rock and dropping again, it gradually came nearer, Of course it really came down in a few Beconds jutt as fast as Jinks could pay it out but impatience and the abnormally acute state of my nerves made it seem a long time. And then It stopped just six inches above my hand! . My arms were stretched to their fuT.. est extent, but the rope did not reach my bands. - It did not seem to me to matter much; it must have been that I sutiiWe'd" Jinks had not finished pay ing; out all the rope. Then, after a moment, the rope receded tome four or 6 feet, underwent sundry gyrations, and Jink disappeared from view. Then the rope descended again, this time with about a foot to spare. I held my breath, got a good firm grip with one hand, and then with the other; and then, putting my weight on it slowly and timorously, afraid It might give in some way, I began to haul myself up. At last I got my feet on the rock, and the rest was easy. Turning on my face, l could help my arms In their task of hauling by stick ing my toes Into cracks and on projec tions, as I had seen Jinks do. Half way up I had a terrible moment the rope seemed to give a little, and at the same time I heard a smothered cry from Jinks. T Now I was but ten feet from the top now eight now six four three feet another haul and I was almost there one foot safety! And then I under stood why Jinks was not In sight. He lay at full length on his fact, his arms locked round the tree he hau used as a pillow earlier in the day, the rope knotted around one angle. The rope some faint Idea of what poor Jinks had lengthened it with his own body! Any one who has ever attempted to remain suspended by the arms for more than a few seconds will have osme faint idea of what poor' Jinks must have suffered on that rack. I weigh one hundred and eighty pounds. The pain he endured without a mur mur can be indicated by results. One of his arms was out of Joint; that a counted for the sudden give In the rope and the smothered cry. The flesh on the ankle where the rope had been tied was cruelly crushed and brulspfl. Except for seeing him lying there suffering that I might live, I mutt have fainted away In reaction from the ner vous strain. What I did do was per haps aa weak, but I trust excusable, I fell on my face, beside Jinks, with one arm round his neck, and burst Into sobs. In a moment he was sitting1 up his dark face shining with joy, in spite of his pain, that he had saved "mlsser" from death. I bound up his poor, crushed foot, pulled his arm back into place, and with Infinite difficulty helped him home. We arrived just before nW night. We were nursed biek to health and strength, and so loud were my praises of Jinks, he Eoon became tho hero of the town. To make this state of things perma nent, I resolved to take Jinks to Seattle on the steamer with me. when his companions found that he was really to go to the "land where the guns are made," and on a "magic ship," he was immediately raised in the estimation of his mates to the position an Amen- can schoolboy would occupy if he owned a marble factory, bad a dozen new baseballs every week, and went to the circus every night of his life. But the best part of It all was that through the aid of the missionary, I was enabled to make them all under stand what a really brave man he was, and what a heroic thing he had done in risking his life and enduring pain that another might live. Jinks carries a wonderful watch now he is sufficiently civilized to believe that it will not hurt him and Inside the cover la the inscription, from grateful man to a brave one." Youth's Companion. TFACKLES3 TROLLEY CARS. Inventor Talkn of a Speed Of mo Miles An Hour. A balloon trolley line Is the last mnrd In nprlnl linV'l IftUOn BOU U comes from Marburg. Germany, in report received at the Department of Commerce and Labor from l nomas n Knrtnn tTnlted States Consul at Chemnitz. An engineer of Marburg, Consul Knrtnn Rflvs. lias secured capital xo carrv out his Idea of an aerial trolley line, which Is a combination or tne es sential elements of the dirigible bar lnnn nnrl the electric railroad. The cars are to be supported by the buoy ancy of tho balloon and the motive power transmitted by an electric ca bin. The nunnortinir balloon Is to be cylindrical In Bhape, of Beml-rlgld con tructlon. 