PERSONALITY OF PEOPLE SHOWS. ITSELF IN THEIR WALK. ~The Strutter Has Roundless Concelt—The Woman Who Steps With Painful Accu- racy—Ah, Here Comes the Man with Steady Tread und Manly Carriage. It is Plutarch who says that “An ac- tion of small note, a short saying or jest will distinguish a person's real character more than the greatest sieges or the most important battles,” and Lavater, the father of physiognomy, declares that po man csn set a glass upon 8 table without betraying to a certain extent his individuality. True, no doubt, but one must have the keen vision, the well ‘trained eye, in order to interpret these - mystic signs. The indications of char- acter as exhibited in the walk of a per- gor, however, are patent to every be- holder acd may be deciphered by the most untutored, the least astute. ; ©. Sit by your window some fine morn- * . ing and watch the men and women as. they pass to their varied avocatioms. Take, for example, t proaching. His chin is elevated to gn angle of 20 degrees, a sel! important frown corrugates his brow, a complacent rather than walks. Need I point him out as a man of boundless conceit, of monumental brags, of colossal gall? His amisbility is imperturbable, for one who is absolutely self satisfied is apt to take an indulgent view of the warld at large. His faith in himself is limitless. No traitorous feeling of self distrust will éver cause his failure. He will under- take without the slightest misgiving what a man of ten times his ability would hesitate to attempt. His success in life is assured, and yet one cannot help feel ing that found to spring from defects rather than merits. The dress of the weman coming just behind him is arranged with mathemat- “jeal exactness. The placing of each pin has been a matter of special care. Her © lips are compressed, her hands clasped “primly before her, her steps are ‘taken with painful accuracy; there is not a bairbreadth’s difference in the length of " them. If you follow her to her home} you will find that the same scrupulous ness prevails in the disposition of every- thing about her. The furniture is ar- ranged there is not a pin out of place in her burean drawers, and the jars upon her “pantry shelves are marshaled like sol- diers on parade. She will accomplish - no great work in life, however. Sheiss procisionist and spends her time labori-- ously doing nothing. And. also, take care of this woman. She is absolutely uncompromising, and all about her must be lopped off or. stretched oat to fit the stean ides of order which exists in her own mind. . : But don't—you who are in search of a . wife—{all into the opposite error of choos ing aa a life companion the girl with the frouzy bead, the skirt of whose dress dips in points, whose gait is careless, who swings her rms as she walks. She - is generous, warm hearted, good natur- ed, p of noble traits, but con- fusion, with sll its hideous train of evils, follows in her wake. One foresees for -ber an untidy, ular, {ll arranged meal badly governed children. chaotic household, irreg- uncleanly, 1f her husband strong man, he will sizaply be supremely wretched and uncomfortable. If not, his ambition will be paralyzed, his dis- tion ; be will escape the phys- . means in his power and perhaps drown the recollection of them in drink. : ‘The man with the shuffling, uncertain gait, whose steps seem to be directed no guiding power within, is weak - ed. There is nothing which more surely betrays feebleness of intellect than the -walks¢ And be of the awkward gait, the restiess manner, the furtive glance, is the morbidly self conscious man, who cannot for a woment divest himself of ~ the sense of being observed; who lives, * 80 to speak, under a glass case. And he ~ of the soft, cautious tread, who givesyou the impression of crenping upon some * object as a cat creeps up upon a bird, is feline in his nature. He is not to be -grusted; he is treacherous; every faculty of his mind is poised for a spring. Let me commend to your confidence the man just coming into view—the man with the earnest eye, the manly carriage, the firm tread, who walks witl. simple, straightforward directness, as if toward some given point. He is “stable in all his ways.” He has as distinctly defined, well considered purpose in life, toward the attainment of which he advances with unswerving steadfastness, never turning to the right or the left, never allowing himself to be drawn into by- paths, no matter how alluring. His vic- tory is assured, his success merely a ques tion of time. Hy And so might one multiply types ad infinitum, for the variety in mankind is limitless. Nor is it to be wondered at that the characteristics of mien and wom- _en exhibit themselves in the gait, for the motive power, the propelling force is from within. Ir his account of Cataline, Sallust, the great master of nature, has not for- gotten to remark that ‘his walk was now quick and again slow,” as an indi- . cation of a mind revolving with vielent emotions, —Fuiladelphia Times. ; - No Danger of a Salt