Punxsutawney Spirit, 1890-12-10 |
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[uh'r t out of doors will develop iiOOls .'CCOrd- picked is Impends ruainly I, PA 1th Judge Jeak*. Legal bualmeMoir* Ddedto. pun booka Has determined to unload his entire stock of OVER- COATS THIS WINTER, . CAMPBELL, a TTORNE YS-AT-LA W, Bbooetilli, Pa. I Matson'a office, Mataon building, oj>- Cour ouse. IENSCOTER, DISTRICT ATTORNEY, !L KAMBY. ATTORNET-AT-LA W 1807 Fat. N.-W., Washington, D. C. lug Attorney In the several court* In ton and elsewhere. Prosecutes claims the Government Departments. Alio tase and sale of real estate. 14-18 RAIG [G. * C. Z. GORDON, TT0RNEY8-A T-LA W, Bkookville, Pa. A CABBAGE ROMANCE A. WALTER, ■Sic I AS AND SURGEON, PCKXgrTAWNET, PA. ii 7:<>r- in of t'.-ili- 1. J. HUGHES, S UEOEON DENTIST, xhibition, 11 England cir naiivo no dry and >\vn to tlieir PCWMUTAWHIY, PA. 1 11 p to both >utji end oIJFindley street, ) th I'u-slnu along :i doosccl . J. CHANDLER, SVEOEON DENTIST, PUKMKWAWNIY, PA; Ice In his residence,! n the West End. ■o to .sav, an' [MORRISON, D. D. 8. DENTAL BOOMS, FUNXBUTAWNIT, PA. Hot!) men 1 f ye worl; justices of Jfttxt. curiosity ife would \v, they v ;'iO land MORRIS, ino to do uiv not jfarru- nils were no ex- LTOV mirdino they o tho •oitiaint'il two The .'rreuU't.t dlvinpf f« weeks. At the end of that time oik* of the 111 said to the rancher: I want so much of your lard ?n \ oerllow much is it. worth?" Sit:' I-* t 9M,«Mla Mfhisrtni. GIRLS IN SILK-MILLS. EVERY WEDNESDAY Spirit. Overcoats t * IMITTST ■ C3-0 ! Overcoats The insurance 8rm of Juo. F. anil Q. £ Brown, of Clarion mid Brookyille, bad a large portion of tlie insurance In Punxsutawney at the time of oar great fire of 1886 and it i* not flattery to say that their adjustment* were prompt and satisfactory. Every loe* waa settled and paid by sight draft*, oyer $30,000 being paid by tbeir companies within 60 days after the fire. That fire did not dis oonrage them and they have written most of the new buildings and stocks. Their buti ness has increised so much that they have opened an office in Punisntawuey, in front room of second story of John Ztiitler block, and placed Walter 8. Brown, one ot the brothers, iu charge. Tbeir line comprises the largest and best companies doing business n tun I nitni .States 1H-2U PownwAwmnr, h. eilpla atreet, two doon aortk of nltnio (tor*. brewer, A TTOMiHtT-dT-LA W, Olayton/.North TttE OWCINAJ- AND mUi-A* One ■.'Price ■.'Clothier BSOOKVILI.B, PA Ma won Block, opposite the public 8 * CLARK, A TTORNX YS-AT-LA W, Kbtkoldhtillii, Fa. Mediuai, light Wright, Heavy ifcla, Fur, Beaver and Storm Coats Opera House Block. Oct. 1, 1889, ATTORNEY-AT-LA W, BftOOKVlLLK, PA PtJXTiDTAWNIT, PA ro doors east of tbe Post Office. r.F. BEYER, 'SICIAN AND 8UB0S0N, Sfftistctans. The Heigh teat-Looking, r .t- !t| hm«1 ' Prettiest of Factory >\«.rk«r*. 4 Cnrlou* Pad That Has Ivhlintly Had It! Uay. The craze for undersized ponies, in her roguish eye tolls you tliatsh • knows bo made by a ;v it all. i tlieso matters. Sul. . Of all the girls who work i:i factories our op'n'on. has had its day. Except as the young woman of tlic silk-mill Is th > curi°sitles °r 'or tho purpose of the brightest-looking, tlio best-c!.ul an 1 menage, those pigmy animals aro pracusually the prettiest. You could scarce- l'ca"y ' s"^88- l'orhaps the fashion o ly believe, if you saw hor in the stre. t Purchasing t'nem at extraordinarily after the day Is done, or on Sunday or hlt'h Prico8 wouM not havo lastod s< a holiday, that she has stood all' tl.n Ion* had it been fully understood tha long day on her feet, plying her hand), 'heir production was mainly a quustioi hor thought, hor eye, and her ear bein- of scanty Coding, either in the case o unceasingly on the alert. She is smart- tho