Tannine Tetah. A twtfcolnrl beautiful wild flower trow tha OU World, now getting com mon in .New England and Riving plena nre to tha lovar of wild flower scenery, li the bin retch, Vicin cruccn. I wn rmrticolirty glad to see it come off it con queror fca tattla with the well known toack gram, which usually acta the UoHatfc among other Tegotntion. It beaally crowds out everything, and onr tVnmnylvanift fanner regards it m one of his worst enemies. Oa the seacoanta of New England, however, fhe yield of this griw is sim ply eaormons, and the agriculturist em ploy tt largely for hay. Its roots are annoying to the more sonthern farmer, as every little piece grows. It can never be got rid of. Out here, where the game field is mowed for an indefinite number of years, it is of no consequence bow the roots hold on. The more tena ctaas the better. But It is snch a hold warrior among vegetation that nothing can grow where it grows, and a field of coach grass looks more like a field of Some right kind of wheat nnder a careful farmer's hands. Timothy grass here will not stand the attacks. Battalions of weeds contest the field with it. Conch grass alone ends forth defiance. But the bine retell is a masterpiece. It grows op wifh tbe grass and at length overtops It, and forms beantifnl bine patches over the whole field, looking like bright cervlean lakes over a gray arid plain. Fortwnately the farmer does not mind, M It is as agreeable to the cattle as the grass. It is one of those rare instances where great beauty and utility go band in hand together, and striko up a truly bappy marriage. Thomas Meehan in Philadelphia Ledger. The Chinese Cnlslne. "In passing through Chinese towns," Mid the Rev. A. T. Wright, of Milwau kee, to the writer, "the astonishingly large number of cookshnps interests and attracts the foreign passer by. One's curiosity is often aroused to know the ingredients of the messes he sees )eing concocted. Those places are unpleas antly pressed upon the pedestrian, for the front is invariably open to the street, and in order to tempt customers by the sight and smell of viands the cook pre pares his dishes over a charcoal fire in full view, and sets samples of his ma terials and his bill of fare out on a show board before him. Tables and stools are placed in the rear, and here the hun gry may banquet. "The Frenchman is not the only one whe haa hi frogs' legs and snail soup, for the Celestial, too, revels in these dainties and many more stranger than these. Snakes and eels alike know the fryingpan, and when skinned and dressed appear very much alike. Many varieties of i on poisonous snakes are need for food. Silkworm grubs are regarded as a choice morsel and are tewed in lard and eaten as a relish, and a mnHitude of other insects are deemed edible." Chicago Inter Ocean. She INxrchMed Then. Bhe wasn't exactly old, but the dis criminating observer could see that she hadn't seen the inside of a schoolroom for at least ten years. The shopman threw down piece after piece of fleecy white material before her critical eyes, but -none of them seemed to claim her unreserved admiration. She was taking a great deal of his time and the silk counter was crowded, so he decided to play his trump card. Holding np a length of crepe de chine CO that it fell in a perfect cataract of shimmering folds, he remarked, reflec tively, as if to himself alone, "The best thing for graduating purposes we have had in the store this year." The effect was instantaneous, and in another min ute the tactful salesman was measuring off a full pattern for his well pleased patron. Kate Field's Washington. Old EngiUh Meadow. Probably there are no meadows in the world so good as those in England or so old. Yet from the early Anglo-Saxon times old meadow has been distinguished from "pastures" and haa always been scarce. Two-thirds of what is now es tablished meadow land still shows the marks of ridge and furrow, and from the great time required to make a meadow ten years at least on the best land, a hundred on the worst men have always been reluctant to break up old paiitais. The ancient meadows, with their great trees aw close, rich turf, are the sole portiea of the earth's surface which modern agriculture respects and leaves in peace. Hence the excellence of the meadow of England and the envy of the AiMrioan. London Spectator. The Cat In Art. TJbMI the present century the peculiar dlffioahie offered by the struolnre and , texiiusu of cats had hardly beon sur mounted. When the old masters drew a cat they