7. Bellefonte, Pa., March 5, 189 THE MINISTER'S DAUGHTER. In the minister's morning scrinon, He told of the primal fall, And how henceforth the wrath of God Rested on earth and all. And how of His will and pleasure, All souls, save a chosen few, Were doomed to cternal torture, And held in the way thereto. Yet never, by Faith's unreason, A saintlier soul was tried, And never the harsh old lesson A tenderer heart belied. And after the painful service, On that pleasant, bright first day He walked his little daughter Thro’ the apple bloom of May. Sweet in the fresh green meadow Sparrow and blackbird sung; Above him their tinted petals The blossoming orchard hung. Around, on the wonderful glory, The minister looked and smiled : “How good is the Lord, who gives us These gifts from His hand, my child. “Behold in the bloom of apples, And the violets in the sward, A hint of the old lost beauty Of the Garden of the Lord.” Then unspake the little maiden, Treading on snow and pink, 6 Oh, father! these pretty blossoms Are very wicked I think.” ‘‘Had there been no Garden of Eden, There had never been a fall, And if never a tree had blossomed, God would have loved us all.” “Hush, child!" the father answered. “By His decree man fell ; His ways are in clouds and darkness, But He doeth all things well. ‘And whether by His ordaining To us cometh good or ill, Joy or pain, or light or shadow We must fear and love him still.” “Oh, I fear Him !” said the daughter, And I try to love Him, too; But I wish he were kind and gentle, Kind and loving as you.” The minister groaned in spirit, As the tremulous lips of pain, And wide, wet eyes uplifted, Questioned his own in vain. Bowing his head, he pondered The words of his little one, Had he erred in his life-long teachings, Had he wrong to bis Master done ? “ To what grim and dreadful idol Had he lent the holiest name 7 Did his own heart, loving and human, The God of hls worship shame ? And lo! from the bloom and greenness, From the tender skies above, And the face of his little daughter, He read a lesson of love, No more as the cloudy terror, Of Sinai’s mont of law, Bat as Christ in the Syrian lilies The vision of God he saw, And as ween in the clefts of Horeh, Of old was His presence known, The dread ineffable glory Was infinite goodness alone. Thereafter his hearers noted In his prayers a tenderer strain, And never the message of hatred Burned on his lips again. And the scoffing tongue was prayerful, And the blinded eyes found sight, And hearts as flint aforetime, Grew soft in his warmth and light. —dJuhn G. Whittier. —————— ALL'S FAIR IN LOVE. When Charles was 30 he decided that he had gone to school long enough. His fath- er had arrived at that conclusion years be- fore, but the son’s indomitable determina- tion to conquer at least the rudiments of his profession before he should enter upon active practice made him deaf to all pa- ternal entreaties to return home, until one morning he waked up to find that his thick, bronze beard had developed several gray threads. Then Dr. Dayton made up his mind to leave the city’s colleges and hos- pitals, where he had lived for the last de- eade, not because he cared in the least for the gray beard but merely because he all at once realized that he was a boy nolonger and that if he ever hoped to do any good in the world it was high time to put an end to preparation and to enter upon the actual doing itself. Consequently, one fine spring morning all Blisstield was electrified to see, as it passed the quaint old Dayton homestead, a modest little gilt sign bearing the simple words ‘‘Dr. Charles Dayton.” "Then Bliss- field peeped and talked and- questioned till everybody knew that old Mr. Dayton’s elder son, who had gone away a big-headed boy, with serious had returned a big-headed man, still with serious gray eyes and red hair ; the only perceptible change at all in his appearance was caused by the addition of the bronze beard and a few deep furrows across his wide fine brow. He didn’t take with them at first, He wore short coats in opposition to all former ideas of the professional man’s dress and he didn’t seem to remember anybody whom he had known in his youth. Tt wasn’t be- eause he was proud, he knew, but he had been occupied with graver things during his absence than remembering who was the sister to his Sunday school teacher and who married the youngest of the Baker girls. But after a year or so they began to un- derstand him, especially when his superior skill had saved the darling of nearly every household in town when the scarlet fever threatened to fill the tiny graveyard out on the edge of the hill. Dr. Charles, as they learned to call him in imitation of the prim spinster sister of the Dayton family, had an additional trait in his favor ; he knew how to neglect each and every woman in Bliss. field with equal severity, Not that wom- en enjoy being neglected, hut they always develop a sort of respect for a man who doesn’t stoop to them, providing