VOLUME 2. IJKYNOLDSVILLK, I'KXN'A., WEDNESDAY MAY 2 1, liM. NUMDER 3. MnUvonl (Tim (Tiil'lcn. 1 UK I Al.O. KOCHKSTKU & I TITS- 1U KCIl KAIIAVA Y. Thoshoit line between HulloK ttlilirwiiy, ltrinlfoil, enliininneii, IlillTiilo. Hoohcstor, Mnitani l ulls niul point In tin" upper "II iriilon. On nnrt nftcr Nov. i:itt. IMi-J, pawn Hit triiliiK mill mil vi niul ilopiirt friiin I nils Crock slut Ion, ilally. except fiimliiy, ns fol lows: 7ilO A. M.-ltnulfmil Aivoiiininiliitlon-lor point Nnrtli between Fiilli t'n-i k niul ltniilforil. 7:M 11. in. tnlMil trnlii fur PllllXHIltllWIlI'V. , 10:OitA.M. Iliifltilnnml lloolietcrmrill- 1 nr Ititx'k vt nv llli-. Ulilmwiv ..liiliii-niil'iiiir.Ml . .lowclt. Ilinilfoiil.Xiiliiiiinnoii. Hull n lo nml HutIii-iIit: eoniicollinf ill .liilinninliiim with I'. E. trnln :i, fur Wllrox, Kiiih-, in ivn. I'nrr.v niul Ki le. 10:5 A. M.--Ai'iiimniiiiliiiliin l or Hullols, Svki'i, llln Hun mill I'liniMitiiwitev. 1:80 1'. St. Hrnilfoiil Ai'i'otnnioilnilon ror Hi'ii'IiIiti', UriK'kiivvllli'. Kllmoiil. Cnr mon, Kldirwny, .lohnsonliinu, Mt..lectt mid Hnulfonl. . . . 4:51) I". M.-Miill-I'or DulloN, fykes, HI Hun. runxnitinMicy nnd WnlMon. 7i5S I'. Si. AivommiHliillon For DtiHols.Wif Hun mid I'linxsuttiivnoy. Trains Arrive 7:li A. M., Aoi'ommodiitlon 1'iinxsiitiiwni-v: lo: A.M. .Mull finm W iil M i in n nd I'unxsutiiwney: I0:M A. M.. Ao coninioiliition from lliudfordi 1:20 I '. SI., Ai'i'oniinodiitlon from I'linxsiitinvnoy; 4:.V) P.M., Mull from Hutl'ulo nml Kochi'iter: 7M I'.M., Aivommmlutlon finm Hiiidfuiil. ThoumiHl mill' tickets in two rents iit milt', good for piiwniro iM'twrcn nil Minions. ,T. II. McIntvhb. Alfi'nt. FnllMi'nt'k, l'u. J. 11. HAHIIKTT. F.. '. I.AI'KV, Cienrrnl supt. lii'ii. I'll". Agent Hnulfonl Pn. Knehester N. A . ALLKGTTEN Y VALLEY 11 AUAVA Y COMPANY commencing Sunday Doc. 1H, W)'2. Low Grade Division. KARTWAIIO. No.l.'NoAINo.ll.l Iftl A. M.'P. M Kcilllunk I.nwonluim Now lli'ililolii'iu Onk Kliluo Miiyivlllo Hummi'rvlllo . . . llrookvillu Hi'll FlllIlT lieynolil'.vlllo .. Pnni'onst Full t'rcek Iliillols Snliulii Winterhurii .... Pon Hold Tyler (ilon Flshor Honooliv tirnnl Hi If! wood in 4M 4 :m 10 .VI II 11 :isi 11 4l 'i a o-i, 12 2 ' 12 :il 4 4:1 ft IV 5J2 J 22 ft ani (1 Ml III ft nil 8 2 47 I :.y 7 H I 10 ,1 7 in 11 OTy 7 2ll ft 2.1 1 a II M i:il (1 Htl 12 4:; I on 1 os it ml .is 7 on 7 :ii 7 4" I 2 1 ;i 1 4.1 1 :t 1 4; 1 m 2 m 1 v n .o, 2 42 2 M' H 20i 8 li 7 : 7 41 7 M N III H llll ft 2il. S 44! h .w,; 0 2.-i H 111 n :i niii r m. WKKTWAHIl. No.5 No.ti INo.lo: Hill 1". M. IP. ft : 7 ill I "'i 7:i4 7 44! 7 .-4I H imi K 12 M. Prlftwoofl .... 'Oriuil . llonozot to tiloii Flshor... Tylor Ponllcld Wlnti'i'liurn .. H11I111I11 D11 Hols r'lillHi'iook ... Pnni'iiiist HoynolilsvllUi Fnllor Ho 1 1 Krookvlllo.... Hurnmoi-vUk'., Mnvsvlllo OnkHldiro Now Kcllilrlu1 LHWsonliHni., Hod Hunk K . 12 0.Y f :r 12 Ki II 40 x 401 K 4s 11 itI 11 2:i :n II 44 57 10 n ml 10 isi l.V 10 2.V iV I M. 1'. M.lA TrHliiH dully cxoopi Hundiiy. HAVI n Mi;CA Hl)), tiiw'1.. HriT.. I'ltisliiiiir. Pu. JAS. r. ANDF.HHON, (ira'i.. Pakh. Aiit., PiltHhui'if, Ph PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. IN KFKECT MAY 21, lSIIIJ. Pklludolplilit F.rlo ltnllmud nivlslon TIimi Tiilihi. Trutim li'Hvo Driftwood. F.ASTWA HI) :04 A W Trnln n, dullv oxoopl. Sunday fur Hunliury, lliirrlsliiim mid Intormodliiti' nt ttiiim, iirrlvlnv lit Plilliidolpliln ll:.vi p. m.. Now York, H'.ilii P. M. i F.iillimoro, ll:4A p. H.; VhxIiIiiioii, H:IS p. h. PiiIIiiiiiii Pnrlor i'r fnoin Willlumsnort 11ml pitHMenKor cohi'Iim from Knno to Plilludillilit. :: P. M. Trnln ft, dully pxi'ppt Hundiiy for HurrlsliiirLr null intomii'dlnto Htm Ions, nr rlvliiKHt Plilluili'lpliltL4:;iliA. M.; Now York, 7:MI A. 14. TlirollKli I'OMi'h from DuHols Ut WtlliuniHport. PiiIIiiiiiii Sloopintr rnrH fiinu IIhii'IhIiiuk to Phlliidolplilit mid Now York, ltiilndi'lplitn piissi'iiui'm run roiniiin Iti Nbm'iM'r iindlstiirlH'd until 7:im a. m, )):: P. M. Train 4, daily rur Hiinlmry, HnrriH luiru mid tntcrnioillatu HtutlotiH, iirrivlnjr hi Plillailolpliiii, 11:30 a. M.; Now York, li:i A. Il l Haltlnioro, 11:20 A. M. ukIiIih;Iiiii,7:;h a. 11. Pullmnn curH null iiusHcmror coiii'Iiom from F.rli'itnd WlllliinisH.it to Phlliidolplilit. lMissoinrorH In kIooiht for Haltlmorc untl Washington will Ih transforrod Into Witsli liWUin Hloopor at llarrlshiirtr. VF'I'VA1U). 