Famine. ~The amonnt of salt in the sea waters of the globe, if extracted, would be greater in mass than the land, so far as it appears above the surface. The seas cover 73 per cent of the earth's surface, estimated at 9,260,000 (German) square miles. The percentage of chlornatrinm in the sea is the same at all depths. Assuming that the average depth of the sea is a half © (German) mile, there are then 3,400,000 enbic miles of sea water, A cubic mile of sea water contains on the average about 95 kilograms of salt. The 8,400,000 cubic miles of séa water would therefore con ©. talib 85,000 cubic miles of distilled purs ‘salt. —From the German. ) _ afterward he himself smile plays about his mouth, he struts if traced to its roots it would be with rectangular ‘ exactness, happens to be a strong, an exceptionally spoiled discomforts of his situation by every | "JUDGE COFFINS FIRST CASE. A Bluff That Was Called Down In s Mest Humilisting Manner. i i The following story is told of Timothy : Coffin, who was for a long time judge of the New Bedford district: When a very young man, he was retained in a case of sufficient importance to bring out almost every resident of the town, so that the little New Bedford courthouse was packed when court was opened that morning. Coffin had been secured as counsel by the defendant. Although it was his first attempt in open oourt, he had made little or no preparation, think- ing that he could get through somehow or other when the time came. Thus, into court that morning, he was greatly surprised, and no less agitated, to see the big crowd and realize the wide publio when the counsel for the defendant came interest in the trial at hand. He saw that he had looked upon the cese too lightly. The prosecution was strong, and ha had made not even a slight prep- aration. : To lose the case meant the loss of a hoped for repmtation.. Could he afford to commit this blunder by displaying his out of it? These were a few of the ques- tions that are known to have flashed through the young lawyer's head, for told of the awfanl perplexity of the hour. Being a shrewd inventor, be devised a plan. As soon as the court had been called to order and the crier had said his little say he arose and asked for a postponement of the “fixed tariff of prices for everything . ——— “ - oo —-— . On wings that glitter as they rise; So blue are they, so akyey clear, : Unequaled bliss their beaming brings For now I think of one most dear, Whose tyes are bright as biuebird's wings. From covert groves glides forth a trill Of wild birds singing iustily, Yet while | list my thonghkte will still Seek her who is most dear to me, For. ob. her soft and soothing voice Sounds merrier than the leaping throng Of waters when spring rifls rejoice Rs music mates the iinmet’'s song. Upon a bourgeoned white birch broad Cd gambols apry and fleet, - Until, by my rude spr pl awed, She higher mounts ¢7 hasty feet: And as she bounds without a fall From lower limbs 10 limbs above Her agile motions well recall © The fiske-light footfalls of my love. . ~Maaurice W. Casey in Boston Pilot. 3 Advice From a Kisg. Kabarega. the negro king of Unyoro, in Central Africa, is a man who rules his subjects with arod of iron. Like all ty- rants, he regulates their smallest actions, and a host of spies inform him of any jgriorance of the case? How could heget | disobedience to his commands, Among other things, he has made a bought or sold in his country. and every deviation from it is severely punished. trial, on the ground that he had just re-. ceived 8 announcing the sad- den and fatal illness of his mother, who resided at Nantucket. Scarcely from the lips of young Coffin, when an elderly woman quietly arose in the balcony of the courtroom and gave atterance to these werds, ‘Timothy, Timothy, how many times have I chas- tised thee for lying?’ : Timothy recognised the sound of that voice only too well. It was that of his mother. This being Timothy's first pub- lic case, the old lady bad secretly come up to New Bedford to see how well ber son would do. Her presence was of ‘course totally unknown to him. The further developments need not be record- | ‘ed here. Suffice it to say that Timothy "Coffin in after years made sure that his escuses would not bs thrown back at him by any member of his own family. —Boston Herald. Profits In Champagne. The returns sre enormous whem & brand of champagne is firmly estab- lished, but it is slow and laborious work to build up s demand for a new wine. pularizes a brand | for dry wines some 15 years ago was . cansed by a remark of the Prince of Wales, made casually in the conrse of an | | ‘after dinner chat. It wag immediately | ponnced upon by the manufacturers of requires continual effort to maintain the ‘popularity of » wine. There must be no flagging. ; Brands that were in great demand a _ few years ago are now dropping out of : sight. Only a few hundred cases are sold annually. Others have come to the An instance of this is given by Vita Has- san in his book about Emin Pasha and the Equatorial Province. vo About a month after Hassan's arrival in Unyoro he bought a fowl and paid 30 cowries for it, while the market price NEAR THE PATTON HOTEL. . All kinds of laundry work done on short po- {ire and good work pam nteed, Prices reasen- able. Work called for and delivered without ‘extra charge. Orders left at ‘s barbe shop, opposite the Beck Hotel, will receive prompt attention. = * WHEN | Se YOU WANT A FIRST-CLASS JOB OF PAINTING, SIGN-WRITING, PAPERING or - FRESCOING, SEE. | WATSON, THE PAINTER. P. P. Young & Bro., - : cates Retail Dealer in FRESH MEAT was only 25. In that part of Africa it. takes aboat 230 cowries to make $1. | Soon afterward a dragoman of the king _ ful henceforth in your purchases—never to give for anything more than it is dry wines, the world was informed of it’ and their success was assured. But it front with remarkable strides, and their sales run up in the thousands. Asmany as 80,000 cases of a certain brand have been sold in this country in one year ats net profit to the agent of not less than $400,000. Such a statement is enough to make a young man giddy.—New “Tribune. : York | Dress of Short Women. Women who are short must avoid ‘much trimming on their skirts, be they stout or slender, as they are shorter in proportion from the waist to the feet, writes Emma M. Hooper, in an article on *Gowns For the New Year,” in The Ladies’ Home Journal. For the same reason they mast omit wearing large plaids and designs. full portions of the waist must be mod- crate in size, as tbe sleeves, bertha, belt and vest. The short, wide revers now worn are becoming, also round ‘waists and short, pointed basques. Jack- et fronts are in good taste, but the um- brella back basques give a short figure a cut off appearance, as do tiny capes, while a close fitting jacket adds ap- parently several inches. Materials anust be selected with a view to making the wearer look taller. A Juvenile Pessimist. Jeremiah, who is 12 years old, is al- ready a confirmed pessimist. Among the things he continually grumbles about are ‘his Jead pencils, which never have points, and to sharpen which he always has to borrow a knife of some schoolmate. : * “Why don’t you have a knife of your own, Jerry?’ one of the boys asked. “(rot mo pockets to keep it in,” said Je i “If I had one I'd have a hole in it.” “Well, even then you wouldn't be any worse off than yon are now.” : “H'm! Yes, Ishonld. If I had a pock- st'n a hole in it I never'd have anything to lose through it.” ; Jerry sighed deeply and went on whit- “tling his pencil with the du!l blade of the other boy's knife.-- Lewiston Journal. Progressive Dinner Parties, Progressive dinner parties are finding plenty of admirers in Be “If the gir] you take in is slow, all you Lave to “dois to take your wine glasses, your broad and your napkin gnd go to other fields. The worst of it is yon ean stay but one ¢ ty aud interesting girl,” is the way one who has tried it puts the case.—Boston Record. =tim Unreasonable. He (to the matrimonial agent)—I've married that! rich lady you engaged for me, but she won's give me any mon- e py y : : ; Matrimenial Agen: And what could yon ask better? Nob only have you a rich wife, © also .a prudent one.— London Tit-Bits. : Ty. “Then why don’t you have a pocket” All “pations and therefore art called em- had the words of this appeal sppeared and brought ‘back 5 cowries, with the message: “A fow] costs only 25 cowries, while you have given 30. The seller has done wrong. and the king will punish him, but he sends to you the advice to be care- worth, first of all in your own interest, and next to this in order not to disturb the market.” — Youth's Companion. An Intevesting Predicament. A man who lives in a flat niear Central park recently had a peculiar experience. A couple of deaf mutes rented an apart- ment underneath his own and were blessed in due season by the arrival of a bouncing baby with an excellant pair of longs. At night the little one woke up ' nearly the entire house by its cries, but throngh all of it the parents slept until the tenant above, at the solicitation of bis wife, went down stairs and fairly forced an entrance. The deaf and domb ! _ couple resort to many ingenious devices to overcome the disadvantages under which they labor. They. are unable to bear their doorbell, so they have ar- ranged a pie of colored paper upon the gong in such a way that the paper flutters when the bell rings. By keep ing s watchful eye on the bell they are able to receive their visitors promptly, brit their inventive genins has not as yet devised a scheme to indicate the baby's distress 4% night. — New York Mail and Express. Mrs. Romney's Water Cooler. " The Colorado journalist, Mrs. Rom- pey, has patented, among several other articles, a water cooler which does not require ice. It is a covered receptacle, of cellular brickware, manufactured of -elay, sawdnst and asbestus fiber. In the process the sawdust .is burned out, leaving the product cellular, ur porous. The receptacle, with the water to ba kept cool within, stands in a tray of - galvanized iron; which holds water toa depth of two or three inches. By reason of the porosity of the cooler and the foree of capillary attraction, the water in the tray constantly rises through the cellular walls of the receptacle, and is ‘as constantly evaporated —- thereby keap- ing the water inside as cool as it is nsu- ally draven from a well or spring.