he is con- sistent in his frigidity to all the women in the place. At the end of five years two things had taken place in Blisstield. Dr. Charles was the idol of the town, and young Tom, the baby of the Dayton family, was to cele- brate reaching his majority by taking unto himself a wife. Poor old Father Dayton was all in a flutter, for such a thing never before happened in his household. Eli ,- beth, the only daughter and four years the doctor’s senior, had never been guilty of a love affair in her near-sighted, soft-voiced existence, and nobody had ever dared to ask Dr. Charles how his heart fared in all gray eyes and red hair, - its temptations. It was an awful mistake. thought the whole household when the downy-cheeked Tom stood up in blushing bravado on his return from his junior year at college and persisted in the statement that he was never going to school again. For that fall he was to become the husband of the dearest little girl in all the world. At first the family looked upon it as a domestic calamity, but reason settled upon them, and the only stipulation was that the little maiden should come for a visit to the family of her future husband some time that summer. One morning late in July Miss Dayton and her younger brother set out for the East and returned a week later with the tiny lady, who was in a pretty state of ner- vousness at the strangeness of the situation. It was raining when they reached Blissfield and as dark and ugly a night as could be imagined, but the pretty old Dayton home- stead, with its quaint corners, heavy old- fashioned elegance and gentle air of hos- pitality, immediately set the timid Miss Eloise at peace with them all. * Dr. Charles was out in the country at the bedside ofa patient, and when, after midnight, he stumbled in, dripping, splashed with mud after his long ride in the storm, he had forgotten all about his expected visitor till he caught sight of a little sailor hat on the table in the hall. Something impelled him to pick it up, and from its crown fell a pair of crumpled damp gloves. Then he smiled so tenderly that he would not have recognized himself if he had realized it. For an instant he had thought the little things belonged to Elizabeth—Elizabeth with the generous, broad hands, the smooth hair which had not been guilty of a stiff hat for the last 20 years. It seemed so very odd to find anything so young, so daintily feminine, in this staid old house that he stood long in the dimly lighted hall, absently smoothing out the tiny gloves, pressing each finger in place and noting with an indulgent smile that a button was missing from the left wrist. When he finally came to himself a hot blush ran over his forehead and he plunged upstairs guiltily. Dr. Charles slept ill that night and awoke with the sun, in spite of the late hours of the night before. Some way, the first thing to come into his mind as his eyes opened was the rumpled tiny, but- tonless glove in the hall below, and the more he tried to throw off the memory the closer it'clung to him. At last he sprang from the bed with the same irritability which had marked his flight from the hall the evening before. Was this slim-wristed girl in the room across the hall going to turn him into a nervous, sentimental vie- tim of one of illusion? If she affected him thus before he saw her what would be the result when he came to know her? But { then, argued Dr. Charles, with a fine touch [ of masculine security, when he once saw her he would cease to think of her ; it was only the novelty of having a guest, es- pecially a young and fair guest, in the gen- erally so sedate Dayton home that bothered him. When he reached the lower hall he found { himself again by the little table with the little hat and gloves, and he put out his hand with a touch almost caressing. Just as his fingers met the feminine trifles he heard a fresh young voice hehind him saying : Pll take those if they are in your way. I forgot them last night. 7 Dr. Charles wheeled about guiltily. There on the lower step, with one slipper- ed foot poised for the next, and her long thin hand resting on the balustrade, was a young girl, looking straight at him from the most haby-like blue eyes ever lighting the face of woman. Dr. Charles, later on. in analyzing his feelings, realized that he had experienced three distinet sensations at the first sight of her : First, that of the critic, in which he was amazed to see, here in actual flesh, the slender, soulful-eyed, little girl, in a white gown with her golden hair tied low on her neck with a blue ril,- bon—the girl whom he had always before thought existed only in sentimental novels. Secondly, as the physician who frowned at the extreme slightness of the figure, the frail waist, the tiny neck. And lastly, as the man who wanted to take her close in his arms to kiss her, to love her and to call her his own. He even felt an intense de- sire to carry her off where no one else in all the whole world could see