I SPEAK aC ILL. Otkir r"P'a aaa tbatr faalta, Aa so bars ro as wall; 8t all J aaaac ta m ar aaaf Ta aar. bm rtckt f tall. IT ra MUD spaas o' w4. Take eara. and aea ai4 fml; Earth baa all ta aaca ' woa, " Ad4 sot oof k o' waal. Ba carafnl that a iasa h strlfa, Wl' maridllsc toafua aad bralai For r will Bad tmmi k U da If t kat look at hama. If ra canna tpaak a' rood, "It Okl dlnna apeak at all; for there la f rlef and woa enough Ob thle terrestrial ball. If ra should fool Ilka pic kiss flaws, Ye batter to, I wocb, And road tba Book tbat Ulla re all About tba mota aad baasa. Diana lead a read aar To cvmI P or ta atrlf a, , Or perhaps 'twill maka for ra - "ae sunny tWngoof llfs. ; Ob! dlnna add to etbara' woa. Nor mock It with yoor atrth; Cat sire ra klndlr iraapatkr Ta aafftrlDf oaaa of oartk. Irtaee of Welhlaf. JTothlof, U to agreeable to tba spirit aa notion. Tba largo portion of our enjoy ment of life cornea from transition from placs to place, more or lea rapid. No recreation is more sgrteabl then trerel, ud no punishment so cruel as imprison meat And of all sorts of locomotion, voluntary or involuntary, none is so sat isfactory end refreshing as that which cornea from the use of our feet The tody is not the onl beneficiary; the pint, always more or loss in sympathy with the flash, is the principal (ainer. Kerer can one find so perfect a remedy gainst the mental condition, commonly spoken of as the blues, as a good, vigor ous walk. Again and again, when op pressed by that melancholy to which we are liable at seasons, has the victim grasped hat and stick, and, striding out into the open air, has speedily left f the enemy far in the rear. One can run away from the "blue devils" in a few minutes at any time. The world knows all about the walks that Dickens took, for the delightful pio lores be has given us are but trans cripts of wbat he found and treasured. In forty years his daily tramps are said to have aggregated one hundred and forty thousand miles. He constructed for himself a theory that to every portion of the day given to intellectual labor should correspond an equal number of hours pent in walking. Carlyle usually took .vigorous tramp of several miles, enough to put him in a glow before he com roancad the day's labor. Macaulay found in walking his favorite recrea tbso. Buckle, the historian, walked both fbfsnoo and afternoon, and heat or . annshins or rain, made bo differ- i to him. Kant, the philosouher. ao I himself to lone walk overr ay without regard to atmospheric coa- cquauy resolute la his out-of- exerciee was Longfellow, who r omitted his daily tramp, thongh ho Slight go no further than the walls of hie garden. Gladstone at eighty-one is ae Most active all-round man in Eng Ittd. That bodily motion facilitates scats! activity is something we alt know ty experience. Bums composed all his sweetest songs at the plough. Thomp. son could not compose except in the opsB air, and Tennyson, Wordsworth, leader and Rousseau ware ail inspired M they walked. " There are thousands of puny creatures ia this world of ours who have no excuse for their inanity thousands of languid, torpid, complaining bodies, victims of dyspepsia and ennui, but with half their troubles in their brains, who, if they would walk regularly and pleasantly in stead of consulting physicians and drug gists, would aoon find themselves sound, healthy and contented men and women. Instead of tossing on uneasy beds through weary nights, they would sleep "Uke tops;" their imaginations would dear up, their aches and pains and dumps would flee away, and almost bo fore they were conscious of ths transfer nation, they, who had thought them selves invalids for years, would forget, fa ths best enjoyments of life, that any thing had erer been the matter with them. There are few people who can not, by proper attention to the best of physi cal exercises, add from tea to twenty five years to the average vita! span. Tho truth is that most persona die uncon scious suicides, owing to the disregard of nature's simplest requirements; not strictly criminal, but nevertheless guilty. HEALTH HINTS'. A remedy for soft corns : Bind on a piece of cotton wool soaked in castor oil. Any one subject to sore throat of any kind will find relief and a preventive in the daily use of salt and water as a 'gargle. Much is said pro and con as to the ef fect of salt water on the head. When properly applied salt water is not ouly injurious but is an excellent tonio. It allowed to remain in a damp mass, how ever, it will cause the hair to fall out Aa excellent gargle is mads of one tables poonful of cayenne pepper, a half cup of boiling vinegar and three tea epoonfuls of salt. Mix well together, and when settled stratni Gargle tho throat every half hour, or as often as re lief is needed. Dr. Mapother has often found a diet ary largely composed of oatmeal and brown bread greatly promotes the growth of the hair, especially when the baldness was preceded by constipation and sluggish capillary circulation. Philadelphia Press. Dr. Keeley says of the cigarette habit i It brings confusion to the brain and heart and-a train of ills from which it is hard to recover, even though you stop the habit I will not treat a man who persists in using tho cigarette. It re sults in insanity and death. Benefit may bo doiived from an ocean climate iu jorus suffering from ner vous exhaustion and overwork, in im paired convtilesenue from an acute dis ao, and in (Uncases of bones and joints. To these may bo added the early stages of hereditary phthisis, especially in a young person. The Sanitarium. A Starr of Leva 1st Half. tn front of a diary row of tenement aonaee on Proideot street, betwren Col tunbia aad Taa Brunt streets, Brooklyn, nearly half a buadred Italians men, rones, and dirty little children stood vocueroueiy welcoming and praising a tall, Mender young man, who stood laugh ing and bowing to the crowd of his countryfolk, but at the same time keen ing careful hold of the young woman at bis side. The girl had evidently been in this country only a very short time, for her Holiday drees was almost an exact copy of that of the Neapolitan flower girl on a feast day. The right side of her face is beautiful ia outline and charming In color, but when she turned there could be eeen extending from her temple to her Chin a broad scar, whose edges, draws together, made a line pf hideous wrinkles. Bo near to the eye ran the scar that tho lower lid was drawn down, giving an ugly leering expression In awful contrast to the beauty of the other cheek. The story of the couple was this. They bad loved and wanted to marry, but tho girl's father, a fishermaa near Naples, had promised her to Francisco, a richer man. At last in despair she begged her lover to disfigure her face. lie refused. The next night, the night before her pro posed marriage Oiuseppine pleaded again for her own disfigurement She hated her own beauty because it stood between herself and her own happiness. At but, in a wild fit of desperation, Au gustine seised the knife, and with one broad sweep of the blade gashed the lovely face from temple to chin. As they suspected, Francisco refused to marry a girl so disfigured, but Augus tine was tried, and aeutenoed to three years in prison, and his marriage seemed as far off as before. All the time he was in prison, Oiuaeppine worked and saved, and when the three years had expired she met her lover at the prison gate, and, putting all her little savings in his hands, bade him go to America and earn enough to seud for her. He refused, unless she married him before he left Naples, and as they walked toward the city they met a wandering padre, who made them man and wife. After one short twenty-four hours of married life, Augustine Mt Naples on a coasting vernel, and finally made his way to this country, which he reached about six mouths ago. Hi countrymen heard his story and found him work, and mean while he saved every cent, until at last he had enough to send for his young wife. Her father refused to let her leave, and locked her in their little cot tage, but the girl who would sacrifice ber beauty for her love, laughed at the old jailer, and one night stole out and away to friends, who helped her to Bad the way to this country. Nsw York Sunday Advertiser. Doa't Lot Trifles Aaaae- Taa. What a blessed thing it is that we can forget! To-day's troubles look large, but a week hence they will be forgotten and buried out of sight 8ays one writer: "If you