'(i v f ' v .7 Ctr cforcnt Hrpubliran is rrnusiir.D tvrBi wr.Tvmvt.r, m J. .13. WBNK. ! , RATES UP ADVERTISING, One Sqnnre, one inrh, one insertion. One Sijnnrp, one inch, one month . , . One (Square, one inch, three month. One Kunre, one inch, one year Two Squares, one year Quarter Column, ono year , 1 CO , 3 00 . c ng . 10 go , irc . SO 00 , Ofllte In SraenrbangU-A Coi'i Building, 'v I'trtf street?, r i- vI'QNE3TA, PA. Halt uoiurnn, ono your ceoo One Column, one year. ...100 00 r ii i TJwjJ i;;r,o5.4 rcii Ignl notices nt e5tal)Iinhed rates. MnrriaRO and ttentli notiroa jfrntia. All bills for yearly advertisements collector! quarterly. Temporary ndvertiaomenU most be pnid in advance. Job work, caeh an delivery. k divert for shorter period Hod from all parta of ttie l lolttk. n (Jiiidiij-moui VOL, IV, NO. 51. $1.50 PER ANNUM. 'J ;, '.''JT,.,'l.t:f.f..' ii . ..' . i . . , . y. vx; y i y. j . .. . r . ' r , 9 f Titlor.'a Colonqa. rAolt IINGFEIXOW'S "MtCHAKl, ANOELO." - riirtiiijf with friends ia-tenipornry death, a nil death in. We aec Ho more their faces, Nor hear their voices, nvo in memory; Hut ttiimjiifes of love pivo us assurance That we are not fm-tfotien. Who ahnll aay That from tho world of n;iirits comoa no jrree'.inj, No me wifre of remembrance? It may be Tho thou;,'hU that vinit ua; wo know not whence, Kurtden as inapirntion, nri the whispers Of disembodied spirits, speaking to us As fricndi, who wait out.-mle n prison wall, Through the barrod windows ppoak to those within. As tjnit t as the lake thnt lies beneath me, As quiet ns tho trampiil sky above mo, As quiet hs a heart that beats no more, This convent aeems. Al ove, below, all peace! Bileneo nnd solitude, tho noul's best friends, Are with me here, nnd the tumultuous world Waken no more uoiso than the remotest planet. Oh, gentle spj.-it nn'.o the third circle Of heaven nmonn the blessed souls nscended, mho, livlnif in the faith and dyin for it, JIave gono to their reward, I do not Rig For theo as beinjj dead, but for myself That I am still alive. Turn those dear eyes, . unco so bcniK'nant to mo, upon mine, That open to their tears such uncontrolled ' And such continual issue. Still awhile t Have patience, I will came to theo at last. A few more foiiics in and out these doors. A few more chiming of these convent bells, A few more prayers, a few more ait'hs and tears, And tho long agony of this life will end, And I shall be with theo. If I am wanting To thy well-being, as thou art to mine, . Have patience; 1 will come to thee nt last . Yo minds that loitor iu these cloister gardens, ir wanderer above tho city walls, Bear Art hjm this message, that I ever Or speak br think of him, or woep for him. By unseen hands upliftod in the light Of sunset, yonder (solitary cloud Floats with ita white apparel blown abroad, And wafted np to heaven. It fades away And mclta into tho nir. Ah, would that I Could thus be wafted unto thee, Francesco, A cloud of white, au incorporeal spirit 1 Atlantic Monthly. THE I'ROFESSOirS STORY, Taking tea tho other evening with an old acquaintance, now professor in ' a New, England college, the conversa tion recalled somo of the friends of our younger days, and he surprised mo with this remark : "A woman's sym pathies lie nearer her heart than "her love, unless her love is born of them." Ihit ho surprised me more by tho story ho told to provo it. I guess it was seven years, ho said, that our chair of astronomy remained vacant. You know of Dr. Mcrdon. It was justly that tho world finally gave him fame. Well, alter his death the trustees were at a loss to fill his place. A weak man would have been insufferable there. Do you remember his family? Charming wife and daughter. They spent several years abroad, after his death, and when they returned, not withstanding that the widow still wore mourning, tho number of our little social event was doubled. The daughter had a string of young mil lionaires after Iter constantly. Fe male society, perhaps you know, wasn't unlimited, ami it was with a foundation of truth that tho fellows grimly joked about calling on the girls their fathers had courted before them. Charlotte Merdon was as fas cinating a girl as her mother had been, so said the old folks, and it was to her that young Professor Lutz quoted from Horace, " Oh daughter, more beautiful than thy beautiful mother !" when he brought down on himself the ridicule of the mountain-day party. Yes, she could have had her pick from a dozen very rich boys, and 1 think lie would have taken it, too, if she hadn't dis covered that her mother was trying to influence her in their favor. At tho senior party, that year, Char lotte held her court, as she did every where. She was surrounded, I re member, by the rich fellows of Charlie Elliott's set. Elliott was happy that night. Charlotte