m&kwvmrw - ettiv. -, v WTWiiMtniw m tr-. n ifiaati ,,., ''tajT.aT-wWW.' af. an irisii ' Melody. T JORH rBlltalB WALLER. ' . , Ah, sweet Kitty Nell! ride u from your wheel iour neat little foot will be weary from spinning! 1 vJ"il'lP down with me to the sycamore treej Hall the parish is there, and the. dance is beginning. tlun g(me l'own b,lt 'he full harvest moon mtl-i"1" wee"y nl cool on the dew-whitened valley; hile a 1 the an rings with the soft, loving tlmiRS r.acn little bird sings in the green chaded alley." iWlth a blush and a amile Kitty rose up the while, t- l eyf B'n"i ne ',0""1 T hair, glancing; "rd to refuse when a young lover sues, t a j ' cou"'n't but choose to go off to the dancing. And now on the green the glad groupa are seen Jtach gay-hearted lad with the lass of his choosing; if' wit,lout fnii ''"'Is out sweet Kitty Neil boaiehow, when be asked, she ne'er thought of refusing Now Felix Magce putt his pipes to his knee, And with flourish so free, seta each couple in motion; -With a cheer and a bound, the lads patter the ground 1 he maids move around just like swans on the ocean. Cheeks bright as the rose feet light as the doe's iiuw ciisuy retiring, now oriircn ine worm all around Np such sight can be found Sweet Kate, who could view your eves of deep blue, Beaming humidly through their dark lashes so mildly" lour fairy-turned i.rm, heaving breast, rounded form Nor feel his heart warm, nnd his pulses throb wildly! I onr Pat feels his heart, ns lie gazes, depart, fSubiliicd by the smart of such painful yet sweet love; The sight leaves his eyes as he cries with a sigh, "Dame light, for my heart it lies under your feet, love!" National Magazine. rnjijxriTuxrinjrinjTJinjiJxririnjxn A Trust . UTruxruTnjTnjxriJxrixuar 0 By Roger .ii..iJ.uJ.i.iJ.i.ij.iI.,..Jj.C ' MjQf HE people of Melstone were Jp not iinchnrltablo, yet it B 'P O would have been hard to " K Unit three persons who be- TXr llcved there was nny guoil In Fred Wlldbiirn. A rude, ungoveriipd child; a lawless, vicious youth; a reck less, dissipated num. In nil his thirty years of life lie bud done no good thing that anyone ever remembered of lilin. ,The people of Melstone were n very moral sort of people, and did not hesi tate to Rive this one Islumiellte to iin derstaml the Impassable milf that lay between themselves and lilin, both in time and eternity. Perhaps It tended to improve his heart and temper; but I doubt it. Among the Inhabitants was n family M the name of t'ptnn. From time Im memorial there had been a feud be tween the Wildlmins and Uptons, kept alive and aggravated by each succes sive generation. A. great many years before a Wlldburn and an Upton liad married sisters, and through some nice bit of diplomacy on the part of I'pton, bis wife was made heiress to the pn ternal fortune, and the wife of Wild burn cut off with a paltry hundred fiollnrs. Later, Henry Upton had succeeded In getting the whole of a large legacy, ' left by some distant relative, which should have been equally divided be tween Fred Wlldbiirn and lilniself. Naturallly, this tended to widen the breach, and fearful nnd bitter were the (vows of vengeance which Fred breathed against Upton. Indeed, his ungovernable passion might have, led him to some act of pergonal violence, but for one restrain ing Influence. Ten years before the commencement tif our tale, when Fred Wlldburn was About twenty years old, ho had one of bis wrists broken in a fight he had bimself provoked. His mother was, tnd had been for years, a bedridden Invalid, with an intellect weakened by long illness nnd abuse for her hus band drank heavily at times, and liquor made him wild nnd furious. The broken limb was set by a sur geon in a neighboring town; but the prospect of payment being exceedingly email, he paid very little subsequent attention to his patient. It was wnrm .weather, and the arm was badly torn and bruised besides, nnd needed dally attention. Good, charitable, pious peo ple, who gave munificently for the amelioration of the heathen thousands f miles away, turned with disgust from this heathen nt their own doors. Timid women shrank from entering the house, because, perchance, old iWildbum might be on one of his "ca rouses;" and so the bruises beenme Inflamed, and the danger that the arm would have to come off grew immi nent. Fred wasn't used to bearing 8ain, and raved fearfully, while the iweak-mindcd invalid cried nnd fretted by turns, and Wlldburn senior drank more perseverlngly than ever. . Into this pandemonium there came one morning a slight, delicate girl, bearing a little roll of snowy linen in ber hands. "I have come to dress Tour arm. Fred," she said, quietly, laying aside her white sunbonnet, and revealing a thin, rather pale face, with steady, fearless brown eyes. "Who sent you here, Bessie Bran- Son?' asked the elder Wlldburn, in a blustering voice. No one, sir. I came because 1 thought it right for me to come. Frederick will lose his arm, unless it is cared for speedily." "Let lilm lose it, then," was the ' gruff answer. ."Not if I can help !t, sir!" " 'And the brown eyes were lifted fear lessly to his face. Muttering something about "meddling neighbors," he seized his hat and stag gered out of the room, and Bessie at once set herself to the work of caring lor the woinded arm. It was a shocking sight, nnd the firm lips grew just a little white ns she stripped off the matted bandages; but ber white fingers were steady nnd cool, as sue careruiiy wasneu tue arm, bathed it in some liniment she had brought with hei.'and swathed it nice ly and carefully in the cool, soft linen she had brought for the jxirpose. "Why. it doesn't feel like the name ' arm!" Fred exclaimed, when she had finished; and involuntarily he glanced -.r.l P, now Domiy niivanciiigi around from the sky to the ground, be found aa the Irish lass dancing! noidiy nuvar.cing; tro as Fulfilled. Canning, p. nt the other hand, which he for the first time realized, with a faint emotion of shame, to be almost as sadly In need of washing ns the other had been. When Bessie came the next day, she noticed that it was almost as white ns her own. Kvery day for font weeks Bessie visited tho Wildlmins on her errand of mercy, undismayed by old Wlldburn, or the ridicule of her friends. "I should hnve lost It, I dare say, If It hadn't been for you. Miss Bessie," Fred said, the Inst day she came. "I'm a mlsernble wretch, Heaven knows; but I slmn't ever forget this," touching his arm. "I mil so glad I could help you," she said, gently. "Well, you're the first one," he said, n little bitterly. As I said, this was ten years before. and, though the years had brought many changes, the ameliorating Influ ences had been few In the life of Fred Wlldburn. The drunken father nnd Invalid mother had both died, leaving Fred quite nlone In the mlsernble, shabby old house where he lived. He had not Improved with the years; on the contrary, he had grown more reck less nnd disorderly, until prople said he was utterly and totally depraved, without one good Impulse in his heart. One- thing had happened during these ten years. Bessie Brandon had mar ried Henry Upton; but no one ever knew of the terrlble nlght which Fred Wlldburn passed when he heard of It. "Nobody ever should know whnt a miserable fool he hnd been," he said, fiercely. He need not have feared his secret was safe for no one ever was wild enough to suspect him of feelini? or sentiment, particularly where the petted daughter of Squire Brandon was concerned. Henry Upton was an honored and highly respected citizen. He was In telligent, educated and wealthy, and If he looked down from his sublime height of virtue nnd attainment a little contemptuously upon poor, mlsernble Fred Wlldburn, it was certainly no more thnu his neighbors did. And if, by nny possibility, there hnd been any little trickery or unfairness in the set tlement of that legacy, he could easily excuse, himself upon the plea that It would only