would keep a book and daily put down the tilings that worry you, and see what becomes of them, it would bo a benefit to you. Tou allow a thing to an noy you, just as you allow a fly to settle on you and plague you ; and you loss your temper (or rather get it); for when men are surcharged with temper they are said to have lost it; and you justify your eel tos for being throws off your balance by causes which you do not trace out But if you could see what it was that threw you off your balance before break fast, and put it down in a little book, and follow it up, and follow it out, and as certain what becomes of it, you would ses what a fool you were in the matter. " The art of forgetting is a blessed art, but the art of overlooking is quite as impor tant And if we should take time to write down the origin, progress, and out come of a few of our troubles, it would make us so ashamed of the fuss we make over thera, that we should be glad to drop such things and bury them at once in eternal forgetfulness. Life is too short to be worn out in petty worries, frettings, hatreds, and vexations. A Palate Salutatory. The editor of a new weekly paper says byway of salutatory: "We would as soon expect to win a fortune by betting against a pat hand as to suppose that we shall please ever body. No doubt in tho course of human events we shall realise those pleasant little editorial episodes in which indignant readers find no other soothing syrup for their wounded feel ings than by attempting to 'put a head ou the editor,' paint a mournful expres sion over his eye; or, without consulting him as to whether he wants to be an an gel and with the angels stand, endeavor to send him to that bourns (on a dead-head ticket) from whence no editor returns. We stand six feet in our stockings in tho winter time five feet eleven inches and a half, without socks, In the summer sea son. Our principal amusement, when a boy, was to throw one hundred pound anvils over our head, hold a barrel of flour at arm's length, and practice other muscular developments. Aided by our early education ia tho manly art, we shall endeavor to hoe our own row, pad dle our own canoe, and hold a full baud in the editorial game of 'bluff,"' Think for Tearself. Do your own thinking. Yes, tbat is the idea. Think for yourself. It is well to listen to the expressed thoughts of others, and it is aa agreeable pastime to give ex- j pression to your thoughts; but when ' alone weigh wbat you have said. It is well to do this, for it will assist in curing you of false notions, and in eradicating unprofitable ideas, and in time, make you better men and women. What you thus gain from surroundings you will ' unwittingly transmit to the rising gener ation, and the result will be that you will 1 do your share in the glorious work of elevating the human family. Do your own thinking. j I What you lend is lost; when you ask for it back, you may find a friend made I an enemy by your kindness. If you be gin to press him further, you have the choice of two things either to loeo your loan or liaa your f.-lnd. HKLIOIOtS 1STELLIOKNCK. The Methodist Episcopal Church bap tised 10,000 persons in India during 1891. The Methodist Episcopal Church hat over 11,000 ministers, 14,000 local preach ers, 100,000 official members and 800,000 Sunday school officers and teachers. The bell that will ring the hours from the steeple of the college church at Notre Dame, Ind, is said to be ths largevt ou the Continent Eight men can easily stand erect within it, and its tones can be distinctly heard a distance of twelve miles. Ths first church built in this country for colored Methodists was at the cornel of Sixth and Lombard streets, Philadel phia, and was occupied in 1794. Ths site is still used by the congregation, which a couple of yeart ago erected a church wortli 50,000. In view of the comparative la- of city mission work in New York above Four teenth street, some persons who hare long been Interested in that work are planning to secure a hall for preaching and tract distribution on Broadway eomewhvre between Twenty-third and Thirty-fourth streets. The eclealutical returns of the Roman Catholic diocese of Colombo, Ct-ylon, foi 1891, show marked increase in every par ticular as compared with those for 1890. The number of confirmations has in creased from 2,865 to 6,639; the baptisms of heretics from 139 to 189, and of infi dels from 1,011 to 1,117. Count Campello, a di"'fjguliied Ro man Catholic, who joined the Methodist Episcopal Church in Rome, but soon af ter placed his work under the direction of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Eng land, is doing fine work in Italy. He lias adopted some of the methods of the Salvation Army. A college and training school lion been opened iu Rome, and n number of congregations nnd churches have been formed. 