had been unusually gracious, and her mother had made her favor clearer than ever. Over near the door sat the last man to bo expected at a president's party, Urent Seymour. He was senior the year before, and taking post-graduate study at tho observatory Merdon had built shortly before his death, a town boy, who supported his mother and worked his way through collego. not often seen in society, and his ill-litting clothes and embarrassed manner at tested it. Elliott, looking about the room for a subject for his next brilliant remark to Miss Merdon, caught sight of him. ." E1," said he, turning to liis chum, "I tell you what will bo great sport. l?ring Seymour up and formally pre sent him to Miss Merdon. It will con fuse him. lie won't know what to do and there'll be a deuce of a scene." . The (hum complied and in a moment had the r din t; 'it Seymour by tho arm. Thu scene, that followed must have been all that Elliott d -sired. For a moment the poor student stood be fore the belle. 11 was not unlike the tableau of the beggar and the prin cess. Her easy attitmle contrasted strangely with his painful awkward ness. Elliott had not miscalculated. The effect was immediate. All eyes wercturned toward the couple and a smile went around. Charh tto' Merdon Raw it, and her checks llained. She had divined the heart'eis joke. To the surprise of those about her she beggel Sevmour ta be B -ated insisted that ho should be seated. Thei. auo tried to uraw him into conversation. Eut it was im possible. Embarrassment seemed to have driven his wits away. Only one lemark ho ventured, (ilancing nt a portrait on the wall he stammered out, "That's a good picture of the president." The portrait was one taken thirty years before and was any thing but a good likeness of the presi dent as he then appeared. The tin fortunate remark caused another smile. Elliott was delighted. His joke was a splendid success. Poor Seymour twisted about in hi chair and hung his head. His diseomliture was complete. Miss Merdon took a deliberate look at the picture,, and did not smile. " Yes," she said, " it is called a very good likeness of him just after graduation. Have you seen the presi dent's (lowers, Mr. Seymour? Let me show thein to you." Hising, and excusing herself, she led the young man into the greenhouse, ad joining the parlor. " Tho deuce!" said Elliott. " I didn't look for anything like that." Seymour, rescued in this way from its trying ordeal, hardly knew what to say Or do. Ho felt as if a millstone had been taken from his neck. The pain and tho manner of relief worked strangely on his sensitive nature. He felt that ho was in great debt to his companion. Ho wanted to kiss the hem of her garment. He wanted to cry. He knew he was feeling and act ing tike a tool. He expected that he should make a greater fool of himself than In the parlor. But some way he didn't care. Ho had lost all fear of the beautiful girl. Her act of mercy had Vr"f?,'t er nearer than years of acquaintance could. He talked rapidly of the flowers, for he knew of them, and Charlotte listened listened wondering why she cared to listen, littlo thinking that her sym pathy had brought tho awkward stu dent nearer than he Would have been had she known him half her lifetime and never seen him in pain. So when he pointed out to her the observatory where ho worked, the queerly-shaped building that shewed its dark outlines in tho moonlight, just over the campus on the hill, she wondered what it was that prompted her to beg him to take her there, to exact a promise from him that, on tho very next evening, he would conduct her through the build ing that had been built aty-r her father's orders. She persuaded herself that it was a desire to see somo manu scripts of her father's which Seymour told her had been left there. Perhaps it was. Notwithstanding her mother's mild remonstrance, the next evening found her with Brent Seymour in the telescope-room of the observatory. The roof had been let down and she was watching tho stars. "I wonder if father often studied them from this room," she said. " Whenever the sky was clear," " I wonder if he can see them now." "No; I think that through some one of t hem he is looking at its." t ar , from science and astronomy. far, very far, from his scholarly stand point, the man's childish reply had taken him, but it had carried him nearer tho heart of tho girl than ho dreamed. Mrs. Merdon' disapproval of her daughter's visit to the observatory with Seymour broadened into anger as his rails were repeated, and repeated often. An intimacy grew between the young people that, even to themselves, they did not undertake to explain. The girl's friendship had opened a new world to the hardworked student. Had ho known more of life, he would have known that he was falling in love. Over the