THE SUN WILL CKAHE. A TIME MU8T COME WHEN HEAT FROM THE BUN MUST CEASE. Mcaauriaf Man's Oaf aa Ciima Tfca Oml Ork mt Ughl mmI i.ira Mmy Im g, 000,000 tears, bat mt 10,000,000. Tha lltwraf f tha ftaa'a Maat. Jt serins to b worth whila 4o rollirt together what may be said tho su) Ject of tha duration of life ua tha rIuIni. It in noteworthy fact that tha tcmtA bllity of the continued exltt"e of the bnmun rare doprnds fumhunnntnlly opon the qncation of heat If iioat, or what in equivalent to hrut. Am nut last, then man cannot Inst, either. There la no shirking this plain truism. Of course it in obvious that the avail able heat generally cornea from the ran. 80 far ns the coal goo, we hnve already observed that on it I limited to quantity It can afford no perennial mpply. Doubtless there I in the earth some quantity of other material cnpablo of oxidation or of undergoing other chemi cal change, in the course of which and M an incident of such change heat in evolved. The amount of heat that can possibly anno from mich source In Itrictly limited. There is in the entire earth just a certain number of unit of heat possible from uch combination), but after the combination ha Wen ef fected there cannot be any more heat from thin Rourco. Then a to the Internal heat of the earth due to the liicandesfrtit Mute of its interior. Here there i no doubt a large store of energy, but still it i of limited quantity, and it is also on the wane. Thin heat is occasionally copious ly litierated by volcanoes, but ordinarily the traiiBit of" heat from the interior to the surface and its discharge from thence by radiation Is a slow process. It Is, however, sufllcinnt for onr present purpose to observe that slow though the esoajMi may be, it is incessantly going on. There is only a definite numlier of nnits of heat contained in the interior of the earth at this moment, and as they are gradually diminishing, and us there is no source from whence the loss can be replenished, there is here no supply of warmth that can be relied on jeriim nently. It goes without saying that the wel fare of the human race is necessarily connected with the continuance of the tun's beneficent action. If the sun ever ceases to shine, then must it be certain that there is a term beyond which hu man existence, or indeed organic ex istence of any type whatever, cannot any longer endure on earth. But we have grounds for knowing ns a certainty that the sun cannot escape from the destiny that sooner or later overtakes the spendthrift. In his Inter esting studies of this subject Professor Langloy gives a striking illustration of the rate at which the solur beat is lieing squandered at this moment. Ho remarks that the great coal fields of Pennsylvania contain enough of the procious mineral to supply the wants of the United States for 1,000 years. If all that tremendous accumulation of fuel were to be extract ad and burned in one vast conflagration the total quantity of heat that would be produced would no doubt be stupendous, and yet, says this authority who has taught ns so much about tho sun, all the heat developed by that torriiic coal lire would not be equal to that which the sun pours forth in the thousandth part of each single second. When we reflect thnt this expenditure of heat has been going on not alono for the centuries during which the earth has been tho abode of man, but also for those periods which wo cannot estimate except by saying that they are doubtless millions of years during which there bos been life on the globe, then indeed we begin to comprehend how vast must have been the capital of heat with which the sun started on its career. And yet we feel certain that the inces sant radiation from the sun must be producing a profound effect on its stores of energy. The only way of reconciling this with the total absence of evidence of the expected changes la to be found In the supposition that such is the mighty mass of the sun, such the pro digious supply of heat, or what la equiv alent to heat that it contains, that the grand transformation through which it U passing proceeds at a rate so alow that during the agea accessible to our o beer rations the results achieved have been Imperceptible. But the energy of the system U as