A BIT OF SLANG. was the innocent cause of the slang is ty of clear enunciation and commands like an officer, things to their own amusement was shown a few minutes after that first through their company streets heard privates in front of a group of men shouting out, “Make a noise like an officer!” whereupon the entire “class” would roar “Umps!” A reporter sent an account to a New York paper, and from this grew expressions such as “Make a noise like a hoop and roil away.” ete. However, it is seldom one hears the word “arms” or “march,” the voice finding it much easier to slur the word till it may mean anything, and as the preparatory command indicates what is to be done the command following is merely a signal for the execution of what has already been specified.— Army and Navy Journal LEGAL ADVICE. The Lawyer's Duty In Giving Counsel to His Client. In the realm of advice a lawyer may choose between counseling his client how to uphold the rights secured to him by the justice of his cause or how to obtain benefits from the application of technicalities and the use of the weaknesses of the particular statute or precedents under consideration whereby he may attain advantages in- consistent with fair play between man and man, Every time a lawyer eucourages such an application of the law as, resulting in injustice, casts disrepute upon the law or its administration be is plainly promoting discord either in the present or the future, Every time a lawyer counsels cob- troversy for the establishment of a right as recognized by existing law or for the promulgation of new law beneficial to the majority of society he is exercising his true function, and the charge which he lays upon his in- dividual client and through bim upon industry and progress in the mass, if reasonable in amount, is well earned and should be cheerfully paid. When, however, a lawyer gives the other kind of advice the expense, per- haps cheerfully borne by the client who profits personally therefrom, must be finally laid upon society as a whole, which is thereby paying for its own injury and oaturally resents the charge.~Donald R. Richberg in At- lantic. Jig ways on tne Stage. 1 have known a aress coat bandea from one to another in the wings sev- eral times during a performance. It was a current idea tbat white cotton stockings assumed the appearance of silk from the front by making a beavy line of white chalk on the shin bone. A white tie was easily made from a strip of note paper, and even a shirt front could be managed from highly glazed note paper. White cotton gloves were de rigueur in place of the more expensive kid ones. A comedian, bav- mg no black stockings, once blacked nis legs. After the show he asked the stage wansger, “Do we play this piece again? “Yes; next week.” “Oh, then 1 need vot wash my legs!” —From “Ramblings of an Old Mum- mer,” by Russell Craufurd. Letter Perfect and Looked the Part. An amateur theatrical company was recently arranging for the performance .of a play which contained a rich va- riety of characters, says London ‘Sketch. Owing to this fact little nrog- ress was made with the cast, a few members of the company making a .dead set at principal positions, while minor characters were going a-begging. One rather vacuous looking youth brother artist. “In my opinion,” exclaimed the lat- ter, “young Jones must, in the inter- ests of economy, take the part of Sim- kins the Fool.” “Why economy?” demanded Mr. Jones indignantly. i “Well, you see, my dear fellow,” was the quiet reply, “you won't need any, touching up.” = The Sacrifice. “a isin couple’ mid Simpkios, married a days Sluape a courtship which had lasted Record-Herald. Doesn't Work. } “Cheerfulness is riches.” £ i «Ob, no! If you can't pay a bill, bed ing cheerful about it only makes the other man madder.”~— Press. - Dropped the Subject. “five thousaud dollars for a dog!” be exclaimed as he looked up from nis uewspaper. “Do you believe any one over pald any such price, Maria?” “I'm sure | don't know, James,” she retu without stopping her needle- work for a moment. “Does the . “Some of these well bred ani- lie about It." “] know that, Maria. But just think of it—just try to grasp the magnitude wind! Five thousand dollars for a dog! Why, bang It, Maria, that's more than I'm worth!" “] know it, James, but some are worth more than others.” She went calmly on with her sewing, while he fumed and sputtered for a moment and then dropped the subject, especinlly the weak feminine mind part of it. Cosmic Dust. A particle of dust one-bundred thou- santh of an inch in diameter is held In its place in space by the force of gravitation. but a particle smaller than this is pushed outward into space by the weight of the sun's light, be- cause as the particle becomes smaller its surface, which is subject to pres- sure, becomes greater in proportion to its weight, The sun's corona, the zodlacal light, the aurora borealis and the comet's tail are all composed of these infinitely minute particles, in some cases white hot and in others merely illuminated by the sun, which