other a secret was stealing as steadily as comes over us the morning. A month had passed since tho senior party. The two sat again in the telescope-room. She seemed to be studying the stars. " And do you remember," she was asking, "that, that evening, you thought through some one of them father was looking at us?" "Yes." "Do you suppose he can see us now?" "Yes" (in a surprised way). "Then" (hesitatingly) "do you think he is glad is glad to see us to gether ?" "Won't you" (the voice was very husky) " won't you answer forme?" "Yes," she said, in a voice clear as a harp-chord, " I know ho is." Seymour wondered if his senses were giving way. He hardly knew what followed. He meant to ask he tried to ask if she didn't think her father, would bo glad to see them al ways together. Somehow that seemed long and heavy, and he couldn't make the words come. He had a choking sensation iu his throat, and his eyes were blinded with tears. He felt just as ho had in the greenhouse the night of the senior party, lie wanted to kiss the hem of her garment, lit felt tha ho was In debt to hery afjd de.'per in debt every moment, .ire knew he was ranking a' fool of him self, but he didn't .-care He was the happiest fool that moment in God's happy world. " You are just ai much mine," she said, nt last, her hands resting upon his held, which some way or other had found a plane in her lap, "you are just as much mine, as if I had not done all the wooing myself." The Merdon mansion had never seen such a storm at followed Charlotte's avowal of her betrothal. Her mother insisted that she would never consent, never in the world, and the girl who had always honored her wishes above everything else was in distress. " But you did not marry a rich man yourself, mother; why should you want me to?" she urged. " I married a man who was great whom everybody knew; why, if you were to marry the man, whoever he is, who will 1111 his chair, I should be happy forever, but this fellow," and her indignation almost overpowering her she left the room. It was late in tiie afternoon when Charlotte stole upstairs. Passing her mother's room she saw that the door was partly open. She knew what it meant. Women, even among them selves, make their reconciliations gradually. She pushed the door wide open, as her mother had intended she should, and went in. The lady sat by her writing - table; her hea 1 rested on her hand, and she was evidently sleeping. A l.ttle pile of letters lay before her, a picture beside them. Tears Lad dropped upon the letters and the picture showed the stains "of tears. Charlotte looked at tho picture rlose'y. Tho face was familiar. Surely he had seen it be fore. But where? She could not place it among lier acquaintances. Whose faco was it ? She started. A broken, uncertain voice seemed to say, " That's a good picture of the presi dent. Her lover's; awkward remark at the party, the portrait on tho wall, tho picture that her mother cried over. It -was all clear, very clear, and she didn't care to read the open letter by uie picture. "My poor, deai mother," she thought, as, without awakening her. she glided to her own room, carrying me greatest secret or lier lifetime, save one. It was after midnight when Mrs. Merdon awoke. She had hoped her daughter would come in. She wanted A . 111. A- 1 i. .1 wi ie:i uer mat no was no longer an gry. Siie had lx-n carried back over parts of her own life and she wanted to tell Charlotte that after all she must follow tho voice of her heart, Unit her own experience had taught her so. She was almost ready to confess to her that although she had married a man who was great, whom everybody knew, she no, no, no, she could "not tell lier daughter that she could not tell her that. Very slowly she put away the letters and the picture, saying, Yes, I loved him then, and, God forgive me, I have loved him ever sine)." . At noon the next day a Hervant brought a note to the president's stuly: "Charlotte E. Merdon requests the pleasure of a few moments. private conversation." " I wonder what Addie Mather's daughter wants of me?" thought the old bachelor as ho passed down into the reception-room. ' How the girl brings her to mind !" In a dignilied way that even sur prised herself, Charlotte began. "I understand that the trustees have given you appointing power regarding the professorship which father's death ma le vacant." "Ye.