rarely declining as the en ergy of the clock declines as the weight runs down. It aeema that the aun has already dis sipated about four-fifths of the energy with which it may have originally been endowed. At all events, it seems that, radiating energy at its present rate, the run may hold out for 4,000,000 years, or for 5,000,000 years, but not for 10,000, - OOO years. Here, then, we discern in the remote future a limit to the dura tion of life on this globe. We have seen that it doea not seem possible for any other source of heat to be available for replenishing the waning stores of the luminary. It may be that the heat was originally imparted to the ran as the result of some great collision between two bodies which were both dark before the collision took place, so that, in fact, the two dark masses coalesced into a rast nebula from which the whole of ear system has been evolved. Of course it is always conceivable that the ran may be reinvigorated by a repetition of similar startling process. It is, however, hardly necessary to observe that so terrific a convulsion would be fatal to life in the solar sys tem. Neither from the heavens above nor from the earth beneath doea it seem . possible to discover any rescue for the human race from the inevitable end. The roue is as mortal as the individual, and, so fur aa we know, its span cannot under any circumstances be run out beyond a number of millions of years , which can certainly be told on the fin gers of both hands, and probably on the . angora of one. Robert B, Boll in, Fort nightly Review, j :., . .' - "' 1 "' Like a llare. An English civil engineer, Mr. Francis O. Ornndy, relate what he calls "The short story of an unknown hero." "Bill, the banker," he was called, ami even at the Inquest over hi body no other name was forthcoming. He was only a pHir navvyt hi usual plane was at the top of a forming m Vankment, among the "tip wagon." During the building of the Manchester and Leeds railway lie was top man over a shaft of one of the numerous tunnels which were being constructed on the line. Here he met with a gloriously dlxas trou aerident. and liisrmidurtidicmid be emblaxotiod in letter of gold iimiii the history of hi country. He was only a navvy, I say, and probably ronld neither read nor write. The hft wo perlinit 200 feet diep. solid rock side mid tiottoin, Hi duty wo to raise the track which had wen filled below Hti'l run them to the tip. returning them empty to hi mute at the bottom. If a chain brol:e. or a big bowlder foil off the truck, he had to shout, "Waur out!" and the miner lie- low crept farther into their "drive" and allowed the death dealing article to come down harmloxslv. One unhappy day Hill's foot sllpiied hopelessly, and be know that ho iiniHllie sm.'inhod from side to ido of the narrow shaft, and landed a critHhod max at the bottom. Hut hi mates? If hn nrrcitnied the nnuxnal noise would bring them nut at once to inquire the cause. He never lout hi preHonce of mind. Clearly wont down the Minimi. "Waur out lielow?" ami hi mate liennl in safety the thud. thud. Hlimidi of hi mangled remain. Ilni1iitlill't Nft t'ntnillir.lllM-aa. A friend one 11 told me that she did not know what to do with her little boy, four year old, who had for the last few day" I wen telling all orlof untruths, with no roaHon or hciihh in them. For instance, that morning she told him she did not want him to carry out, as hn had Ix-en doing, hi little banket of ap ple to sham with hi playmates, a the nppli'H were nearly gone. Two or three hour niter she heard lit lit tin feet on the cellar stairs. Shu went out, and saw him coming tip the slair with hi banket of apples. 