be a curse to Wlldburn if he hnd it, lending him into deeper de bauchery, whereas he could use it wisely, nnd for the benefit of mornllty nnd religion. The fact that Wlldburn did not see it in Just that light was only another proof of his Innate de pravity, people said, piously. Upton hr.d a mill some four miles from Melstone. by the main road, but scarcely three by a cut across country. It was little more than a bridle path, though Upton sometimes drove through with his light drag. He started with it one wild, chilly December morning, promising his wife to return early if I: came on to snow, as it promised to. It was piercingly cold, nnd the wind blew in fierce, fitful gusts nil the fore noon. Just after noon it began snow ingnot aa usual, in fine, light parti cles, but with a wild, tempestuous force that carried all before it. Long before night the streets were block aded, and the wind roared and shrieked up nnd down them like a madman. Bessie Upton paced the floor of her pretty sitting room, more excited nnd nervous than 3ho hnd ever been in her life before. She hnd, naturally, a cool, quiet temperament. "If only he hnd not started," she said, anxiously; "if he saw the fierceness of the storm in season to stop at the mill, instead of attempting to brave iW" The night came down early; but the mill owner came not, Jind his wife, though still anxious, had settled down to the belief that he would not come till morning. Suddenly a loud neigh, falling be tween the pauses of the tempest, struck her ear. , "Henry has come now!" she ( claimed; and, catching np a lamp, she hurried to the side door. Only a panting, terrified horse, the broken harness dangling from his foamy sides, met her appalled vision For a moment she sank, dizzy nnd faint, in a chair. She was alone; her one servant, having gone awny for the day, had been prevented from return Ing by the storm. ' ' Fred Wlldburn was sitting over a smoldering fire; inwardly cursing the storm that kept him in.. It was not a pleasant home there whs tlnt excuse for him. The walls were' dingy with smoke, thr floor was bare and dirty, the chairs and tables were broken and dilapidated. "How the wind blows! This Is the third time He paused suddenly, for.j framed In the door, the wind and snow whirling madly about her slight figure, stood Bessie Upton. "Great Heaven, Bessie!" he ejaculat ed, and then stood gazing at her in dumb amazement, while she closed the door, nnd came and stood before him. "Frederick," she said, In her sweet, firm voice, "Henry Is out somewhere In this storm. The horse has come home nlone. If ho came the forest road, he can never find ills way home, nnd ho could not live till morning In this storm. There Is nobody I dare ask but you to go to him. It Is a great deal to ask, I knows but I think I know your heart better than anyone else does, and I shall trust to your courage and bravery in this dreadful emer gency." A fierce spasm of pain crossed Ills face. Then he turned away without spenklng, and took down his hat nnd cont, and they walked together to the door. Ho paused on the doorstep, look ing wistfully down nt her. "How can you get home?" he said. "It Is dreudful, I know, Frederick" nobody but she ever cnllcd him any thing but Fred "but I think I enn get along," the wind nearly taking her from her feet ns f he spoke. "If I might accompany you," he said, hesitating, nnd adding, "If you are not afrnld of being contaminated." For answer, she put her hands In his, confidingly. While she lived, Bessie Upton never forgot the close, nervous clasp with which he held bet hands; but he took her carefully nnd tenderly to her door, nnd then turned away into the storm nnd (lnrkness: One, two, three hours nnd, oh, such long, Interminable nges as they seemed! "Perhaps I have sent him to his death, too," she moaned, sadly. "Oh, If I could only know and see Just where they nrc!" If she could, she would have seen a slight, determined figure, bnttllng with the strength of