an'mals themselves or of thoi ly and genteelly drossod. Sho has a more or lcs8 iwm(iaia,t' progenitors, jaunty, bright air, her laughter is a rip- And the same ma.v ' • plo, and the demuro consciousness in abundant liair. Sho can well afford to dro<s herself trem0 hardship, li<avi well, for if she bo quick an 1 cipahl'i ' a" w,'athors, her averaffo weekly earning will nol |iair we_ 1 fall below 89. An experienced f*ir!,with '"£'>• A veritat. ' quick hands, and in whose skill the em- ! at ranJ<'1'1 from t: Thoro is a strong kind of tho highest prido among theso young women. Thoy boliovo that no occupation on the earth is superior to tliotrss their personal conduct Is tho highest, and thoy dolight in tho good name of all their companions. It would not do to employ slovenly, dirty, or caroloss persons in theso mills. Tho most costly fabrics aro works of their hands, and brokon threads, tho smirch mado by a dirty gown or uncleanly fingers, would bo a serious damago to tho fabric.—Harper's Weekly. ployer can place confidence. w !1 make : ■ us: !ls to 1 from SI4 to 8X8 per week. I clean-limbed -.n And mercy me! all the silent wooln?, • uPon ll'" trealn.'-t tho mute language of oyes. th.it mu t i SOi '',p ot>nV4'"' . fro on among tncae looms; and tills Is tl»«' animal rein attested by tho many couplos that aro -namely. j.l.-i.u. constantly boing wedded at Paterson Inchos high. very i: •!u--,.».n id with mills. I saw all tho process of tho an i'npossiblo giowth of hair all over match-making'thero as I saw tho process OVL'r '1'm< is about as bad a typo ol of fabric-making among tho machinery. th'8 fam0,1H race as ''an well bo im- Thoro was scarcely a loom in any factory affinod. i'rom his bnil.l he is generally that I entored but had a ban god fore short-winded and thoroughly "rnpracticlioad and a pair of bright oyes boliind in his pa.'os. A South .Mainland It; a casual glance would impress you specimen, on tho other hand, long and that sho thought of naught olso in this ralfish in build -hard Town, as the sayworld but hor reels, hor threads, her 'n,r 's clean-litii d, will far surshufiles or hor loom; buta flguro passes P888 his companion in slaying power, in between tho humming machinery, I <>no of tl''8 hardy brood -in our opinion and she does not miss seoing him too'l tho idt'aI Shetland pony has boon She will como to work demurely in I known to travel from Sumbur r to Lerthe morning as a young nun, and she I w c an, 1,ack samf' ':'• - witl> will trip out at lunch without a word, ' * tolerably heavy rldin •••o.ght, say going, perhaps, arm in arm with her "n'ea altogether of > Mr< mely "lady friend," but in the evening, when j y r ' wheels and shuffles coaso their clatter, I!lIt' minor, differences apart, tliore you will And that sho has her tryst • a™ certain characteristics unfailing right at tho very door of tho mill; and i tosts in ,hoir way wiu> ,h" exp'Tienpod how proud and happy tho young opera- j"dgo—which go to the "make up" of a tor seems as ho walks away with her i Shetland as distinguished from an Icotoward hor homo. i land or Faroe pony—e. g., a certain un- mistakablo breadth of build, sot of pasterns, and, moro particularly, an apathetic air which no other breed possesses. Your "Shettle" is not a quick animal, is inclined to be sleepy rather than othorwiso in his paces, and is as a rula, disposed to do no more t! an ho can help in tho way of exertion, though, if put to it, tie inces great power of endurance and will go through an immense amount of workfor his size. Tho Iceland variety is altogether inferior, shortorlivod, narrowor in build, and generally fallacious, but, with all this, ho is quickor, livolior and lacks that air ol ponsivo melancholy which haunts ovory Shetland pony. Our advioo is to avoid tho inforior animal, however highly reeommendod. Ilis prico is, roughly speaking, about half that of the Shetlar.dor, but tho nionoy is lll-savod. Tho aver, ago lifo of an Icolander is about twelve or thirtoon years, while the othor will livo to t.wenty-ilvo or even more.