7:!W A. M. Train 1, dally xi'opl Sunday for Kklicway, DuHoIh, Clormiiul mid tutor tiKvilitto NtatUitiH. Li-avert KldKwny at U:0O p. M. forErlo. II:A0 A. M. --Train S, dully for Ki lo mid Intor modtatu ))olntH. :27 P. M.-Tniln II, dally exoopt Sunday fur Kane 11 nd Intormoit Into stnt Ions. Tlllt'(,ll THAINS K4K DKIFTWOCII) FIIOM TIIF. EAST AND SOFTH. THAIN II Ioiivoh Pliiliidolphiii H:l a. nt.j Wiishliitrlon, -Ma. M-t HaltlniofB, N:4A A. M.; Wllkusliarro, ll):l."i A. l.; daily oxcopt Hun day, 111 r l vlnu at Driftwood at 11:27 p. h. with 1'u I liiiun Parlur cur from Plilludolpliiu to WllllaniHiHirt. THAI N :i IrnvPM Now York lit p. m.i Plillu dolpliiu, 11:211 p. m.i Washington, 111.411 a. 111.; Hafthuoro, 11:40 p. ni.; daily iiriivinv; at llrlflwisHl at HlVI a. ni. Pullmun Hli'oplne rum from Plilludoltiliiu to Kilo und from WiiHliliiKtitti und Hall linoi'o In Wlllluinsport mid throuirh passomror ooaolioH from Phila dolphia U Ki-i nntl Hiilllinore U) Villlunni lHirt and ui DuIIoIm. TltAIN 1 Ioiivoh Honovo ut :! n. m dully tixi'opt 8uiuluy, urrlvliiK ut Driftwood 7;.i"i a. 111. JOHNSONBURG RAILROAD. (Dully extuijit Sunduv.) THAIN 111 Ioiivim lildKway ut li:4ti'u. m.: Jolin miiihuiK ut ll:6i u. in., urrlvliiK ut CUiriiiout at 10:4.1 11. m. THAIN 20 Ivuvett (Uormont lit 10:5.1 u. m. ur rlvlim ut JohiiHonhuiK utll:40 u. 11). und HldKWuy ut llnVi u. 111. JIDGWAY & CLEARFIELD 11. R. DAILY EYCEPT SUNDAY, BOUTUWAKI). NOItTHWAlil). P.N A.M. HTATIONH. A.M. P.M. iTili Win KUIirway Tiiii 7lio 12 IK V4N IhIiiiiiI Hun 120 U.M . lift'' lli.u,,,, lla AJ11 12;ll 10 02 I'mylanil 1 Oil tl IB 12 UK 10 10 HIiorlsMlllH 12 fW tt . IS 42 10 III Who Hook 12 M H 2.1 12 44 1ft 17 ' yinoyurd Hun 12 ft2 II 2:1 12 411 20 20 y Currlor - 12 M) 1121 100 1032 Hroi'kwuyvUlo 12 Hn 0 Oft 1 10 1042 MoMInn Summit 12 ml nfi7 114 10 4N HlirvovH Kim 12 2H ft M 120 10 U Fulls Clunk 12 20 5 4fl 146 11 . llullols 12 0S 6 JO THAINS LEAVE HID0WAY. EuHtwurd. Wtwtwurd. Train H, 7:17 a. m. Train i, 11:4 u. m. Train 6, 1:4A p. ni. Truin 1, 11:011 u. ui. Train 4, 7:66 p. m. Trnln 11, tt:2fi p. ni, S M. I'REVOHT, Ovu. Munutcer. 4. H. WOOD, Oon. Puim. Ag't, FL0WER3 WITHOUT FRUIT. Prunn thnn thy words; the tliomrhtn control Thftt oVr thi'o mvi'll nml tlimn. Tliry will condone v.-llhin tliy mml And clinnuo tn purpo.-o strmur. But h who IDs I1I1 fi clluKs run In soft luxurious flow Bhrltika wlirn Imrd vrvlro must be done And fnltit. nt every woo. Faith's mennrst dt-i'tl nioic favor lirnm NVhcro hrnTta and wills nro wpinlicl Trmn brlirhtnst trntinort rhnln-st prftycra Which bloom thrlr hour nml fudo. John llrnry Nowmnn. SIOUX LOVEMAKING. HOW A YOUNG INDIAN WARRIOR MAKES KNOWN HIS PASSION. Ha Ooe to Work In One of Two Ways, Klthcr With Food nr Mimic Chnncn the Mnldrn of Illn Choice With 11 Itlnnkct or Slnirn to Her In the Demi of Night. Althongh the Siotix Indian 1b, under til other circumatniiccs, ns ftolcnl ns A stone, Ills heart often under the toncli of love, and ho is ns romnntio in his courtfthip nn the most Bentimental Can cnxinn. The old custom of selling a maiden to her lover by her fnther has fnllen into disrepute. It is one of the savage, customs successfully eradicated by missionary teachers. In those days a squaw was considered a beast of bur den, while her condition is now much improved. There nre two characteristic methods of Sioux courtship commonly practiced, though it must bo admitted that with the gradual education of the young meu and women in tho schools there is nn apparent tendency to npe the ways of their white brothers and sisters and to consume the fuel of their parents in the pursuance of their lovemaking, but with those from whoso natures it seems im possible to eradicate