made it solid and hard it is probable that the varieties they knew weTS less beautiful than those which we now delight in but also there was a conventional neglect of the furry char acter of the surface. In painting a cat now tha danger is in avoiding a false solidity, to lose all sense of the osseous forms in securing softness and light ness. London Saturday Eeviow. Cv'.leUtng the Parson. A minister of the Gospel must be pre pared to submit to all kinds of criticisms. One "leading" member criticised the minister for saying, "When Adam was born," and remarked to a friend: "Any man who will say, 'When Adam was v born,' instead of 'When Adam was cre ated,' is unfit for his position. I call such a remark an egreg-rious blunder." Christian Advocate. Better Than Trees. Mr. De Avnoo I don't see why Mrs, Forundred should put on such airs over Son. Our family trees are as good a Br. Mrs. De Avnoo Y-e-s, but her hus band has the gout and you haven't. New York Weekly. BTAR TIME AND BUN TIMt The War Astronomer Find Onl fret the Star trhea It Is Noon. The time for sending out the noon signal from Washington is the instant the sun crosses the seventy-fifth meri dian. This, however, is not the sun which gives as light and heat, bat an invisible, imaginary onei because, fot certain reasons, the true snn dee not cross the meridian at the same moment every day, bnt during one part of the year he gets over it a little more ahead of time each day, and during the othel part he is correspondingly behind time: and so this fictitious sun is used, be cause its apparent path around the earth brings it exactly over the same line at the same moment every day. Now at just what instant this snn crosses th meridian is determined by means of thi stars, for time at the observatory is not reckoned by the sun but by the stars. Every clear night an astronomer at tin observatory looks through a large tele scope for certain stars which he knowi must cross a certain line at certain times, and by the use of an electrical machinf be makes a record of the time each stat passes, as shown by a clock which keepi sidereal or star time. He then consult! a printed table, which shows him at jnsl what time each star must have passed, and by a much as this time differs from that recorded by the clock the latter it wrong, and In that way the sidereal clock is regulated. This star time Is thee reduced to sun time, which requires sonn calculation, as there is a difference be tween the two of about four minute each day. These two clocks the one keeping stai time and the other sun time are of very fine quality, and are as near perfection as possible. Although they cannot heir, being affected by changes of tempera ture and different conditions of the at mosphere, they very rarely are mor than a fractional part of a second out ol the way. No attempt is ever made tc correct such errors, but they are care fully noted and allowed for in making calculations. For the purpose of distributing time s third clock, known as a transmitter, if used. This is set to keep time by tin seventy-fifth meridian and is regulated by the standard clock before mentioned. It is in all respects similar to the otbci clocks, except that it has attached to it an ingenious device by which an electric circuit may be alternately opened and closed with each beat of the pendulum. Clifford Howard in Ladies' Home Jour nal. A Cartons Cave. The cave temple of Karli, India, it rightly considered one of the greatest wonders of the world. This gigantic recess in the mountain ledge haa beet chiseled by human hand, from porphyry as hard as the hardest flint. The nav is 124 feet long, 45 feet broad and 4( feet from floor to ceiling. Before tin entrance to the temple stands a monstel stone elephant, upon whose back is seat ed a colossal goddess, all hewed fromoni solid block of stone. Like the tempi walls and the outside ornaments, every article of adorning sculpture oa the in side is hewed from the native rock. There are aisles on each side sep arated from the nave by octagonal pil lars of stone. The capital of each plllai is crowned with two kneeling elephants, on whose backs are seated two figures, representing the divinities to whom tin temple is dedicated. These figures an perfect and of beautiful features, as in deed are all the representations ol deities and divinities in this peculiai temple. The repnlsiveness so characteristic ol modern Hindoo and Chinese pagodas U here wholly wanting. Each figure it true to life, or rather to art, there be ing no mythical half horse, half man 01 beast birds depicted in this underground wonder of Karli. This wondrous under ground pagoda or cave temple has beet a standing puzzle for the learned ar chaeologists of both Europe and Asa foi the last 8,800 years, and is as much ol an enigma today as it was in the time ol Confucius. Philadelphia Press. A Bibliophile Indeed. A lady left some very precious first editions of a book in three volumes in l hansom while she went into a shop risky thing in itself to do. When slu came out of the shop she couldn't find the hansom, which had beon made tc move on by a policeman, and in despaii took another, and just saved the train which she had to catch at Charing Cross. After waiting for an hour and a half the cabman thought there wat something queer going on and endeav ored to find his fare, without success ol course. Then he looked inside the cab, saw the books and some parcels, and conveyed them all to Scotland Yard. And here comes the pith of the story. The lady applied the following day fot her precious books and got them. It was suggested that she should pay a certain quite adequate sum as recom pense to the cabman. But the lady was indignant. That sum, she averred, did not in any degree represent the percent age due on the enormous value of the tomes. They were worth something stupendous. She mentioned what Quar itch valued them at. And quite cheer fully she paid a sum that made a com fortable nest egg for the cabman. She also made the Scotland Yard official understand something about books that be hadn't a notion of before. London Vanity Fair. Why Be Was Retleent. A. Sir, when we were introduced to each other just now, why did you so per sistently deny that we were acquainted? We have often met before, only I can not just remember where. I suppose you are in business? B. Yes as a pawnbroker. Tableau! Exchange. Grandpa's III; Effort. "I suppose you're going to Dr. Mason's funeral, grandpa?" "Oh," snarled the Infirm old man, "don't talk to me about other people's funerals. It's as much as I shall be able to do toet to nyr own." Exchange. Adding Insult to Injury. "Talk about adding Insult to Injury," said Luvrum, as with the aid of a hravy cane he hobbled to his favorite seat in the Rounders' club the other afternoon, "something happened to me last night that capped the climax in that direction so far as my experience goes. I dined some friends of mine from ont of town last evening. They were old college chums, yon know, and us we hod not met for years we lingered long over the table, and the loving enp was passed steadily around until my friends had to leave for a midnight train. It was s very hot night. I was very much le fuddled, and, as Is my custom on such rare occasions, I turned my feet Turkish bathward. I went down into the hot room. A strong desiro came npon me to jump Into the big cold plunge there without waiting for the usual scrubbing by the attendant. "It has been my hnbit to forego the nse of the stairs leading down Into the plunge, and to simply get up on the marble railing and fall off backward into the cooling waters. So up on the marble railing 1 stepped and threw my self off. There was not a solitary drop of water in that plunge. The attendants had emptied it for the purpose of clean ing it. Down I went full six feet, and lnnded squarely on my back on the mar ble bottom. No, I did not break iny back and fracture my skull, though it is a wonder that I did not. "So much for the injury. Now let m tell you alMiut the insult. As I lay there on my back partially stunned an attend ant came, and shaking me roughly by the shoulder said, 'Say, if yon do that again you will be put outP If I did it again I would be put out) Wonder If he thought I did it for fun?" New York Times. While Paper Not Wasted. "There is no such thing as waste paper," said the junk denier to a re porter. "Hardly a scrap of white paper is wasted. Every bit of it that is thrown away is carefully gathered up and finds its way eventually to the mill again to be made over. The notebook in your hand may furnish material for the pagee on which you will write a letter six months hence, and perhaps a year latet you will nnknowlngly find it incorpo rated in a summer novel with yellow covers. Thus the stock of paper that supplies the world is used over and over again indefinitely through the medium of the scavengers, the dealers in junk and the factories, which are continually engaged in transforming the discarded material into fresh and clean sheets. , "Brown paper, however, is different. Because it is composed of nothing more valuable than straw it is mostly thrown away and never used again. I would not pay you twenty-five cents for a ton of it. A few years ago old newspaper! were worth four cents a pound, leing made of rags. Now they are manu factured ont of wood pulp and straw, and their market value is only a quartet of a cent a pound. Office paer, such as old bills and such scraps, are worth the same price as newspapers, while what we cll "office sweepings," com posed largely of envelopes, are quoted at fifteen cents a hundredweight." Washington Star. Kecentrle Will. Eccentricity, and nothing else, distin guishes the will proved in 1724 of Henry Trigg, of Stonage, of the county of Hertford, grocer, who directed that his body should be committed to the west end of his hovel, to be decently laid there upon a floor erected by his execu tors; and only sixty years ago, it is said, the bones of Mr. Trigg still remained nnbnried in the raftors at the west end of his hovel aforesaid. A provision, quite as bizarre, was made in the will of the philosophic Jeremy Bentham, who enjoined his executors to embalm his corpse and dress it in the clothes which he was accustomed to wear in his life time, in order that he might form the text of a lecture to be delivered annu ally at a literary institute held at a school of anatomy in Windmill street, Haymarket. On the occasion of one of the lectures in Jeremy Bentham's mummy the ven erable philosopher's head fell off and came to irremediable grief, whereupon an artificial head was modeled in wax by Miss Margaret Gillies, the distin guished miniature painter, but the mummy with the waxen head has long since fuded out of the public ken. Lon don Telegraph. Savin Hie Father's Hair. Lord Charles was often troubled by Importunate acquaintances, who begged for some of his father's (the Duk of Wellington) hair. On such occasions he mid to an old servant, whose hair was like the duke's, "Sit down, John; I must sut off another lock I" Fortnightly Re gno Uot Even. A certain broker had been teasing his wife about some of her housekeeping arithmetic, and yesterday she got her revenge. "What time is it?" be asked her after lunch. She took out her purse and held np a half crown without a word. He stared, scratched his bead and finally gave it up. "Anybody who is up in figures," she remarked sweetly, "would at once have understand that I meant half past London Tit-Bits. The Passion Flower. The passion flower derives its name from an idea that all the instruments of Christ's passion are represented vis., the five wounds, the column or pillar of scourging, besides the three nails, the crown of thorns, etc. Most of tha pas sion flowers are natives of the hottest parts of America. London Tit-Bits. When it was proposed to build the Central Paoifio railroad, a civil engineer of twenty-five years' experience reported that the road could not be completed in twenty years with all the money of the Bank of England to back the enterprise. But it was built and completed seven years before the expiration of the time Axed by eongTwa. A Miser's ffeepltallt. Sir Harvey Elwes, of Stoke, ia Suffolk, next to hoarding money, found his prin cipal pleasure In netting partridges. H and his honsebold, consisting of one man and two maids, lived npon these. In cold or wet weather Sir Harvey wonld walk np and down his hall to save firs. Hit clothes cost him nothing, for he ran sacked old chests and wardrobes and wore those of his ancestors. When h died the only tear shed was by his serv ant, to whom hn left the farm value, fifty ponnds per annnm. The whole of his property was left to his nephew, John Maggntt, who thus in herited real and personal estate worth 250,000, on condition that he should as sume the name and arms of Elwes. Ol this man, who is better known as John Elwes, the miser, the following story It told: His nephew, Colonel Timma, vis ited him at Marchnm, and after retiring to rest found himself wet through. Find ing that the rain was dripping through the ceiling, he moved tho lied. He had not lain long before the same Inconven ience again occurred. Agnin he rose and Miritin the rain rnme down. After push ing the bed quite around the room, he found a corner where the ceiling was better secured and slept nntil morning. When lie met his uncle at breakfast he told him what had hsppennd. "Aye, nye," said Mr. Elwes; "I don't mind It myself, bnt to those who do, that's a nice corner in the rain." Cussell's Journal. Warren's Idea of lTlnt Warren, aged four yesrs, had formed his ideas of angels and I heir forms from the study of certain steel engravings, and Uld his mother If she scolded him KKniii he would "die nnd go right to heaven." Being told that that was eiffrr said than done, nnd nsked how he would get there, ho answered without hcxitHtion: "Oh, I would pile np all the fhiiint and tables nnd boxes nnd ladders as fur as they would go. nnd then 1 'spect an angel would come down and det me. And anyway I'd a good deal rather go that way than have things screwed into me!" New York Trib-.ine. Ayer's Pills Are compounded with the view to general usefulness and adaptability. They are composed of the purest vegetable aperients. Their delicate sugar-coating, which readily dis solves in the stomach, preserves their full medicinal value and makes them easy to take, either by old or young. For constipation, dyspep sia, biliousness, sick headache, and the common derangements of the Stomach, Liver, and Bowelaf also, to check colds and fevers, Ayer's Pills Are the Best Unlike other cathartics, the effect of Ayer's Pills Is to ttrenythen the excretory organs and restore to them their regular and natural ac tion. Doctors everywhere prescribe them. In spite of immense compe tition, they have always maintained their popularity as a family med icine, being in greater demand now than ever before. They are put up both in vials and boxes, and whether for homo use or travel, Ayer's Pills are preferable to any other. Have you ever tried them ? Ayer's Pills Prtpsred by Ir. J. O. Ayrr k Co., Lowtll, If mi. Bold by sll t)rus(liu. Every Dose Effective Gitu Meat, Market I buy lit! best of c:i1tlo nnd keep tlit! choicest kinda oi" meats, such as MUTTON, VOUK VEAL, AND BEEF, SAUSAGE. Everything kept neat and clean, Your patronage solicited. E. J. Schultze, Prop'r. KNOW ME BY MY WORKS I have removed 24Huno worm In tho lust 40 months, unci run show more cures of Catarrh. I'nm-i-r. ticroftilu. kt-zema Hint sll blood dlHOHHt-tt than all others. 1 treat through the blood Willi Nature's remvdliM, roots null herbs. Nyelem ltenuvalor, tlie Wonder of lite W orld, (or mile at all (irtiK stores. Unfit. It la making the patent nit-dlilne men look sick Hiul the grave yarda irreun. Hnnd stamp for circulars and Information. Uttice open irotu a. h. uiiiu v p. u. 1U. J. A. HITKOOON, a Ohio Heri-iit. Al.I.KUIIINY, PA. lHurgoon rrmedleu for kiuo by II. A LIZ. Htokii, tlie DruxKUt, mintuoay Manufacturing-lliibbei- htainim. Ht-nd fur I'rk'O Mat of Outfit, to J. V. W. Norman Co., 217 IJaet Uurinan Street, DMlUUiuro, M1 U. 8. A. MONEY ED. GOODER, REYNOLDSVILLE, PENNA. CI7"Oppopite Stoke's drug ptore. ii In a first clasp family journal, published every Wednesday at Ileynoldsville, Pa., by C. A. Steph enson, contains all the local and general news; the pubscription price is but 1.50 a year in advance. The job department is replete with the latept designs in type, and Letter Heads, Note Heads, Kill Ileadp, Statements, Envelopes, Posters, Circu lars, will be turned out with neatness and dispatch. fls an Advertising Medium It Antrhlnnr fhnm oil McKce ffl Warmck HEADQUAHTKKP lOK Fancy and Staple GROCERIES, 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. f An endless variety on w Wo hand; always fresh. Try our fruit and chocolate cakes. "Washburne's Kest" leads the list; it's a dandy. Try it. We have in stock, "Our Kest," "Straight," "Imperial," "N. W. Patent," "Pilgrim" and others. 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. 3 I I O A FULL STOCK of yowl in our line dlway on hand. Jliyhest market prh-e paid for country produce. ' goods received ' daily. : XO OLD GOODS FOR SALE. McKec & Warnick, The Grocers, Cor. Oth and Main St., . . . Reynoiditvllle, I'enna. lb UUbdlllllbd bllOIII Qll. ft ArTT"""" I want to close out my sum mer goods to make room for fall stock, and will sell f At COST! Outing Cloth, 6J cents, Sold before for 8 cents. Outing Cloth, 8 cents, Sold before for 10 cents. Outing Cloth 12 cents, Sold before for 12 i cents. Challie, 10 cents, Sold before for 12 i cents. Challie, 10 cents, Sold before for 15 cents. Sateen, 10 cents, Sold before for 15 cents. Indigo Rlue prints 6 cents per yard. Men's Seersucker Coat and Vest at 65 cents, Sold before for $1.00. Men's and Koys' Outing Shirts At 19 cents apiece. Men's suits at 3.60, Sold before for $5.00. All Men's suits reduced From $2.00 to $3.00 per suit. Children's Suits $i.oo Now is your time to save money. These goods are all new. N.Hanau. Gooods