RED yWCLOVER, Robin, atilt on the apple-tres Singing your love to the What {= the From the waking world, sweetest thing y quivering bough with the dow earlod ? Do you love the golden daisies best, Or the ro What do Of the imj es glowing you tell you desire? 3 tobin, wing Of the 1 clover, Waves NSON HOLDR had a that was OOK UISPOsIL 101 put an er 0 hi to separate them tle town bey hora nnibie } ere nniting to line : emselves, with the as- sistance of the necessary attendants, in holy bondspf matrimcny so strongly welded that all the angry brothers Christendom asunder. T ill I with thie m few she chal int the tray l any nt in ¢ trying to find a rao yd he never be the knowledge, | ar kerosene evidence o went on measuring out su and butter and with equanimity as though criticism of his uct was a possibility as far re | stars For ten years the estrange tinued without a word or sign having pas two branches of the Saturday afterno : erat y's blue-coated, brass-buttoned boy brought Anson a A It was sent from a little town in Western Wy- oming, and read “They tell me I am i at once. v Honace," Whether or not Anson _cxperienced any revulsion of feeling towards his sister-in-law for the tiu matter for conjecture, but certain iti that when the news of the " 3 dissolution of his on fis much col 1 te as the fixe ment con of rec etween toe Then on the telegraph ognition family, aoon 4] 0} mie mn dving. bein is a reached him the t proved infinitely } barriers that had arise: strife and d end of on few moments’ deliberation h decided to He hurriedly made preparations for leaving tho business ine ’ LE oo, in charge of an employe of the estab- | this time, I reckon. lishment during an indefinite period | of absence, and when the westward bound train left Winterset that night, Anson Holbrook, bent on a mission of | reconcilintion, was numbered among | { the passengers. Through what would seem to be EOMO special intervention of Provi- d , thongh perhaps it was but the natural course of things, Horace Hol- brook's life was prolonged through the four days required for Anson's ourncy, and he was given strength nough after his arrival to make the | desired disposition of ali his posses sions which could not be taken with { him into the world beyond, Hie last will and testament ! vorbal one and was far from intricate, | He had not prospered during the la and after the be tween the brothers, which , owing to the swi ith of the younger, Horace n in a few words that the only leg he had it in his power to be 01s wile nd he ence 1 4 { Wis fi | fow years, me Was | effusive one ft-con mandi such things yet,” ““There’s plenty of F A that after a whi to the to talk about conclusi nnliess I think 41 afl 4 RSE FL 8] ted the p f bookkeo merchandise a serupn IARI ER LY months she | and caprices, meeting unjust nel {tio And crisicisin 1 3 r ompisinin dictates her em) “I ought t e as ; have to here,” she shutting down her ig 0 tie liver wi gion that surged through done my and I've faithfully, and yon can’t den I might have kn ] whole life has been marke me with a bang viel with AUZTY Pas ner. "vi served you y it Bat Wt A man whose Eat GOA on her th ¢ ‘ha and beginuir 11 fingers all a-qt yest wi t ywi th I by an utter lisrezard for another's rights and feel not so far 1 1% to deal in a consi te, 1 ings could form himsel | fair-han led way with any one dependent upon him, even though his last words to a dying brother was a p1 of pardon and | kindness,’ _R | It was her | 5 of ammuni- | tion, and the shot told. Anson tried to frame an equally telling answer, but the rapidity with which she had hurled the words at him stemmed the tide of his thoughts, and before he eonld re yver himself sufficiently to reply she hal rashed oul through the back door { for the ol art the office, and was heading wite side of the street. ‘Liet her go,” he mnttere 1, looking at the hurrying figure moodily. be back in loss than a fortnight, beg: ging to be given her old place again, om A iH | She was a good worker, I'll admit, but there's just as good fish in the sea as ever wero caught, and Anson Holbrook is the man that is able to cateh them. I'd like to give her to understand, once for all, that, whatever comes, she can’t bothering me for help, I won't have it, I'll got a now woman at once, and then there'll be no hemming and hawing ‘around when she wants to be reinstated.” Julin Holbrook was serenely uncon- seicus of her brother-in-law's dire pre- ie comes and | dictions as to her future, and while Anson meditated and planned, she, too, get about to find ont some opening for herself in another direction. Ww y people of Winterset had hey didn’t want or wanted they didn't have, they let cosmopolitan body, the about it through the Winterset Herald. slow to avail which n, contr lv, after a # hesitation, *‘it I have i myself N know I have my opinion preci contradict me, for I k I don't think it is too late to