'Why, KIh'ii, did 1 not tell you not to bring up nnv more apples for the chll dren?" "Ven'm," answered the littlo fellow. pursuing hi way. "Why do you bring thorn, thenr "I'm not bringing them," said he. "In not that a banket of applos yon have in your hand?" "1H 111. "Well, then, you are bringing up ap ple, as 1 told yon not to, are you not'r" "No, mamma, he said, with an honest expression of face. Hue wan nhocked ut his duliborute and stupid untruth, and also that ho should seem so Indifferent about it. The child won, and in now that he is grown, per fectly honont and truthful; bnt here was a phase of development when the refrac tion of mental rays produced thin crooked result in his mind. The prime element of untruth in deception, and here wo no intention to deceive. Harper s Bazar. Dntlaa at tha Maid of If unnr. She iH going to be maid of honor at the wedding of one of her dear friends, and she wants to know whnt her duties are. Well, thoy are not very onerous. She walks alono, just ahead of tho bride, in entering the church, or wherever the ceremony is to bo performed. Her dross must lie n littlo more elaborate than that of tho bridesmaids, but not of course ua rich as the bride's. When the altar is reached sho tands just beside the bride, holding her bouquet. At tho moment when the ring is to bo assumed she hands the bouquet to tho first bridesmaid, uud assists tho bride iu taking off hor glove. All this time the bride has boon standing with her veil over her fuco, but jnnt after tike service is over, when the bride rises up after having boon blessed, tho maid of honor throwa back the filmy cloud and the bride stauds facing the bridegroom and ready for his kiss. The bouquet is then handed back to the maid of honor, by her given to the bride, and aa the procession retreats she walks just behind the bride and groom, leaning on the arm of the best man. Ruth Ash more in Ladies' Home Journal. Not So Blapld. The overbearing waya of drill ser geants with new recruits are a familiar subject of gossip in the barracks of European countries. On one occasion a recruit a profes sional man showed so little aptitude for military movement that the ser geant broke out at him: "Blockhead! Are they all each idiots as yon in your family?" "No," said the recruit, "I have a brother who la a great deal more stupid than I am. "Possible? And what on earth doea this incomparable bloclihcad do?" "He U a sergeant" Youth's Com panion. Savage Art True to Mature, Singularly enough, the primitive men In the caves of the Perigord, contempo raries of the mammoth and the musk ox In France,' and the Bushmen, whose paintings Heir Fritach discovered, only painted the animals known to them as truly as they could, while the compara tively highly civilized Aztecs outran all that is oriental in abominable inven tions. It almost seems as if bad taste belonged to a certain middle stage of culture. Popular Science Monthly, How Ha PreMrved Bll Kja. Old man Coons, of Jasper county, Mo.. who la sixty years old and can read thr finest print without glasses, aays hf has preserved- his optics good by pressing the outside corners. Kansas CityHtor. ' i A Characteristic rallies'. First Preacher Doea your choir sing In harmony? h. Second Preacher Yes; but they dont live in harmony. Kate Field's Wash ington. ' . ,.; : "vl ... .' , ' A GAME WHERE THE WINNER LOST. ifa Wan til raaa, bnt lla Mail I'n Ills Mlaa Thai Thare Waa N Pun In II. It makes the man who would nil her pi in law than go on n good old time liny ride mud enough to lose a suit, but wueti lie bring suit, wins hi t-une, get dMiiiiiqe Ntid then find that he is nut of pocki-ta line round sum. he can give the Inliiiary man point and discount him besides lit the IMogeiie game of hating the world, (me Now Yorker got a Innte of a legal dime the other day which is likely lo make him hesitate about ning the same prescription nniii. He wanted damage from 11 man whe he declared had injured his property. lie wanted all the damages lie could got tio. He was earnest enough to insist that tin) damage ought to bo run up In tho thon-iiinls. Now if ho had boon con tented to tako bin cane Into a district oiilt thin story would probably tiovor have boon written, tint a he estimated hi wrong not by single, plain, every day "cart wheel" dollar, but in blocks of I, '100 ouch, he was forced to tako hi suit into the court of common plea. Everything went swimmingly lor his ido. Hi lawver proved lioyond a doubt that the defendant had caused damage to tho plaint lit" n proHrty. The judge be lieved it. tho jury lielieved it, In fact the defendant himself and the defendant's counsel lielioved It If ever there wan a clear cane of damage it was right there In the com mon pleim court. And so the plaintiff got a verdict for forty-nluo dollar. Hut it is one thing to get a verdict ami another thing to take what goen with it. It hapivcned In thin case that if the defendant received a Verdict for less than fifty dollar he wan liable for cost. Ho did not know much about law, and, though ho was disappointed at tht amount of the diiiiin;,'.