the traits of their forefathers the customs followed by their ancestors nre still comme il faut, and to these they stubbornly adhere. Ration dBy is seized npon by these "true Indians" for lovemaking, and the sjiort of it is as heartily enjoyed by the old ns by the young. When a brave finds upon tho agency grounds tho maid en of his choice, he manifests his prefer ence for her by taking the blanket from his shoulders nnd stretching it out before him, rushing at her with the intention of throwing it over hur head and shoul der. If the brave doesn't succeed in cap turing the girl at the first attempt, he tries again nnd persists in his efforts un til he is satisfied by her action that Iuh suit is not approved. If his advances are favored, the maiden, after a brief period coquetry, allows tho blanket to settle over her head, nnd thus envelojicd she listens as well ns she can to a verbal ac counting of his deeds of prowess ns a hunter, of his possessions in ponies nnd skins, nnd the low chanting of a song in which ho pledges his lovo eternally. If after listening to this the maiden is still willing to become his squaw, she tells him so. The blanket is removed from her shonlders and together they go to the maiden's parents, or, if they are dead, to hnr nearest relatives, to whom they declare their desire. Tho match is speedily sanctioned, and when they leave the agency Uie bride carries on her shoul ders a portion of her husband's rations. There is less romance in this method of winning a wife, thnn in the custom of wooing with the aid of a flute. Such a courtship as this must be carried on in the spring when the sap is running in the trees, for only at this time can the wooer mnko his tuneful instrument. The manufacture of a flute is not a diffi cult piece of work. A section of willow or any other wood with a smooth bark is chosen. It must bo about 15 inches long nndhnlfnn inch in diameter. With a smooth stick this piece of wood is vigor ously rubbed until the bark has boon loosened on the wood. It is then twisted off. A row if holes is cut through the bark, and it is when completed exactly like a fife, though less shrill in tone. The brave invariably chooses a pleas ant night for his lovemaking. When the conditions are favorable, he locates himself a short distance from the tepee in which the ohjoct of his affection it sleeping and blows on hit bark flute a weird chant, probably an iinpromptn composition. Of courso the sound of the flute at tracts the attention of the people in the villngo, who gather around the ardent swnin nnd indnlge in good natural badi nage at his expense. If ho is a true lover and a desirable man for a husband, he will continue his playing, indifferent to the presence of his tormentors. The tost sometimes huts two hours be fore the father of the maiden who is thus being wooed issues from the tepee and ascertains who the serenader is. He re ports to his daughter, and if she ap proves the suitor she goes forth to meet him and leads hiia to her tepee for the sanction of her parents. If she doesn't approve the man, she tells her father to dismiss him, which he does, and the un successful lovor disconsolately pockets his flute and leaves, followed by the jeers of the crowd. It not infrequently occurs that the lovemaker is unable to keep his temper while the crowd is rallying him, lie sometimes even throws down his flute and attacks his persecutors. Such a mani festation is considered an evidonce of bad taste and indicating a defect in the woo er's churacter. It is useless for the un fortunate fellow to press his suit further lifter such a breach of etiquette. , Sioux parents of a marriageable daugh ter use a good doal of diplomacy in dis posing of her baud in morriuKe. They are ahvnys ambitious to find ft husband who has considerable wealth, for accord ing to tribal law thy nro entitled to a certain portion o,f tho possessions of the Fon-in-law. It sometimes happens that tho hand of the s.iiiio maiden is sought by several braves. When this is the ense, tho