)2 Her Punishment lOrldlnal.) Bin- was Incorrigible. With In one winter season she refused a wealthy and tlenlrHlito parti of forty and Hunt a young army lieutenant to "get over It" In Manilla. He would not hnvo had to go there If It hadn't keen tor Birdie, u nickname given her when she was n child, Imt which was even then Inappropriate. It xhould have heen Wasp. Her mother was vexed with her for. refusing the older man, and the yoiuiKer man's mother was furious thnt she had sent her sou half round the globe where sho could not be near him. Birdie must lie punished. Her aunt tjved In her country phce 1:1 the midst ef farms, and there Birdie should go for the summer, whore lier propensity would lie In check. Birdie protested, but her protect was unheeded. She was pneked off Into exile, and her mint was requested In keep nil eye on her. At tlie end of a week she was ready to promise to behave herself If per mitted to go home, or. rather, to the sea shore, where her mother was, but the mother knew her promises would avail nothing. One evening when the twi light was long she was walking In a lane where she mot a young farmer. He was a splendid specimen of man hood, and as Birdie wns a dainty speci men of womanhood the two naturally looked at each other. The next evening at exactly the same hour the girl walked In the lane again. So did he. She looked very hard at hi in and after passing Ii 1 111 turned. Ho turned too. "Is it you," she said, "or am I mistaken?" "I think we have met before," he replied. "What are you doing here?" "I thought I would try farming." ''How did yon leave them all at homo?"' "They're all very well." "I'm staying with my aunt. Do you know herr "No; I don't." ; . "Sorry. You might come to see me If you knew her, but since you don'f'-r She paused. "Possibly we may meet hereabout sometimes. I go after the stock at sun down, put them in the barn and go back about thU time." ( "Good evening. Glad to have met you again." "nope It will not be for once only." That was tlie beginning of It. Birdie talked a great deal about people she knew, and the farmer listened to her references, making only general com ments upon them. He never addressed her by name, always getting round do ing so but he might have forgotten her name. There was an appearance of honesty about him, a deference not uncouth either a vein of uncultivated Intellectual vigor, that pleased her. On the whole, her exile wns not so un bearable as she had expected. Some times she fancied be knew more than she bad supposed farmers usually knew, but Birdie did not always tell all she knew, and to blame him for , concealment would be like the pot calling the kettle black. , Affairs between the sexes uuuall) commence by both keeping on, their - own side of the line, Perhaps the man would have kept on his side Indefinite ly had Birdie kept on hers. She soon began to practice her little arts; first by a look now and then, after that, half finished sentence from which the retired In confusion and lastly by an open charge of Indifference on the part of the man. The farmer always adroit ly turned these thrusts, keeping on In the even tenor of his way. This was something Birdie had never encounter ed before. She poured a, shower of Cupid's arrows from her quiver only to aee them glance aside, or fall harm less from her would be victim. July passed into August and August Into September. How they contrived, or, rather, how Birdie contrived, their fre quent meetings without suspicion she was at a loss to know. Only a few times was she discovered conversing with the farmer, but In her case farm ers were supposed to be out of the question. At last the days grew so much shorter that one evening when Birdie was starting for her evening walk her aunt stopped her and forbade her go ing, on the ground that It was already quite dark. Birdie did not dare excite suspicion by defying tlie order. She went otf Into a corner of the porch and sat down. . Then and there came a revelation. She was suffering nnder a great disappointment Could it be that she who bad played - with the hearts of many men of the world could have "drifted on the rocks" In the rase of a countryman? She went to bed early, but not to sleep. For the first time In her life she knew how It felt to be on the losing side In a love affair. The next morning the farmer was passing a shaded nook near the road. He turned aside, expecting to see a feminine figure push away the droop ing branches and greet him with a face that laughed. He was disappointed. But tied to a bush near by he found a note: Forgive me for feigning that I had met 'you before. I never saw