her, where he could minister to her in her adorable weakness. Perhaps he looked all these things in turn, for the girl drew back with a rising flush on her flower-like face until the man was ashamed of his brutal abrupt- ness and hastened to stammer : I really must beg you to torgive me, but a young lady is so rare a pleasure in this house that I was overwhelmed with my good fortune. She smiled a little, it is true, but the doctor recognized that his ridiculous ex- travagance of expression was ill calculated to set her at her case. Finally, gathering himself together, he walked over to her, and taking one of her hands in each of his. he said gravely : You are to be my sister, I suppose. I amr Brother Charles. Eloise was herself again, and smiled charmingly as she said : I knew you immediately. I’ve know you for a long time, I think, for Tom talks of you all the time. ' I quite suspect that Dr. Charles is the hero of his family, she added, with a touch of mischief, swinging his hands which still clasped her own. She was most delightful, Dr. Charles confessed, but somehow it rankled him that she should accept him so much as a matter of course. He would have pre- ferred her look upon him more as a man to be studied rather than a problem already solved. What a fool he had been to call her his little sister. He didn’t want to think of her as a sister, he didn’t want her ever again to speak of Tom in that familiar way, as though everything was settled. He felt his finger burn when it touched Tom’s ring, and then—then he deliberate- ly drew her close to him and kissed her fairly on her smooth, white forehead, She struggled away with a little cry, while her | face grew deadly pale. Then she said, with a nervous, hurt little Jaugh which | sounded pitifully like a sob : | Of course, since you are Tom’s brother. Dr. Charles's teeth were so locked that they refused to open. ~ Besides, what could he say? He had been a brute, and de- served only that some one should put an end to the life which was so unreliable. When he came down to breakfast he found the family at the table, .but Tom rose with a strange new pride to present his lady-love to his fine big brother. Eloise blushed and her eye lashes fluttered as she glanced up to see how to meet him. Dr. Charles bowed gravely but without a word and sat down in his place. Tom, nothing and mistaking poor Eloise’s emotion, clinched his teeth at the sight and poor old Father Dayton trembled with shame at his elder son’s cruel rudeness ; Elizabeth shifted her glasses in amazement on her be- loved Dr. Charles. Then the physician said, in a grave, calm voice : I met Eloise in the hall this morning. I kissed her. If consternation had assailed them before it now rose to a terrible pitch. Tom’s fingers clutched the edge of the table and he drew in his breath sharply, when little Eloise, with that tact which heaven some- times sends women in their times of peril, answered : Yes, and he called me his little sister. He isn’t much used to kissing a girl, though, I know, for he did it so queerly, and—he kissed me on the forehead, Tom, while you always choose my lips. It was an awfully bold thing to do, hut then it is the lightning flash which clears the sky. All waited for Tom’s lead, and the tiny, coaxing hand, creeping over his ; as it touched the table, won the day. The | lover wavered, tried to speak once or twice, and finally ended by bending over and saluting the little girl squarely on the | lips. aw sweetheart, we’ll show him how it isdone. And the amazed Miss Eliza- beth ejaculated, mercy me, so loudly that the whole party went off into a nervous but steadying laugh. In spite of this questionable gayety the meal was a farce and Dr. Charles took up his medicine case and hurried down the street the instant that it was over. He stayed away for three days and nights, but when Sunday came he appeared among them as usual, apparently as grave, as preoccupied as be- fore the tiny Eloise came to Blissfield. She even took a walk with him in the garden and pinned a big white daisy on his coat. The touch of her fingers made him set his teeth, and when she raised her eyes he knew that she, too, was on the verge of giving way. However, all her eyes told him after all was gratitude that he had told them all the other day, so that her peace would not be marred with the consciousness of a secret between them. He did not accompany them to church, but as he watched her by Tom’s side, dainty in the snowy muslin gowns she wore so much, with the sunlight flecking her bright hair through the maples at the gate, he turned away with a mighty pur- pose in his eyes. From that instant it was fated that Eloise should be the wife of the man who didn’t know how to kiss her, in- stead of the gay-hearted boy whose privi- lege it now was to claim her as his own. Dr. Charles had long ceased to argue with himself that he was doing a tremendous wrong. He was old enough and possessed of will enough to deceive the whole