WAYS OF ALLIGATORS THE 8AURIAN AT CLOSE RANGE IN HIS FLORIDA HOME. Bow tli Fcmatt Lavs Her Rats mad Care for Her Taunt A Mother Will right Anything That Threatens tier Babies. 1)1 rt anil LmnrlM of Alligators. Ono of tho sight most PtiKrly wntrh d for liy the newly arrived Florida vis itor, aa ho glide over tho lukc and river of tlint genial land, in the nllfgn tor. A few year bro this desire was easily grntiflod, lmt the gront saurlnn in comparatively rnro nowaday along tho older route of travel This i due pint ! to thn bullet of tho victor and pnrlly to tho shot and trap of tho moro legit imate alligntor hunter, who find in that pursuit thn chief mentis of support for himself and his family. It is in tho ilenso fastnesses of tho in land swamps and everglades that alli gators may he seen in great number on bright day, basking in tho sunshine. They are gregnrious and love to ossem bio in snch places, whero they brinp their two row of strong teeth together with a prodigious clatter and ronr with a noise that resembles thunder. . The female makes her nest in the sand near the water' edge, scraping a hole with her paw and dropping tho egg in a regular layer. Then she scrapes grass, leaves, mud and sand over them, on these places another layer, and so con tinue alternate layer until the nest contains from 80 to 40 eggs. As tho holo is rarely deep pnongh to hold all these, the result is a decided mound easily de tected by tho experienced hunter, who find ready sale for tho egg a curiosi ties. They are white, hard shelled and rather larger than a hen's egg. If he prefer to await their hatching, he se cures a fine lot of little alligators, for which also there is always a ready sale. While she thn leave her prospective children to the doubtful guardianship of the earth, the mother doe not desert them. Patiently she keeps wuteh over the nest in which they lie, never allow ing that mound of sand to be long out of her sight. How she know exactly when the little folk are ready, like the emancipated chicken, to step out of their shell and t:.ke their first peep at tho world, who shall say? But, all the same, it is a fact that, however far afield her excursion may previously have been, the day. and the hour of that happy event in her family circle And her on the spot ready to gather the little one under her wing, a it were, and lead them to their future home in the water that lies before them. This watchful care the mother con tinue until her babies ore old enough to forage for themselves and their scale are firm enough to enable them to dis pense with her protection. The extent to which the young alligators or croco dile require this watchful care can hardly be realized by those that are not familiar wi'h their habits, for the little one are ter bly persecuted by bird and beasts and even by their kinsmen, the bull alligator, which sometimes eat a dozen or two of their own children at a meal. The mother on such occasion ha been known to turn and fight the unnatural monsters with such fi.ryas to put them to flight. It ia not only tho bull alligator that she will attack when alarmed for the safety of her young she often holds tho most experienced hunt ers at bayMmtil her littlo charge hove time to flee to a pluce of safety. Tho sight presented by the mother, surrounded and followed by a whole brood of her little ones, is a pleasing one, but lot nn enomy come in view and the Bceno oensea to be pleasant In the twinkling of an eye the little one dash away into te mysterious shadows, and the placid mother become transformed into a raging fury, fairly churning tho qniot water into waves in hor mad rush to do battlo with tho intruders. Without this incentive of maternal affection, however, it is but seldom that an alli gator or crocodile attacks a human be ing. The lower animals are les fortunate. Cattle in the far south, where the ope range and shallow water extend a tempting Invitation to room, are some times seen with shortened tails, an ab breviation for which tho wily alligator ia responsible. Pigs rooting too near the water's edge and unobservant of tho log- like form lying close at their side are ofteh caught by a lightninglike sweep of tne alligator's formidable taiL But the most cherished of all tidbit to an alligator is a nioe, plump dog. The saurian' peculiar attraction toward this animal it so well known to hunter that tbey frequently imitate tho yelp of dog to entice their prey within range, and the call never fuiUvcf it purpose. The squeal of m pig i almost a effec tive. These dainty bits, however, are rath er in the line of luxuries. For a steady, everyday diet the alligator depends up on fish, and it hannta those localities ia rivers or lake where its natural prey most abounds. It catches the fish by diving swiftly under passing shoal - and snatching two or three in it open jaw a it pasao through the