-. hn looked tri umphantly at the other side. Ho wiu- llsgusted to see the calm siiillo 011 tilt- face of the defendant's lawyer. Hut a moment biter there wan gnashing ol tooth when his counsel told him iiIhiiiI the cosln. J have to pay the cost, do I?" bo Knapped. Yes." 'After I havo won my case I have t pay cost for tho other side?' "That in the law.' "Well, It's a mighty nice law that makes tho winner lose, ain't It? What do yon think I went to law for? Do you tliliiK I wanted toKiieml money for fun. Do volt think after that fellow hur H)ilcd my property I waul to pay bin: for doing il? What do yon think 1 am, anyway a muddy brained, cronn eyed, half hearted lunatic? How much are tho costs'" "Three hundred and nixty dollars." "Three hundred and nixty dollars! 1 win a cane and got damage and lose f ill, do I? 1 can subst root the amount of tho damage from tho cost and make out a check for the balance, can I? Well, I supiHwe I can so long as I have to. LSut I want you to understand that the next time I go to law it will bo be cause I am a candidate for a lunatic asylum. Tho next time I have you for a lawyer it will be when I'm the de fendant In 11 case like this and want to lone. 'Du you hear?" he screamed. "When I want to lone I'll havo you, I say, so that I can come out ahead of tho game. And tho next time a man damages my property I'll invite him to come in and knock tho roof off the house. I'll have him uso my piano for 11 tolioggan on tho hall stairs. 1 11 invito him to play a gaiiio of tenpins in my dining room und will line my great-grandmothers tea service for pins, and if he want to jump through our f (100 Japanese screen like a circus rider ho can do it. "Then niaybo ho'll want me to sue him, so that I can got stuck for costs again. And I'll suo him; oh, yen, I'll sue him!" and he snorted so loudly that the court usher s afternoon nap was dis turbed. New York Tribune. Hound to l'e a "K." There was once in eastern Tennessee judge well versed in the law, but en tirely self educated, who had this same obstacle of orthography to contend with all his days. In early life he had lived In Knoxville, and for a long time in sisted upon spelling the name Noxville. His friends at last educated him up to the point of addir g the K; so thorough ly, in fact, did he learn this lesson that when a few years afterward he removed to Nashville, nothing could prevent him from spelling the name "Knashville." After a few years' residence there the judge moved again, this time to Mur freesboro. One day he sat down to write his first letter from this place. He scratched his head in perplexity a mo ment and finally exclaimed: "Well, Til give it npl How in the world can they spell the name of this place with a 'K?" " San Francisco Argonaut Naed of a Physician. The physician needs more mental di version. It would be well for him to cul tivate flowers, to study some science, or some department of history, literature or art, or to take up some simple mechan ical occupation, to which he could turn from time to time for refreshment. He needs more active exercise. It would be well for him oftener to sub stitute the bicycle for the carriage. He needs more sleep, too fully seven hours and as his sleep is often broken in upon at night, be should form the habit of lleeping at odd momeuta, even by day. Dr. Minot Newspaper Have Inorsaaad. The number of newspapers published in the whole United States 'thirty years ago waa less than 5,000. Now the num ber of newspapers published in the re gion west of the Mississippi aggregates 6,500, of which number 8,12a are pub lished west of the Missouri river. Ed ward Rosewater's Omaha Address. One Way of Catting Kid of Sparrows. There are families iu Germantown that have sparrow potpie frequently. They don't shoot the birds and fill them with shot, but trap them inntoad. Phibidelphia Recordy - ; ... Nowis tne time to My your footwear KVKIIYHODY WA NTH A NKW I'AIK OK KlloKS AND Mt'KT IIAVK Til KM. WK HAVK, .11 THT WHAT YolT WANT AT ALMOST MtVU OWN I'HK'K. Also a full lino of Slippers nnd Oxfords. LADIKS I'ATKNT Til' OXFORD'S 7ft (,Vnt IIOUHKSLIIM'KKS 2ft " CAKPKT SLU'l'tiKIl 2ft " MEN'S DHKSS SIIOKS 1.) LACK OK CONUKKSS. Call mid sco Our Mon's H rowans and Nailed Shoos at 81. 23, and soo if wo can't savo you money. D. F ROBINSON, Kxcli tsi v SI km TVnloi KKYNOLDSVIM.K, PA. SECOND ANNUAL STATEMENT- Ill- THE Rcvnolflsvillc lnilfa $ Loan Association, REYN0LDSV1LLE, OFFICRESi OKO. MKLLINOKK, PivMldi-iit. H. KKYNOLDH, Vli.'o I'liwlili'nt, DIRECTORS. H. HKYNOLDH, JOHN M. HAYH. A. (J. MILL1HEN, K. J. IjOKTS. F. M. HHOWN, GKO. MKLLINflEIt, H. C. DK1HLK, W. B. ALKXANDKH, W. H. HOSS, RECEIPTS. As pur last report . . 124,382.52 l,H.m.01 25.ill0.00 . 2,853.50 . 144.WA . . 102.75 . . 12.50 . . 7.00 . 71.2 lialanoe in treasury . Amount from duos . . " " interest " " fines . , " entrance foes " transfers . " Insurance Re-payment of loans . $55,723.80 ASSETS. Mortgage $74,800.00 Furniture 115.80 Books 108 15 Due from stockholders , . , 745.32 " " secretary . . . '. 40.28 Cash in treasury 45.83 C-; $75,855.38 $75,855.38 1 I H l-2 2f 1 it i .to ofirTo - First. 1415 185 12:t0 $24 00 $25 44 $27 47 $3 47 35,!l!i7.0 Second 424 01 303 18 00 1 8 81 1 U5 1 a" 7,075.44 Third...... 174 57 117 12 00 12 30 12 80 811 2.150.04 Fourth..!.. 238 80 158 0 00 0 01) 0 21 21 L428.0U 2251 383 1808 $47.551.08 Tntnl mimVutv nf tthfima TTndividnd balance Highest ruto of premium T SltUtXtlt. ' 4 ' - Avara.ru " " . .r. w i.Iib un.lni'Hlirniid. Aiiditoi-s. have exuiniiiod tho books of the Sot-rotary and Treasurer of the Heynoldsville Building and Loan Association and find them as per tho above report. - - ' , W K IIAVKTHK l,Alt(! KHT AND MOST CO.Vll'I.KTK HT M K t K LA Dl KH M KN'H, M I MS KM' AND t IIILDHKN'S HHOKH INTIIKI'ITY: IMUC KH To HI,' IT KVKIIYHODY. PA., APRIL 20, 1892. A. (S. MILLIRKN. H.-crftHi'v. W. H..ALKXANDKH, Trciwuror. .1. VAN R.KED, NINIAN COOPER, A. M. WOODWARD, F. P. ADELSPEHG. DISBURSEMENTS. As per last report . . . 24,382.52 Loan 211,150.01 Withdrawals 1,423.12 Secretary's salary 284.40 Solicitor's salary . . . . 150.00 Safe 103.00 Int. on advance payments . . 114.22 Kxpenses H4.20 Forfeited stock .nu Insurance . 22.00 45,83 Balance in treasury 55,723.86 LIABILITIES. Value of stock (47,551.53 Dues paid in advance . . . I.IIH4.12 Unearned premiums . . . 22,594.43 Outstanding orders .... 400.25 Due on loans 71!.M3 Treasurer's salary 25.00 Due for rent 10.00 Assets over liabilities . . . 2.553.4 . I 2,251 M . .... a a ! 33.70-383 a a GIBSON. 1 M. C!.. COLEMAN, Auditors. B. E. HOOVKH, ) ' IN OUH Shoe Department We carry only reliable innken, nwl we couM fill the one fide of thin Ihmio with testimonial!" In re gard to tin wearing qunl Itlenof onrnlioeH. What In termed among shoe dealer n eheap phoe, "for liiHtntiee," HhoeBthnt . nell for one dollar a pair, we do not handle, for tlit ni in pie reanon that goodn of that kind will not build up our nhoe de partment. We buy no nhoeH from what in called ".Jobbern," but place our. ordeiH three and four montliH iu advance, with the bent nhoe manufac turern in 1 lie country. 1 . )iir dry good depnvt ment h full of Hpring fabricH, at prices lower than the lowest, and all we ask is that you give us a call and Compare Prices and Quality, don't forget the quality, as that goes a long ways as regards price. Quality first, price second. J. . ARNOLD. Mck i Warnickr HEAIrQCARTEKH FOR ' Fancy and Staple GROCERIES, J Oil, Flour! Feed. An elegant line con sisting of sour, sweet and mixed pickles. Onions, chow chow, olives, cauliflowers and others too numer ous to mention. o i a 9h "53 Zfi Cfl ( An fiifllpHH varintv on hand; always fresh. Try our fruit and chocolate cakes. "Washburne's Best" leads the list: it's a dandy. Try it. We 0 have in stock, "Our 1 Best," "Straight," "Imperial," "N. W. f Patent," "Pilgrim" k P3 and others. f We have no oil wagon on the road but we deliver you a 5 gal. best 150 oil for 50 cents. Get our rates on oil by the barrel. A FULL STOCK of gxU in our line uluxty on hand. Jliylteet market price paid for country proilure. fiOUDS RECEIVED DAILY. yo OLD (JOODS FOR SALE. McKce & Warnick, The Grocers, Cor. 3th ami ilain St., . . . , . ReunoMmHUe, I'etimtX 6 1 1