Srat VOLUME 6. IlEYNOLDSVILLE, PENN'A., WKDNESDAY. OCTOBER 6, 1897. NM111EU 21. Our Educational Column. "Until Wllllaa." EdiUr. Achlrewialli'oinimiiili'iilliinii relative In tills liiarlment to Killlur Kiliii'iithiiml Column, rare uf Till! fTAH. Wntitrd-s tmy Hint l mnnljr nnil JuM, One Hint yifwl yon niny lionor nnil trust; Who rhwrfully shoiililer what llfi- I" lilm brings, lit sunshine mul pleasures, or triullfsonn lllltlKMI , , , . Whose eve meets your own with no shallow of fear, . . . No wllo on the tare tlml Is open and clean Htralslit-ftrartl In pun)- nnil reaily to Kor 'a'blrd In the hand U worth two In the bush;" . ... Who scornfully tiirn from B something to sain, If It brlnirs to another a sorrow or imlnt Who l willing to hold what Isrluht ovcrilcnr, And In patient, unl.etMllns thn wolf or the jeer; Who doM all hp run with a heart that' elate, He In wanted, that buy, a hatsoevcrhls estate. Wanted- slrl, not butterfly iruy Who In Rent tw and sweet In a womanly wnyi Nobenntlfiil nlctiirp, so lanitulil and fair, That always seems labelled, "I'lcase handle wlthcarej" , ,, But one In whose heart. there In hidden trim worth, Who faithfully follows her mission on enrtln Hopeful and earnest In helpline unci kIvIiir, Kinds plenty to do In the life she Is IIvIiir, Killing Its duties with quiet content, Whether advcnie or plcaant. Just na they're aent; In the Riirb of a queen, or In homespun ar- Whatever lier station la needed Hint maid. -Selected. Hoys and girla, another week has rolled by since "Uncle Willlum" begun his weekly talks to joii and you am ono week nearer tho goal of either success or failure; which Is It to lie? Shakes peare says, "Every man Is the architect of his own fortune," and this saying ap plies to you each and every ono. In your hands rests the power to form a solid foundation and erect a substantial educational structure. I am afraid that many of you do not do your duty rela tive to "home study." There seems to be too much attraction "down street" in the evenings. We are grieved to sou this for we well know that the time will surely come when you will bitterly regret the valuable hours you have thus lost. Hut then it will be too late; they have passed into oblivion, and "time once lost can never bo regained," no matter how bard you may work. "Begin well If you would end well" Is a good motto to adopt. Remember, boys and girls, that "two and one-half hours spent in study each evening will pre pare your lessons for the following day and fit you for the struggles of after life, making of you noble men and women who will be ornaments to so ciety, " while on tho contrary, two und one-half hours each evening spent promenading the streets or lounging about the stores will blunt your mental faculties and fill your mind with gossip and street slang and fit you In after life for positions of drudgery, crime and misery. The educated boy or girl is the ono who has entree to tho best so ciety and . whose companionship is sought after, while on the other hand tho ones who grow up In Ignorance, neglecting the golden opiMirtunttles given thorn, are shunned and avoided .. by their follows. God pity then. They grow up In ignorance, are schooled In crime and our prisons are tholr hablu tlon in tho end, where they can sit and mourn over a misspent life and lost op portunities: and a wall roes up all over our broad land: Lost! Lost! Lost! Think of these sayings, my boys and girls, and decido which of the two classes you will ' enter. Now Is the time you must map out your future. Now is the time you form habits for lifo, bo they good or bad, and don't forgot that It Is ton times more difficult to break a bad habit than It U to form one. Again, don't be Indo lent and assume a lounging position when studying or reciting, or be always fuming and fretting about the seeming' ly long hours of school work. Be ener getic and study diligently and you will be surprised to see how quickly the time slips around. You can't expect to accomplish anything without an effort. "If you covet learning's prize. Climb utir height sua bike It." Our Uvea are what we make them, therefore, watch carefully every point. We hear some of our boys and girls sometimes saying that they "don't like this or that study." There may be studies that you don't like just as well as some others, but they are in the i course and It Is necessary to take them with the rest in order to be complete, When you are ill and under the care of a physician you take without a mur mer the bitter medicines he prescribes for you, and why? Because you rely . upon his skill and knowledge of your ailment and know that is necessary for your own good to do so. Just so with your studies. Each one of them is Decennary in order to properly develop your mental faculties and fit you for sphere of usefulness, and when they are assigned by your teachers you should accept, them cheerfully, relying upon the knowledge) and skill of your teacher just as readily as you do that of your Iihyslclun. Ua self-reliant. Don't al ow a day to pass without having learned something new. "Keep pushing, 'I la wlaer Than silling aside, Thau dreaming or hlgulng Or walling the tied. In life's est'mwt buttle They ouly prevail Who onward keep pushing Aud never aar all.' " ' H si 1 it f our goods wenr twice as long as we oiter. See the Men's Suits we sell HB5.00 Strictly all wool and cut in the very latest Fall styles. We couldn't sell them for less than $8.00 if we had bought them as other houses bought theirs. But we didn't. We bought ours woolens were away flown in To-day the manufacturers ask at wholesale for these goods we sell them at retail. Then we have some better at $6.00, 7.00 and $8.00. These suits are made of stylish, all-wool Cassimeres, Cheviots and Meltons, cut in popular sack styles, lined, trimmed and finished in a splendid manner. Each suit perfect fitting, each button hole done with care. See our big line of Gloves. Also our big line of Men's Heavy and Dress Shirts. Also over 3,000 pairs of Boys' Knee Pants, Iron-clad and All-wool. NOT USED TO HOTEL WAYS. A Yottag Wm Attar Iteaiatartns; Olvas all Clerks a Surprlaa. 6he drifted into an uptown hotel by way of the women's entrance. She waa plainly bnt neatly clad aud did not look like a girl who was used to tbe system in operation at a big hotel. She had a bright, pretty faoe and looked fredb and oharming. The two clerks on duty eyed her curiously and exobanged eotuaienU about the girl. She hesitated moment when she reocbi.J the ofBoe, bnt after soma little display of emtoar rasstneut walked np to the desk and picked np a pen in a diffident maimer. The clerk wheeled the book around so that the place for signatures was ia ths proper position and waited. She obewed nervously at the end of the pen, then dipped it slowly in the ink, and with a great deal of pains wrotei "Miss Mary MoClosky, 87 West Ninety-third street" Then she eyed bee effort approvingly and carefully laid the pen down. The elerk, who bad been watching the oper ation with a good deal of curiosity, aaidi "Rpom, miss?" A flash mantled her face, but she said sweetly, "Tea, if yon please. " "Would yon like a room with a bath?" asked the clerk in pussled tone. Agaiu she seemed embarrassed and hesi tated, bnt finally said in a low tone: " Yes, if yon please. That would bs very nice and I would thank you very much. " "How much do yon eare to pay for a room?" said the clerk as his eye swept the rack. "Fay?" she said in sheer surprise. "Pay? Why, I didn't expect to pay any thing. I got a job here today as a cham bermaid and I have just come down. " New York Tribune. A MlrMUloa Dntt of FUhes. The dwellers on the banks of the Neokar, near the good old German town of Heilbrouu, bad an experience the other day which moat have reminded them of the miraculous draft of fishes. A few days ago, toward evening, the worthy Hoilbronuers perceived that the Neokar was toward both its banks one moviug mass of all aorta and con ditions of fish, thronging landward in seeming auxiety to be caught. Nor was this tacit appeal at all disregarded, for every ruuu, womuu aud child of the vicinity ran out with pots and pans, with spades aud rakes, and pails aud baskets to help himself or herself to a share of flbh. The expluuution of the miracle, which percbauce might prove a hint to fisher folk, was that the river bad become so muddy after recent heavy rains that the fish found it diflicult ! breathe in tlio "thick" water and bu t sppcoacbed the bunks for more air. Westminster Gazette. ' WlniAN nntmii4a those sold by other dealers Is at when price. more than ones Men's .Working and Dress VMS and nonaoa. For a little way the pack follow steadily npou the line, gaining fast. Snddeuly a leading bound views 100 yards in front the beaten fox. He raises his voice ia frantio delight The rest of the pack in tnrn catch sight of their prey, and now, ravening together, dash forward with a crash of voices, with re newed pace and vigor. The fox knows now that the end ia very near, yet he still holds his head straight and pressscs on. The light, even to the hardened fos hnnter, ia almost a pathetlo one. Here is no friendly ditch, no bush, no shel ter of any kind where the hunted creature may set himself np at the last and die at least with bia back to the wall All ia bare, inhospitable and open. The pack flashes forward, one houud three lengths ahead of his fel Iowa He ia within Ave yards of his prey. The fox suddenly faces round with npen mouth asid bared teeth. The big hound grapples him fiercely, receiv ing nasty bite as he does so. In an other instant the whole pack are mingled in one wild delirium. The death has oonio. The huntsman gallops p, jumps off hit good chestnut, rescues the dead and now tattered quarry, and, with the field gathered round him, paoceeds to conduct the last rite in due form. Batnadaa Review. A Parmaoant Pasta. Soak an ounoe of refined gelatin ia cold water for an hoar, then drain off and squeeze -rat the water as muoh aa possible Pat the gelatin in a Jelly pot and place the pot in a pan of hot water over the fire. When the gelatin has melted, stir in slowly ounoes of pare alcohol. Put in a wide mouthed bottle and cork tightly. Thia glue or paste will keep indefinitely and can be melted for nse in a few miuutes by set ting the bottle in a basin of hot water As it contains a very small percentage of water it affoota the gloss of ths prints bat little and dries almost im mediately. Harper's Ronnd Table. The Tblnt Par Offlea. Women have had mnnicipal suffrage in Kansas for the last ten years. Dur ing tint time, in the 8W3 little "cities" of Kansas, about 1,600 men and only IS women have served aa mayors. This does not look as if women were unduly eager for office. Christian Register. The f uot that the greater resistance is offered to the X ruys by inanimate tbuu by living flesh is now put to praotioul nse in determining whother a person is really dead or not According to Dr. Forbes Winslow, kleptomania la found uuioug boys, but very rarely, indeed among men. The great majority of the victims are tyo-men. Mm lip Mr v nrn noiwlnfl Hf.viVa 1m tilapa In itself conclusive evidence of Overcoats That ExGel In Style and have, the kind we built them from $3.50 to $15.00 They are made of medium and heavy-weight Meltons, Cheviots, Kerseys, Cassimeres, Mixtures, Etc., all well trimmed and made throughout; in fact, any other store in this town will ask ybu from 2.00 to $4.00 more for these same overcoats than we sell them at. - - PRESERVE YOUR HEALTH - - Priil.'i f vniirnlf jifrjiiiiHt, suddtm cliHiiD-es in the weather, so common this time of the year, F t t Underwear, we nave it. uver ouu cases, a u uougm uy na HI rnr-t from th inn nufartiirers before the recent rise in prices. These all go on sale present wholesale figures. 25C. " for men's serviceable atural wool Under- wear, value 50c. ttl A A for men's fancv. heavy-weight Underwear, nice M l II I and soft as velvet. 6 finish, value $1.50. Millirens. SHE WAS WRONG. Tha Or Waal Pom Waaat by Cowper at All, bat by me Oae Bum. There ia a woman's literary club em the South Side which ia having the hardest imaginable time to keep togeth er.' Unlike most similar organizations, it is not from want of money that this association of fair students is constant ly Uireateued with disbandment A ipirit of discatitent and rivalry stalks through the meetings. The original purpose of the clnb was thorough criticism of tha works of Horner, Daate, Shakeepeam, Milton, Spenser and Sir Edwin Arnold. Bat, although thia laudable intention was adhered to for several months, after awhile some of them got to writing es says and other papers to to read before the society. The book trade may not have noticed it, bnt at that time there was a considerable ran oa concordances, glossaries, books of aynonyma and liter ary dictionaries. Ever since then (bings save gone from bad to worse. It seems impossible to maintain harmony. The vice president of the organisa tion, charming young lady, whether considered mentally or from her photo graph, recently wrote a rather extend ed poem in a very lofty strain. She read st to the elnb. Amid the general ap plause which followed there came from several eemote corners of the room aomethlng like murmurs. A couple of aer auditor were beard to say that she had never written anything like that before; that they didn't believe auy one in the club was capable of it; that, ia fact, several passages sounded strangely familiar., Finally one member with glasses and a very penetrating expression, sddress ing the author of the poutn, said: "Didn't yon get some of that from Cow per? I'm sure yon did." "I did nothing of the kind," retorted the vice president, flushing at tha ac cusation. "Oh, but I remember almost the ex act liuesl" persisted her accuser. "How dare yon say sol" returned the poet hotly. "But we'll get the book and look," persisted the other. "Yon 're a mean, mean thing," said the vice president, bursting into tears. "I didn't get thia from Cowper at alL And now that yon're. so smart I'll uot tell yon where I did get it" Chicago Tribune. Haas' llralns. The brain of the honeybee has re cently beeu studied by Dr. Kenyon of Clark university more thoroughly, it is said, than ever before. It is thought that the source of a lee's power to adupt itself intelligently to its snr ronudiugs has been discovered in oertuiu peculiar objects in its brain called the "mushroom bodies.? in rmf til Pin T'Iia fnrf flinf the matchless inducements Quality. That's the kind we our reputation on. We have by wearing the proper weight nan 1 1 1 1 . i. I this week at prices lower than 50G. for men's extra fine tmre camel s nair or natural wool Underwear, value 75c. different colors, pearl button Conrts of Lovs. "Courts of love" were established in the middle ages, when chivalry was at its height and love the serious occups tion of life among the higher class of society. The first "court of love" was established in the south of France in the twelfth century and was composed of knights, poets and ladies, and their decisions ou subtle questions connected With affairs of the her.rt were given Vitli great formality. tfrlttanj Marriage Caitom. lu Hrittuny there is said to prevail a curious uiurriage custom. On certain fete days the young ladies appear in red petticoats, with white or yellow bor ders around them. The number of bor i vera uuuuies uiv ioruoD toe xawer 1 wining to give nis aaugniar. r,acn white band denotea silver TOO francs per aunum; each yellow band represents (old 1,000 franoa a year. MonntaJa Rangaa. The long, undulating folds in which tha Appalachians were produced when first thrown np are characteristic of tnonutain ranges the world over. The Alps, the Pyrenees, the Caucasus. Himalayas, Andes and Rockies are built in joet that way. They are enor tnonaly thick beds or masses, and they r ill ridged np into these folds. Zabra Culture. On several South African farms ex periments have beeu tried with Bur chell's eebra. Ths zebras become as tame as ponies, and are readily broken in for draft work. The object of their tamers has been to breed a mule which, like the aebra, is proof against the tsetse fly. The zebras themselves run well enough in a mule team, tfaongb they cannot stand overdriving. Lon don Spectator. How to Uafca a Vortaaa, When old Zactmriah Fox, the great merchant of Liverpool, was asked by what means be hud contrived to realize so large a fortune as ho possessed, bis reply was i "Friend, by one artiole, in which thou mayst deal, too, if thou pleasest civility. "Golden Days. An old Welshwoman of the old school ays that tho best thing to do with boya who are rough and stubborn is to send them to w.irk in the pits. "Weak cues," she added, "ought to be brought np as ministers, aud them as Isu't rough nor weak as pupil teachers. " Tha debt of London is 1180,000,000. Of the unuuul tux to meet this 80,000,. 000 goes as interest and f 0, 600,000 iuto the sinking fuud. CUBE ROOT MADE EASY. Dow Aajr Bright itholar Slav Laarn ta Tall It Offhand. To find the cube root of any given umber of figures offhand seems en al most impossible feat, but yet it is sim ple enough when one knows how to do it so simple, indeed, that any bright .. boy can learn to do it in a few weeks. First he must know exactly what a tube Is namely, that It is the result of multiplying one number by itself and then multiplying the product by the original number. Thus, 8 multiplied by 8 equals 9, aud 9 multiplied by 8, tho origii a! number, produces 27, which consequently is the cube of 8. The cube root of 87 is the original number, 8, and to find the cube root Is the reverse of finding the cube. The would be adept at this art should first study carefully the following figures: lxlxi- I txrxfr I Ixuxa-n x4xt- M txAx6l!o exex2i TX7X7-D48 8x8X8-41? SXSXft-MS A close study of these figures shows that 8 multiplied in this mnnuer by it self results in 8, that 8 multiplied by itself has 3 as a final floure, that 8 mul tiplied by itself has 7 as a final figure, that 7 multiplied by itself has 8 aa a final figure, and that 4, 6, 6 and 9 mul tiplied by themselves bavo their origi nal figures ns finals. Hence the "artist" knows that any sum given to him the final figure of which is 8 must have 8 as a cube root that if the final fin tire be 9, the cube root must be 9, and so on. For examplo, give him the figures 74,088, aud he can at once tell that 42 is the cube root, for the reason that 74 has 4 as a cubo root, as the cube of 4 is 64, while the cube of 6 ia 185, much more than 74, and 088 has 9 ns a cube root Or give him a more difficult problem, as, for example, the figures 8H4,3U. - Then he will see at a glance that 824 ia more than 218, Which is the oubo of 6, but is less than 848, the cube of 7. Therefore the cube root of these three figures Is 0 In like manner the final figure of 809 being 9, it follows that tl.e cube root of these three figures is 9, and thus the cube root of the six figures bss been shown to be 89. Any one can test this method for himself, aud a little practice is all that is needed to make one as deft in such jugglery of figures aa the best "light- mug calculator. Of course skilled arithmetician could easily frame problems that could not be solved in this offhand fashion, but such difficult tests are seldom offered by publio audiences, and, as a rule, the artists' are easily able to answer all the questions asked of them. New York Herald. Haw Cola Natal Bomatlmea III. Professor Roterts-Austen's discov eries on the subject of the interdiffusi bility of metals is most interesting reading. The facts have been to some extent known to savants before the meeting of the Royal society, at which more public attention was drawn, but on that occasion the results were made more clear It was then shown that olid metals may be made to mix them selves as if the atoms were living crea tares. Professor Roberts-Austen has, lu fact discovered pieces of metal eugaged in the very act of mixing themselves m. one with the other. Of course the inter est of this is that the interdiffnsion which we speak baa been found to take', place when the metals were cold, and, though this Tiroperty in metals. o be- capable of u.,txhing themselves ou to--the other when cold, bas been talkrd . abont before, nothing so clearly proved . has hitherto been at the service of ' metallurgists and chemists as the fsots adduced by Professor Roberts-Austen. He shows that when c!an, sncfacea of ' lead and gold are held together i the. abseuceof air alt temperature oT degree for four days they unite firmly and can only be separated by a force equal to one third of the breaking train of tha lead. The professor haa also proved that if plate of gold be laid under one of lead abont three tenth of an tnon thick in three day. gold will have risen and diffused itself to the top of the other metal in very appreciable quantity. Colliery Guar dian. Lord Palmarstoa. A minister who kent and had at his command a good store of very blunt vernacular, who could not be got to admit that be understood ait abstract thought, who always knew what he wanted and was determined to carry it out regardless of the opinions of others, who conceived bis own ideas to be superior to those of other people, who never 1 joked farther tbau tomorrow and much preferred uot to think beyond this evening, bnt who at the same time was determined to establish the privi lege of an Englishman to the sidewalk all over the world, while men of other nations might step into the gutter this minister represented aspiration which bad long ago sickened uudt-r the founded periods intended to convince bumuuity thai bread and calico summed up their teal requirements and wete more sufficient for rational happiness. This Wat ' thn nonnlar cnni-etitimi rt Palmerston wbeu, in 1863, he becam' nrst minister of the crown. "Yoke of Empire," by R. B. Brett The enterprising biahwuvmun ra. lieves niuuy a man tho doctors oaunot touch. Harrisburg Patriot