you until I met you here. My object . was to pass the time. In a few days I go home. Tou have rendered my stay happy. Without you It would have been very dull. When Birdie went to the trystlng place again she found the following on a bit of paper: Ooodby. Tou are forgiven. Forgive me for the same offense. My betrothed re turns tomorrow. "Poor Birdie writes," said het mother, "that her punishment Is great er than she can bear. Poor child! It must hare been very lonely for her." D. F1SK BRADY, MAKE CALLS AT NIGHT. Peculiar Cnatnm of the Arab Ladles of Zanallmr. The Arab Indies of Zanzibar live In great seclusion In the large white houses, never going out In tho daytime from one year's end to another, says the Manchester Guardian. A little cooking and sweetmeat making Is their only recognized employment, though some few of them can do beautiful silk embroidery. To lie ou their beds nnd be fanned by their slave girls Is tho usual occupation of the richer women. If they want to visit their frlonds, or, as I more often the case, to perambu late the town, they wait until 8 o'clock lu the evening, when n gun Is fired wnrulug all Mohammedans that It la tho fifth and last hour of prayer; then they may go out. They lire entirely enveloped In large mantles and their faces completely hidden by very ugly gilt masks, with oblong slits for tho eyes, nud many of thorn wear theso even In the privacy of their own homes. Their oilier garments lire troiiHers and a tunic reaching below the knee, which Is often embroidered and trimmed with gold braid. They have a number of gold und silver ornaments, nose rings and earrings, bracelets, aukluts. and so on. They are very light In color, many of them cream colored. Their features nre regular and good, and they have dark eyes nnd silky black hair. They paint under their eyes and stain their hands and nails a reddish color with senna. If they want to go any distance from home they ride through the narrow streets on large white asses stained a brick red. their slaves running by their shies, but you generally meet them stalking solemnly along, surrounded by their slave, who carry enormous lan terns us big as n London street lamp. Very often they do not return home till 4 In the nornlng, when another gun Is fired proclaiming the first hour of prayer. It Is very nwkward nt times when you meet lu the streets' some of these ladies wlio::i you ought to know and nre .wi-tH by them. You cannot sol their faces, it is not always easy to rocotjnh e a voice, rtnd nothing would offtvid them more than to ask their FREAKS OF THE LAVA. Some Corlooe Incldenta of n Over . flow or Vesuvine. At onu house, which had been entire ly surrounded by tho flood, but not de stroyed, one saw people, on top of the muss of lava, entering the upper win dows with u ladder and bringing forth their household goods to transport them to a place of safety. One vine yard was surrounded on three sides by this dividing current, nnd It was pos sible to walk Into It among the lines of trimmed vines nnd to perceive the fire still glowing in the towering walls of lava on each side. The people at tributed this remarkable phenomenon to the miraculous intervention of their Madonna, "Our Lady of the Snows," with whose sacred Imago they had con fronted the all devouring monster sweeping Implacably down on their ap parently doomed homes. Step by step the priests and the faith ful, singing the litany, retreated as the awful flood swept .on, nud stlll 'the uouml of singing and prayer rose above the fearful roar of the torrent and the thunder of tho mountain above, belch ing forth from the ceutral crater fiery bombs and enormous swirls of cinder, Band and smoke, which rose to great heights. Yard by yard the lava swept onward. Now a palatial villa would be surrounded by the torrent, crushed down and disappear In smoke; now a weeping peasant would see his little cottage and vineyard, bis all, go under in an Instant. One poor woman was thus watching the fate of her earthly belongings from a little eminence when a smaller crater came roaring forth at her very feet She turned to flee, fell, rolled to the bottom of the little hill, and the next moment tho lava flowed forth like the foam 'rom a glass of beer und swept over the spot where she had been standing an Instant before. William P. Andrews iu Century. , . Glattoaoae Eaklatoe. The eating powers of the Eskimos, If the tales told lu the books of north ern explorations are to be believed, are most extraordinary. One writer tells of a young man scarcely full grown who ate four pounds and four ounces of frozen sea horse flesh, four pounds and four ounces