are being constantly driven away from the sun by the pres- sure of its light. In the case of the aurora borealis there is a movement of the light both away from and toward the sun. This is explained by the theory that the welght of the sun's light presses the particles ourward into space for a cer- tain distance and that then a certain pumber of them cohere together until they have sufficient weight to be at- tracted toward the sun once more by the force of gravitation. Rarely Disturbed. Two spiders who dwelt in different parts ot a church chanced to meet to- gether in the aisle one day when out for a constitutional. “How are you getting on?" said spi- der No. 1 to spider No. 2. “Oh, moderately!” was the reply. “1 don't feel very comfortable on Sun- days. 1 live in the pulpit under the cushion, and on that day the parson comes and bangs the book and sends his fists on the side, and 1 have to keep very close or else some day | think he'll hit me. He bangs with such a force that 1 know he'll squash me to a jelly.” *Oh, you come and live with me!” said his companion. “I'm never trou- bled. I'm aiways comfortable and nev- er disturbed from one year's end to the other.” “Indeed!” said the other spider. “And where do you live?” “Oh, I live in the poorbox!” was the reply.—Pearson’s Weekly. Antiquity of Fishing. Probably no branch of industry can lay claim to greater antiquity than that of fishing. Its origin would seem to be coeval with the earliest efforts of buman ingenuity. for the oldest monuments of antiquity show the fish- erman in full possession of the imple- ments of his calling, and even those tribes of savages which have learned peither to keep flocks nor to till the flelds are skilled in the fabrication of the hook, the fish spear and the net The earliest civiiization of the eastern Mediterranean was begun with fishing. Sidon, which means “fishery,” was originally a fishing village, and its en- terprising inbabitants devoted their at- tention mainly to the collection of a certain kind of mollusks, from which they prepared the famous tyrian pur ple, prized more highly for the rich ness and variety of its hues than any other dye known to the ancients. The Aurora Borealis. Whatever may be the cause of the aurora borealis, its height does not ap- pear to be limited by the atmosphere. The rays sometimes touch the earth in Scandinavia, coming between the ob- server and elevated places, but Flogel years ago obtained data showing that a large aurora seen in northern Ger- many must have had a height of sixty miles and that the rays often rise to 450 miles, their points glowing with red light. Seeking For Danger. “I'm going to lick Smith.” “Why?” “He said 1 was a horse thief and a liar.” . “Did be prove it “No.” “Then let well enough alone and don't get him any madder.”—Cleve- land Leader. imperiled Treasure. Indignant Wife—That new chauffeur bas only just brought the children and me home, and now he's taken the cook out for a spin. Husband—Great beav- % en! He doesn’t half know how to man- | age a car, and she’s the first decent cook we've bad in a year.—Brooklyn Life. Either Way. “Happiness merely consists of get- ting the things we want,” remarked the wise guy. “Or of not getting the things we Fre@ don't want,” supplemented the simple | wog—Phitadelphia Record. The most remarkable example of a book made town is Biskra, the oasis in £3 Ba : ; 1 is ST Feegaid efiz: ! seaport, of Paimpol. consequence have visit gf Paimpol in the hope of passing the summer there. Vain hope! Paimpol, with its muddy, smelly tidal river, is not quite an ideal holiday resort.— Exchange. EXPENSIVE STEAK. Ten Pounds of Beef That Sold For $48 a Pound. The highest price ever paid for beef- steak so far as is known was at Circle City, Alaska. The first beefsteak that ever reached that town sold for $48 a pound, according to the newspapers of the time. There were ten pounds of the steak, which was shipped 250 miles to Circle City. When the owner of the precious bit of meat reached the camp the miners turned out in a body to see it. It was placed on exhibition and attracted as much attention as an elephant. Every- body wanted a piece of it, and the prices offered were such as would have resulted in a mining camp quarrel if it had not been decided to raffle the steak off for the benefit of a hospital which Bishop Rowe was trying to es- tablish for the miners at Circle City. Bids were started at $5 a pound and rose briskly to $35. Finally in order to avoid complications it was decided to sell tickets at prices from 50 cents to $2.50 for the privilege of drawing for a slice. After $480 worth of tickets had been sold the drawing began, and to the relief of those in charge of the sale no trouble resulted. Sin Eaters. “Sin eaters” of the old days, like “mutes” of quite recert times, were hired performers at funerals. in con- sideration of sixpence in money. 8 bow! of beer and a crust of bread these sires, as they were called—"long, lean. ugly. lamentable rascals”—would by eating over the body take upon them. selves all the sins of the deceased and so free him from afterward walking the earth as a ghost, so that his soul might rest in peace. This custom pre- vafled all over Wales and the adjoin- ing English counties and was observed even down to 1686. The usage is sald to have arisen from a mistaken inter- pretation of Hosea iv, 8, “They eat up the sin of my people.” The more like- ly origin of this strange custom is the Levitical scapegoat. A much later rem- nant of this obtained at Amersden, Ox- fordshire, where, after every funeral, a cake and a flagon of ale were brought to the minister in the church porch.— London Standard. Y Stone Cake. In very unusual seasons the peopie of Rajputan, in India, are deprived of seeds and succulent roots of grasses. Under these very adverse conditions the barks of trees and even ground up rocks are resorted to principally to give bulk to the scanty meal and there- by to stay the pangs of hunger for a longer time. A soft stone found on the Bikanir-Marwar border of Jaipua ie largely used in that part of the coun- try to give bulk to the meager mesl. This stone is friable and easily ground into fine powder. It contains an oleagi- nous substance which has some nutri ent qualities, and the people have found that when finely ground and used in proportions of about one-fourth to three-fourths of flour it does not fm- pair digestion for a considerable time. Domestic Repartee. Mrs. Fidgett—Are the stars shining. John? Mr. Fidgett—Did you ever know the stars to do anything eise than shine? (Later) Mr. Fidgett—Is the rain still coming down, Bessie? Mrs. Fidgett—Did you ever know it to do anything else than come down, JohuY Mr. Fidgett—Yes. 1 have known it to hold up. 4 Not Much by the Day. Lady—What! Thirty-eight cents a dozen for eggs! Why. that’s more than 8 cents for one egg. Grocer—Well, mum, you must remember that one egg is a whole day's work for one hen.— Cleveland Leader. Revolver Needed. John—1"ll bring you a fork, sir. The Customer — What for? Joho — The cheese, sir. The Customer—A fork'e no good. Bring a revolver.—Loudon Sketch. A Slim Chance. Willie—Pa, why do they call our lan- the mother tongue? Pa-—8h! It's because your father never gets a chance to use it.—London Tit-Bits, Only those who do something for tha world have a right to wear its crowns. ~Wentworth F. Stewart. ir Madler’s Theory Is That It Is the Star Alcyone. THE CENTER OF GRAVITY. According to the Astronomer, the Principal Star of the Pleiades Is the Body Around Which All Created Matter Within Our Ken Revolves. It has been the dream of all the ro- mantic astronomers since the time of Copernicus to prove the existence of 2 central sun, says Lawrence Hodges, writing in the New York Lribune. By this is meant a heavenly body as much larger than the sun as the sun itself is larger than the earth, round which the sun, with all its planets, must re- volve. It has been proved that the sun and all its satellites are rushing forward through space with enormous velocity, but whether the motion was in a straight line or a circular path was not proved for some time. But even if it was proved a curved path and that there probably existed a central sun that transcended the earth's lord in size, why couldn't we see it? The only answers are that it would have to be nonluminous or else so far away that the light badn’t reach- ed us yet. But if all the stars, includ- ing our sun, were children of this big sun, just as the earth is the child of the sun and the moon of the earth, they would have had to have been flung off from the big sun with a greater velocity than that of light in order for the big sun not to be visible and still be luminous; also the big sun would have to be luminous if any of its children were, for that is the in- variable law of the heavens. So the problem simmered down to finding a star or group of stars that would take the place of the central sun. The motion of the solar system hav- ing been settled as to fact, quantity and direction, astronomers set about to find the center of gravity of the whole astral system, for there, if any- where, the central sun was to be found. An astronomer named Mad- ler thought he had found the star to satisfy the necessary conditions in the consteliation known as Taurus, or the Bull. A closer search proved the spe- cial star under examination to be lack- ing in some of the conditions, so this one was left and the search begun anew. This same astronomer persist- ed in his search with a wonderful faith in his theory and at last found a star fulfilling in the most wonderful and complete manner the necessary couditions, Every one is familiar with the beautiful little cluster known as the Pleiades. or seven stars. The teles- cope, however, shows fourteen stars clustered about the beautiful and bril- liant star Alcyone, which is the op- tical center of this group. The proper motions of all these have been determined with great exactness. They are all in the same direction and are all nearly equal to each other, and, what is still more important, the mean of their proper motions differs