shoal. Then, rising to the aurfaoe, it tosses them in the air, for the purpose of eject ing the water that ha entered its mouth along with the fish, and adroitly catches them in their descent. Helen Haroourt in Philadelphia Time. i V Latitude af VtmU She colored deeply. A girl in an ordinary story would fcave blushed red. But she was in a problem story with poster illustration. Aooordingly, in view of the uncer tainty, she merely colored. Detroit Tribune, It is a certain rule that wit and pas sion are entirely incompatible. When the affection aye moved, there ia no place for the iniagi nat ion. Hume. Bnaila vara oooa thought to be a our for eoaaamptioa. rolling Mallgmnt. A tnaliclons person, who took pleas ure in giving puin, tried to mortify Dr. Guthrie, the eloqnont Scotch preacher. But the young minister the incident happened at Arbirlot, his first parish- took the wind out of hi sails and left him bobt-ng in tho shame of failure. The malignant man had been very ill. and being an attendant nt the parish church, tho minister, as soon as the doctor would permit, visited him. The man expected tho call and was prepared for it. It was at a time when the con trovcrsy that resulted in the formation of the Free church was raging through out Scotland, and a scurrilous pamphlet had been published against Dr. Guth rie, which he had hoard of, but not seen. The malignant man, who had secured a copy of the pamphlet, thought to mortify his minister by getting him to take it homo and read it No sooner had the clergyman finished praying with him and risen to hi feet to go than the man said: "Oh, Mr. Guthrie, hore i a pam phlet about yout" Guthrie, seeing malice gleaming in thn man' eye, and suspecting the truth, asked, "Is it for or against m?" "Oh, " ho replied, "it is against you. " "Ah, well, you may keep it" nn swered the minister, with a laugh. "Had it been for mo I wonld have read it I never read anything that is against met" "Never did at man look more chap fallen than he," Raid Dr. Guthrie, re lating tho incident He added, "My answer i one which, if given in sim ilar circumstances, would put nn end to much mischief. "Youth's Compan ion. Victors Supply Bard Dolled Egg. There i a strange custom attendant upon local election which has existed in Brown township, Delaware county, O., for the last 80 year. It is that of eating 40 dozen hard boiled eggs on election night at the expense of the suc cessful candidates. Neither the bill of faro nor the number of eggs is ever va ried. Each year a committee is selected to secure tho eggs and prepare tho feast When the count ia finished, the egg are passed around and the banquet begins. The person who are elected foot the bilL Party feeling never interfere with this part of the election proceedings, and it is an unwritten law that tho feast is to be furnished. But one man ever dared to brave popular sentiment and refuse to pay his share of the expense. Ho had been elected by a good plurality, but was turned down at the next election for no other reason than his want of respect for tho custom. The election for the township ia held at the little village of Eden, where the greater part of the township is gathered on the night of the feast No one knows how the ceremony originated. Cincinnati Enquirer. Jttj Gould's Orchids. "Shrewd as Jay Gould waa in every branch of finance," a flower merchant said to me tho other day, "he hod no idea whatover of the value of orchids his great hobby. The old orchid collec tion up at Irvington has run down now, but during Gould' lifetime it waa one of the finest in the world. The amount of money that had been spent on it, however, was enormous. Careful, conservative buying by an orchid expert would have gathered it together at al most a fraction of the sum actually paid ont Many exquisite and rare varieties wore numbered in it it ia true, but an excessive price waa paid for the most of them. "The old finanoior' ways in this were well known, and people with fine orchids to sell seldom failed to get the sum they asked. Actually, he used to pay as much as f 50 at times for orchids thnt were hardly worth a quarter of that In London he had agents constant ly on the lookout for rare plants of this species, und he paid them prices that they could have obtained nowhere else. " New York Herald. Documentary Evidence, "If lever have a daughter alio shall be taught to apeak every known lan guage, but not to write one, " declare John Drew in "The Squire of Dames. " The average parent does not half ap preciate the necessity of pointing ont to his daughter the dangers that may arise from the too free use of hor pen. Men are taught in their business life to be careful what they put on paper, and this same caution ought to be part of ev ery girl' education. One prudent New York society woman, who haa enjoyed life to the full, la very fond of saying, "My motto haa always been, 'Avoid documentary evidence. ' "New York Journal. Obliging a Lawyer. A celebrated criminal lawyer, having just defended a noted assassin so bril liantly that the wretch waa acquitted in the face of overwhelming evidence, steps up to the judge. "A word in your ear, your lordship." Judge Well, what I it? . "I would ask that the prisoner be de tained in jail until tomorrow morning. I have to cross a lonely field on my way home, and the rascal happens to know that I have money about me. " Obliging Judge Oh, certainly. Strand Maguine. Vegetable Paper. The ancient Mexicans made a good article of paper from the pith of the maguey plant. By pressure the libera were condensed into a tolerably strong fabric, whioh received ink and' eolor very well. Many specimens of the Mexi can paper are to be found in the world'a museums, and in the National library in the City of Mexico there are great numbers of mannacripta and documents composed of thia paper. Proof Pool tire. The First Girl So you think they are engaged? The Second Girl I am sure of it Why, aba haa stopped apeakfng of him a Tom West and always refer to him a Knew Bis Bights. A little bowlegged Jap abotit 4 feet high made the conductor on a Market etreet cor feel very uncomfortable yee terday. The Jap got on the car at Powell street, and in poyment of hie fore gave the conductor a transfer. He glanced at it and observed that it had been punched an hour before, "Fare, please I" he growled a he held out the transfer. "I have gave you one transfer," said tho Jap very calmly and deliberately a be stared ahead like a wooden Indian. "That was punched an hour ago. " "I cannot help if the conductor punch a wrong hole," declared the Jap. "But it il not good. I want your fare." "If it ia not good, why he gave it met"' "Will you pay your fare?" "Na" "Then you will havo to get off." "I neither pay any more nor got off, " declared the Jap deliberately, and his face never moved a muscle. "Then I will have to throw you off. " And tho conductor stopped the cor. "You arc afraid to put me off, if you even could The law says you must take transfers, and your employer says you mnst take it too, if you cannot make a man pay again. You cannot make me pay again." Tho conductor gavo the bellcord a jerk, and the little Jap continued to stare out the window opposite. Son Francisco Post. Wee Orate fill to the Preacher. "The man who said, ' 'Tis the unex pected that always happens, ' waa a preacher, I'll guarantee, " said a clerical member of the Lnuch club. "At my time of life I ought not to be stunned by anything, but after service a good wom an of my flock did manage to take my breath away. I was preaching about the Father's tender wisdom in caring for us all," he ald. "I illustrated by Raying that tho Father knows which of us grow best in sunlight and which of ua must have shade. ' Yon know you plant roses in the sunshine,' I said, 'and heliotrope and geraniums, but if you want yonr fuchsia to grow you must keep them in a shady nook. ' After the sermon, whioh I hoped would be a comforting one, a woman came up to me, her face glowing with a pleasure that was evidently deep and true. 'Oh, Dr. , I am so grate ful for that sermon, ' she laid, clasping my hand and shaking it warmly. My heart glowed for a moment, while I wondered what tender place in her heart and life I had touched. Only for a mo ment, though. 'Yes,' she went on fer vently, 'I never knew before what wa the matter with my fuchsias. ' "Chi cago Interior. Persian Peasants. There is probably no peasantry in the world so ground down as the Persian. The agricultural laborer there, as in China, never triea to ameliorate his con dition, for the simple reason that if he earns more, more is taken away from him by the rulers of the land. The gen eral condition of the laboring classes, however, does not seem to be so bad as might be supposed. In a country so vast (660,000 square miles) and so thinly populated (6,600,000 in all), a small and sufficient supply of food is easily raised, especially with such prolific soil at tho command of the poorest At Shiraz there are two harvests in the year. The seifl, sown in summer and reaped in autumn, consists of rice, cot ton, Indian corn and garden produce, and the tchatoi is sown in October and November, and reaped from May till July. This ia exclusively wheat and barley. Here also grow grapes, oranges and pomegranates, for which latter Shiraa ia famed. Outing. Dlood Showers la Olden Tlmes In tho "Annals of Remarkable Hap penings In Home" mention is made of 14 different showers of blood, or blood and other susbtanoea mixed, which oc curred between the years 819 A. D. and 1170. In 1229 we find record of a ahower of blood and dust which covered the larger port of Italj . In 1920 a "snow" foil in Syria "which presently turned into large brooks and pools of blood." A monk who