200 feet long and 33 feet In diameter. It rests lightly against the cables on either side, channelled wheels attached to the framework or the balloon forming the contact, the cables being suspended at the proper height by towers. The passenger car Is to bo attached below. A compnny hns been formed to con struct a line on this principle from thfl railwnv station at Marburg to Freuenbcrg, an elvatlon five miles dls- tant and 1.200 feet above the town The estimated cost Is $288,000 a mile for a double cable line. An Important economical feature Is the prospect that the cost of maintenance and transportation on the line will be only about 5 percent of the corresponam exoense on rn ordinary railroad is believed that a speed of 125 mile nn hour can he eafely made on the balloon trolley Philadelphia Record. The Eus Eighty Years Cld. The London omnibus is now eighty veara old. la w3 on July 4, J8Z, that George Shllllbeer, after being suc cessively a midshipman In the Brlthm navy and a coach builder In Paris placed on the London streets the first two omnibuses ever seen in bngiana. A large crowd assembled to witness the start and general admiration was expressed at the smart appearance of the vehicles, which were built to car ry twenty-two passengers, all Inside, and were drawn by three beautiful bays, harnessed abreast. The word "Omnibus" was painted In large let ters on bcth sides of the vehicles. The faro from the "Yorkshire Sttnsto" to the bank was Is.; half way, 6d. Newspapers and magazines were pro ilded free of charge. EnzIUh Homes. A TROUBLE MAN. Frophssyln' trouble Always wa his way When Joy wan Just a-waitln' With hat off and "hoormyl" Even In the brightest auneulne He saw the rainy day! Prophesyln trouble Alwaye a thorny bed, But his time cama for to leave ua, An 'twas then the people said, "He knew r.ot he was llvln'. An" he doesn't know he's dead!" Frank L. Stanton, In the Atlanta Con stitution. "Da the natives ever give ban quets?" "Sometimes." I suppose the Eskimo beau drinks whale oil out of lady's slipper?" "Yes, and then eats the slipper." Baltimore Sun. "Did tho father of the bride give her away?" "Far from it He told the bridegroom that she had the dis position of an angel." Baltimore American. First Boston Child "Do you be lieve In corporal punishment?" Sec ond Boston Child "No; I can usually make my parents do what I wish by moral suasion." Life. I told them people I was wit Cook." "And didn't It git youse a handout " "Naw; they're on the Peary' Bide of the controversy. It's hard world." Louisville Courier- Journal. That young man looks very Intel ligent." "Yes; he's a member of our magazine staff." "What are his du ties," He hitches well-known anec dotes to ' unknown celebrities." Lou isville Courier-Journal. "How do you happen to be wear ing such a nice straw hat?" asked Wiggins. Easy," answered Hlggins. "I have no wife to lemon up my last year's lid." Buffalo ExpreEB. Hard Featured Woman "So you had money once, had you. May I ask you how you made your first thousand dollars?" Tuffold Knutt (wiping his eye with his coat sleeve) "Ma'am, I drempt it!" Chicago Tribune. "What makes that parrot so pro fane?" "Well, mum," answered the sailor man, "I s'pose it's part my fault. Every time I hear him speak a bad word It makes me so mad that he gets a chance to learn a lot of new ones." Washington Star. 'The ten commandments have never been repealed, so far as i know," said Uncle Allen Sparks, "but in these days of course, you can't ex pect them to be enforced in commun ities where the public sentiment is against them." Chicago Tribune. "Don't you find Judge Blank tire some as a speaker; no, inaeea. What makes you think he is bo?" "Be cause he Is such a severe judge." What has Hint got to do with him as a speaker?" "Well, it makes him inclined to long sentences." Bait! move American.. Town Marshal "Ye can t get a drink under any circumstance . in this town." Stranger (fingering a roll of bills) "Then I suppose I'll - have to give it up." Town Marshal (lowCr- Ite voice) "Well, say I'll make the circumstances two dollars, just to ac ccuunoilftte ye." Puck. "Why is there so much discontent In the midst of plenty?" asked the demagogue. "I don t know," an swered the substantial citizen, "un- less It's because a lot of people would rather stand around, the same as I've been doing, and talk about their troubles Instead of going to work." Washington Star. "Although he overcharged me ter ribly," says the returned traveller, "the cab driver who took me over Paris was most polite." All French men are," we observe. "Yes, but this one got off his box and helped me to find the necessary profanity . In my French-English dictionary, so that I might say what I thought of him." Life. A Cbntagious Idea. Imitation may be a nuisance rather than a form of flattery. A writer in the Outlook tells of an incident Jn a bank which Is as amusing as It Is probable. Tho toller wa3 asked by a woman for a new envelope fjr her bank book. It was passed out, and the lady behind, noting that her own envelope was a trifle dingy, also ask ed for a fresh one. The third woman said, "Me, too," or words to that effect, and so It went down the line. When the teller's pa tience and his stock of envelopes threatened to give out he determined to call a halt. A fastidiously dressed lady appear ed at the window, he! ling out a per fectly gloved! hand. "I should like; one, too, please," said she. "One what, madam?" asked the tel ler. , The lady flushed and began to look comical. "Why." she stammered, "what the other ladies had." Youth's Compan Ion. Alcohol's Derivation. "Alcohol" is really the Arabic "al kohl" "al" being the definite article, as in "algebra" (the reduction) and "alkali" (the soda ashes), and "kohl the black powder wherewith the east ern beauties stained their eyelids, But "alcohol" came to be used for any finely triturated or sublimated powder, and then for sublimated liq uids. "Alcohol of wine," being1 the most interesting of these, It gradually took the name entirely to ltiolf. BRADSTREET'8 TRADE REVIEW Colder Weather Increases Demand for Winter Goods. "With the arrival of cold weather this week, retail trade, hitherto inclln-J ed to lag, has taken on the appear ance of activity, and distributive trade reports are more uniformly en couraging than for some time past In some sections, particularly the Northwest, the temporary effect of heavy snows Interrupting transporta tions to some extent has been to dull some lines of wholesale trade, but the general effect of the winter vtaltani has been helpful. In wholesale nies generally the nearer approach of win ter lias had a stimulating effect upon general feeling;. Reports from the shoe manufacturing trade are better. -East nnd West, and the coal trade, it is hoped, will show further Improve ment. In the cotton goods trade the feature has been country-wide advance In prices of prints. A more or less general tendency to advance prices of other cotton goods and to find buyers at the higher levels Is also noted. Hol iday trade is good with obbers, and the reports as to eprlng trade are in a high degree encouraging. From the industrial field general ly, the report Is of large ozput and In some cases, as In the Western shoe trade and the automobile industry, ex tra time la being run. The railroads are buying freely of equipment and track material. Pig iron buying shows a Blackening after a long period of activity but output Is large and stocks are claimed to be not accum ulating, though some varieties have eased slightly. "The lumber trade Is reported good as a whole, though there are some scattered complaints from the South and North Pacific coast. "Business failures in the United States for the week ending with No vember 18 were 232 against 221 last week, 273 in the like week of 190R, 265 in 1907, 212 In 1900 and 224 in 1905. Business failures In Canada, for the week number 26, which compares with 29 last week, and 33 In the cor responding week of 1908. MARKETS. PITTSBUnc Wheat No. t red I Hye ko.-j Corn Nn. 2 yellow, ear 77 tin, k yellow, snotioa i Ml led ear H Oats Mo. 2 white 44 No. 8 white 44 Flour Winter patent 6 60 4S 44 6 GO 17 0) H 0! 80 50 -'8 0C am m 9 0) Fancy straignt winters Bay No. 1 Timothy 1S0O Clow No. 1 IBrti Feed No. 1 whits mid. ton Su 00 Brown middlings mji Bran, bulk 24:0 Straw Wheat s 00 Uat 8 60 Dairy Products. Butter Elgin creamery I SI 8t 1) 15 13 Onlo creamery Fancy country roll 19 Cnrfne )hlo, new 14 NwXork,new II Poultry, Etc. Hens per lb I Chlcions dressed Eggs I'a. and Ohio, fresh 17 t) It 1 21 7 Frulti and VegMablos. Potatoes Fancy white per bu.... Cabbaee car ton SO 1 1 8i 7- 14 0 K Onions per barrel .. BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent I Wheat No. 8 red Corn Mixed Eggs Butter Ohio creamery 5 60 1 U1 n 6 7 71 at PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent 80 83 41 8 27 8 7 1 H t 47 7 Wheat No, red Corn No. 2 miied Oats No. S white Butter Creamery Eggs Pennsylvania firsts NEW YORK. W!. i....- 70 8 60 Wheat-No. red I' Corn No. 2 Oatn-No. white 69 44 Butter -Creamery Kggs State and Pennsylvania.... a LIVE STOCK. Union 8tock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLE Kitra, 14.10 to 1600 pound 6 75 7 U frlme, 1 to 1400 pound. 0 W Uooil. Itfxi to l.iao DcmuU B8S I 0 Tidy, 1(160 to 1150 pounds. J ' Kalr, WW to HOD pounds 42'' Common, 700 toduO pounds. 8 23 t 4 OU1IB w T . low. lin mo BOOS Prime, heary. 8 41 t 8 4j 1 rime, medium weight 8 so 8 3' urary xoriors ow oa BUSINESS CARDS. & NEFF JUSTICE OF THK PEACH, Pension Attorney and BeaKEafta asset, JJAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Brookvtllk, Pa. Qt m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Real estate agent, patent secured, eoW .actions made promptly. Office In syndicate Hilldlug, Keynoldsvllle, Pa. SHIT FT M. MoCREIG HT, , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real estate agent, OV lections will receive prompt attention. OtBoe In the tteynoldsville Hardware Oo. bulldlag, Wain street Beynoldsvllle, Pa. U1 DENTIST, . Reeldent dentist In the Hoover bulldhaf Hal a street. Gentleness In operating. )R. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST; OfflVe on second floor of '.he Fin Satlomal bank building, Main street. DR. B. DnVEKE KINO, DKNT13T, ofllre on second floor of the Syndicate b all ag. Main street. KeynoldsTllle, Pa. JfJENRY PRIE3TER UNDERTAKER. Black and white funeral cars. Mala I aejBOldstU,Pa. ,