family, and, as Eloise’s visit was to be prolonged till September, he could afford to be cau- tious. While taking care not to frighten her in any way, he made himself necessary to her in countless ways, and Tom, all sus- picions long since vanished, seemed to he rather glad of a respite from his attention to his lads love when he knew that Dr. Charles would not let her lack for en- tertainment. Gradually the physician be- gan to hint to his father and the trusting lizabeth that the two were too young by far to think of matrimony, and the old fears of Tom's irresponsibility began to rise anew. Then Dr. Charles exploded his last gun, and that point blank at Tom himself. Eloise was too frail, too delicate, to he any- body’s wife. She herself had confessed to consumption in her family, and the doctor, with a professional skill which terrified the boy, drew awful pictures of the relentless disease. Of course he—the doctor—would not for the world advise a complete break- ing of the engagement, only a postpone- ment to an indefinite future. Hadn't poor Tom noticed her extreme fraility ? How her breath came so quickly at the least exertion? What had he supposed those bright spots in her checks meant ? It was a cruel lesson for the devoted boy, and he stormed that he would marry his sweetheart on her death bed but when he calmed down he was less determined, and some way managed to leave the little maid- en more and more to the care of the grave, calm doctor. One fine morning, when Eloise had heen laughing with the family in the shaded he now asked . You are free again. Eloise ? He had taken the little left hand. drop- the glove for its better, and turned it till the firclight showed the bare third finger. And poor Eloise could only say a little, half sobbing, yes. Then, said Dr. Charles, solemnly, I may ask you to give up that freedom again and to teach me to kiss you as Tom did. Afterward Eloise declared that it was the most brutal proposal ever made. At the time, however, she merely let him draw her to him, while she whispered. Iam so happy. And so ashamed. Do You want a wife whggs so fickle with her lover ?—Chicago News. -— W. J. Bryan on “Money.” ' A Most Enthusiastic Reception Given the Silver Ad- lane, a telegraph was brought to her an- | nouncing the death of her beloved father : | and so Elizabeth and Tom started sudden- | ly away from Blissfield with their terror- stricken little charge. Dr. Charles didn't say it even to himself, but he some way felt that the fates were with him, for. of course neither Eloise nor her mother would think of letting her marriage take place for at least a year. In the meantime Tom decided to return to college, but he stoutly refused to return to his former school, which was near Eloise’s home, but chose instead a seat of learning farther East. He didn’t confess anything at home but when the Christmas holidays passed with his going to a house party at the home of a Virginia class mate, and he put Eloise off with a hurried note and a costly pres- ent, Dr. Charles smiled. The little girl wrote to Elizabeth regularly, and the inno- cent sister always handed over the woeful little epistles to the hig brother to read. Finally, one February morning, there ar- rived a short, unhappy note, in which poor Eloise begged to come to visit the Dayton family. Mamma is at sister’s, whose baby has the scarlet fever, so they won’t let me stay with them, and it is so lonesome here in this big house with no one but the ser- vants. Besides, I want to talk to you about Mr. Thomas Dayton. Dr. Charles’ heart leaped for joy. This formal Mr. Thomas Dayton spoke volumes. And so the little girl came to Blissfield the second time and reached the Dayton home on another stormy night, this time to he welcomed by the bearded doctor standing by the glowing fire and holding out both his hands. Simple Elizabeth the next day told him all Eloise’s confessions of Tom's neglect, and added ; She puzzles me, Dr. Charles. She doesn’t seem to be half so broken-hearted as I ex- pected. I really think that her pride is hurt worse than her effections. And I thought she loved him so. Dr. Charles smiled and the next time he met Eloise he canght her by the hands and looked so long and searchingly into her cyes that she feared that he was was going to kiss her again. The climax came when a whole week passed without a letter from Tom, and Eloise setting her white lips and blinking back her tears of mortification, wrote to offer to release him from his engagement. The speed and eagerness with which he accepted almost tock her breath away ; nevertheless, the first time she came down without Tom’s ring she looked younger, happier and more womanly than ever before. Dr. Charles was standing in the twilight, before the grate where he had welcomed her the stormy night a few weeks ago. By his side was the little table where he had first found her tiny gloves last summer, and he had found another pair now, stouter and darker, but with the fatal