-." "Have you made any provisions yet?" "No." "I have a candidate to present." "What you! A candidate! Who is it ?" "Brent Seymour." Charlotte's intimacy with Seymour was not unknown to the president. but this astounded him. "It is impossible," he said; "I do not see how vou can ask it, how you can think of it." "Would you not do much to bring to you one you loved?" she asked, boldly. A peculiar light camo into the gray eyes behind the steel-bowed spectacles. " l es." "How nrich?" " Anything." "AVould you give a professorship?" Tho peculiar light increased. It was almost a blaze. " Yes." "Will you give me this professorship if I bring to you one you love?" Tho gray eyes were now fairly allame. She was understood lie sprang to his feet. Age seemed to fall from him like a scale. "Girl, what do you mean?" he shouted. " That she loved you all the time." There was a baseball match on the collego grounds, but it was not tho topic of the afternoon. A report that Brent Seymour had been appointed to the chair of astronomy had sent half the college to bis little house to congratulate him. They could not be gin to get inside, so ho stood out in the yard and shook hands with them one by one. )n the' early evening" a Passing at u- dent saw an unusual visitor go-up the path to the, Merdon mansion. It 'v ;is the gray-haired president. Mrs. Mer don opened the door herself, and tho student couldn't help seeing the, look of . astonishment on her face, and that she tottered as she stepped back into the hall; couldn't help hearing, intones that he will never forget, two ex clamations, "Addie!" "Prank!" and the door closed. When Seymour and Charlotte came in from their evening walk they heard voices in the sitting-room, aid Sey mour was speechless with astonish ment as he recognized the president's voice saying: " 1 am glad that you re jected me once, for my joy is made wonderful by years of darkness. ' Catching her lover's hand Charlotte stepped with him into the room. "Mother," she said, " if you haven't got too much happiness already" looking at the venerable man who did not release the hand he was holding "remember you promisiil to be happy forever if I should marry the man who will (ill my father's chair. Let me present him." Myliost ceased. His story was evi dently done, and as he drew l a'kfrom the table, he said : " The only thing fictitious about it is tho name' I have given tho poor student." "But," 1 asked, "di.l Charlotte ever tell her mother of the visit she made to her chamber when she was asleep at her writing-desk?" " You may ask her," ho said, smil ing. "Site sits at the head of the table." Absorbed in the story, I bad not no ticed that my hostess was concealing her blushes behind the tea-urn. Springfield Republican. SCIENTIFIC ASD INDUSTRIAL. India rubber is now adulterated with tinely-pulverized cork the cork, of course, being that for which no other use can be lound. A French scientist says that bodies can be kept incorrupted for an indefL nite period oy .ueing placed in glass colhns, with the air pumped out and replaced with antiseptic gas. The decrease in the rent of farming land in Scotland averages ten per cent, llus is partly owing to poor crops for a series or years, and partly to the amount of capital invested by Scotch iarmers in America. A party of Italian scientists just re turned from an expedition to the South Pacilic have proved to their own satisfaction that a race of giants once existed in Patagonia. In wan dering over Terra del Euego they found human bones of marvelous large size. A spot which appeared in the sun's southern hemisphere, on April 13, oi last year, was measured by Rev. ! Hewlett and found to have a superfi cial area of not less than 2,050,000,000 square miles. Even this was sur passed by one seen in November, which a correspondent of the London Evho reported as extending over a space of ..joo.oio.uuu square miles. lhe removal of the electric lamps which ngnt tne ioreign settlement at Shanghai has been ordered by the Chi nese governor of the district, who says he has heard of tho terrible accidents which have been caused by electricity, and he cannot allow his people to be exposed to the frightful risk of hav ing hundreds of thousands of houses destroyed, millions of persons killed, or the walls of the city blown down. by any irregularity in the working of tne eiectric machine. According to foreign journals a Swiss engineer, named Eodor, at present employed on a railway in Finland, has lately perfected a discovery which, if all that is said of it be true, will prove an immense boon to railway companies. The invention consists of an indicator, of easy application to all existing wagons and locomotives, whereby their speed, the number of stoppages they make, tne miration ot the stoppages, and the times at which they are made, are exactly and automatically regis tered. Tho apparatus has been tried and its efficiency proved on a railway in Finland, and on a part of tho line between Moscow and St. Petersburg. Olive Oil. A correspondent of the Philadelphia BulU'tin, traveling abroad, says;: I was much interested in the'fratonia, the place where tho olive oil is made, and had the opportunity to watch the whole process. Signor Matteini has just