of sea horse flesh broiled, one pound and twelve ounces of bread, one and one-fourth pounds of rich grainy in twelve hours. Besides eating tmVnbove he also drank one pint of grog, three glasses of raw spir its and nine pints of water. Convalescence. When a sick person is becoming con valescent, the rule of a quiet time be tween 2 and 4 o'clock In the afternoon should still be adhered to until com plete strength Is regained. Even If the patient cannot obtain sleep the fact of lying quietly In a darkened room will rest both eyes and brain, producing that feeling of wide nwako brightness which Invalids so often feci in tho even ing, to them the ploasnntest time of the day In consequence. Dime Slander. "Your husband," said Mrs. Hlgbmus graciously, "is decidedly interesting and original, even If he docs sometimes blow his own horn n little too" "It Isn't so!" indignantly exclaimed Mrs. Gaswell. "My husband always uses his handkerchief!" Chicago Trib une. It Is a common fault to be never satisfied with our fortune nor dissat isfied with out understanding. Rochefoucauld. The Sonnet Writers, ' The fashion of sonnet writing was at Its height in the sixteenth century, when Itousard, the French "prince of poets" In his own country and genera tion, wrote over 000 sonnets, a total which appears only to have been ex ceeded by Gomel de (juevedo, the Spanish Voltaire, who Is said to have written over 1,000. Fortunately for sonnet lovers some of the best poets have been prolific sonneteers, retrarch, who created the classic model which later poets Imitated, wrote Ml 5. Cain oens la responsible for 352, Sir I'hillp Sidney wrote 108, Spenser 88 and Dante 80. English sonnets were first written by Sir Thomas Wyntt (irMKM'Jj ! and Henry Howard, earl of Surrey (1517-47), and the first appearance of any In book form was In a rare publi cation briefly knowu as "Tot tie's MIs ceilany," the full title being "Songs nnd j Sonnettes written by the Itlght Ilon oure Lorde Henry Howard, lale ICarle of Surrey, and other." The greatest sonneteers of our language are Shake- 1 spenre, Milton, Wordsworth und Hos settl. London Standard. Tlirer and Vnltur of the Sea. If the "killer" whale Is "the tiger of , the Hen," as the writer of an Interest- I lug article In the September Windsor has It, the orcas surely are tlie vultures of the ocean, Iu connection with whale catching the author of this Interesting natural history artlclo tells of tlie fol- j lowing Incident: Some years ago a whaler In the northwest had killed a large whale and had the animal uloug- . side when It was attacked by a school nf orcas. They doubtless were half starved and. crazed by the scent of blood that extended uwny a long dis tance, probably followed It up like hounds, Immediately attacking tlr; whale. Tlie men, with spades nnd lances, cut nud slashed at them, In flicting terrible blows, yet despite this the orcas literally tore the whale from the ropes nnd can-led It off. This cer. taluly shows that the orens, together with a very fair share of Intelligence, nre also creatures of extraordinary courage. Dundee Advertiser. Alwara la Trouble, A still summer's evening, quiet and almost sad. The trees nodded sleepily, iu if hushing the world to rest. Sud denly flie silent bcdiity was rudely dls-' turbed. The clattering of a horse's hoofs broke the silence Into a thousand echoes., A, horseman dashed through the scented lanes, rn go glittering fcom his eyes. He sprang from bis horse and rushed Into the still homestead nnd dragged forth Farmer Brown. "Why. what be matter, Squire Tamp son?" queried the worthy fnrnier In sleepy surprise. "Matter?" repented the squire. "Why. matter enough, to be sure! Your great lubberly sou Jack has run off with my beautiful daughter Maud." . . "Has he, really?" cried the farmer, now thoroughly awake. "Thee'rt ri;;ht t' call 'I in a lubberly Idjut. He's alius loin" somethln' clumsy. Only Inrsl week he went an' broke a shovel !" London Express. Jlrltlna Fire C'lar With Snn'a Harn. There Is nn nppuratus which concen trate the rays of the sun from more than !,000 small mirrors on n spot about seveii Inches In diameter. T. heat generated . Is about 7,000 de grees F. Iron cnu be melted lu less than li minute and fir clay .used In about three minutes by this machine. Magnesia, one of the hardest things to melt, requiring a heat of about 0.100 degrees l'., can bo reduced to a molten state In twenty minutes. For the hen etlt of those who wish to forget the name of tilts Instrument It Is called the pyrhellophor. , Protective Colors of Animate, I seem to trace a faint clew to the connection betweuu the protectlvo col oring and the mind In the Intense de fclre df the Tox to remain concealed and unseen. That this Is a possible theory we infer from the fact that a blind animal does not change cjlor. 1'ut a dosen minnows li hj un ordinary white wash bund basin and they will iu a very short time be of a pale color. If over one no change passes we may he tolerably certain that It Is blind. From Dale's "The Fox." Gaese Atvutn. "I have a pleasant surprise for you. Miss Sharply." "Can I guess whit It Is, Mr, Bore hutne?" "You may try. Miss Sharply." "Let me see. I guess you are going to tell me that you Intended leaving the city." "Good night. Miss Sharply." "Good night, Mr. Boresome." Cleve land Plain Dealer. Meaeteaeaa, "Wealth has Its disadvantages," said the philosopher. "Yes," answered the man with sport ing Inclinations. "It must be very' mo notonous for a man to be able to bet $3,000 or $10,000 on a horso race with out caring whether be loses It or not." Washington Star. Soanded Expensive. Dumley How much will It cost to send a packing case from Philadelphia to Boston? Freight Agent Six cents n foot. Dumley My! How many feet Is it from Philadelphia to Boston? Philadelphia Press. An Ascending Scale. ('urate's Little Girl My hen has laid an egg. Vicar's Little Girl My hen has laid two. Bishop's Little Girl That's nothing. My father has laid a foundation stone. London Sketch. ITe thnt was never acquainted with adversity has seen the world but one side and is ignorant of half the scenes of nature. Seneca. WASHINGTON AS A FIREMAN. Be Was a Member of the Friendship Fire Com pa nr. George Washington was a member of the Friendship Fire company, or ganized in 1774 In his home, Alexan dria. At first the company consisted of citizens who, out of "mutual friend ship," agreed to curry to every fire "two leathern buckets and one great bag of oznaburg or wider llnnen." Washington was made an honorary member, and when he went as a dele gate to the congress of 1774 at Phila delphia he examined the fire engines In use there. On his return to Phila delphia to 'tlie Continental congress In 1775 he bought from n man named Glbbs a small fourth class engine for the buiii of 80 10s., and Just tiefore he set out for Boston Heights to be come commander in chief ho dispatched this little engine to the Friendship company. During his younger days he alwuys attended tires III Alexandria and helped to extinguish them. In the last year of his life a lire occurred near the market. He was riding down King street at the time, followed by his servant, who was also on horseback. Washington saw that the Friendship engine was tiisiil'lclcutly manned, anil, riding up to a group of well dressed gentlemen standing near the scene of action, he called out authoritatively: "Why are you Idle there, gentle men? It Is your business to lead In these mutter." After which hp. leaped ofT his horse, and, seizing tlie brakes, was followed by a crowd that gave the engine such n HliMkhi'.; up as it had' not had for many a day. WOMAN AND THE LAW. How Condition llin-c chiuiflred In the I.nat lliilf ( Mini-). Truly the position of women before tho Inw has suffered niMity changes. Fifty or sixty years ng the twain '-ere Indeed one, and that one t'.ie husband. He could colli ct all debts, suc'.i as wages that might be due lev th mgh Incidentally, he was liable lor all she owed. She could not make a will of her real estate,, nor of her personal property, without bis permission, and be was entitled to the Income from her lands. . He could lock her up In his bouse and keep her there. Whether he could Inflict chastisement was a moot point, though a Judge of the North Caro lina supreme court held In 18iil) that he possessed this power, provided he used "a stick as large as his finger, but no larger than his thumb." Over the children the husband had absolute control, and could even ap point a guardian by will who could take them away from the mother. They were to be brought up In the father's religion, without any consideration for her feelings. In fact. It was only about 188(1 that the supreme court of Judicature In Bngland directed that the sons and daughters of the deceased nawab of Bengal by an English wife be reared as Mohammedans. Every body's Magazine. Whims of lh.cn. Like many another man great In his writings, Heurlk Ibsen v.ms not with out bis foibles. Scorning c- .!;iany as he professed to do Slid dee I irlng al ways for solitude, he nevertheless de lighted to be dined, ami to Invite him to a banquet In his own etpeelal honor was to give the great man unalloyed pleasure. In his latter days, too, be developed a passion for decorations, of which be received a large number from bis own and foreign monurchs, and on public occasions he would wear all his Insignia as probably the most deco rated author In the world. It was on public occasions that Ibsen would car ry a small mlrjr and comb In the crown of his hat. and "coram pojiulo" would proceed ta nrr.injj his bushy hair and wblskjrs. Politic, and lorr. "It's funny," remarke l Sin-'y Bowen, "how politics nnd love nr.' so much 'alike. For Instance, if you meet a bonnle girl and she gives yon bslf a chance to kiss her you go In for free trade. However, after yon get mar ried and your wife's mother wants to embrace her newly acquired son-in-law you go In for protection. If your wife seeks an osculatory exchange you in time become a passive reslster, and"- "Sbe turns out a home ruler If she has any sense," remarked Mrs. Bowen, who happened to' overhear the conver sation. London Mall. Odd Kalvee. In a monastery In Ireland there is a very curious collection of knives of the sixteenth century, the blades of which have on one side the musical notes to the benediction of the table, or grace before meat, and on the other side the grace after meat. The set of these knives usually consisted of four. They were kept In an upright case of stamped leather and were placed be fore the singer. Too Methodical. "As for me," said Aunt Clarissa, "I haven't any nse for a woman that takes three or four handkerchiefs with her when she goes to see one of these heart Interest plays. She's too businesslike and calculating to be ' the genuine thing." Chicago Tribune. Something Wrong. Mr. Am I still "the star bf your life," as I was when yon used to write love' letters to me? Mr. Of course, dear. Mrs. I don't seem to be draw ing a star salary, though. Inherited Dollars. The only reason some men escape social ostracism Is because their fa thers made enough money to buy them a ticket of admission. Birmingham, News. ! fKBM" PARK THEATRE REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Watch this Space for the Opening Date. n-raantaMsaaflHROT THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF REYNOLDSVILLE. CAPITAL . $75,000 SURPLUS . . 9p,000 TOTAL . $165,000 , OmoER J. 0. Kino. Vl.;e-Prei. DIKECTOKK J.O. Kln Daniel Nolan .1. H. Ilnmmnnri John H. Kadchek, Pres. John H. Kauchnr Henry 0. Delble SAFE AND CONSERVATIVE BANKING.- EVERY ACCOMMODATION CONSISTENT WITH CAREFUL BANKING. Street Car Rales of Rio. There are first and second class street cars, writes Albert Hale In the Reader, and I, with a package, In my arms, liqd taken a llrst chins bond, as a street car Is called In Rio de Janeiro. Scarcely had I done so when the con ductor requested me to transfer to a second class car whenever It might come along, because no one is allowed to carry anything greater than a lop sntcliel first class. So I humbly de scended and bad either to mix with market women and sweaty laborers or to take a tilbury. A tilbury, named after the English maker who years ago Introduced It, Is a curious two wheeled, light sprlngcd cab, like an old fashioned gig, and resembles a hansom without the uttnebmeut for the driver. ., He sits Inside the tilbury. A person without a necktie is no more allowed first class on the street cars than was I with my parcel. Tiiey are decidedly particular In Brcsil and In herit iiinuy fastidious ways from the time bf the empire, when dress and manners were the mark separating the aristocracy from the working classes. . Peeallarttle ef Raaoleoa. Napoleon's father was a toper, a man utterly lacking In moral sensibility, and his sisters were Immodest and hys terical. According to Dr. Cabanas, raullne was particularly so. Napoleon himself wus exceedingly sensitive to atmospheric chnnges, was headachey and had auditory Illusions. He had twltchlngs of the arms, the shoulders and the Hps. He was at times the most Irritable of men, often b?!n; v.u approachable. His mania for destruc tion was such that he whittled piecej of furniture, broke articles presented to hlin, pinched babies while pretend ing to caress them and took keen de .ll;:lit In shooting Josephine's rarest bird's. The slightest opposition threw him Into a paroxysm of rage. But In a campaign all weaknesses vanished. His pulse ranged ordinarily between thirty and thirty-five beats a minute and never went above fifty-five. The usual pulse rate Is about seventy-two a minute. The Fyee ef the Raale. That the eagle lias a mot wonderful power of vision is shown from the fact that It flies In almost a straight line for any object which It desires to secure. Baby eagles also possess this farxigut "d'.'.ess. Long lnfvp hnmiu ivn can I'.ljcern them their gaze Is fixed on dis tance, and their cries of welcome to their parents are shrill nnd continuous. The structure of their eyes mnUes tbem peculiarly strong. The brightest glare of sunlight does not af.'ect them. Ea gles do not fly as high In the air as some other birds, hut their (light Is very long and steady. A peculiarity about eagles Is that they nre constant to tjieir mates, not cbnng!";r every sea son, as most bin's do. S : .'times the same pair of eagles will retivn to the same ucst your uf'er yr.'.r. 'iiicy seem to become acq":iinted vr'.th the locality, and If they nre not disturbed nre regu lar tenants. ArtlBetaJ Bales or "San Do." An experiment which illustrates la a) very curious manner the actual phj losophy of the formatien of halos QS( "sundogs" is performed as follows i Take a solution of alum and spread 01 few drops of It over a pane of glasai It will readily crystallize In small, flat octohedrons, scarcely visible to the ey When this pane of prepared glass held between the observer and the si or even a candle (with eyes very cli to the smooth side of the glass) th will be seen three different but dls and beautiful halos, each at a differ distance from the luminous body, town! usursr, K. C. SbHUOKKiis, Ousbier. John tl. Corbeu It. H Wlon CONSCIENTldl3 tfOGUES. The HI aaa Formidable Sinners Are tlrar of Sool, Not Black. :: ' No paradox Is It, but a demonstrable fact, that In a highly articulate society the gravest harms are Inflicted not by the worst men, but by those with vir tues enough to boost them Into some coign of vantage. The trass who sells out the town and delivers the poor over to filth, disease and the powers that prey owes his chance to bis engaging good fellowship and li!g heartedness. Some of tho most t-v;.:'.;i careers of fraud have behind t!i' -.i Ion and, reas suring records of pn. hich have served to bait the tr;!i of villainy. Not that these decoy vlriu. s are com terfelt. They are, in fact, so genuine that often the stalwart sinner perse veres In the virtue that has lifted him Into the high places be abuses. The legislator conscientiously returns the boodle when he finds be cannot "de liver the goods." The boss stands by his friends to his own hurt The lob bying lawyer Is faithful to his client The corrupting corporation president Is Joy a I t bis stockholders. The bought en editor never quite overcomes his craft Instinct to print "all the news there ts." In a word, the big and formidable sinners are gray of soul, but not black, so that chastisement according to their character rather than according to their deeds lets them off far too easllyv E. A. Ross In Atlantic. . , FIRE THE BEST FILTER, Belllne- Water the Sareet Way te Set tare Water. "All this talk about the need of fil ters, about people dying for lack of fil tered water, amuses me," said a chem ist "For filtered water Isn't .neeessa rlly pare water. Boiled water hi a hundred times better. "A filter, you see, does not free water from things dissolved in it, but only . from things floating In It. For Instance, if you mix a quart of whisky la a gallon of water and then filter the mix ture it will come out colorless, the floating color particles having been left behind, but this colorless fluid will ba quite as capable of Intoxicating you now as It was before, for none of Its dissolved alcohol will have disappeared. "8o with water that Is polluted with sewage. All the undissolved portions of the sewage are removed by filtration and the water la left clear, tasteless and colorless, bnt tho dissolved sewage Is still present and In It ma lark bil lions of typhoid germs. "Let those who complain about the lack of filters Just turn in and boll their water. A cent's worth of fire will puri fy a gallon of water better than a $10, 000,000 plant could do It." St Louis Globe-Democrat The Carloaa Seaalekaeaa. "Seasickness Is a curious trouble," says a physician. "It Is probably due to the disturbance caused by the mo tion of the ship to the little organs that govern the sense of eqntlibrium. In the inner ear are three little semicircular canals. In movement In any plane the fluid in these canals disturbs and tele graphs the sensation to the brain, which is then able to control the balance of the whole. By the motion of a ship this delicate apparatus of the canal system Is, it is suggested, thrown ont of gear and wildly telegraphs wrong messages to the brain. And that por tion of the brain Is intimately connect ed with the nerve that controls the hap penings In the region whence the trou ble arises. The whole system, in brief. Is short clrcnited."