i ON THE VrriGE OF THE UNKNOWN. An F-nnrrfnirlit Thnt Mnkm I'D Auk. "Wlmt I f-nmlns?" Mr. W. II. I'rwro, chief ptiKinrrf nnl rliTtridnii to tlw posto'Dcp, Ims jutt hjiii wiro n mile Ioiik on tlio const nrnr Lnv rrnock iiinl a nlmrtcr one on Fliillmliu. 11 littlo lsliiml tlirre miles olT in thn 1'rintol clmiiiicl. llolitliil tlio InttiT wlro will1 n "sonncler" to rrreivo iiipssiikps. nml font a iiipssiiko tliroiili tlm forinpr from b powerful telephonic ppiiprntor. Tli.it niPR:mKP on i' nmiiihiticl tviis illstiiictly hriiril on tlin Ishinil, though nothing cull lice-toil the two. or. in other worils, the possibility of n telephone between pliiees unconnected by wire wns conclusively PHtnhlisliril. Thrre is ll possibility hero of (nter ll:mctai y ('oininiinicntion, u kmm1 1 - 1 iMoro worthy Attention thmi nny scheme for milking KiKiiKtl'.' clcttric flashes. Wo do not know if wo enn cotnniuniciite liy telephone through thn ether to New Vork or Melbourne) with or with. ml cnbles, lint we do know that, if wo enn not. the fault is in our i?cncrntors nml rounders, nml not In nny prohibitory mil urnl law. Will our habitual reudc: birr with im for a moment n wo wander into another, nml. ns many of them will think, nsupra wnsunl region? Tim thought in n man's lirain which causes him to advance his foot must iiiovp something in doing it. or how could it bo transmitted down thnt flvo or six feet of distance? If it moves a physical something, internal to the body, why should it not mvo nlso something external, a wave, ns wo nil ngree to cnll it. which on another mind prepared to receive it lilted with n sounder in fact will makn an impact hnvingnll the effect in t ho conveyance of suggestion, or even of facts, of ti e audibility of words? Why, in fact, if 0110 wire enn talk to another without con nection, save through ether, should iiot mind talk to mind without any "wire" at nil. None of us understands accurately, or even as yet approximately, what thecon ditions nre, but tunny of us know for certain that they have occnsionally, mid by what we call accident, been present to particular individuals, mid thai, when present, the communication iscompleted without cables, mid mind speaks to mind independently of nny machinery not ex isting within itself. , Why, in tho name of science, Is thnt more of a "mirnclo" that is, an occur rence prohibited by immutable law than tho transmission of Mr. Preece's message from Lnvemock to Flatholm? London Spectator. A Raltuinikpr to He llppemlrd rpon. Frederick W. Root is n Rood deal of a hoodoo. Ho gracefully acknowledges the charge himself. It is a singular fact thnt whenever ho apKars to deliver a lectnro tho rain begins to fall. Ho is so good n rain producer that he hnsserious ly considered the idea of utilizing his talents for that pnrposo in the arid re gions of the west. While tit Silver Lake Assembly, in New Vork state, ho delivered a lectured on musical tastes or a kindred Bubject. He had delivered the snnio lectnro a half dozen times In the west, and tho refresh ing shower enmo along each time before he had half finished it. But when ho reached the Silver Lake Assembly grounds tho sky was bright, and Mr. Root congratulated . himself upon having shaken off his evil spirit. He mounted tho rostrum, cleared his throat, and when ho hnd got 'as far as "Friends and fellow citizens" the rum ble of distant thunder grated harshly npon his enrs. Yet ho gathered up his conrngo and went on, nnd beforo ho had delivered n quarter of his lecture the rain came down in torrents. "Indeed," said Mr. Root, "I never saw it rain so hard before." After tho ad dress a witty young Chicago woman who knew of tho hoodoo Im iness suggested, for the convenience of tho public, that next year Mr. RViot should write n lec ture npon a, dry subject. Chicngo Post. Iturlnl fiiMniiiti In Kentucky In tho mountains of Kentucky when a husband dies his funeral sermon is not preached until after tho death of tho wife, nor that of a wife until tho hus band nlso is dead. Tin n a preacher is sent for, friends nnd neighbors are called in, and tho respect is paid to both together. More peculiar is tho custom of having the services for one person repeated, so that thef dead get their "funerals" preached soverul times mouths and years after their burial. I heard tho pitiful story of two sisters who had their moth er's "funeral" preached once every sum mer ns long as they lived. In strange contrast with this rogard for ceremonial observances is their neg lect of the graves of their beloved, which they do not seem at nil to visit when once closed or to decorate with those symbols of affection which are the common indi cations of bereavement. "Bluo Grass Region of Kentucky." Photography mid Mrdical IMugnoali. It seems there must be added to the ulready numorous applications of pho tography that of an agent in medical diagnosis. A Berlin holy was having her photograph taken. The faco in the first negative came out covered with Bpot:i. Examination showing nothing abnormal in the sitter; a second was taken with the same result, so it could not lie the fault ef tho plates. What was it? In a week tho poor woman died of smallpox. The cleverest physician could have pprceivednothing, hut the sensitive til in of the photograph ic pinto hod detected an actinic.' altera tion of the skin where the postules were to develop. London Tit-Bits. rbllteneiia and Ilout. The reaBonwhy it is the custom for an inquiring person in a New York tene ment house to interrogate the residents of tho top" floor 'first is because he re-' ceives plenty of polite attention, whereas' ir one uegms at ine tower noor aim pro ceeds upward, he will get short answers and little satisfaction. The top floor ten ants pay the smallest rents. New York Sun, A LITERAL MINDED MAN. An Intrrrntril ftprrtntor Who TnnH Po ll! I Hi Slnry In flood Faith. The most curious person in tho audi ence of n story teller is the literal minded man. When General Ilx ran for gov ernor there was great discussion ns to his age. It was one of tho controversies nf the ennvnss. His opponents t l. l ined that he was tooold to fulfill (he functions of tl e ofllce. Singularly enough, the lilngraphtcnl dictionaries differed ntiout ten ; enrs. I wns making a sppoi'h nt Wn eitowii to n very big audience. I wns running nt thnt time ns a liliernl Republican for lieutenant governor npun the smne ticket with Francis Kerni'ti. It wns an Immense ontdoor audience. In front of me stood a man who watched me during thp thrpo hours of thnt sppecli for thn purpopof cntchlng mo on some material point. 1 finally took up the question of Gen eral Dix's age, gave the dates of tho va rious biographical dictionaries and en cyclopedias, and based a theory on how old he must have been In the wnrof IHpJ, where ho was a lieutenant, nml finally said that the only really authentic data hnd been revealed by somo recent re searches in the colonial records of Mas sachusetts. It hml been discovered that when the pilgrim fathers Innded on Ply month rock they found General Dix standing on that historic spot and shout ing that unless they matin him a justice of the ieace b1 would go over and join the Indians, the point of which was tli.it the general had changed his politics sev eral times, and every time he got an ofllce. My critical friend saw his opportunity and grasped it nt once. Ho sprang tip with n shout that could bo heard to the C'nnndian border. "Mr. Depew, that, is a lie!" I looked nt him for a moment to see whether ho had swallowed the bait, nnd found that he bad taken it in hook nnd line, bob and sinker, w hole ami all. Then I stepped to the front of thn plat form and said with great emphasis and indignation. "Sir, I have told that his toric anecdote from Montank point to Niagara falls to hundreds of thousands of the intelligent nnd educnted ieopleof this great commonwealth, nnd you nre tho only ninn who ever hnd tho nudncity to deny it." "It ain't truo, Mr. Depew," he repent ed, "beennso thnt happened more than 2r0 years r.go." I was told when In Wntertown last fall that although this happened in ISTSthnt man hnd never been ablo to coma into town since. Clmunccy M. Depew in Now York World. Tile Wnvprly links. Tho great oaks at Waverly, Mass., are survivals of tin oak forest that must have existed in that region, according to tho geologists and students of trees, as far back as tho Tenth century. They bear every evidence of great age, and an elm treo in the iieighorhood, now almost dismantled, with its great limbs lying on the ground nnd nearly nil of its brandies d' rayed, is tho moRt venernblo object in tho lino of trees that can prob ably bo displayed in New England. It is well worth a visit to Waverly just to see this venernblo elm. It is immense in tho sizo of its trunk, nnd its dignity in decay is very impressive. The dozen oak trees in the neighborhood are of the sort thnt attain a very great ugo and that maintain their virility unimpaired. Wo know of only on other onk tree iu New England that can bo compared with them. That is located in Ipswich, nnd is larger and moro venerable appar ently than any of tho Waverly oaks, and that and tho Waverly oaks, we aro glad to know, have been inspected by tho state park commissioners and are likely to be preserved. It is worth one's whilo to seo and study theso majestic, oaks. They aro Been to great advantage In the winter, when their rugged limb aro bare and their imnienso Btrength is revealed, end in summer, when they are covered with foliage, they aro objects of wonderful lieauty. Boston Herald. Til a roe try of Shopping. Tho poetry of shopping comes in with those shoppers who aro starved for ex citement, variety and beauty at home. It is not lawful; they have no right to do it; but they havo no society to satisfy a hunger for tho beautiful with jewols and fine dresses on others if not on themselves. They cannot afford tho theaters; they go to the shops. Thoy look at tho luces and long; they go to tho embroidery counters and fancy; they educate thomsolves in tho matter of India shawls; they seek the silkroom, brilliant with gas lights and electric lights, and look at brocades fit for the court of a princess, at silks whose flamboyant scarlets burn in tho illumi nation, whoso tender bluo is the blue of spring skies half robbed of rain, whose green is the breaking wave of tho sea, whose violet is the hue of mountains far away in autumn mists, and they picture themselves or those they love robed and radiant in theso tissues. And if the poor shopman is weary when they go away, they themselves aro refreshed for a long season of further denial and renuncia tion. Harper's Bazar. A Medical llorlnlon lu 1T18. In 1713 a cellar digger having been ttiflcd at Jena, the medical faculty of the university dei.ided that the cause was not tho direct action of the devil, but a deadly gns. Thereupon Professor LocBcher, of the Univoreity of Witten berg, entered a solemn protest, decluring that the decision of the medical faculty was "only a proof of the lamentable li cense which has so taken possession of ns, and which if we are not earnestly on our guard will Anally turn away from us the blosiring of God." Dr. Andrew D. White in Popular Science Monthly. strategy. Small Boy Mamma wants you to send her up two barrels of those apples she wns lookin at. , Dealer AH right, sonny. "Say; couldn't you pour the two bar rels into' one' big barrel?" "Eh? What for?" "Thon she couldn't get it through the floor of .the Jock.closet." Good, News. A New rhntnursphlo froeeM, An effective and greatly simplified method of producing a phntographlo representation In tho form of an intaglio engraving, or, as it is generally called, a "photogravure," Is lielng Introduced. The new method is intended to reduce the time occupied In the process, which usually takes many dnys to a few hours, nnd to dispenso entirely with the supple mentary nid of the skillful engraver. Its essential fentnrn lies In the fact that tho picture. Instead of being obtained from n graduated depth of the engraving, is produced from a sunken surface of mi i form depth, the grndations of light, half tone nnd simile licing effected by minute lilies and stipples of varying thickness, but of uniform distance apart from center to center. The picture is made up of equidistant stipples, varying from n microscopic point tip to a size where they coalesce in a solid Mark, the half tones com-istingof stipples about t-HHith of an inch in di ameter. If n course stipple is used the effect varies from that of mezzotint and approaches more tienrly that of a line of engraving, thn light shades being mndo up of perceptiblo lines nnd stipples, like the effects of a steel or copper plnte en graving of equal texture. Pittsburg Dispntch. A Comparison of lllrtli Kate. There nro S1S.000.000 peoplo lu France, and during the last five years the In crease in population has only been 121, 000. In f5 departments out of a total of BO there is actually a diminution. It is not due to nny high average of deaths, although infant mortality is higher than it should lie. It is due tothn small num ber of children born. Tho average birth rate hits fallen to 21 or S3 per 1.KJ0 in habitants. This is a phenomenally low rate when contrasted with IIS to !!! in Germany, 115 or 11(1 in Italy, 11:1 in Eng land and ill) in Switzerland. Tho per lentngo is lower in France than in nny other count rv; so thnt there Is a rapid Increase iu rival countries and Franca remains stationary. Chicngo Herald. A Monument to Loyola. Ignatius Loyola's followers have erect ed n monument to his memory over tho spot where the fortunes of war decided that Lnnndii should lie a free liritish country. "Tho Jesuits' Retreat" stands in the city of Quebec on tho ground consecrated by the blood of English sol (tiers, and in front of it has been placed a colossal statue of the founder of tho order. Toronto Mnil. GREAT PREMIUM OFFER. Take Artvuntage of this Opportunity Two Good Papers for the Pricp of One. A .Farm and Home Journal in Every Household in the County. Liberal Oiler to The Star Headers. Heliilf very desirous of ileusliiir our lnro family of romlers, tho STAR 1ms niadi) niTuiiircniciits whereby wo can fiiriiisli our sulii'ci'lbi'cs with an extriniiiiinint of rradlnif matter at no extra cost. In Inif successful, ill viuw of tho present sharp coiiipntition, it is necessary for tho Intollitfont fiu'iiu'i' to closely study tho methods of thoso who havo obtained tho inoHt practical 1'i'Hilltn. This knowledge can Ira found by vend i lie; tho premium paper which wo nro otTerlnir to our Hiibserllicrs FKKK. Fcollnj; suro thnt tho renders of tho Stak would lio pleased to roocivo a present from ns In tho hIiium of a Hrst-cluMs farm, stis'k and homo pnier, puiiiiHiioi'H of tlio Ameneiin riinnii; or Sprinifllelu and Cleveland, Ohio, wlioreoy wo aro enabled to pivo FUKK to each of tho HiibserilierH) of tho STAK ono year s subscription to that excellent monthly publication, tho subscription price of which is One lliillar per year. Wo do not ank you ono cent for your subscription to this premium journal. Tho STAH wishes to iniiko a present of tho American Farmer to subscribers who will appreciate, It. That is, to all subscribers who will pay all arrearages and ono year in advance. Wo aro not content with (jiving appreeittlvo subscribers the best local piiier In JelTorson county, but wo want to (flvo them froo tho best furra, stock and homo paKr in America, which has now over iMl.tNM) reuders. Tho subscription prion of tho Stak is 1."(I er year, and that of tho ,lWnm Farmer, $1.0(1 jier year, hut wo will jfivo both pupuin a full year for tho price of the star alone. J no Amcrieiin farmer Is a luriro National circulation, rankliiK iiminic; tho leadintr agricultural papers. It Is care fully edited and has u tine corps of contributors. All of itsdepurtments, including Tho Farm, Hheep and Swino, Horticulture, Tho Dairy, Tho Horse, and Tho Home, nro nil edited with care, tho especial aim boin"; to ivo as many useful hints us possible, making a paper of especial value to farmers and utfriculturlHts in all sections. Its hlirhost iiui'Iioho is the elevation and ennohlinir of UL'riculturo throiiirh the higher and hroudcr education of the men and women enquired in this pursuit. - . It will be Itnpossiblo for you to secure so much muling matter for this small amount of money from any other source. Tell your neighbors about it and urpo them to come in and look over a sample copy of the .Imin'cuii Farmer, bearini; iu mind that they can secure two papers for us lu puttine; theso two excellent journals into every family in Jetterson county. It Ih an exceptional otinortunit v which you should tuko ndvantui'o of promptly. Seizo it now and (fot your next door neighbor to help you. Tho regular sub-crip- turn price or tlio Aim rivan runner Is ono dollar, IT COSTS YOU NOTHING. From any ono number of the American Farmer, ideas can bo obtained which will bo worth twice tho subscription price to you or any member ot your lamtly. Call and pet a sample copy at tho'HTAK olllce. SUBSCRIBE FOll "THE STAR" S1.50 PER YEAR. HOME STUDY AND 1 EJ m m H m M Mrf i:illirKUH ruilHOIIIIiMU. urummii-n mo inw-ini n uwti.i.iii fl a tl a P n U portion by Uiu Euiuloymeui Uurvuu of 'tlio Scliuol. Whtttler'a Ileslanntlnn. Here is a lieantiful extract of one of Whittier's letters to Elizalieth Stuart Phelps; I have just been reading Cation For rnr's sermons on the "Eternal Hope," and I agree with him in the title of one of them, that "Life Is Worth Living," oven if one can't sleep the biggest part nf it away. Thee nnd I get moro out of it, after all, than these sleek hende 1 folk who sleep o' night. I quite sympathize with thee In what thee sny of the "cnuses." Against nil my natural Incli nations I havo lieen fighting for them half my life. "Woo Is me, my mother!" I enn say wilh thn old prophet, "who has borne inn, a mnn of strife and conten tion." I have suffered dreadfully from coarseness, self seeking, vanity nnd stu pidity among associates, ns well ns from (lie coldness, open hostility, nnd, worst, tho ridicule of the outside world; but I row see thnt it wns best, nnd thnt I needed it nil. C'eiiturv. AT In adaiiRi-roiisemprKi'iiej', Avr.irsCiiKnnT Pkctohal I prompt to net "ml sum to cure. A ilese taken on tin? (list symptoms fit Crnup or llrom-lillK eheekt further limn rcss of these ci'iiiplulnts. It softens Mm phlPRm. K'Hilhcs tin) Inflamed Inrmlirnne, nml fndiiees sleep. Ai a fined)- fur mills, ciiiii'Iis. Iini of voice, h rrippe. piieiimmilil, uinl even eonsiiin;t iivi. In i!: early sini', AVER'S Ohcrry Pectoral i nil similar pri pnr illniK. It l eii i!;rn'rl liy IcnilhiR phyie l.iiH, Is ncrcenWe In fie llisle, does not Intel i-re Willi dlKestion, i.. nl need In lie taken inn. illy in small doses. "I'min repented tests In my own family, Ayr's flurry 1'eetiHHl Ims proved Itself a . : ; i nii'li nt remedy for colds, rnnulis, nnd l i i' various disorders of thn throat, nml ll.il-s."A. V. Ilnrtlett, rittsflrM, N. It. for the last ar years I have lieen taklnR v r s Cherry IVetnral for lung Ironlilcs, and . i.i :.sMired that Its use hits Saved My Life I aive reenmmended It to hundreds. I find most effective way of InkliiK tills medl c lie Is In small nnd frequent doses." T. M. Matthews, I". M., Sherman, Ohio. "My wife suffered from a rnlil; nnthlnR In'lped her lint Ayer's Cherry Pectoral whirli effected n cure." II. Amero, l'lympton, N. 8. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer Co., LowcII.Mim. Prompt to act, suretocure that will bo a Welcome Visitor onler to iniilco iiiri ii'iiltmo mid stock ruis- wo have mndo arrangements with tho sixteen pairo Illustrated journul with a the price of one. Talk it up and assist OF MECHANICS M&GHANIGAL TUUOUOH DRAWING The Correspondence School ot Mines, To Enter. Student only Need to Know How to Read and Write. M BunU fur P1IKK I'ltvullir of Information. Htiuluut need lost) iu tlmu from work. No liook niiilivl. Tiillloii Do You Wear Shoes? Do You Deal With Us? -:- I F NOT, WHY NOT ? LOOK HERE! Wo nro going to sell our Shoes nt n very small innrgiii nnd turn our money oflener this year. We nro now in 1893, World's Fnir year. We commence NOW. Watch our win dows every week. You can tell better by railing and examining Shoes. We lend. Henry A. Reed's Shoe Store. Here it is! TRUTH ml SQUARE DEAL! . And they know where to get it. Here is another slice of news that will create another BIG SENSATION In this Community. ; Kvery person that studies the interest of themselves, their wives and families will take, or rather should take, advantage of this article, because it will be conceded by every fair-minded person to be nothing more than a straightout effort to keej) up our well earned reputation s Tiie orioiiMors Possessing that steadfast determination not to be outdone by our competitors. All our goods will undergo another Great deduction. This Great Diminua tion will keep thinkers thinking, and 't will also puzzle our liival's Thinkers, especially when they commence to think and realize that we possess the courage to do it. It will )K a Perfect Boom Trousers that will leave our WILL BOOM ITSELF. And customers will help to your selection hundreds of Overcoats, hundreds of Suits, hundreds of Ulsters $5, $7, $9 $10, $12, $14. Worth, without the faintest shadow of exaggeration, forty to fifty per cent, more than the above charges. Wishing to aid all by our Small Profit System, and thanking the public: for past favors We remain, always sincerely, BOLGE.R BROS., The recognized Lending Clothiers, Hatters and Gents' Furnishers of Reynohlsville, Pa. Just in tiie v;Smlr CLEAN- LIN'ESS OF ggig CINDERELLA 1.MjtY-&ml7 LABOH Im AND 0 THEIR s ECONOMY r v- -f SAVES yJ-Tii'isje- YOU I fi I MONEY. - CALL -s3-3r 2S!SSSfeZ- 1 AND SEE S i'ilS I OUR 1 N. JS4-J STQ VE S. fa- -T-ra.--" r-r In fact anything you may desire in our line in our mammoth store. The Reynoldsville Hardware Co Then! is not an article in this paper that in more worthy of consideration than this one: What the people want ia ohm Small profit System. 1 And one that won't require self booming because every Over--coat, every Suit, every pair of establishment boom it for us. You can make commencing to-morrow. Season ! IT WILL PAY YOU TO EXAMINE OUR LINE OP ST0VE&' BEFORE BUYING ( ELSEWHERE AS WE CARRY THE LARGEST AND BEST LINE IN THE COUNTY. will be found"