-—Den- ver Letter. lg The Emperor and the Pirate. Alexander the Great was about topass: sentence of death on a noted pirate, but previously asked him, “Why dest thou trouble the seas? : : “Why,” rejoined the raver boldly, “dost thon trouble the whole world? I, with one ship, go in quest of solitary ad-’ venture and am therefore called pirate. Thou, with a great army, warrest againat peror. Sir, there is no difference be- twixt us bat in the name and means of doing mischief.” Alexandér, so far from being dis pleased with the freadom of the culprit, was so impressed with the force of his appeal that he dismissed him unpun- ished. —Sala’s Journal. ’ New York Women Officiala. Eighty-five women were nominated « for school rommissioner in the late can- irse when you strike the pret- ‘litical Equality party 1. vass in New York and fonr were elect- ed. The Republicans nominated eight. the Democrats 30, the Prohibitionists 2, the People’s Party 42 and the Po- The list of women corimissioners is increased by one over last year. The French have long been tamous for their riddles, but it was an English fam- ily who lived in. such an atm=phere of puzzledom that on the husband inquir- ing in excited accents of his wife, “Why is that door always left open? she took on a reflective air, and after a moment's musing answered, “1 give it up.” A young man advertised fora wife, and his sister answered the advertisement; and the voung man thinks there is ne balm in advertisements and the old peo- ple think it is pretty hard to have two fools in one family. : It was an old bachelor who said that he never read the women's corner in his paper. although be was something of a women scorner himself, : - No representation of the face of a man was ever. staiuped on a coin until after the death of Alexander the Great, who was regarded as a divinity. ' Fifth Avenue, OF ALL KINDS. Bologna, Lard, Etc FIFTH AVENUE, Patton, Pa. NEW MERCHANT Tailor Shop IN REAR ROOM OF + JoHN YANER'S Building. Particular attention paid to Mend- ing, Dying and Cleaning. ' gor 1 guarantee PERFECT FITS and FIRST-CLASS WORK. © R. LE BOVIS. Keller's Bakery and Restaurant. H. E. KELLER, Proprietor. Fresh Bread, i ar A TE TON ow Patton, Pa.’ ARE YOU WITH If Not, Why Not. We undoubtedly have the very finest and hr Pt eet a ee A A lA EA, A FC La gi ai is i AR ‘best line of Gents’ Furnishing Goods ever brought to the town of Patton and not only Fis the best, but we can sell at the al FOR CASH. > | We are generally acknowledged as THE LEADERS in > ee everything kept in a first-class Clothing Store and we can tw show you goods with the greatest of pleasure. We makeita 8 ‘point to treat every person alike and offer the same priceto all See our Large Stock of Shoes, Rubbers, Etc., 3 This isn’t all; We will sell all our Overcoats at Cost Yours For a Square Deal, WOLF & THOMPSON. Pies, Cakes, And everythin in the Bakery line al- | ways fresh and on hand at all times. ealr served at all hours and First. ‘class Lunch Counter in connection. Tobacco, Cigars and Confectionery. Fresh Shell Oysters, w=" Prices Are Right. Have You Read The Tires, PHILADELPHIA, PA. This Morning? THE TMES is the most extensively circulated and widely read newspaper published iu Pennsylvania. [ts dis cussion of public men and public measures is in the interest of public integrity, honest government and _ prosperous industry, and it knows no party or personal allegiance in treating public issues. In the br yadd- ~ est and best sense a family and gen- era! newspaper. : THIS SPACE is reserved by A. M. Thomas. who will on or about March .1st open a first-class cedar plumbing and steam heating estsblis} ment in the room oc- ; cupied vy Wolf & Thomson, Magee avenue. THE TIMES aims to have the largest circulation by deserving it, and claims that it is unsurpassed in all the ecventials of a great metropalitan newspaper. Specimen copies of any edition will be sent free co any one sending ‘their address, : TERMS -DarLy, $8.00 per §1.00 for four months: 30 cents per month; delivered by carriers for 8 cents per week. SUNDAY EDITION, twenty-four large, handsome pages 168 columns, elegantly illustrated, $2.00 per annum; 5 cents per copy. Daily and Sunday, $.0¢ per annum; 50 cents per month. Weekly Editiou, 50 cents per annum. Annu; Address all letter to THE TIMES, PHILADELPHIA, morse THE BEST Sc. CIGAR. EQUAL TO ANY 10 CENT CIGAR. | FOR SALE BY ALL RELIABLE DEALERS. : : OF Sictier, Jobe, Maret Steet, Johnstown, Pm. n Patton by THE PATTON NEWS DEPOT. E. A. MELLON, P. M. HENRY ‘E. KELLER. CHARLES McMULLEN. - J. M. ROBINSON'S HOTEL. J. F. HULL. "The above Cigar is for sole