erected a very lino new building for the purpose, and has introduced machinery, an innovation most dis pleasing to the unprogre:sive conta ilini mind he would prefer the slow primitive method, though it consumed more than twice or thrice the time and was infinitely more laborious We saw the great bags of olives emptied between two largo grindstones, which crushed them thoroughly; they are then put into sof t wicker" baskets and placed under heavy presses; from these the pure oil runs into marble vats in another room, is left to settle for a short time, and is then bottled. To us who are used to seeing one flask of olive oil at a time it was quite over powering to behold hundred of gal lons produced so quickly. FASHION NOTES. Cheviots will be worn again. New ribbons are in Ottoman reps. Ottoman sateens come in large flat reps. ' Corsage bouquets- grow larger and larger. Ball dresses are again trimmed with flutters. . . There is a return to demi trains for dinner toilets. Pretty fans are made of soft feathers in every color. Brocaded velveteen appears spring novelties. Large cravats or lace bows longer fashionable. among are no Silver dog collars are worn outside the collar of the dress. The newest bonnets are very small, but have a pointed brim, extending over the forehead, and long ears with square corners. Box plait skirts are made so wide that they look like panels, especially when trimmed with cord fourages or buttons aud bows. Dressy slippers of black satin, to bo worn with black silk stockings, have handsome buckles of cut jet for orna ments below the instep. Novelties4in dress buttons are in odd designs, in carved wood, in jet, bronze, silver, or dead steel, representing gro tesque heads of animals. Padding, wadding and corsets are avoided by fashionable girls, as it is the style now to have the figure look as natural and supple as possible. The newest wraps are padded on the shoulders, or rather on the upper part of the sleeve. This is done to give the wearer the appearance of greater height. Crocheted slippers in fancy wools for the bedroom are wrought with long loops inside, which servo as a lining. making them much warmer and fit ting closer to the feet. lied cashmere pelisses for little girls are plaited from the neck down, tied at the waist with a belt ribbon, and have a pelerine cape so long that it nearly conceals the garment under it. Evening dresses are frequently made of light-colored velvets, in the uncer tain shades called icsthetic. such as pale crushed strawberry red, flauie blue, Nile green, shrimp pink and pale blue, cream and ficelle, with elaborate trimmings of laco and satin ribbon. Imitation diamonds are now so per fect that the real ones are at a dis count; no one of wealth is suspected of wearing any but the real stones, and many a wealthy woman takes ad vantage of this notion and wears the mock jewels without fear of detection or of theft. HEALTH HINTS. An orange eaten before breakfast cures the craving for liquor and im proves a disordered stomach. For a scald or burn, apply imme diately pulverized charcoal and oil; lamp oil will do, but linseed is better. It is stated by a medical writer that carbolic acid diluted with warm water, and poured into the ear, is a sovereignacure for earache. Dr. Denker, of St. Petersburg, treats diphtheria by first giving the patient a laxative, and when its operation has ceased he gives cold drinks acidulated with hydrochloric acid, and then a gargle of lime water and hot milk in equal parts every two hours. His method ha been very successful. A physician who manages a home for the cure of the opium habit says that in every case excepting ono that has come under his notice, the habit has been acquired by using the drug ior some painiui auniem, usually by prescription of physician. A large number of physicians have come under his care for tho euro of this habit, and ono remarkable case of a physician who acquired the use of opium for the purpose of discovering some antidote. Failing in this, ho brought up at the cure. Evidently morphia is a danger ous drug to experiment with and should not be prescribed when anything else will servo in its stead. Dr. Footi's Htalih Monthly. Bird Architects. Doves, in the construction of their nests, display a great apparent care lessness or want of skill. The coarse sticks that compose their nests are so loosely thrown together that one would hardly believe they could hold the eggs. This is evidently a provision of nature to secure the young from vermin, like the practice of woodpeckers of laving their eggs on the bare wood. A similar imperfection of structure marks tho nests of some of the larger birds. But why should certain species be endowed with this conservative instinct, while in others i, is entirely wanting? By careful observation we