first button button missing from the left wrist. As his eves fell on Eloise, half-broken half-ra- diant, there sprang into them such a light as made her drop her own. She realized that Elizabeth had told him the whole pit- iful shameful story, even to sending the ring back in its tiny white satin bed, and yet somehow, she never was so happy be- fore. With that same abruptness with A, vocate in Carnegie Hall in New York Last Friday Night. Mr. Bryan spoke substantially as follows: My Friends, Fellow Countrymen : In coming to New York at this time to speak upon the money question I miss the presence of that warm personal friend and heroic defender of the money of the Consti- tution, who has so lately been called from among us, William P. St. John. (Ap- plause.) I feel that no words of commen- dation of his work can be too strongly ex- pressed to do justice $0 his labor. No martyr ever burned at the stake who mani- fested a higher moral courage than did William P. St. John. No person ever stood by his conviction amidst surroundings more embarrassing ; no person ever showed a dearer devotion to what he believed to be right than did our friend. He was willing to risk anything ; he was willing to stand alone, almost, among business associates, satisfied, if hg only had the approval of his own conscience, even though he suffered the criticism of those whom he had loved and with whom he had acted. The world would be much better if all the citizens of this republic were willing to do as St. John did. The world would be better if all the people who live upon God’s foot- stool were willing, like him, to think and then stand by their convictions, let come what will. (Loud applause. ) Before commencing the discussion of the money question I want to call your atten- tion to certain questions of government which you may well consider if you are in- terested in making government good. THE RULE OF EQUALITY. We must have certain rules to go hy. 1 want to give you a rule which will help you to decide every question concerning govern- ment which comes before you ; and it is not a new rule, because the science of gov- ernment is not a new science. And yet this rule is just as important as if it had never been stated before. : I tind it in the Declaration of Indepen- dence—that all men are created equal. That, T lay down in the fundamental prin- ciple which underlies our form of govern- ment. Do not mistake. Do not confuse equality before the law with equality of possession, Remember, then, that what we insist upon is equal rights before the law. We insist that principle that men are cre- ated cqual is a principle of universal appli- cation so far as governmental affairs are concerned. We mean that wherever the government comes in contact with the citizen, that wherever the citizen touches the govern- ment, that then all must stand equal, and that the legislative power. the executive and the judicial power shall know no dif- ference between high and low, rich and poor. (Cheers. ) Now, out of that proposition that ali men are created equal comes another. If all men are created equal then no citizen has a natural right to injure any other citizen. You will find no one who insists that he has ; vou will find no one who will openly declare that he has ; and yet you will find a great many who act as if they thought they had. (Laughter and applause. ) NO RIGHT TO INJURE OTHERS. If you accept that proposition you must accept the next one—that if no citizen has a natural right to injure any other citizen, then a just government will neither enable nor permit one citizen to injure another. (Applause. ) But it has always been the case that whenever a person raises his voice against an abuse of government, the people who profit by the abuse have always hidden themselves behind government itself, and try to make out that the reformer is an enemy, not of the abuse, but of government itself. More than that, the injustice which has been done by a government has heen at the request of those who have least need- ed the aid of government. ( Applause.) When I assert this I am not asserting any- thing new, because in the same veto message I have referred Andrew Jackson speaks of the departure of government from the strict line of duty, and when he speaks of the humbler members of society having a right to complain he adds: “Who are not able to secure like favors for Mies It is true that the humbler members of society are not able to cope with the more powerful ones when it comes to legislation and special priveleges. ( Applause.) I want to apply this principle to one phase of legislaton. Take the subject of taxation, which is one we always have with us. In what proportion should peo- ple pay taxes ? In proportion to the advan- tages which they derive from the govern- ment which protects them. (Applause. ) An unjust tax law is indirect larceny. (Cheers.) My friends, the Creator never intended that you should have other people do your thinking for you. If the