wrote In the year 1261, and whoso manuscript is now preserved in the British museum, tolls of a throe days' shower of blood "all over south ern Europe." Burgundy had a blood ahower in 1861, and Bedfordshire, Eng land, witnessed a similar phenomenon in the year 1460. In 1680 hailstones foil in Wurttemberg whioh contained cavities filled with blood or blood red liquid. The last "blood shower" on record occurred in Siam in the year 1802. St Louis Republic. Tho Batcher. Customer That meat that I bought here last, Mr. Cleaver, waa frightfully tough. Butcher Do yon know, marm, that one reason why there are so many poor teeth nowadays la because they do not have enough exercise? Customer But that steak couldn't be cut with a knife. Butcher Yea, there ia aome mighty poor cutlery in the market now. Did you aay five pounds, marm? Boston Transcript . Tho lonrod Bachelor. "I wonder," aaid the vealy boarder, "if there ia any truth in the theory that the advancement of woman to an equal intellectual plane w ith man will destroy her beauty." ' 'Of course there la, " aaid the soured bachelor, "and there are more pretty women than ever nowaday." Indian apolis Journal. Haass In Chisago. If the name of the man who first thought of sending floral tribute to Chicago aldermen could be discovered, he would take first place on the roll of fame aa the great American humorist Chicago Record. I The smallest humming bird weigh A Oreat Medicine Olven Away. Reynolds Drug Store Is now giving fi-ee to all a trial package of the great herbal remody, Bacon's Celery King. If Indies sufTorlng from nervous dis order and constipation will use this remedy thoy will soon be free from the headaches and backaches that have caused them so much sufTorlng. It i a perfect regulator. It quickly cure biliousness, Indigestion, eruptions of the skin and all blood diseases. Large size 25 cents and 50 cunts. m. w. Mcdonald, FIRE, LIFE and ACCIDENT insurance. I have a largo Una of Companies and am prepared to hnndlo large or Bmnll line of Insurance Prompt attention given to any business Intrusted to my care. Office In Nolan Block, Roynolds- vlllo, Pa. Admired by the ladies. WHY? Because he wears Graff's X-Ray $2.00 Shoes. Latest Style, Good Wear and only found at GILBLOM'S. Facts and not "fad" are ele ments the thoughtful buyer is looking for in these days of close com petition, and these are found in purchasing GROCERIES where you get the best returns for your money and this you can do at the GROCERY - STORE OF W. R. Martin, Dealer in Fine Groceries, Canned Goods, Tobacco and Cigars, Flour, Feed, etc., Fine Teas, and Roasted Coffees. W. R. MARTIN, . Main Street, REYNOLD8VIIXE, Penna. L. M. SNYDER, Practical iiorse-stioer and General Blacksmith. , Hnme-slioctiiK done In the nontext munnor and by tlie littiwt Improved methods. Over lnudlirorent klmU nf hi iocs niHdtt for correc tion of faulty union and dlscawrt feat. Only the iwat make of shoes and nulls used. Hu puliing of all kinds carefully and promptly done. Batihkaction Uuakantskd. Lumber men's supplies on hund. Jackson St., near Fifth, Reynold vllle, Pa. SINGE 1878. NORWOOD G. PINNEY, BROOKVILLE, PA. John Trudgen, SOLICITOR, rjirfM"?t'"lMt" ' a " SJyaw' Fire Insurance. New Price List I Bust flour, In cotton, (1 lit) Fine Cal. apricots 1.1c., or 2 cans, 25 Tomatoes 7c. ft can, 15 can", Syrup, per gallon, Hoad rice, per lb., Halslns, " Pure tapioca, per lb., Tea, extra quality, per lb., Lima beans, " 1 00 .10 or, 05 05 20 05 Navy beans 8 lbs. 25c., 35 lbs. 1 00 Coffee cakes, 5 lbs., 25 Peas, 10 lbs. 25 Absolutely pure pepper, per lb., 18 V " baking powder, 20 The above Is price on a few articles In our Immense stock. We havo the goods and our prices are right all along the lino. We can save you money on GROCERIES, FLOUR and FEED. Robinson & Mundorff. Wash Dress FOR HOT WEATHER. A. D. -Dew & Co. Have received and placed on sale this week all the latest novelties in thin goods. NEW SHIRT WAISTS AND. WRAPPERS! Call early and get your choice. A, D. How Does This Strike You Golden Sheaf Flour, $1.00 per sack " 3.90 per bbl. Corn Chop, - 85c. per cwt. Rye, Corn and Oats Chop, - - 85c. " Pure Wheat Bran, 80c. " Also everything in the Flour and Feed Line at the lowest possible prices. Call and see us. Yours Respectfully, MEEKER BROS, HALT A CtXTUV CLP, ... . la a sura remedv fbrlla" Coughs, Colds, Whoop- lng Cough, and all Lung diseases when used In season. FIflv mn amv c Elder Downs waa given up br hi physicians to die with Consumption. Under these circumstan ces he entnfVMinrleft thU lixir, waa cured, and n1 lived to a good old age. Voa can Try It for the price of one doctor' visit For sale everywhere. u CURE0 AKXilALLY. t'omnln l,y H. Alex Htoke. fiubacrlbe for The -X- Star, If you want the News Goods THE Deemer & Go. 10 grain. ( Reynoldsville, Penn'a. Centennial Hall Building. RXYNOLDSVILUE, PlNTf'j 7 '