find a reason for it. The woodpeckers lay their eggs on the bare wood that vermin may not Hud a harbor in the material of a nest; but wlu n a wren or a chickadee takes possession of oiieof these vacated hol lows it fills it with materials that are fitted to harbor swarms of vermin, but each of t best? birds feeds on the mi nutest crawling in.a'cts, and with its microscopic vision can easily destroy all that enter its abode. Where There's a Will There's a Way. Thongh troubles perplex yon, Dishearten and vex you, Retarding your progress in sorxib array To shrink with torror Is surely an error, For where there's a will there's a way. The tak may be teasing, The duty nnplcasinR, But ho who confronts it will soon win the day; Half the battle is over When once we discover That where there's a will there's a way. Misfortunes uncounted Are often surmounted, If only we quit not the field in dismay Thou once more endeavor, Remembering ever That where there's a will there's a way. Domestic Journal. HUJIOIt OF THE DAY. Gallant tree is known by its boughs Sleight-of-hand llefusing an offer of marriage. The deuce of diamonds is their ex orbitant cost. The electric incandescent pocket book is the latest; it is always light Drummer. Eva, noticing a flock of noisy, chat tering blackbirds, said, "Mamma, I gues3 they're having a sewing 'ciety 1" Home Journal. A little child of seven or eight said that when the Bible speaks of "child ren's children" it must mean dolls. Christian at Home. A littlo girl in Arkansas, according to dispatches, has been found with three tongues If that girl ever gets married but why dwell on such hor rible anticipations? The increased tendency to play chess by telegraph suggests cur intimating that it wouldn't bo a bad idea to have prize-lights and cocking mains cort ducted in the same way. Home Senti nel. A philosopher says : "In the econ omy of nature nothing is lost. The inside of an orange may refresh one man, while the outside of the same fruit may serve as a medium for break ing another man's leg." A book of JJ50 pages has been writ ten to prove that sharks do not eat human beings. The author of the work has declined an offer of $1,000 to jump into the harbor at Key West and settle the dispute. Archibald Forbes, the English war correspondent, is to g.'t $5,000 for his proposed work on the United Slates. We had no idea the United States needed repairs so bail that the work on them would cost $5,00J. Texas (' ini;s. A miller, who attempted to be witty at the expense of a j-ontli of weak in tellect, accosted him with, "John, peo ple say that you are a fool." On this John replied, "I don't know that I am, sir; I know some tluigs, sir. and some things I don't know, sir." "WeH. John, what do you know?" "I know tiiat millers always have fat hogs, sir." "And what don't you know?" "I don't know whose corn they eat, sir.' While tho guards nro being doubled around the palace of the sultan, and the most experienced safe-builders aro employed in constructing a bed cham ber of chilled iron' for tho czar that cannot be opened without a knowledge of the combination, the gratifying news comes that th? governor's guard of Ohio is to bo disbanded. How tran quil and secure is the life of an American potentate beside that of foreign rulers! Saturday Night. A Caterer on Meat, Fresh meat of every description should be hung up in a dry, cool place. and carefully wiped every day. It ought never to lay long in a dish. Tha time it shoull be kepi vi.ries with the weather in cold, dry weather it will keep fresh much longer than in moist, warm wra'-hcr. Game will keep longer than butcher meat say, two weeks birds being kept with the feathers on, but not t'rawn, ajid veni son and rabbits paunched but not skinned. Beef will require from four to te l days' keeping, or even longer in cold weather: and mutton, if well managed, will sometimes hang a fort night or three weeks without spoiling tho longer tho bitter. As young meat, l.owever veal, lamb a'ul mut tonspoils very quickly, one, two or three days at the utmost sullices for it. Fowls will keep for a week and turkeys a. fortnight, but a goose not above nine or ten days. In plucking birds which have been J;ept some time, care should be takoi not to break the skin, which wi 1 become, rather tender. There are various ways of keeping meat sweet and of removing tho bad smell after it has become slightly tainted. Ono mode is to rub it over with coarsely-pounded charcoal, which has the -property of absorbing tho putrescent gases, and thus prevents the bud smell. The charcoal must, of course, be washed off before cooking. Another way is to paint the meat all over with a solution of salicylic acid, or rubbing the meat, with dry avid is tne simplest method, and will" do for. all household purposes. The Uuttitr. r i