Creator had not intended all people to think he would not have given brains to all people. The fact that you have the right to vote in all ques- tions is conclusive proof that those who framed our government and made the laws intended that you should think for your- selves on all questions upon which vou are called to vote. (Applause.) You cannot have a person think for you safely unless that person’s interests are identical with yours. What is the fundamental principle that underlies the money question? It is that the value of a dollar depends upon the number of dollars. (Applause.) You can change the value of a dollar by changing the value of a dollar by changing the number of dollars. You can make dollars dear by making them scarce ; you can make them cheap by making them plentiful, When- ever you control the volume of money yon control the value of money. , Now there are three systems of money which have adherents and advocates. There are those who believe in monometallism ; there are those who believe in bimetallism : there are those who believe in what is known as fiat money or no metallism. The monometallist believes that your standard money shall be made for one metal ; the fiatist or no-metallist believes that your standard money shall be paper, not re- deemable in any kind of money. which he had told Tom of the stolen kiss Then we have credit money which may be issued by the government, as our green- backs are issued, redeemable in another kind of money ; or we may have a bank currency, issued through the banks and re- deemable in another kind of money by the banks ; and then we have a third kind of money, which is only a certificate of deposit | which simply declares that a certain num- Ler of dollars of gold or silver have been deposited in the treasury and will be given to the holder of the certificate on demand. What I want to ask is your consideration of the relative merits of the two ideas which are now most prominently before the people. While there are thoge who ad- vocate fiat money, or money that is not re- deemable in any other kind of money, the great contest through which this nation is passing, the great contest through which other nations are to pass, is the contest he- tween monometallism and bimetallism. Assuming, then, the advantages of a me- tallic base, I want to call your attention to nonometallism and bimetallism, and I want to give you reasons why we believe that bimetallism is absolutely necessary. What is the important thing in a dol- lar ? It is the purchasing power. Where is the test of honesty to be found ? In the purchasing power of the dollar. And yet the goldbug never mentions the purchasing power. He never mentions the purchasing power when he treats of gold, but sometimes mentions it in connection with what he calls ‘“‘the 50-cent dollar.’ Suppose all nations of the world agree upon a gold standard and agree upon our dollar as the unit ; and suppose next day they should meet and decide that we had too much money in the world—that they should decide to gather in ninety-nine-one hun- dredths of all the gold in the world and sink it into the ocean. What would be the result? Where we now have $100 we would only have $1, but it would be *‘hon- est money,’’ according to their definition, because if we melted that dollar it would not lose anything. What is the proper definition of an hon- est dollar? TItis this : An honest dollar would be a dollar whose purchasing power —not the purchasing power when measur- ed by one particular article at one par- ticular time—but a dollar whose general average purchasing power is the same yes- terday, to-day and forever. A dellar which rises in purchasing power is just as dis- honest as a dollar which falls in purchasing power. The only difference is that they hurt different people. A dollar which rises in purchasing power helps the creditor and hurts the debtor ; a dollar which falls in purchasing power helps the debtor and hurts the creditor. The one is just as dishonest as the other. Ido not insist upon an absolutely honest dollar. If we could get a tolefably honest dollar it would be so much better than what we have at present. We want bimetallism, not because it gives an absolutely honest dollar, but he- cause it makes a nearer approach to honesty than we can make on a gold standard. Now, how can we get nearest absolute honesty 2 By having money sufficient in volume to keep pace with the demand for money. There are two things necessary in selecting our standard money—one is quality and the other quantity, and quan- tity is as important as quality. “The business man finds that he cannot prosper unless the people who buy of him . are also prosperous. He understands that “unless there is money in the country he cannot get it into his store, and that in due time the sheriff will get in there instead. Mr. Byran then referred to a speech made by Mr. Blaine in 1878, and to a more recent speech by Mr. Carlisle, in which the latter spoke of idle capital and the injury it wrought 10 toiling masses, and added 1 I know there are many people who re- tard as a demagogue every person who | speaks of the struggling masses. But I insist that they are the great producers of taxes of the country, and that these same struggling masses, when appealed to in time of war, were always willing to offer themselves as a sacrifice, and when the Monroe doctrine was’ assailed a short time ago, we remember how these struggling masses stood up in its defence and for the honor and integrity of the country. The gold standard has failed in this coun- try, in Ingland, in France, in Germany and elsewhere. New York cannot afford to insist upon a financial policy that will make tramps and paupers of the people of the rest of the country. You may foreclose mortgages, but you will need renters. The people you turn out will not want to have anything more todo with the farms. While the farmer will live, your streets will be filled with the idleand hungry, and it will take all your accumulated wealth to feed the people made hungry. a A Wonderful Old Horse. A Noble Animal that Reached the Age of Thirty= Eight.—Incidents in Old Bob's Life.—Held One Job for Quer Thirty Years—Succumbed to Old Age—Was a Gymnast of no Mean Merit. The death of Old Bob, the yard horse at Osburn and Shaffer’s mill, at Falls Creek, removes one of the most familiar and best known figures from that portion of the town. Old Bob was aged 38 years and nearly all his life time was spent around saw and planing mills where his imperturb- able nature and steady disposition made him of especial value. Before the war he was an employee at Clark’s old shook mill in Reynoldsville and for more than a score of years he was enrployed at the saw miil at Falls Creek where he worked steadier and held his job better than any other em- ployee. Many stories have been told in re- gard to his sagacity and good horse sense. So accustomed had he become to his work and working hours that he could tell with- in a few minutes the time when the noisy whistle would announce the hours of 122.00, and 6.00 and a few minutes before these. hours Old Bob would amble to the edge of the platform and by no amount of persua- sion or entreaty would he allow himself to become attached to another load of lumber until he had received his rations and his hour’s rest. On one occasion Old Bob had the misfortune to fall over the platform which was some distance from the gronnd., The chain to which he was attached caught in the track and Old Bob in mid air swung back and forth like a pendelum. Many a horse would have become frightened hut not so with old Bob. He very complacent- ly commenced munching at the blackberry bushes growing on terra firma below him entirely obvious te his perilous position. Old Bob made few friends. At the ap- proach of a stranger he would throw back his ears give his tail a few vicious switches and announced the acquaintanceship at an end. The death of Old Bob is deeply re- gretted and it can be truthfully said that his position at Osburn and Shaffer's mill can never be filled by a Bucephalus his equal.—DuBois Eupress. ——To cure a cough or cold in one day take Krumrine’s Compound Syrup of Tar. If it fails to cure money refunded. 250ts. -—=Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN: The foliowing women are said to be the | Six wealthiest in the world : Senora Isidora | Cousins, $200,000,000 ; Hetty Green, $50,- [ 000,000 ; Baroness Burdett-Coutts, $20,- | 000,000 ; Mme. Barrios, $15,000,000 ; Miss Mary Garrett, $10,000.¢00 3 Mrs. Woleska, 1 $10,000,000. The most advanced authorities on food I now advise us to serve the hreakfast cereal to the children of the family with chopped dates or figs mixed with it instead of cream. This mjght be an especially good idea to try for the child who does not like cereals and who absolutely refuses to eat the rath- er insipid mixture of oatmeal or farina with sugar and cream. Stewed prunes might also be tried, and if mixed with oatmeal the night before, and while the cereal is hot, then put into a small cup and put into a very cold place, it may be turned out the next morning as out of a mold and either cream or the juice of the prunes poured over it. This may prove tempting when the warm, soft mixtures fail. Have yon a headache? No ; this is not i the beginning of a patent medicine ad. but a clever physician says that enemy of wom- ankind that goes under the name of head- ache is of many varieties, and requires many kinds of treatment. That to at- tempt to banish all variations of headache by a single “‘cure’’ shows a child-like faith in medicine but very little common sense. That the first step toward curing a head- ache is to find out which kind of one it is, and then to devote one's energies to driv- ing it away. That the headache which results from indigestion is of frequent occurrence, and it implies over-eating or unwise eating, and that when a woman finds herself afflicted with such a headache she should proceed to cure it by fasting and sitting with her feet in hot water for a few moments before go- ing to bed. That a great many mysterious headaches have their origin in overstrained eyes. This kind is cured only hy giving the eyes a vacation or by the oculist. Of course, care in the use of the eyes is also a help. Read- ing. writing or sewing in a dim or flicker- ing light must be given up. The common | practice of trying to read in jolting trains must also be discarded. The eyes must never be used too long at a time and when there is much eye work to be done brief rests and bathings in hot water will ward off the dreaded headache. That the headache which is the result of exposure to colds or draught or sudden changes is best treated by hot applications, hot water bags and gentle friction of the place of pain. Tf this does not banish the headache in a day then a deeper illness is | indicated. , | That the hest way to treat headaches is | to avoid them. To refuse to overtax the | eves, the nerves or the stomach, and to 1 give attention to exercise and bathing, Now, will you mind ? { Forsummer dresses tucks of all widths will be much in evidence ; skirts will be tucked, sleeves will he tucked, and bodices will be likewise garnished —a fashion which is a revival of the art so dear to our grand- | mothers, but one questions whether the fin de siecle women will employ their own | fingers and time in the gentle art, as did their industrious ancestors ! Ruftles | edged with lace or narrow ribbon will be a | feature of diaphanous summer gowns, and | Yards and yards of velvet ribbon or silk | braid are sewn around the bottom of walk- | ing skirts or up and down the seams if more becoming to the wearer. Miss Jessie Ackerman, now in Baltimore. will soon enter upon her duties as assistant pastor of the Fourth Baptist church of Chicago. The best way to make a child good is to expect good things from him. How many children are ruined by hearing from the lips of their mother or nurse words that come thoughtlessly, “Naughty child 1’ I have heard a little hoy proclaim as an ex- cuse for his misdeeds, “I can’t help it. I'm naughty.” He had been convinced that it was of no use to try to he good. How to become slender ? Oh, ve maid- ens, inclined to embonpoint. Follow this advice, and your forms will become as willowly as you could wish, in a trice. Rise early and take a cold bath, rubbing vigorously afterward with a coarse towel or flesh brush. Take a cupful of hot water before breakfast. Avoid d rinking at meals and confine yourself to one meal a day. Take one small cup of tea at breakfast, some dry toast, boiled fish or a small cutlet and a baked apple or alittle frnit. At dinner, which should he at mid-day. take white fish or meat, dry toast or stale bread, vegetables or fruit, either fresh or stewed 3 for supper, toast, salad, fruit, and six ounces of wine or water. Hot water with lemon juice in it is also good for supper. When you have followed all these rules, and find yourself fairy-like in proportion, then you may begin to contemplate smart toggery such as only the slender can wear. A touch of black or white, or both, is al- most a necessity for a modish gown, what- ever the color of the material. A black stock has the effect of increasing the seem- ing fairness of the complexion, while a black girdle materially lessens the appar- ent size of the waist. : Embroidery must necessarily he a species | of decoration somewhat limited in its ap- | plication in spite of the improvement in | the mechanical contrivances by which it is | executed. The most popular ornamenta- | tion for the skirts of woolen dresses through- out the coming season will be hands of mohair braid and velvet and satin ribbon, laid on in horizontal bands, either grouped together around the lower portion or carvied up to the waist with regular intervals between. For summer fabrics the same arrangement will be car- ried out in different kinds of lace insertion. Piece velvet will also he used for broader bands, and very much, too, for making fashioned belts. collars, vests and other portions of the highly trimmed hodices, while narrow black rib- bon velvet enters largely into the composi- tion of fancy blouses, chemisettes and col- larettes of all sorts. It is rather too early to say whether or no flounces will be pa- tronized very generally ; still, most dress- makers are showing a few models flounced up to the waist, and a single flounce or ruching is very much used to trim the bot- tom edge of handsome silk or velvet skirts, and particularly to finish off the skirts of evening frocks, for which all manner of transparent fabrics, crepes, gauzes and tulles are the most fashionable. We are told by the modistes that Rus- sian red will be the fashionaLle color for early spring wear. A deep, glowing red it is, just a trifle darker than the military scarlet worn by an English officer, and so eminently becoming to blondes as well as brunettes.