will of the father rises superior to that of the daughter, and she is compelled to consider his choice, which ho does not mnko until ho has excited a lively bid ding among'them for his daughter's fa vors. Needless to sny she usually goes to tho man who has the greatest amount of Iiroiierty to share with her father. Kate !'ield"s Washington. What the Italian Laborer Fear. Italians are less prone to strike than any other laborers, the ono sure way of bringing them to tho point being the withholding of their wages. They nre very suspicious, and if not paid in full at the appointed hour take alann, fear ing that they nre going to lose their earn ings. Such a thought sets them wild. Argument is useless. The employer who gets behind with his payroll is lost. New York Tribune. A Dlnbolleel onp none. "Ves," meditatively said the bnchrlot jo the other man, "I would havo been a prosy old married man like yon by this time if it had not been for the meddle some intervention of a soup bone. 801110 months n;;o I was very much impressed With a little typewriter girl in onr of fice. She was bright, pretty, had a dainty figure nnd wore such neat toilets that half the men in the place were moro or less diift about her. I was too bash ful to ask her if I might call on her, and one night over my Into cnr 1 evolved n business method, of settling my fate. I would go ravly to the office next morn ing she was usually tho first clerk down I would send tho porter outnp ni nn errand and then dictate a letter lo her asking her to innrry me. Wasn't that a brilliant scheme? But she was not thero nnd did not come in until 9 o'clock. "Lnter in tho day I overheard her tell another girl what had detained her. Tho cook at her boarding house had gone out to buy meat for breakfast. Sho entered tho bntcher shop just ns the butcher in anger throw 11 soup bono nt his assist ant. The cook intercepted the soup bone, was felled insensible, nnd being unknown to the bntcher was carried off to tho hospital. Tho boarders waited for their breakfast, and my romantic in tentions were) chilled beyond resuscita tion. So hero I am, n dismal bachelor, tho victim of a contemptible, mean, littlo 5-cont soup bone." Iudiannpolis Jour nal. Perpetuation of PhyiilcRl DefectM. Diseases of malnutrition, snch as gout, scrofula, cancer nnd tuberculosis, re quire several generations for their full evolution, and this evolution may be re tarded or even wholly arrested by inter marriage with healthy persons of an other nonrelaW family. Acquired con stitutional taints nnd abnormal habits, as alcoholism, kleptomnnin, when onco firmly rooted in nn individual organism tend to propagate themselves like fanv ily features and become hereditary for several generations, even when the origi nal factors have ceased to act. Thus tho acquired habit of the father may be come a natural feature in his son or daughter, just as the pnppies of n well trained pointer or setter require but very little training to "point" or "set. Deformities, superfluous digits or toes and malformations in general may be caused by accident to the mother, by powerful mental impressions arresting or altering tho development of the un born child, nnd the child born with4iny of those defects may becomo tho parent or grnndparent of an infant having an exactly similar abnormality. Homoeo pathic Roriew. How Faet llorl Thought Travel? Professor Bonders of Utrecht has made Bomo interesting experiments in regard to the rapidity of thonght. By means of two instruments, which he callt the "neomatachogrnph" and the "noerna tiichonicter," he obtained some impor tant results. His experiments show that it takes tho brain .067 of a second, to elaborate a single idea. Writing in re gard to this Professor Donders says: "Doubtless the time required for the brain to net s not tho same in all radl viduuls. I ielieve, however, that my instruments may be perfected until we will be able to determine the mental caliber of our friends without our friends knowing that we are testing their apt ness." The professor further says: "For tho eye to receive an impression roquires .077 of a second, nnd for the eat to appre ciate a sound .049 of a second is neces sary. Those curious experiments have established one fact at least viz, that the eye acts with nearly double the rapidity of the ear." Philadelphia Press. A Fair Queetlon. Miss Passe Three clairvoyants have propheslod that I should be married be fore I reached 80 years. Miss Blooming Bud And were your Elmira Gazette. Man is marvelously made. Who it eager to investigate tho curious and won derful works of omnipotent wisdom, let him not wander the wide world around to seek them, but examine himself. The motion of the earth around the sun is 68,309 miles an hour, over 1,000 miles a minute, or 19 miles a second, Slave ants and working ants have lost their wings through being kept entirely to a life ou tkn wound. MR. SCHOENFELD'S LUCKY ERROR. Ho Forgot lfo Was Iti'ttlnu round, Nut Ilollnm, lint Jnnctcr Won. While Mr. Hcfooenfeld, the Imrsn own er of Indiana, was in England in 1H!i bo picked up somo pretty good horses. Just ns the horses were being tnken down to the ship the colt Jangler fell sick nnd had to bo left behind. Mr. Schoenfeld remained in England to visit some of the tracks. So ho placed Jangler with Alfred Day nt Newninrket, with instructions to get him in shnpo by early fall. Ho then started to do tho races, saw tho Lincoln handicap open the legitimate season, nttended thespring meetings at Newmarket, Epsom nnd Snndown, spotting the winners of tho City and Suburban, the Great Metropol itan Bnd the Derby, generally having a pretty good time nnd luckily winning enough to pay expenses. The British bookmaker does most of his business "on tho nod" with regular race goers, weekly settlements being made on Mondays. Mr. Schoenfeld was soon recognized as a responsible bettor and could bet away freely on credit. During these months he had heard now and again, from Alfred Day that Jangler was doing nicely, coming back to his feed nnd form, nnd one letter in timated that ho would, if placed right, soon be good enough to win a nico stake. Later Mr. Schoenfeld received this tele gram: llnvo entered cott FKhntn IMnte at Windsor: think ho will about do; put 2U each way. Day. Being in London on the day of tho race Mr. Schoenfeld went down to Wind sor. Strolling into the betting ring about 10 minutes before the start, with the amount he intended betting buzzing in his head, namely $100, he halted in front of a bookmaker with whom he had a business acquaintance. "Thompson, how much will you give me on Janglor?" he said in as offhand a manner as possible. "Give you tens," was the response. "That isn't enough. He's a rank out sider, but he's the last on tho card, and I take a fancy sometimes to back the cud ono." "Well, I'll give you elevens," said Thompson. "No," replied Schoenfeld; "givo mo 13 to 1, nnd I'll bet you n hundred." "Donol" said tho pcnciler, und Mr. Schoenfeld walked away toward tho sad dling paddock to see how Jangler looked. While, there it suddenly flashed across his mind that he had bet 100 and not dollars on an untried colt. Pushing his way back to the bookmaker ho asked, "How did you understand my bet," he gasped, "dollars or pounds?" "Why, pounds, of courso," said tho hooky. "Wo don't know anything about your Yunkeo currency over here." "Why, I meant dollars!" replied Mr. Schoenfeld. "Can't you alter it? I don't waut to risk f00 on this colt." "Very sorry I can't oblige you; but, you see, it was soveral minutes since you made this bet, and I made my other prices accordingly. You'll have to stund it now." Before bo could reach a point where he could see, tho winner Unshod past the post, hut for once the British crowd for got to shout tho name of the first horse. "Some doubt about who's got it, I sup poso," thought tho speculator; so, calling to a man who could see the winner number hoisted, he asked, "Who's won can yon see?" In a low seconds the reply caine'Some bloody dark 'ess from Alf Day's stable nanio o' Jingles or Janglos, or summat like that." With a deep sigh of relief, Mr. Schoen feld mentally wroto down $0,000 on the credit sido of Jangler s account nnd went back to town to have a real good tune. Now York Times, They Object to Cold Muttea. What, I wondor, is the reuson of the intense aversion to cold mutton cher ished by curtain classes of tho comma nity? Is it possible that Dickens, with his grim picture of the squalid rations dealt out to the poor little marchioness bv Miss Sally Brass, has had anything to do with the unpopularity of this particular article of food? Whatever be the cause, there can be no doubt about tho fact, und most house keepers will recognize in the protest of the sweep s man who objected in a Lon don court to the action of his master in offering him cold inuttou for dinner nn echo of a Btaplo and recognized com plaint from the servants' halL The odd thing is that no one, servant or otherwise, ever thinks of objecting to cold beef. It is only mutton in its frigid state that is held to bo, in some myste rious way, derogatory to the dignity of its consumer. The comlo papers, in duys of yore, used to connect cold mutton and "wash ing day" together, and it is perhaps to this fact that the survival of this curi ous prejudice may bo traced. Lady's Pictorial. May lie Itube Harrow's I'lunder. News comes from Lamar county of the finding of about l3,000 in coin, which was dug up in a field on a farm not far from where llube Burrow, the train rob ber, formerly resided. It is thought thr.t this mouoy was some of Burrows's f! gotten gains. He was known to have had about that amount of money a year before he was killed, and it was never accounted for. Some of his relatives Bay he buried it. The express companies be robbed may recover it. The mun on whose farm it was found has it.-r-Ala-bama Cor. St. Louis Republic, Catching t'lah While Atleep, "Never saw a fish asleep, eh?" said Cornelius Ilinmnn, who is located nt the Liudell. "Well, I have. I've seen them sleep sound nnd much to their sorrow, especially catfish. There is nothing more wary than a fish. You know that y-m can't creep up on them nor drop a pebble anywhere within 150 feet of them but whnt they will dodgo nwny that is, when they are not asleep. How I come to know so much of. this is thnt I have caught them without bnit when they were sleeping, although I did uso a hook and line. The first one that I ever caught this way wn a large catfish that I observed daily to be in one particular spot the base of a wooden pilo thnt protected an icehouse chute that led out into the water. A kind of nest was there, a depression in the mud, and hero that catfish was to be found every day at about 3 p. m. It would lay for hours in the rays of the afternoon sun and nev er move. "I decided to catch it. First 1 fished around there day after day, but to no purpose. Bnit of nny kind wasn't any inducement to that cntfish. I concluded thnt it must be asleep when it would al low a fat minnow to swim by and never touch it. I got a sharp plain hook, which I properly weighted, bo that it would act direct. I lowered it and moved it slowly np to the side of the fish. Then I tnrned the line so that the hook was directly under it. Then I gave the hook a quick jerk. The catfish tlnrtcd awny, but not very far. I hnd mm foul, and all lie- cause he was sleeping, I have caught piko nnd sunfish the same way at least a dozen different times." St. Louis Globe- Democrat, tier Chat With the Emperor. Mrs. Flyer had just returned from Europe. Of courso tho "Woman's club" was eagerly watching for her arrival, nnd just ns soon ns she got back a recep tion was tendered to her. Tho room was crowded, nnd Mrs. Flyer became the center of a group of interested listeners. Everybody wanted to know just what the had done nnd how she hnd done it, whether she got her gloves and silks in nil right, etc. At last Miss Perkins said, "And did you go to Berlin?" "Oh, yes. And really I did have the most delightful time. I was at a recep tion one night nml met the emperor. There was a silence. The magnitude of the thing astonished the club. But curiosity conquered, nnd Mrs. Flyer went 011: "Yes, ho wns thero with nil his officers, nnd I did hnvo such a delightful conver sation with him." "Oh, tell us about it. Did yon talk long?" "No, you seo my German isn't very good, and I was a littlo bit flustered, sol only asked him a question or two." "And whnt did you say?" "Oh, I just smiled nnd said 'Sprechen Bio DoutBch?' " Boston Budget. Comforte anil Danger. Many of tho comforts of modern life can only be enjoyed ut the risk of seri ous accidents. Leaking gas pipes cause explosions, and tho death roll for which that new agent, electricity, is responsi ble is already considerable. Euch severe frost brings itB crop or boiler accidents. Paraffin lamps coutinuo to explode. Every day or every night thero are fires, many of which load to frightful nccl dents and often death. The largo masses of people gathered together in a huge city like this are ex. posed to constant attacks from those in sidious enemies, tho bacteria. The dust and soot nnd fog foster theso enemies of human life. The ground under London is honeycombed with druinago pities, largo and small, measuring thousnnds of miles. Each mile of drain is charged, sometimes at high pressure, with poisons sufficient to kill hundreds of the health iest men. It is enough to mnko us shud der to think that only a few feet divido ns from a gigantic, death dealing octo pus. So that it appears if wo givo up traveling we run an almost equal peril in staying at homo. "Suffering London." A California Imuiber Flume The county of Fresno, Cal., boasts of a flume 03 miles long, built of timber throughout and designed for conveying lumber from the place of fulling in the Sierra Nevada mountains to the plains below. In section the flume is V shaped, the angle being 90 degrees. Tho V is 21 inches deep and for the most part 8 feet 7 inches across tho top, this width being increased, however, at various points where a decrease in the grade necessitates a larger volume of water to carry the timber, the lower terminus be ing 3 feet 4 inches wido by 81 inches deep. The main supply of water is received from a hike near its head, but four addi tional feeders are led into it at different points along its length. Tho sides of tho flumo are constructed of li-iuch boards, and tho structure is carried on trestle work for nearly tho wholo length, theso trestles being us many as 130 foot high in some of the deep canyons crossed by tho flume. The steepest grade is one of 1,C00 feet to tho mile, maintained for about 8,000 feet. Chicago Tribune A l'rotpeot of a Lively Time. "Will you npologizo for blowing smoke in that ludy's fuco?" "Apologine nawthin, "Very well, I intend to thrash you, and before 1 do I think it only fitir to toll you that I am Tranjan, the heavy weight rusher of Harvard." . "That's all right, young feller. Vm Liver Gilligan, the middleweight cham pion of Hoboken." Harper's. v Snch a TMti Too Much tilgnlty. It is all vefy well for a traveling man to be on bis dignity, but if ho overdoes it ho is apt to encounter tho fall beforo which, we nr9 told, pride goeth. When I first went on the road, 1 had n, mortal objection to tho word "drummer" nnd resented the term whenever applied to mo. On mv second journey I called upon nn old fashioned merchant in a Texas town whose nnine wns on our books and to whom my predecessor had always sold large bills. I introduced myself with a good deal of dignity and handed him my card. "Oh, you're 's now drummer," re marked tho old gentleman in a some what patronizing tone. I wns nettled considerably, and correcting him said: "No, I am their traveling man. I am not a 'drummer.'" The merchant was quite as good at repartee as I was, and looking at me half in pity and half in contempt he said with a sneer, which he made no at tempt to disguise. 'Oh, that's so, is It? Well, 1 was look ing out for 's drummer, but if you ain't he I've nothing for you." No amount of persuasion or apologiz ing had any effect on the old gentleman, to whom the representative of a rival house sold a first class bill the snme aft ernoon. The lesson was not thrown away on me, nnd now a man can call me a Hottentot, provided ho accompa nies tho salutation with n good order. Cor. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Three Oreat Navigator. To review the work of Columbus without referring to thnt of Vespucius nnd Mngellan would leave the story of new sea and world discovery discon nected and incomplete. ' This will be patent when it is remembered that, though a believer in the rotundity of the earth, it wns not Columbus bnt Magel lan who first physicnlly demonstrated thnt fact by circumnnvigntion. And Ma gellan might have failed but for tho pre vious work of Vespucius. The latter had explored the Atlantio coast of South ' America farther south than nny of his predecessors, and the south Atlantic ocean eastward to the islands of South Georgia, nearly to the parallel of Cape Horn. By this jonrney Vespucius demonstrat ed with a considerable degree of cer tainty that tho strait, which had for some years been looked for, lealing to the elusive unknown sea that bounded tho eastern coast of Asia, was not to be found through the now lands of the west north of 54 degrees south, at all events. The mouth of the Amazon, the bays of Hio Janeiro and of the La Plata had been explored and were found to contain fresh water, so that through nono er these could au entrance to the unknown sea on tho farther west be found. Thomas Magee in Californian. ' The Greeks staked their faith on No. "8;" tho oracles were consulted three times; tho tripod was sacred to the gods,, and so forth. The visitor who is easily entertained is nn entertaining person nnd is gener ally welcome, even if ho have many faults. It is averred thnt a sausage and a slice of bread and bntter compose the Prinoe cf Wales' breakfast five mornings ont of lix. . Havagee Who Know Little Arithmetic In Galton's "Tropical South Africa" it is stated that the Dammnras use no term beyond three, nnd thnt when they wish to express four they tuke to their fin gers. Beyond five they cannot count at all. It is seldom, howeier, that they loso in a bargain through their inability to count. When bartering, each sheep or oxon, or whatever they may be sell ing, must be paid for separately. If this -rate of exchange were at the rate of two sticks of tobneco for one sheep, it would greatly puzzle aDnmniaratoaccopt four sticks for two Bheep. Goltou says that' he several times paid them in that way, and that the Daramara forthwith sot aside two sticks for one of the sheep, and even when he found that he had two sticks left for the other Bheep be still had his doubts as to the genuineness of the transaction and was not satisfied until two sticks were put into his hand and one sheep driven away, and then another two sticks given to him for the other sheep. London' Underground Water. The chalk under London can no longer be looked upon as a source of great addi tional Supplies of water. This is already Utilized by upward of 200 wells, and whilo at tho commencement of tho cen tury tho water when tapped rose in many places to tho surface it stands now nt a level of about 40 feet below Trinity high water mark. It is considered that tho rato of depression now varies from 0110 to two feet per annum. Tho effect of tho continuous pumping of water from tho chalk has thus been to lowor tho piano of saturation, whereby tho flow' of distant springs und streams has been more or less seriously nffocted. Practi cally, the amount of water pumped from the chulk under London is so much taken from tho streams that nro fed by the natural overflow from that formation. ' Natural Science. A Mnu'e Ilnuilkervhlvf. A uion's handkerchief has such an air of attending strictly to business that you cuu't conoeive of any romuutic situation tn which it might figure. It Is usually such a big affair that one would as soon think of growing enthusiaeUo over . a towel. Philadelphia Times.