m am than anxicus to tre vou willing to help me? It is my bookkeeper that I wan as my wife. If you are give the past and will come tom ndvertis Shall 1 £ xt IS gO08e Ol yi but more You, able to for those terms 1 can easily another office assistant do She let her brown head dro on hisshoulder and then she whi “Yes, 1 think York World. pn —— p over spor You MY — May NOW I To Recover Sinken Logs, A new bransh of the lumber indus. trv has been introduced on the Pike liver, and before long will extend all over the Menominee River and its tri butaries, giving employment to han dreds of men. It is recovering *‘dead- heads” or logs which ar aad eanuol [he hanle 6 partly sunk be driven down stream. will be s river bank down stream Wis. There timber sunk in and ibs tribue water-sonked ! out and put on th to dry and then floated to the mills in Marinette, are millions of feet of the Menominee River Lut she's ealculated beyond her depth taries. ~Milwaukee (Wis) Sentinel, f | | / | seed. HOW TO KEEP If the ditch is in a meadow or pas ture, round off the bank or plow, and sow They will with a good sod, the bottom of the i8 in cultivate DITCHES FROM WA HI | with a spade | [Ass OVEr ef heavily with g 111 sow to gra If fail 1t can be sodd to put that much resulss from the cows to them are the eating the seeds, seeds and stringy master attached nutritious part TRA i Arue { soft { i8 le AR d country this tinent to inquire where the geldings to horse the trucks and American towns and « to be derived, wey 1110s a Ars | Are Ti € teams no ness will not last forever; certain, Ou our pavements the best wearing sorts must sooner or later snecumb and in time give to stock from the | farms. When that inevitable day ar few ve ence w in har that much 18 city even WAY fresh On | rives will the farmers be prepared to H 2 {OF | supply the desired grade of stock or not? forecast of the situation the century At present there ean be but one I'he end of will find our markets right stamp. Even the wagfaring man can figure thisout. From every farm ing district in the land we get the same | report: No breeding of any conse-| quenze in prospect ; few colts last year | and practically none this spring! And yot only this, bat a buyer connected | with the export trade is ovr anthority for the statement that sixty per cent, of the current receipts of horses of all | descriptions in the Chicago market are mares! Stallion keepers without an occupation, and the mares going by tens of thousands into tke barns of the big dealers in the great cities of the North and of Europe! From these stables they never ave to begin a oareer of drudgery in the traces, which ieads to but one plage come ont | make | BOTY Where are the ite future the boney up the requ come from? One surprising nt netivi cago market er of 1500 pound “chunks by Frenel i, German and ry that w new macol mis, or eracked wheat | for It requ no preparation, and they will do nie it od, as it does not with the dirt of the ¢ ros best fee little chicks, on it, 1s cleaner than mush, f rary it ig! It = the litters of o determine are ti sensible the females course, the thes as the breedi: part of next year's cro) 10 very bes breeder w or some CWE use When your chicks have hatched and you put the old hen in a coop, be sure and have nwo bottom in it, on the ground. A board bottom, sneh as is used, is bad in summer, us hot the hen puflers greatly, infrequently dies Let her bo it gets and not During the warm weather it ing process along so that the chicks will appear one or even two days ahead of time. Last week fourteen Brown Leghorn chicks surprised us by com: ing a day or two ahead of me. So it is well to wateh out for them, towara the last, or before you know they are on deck some of them will be trampled to death, Que tie in time like th may not, | proverbial stitch, save nive, but it cer. tainly will save many broken branches and shoots, and lessen the ever pros. ent danger to be apprehended from strong winds the plants need support, they should be staked aud tied, or other: wise seoured, acoording to their re quirements, Therefore, just as goon nx close box, with a | sometimes | £0 | is not | 3 \ | ed: | sraotioally bare of big horses of the | unusual for a hen to hustle the hatch. | practic 3 4, (imer’s tui After No-To-Bac, Trust une But the Right One, “ levolutionizing Mining, taken stim. ve action er effects They effi. PE EE * HIGHEST AWARD * WORLD'S FAIR. wv THE BEST % PREPARED FOOD SOLD EVERYWHERE. & JOMN CARLE & SONS. New York. PAY FL ary prieationtor Local Agwwey 16 soil 0 DAVIS CREAM SEPARATORS fo Yarmers and Dalrymen. Ons style war shown Ih tast number of this Journal Another will soon be piotured out. Meanwhile, witte for Handsome Tus trated BOOK Free, DAVIE & RANKIN BLING sAXD #0 CO, Sole Nanufscturers, St W. Lake 81, Chicago Sh § secured irony —- STCURE FOR RISO" h: " 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers