DANII —— RN Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 14, 189L «THE UNIVERSAL AUNT.” BY J. P. BEEL. There's an omnipresent personage who sel- dom gets her due, : But if the muse will come to me and kindly help me through, T’ll advertise her virtues in a way to make her a And iy her recognition, which perhaps she never had. She has seen a sight of trouble in this world of death an woe, For all her blood relations they have melted off like snow ; Every niece and every nephew has gone to wear the crown, ; And left her here to be an Aunt to every one in town. . She has a bit of property—-a.village house and ot— Six hundred would be liberal to cover all she’s 0 Exo a few resources, that are scattered here and there, ; Which she wouldn't want toswop, to-day, with any millionaire. The little house she loves as well as if it were of gold, Has multiplied upon her hands the promised hundred fold, Until for miles around about wherever she may roam She meets the welcome, “come right in and make yourself at home.” She is very sure to visit every meeting house in range, : And, to her, a big revival is an industrial ex- change, Where some dozen Christian people break the Sabbath and the peace Seeing whose shall be the wagon that shall take her old valise. She does a pile of patching on the children’s pants and coats, - . She can whip out any doctor on their dipth- eritic throats ; She brings them thro’ the measles, thro’ the whooping cough and mumps, And she cures both man and woman of the very worst of dumps. ~She has Somslitils notions about the way to 00 From which it's very evident she doesn’t go book ; Butyou'll declare the minute that her dinner comes on deck You can never do it justice ’less you lengthen out your neck. In a long protracted illness she is handy as a nurse, She is so kind and gentle when the patient’s growing worse ; And when it is all over and they take the fu- nerai hack, She makes the house seem cheerful when the family get back. So she’s dispensing sunshine, with the grand- est of results; Her dose is never different for children or adults ; The dogs will wag there gratitude, and all the cats will purr, Whenever heaven favors them with just a sight of her, 1 said I’d sound her praises, but the world will never know Her full all purpose value while she sojourns here below ; But by and by ’twill lose her, and from that humble gate There will pass a long procession that will help us estimate. Every heart that's in attendance will attest her noble worth, Every eye will there be weeping for a royal one of earth ; Every roseand every lily, every little potted plant Will be paying lovingtribute to the universal Aunt. Rochester Democ rut. To the Rockies and Return. How the North-West Looks to a Penn- sylvanian. Many of the readers of the WATCH- MAN have never been west of Chicago; more have never looked upon the tur- bid waters of the Mississippi or wearied their eyes watching for an ending of the broard, flat acres that stretch away to the westward of it. Few who have not seen it, have any conception of the vast territory—some fertile, productive and promising, much arid, unfruitful and desolate, that lies between the Father of ‘Waters and the Rocky Mountains ; and fewer still can have any definite idea of the wonderful growth, the solid, sub- stantial business-like look of cities that have sprung into existence, within yeas which it does not take an old man to remember. A four weeks’ trip extending across the State of Wisconsin, via the Chi- cago, Milwauke and St. Paul Railroad —a five days’ stop at St. Paul and Min- neapolis ; then on via the Northern Pacific, through Northern Minnesota, the southern part of North Dakota, and southern Montanna, to the Yellowstone Park, and the summit of the Rockies at Butte, and return through northern Montana via Helena. Great Falls and the Red River Valley in northern Dakota, over the Great Northern Rail- road to St. Paul, has opened the eyes of the writer hereof to facts and conditions in that part of the West that are not set forth in the circulars of land agents, or the promising prospectuses of investment companies. A fer & pleased tide ta Chicaga—the | big, busy, boasting Babylon of the ‘West—on the Pennsylvania’s new and unequaled train, the Columbian ; a short stay at that point quring which we no- ticed that about all that has been done in the way of preparing for the World's Fair, or Columbian Exposition, is the erection of a board fence around the proposed grounds, and a three hours ride through a well tilled and fraitful country, we found ourselves at DMil- wauke, Kvery body East, knows of Milwauke, or at least of Milwauke beer. Have you ever been there ? If not, and you get within a days travel of it, it will richly repay you to spend a few hours there, It is not unlike other cities in many respects. It has its big business houses, prosperous manufactorizs, fine residences, delightful drives, enterpris- ing papers, pretty parks, churches, schools, and the best Hotel in the “Plankington’’ there is in.the country, hotel ; but it is in the character of its population, the easy going, honest con- tentment of the large majority of its pop- ulation that makes it seem a peculiar and particularly pleasant place to a stranger. Three fourths ofthe inhabi- tants are German. Four-fifths of the resident population, we were told, own their own houses, many of them modest wooden buildings, costing probably from $1.500 to $3.000. Thereis no evidence of push or rush or scramble to get rich. Any one you meet has time to stop and answer civilly, any question you may ask. The slot machines which in other places has the label “Drop a nickle in the slot,” have in Milwauke the legend across the face, “drop a penny in the slot,” and get what others charge a nickle for. The young men don’t seem to care if their hair is parted in the mid- dle or not, and the older ones do not bother about their pants bagging at the knee. Yet all seem prosperous and happy. We happened there when the German Singing Societies of the North- west were holding their ‘“Sangerfest,” and it looked as if all the bunting and: the patriotic calico in the country had been gathered together to decorate the city. It was a regular gala week. An orchestra of 50 trained musicians, a chorus of 1500 cultivated voices, and an audience at times of twenty thousand people listened to the music. Is it to be wondered at that Milwauke looked happy under the circumstances. Sitting in the tower at Schlitz’s park where a fair view of a large portion of the city can be had, and noticing the scarcity of smoke stacks or otherevidences ~f manu- factories, we inquired of a gentleman, who evidently thought he knew all about it, what the people of the city— the population exceeds 200,000-—gener- ally did for aliving? “Oh!” said he quickly, “they make beer.” “But they can’t all live making beer’” we answer- ed, “what do those who don’t make beer do?” “They drink it” was the reply. We afterwards discovered that our in- formant knew but little more of the city than we did, for Milwauke has some of the largest and most prosperous locomo- tive works,iron foundriesand other manu factories in the country. In the evenings before the singing societies met, the princi pal business seemed to be beer drinking, and from a single night's observation we concluded that Milwauke has more front porch beer drinkers of an evening, in proportion to its population, than our eastern cities have church goers on Sun- day. And yet while there we did not see an intoxicated person, a policeman, or the necessity for one, and strange as it may seem, the records show that the arrests for drunkenness in that city are less in proportion to the population than in many of the New England towns that profess to enforce prohibitory statutes. It's an eight hours ride across the State from Milwauke to La Cross, via the Chicago, Milwauke & St. Paul Railroad, which by the way is one of the safest, shortest and pleasantest routes one can take, and over which you find comfortable cars and excellent train service. Over theentiredistance, except astretch of about twenty-five miles on either side of the Wisconsin river which is sparsely settled and has » sandy, bar- ren looking soil, you pass through a well populated, prosperous appearing country, The farms which are plenty, look fruit- ful and easily tilled, patches of hard wood timber are noticed all along the way, plenty of shade and fruit trees are to be seen, the farm buildings are gen- erally good, although a Pennsylvanian soon notices the absence of the big barns so common in his own State ; the wheat crop, which was being harvested as we returned, we were told, would av- erage from 20 to 25 bushels to the acre; corn looked thrifty and strong most of it being in tassel, the oats and potato crops abundant, and over the en- tire distance, from Lake Michigan to the Mississippi river, there was every appearance of prosperity and abundance among the farmers of that State. The towns passed through were well built and substantial, church spires and school houses loomed up all along the way, and pretty girls adorned the depot porches everywhere we stopped. De- lightful fresh water lakes, some a little bigger than a wash tub, others extend- ing for miles, and nearly all with tim- bered borders, dot the State from end to end, and furnish duck shooting and fishing ‘grounds of the finest kind. From what we saw of Wisconsin, in this section, and afterwards up about Red Lake River,and teking into consid- eration the fact that it is now Democrat- ic and intends to remain so, we have an idea that it would be a pretty good State to resids in. Improved farm land can be purchased in most any part at prices ranging from $15 to $50 per acre, with no mountainsiand but few stones to bother the plowman. At La Crosse, at which place large lumber mills are in operation, you cross the Mississippi, which at this point is about as large as the Susquehanna at Lock Haven. From where you cross it up to Hastings, a ten honrs ride, one sees little except river bluffs on one side and river and river bluffs on the other, except at occasional spots where the just as other cities have,-~minus the | bluffs and river do not meet, prosperous towns or patehes of fartile farm land un- der good cultivation are noticed. At Red Wing, a pretty town just at the point where the river widens into Lake Pepin is thelhome of Gen. Jas. S. Bris- bin, so well known to all our readers, ‘who, since the Indian troubles have quieted down, is dividing his time be- tween duck shooting’ and over-seeing his splendid farm, across the lake in Wis- consin. Next February the General re- tires from the army, and he tells us that he is giad the date of retirement is so close. From Hastings, where the road re-crosses the river to the eastern bank of the Mississippi, to St. Paul, is a short ride through one of tha most productive and thickly populated farm regions of the West. A five days’ stay in St.Paul to attend the meeting of the National Editorial Association (the proceedings of which have already been given by the daily press) and to enjoy the hospitality of one of the most hospitable cities on tae face of the globe, gave ample time to see and learn much of this great com- mercial metropolis of the North-west and its twin sister Minneapolis. If we have heretofore had doubts of the truth of the statementstconcerning the growth, the solidity, the enterprise, the beauty, wealth and prosperity of this wonderful city of the west, we have them no long- er. Noone will who visits it. The stories that are told of its fourteen-stor- ied business blocks, its residences co-ting close onto a million of dollars, its miles upon miles of paved and cleanly swept streets, its boulevards and bridges, its lawns and lakes, its business and push, its rail-road enterprises and future, are not “wild western” fancies, but actual, realized facts. Of Minneapolis,its sister city,and but nine miles distant,the same can be said. In any notice of this rap- idly increasing North West these two cities should ba treated as one, which they virtually are in locality, interests, and success—so grown together that a stranger cannot tell where the one ends or the other begins. St. Paul, which forty years ago had less than 1000 in- habitants, has now over 133,000. Min- neapolis, which thirty-seven years ago was unknown has over 160,000. To- gether they have 145 public ani private school buildings, 302 churches that will aggregate in value over one million of dollars ; 40 banks with over $20,000,- 000 capital ; manufactories and mills the value of which cannot be estimated; a system of sewerage and street improve- ments that cost in a single year $782,- 000 and are unequaled in any city on the globe. Their building permits for two years amounted to $955,000. Their jobbing trade in 1880 was over $300,000,000, and their manufacturing output close to $150,000,000. St. Paul has a Court House and city hall that cost $1,014,000, and the day we left Minneapolis laid, with great ceremony, the cornerstoneof a $2,500,000 building for the same purpose. They have more miles of cable and electric street railways than any city in America, and are the starting point of a dozen differect rail- way systems which aggregate in length over 20,000 miles of tracks. And all of this Alladin-like growth in less than half a century, in a section of country only now in the beginning of its devel- opment. What will the future of these cities be when the Northwest is fully peopled? Don’t ask land agents or speculators. They’ll stun you with their reply. For the big heart- ed, open handed hospitality extended by the citizens of St. Paul to the editors and editresses who attended the conven- tion we tender our due proportion of thanks, There is no end to their en- terprises or expectations, neither was there Jimitto nor stint in their hospit- ality and kindness. St. Paul is not only a liberal, hospitable and enterprising place, but it is highly moral (?) as well—that is, in some re- spects. It was late on Saturday night when we registered at the Ryan. On Sunday morning, preparatory to going to church, we sought information at the office as to the locality of the barber- shop. “That's closed, you can’t get shaved in this city on Sunday, sir,” was the answer. “How about a cock-tail this morning ?’’ asked a thirsty looking gentleman who had been waiting for a chance at the clerk. “Gl, that’s all night, sir.the bar's open al) the time; just go back along the hall,” was the reply. He went “back along the hall” and we got shaved, after going out and around a couple of corners, thea slipping th rouzh a half dozen of doors and a celler way, as if going to commit an awful crime. All the time that “Sunday breaking” barber was trying to make us present- able, we were wondering what queer kind of morality it was that punished one man for keeping a barber shop open on Sunday and allowed a bar tender to sell a belly full of bad whiskey to whom ever would buy it. While around the city that afternoon, we noticed ‘that all | the bars and restaurants, d&igar stores and fruit stands were open ; all of which fact will be mortifying news, we know, to the temperance and other good peo- ple who read this paper—aund nearly all of them do ;—but when we tell them what we saw up at Miles City and on the way to Livingston the next Sunday, and at Butte the following one, their hair will rise in holy horror, and they'll wonder what in the world all their missionary money has been spent for. West of St. Paul, along the line of the Northern Pacific, for 150 miles is a most charming country, except in spots, where tamarack swamps seem to get away with every thing else. It is flat, dotted with pretty little lakes bordered mostly with timber and which, when ve passed, had thousands of ducks upon them. For the first 100 miles the land is seemingly well occupied and much of it under cultivation. From the car window you see no hills, stones or stumps ; the soil looks black and rich, and so easily worked that one team of horses ought to do as much ploughing in a day as two would do among the hills of Pennsylvania. The crops, wheat, oats, corn and potatoes were ex- cellent. For the next fifty miles the country had about the same appearance, excepting that little of it was occupied or under cultivation. A further ride of 50 miles takesiyou through what is called the timber belt. We failed tosee the timber. It has either been cut or never grew. There is wood and brush but ne ‘timber.” At Lake Park, where the “timber” ceases the wheat section be- gins and from there on to Jamestown in north Dakota, a distance of 130 miles, is a country as flat as a barn floor and all over which wheat grows as easily as does crime in a republican city. In many spots as far as the eye can reach on either side, in front and behind the train, one sees nothing but waving wheat and blue sky—no fences, no trees, no shade, nothing but a blazing hot sun, a deep blue sky and wheat, wheat, wheat. ‘Where the ground has not been broken for wheat the prairie lies untouched, no effort to grow anything else being visi- ble. At Dalrymple you pass through a single wheat farm of 20,000 acres. From Jamestown to Bismarck, 150 miles, the country is rolling and wheat fields scarce. Most of the distance nothing but unbroken prairie is to be seen. From St. Paul to this point the farm buildings are small, mostly one and a half story houses, with a single shed for outbuild- ings. No barns or corn cribs are seen, and in many instances, in fact in a ma- jority, the farm buildings consist of a gingle story house about the size and having very much the appearance of a freight car without wheels. Through the wheat belt the houses, such as they are, are far apart, without fruit, gardens, or shade. West of Bismarck you reach the bad lands, and from there to Billings, over 600 miles, the greater portion of the way along the Yellowstone river, is a country of sand hills and gulches, sage brush and sand, alkali and mosquitoes, which to all appearances is not worth 5 cents for 5,000 acres. It is however a part of the great grazing range of the west, and around the sand hills—buttes they are called out there—and among the sage brush, is a bunch grass that grows, and 1s so nutricious that stock of all kinds fatten upon it sufficient for the market. Through this section nothing but this bunch grass and sage brush grows with- out irrigation. It seldom rains and when it does the sandy soil dries out so quickly that there is no moisture left to assist vegetation. There are no houses or buildings outside of the immediate vi- cinity of the railroad stations, many of which are only water tanks or section bosses’ residences. There are brush pens, sheds built of poles, brought from the mountains many miles distant, or dirt houses dug in the sand hills, scattered here and there, where ranchmen have located claims and stay part of the year to watch their stock. Many flocks of cattie, sheep and horses are seen all along the way, and we must say for this verdureless, treeless, sun scorched, mos- quito ridden plain, that from the time we entered the cattle country above Bismarck, on the Northern Pacific road, until we left it on our return, east of Minot, on the Great Northern Railroad —a distance of almost 1500 miles—we did not see a weak, thin, poorly fed ani- mal of any kind. Horses even that work, are turned loose without grain at night and find plenty of nourishment in the bunch grass to keep them in good condition. Cattle and sheep were fat as ifstall fed, and many of them were and all looked ready for the butcher’s block. But throughout this entire coun- drink, or comforts or conveniences of any kind. A scorching sun blisters your face, an aikali dust burns and chafes your skin, wosquitoes pester the life out of you till your eyes look, but look in vain, for a hidirg place from these nuisances. Miles city is a place of about 1000 in- , habitants. A few years ago it claimed to have 8,000. We stopped over night here and found Mr. Orlando Beck and ! family, formerly of this county. They are living very comfortably and con- tentedly in a snug little house built by Mr. Beck, about a mile east of the town, cultivating a five acre truck garden. As there is little grown in that section -—nothing except where land isirrigat- ed—vegetables and small fruits bring good prices and Mr. Beck's son, who being shipped at the time we were there | try there is neither shade, water fit to | FEET markets the products of his garden, tells us that they have realized from sales at the rate of $150 per acre per year. Mr. Beck himself is sinking artesian wells at which business he has been qnite successful the past three years. Of the entire colony from this county that emigrated to that place with him eight years ago, not asingle one of them is there. Those who did not return are scattered elsewhere throughout the west. While at Miles city we went up to Fort Keogh, two miles distant, to see the Indians taken during the Pine Ridge trouble. Mr. Lo! in his original faith, feathers and filth, He lives in his tepee, a short mile from the Fort and under the eye of the soldiers ; loafs continuously, eats government beef, grows fat and wastes no time in washing, The squaws tan hides, make moccasins and dry and fly- sun on poles erected at the entrance to their tepees. Their camp is full of dogs, dirt and pappooses, and a ten minutes stop was as long as we cared to remain in this home of the “noble red man.” ‘When we left Miles City on Sunday morning, the stores,restaurants and bars were all open, but we were told, as a kind of an apology for this seeming want of respect for the Sabbath, that at half past ten all business places were expected to be closed, and remain so until after church hours, (they have five churches in the town) after which those who desired to, opened up, and others went down to the race course to see a horse race, From Miles city up,the flats of the Yel- lowstone widens out at places into little vs; valleentton wood trees line its banks in spots, but buttes are less prominent, and back among the sand hills an occa- sional scrubby pine tree can be seen. At Rosebud there was a promising looking wheat field and at Custer, Bull Moun- tain and Clermont—three towns without houses—could be seen large tracts of meadow land, the result of irrigation. It was Sunday, but the mowers and hay-makers were as busy cutting and making hay as republican office seekers on election day. At Billings—the best built and brisk- est town we passed after leaving St. Paul—the valley is from three to five miles wide and irrigating ditches and growing vegetation make it look like a paradise, compared with the arid coun- try through which we had passed. It is here you get the first breath of pure air that comes from the distant Rockies, and it is here your eyes look for the first time upon peaks whose summits are eternally covered with snow. From here to Livingston is a delightful ride through a valley that irrigation prom- ises to make exceedingly fruitful, and from every point of which snow capped mountains are to be seen. (concluded next week) ETE Governor Pattison on Horseback. The Washington correspondent of the New York World writes: Governor Hill, Governor Campbell and Governor Pattison are probably the hardsomest young men whose names have ever been canvassed in connection with the Presi- dency. All are men of fine proportions, tall, straight and commanding, and each wears easily and naturally the air of au- thority. The nomination of either would give to the party as fine looking a candidate as it possessed in either John C. Breckinridge or Winfield S. Han- cock. This town, by the way, will long re- member the appearance of Governor Pattison in the procession which escort- ed Mr. Cleveland to the Capitol and back again at the time of his inaugura- tion. Pennsylvania was well repre- sented in the line, and Governor Patti- son rode at the head of the Keystone troops. He was splendidly mounted, and appeared at the ease of a skilled horseman. He was attired in a plain suit of black and a tall silk hat, which afforded a striking contrast to the flash of the uniforms of his staff. He was a conspicuous figure, easily the handsomest man in the whole line, and one whom everybody at once noticed. Inquiries from strangers were shower- ed down from balconies to the street as be passed, and when the answer came back that the handsome horseman was Governor Pattison, of Pennsylvania, the cheering that went up was something to remember. The Governor had not mis- calculated the effect of his outfit, and his reception warmed his heart through and through. His tall hat was lifted time and again in acknowledgment of the greetings, and his staff rode well back, so as to give him the fullest oppor- | tunity, If Governor Pattison should be nomi- nated and elected President next year the ladies of Washington will be likely | to insist that he should imitate Mr. Jei- ferson and go on horseback to the Capi- | tol to be inaugurated. Two King’s Grand Daughters. There are two young girls, well | known in the London society, who { know how to sew so well that they make their own gowns, who nnder- stand the homely science of making "bread and the butter which accom- | panies it; who paint welly are capable | musicians, are familiar with the art of | sculpture, read and speak fluently four different languages, and if thrown on | their own resources could support themselves in half a dozen womanly ways, all of which is well, as their mother is only the daughter of the Danish King and their father the son of that humble personage known fa- miliarily as the Queen of England and Empress of India, Victoria, Re- gina. a It is here you behold blow their beef, entrails and all, in the! The Bank of Engtand. Down in the Money Vaults Amid Al- most Countless Wealth, The automatic bodyguard now shows some animation, savs the London edi- tion of the N. Y. Herald. Producing a hand lantern from another mysteri- ous recess h bids us follow. We walk in narrow alleys formed of piles of boxes, where not a ray of light peune- trates, and find ourselves making a rapid descent, with the lantern ahead, like some guardian angel. We de- scend a steeper incline than the others, with the defunct bank notes in their sarcophagi all around us, when a chili air striking us proves that we are well underground. Then the figure in front turns and announces to us in a tone calculated to strike terror into nervous persons. “We are now in the labyrinth.” I be- gin to feel like another Guy Fawkes going to blow up the whole place. But the sudden twists and turns we take always in that bewildering maze of piled up cases are becoming most trying to the banker, who is not ac- customed to dodging a will-o’-the-wisp in a catacomb. 1 begin to entertain fears that he is leading us to some dungeon fastness when he tarns again and solemnly re- marks, with a wave of his hand, “All bank notes.” Some idea can be gain- ed of the quantity when it issaid that they are 77,745,000 in number, and that they fill i5400 boxes, which, if placed side by side, would reach two and a half miles. If the notes were placed in a pile they would reach a height of five and a half miles, or if joined end to end would form a ribbon 12,455 miles long. Their superficial extent is a little less than that of Hyde park ; their original value was over £1,750,000,000 and their weight over 90 1-2 tons. Along another passage we enter a large room—really a vault—which is surrounded from floor to ceiling by iron doors of safes which at their open- ing might be five feet high by five feet wide. One of these is opened and shows rows upon rows of gold coins in bags ot £2,000 each. One is handed t6 me to hold, and after doing so for a moment I decide I will not carry it home. The dead weight is enormous. Yet theseofficials handle the slipping, mass as fast as though it were a book. Another door is opened and we observe a stack of bank notes. I remark that I have seen a lot already.” For answer the manager takes out a parcel of 1,000 £1,000 notes and says : “Take hold.” Ido so, and am told I am holding £1,000,000. I should have wished to hold it longer, but they want it, so I put it back." “This small safe contains £8,000, 000” continued the polite manager, “and you are in the richest vault of the Bank of England and of the world. This small room at present holds £80,- 000,000. By this time my appetite for wealth is nearly gone. I am nauseated with the atmosphere of bank notes. My senses are dulled with the oppressing spectacle and I hail with delight the merry splashing fountain in the court yard. Here are the quarters of the thirty-four guardsmen who nightly pa- trol the establishment. A double sen- try is posted at each gate, and as they load with ball cartridges it 1s not a safe place for an enterprising burglar to tackle. The officer of the guard has a bedroom in the bank, and is provided with a dinner and a bottle of the finest old port,” and I understand that the guards are also liberally treated. Beecher and His Teacher. Henry Ward Beecher certainly owed a debt of gratitude to his teacher in mathematics, not only for the knowl- edge acquired through his tuition, but for lessons tending to strength of char- acter. He tells this story to illustrate the teacher's method. He was sent to the blackboard, and went, uncertain, soft, full of whimper- ing: “That lesson must be learned,” said the teacher, in a very quiet tone, but with a terrible intensity. All expla- nations and excuses he trod under foot with utter scornfulness. “I want that problem ; I don’t want any reasons why I don’t get it,” he would say. “I did study it two hours.” “That's nothing to me; I want the lesson. You need not study it at all, or you may study it ten hours, just to suit yourself. I want the lesson.” “It was tough for a green boy,” says Beecher, ‘but it seasoned him? In less than a month I had the most in- tense sense of intellectual independ- ence, and courage to defend my recita- tions. His cold and calm voice would fall upon me in the midst ofa demon- stration, ‘No // “I hesitated, and then went back to the beginning, and on reaching the same spot again, ‘No!" uttered with the tone of conviction, barred my prog- gress,” “The next,’ and I sat down in red confusion. “Ie, too, was stopped with ‘No!’ but went right on, finished, sat down, and was awarded with ‘Very well.’ “Why! whimpered 1, ‘I recited it just as he did, and you said ‘No !'” “{Why didn't you say “Fes!” ana stick to it 2 It is not enongh to know vour lesson. You must know that you know it. You have learned nothing till you are sure. If all the world says “No!” your business is to say “Yes I"—not only to say “yes” but prove it.’ EC A CT— ———— ——A complete coliapse is occasion- ed in our feelings by derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure sick and billions headache, bowel complaints, in- ternal fever and costiveness. They re move all waste matter, and restores health to body and mind. A dose as a laxative consist of one tiny, sugar-conted Pellet. Cheap ard easiest to take. By druggists, 25 cents a vial,