27i American Hebrew, commenting upon the festival of Purim, with its gay eties and festivities, its wealth of histori cal reminiscences, and its inspiration to courage, devotion and fidelity, calls at tention to the great temptatiou to dwell too exclusively on the festal character of the time; while its moral and relig ious phase is overlooked or not suffi ciently emphasized. Without wishing to detract from the merriment of the sea son, it urges that the highest purpose and possibilities of the festival should not be lost sight of. The census of all India shows a popu lation of 287,200,000. Of these 207,65V 407 are Hindus, 57,365,204 Mussulmans, 2,284,191 Christians, 1,416,109 Jains, 1,907,830 Sikhs, 7.101,057 Buddhists, 89, 887 Parsees, 17,180 Jews, 0,402,083 forest tribes (auimal worshipers), 289 Atheists, Agnostics, etc. Among the Hindus are included 3,401 Brahmas and 88,948 Ar- yas. The Brahmas are chiefly in Bengal, the Arras in the northwest and the Pun jab. The latter return themselves as Vedic or Aryans by religion, sometimes as Hindu Aryans, while even a few Sikhsdescribe their sect as Aryan. New York Sun. PROGRESS OF SCIENCE. "Railroads change climates. " Aluminium is ths best conductor of electricity. The average mortality of unmarried nen between the ages of twenty and twenty-five is 1,174 in every 100,000, while that of married men is only 597. Blood travels from the heart through the arteries ordinarily at the rate of about twelve inches per second ; its speed through the capillaries is at the rate of three one-hundredtlis of an inch per sec ond. A new method of making steel, known as the "direct process," has been adopted by the Homestead Steel Works of Car negie, Phipps & Co., and it is expected to give the company a "practical monoply of the steel trade of the future. " The custom of placing green boughs of the eucalyptus or blue gum tree in sick rooms is extending in Australia. It is stated that the volatile perfume has a favorable effect on consumptive patients and is also able to promote sleep. Aristotle attempted to weigh air br weighing a bag when empty and again after it had been inflated. The result of this experiment caused him to announce tbat air had no weight. Without air wo could see the stars as plain during the day as we can at night Dr. Schliemanu found bits of glass ia his excavations at Mycenee, though Homer does not mention it as a substance known in his time. The most eminent Egyptologists place the date of the first use of glass at a period too remote to be given in years. Pittsburg Dispatch. When the mosque of St. Sophia, in Constantinople, was built, more than 1,000 years ago, the stone and brick were laid in mortar and mixed with a solution of musk, and the building it is said has been infected with the odor ever since. Probably age has imparted a musty odor, from which the musk story was fabri cated. CRAMS OF COLD. Never let your curiosity get the better of your discretion. He who would exert influence must exercise judgment Only the quickening of conscience coo hasten repentance. We should all be perfect if we were Boither men nor women, As long as the heart preserves desire, the mind preserves illusion, Thoughts are blossoms of the mind and deeds are the fruits of derive. Let any one be idle long enough, and be will break out in some folly. JEsop says: He loses character who puts himself on a level with the unde serving. The only way you can bring a child up is the way you're going yourse'f. Womankind. Lover, daughter, sister, wife, mother, grandmother in those six words lias what the human heart contains of the sweetest, the uobt ecstatic, the mobt sacred, the purest and the most ineffable. Massais. l - i "1 T1 T .sT Lydia E. PinkhanVs Vegetable Compound It m Harmless, Posltlva Cur for the worst form of Female Complaint, all Ovarian troubles, Inflimmstion and Ulcera tion, Falling and Displacements, also Spinal Weakness and !ocorrho?a. It will dissolve and tl tumors from li e uterus i an early stiff o( development, and checks the tendrncy to cancerous humors. It removes faintnun, f atultncy, wralcntts of the stomach, curt Bloating, Headache, Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleep lessness, Dprfirn and Indigestion, also that fee lire of Rearing down, causing pain, weight, and backache. It acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female system tinder all circumstances. For Kidney Complaints of either ses this Compound tt unsurpassed. Correspondence freely answered. Address in confidence, LYDIA K. flNKHAM MED.CO,Lui, HEAR WHAT THEY They have used WE PUBLISH BELOW A TESTIMONIAL FROM A FEW OF I ML LIN I LKrmbllNCJi FARMERS OF OUR COUNTY, TO WHOM WE SOLD -DEERING BINDERS- LAST YEAR. o AVe the undersigned, farmers in fhltimh? fYmnfv ooV. v.. ,;., lv..i, r w KITCHEN in 1891. a Deer Inn Junior Steel Binder, with great pleasure recommend it to all farmers who may contemplate purchasing a Binder. . y3 have subjected our Binder to every test, and do not hesitate in pronouncing the Deer ing Binder far superior to any other machine we have ever seen. For riimnlicitv. worknianshio and material it is nn en maestri Ta Uvlit uhty and immense capacity are jwiuig v uuiux ictwi iJiiiutT itxtus tuts wuriu. 1 .1 -V -v-v a aj . "NVe wish the Deering Binder unbounded success. J. J. Parr, Mifflinville, Pa. ' Amorj Dreiblebis, Bloomsburg, Pa. Isaiah Kline, Orangeville, Pa. David Mouser, Grovania, Pa. Andrew Beagle, Buckhorn, Pa. H. R. Ash, Stillwater, Pa. H. C. Barton, Alraedix, Pa. George W. Remley, Light Street, Pa ll. C. Seesholtz, " " With hundreds of such testimonials coming in from all quarters of the globe, is it a won der that in 1891 Wm. Deering & Co. g3LB 137,66 If you want a Binder this The Machine is The Price is Right. The '1 erms are Right. D, W. KITCHEN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. rjrpq p-i BELIABLE CLOTHING Ji MT HOUSE Comes to the front with the LARGEST ASSORTMENT AND MAKING AND FITTING .-.OF THE.-. a. Best, the Newest and JJIost Stylish, Lowest in Price ; and to prove Satisfaction is our Endeavor The best value for Money is to buy your Clothing, Hats, Shirts, Neckwear, Trunks and Valises of GI- MAIER, ) - Corner! of Main and Centre Streets, BLOOMSBURG, PA. 4 Largest Clothing and Hat House in Columbia and Montour Counties J. R. Smith &Co. LIMITED. MILTON, Pa., DEALERS I PIANOS, hf the following well-known makers : Chlckcrlns:, Knabe, Weber, Hallct & Davis. Can also furnish any of the cheaper makes at manufact urers' prices. Do not buy a piano before getting our prices. Ctlcgue and Price Lists On application. DEERING BINDERS unouestumable and we feel confident in saying that to-day the year, don't buy until you have Rieht. THOMAS GORREY ill Plans and Estimates on all kinds of buildings. Repairing and carpenter work promptly attended to. r:ihrin Euildsr's SHu::':::. Inside Hardwood finishes a specialty. Persons of limited means who desire to build can pay part and secure balance by mortgage PATENTS. rsTohts and Trade Mark pntulnpd. rrt .i l'nt'nt business conducted for MuPsKaik ot'K fiFnm t opposite TnR r. s KNT OKKlCK. We have no nub-dKcn, ,il biiKlniw dlrpot, hi'nceeao trnhmtot nt,.i '." . niw In k time and at, Lwts Cost than thn. . lnnu from Waohlnirton. rc" Krnd inralct. drawing or photo, with dowrin tlon. We advlM If pntenfahlf or not fr, !.. cbarico. our fi-e not due till patent In Vi ur. A l-ook. "How to obtain rulont," witli rvf t" enws to actuiil cll-ni in your state, county ar town, seat tree. Addnss C. A. NOW CO.. Wsshlnifton, ll. (! (Opposite V. 8. Patent unite.) SAY: and know their WORTH. Wm. Furguson, Bloomsburg, Pa. J. H. Townsend, Lightstreet, Pa. Frank P. Davis. Canby, Pa. W. P. Eyerly, Buckhorn, Pa. A. L. Kline, Orangeville, Pa. Francis Rote, Turnbach, Pa. W. Johnson, Jersey town, Pa. J. G Girton, Greenwood, Pa James Johnson, Eyers Grove, Pa. seen the Famous Deering