—Corn* hill Magazlno. , C. ALLISON, \siOIAN AND BURGEON, ProuuTAwmrr, fa. U services to the people of Punxsuid vicinity. Vuffuries of it Flower. A wonderful flower ha3 beA discovered in tho Isthmus of Tehuantopoc. Its chief peculiarity is tho habit of Changing its colors during tho day. ftr tho morning it is white, when tho sun is at its zenith it is red, and at night it la bluo. Tho rod, whito and bluo flower grows on a troo about tho sizo of a guava troo, and only at noon does it givo out any perfume. Everything in Overcoats from 12 to $25. Our past history of advertising just, what we mean, and doing just what we advertise, will bear us out in the assertion that to elose out a slock of Overcoats such as we carry means the greatest slaughter in prices you have ever witnessed in Punxsutawney. You are all aware of the fact that the past two winters have been very poor winters in which to sell overcoats, and every clothier in this town, and in fact almost • everywhere, have been obliged to carry more or less of these garmenls over summer. To keep overcoats from one season to another means to lose money, and we have always believed in the maxim that half a loaf was better than no bread. Our word for it. We have said our overcoats must go, and go they will, profit or no profit. We will give you a little idea how prices will be cut: $10 coats, $8; $12 coat, $10;'$15 coats, $13; $18 coats, $1G; $20 coats, $18; $22 coats, $20; $25 coats. $23. Don't make a mistake and think this just an advertising dodge for it isn't, but a bonafide sale at £ rices that will astonish and surprise everybody. Our [en's suit Department is not a side show by any means. We show everything from the cheapest working suits to the finest dress suits to suit any man, professional or in any avocation of life. Our suits fit, and are lined and trimmed, all sewed with pure dye silk and epual in workmanship to custom made good, prices from $5.00 to $20.00. —A pioco of tlio lithographic) stoni from which the $10 bills of tho Confodorato Oovornmont woro printed was discovorod in a eoruetory noar Andorson, &. G, rocontiy. JHARLES G. ERNST, 'SICIAN AWD SURGEON, , PtrxwmwMT, PA. anently located In this place, and olofessiona! services to tiie citizens of ity. He way be found at all times at corner of Mahoning and Penn street, hitler's grocery. German langHam Member of Board of Pension Examl- Stations in English and German. Diafche eye. ear and throat, a specialty. All operations on the eye, ear and throat - and safely performed. Eyes accurate[ned and tested for the adjustment of sr glasses. SUITS, SCHOOL SUITS, CHILDRENS SHORT PANT SUITS. BOYS' In Boys suits, we show everything, sacks and cutaways, prices from $3.50 to $18.00. Children's short pants, suits, $1.00 to $7.50, three piece suits with short pants and vest, kilt suits from $2.00 to $500, Jersey suits, .$3.50 to .$5.50, allwool stockinette goods. (BRIDGET'S ULTIMATUM —ICidnoy Tauto. —Split the kidneys in halves lengthwiso, and trim. Cut in pieces. Put two ounoos of buttor In a frying-pan; let molt; add a small onion, cut in slices, with thokidnoy. Stir ovor a brisk Are four or five minutes; thon add a tablespoonfal of flour; stir again; stir in a teacup of soup stock (or hot water); season with salt, pepper, tho juice of a lomon and a teaspoon ful of grapo jolly; stir well and servo hot — Louisville Courier-Journal. —Cabbago Piokle.