from that of the central star, Alcyone, by only one-thousandth of a second of arc in right ascension and by only two-thousandths of a second in decli- pation. Here, then, is found a mag- nificent group of suns either actually allied together and sweeping together through space or else composing a cluster so situated as to be affected by the same apparent motion produced by the sun's progression through the celestial regions. But an extension of the limits of re- search round Alcyone exhibits also the wonderful truth that out of 110 stars being within 15 degrees of this center there are sixty moving south—that is, in the same direction—in full accord- ance with the hypothesis that Alcyone is the center, forty-nine showing prac- tically ne motion, while only one sin- gle individual that moves at all con- trary to the computed motion. Thus was Madler's profound speculation justified. Furthermore, assuming Al- cyone as the grand center of the mil- lions of stars composing our astral sys- tem and the direction of the sun’s mo tion to be as before mentioned. Mad- ler investigated the consequent move- ments of all the stars in every quarter of the heavens. Just where the swiftest motions should be found in accordance with this assumption there they actually ex- ist, this either demonstrating the truth of the theory or else showing a well nigh impossible series of coincidences. Therefore the concluson given out by Madler is that Alycone, the principal star of the Pleiades, now occupies the center of gravity and is at present the great central sun about which the uni- verse of stars and all created matter within our ken is revolving, each en- tity in its own special path. Cordwood Counsel Fee. A Barton county farmer sought ad- vice from a Golden City attorney about suing his wife for divorce on the ground that she did not agree with him on a horse trade he bad made. The attorney advised him, and the farmer agreed to pay him for it in cordwood. A few days later the wife and one of the little children went to town with the first installment of the, wood and unloaded it in the lawyer's shed. —~Kansas City Star. The Color Scheme. “Wht do some lawyers CaITy green bags? : “In some instances they expect to bug that kind of game.”—New York "ross, : Self inspection is the best cure for: epll esteem - Wordsworth, IN BUYING SHOES. Retail shoe men in order to get their shoes when they want them, and get them as they want them, must buy six months in advance of a season. It is very hard to tell just what is wanted in styles as the styles of shoes change very quickly. I for one, made a mistake this season; purchased too many iace shoes. Lace Shoes are Not Wanted Button Shoes have the floor. I will sell at once all my new fall Ladies’ Shoes, in Lace and Blucher, AT A BIG REDUCTION, Sale begins at once. Must sell them before the season becomes advanced. Will not hold them until they become old. To the Ladies’ that wear Lace Shoes now is the time to get New Fall Shoes at a big reduction. Dorothy Dodd, John, Cross, and Clement & Ball, Ladies’ High Grade Shoes. $4.00 Shoes now $3. $3.50 Shoes now $2.75 and a big lot of $3.00 Shoes now at $2.00. Ladies, this is a chance you cannot afford to miss if you like Lace Shoes, Remember the sale starts at on®e and lasts until all the Lace Shoes are sold. Do not put it off until the best are all picked out, come at once, or you will be sorry for it later. YEAGER’S SHOE STORE, successor to Yeager & Davis. Bush Arcade Building, BELLEFONTE, PA. Lyon & Co. LYON & CO. LET US SHOW YOU Ladies’ and Misses Suits WITH INDIVIDUALITY. Our Special Sale of Ladies and Misses’ Coat Suits has brought so many buyers, that we were compelled to order for the fourth time a full line of Coat Suits. This week we have again received a large, fine assortment of the latest New York designs. Black and all the new shades—Catawba, Raisin, Smoke Grey, Green, Blue and Garnet, all made with the very best linings and well tailored, in the new long coats, mayenage cut, Plaited and Flare Skirts with the latest styles in Collars, etc. These Coat Suits would be cheap at $16 to $20, our sale price is from $12.00 to $20.00. A special line of handsome long semi-fitting black Coats, A handsome black Caracul Coat, full length, well lined and made by first-class tail- ors ; regular values $20.00, Our Price $15.00. A handsome Kersey Cloth Coat, full length, at prices that will save dollars for you. Misses’ and Children’s Coats at the special sale prices. ROYAL WORCESTER AND BON TON CORSETS. Our Corset Department is now complete with the new Winter models. All the new long models in Royal Worcester; prices from $1 to $3. Bon Ton models that will compare in style, workman- Ship avd quality with any $10 Corset; special from $3 to A fall live of the celebrated Adjusto Corsets at $3. We invite every one to inspect all our new Win- ter Stock. Every department is now filled with choice selections. Weare ts for the Butterick Patterns, ineators, The Fashions. PRON LYON & COMPANY, 47-12 Allegheny S¢., Bellefonte, Pa. Lyon & Co. a