a giant against tho winds that disputed his progress step by stop. Falling sometimes over prostrate trees, nnon borne down by sudden drifts of snow, yet struggling on with unabated zeal, till he comes nt last to a still, white figure lying across tho path, entangled and held down by the debris of broken wheels and tree limbs! Two hours later, when poor Bessie hnd nearly given them both np for dead, Fred Wlldburn staggered into tho room, and laid her husband at her feet. "I have fulfilled the trust," ho said, faintly, nnd sank down beside Upton, who was slowly rousing from the ter rible chill nnd torpor that had over powered him. "Oh, Henryl he has fainted! And see!" She grew suddenly white as she pointed to) a small Btroam of blood that stained his shirt bosom, caused by n sudden hemorrhage from the lungs. It was morning before they could get a physician there. Wlldburn had laid In an unconscious state nil night; but tho flow of blood hnd ceased, nnd they thought it only the torpor of exbnus tlon. "Poor Frrd!" Henry Upton snld, "there was some good in him, after all. I owe my life to his bravery, and I shan't forget It In n hurry. I ha- been thinking, Bessie, that I will take him Into the mill, nnd see If I can't make something of him yet. I intend to re ward him hnndsomely for this." The doctot came at last; bnt his grave face told the story before he opened his lips. There is no chnnce for nim to re cover," he snld. A little after noon tho dying man opened his eyes, nnd looked about him. Fred." Mr. Upton said, feelingly, "I've not treated you ns I should hnve done in tlincn past, and I dldn t de serve this at your hands. I want you to forgive me, and " "Bessie whero is Bessie?" he In- terruptcd. faintly. "Here, dear Frederick, here." And she took his hands In hers, and bent over him t he felt a warm tear splash, on his face. "Ob. Bessie! It s a miserable lire, i know; but it's nil I have to give, nnd I would give it a hundred times over to snve you from sorrow," he snld, with a smile that glorified his conrse fnce. "It wns my good right arm the arm you saved for me, you know, dear I told you I should never forget, nnd I never did! Nobody a but you evei trusted to the good there was In me llttle enough there was, I know," he snld, dreamily, his voice growing sud denly weak. Bessie was crying softly, ne opened his eyes, nnd gave one long, eager look in her face, nnd In thnt wistful gaze Bessie Upton read the secret no one: else ever knew or guessed. New York Weekly. Don't Insult the Hojr. : When a mnn don't give his wife any money nor pay the preacher nor contributes a cent to build up his town or country, some people call him a hog, but that Is, slander slander against the hog. The hog does pay. He pnys the doctor, the preacher, the storekeeper, builds a new house for the wife, buys organs, pianos, buggies and sends the qhildren nway to school. Don't ever compare a mean, stingy man to a hog again. Jewell (Kan.) Republican. i . ,IN OANDx LAND. "In Candy Land the little folks Wear candy buttons on their cloaks, And candy buttons on their shoes Indeed, on everything they use." "Why. I -ihould think the thing would break!" "They do; and thea the children tali The broken pieces, great and small, And eat until they ve eaten all, "In Candy Land the girls all know With candy needles they must sew; Tho boys who work have candy tools, And they have candy books in school. "In Candy Land they think it nice, To go to skate on candy ice; They rest themselves in candy chairs, And go to bed up candy stairs." The candy-lover on my knee In wonderment still questioned me: "And if the candy stairs should break !" "The children must the pieces take, And very quickly down must sit And eat up every single bit."' "What if the candy buttons break?" "The pieces then the children take, And very calmly down they ait And eat up every single bit. "In Candy Land the girls and boys Play every day with candy toys; They always eat from candy plates, And