—Cut cabbago in quarters, if largo in eighths, boll flftoon minutes, pack in jars with small cucumbcrs, soaked from tho brine. Small onions, a fow largo peppers from which tho seeds have been taken, a fow small roots of horseradish bruisod or split, and a handful of black mustard soed. Over this pour vinegar sufficient to cover; after boiling add to each half gallon a teacupful of sugar, half an ounco of clOYOS and half an ounco of cinnamon. —Yanlcoe Blado. —Turkey Croquettes.—Add a pieco of butter tho size of an egg to a spoonful of milk. Stir in enough flour to mako tho uiixturo of the consistency of drawn butter. When it is well cooked add a boaton egg, acoffeecypful of cold turkey which has been chopped flne, and pepper and salt to taste. Spread it on a platter about an Inch thick, and leavo it over night. In tho morning cut tho mixturo into squares, dip each squaro in cracker crumbs and fry in hot lard liko doughnuts.—Housekeeper. — linked liananas.—liomovc sin and out in two; place them in a maiiow baking tin, opon side up; sprinkle .well with sugar, and <rrate over them a little nutmeg; place a small piece of butter on each pioce of banana, and bake t.ivonty or thirty minutes; servo with e.r<-nin.—Boston Herald. —To take iron rustout ot whlto goods pour a teacupf ul of boiling water, stretch tho goods tightly across tho top of it, then pour on a llttlo of the solution of oxalic aoid dissolved in wator, and rub it with tho edgo of a teaspoon or any thing. If it docs not como out at onco dip it down into tho hot wator and rub again. —A Southorn Way of Cooking Sweet Potatoes.—Place a layer of slicod cold sweet potatoos on tho bottom of a bak- Ing-dish, cover well with buttor and a sprinkle of sugat Anothor layer of potatoos, buttor and sugar. Repoat this until the dish is flllod. Cover well tho last layer with sugar and butter. Brown It over in a hot oven, and serve hot — Good Housekeeping. —The following1 rocipo for gems is quickly and easily mixed, and thoy will bo found delicious for breakfast: To a pint and a half of flour add a tablespoonful of sugar, about the samo of butter and a teaspoonful and a half of baking powder. Break in an egg and stir up tho wholo with enough wator to mako a nico batter. Pour into tho gom-pans and bake. Let thom bo nicely browned on top and eaten while hot.—N. Y. World. tio aaid, "I want i merchant ront of Uio cisco'a roal of (irari- EigUtoon months ago, tho unquestionable statcn villo \V. Alexander, a pr in this city, there stood in door of ono of San Fr ostato dealers a cabbago < nardino County weifhii pounds, and said to bo thi raised. Whilo this produ fornia's greatness was o tho Oregon cxp two Kriton*, so f soil that they wal dusty streets w ankles and thoir bound for Australia, (hoy ospipil llio won Doth men stopped -diort sinfflo oypplassc Hy Jove, old boy, V ly largo done Doosodly 1 surprised son of Albion both wont in and inqi: cstato man whoro it u iloth incm wore hbajyo that iat wound tho Indigestible Vegetal lc An Englishman Owes ilia HuppincBi to Romances and tho rose go band in hand and tho dainty violots and tho modost lily havo ofton opened tho portals of lovo, but it has boen left to Oali fornia to produeo tho onl.y over led to a real romance up in wodding. —a irionn Said to us: "I was ovor careful of my children. I wanted to shield tlieni from hard things. Tho Lord knew hotter than I what was best for them. IIo took av.'ay our property, IIo took away ray husband's health. Then all thought of ease was gone. I was willing to do anything. I was willing tho children should do anything. Thoy diU not shrink back. AVo all worked hard. Health was given back to our dear one. Opportunities boyond our brightest dreams opened up boforo us and prosperity returned; but o*r blessings wore withheld until wo word willing to do any honest worU, howevel small."—Farm, Field and - toekman. Building* four doors west of Mahon HATS! HATS! HATS! We sell the J. T. Wood boot and shoes. There is no better, and Canade rubbers, best in the world. Every pair guaranteed or money refunded. Boots, Furnishing Goods, Men's flannel and Jersey shirts, Men's and Boys' underwear in every style and price. We have had the highest sale in underware this seasou we have ever had. Our stock is complete and prices away down. Rubber and Leather Boots! BOOTS I BOOTS wero cousin tho busy baml < ►cornea to : lookers that in deciding ;b bo misspent unless they r upon which this eabbujji wero obeying the icUo whin tiomon in going' to S.tu I And so they won What I'rairio Dogs Lack. Prairie dogs, it appears from a recent letter by Dr. Wilder, lack the sense of distance. AtCornell University spveral of them walked olT chairs, tables and window sills unhesitatingly This is thought to bo duo to the nature of their unusual habitat, a plain, with no sharper inequalities than burrows and mounds One adult fenjal.' seemed to have wonderful immunity from the evil effects of falls; she onco from the top of an elevator twenty-one feet high and another time from a window sill about as high, on a gran Ho pavement, but soon i ("covered were directed to the cabba contions. Onco in lous, ami tbcso two Englishmen as a Boforo tho young mistress couUl cover her breath after tha go* an' to shtay," the tfirl went on "An' there's another tiling I want to tell yo. I notioo that yo have wino 011 tho tobhle aieh day, but that none of it whativer gets down-tiht.alr.-4 to the kitchen. Now, that's naytli voight nor fair, an' 1 givo yo warnin' that ? >;tio of that wine must llud its way to tho kitchen or I'll ho lavin' ye." Tho mistress had by this tirao recovered her composm <. "You may belavin' 1110 this afternoon, please!" sho said. it's thi hero, an' ye bavo ordhera to givo mo, yo'U have to como uuwiv htair\s to tho basement, for I'll not bo comin' up hrro to .ye unny more yo to listheil to v. iiut 1 That if yo'rc go'an' to shtay The Astonished Mistress Klectod to Stay and tlio Cook I-eft. A young lady of ono of our suburbs who married recently and went to a Connecticut city to livo reports a remark on the part of a servant girl, says tho liostou Transcript, which is quite epic in that line. Tho lady, bavin? a large house and being desirous of running it in good form, called up her cook each day to tho dining-room, which was oil tho main floor, the kitchen 1 oing in the basement, and there gavo her her orders for fclio meals and other matters connected with tho down-stairs For a d;i work cook took iho orders with a rather bad grace, but committed no overt act of insurrection. Iiut presently, one day after tlio mistress had finished her orders, tho cook Bpoko up. "And now, mum UBTICE OF THE PEACH, Younb Tow*»nre, pa ma and other business, promptly at- We believe we can truthfully say that we sell more hats than all the stores in Punxsutaw y combined. Why? Because ws always keep the latest slyles and sells cheap. Caps ! Caps! for girls and boys, the nobbiest s vies you ever saw. Fur and Scotch caps for men and boys'. Neckwear, olie grandest Une in town. Gloves, hosiery and mittens. A carload of brand new trunks, prices guaranteed the lowest. Satchels, valises, umbrellas ins lk and mohair, something nice for a Christmas present for your best girl. PAINTER, rjfXSUTWJfET,PA. IE H. TORRENCE, id graining of all kinds done in the and satisfaction always guaran- CLAYTON NORTH, Two months a:;o there was a \v--iMin;* tit the ranch. There w«.ue a if people present, friends of tho farouy, and the <;rcom tbreu asic'lf h:;? : .Nturnity long1 enough at the .«*»<;> > <r u> tell how the liiy oaMj:i:r- had leU to bis "Your ilaughcor is vc-.- I lovo hur. I want, to wife." make her my 1 mailt:ful a sJ lain soctio "Four li in: (1 rod tjiouf-nnd u- It wan paid for. Tho otlu said to thr> rn friond nJ-'T water : 1:mi,vn t <> tics. :■::<[ v v. v>-,; i-1 •i<atosc depth to wlii T!io tlre:iteit Oiviuu %<•'* Lit» no time forty over achieved was in moving l.io cargo of the ship Capo Horn, wr > !:i'J off liic coast of South Atncri :t, vvbtm a diver, name-i Hooper, mud • . i v< 'a descents to a depiu L»f '2 )1 foot, roil two minuti t » stales th:\B 1 man has I). p.'I' B<j aofc oxoccd C i ■» 0£[lliV£l0ilt l>.' \ CARMALT'S IYER! AMD SALE STABLES, IOTAWNMT, PKKN'A. (or hire at all time* at J rate* to funerals and • near railroad itatioa Main Street, Hotel Pantall Build inc, PUNXSTJTA WKEY PESnST'A [Successor to North & Morris.] The Original and Popular One Price Clothier A Good School Story Tho following story was recently told by a Galveston high school teacher: At one time there was visiting in that city the famous Tom Ochiltree and Mr. Mackay, tho California millionaire, and the teaoherin question gave out one day "Our Visitors" as tho subject for a composition. Among those which wero submitted was one by a bright girl which commenced as follows: "Wo have in our midst two distinguished visitors, Mr. Mackay and Tom Occiltree, representing, respectively, gold from Cali Hornia and brass from Texas." men. R 10, * 81X) Y, PA., WEDNESDAY.!) N >' 26 DIMINUTIVE . I. TBUITT, A TTO&NS T-A T-LA W, taani««iT, Ft Mcond (ton of John Z«itl«r'i brick MUmIb thr Court*ot adjacent ooan- :iil of supor* per. nent can s in J ex- D A. CARMALT, ATTOBNIT-AT-LA W, It :i
Object Description
Title | Punxsutawney Spirit, 1890-12-10 |
Volume | XVIII |
Issue | 28 |
Subject | Jefferson County -- Newspapers; Punxsutawney Spirit -- Newspapers; Indiana University of Pennsylvania -- Newspapers: |
Description | An archive of the Punxsutawney Spirit weekly newspaper (-1911) from Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Smith & Wilson; Spirit Pub. Co. |
Date | 1890-12-10 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_18901210_vol_XVIII_issue_28 |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Relation | Property of The Punxsutawney Spirit. Use of the microfilm Courtesy of the Indiana University of Pennsylvania Special Collections & University Archives. |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For further information contact mengle@cust.usachoice.net or call 814-265-8245 . |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contributing Institution | Mengle Memorial Library |
Description
Title | Punxsutawney Spirit, 1890-12-10 |
Volume | XVIII |
Issue | 28 |
Subject | Jefferson County -- Newspapers; Punxsutawney Spirit -- Newspapers; Indiana University of Pennsylvania -- Newspapers: |
Description | An archive of the Punxsutawney Spirit weekly newspaper (-1911) from Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Smith & Wilson; Spirit Pub. Co. |
Date | 1890-12-10 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_18901210_001.tif |
Digital Specifications | Archival image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from 35mm microfilm at 300 dpi using a Nextscan Eclipse film scanner. The original file size was 2594.93 kilobytes. |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Relation | Property of The Punxsutawney Spirit. Use of the microfilm Courtesy of the Indiana University of Pennsylvania Special Collections & University Archives. |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For further information contact mengle@cust.usachoice.net or call 814-265-8245 . |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contributing Institution | Mengle Memorial Library |
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[uh'r t out of doors will develop iiOOls .'CCOrd- picked is Impends ruainly I, PA 1th Judge Jeak*. Legal bualmeMoir* Ddedto. pun booka Has determined to unload his entire stock of OVER- COATS THIS WINTER, . CAMPBELL, a TTORNE YS-AT-LA W, Bbooetilli, Pa. I Matson'a office, Mataon building, oj>- Cour ouse. IENSCOTER, DISTRICT ATTORNEY, !L KAMBY. ATTORNET-AT-LA W 1807 Fat. N.-W., Washington, D. C. lug Attorney In the several court* In ton and elsewhere. Prosecutes claims the Government Departments. Alio tase and sale of real estate. 14-18 RAIG [G. * C. Z. GORDON, TT0RNEY8-A T-LA W, Bkookville, Pa. A CABBAGE ROMANCE A. WALTER, ■Sic I AS AND SURGEON, PCKXgrTAWNET, PA. ii 7:<>r- in of t'.-ili- 1. J. HUGHES, S UEOEON DENTIST, xhibition, 11 England cir naiivo no dry and >\vn to tlieir PCWMUTAWHIY, PA. 1 11 p to both >utji end oIJFindley street, ) th I'u-slnu along :i doosccl . J. CHANDLER, SVEOEON DENTIST, PUKMKWAWNIY, PA; Ice In his residence,! n the West End. ■o to .sav, an' [MORRISON, D. D. 8. DENTAL BOOMS, FUNXBUTAWNIT, PA. Hot!) men 1 f ye worl; justices of Jfttxt. curiosity ife would \v, they v ;'iO land MORRIS, ino to do uiv not jfarru- nils were no ex- LTOV mirdino they o tho •oitiaint'il two The .'rreuU't.t dlvinpf f« weeks. At the end of that time oik* of the 111 said to the rancher: I want so much of your lard ?n \ oerllow much is it. worth?" Sit:' I-* t 9M,«Mla Mfhisrtni. GIRLS IN SILK-MILLS. EVERY WEDNESDAY Spirit. Overcoats t * IMITTST ■ C3-0 ! Overcoats The insurance 8rm of Juo. F. anil Q. £ Brown, of Clarion mid Brookyille, bad a large portion of tlie insurance In Punxsutawney at the time of oar great fire of 1886 and it i* not flattery to say that their adjustment* were prompt and satisfactory. Every loe* waa settled and paid by sight draft*, oyer $30,000 being paid by tbeir companies within 60 days after the fire. That fire did not dis oonrage them and they have written most of the new buildings and stocks. Their buti ness has increised so much that they have opened an office in Punisntawuey, in front room of second story of John Ztiitler block, and placed Walter 8. Brown, one ot the brothers, iu charge. Tbeir line comprises the largest and best companies doing business n tun I nitni .States 1H-2U PownwAwmnr, h. eilpla atreet, two doon aortk of nltnio (tor*. brewer, A TTOMiHtT-dT-LA W, Olayton/.North TttE OWCINAJ- AND mUi-A* One ■.'Price ■.'Clothier BSOOKVILI.B, PA Ma won Block, opposite the public 8 * CLARK, A TTORNX YS-AT-LA W, Kbtkoldhtillii, Fa. Mediuai, light Wright, Heavy ifcla, Fur, Beaver and Storm Coats Opera House Block. Oct. 1, 1889, ATTORNEY-AT-LA W, BftOOKVlLLK, PA PtJXTiDTAWNIT, PA ro doors east of tbe Post Office. r.F. BEYER, 'SICIAN AND 8UB0S0N, Sfftistctans. The Heigh teat-Looking, r .t- !t| hm«1 ' Prettiest of Factory >\«.rk«r*. 4 Cnrlou* Pad That Has Ivhlintly Had It! Uay. The craze for undersized ponies, in her roguish eye tolls you tliatsh • knows bo made by a ;v it all. i tlieso matters. Sul. . Of all the girls who work i:i factories our op'n'on. has had its day. Except as the young woman of tlic silk-mill Is th > curi°sitles °r 'or tho purpose of the brightest-looking, tlio best-c!.ul an 1 menage, those pigmy animals aro pracusually the prettiest. You could scarce- l'ca"y ' s"^88- l'orhaps the fashion o ly believe, if you saw hor in the stre. t Purchasing t'nem at extraordinarily after the day Is done, or on Sunday or hlt'h Prico8 wouM not havo lastod s< a holiday, that she has stood all' tl.n Ion* had it been fully understood tha long day on her feet, plying her hand), 'heir production was mainly a quustioi hor thought, hor eye, and her ear bein- of scanty Coding, either in the case o unceasingly on the alert. She is smart- tho an'mals themselves or of thoi ly and genteelly drossod. Sho has a more or lcs8 iwm(iaia,t' progenitors, jaunty, bright air, her laughter is a rip- And the same ma.v ' • plo, and the demuro consciousness in abundant liair. Sho can well afford to dro |
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