do their sums on candy slates. "Sometimes the children eat all day To get the broken bits away." "And must the cnildren eat them all?" "Yes, every piece, both great and small, This is the law in Candy Land; And you must own 'tis wisely planned; For in that land, as you can see, So many things must broken be That bits of candy soon would strew The sidewalks, ronds, and houses, too; 8o children must the pieces eat That Candy Laud be clean and neat." The candy-lover on my knee In blank amaze looked up at me. "Why, Candy Land's a dreadful place!" Then dawned a wise look on his face-" "I used to think it would be grand I'o go to live in Candy Lund; Hut now I only wish to go Kack day and stay an hour or so!" St. Nicholas. FUN IN MAKING SMOKE RINGS. Have you ever watched n smoker blow rings of smoke from his mouth? Here 1b a way to make smoke rings without being a smoker, nnd it will 6e found one of the prettiest experi ments thnt you ever made. You must have a pasteboard box about a foot square at the bottom, and In the middle of the bottom cut a round hole ns large as a sliver dollar. Pin a handkerchief tightly arer the THE SMOKE RINGS open top of the box and then burn touchpnper In tho hole until the box Is full of smoke. Now rest the box on its side, and when you lightly tap the handkerchief smoke rings will come out of the hole Just like those from the smoker's rnoutU To mnke larger rings of smoke and to perform little fents with them, get a wooden box Instead of the pasteboard one and let It be about two feet square nt the bottom. Over the open top tack tightly a piece of heavy muslin and stand the box on Its side, ns before. The hole In this box should be three or four inches in diameter. To keep the box full of smoke arrange two bottles, orfe filled with strong ammonia and the other with hydrochloric acid, and sup port them on asbestos so that they fan be heated from below by an alcohol lamp. The corks of the bottles will have to have either ruhber or bent glass tubes fitted in them, the other ends of the tubes entering the box by means of two small holes. When you heat the bottles with the lamp the fumes will rise through the tubes and enter the box, where they will mix and form a dense white smoke. Having filled the box in this way the bottles need not be heated again until the smoke becomes thin. When you tap on the muslin, largo, beautiful rings of smoke will come out of the hole, nnd you can bring them out forcibly and fast if you tap the muslin hard, or gently and slowly if you tap It lightly. You will perhaps be surprised to hear that you can make one of the smoke rings blow out a lighted candle that Is placed across the room from the box. Of course the candle must be placed exactly opposite to the hole, when a quick, hard tap on the muslin will Bend a ring of smoke that will extinguish it And your friends will be surprised when you blow out the candle by tap ping the muslin on the box, even after the box has been emptied of smoke. The tap on the muslin sends a current of air strong enough to extinguish the flnme. The accompanying Illustration-shows how the box' should be arranged. Any boy cau make it. New York Kvenlug Mall. THE STRENGTH OF Ulllbs. Birds can eat and digest from ten t thirty times as much food In propor tion to their size as men can. If a mnn could eat as much in proportion to his size ns a sparrow Is able to consume he would need a whole sheep for dinner, a couple of dozen chickens for breakfast and six turkeys for his evening meal. A tree sparrow has been known to eat 7(H) grass seeds In a day. Relative to tho bird's size, these seeds were as big ns an ordinary lunch basket would be to a full grown mnn. A bird's strength is equally amazing, says tho Indianapolis News. A white tailed eaglo weighing twelve pounds, with a wing-spread of six feet, has been known to pounce on n pig weigh ing forty-two pounds, raise it to a height of 100 feet nnd fly off with it The bird had covered a distance of half a mile before tho pig's owner succeed ed In shooting the thief. Birds can und do work far hnrder than human beings. A pair of house martins when nesting will feed their young ones In twenty seconds thnt Is, each bird, male and femnle, makes ninety Journeys to nnd fro In an hour, or nbout KMIO a day. It must be re membered that on ench Journey the bird has the added weight of catching the worm. Even so tiny n bird ns the wren has been counted to make 110 trips to and from Its nest within 4.'10 minutes, nnd the prey It carried home consisted of larger, heavier nnd hnrdor-to-flnd In sects than were caught by the spar rows. Among them were twenty good sized caterpillars, ten grasshoppers, seven spiders, eleven worms nnd mor than one fat chrysalis. ANTS' COWSHEDS. One of the most Interesting studies of Insect life is tho relationship be tween nnts and plant-lice, or aphlds. These plant-lice supply honeydew from the Juices which they take as food from plants. The ants are very fond of this sweet substance, and car AND THE SMOKE BOX. for the aphlds In a manner that seems to us surprisingly intelligent. They sometimes carry them bodily to a bet ter feeding gronnd nnd drive away certain of their enemies. It is claimed thnt they even build sheds of mud in the crotches of shrubs nnd small trees. On account of this insect relationship, one may truthfully call the ants "farm ers," the aphlds "cows," and these pro tecting mud cases "cowsheds." St Nicholas. , MOTHER GOOSE GEOGRAPHY. The old "Banbury Cross" familiar from the Mother Goose rhjme was a real cross in the English town of Ban bury. For a long time it was in ruined condition, but was restored some twen ty years ago, possibly because tourists would ask fo see it But the "Old Lady", upon the white horse, with, all her bells and rings, is gone forever, music and all. "Primrose Hill" Is an other real -locality, being in London near Regent's Pnrk. "St Ives," on the road from which "seven wives" were met, is the town where Oliver Crom well passed five years in farming. St. Nicholas. PIGEON CARRIED THE NOTICE. A carrier pigeon, writes the Redding (Cal.) correspondent of the Sacramento Bee, played a part the other afternoon in the filing of a mining location notice and several amended notices with the County Recorder by Clinton Johnson, manager" of the Gold Kings Mining Company. The pigeon was liberated at the mines, four miles west of this city, nnd reached Mr. Johnson Just four minutes- later, bringing to him the word that the notices had all been properly posted on the claims. Thereupon he tiled du plleates with the County R?corder, and was Just in time to do so before the office closed for the r. i INTEREST IN FAST ELL C- ' ' TRIC TRACTION WANES. The Matter of Eipense it What Prevents the Running of Trains at i Speed of 129 Miles an Hour. At present th very high speed elec tric railway Is little heard of In Eng land, mid even In Germany, whero tin P.crlln-ZosHcn experlnieutsshowedthaf, given a straight,, well-hild and well halanced track, a speed of 120 miles an hour was possible and safe, It has rather dropped out of Imminent prob ability.,-The question seems at present prliiclpnlly one of expense. Very heavy cars are required fo;-nny speed over eighty miles nn hour; no curve enn be taken without slackening of speed If It has a radius of less than a mile; and a enr conlalnli.g, say, sixty people, would with Its necessary transformers and motors require 2000 liorsc-pnwor to urge It nt a rale of 120 miles an hour. The curves are the principal difficulty; so that In order to run trains nt these speeds It will be necessary to construct new railway lines. At present public Interest In Germany Is concentrated on the possibility of high-speed electric traction between Berlin and Hamburg, which, If a new straight line were built, would be IW miles distant by mil. During the dis cussion of the high-speed experimental line Messrs. Siemens nnd Hnlske pro posed a single-track electric line at n cost of $17,000,000, on which trains would run the whole distance either way, with n stop half way. In five minutes under two hours. The Gen eral Electric Company propose a double line, on which trains would travel 100 miles an hour nnd do the Journey In one hour nnd tweiJy-five minutes, for M2r00,000. For ?::7,r.00,000 they be lieve they could raise the speed to 125 miles nn hour. London Tost. WISE WORDS. The pursuit of money Is painful, but Its possession Is often more so. There's no power In the plrty that seems to give a mnn n perfect pain. Bett"r the hands that nche from toll llinn the heart that aches from trouble. Temptations nro sure to ring your doorbell, but It's your fault If you osk them to stay to dinner. Perform n kind action, nnd you find n kind feeling growing In yours'lf, even If It wns not there before. Those who reason only by analogies rnrely reason by logic, and are gener ally slaves to Imagination. C. Sim mons. How evenly things are bnlnnced in this world! The foolish benefit from the wisdom of tho wise, nnd. In return, tho wise must suffer for the follies of the foolish. Men born with silver spoons In their mouths nre but poorly fitted to sit In Judgment on those who labor. Noth ing puts a man so wise to a thing as having "been there." ' Happiness, content and right satis faction, nil doubts answered, all dark places lighted np, heaven begun here this Is the reward of loving God. In this world, tribulation; yes, bnt good cheer In spite of that George Hodges. D. D. Blight Mistake. There Is nn old story of an authority on Buddha whose next neighbors nt dinner insisted on bringing the talk back to agricultural products, under the Impression that "butter" wns the magic word uttered in her enr by her hostess. This story has hnd many suc cessors, one of which relates to Sir Henry Howorth nnd his book, "A His tory of the Mongols." no met at an afternoon reception a young woman who, after surveying him with inter est, launched Into a discourse on dogs, telling him she hnd three, and had al ways been pleased that each of them had such a good pedigree. '"Though I don't know that it counts for mneb," she said at last. "Some of yours, no doubt, are cleverer than any of mine." "But I have no dogs," said Sir Henry, bewildered. "Ob, well, I mean those you've written about," said tho young woman, quickly. "But I've never writ ten nbout any," said Sir Henry. "You haven't!" exclnlmcd tho young woman. "Why, I'm s;ire somebody told me you hnd written a book on mongrels"' Youth's Companion. The Next Best Thin. "I had almost forgotten what an old fashioned Fourth of July celebration was like," said a man whc was born in the country, but was translated te New York many years ago, "when last Fourth of July I found myself visiting some relatives In a little country vlllag in Iowa. They had a picnic in thj woods, with speeches, music and din ner afterward. "When the program was about t begin the chairman stepped forward nnd said that they had intended U open the exercises with prayer, but th minister had bon unexpectedly called away. He asked if any one in thf audience would come forward and offet prayer. No one responded. He waited a minute and then, 'Well,' said he, 'we'll have the next best thing. We'll have the Declaration of Independence read.' "New York Press. A "New-Born" Giant. Apropos of a thirteen-ponnd baby wl:ch an English practitioner recent ly nnnounced ns a record breaker, a Johannesburg doctor sends the follow ing letter to the Lancet: "Sirs I beg to inform you that I delivered a Dutch lady of n son weighing fourteen and a quarter pounds. The child looked to me as If he would be more satisfied with a chop than a drink of milk. I may men tion thnt both mother and father are large persons." atus: 4TT0RNKT AT-LaW; lfotary ini.i!, mnl a'staia atsnt, PateaM I'-eiirnd, fn,;-r-tir,n riia1 promptly ObmI In urn Unax i.'jiiiiii,, HnynoKliTlUa, fa. ' " JJH. B IIIMIVKII. HPrmil.l.SVII.I.B, PA. ltiiM- i!i'iiM I the ItooT.r kaiMlat J)ll. L, L. MKANS. DENTIST. Offlea on teonnri floor of First KsV IIomI bank buli-liug, Main trtt. J)B. II. UEVIIE KINO, DENTIST. Offlos on aecond floor Reynoldsrni Ileal Estato Building, Main street Kyooldrlll, " J HEBT, . JUSTICE OF THE PEACH Aud ileal Unt.tli Agent. ItftyfioMstUlo, Pm gMIin M. Mf.CnKJOJIT, ATT') it x n r-A t-i.k w. Rotary Ptltilln and Htnl Kstai AfinM. 0f Mtett'ms will vnnli rr,mfil attontlrin. OfBa In thi H7nol1srill flr'lre Co, balldlaf. Halo ilmi. Hi ynol'isnlis, fa. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed, wtiiat No. t fi f n m Hjn No. 2 . Corn No ' jnllow, enr nt M No. Tll',W,Sb-llKl Si t,l Mlfd Mr 4 Oats No. whit f(l SI No. a whit te m Flour Wlnfir rtint fiM 8 11 Vw.j atralK'it wlnlnrs N Hi It) Hiy No. I 'flniothr H M (ill (;ioTr No. i 11 m i: Fwl-No. I whit ml'l. ton 1 .V) Vni'l Drown ml'l'llliiK" 17 '0 hrnn. hulk If, V; 17 VI 8irw Wheat 1 ! 7 VI Oat... II Ml 7 00 Dairy Products. , Battor Eluln creamery t 91 Ohio creamery 20 tt Fancy country roll is H Che' -ie-Olilo, new 11 12 Now York, new 11 1 Poultry, Eto. Hens tr In $ 1' I Chickens flreel M IS JiK fa. aii'l Ohio, tresta VJ 21 Fruits and Vegetable!. Apples bbl f v s no I'otfttoes Fancy white per bu.... 50 oi Calibans per ton is W Jl 10 Onions per barrel 4 3 (u BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent S gir, 5 2", Wheat No. 2 red jfj Corn Mixed 51 E"K 1H IH llutter Ohio creamery 20 a! PHILADELPHIA. Floor Winter Patent f 5 so 5 7s Wheat No. red tK) 101 Corn No. i mled fi SI Hats No. 8 while 34 37 Butter Creamery xo ! F-Klf Pennsylvania firms is 17 NEW YORK. Flour Patents $ 01 Wheat No. SI red 10 l Corn No. 2 Oan No. 2 white 17 US Butter-Creamery 0 2 Kg State and Pennsylvania.... 17 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Plttaburo Cattle. Fjtra, Mr) to VM lbs fS 50 Prime, iwxi 10 Mum lt,s 6 6S Weaimn, liuitoiaou b. 4 no 610 Tidy. 100.1 to 1150 140 180 fcul,-her. 9W)lo 1100 100 170 Common 10 fair sM 875 Oxen, common to fat 7i IM Common torond fat bulls and cows 2 50 S50 II Ikh cows, each 1600 JSOO Hojja. Prime heavy hom l S 810 I'rin.e medium weights Biu tii ben hcnvy jorkem and meilllno 6.W 8 V UockI pips and llshtyorkors 670 675 Piifs. common 10 good 170 1) fOKhs 3 74 1li "' 85 Sheep. $ in sin 'iod to choice 5 25 600 lluin 175 5 00 I ommon 10 fair., tso 101 Lamba jjj Calves. Veal, cxtro 500 7 50 V eul, iimhi to choice .... W 150 Vai, common heavy 8JJ S7J SPORTING BREVITIES, The New York Tacht Club made its annual cruise. Alfred G. Vandcrbilt took the honors In a hunt at Newport. The Westchester C. C.'g polo teanf won the Point Judith Cups. Sadie Mac won the $10,000 Empire! State trotting stake at Buffalo. Menus Bedell easily defeated Lonia Mettling in the ten-mile motor paced race. The Westchester C. C.'g second poo team defeated Squadron A by a score of 17i to 12. Kieran, the Australian, swam 500 meters in 7 minutes 18 2-5 seconds, near Stockholm, Sweden. The prize-winning French bulldog Felix was run over by an automobile and died almost instantly. Golfers representing: the Western Pennsylvania Association won the Olympic Cup on Chicago links. Colonel John Jacob Astor's yacht Nourmnhnl, in starting for the Astor Cups race at Newport, Tan on the rocks. . Deleree, a green trotter driven by D. W. Sfaloney, of White Plains, won in 2.09 at the Poughkepesie Grand Cir cuit meeting. Frank Kramer scored a victory over Iver Lawson In the two-mile cham pionship at MadUou Square Garden, New York City. W. A. Lamed successfully defended the lawn tennis championship by de feating Clarence Hobnrt in straight Bets for the Longwood Cup. The Vanderbilt Cup Commission de cided to hold the automobile race for the Vanderbilt trophy over the twenty nine mile course in Long Island. Tom Eutler, who was killed looping the loop In the West the other day. la the lad who was at one time the short distance cycle champion of this country.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers