r V EXPORTING COFFEE. THE JOURNEY FROM THE BRAZILIAN ORCHARD TO THE OCEAN. The Favorite Amertran llraakniiit Haver age Underjrnee Many Experiences n- ' for II Comri Hrfore l'e Hot and Steaming Flow the Berry la fternred. Coffee is not a shrnb, a is frcnrrnlly apposed, bnt a tree, which, if allowed to go nntrimmed, would attain twenty feet or more in height, but which is gen erally kept down to eight or ten feet fur convenience in picking. A grove cnn be started by burying the berries or from slips. The bitter are preferable placed about six feet apart, and thono plants which have btcn taken from the unrsery with considerable earth aronnd their roots will bear frnit in two years, though their full yield is not attained under four years. It is calculated that 1,000 thrifty trees will yield on a fair average 8,200 pounds of coffee per an num, bnt in some parts of Snn Paulo province the yield is an high as ,.100 pounds. There are two and sometimes three harvests to a year, but after fifteen or twenty years the old trees must be ent down to give place to new ones. When fully ripe the berry is about the size, shape and color of a large cran berry. The tough red skin incloses two grains or seeds. The old way of prepnr ing it for market, still much used in Brazil, was as follows: When the berries have acquired a rich blood red they are picked into bags by the negroes, twenty three pounds being considered a fair day's work for one picker. Tho bags are then e'npried on tho terreno or dry ing place, which is generally a level piece of ground beaten smooth or cov ered with cement. After a few days in the sun the outer skin becomes black, hard and shriveled, and then the berries are ponnded in hnge wooden mortars until the skins are broken without in juring the tough grains. By sifting, the skins and grains are separated and the latter are again spread outin the snn until tho pellicle envelop ing each grain is dry as dust. Then they are again subjected to the mortars and the winnowing fan, and are ready for sale or immediate consumption. The improved method now in vogue on the wealthier estates consists in drying the freshly picked grains on wooden trays or pavements, by which they escape the earthy flavor acquired when dried on the bare ground, and tho onter and inner envelopes are removed by passing them through two mills. The main featnre of the first mill is a horizontal copper cylinder, whose sur face is roughened after the manner of a rasp. It revolves against a board, be tween which and the teeth space is left for the grains to pass, bnt not the husks. The grains drop into wnter and are left to soak twelve hours, in which time the parchmentlike film that envelops each seed is softened. They are spread out again on trays in the snn, and when thoroughly dry are passed through the second mill, which resembles those used for grinding plaster, except that the two vertical rolling disks are. of wood, six feet in diameter and five inches thick, their light weight abrading the pellicles without injuring the grains. Then the fanner is brought into requisi tion and the berries are put in bags for transportation. The freight on a sack of coffee (188 pounds) is about one cent per mile; therefore, coffee coming from the end of the Dom Pedro II railway must pay in the neighborhood of four dollars the sack for transportation to the shipping point one-third of its value when de livered in Rio. From Rio to New York the freight rarely exceeds sixty cents a sack, and it is often as low as twenty five cents. Thus fifty miles of railroad carriage in the country where it grows costs more than 5,200 miles of ocean. Many of the planters still send their coffee to market by mule train, consid ering that the cheaper way of transpor tation. The entrance into Santos of a mule train from the interior is something worth seeing. The train is always pre ceded by a white horse wearing a string of bells, and the mules obediently follow the leader. Sometimes troops of several hundred arrive in a morning, and again there are weeks when none appear. Every mule brings two bags of coffee on his back. Having made long, slow jour neys, often hundreds of mUes, the ani mals are pitiable looking objects when their burdens are removed, for the con stant sawing of the loads has not only abraded the akin, but in many instances ground off the flesh to the bone. The bags are dumped in hnge piles in the custom house yards, and aronnd them cargadores immediately collect like swarms of black bees. There is an export duty to pay, and every bag must be piaccwd and a sample withdrawn in order to determine the quality and the duty thereon. The tariff, based on the market price, ia regulated anew every Saturday. The sampling instrument is a brass tube, shaped exactly like a pen. When the point is pushed into a sack of coffee the berries ran down through the tube, And after a handful has been abstracted the instrument ia withdrawn and its point turned over like a crochet hook, thus closing the opening. The operation occupies only a few seconds, and the "samples" taken out amount to many tons in the coarse of a year. They, to gether with all samples of exported sug ars, are presented to the lepers' hospital. The gangs of cargadores employed in "toting" the coffee away from the cus tom7 house and loading it upon waiting vessels are a featnre of Santos. Naked, except from waist to knees, their choco late colored hides glisten in the snn and their well cultivated muscles stand out like whipcords. Each gang has its lead er, generally the tallest and most pow erful negro among them, who carries a rattle, to the muaio of which his follow ers keep step in a rapid jog trot, singing a low, monotonous song meanwhile in , words to us unintelligible. Sometimes the rattle gives place to a small flagv Cor. Provide noe Journal. THE DEATH OF LITTLE LUE. A Heart Capable of Interna Snrtrlnf la Within Many a Rongh Kitrrlor. Our ghostly, white topped wngons had rounded into camp near Kingfisher; the sun had sot and there was a golden blnsh on the westei.i sky aht I remem ber the scene well as we all gathered around old Gunderson, who eat on the prairie with his hend bowed and his straggling gray hair fulling over a child ish face and mingling with curls that seemed like spun gold. Ho held his dnnghter in his arms and at every fnint respiration tho old mnn's sinewy hands clutched convulsively as though he re alized how vain was all his strength to save his child. We were boomers, and nil tho way from Caldwell little Luc had been ail ing. Her face grow paler nnd her cheeks flushed a brighter crimson day by day. She could not support herself toward the last, and one of the boys drovo old Ounderson's wngon while he sat behind and held the girl in his arms. All through the lonely Cherokee strip what torture must that wretched father have borne, sleeplessly watching his dy ing child I And the heaps and heaps of white bones that bleached and decayed beside the trail what ominous remind ers of death must they have been to old Gunderson! "How is she, Gunderson?" asked some one in a whisper. He turned his blodshot eye upward for a moment, and his face, pinched and drawn with grief, was mute answer to tho words. "Father!" Tho sound was Just audi ble and little Lue's eyelids raised slowly. "What is it, dearie?" asked the old man, pressing his bearded lips to thu child's. "I had such a beautiful dream, father. It was night, it seemed like, and all at once a great big star fell from up there and hung in the sky just over my hend. Then I heard mother's voice oh, so sweet and sad! and she said, 'Come, deario; kiss your father and come to me.'" Little Lue's words became inaudible after this, nnd she sank down wearily in her father's arms. We all stood sad ly by and saw the child at last lift her self with a quick effort and put both arms about her father's neck. Then she kissed him, and murmuring, "I am so tired," sho again lay quietly on old Oun derson's breast. Slowly rocking to and fro the old man kept bis eyes on her face and never once removed them. Then we drifted away one by one and attended to our camp duties with heavy hearts. It was no; long till some one came and said to m : "Ben, little Lue is dead and old Gun derson doesn't know it!" I walked back to the old man where he sat still rocking his burden, and one glance at the child's face proved that she had passed away. "Gunderson," I said huskily, "little Lue is gone." He looked at me vacantly a moment; then with a start he peered into his child's face. He realized the truth, laid the dead child down and dashed off into the night with a cry of anguish. There is a rude grave on the prairio, jnst at the border of what was once the Cheyenne and Arapahoe reservation, and a clumsy headstone marks the spot, sacred to the memory of little Lne and her father for we found old Gunderson dead the next morning, killed by his own hand. Detroit Free Press. A Cool Heart. There is nothing that conduces to a successful meeting of emergencies bet ter than a cool head, with a feeling of perfect confidence that everything is going to come out all right. Whether things are "coming out all right" or not, at least the feeling of quiet self control makes one better able to work toward the good result. To a mother this self possession is invaluable. In a large family small events calculated to upset the domestio machinery are con stantly occurring. It seems to be a law of nature that children should continu ally have hairbreadth escapes and come within an inch of losing their lives. Bnt it is equally a law of nature that they should escape. And whenever the critical moment arrives in her own life or in the life of another, it is important for a woman to remember that the very worst thing she can do at that moment is to lose her head. To do that means to be helpless in stead of helpful, to be a drag instead of an assistance. In an emergency one should rather seem heartless than in efficient. There are always ten people ready to cry or faint or shed tears over the sufferer where there is one who stands coolly by and sees the way to help him. Affection and sympathy are often best proved by ignoring them, particularly when the moment arrives that calls for action and not tears. Harper's Bazar. Dlda't See Mneh. Daring a great display of the northern lights the wife of a Rockland sea cap tain was determined that he should see it, though he cared but little about it She therefore roused him from his sleep and persisted in her missionary work until finally the man of the house was obliged to crawl out and take a look out of the window. "Don't see anything especially won derful about them," said he as he crawled back to bed. "Have seen 'em finer than that a thousand times." In the morning it was discovered that the window through which the captain had criticised the display was hermet ically closed with a blind. Bangor Com mercial. "Wild Beaat" Stories In the Country. Country people are as eager to accept any rumor of a strange and dangerous creature in the woods as they are to be lieve in a ghost story. They want it to be true; it gives them something to think about and talk about. It is to their minds like strong drink to their palates. It gives a new interest to the woods, as the ghost story gives a new interest to the old house. John Bur roughs in Century. j Irtat Children In Big Stores. "Are many babies lost in the big stores?" The floor walker stood beside a num ber of bolts of cloth. It was in one of the big stores in Fourteenth street. "Come with me," he said. When we hnd arrived at the ronr of the store he carefully opened a doer leading to a small room. There, on a loft lounge, all cuddled up, asleep and evidently dreaming, was a dear child with golden bnir. "The child," exclaimed the floor walker, "belongs to some woman now shopping in this place. She is wander ing around from counter to connter and has temporarily forgotten her dear littlo Willie. We found the child asleep near the elevator, tired ont apparently." "And yon will take care of it till sho comes back, eh?" "We will. We have a number of children to look after each day. Somo are lost, some forgotten, but the mam mas all come back in due season." Just then there was a suppressed ejaculation at the door, something that sounded like: "Oh, my deardarlingchildchildchild!" A woman bounded into tho room. Such kissing, such hugging, you never saw in all your born days! "It was like this," the woman said. "I left the dear boy just one tiny min ute to look at some bargains in laces. Then Mrs. Gamp came up, and of course I had to talk to her. Time slipped by; it was most an hour before I ever thought of dear little Willie again." "Well," said the floor walker smiling, "he is safe." Then the woman went awny with her prize, saying something at each step that sounded like: "O-h, m-a-m-m-a'a d-e-n-r 1-i-t-t-l-e 1-o-s-t b-o-y! I w-i-1-1 n-e-v" New York Herald. A Ride with Senator Wolcott. Upon an occasion somo years ago a friend took Senator Wolcott for a drive in tho suburbs of Leadville, nnd Wol cott expressed a suspicion that the horses were perhaps too frisky to bo trustworthy. Thereupon the friend set about bantering and badgering Wolcott upon his excessive timidity. Wolcott bore this badinage patiently, till pres ently they began to descend one of those steep, nlmost precipitous inclines in which Colorado roads abound. "Will you let me driver' asked Wol cott. "Certainly," answered the other. But no sooner had Wolcott got the reins than he turned to his companion and said: "You have been shaming me for my timidity. My turn hns come. We'll see who squeals first!" With thnt he flung the reins out over the horses' backs and began plying the whip furiously. The frightened horses dashed down the hill, swinging the buggy around curves nnd against bowlders in such wise as to threaten its demolition. Wolcott continued to ply the whip nnd to shout at the maddened brutes. His friend clung, whito and trembling, to his seat. It is a marvel that both were not killed. Finally the buggy was overturned, the horses broko away nnd Wolcott nnd his friend were left in a confused heap, with a broken arm, a sprained ankle and a dozen body cuts and bruises between them. "Well, how do yon like it?" asked Wolcott, gathering himself together and emerging nimbly from the debris. The other answered feebly bnt proud ly, "I hain't squealed yet!" Chicago News-Record. The Rattleanake'a Ratttee. It is an error to suppose that rattles are shed each year as are the horns of the deer, or that a new rattle is added each time the skin is shed. A friend of mine owned a massasauga over one year, and while the skin was exfoliated the rattles remained intact and without ad ditions. Men who owned rattlesnakes of the diamond species in Florida informed me that an adult might add one or two rattles that is, sections to the rattle in a year, or again not any, and that the changing of the skin exfoliation had nothing to do with the new formation. All agreed that the older rattlers of the south were provided, as a rule, with a longer rattle than the young ones. Said one man, pointing to six specimens of the diamond rattlesnake (Crotalus ada manteus) about sixteen inches long and possessed of a single rattle and button, aa the terminal and growing portion is called: "Those little rattlers were born in this house, and when they were a few weeks old I mounted them as yon see them." Dr. Morris Gibba in Forest and Stream. The Carbuncle Blag. The carbuncle ring is now quite fre quently seen on the bands of the fash ionable gentleman. One of the rarest and most precious stones is the carbun cle, which is sometimes confounded with the ruby, from which it differs by the intensity of its fires, produced by an internal luster of gold, while under the purple of the ruby there only appear dottings of azure or lacquer. Ethiopia produced the most precious ancient car buncles. The Chaldeans regarded this tone as a powerful talisman. The vir tues of the carbuncle are resistance to fire, preservation of the eyes, promotion of pleasant dreams, creation of happy illusions and an antidote against impure air. Bangor Commercial. Cooking la Mow Science. Cookery in these latter days has be come a science. Cookbooks leave no room for guesswork. We no longer mix our ingredients as the woman said she made her brown bread: "First I put In what meal I think I will need, then what rye tho meal will bear; next a good sized pinch of salt; next a little flour, a trifle of molasses and aa much water or milk as I think it wants, and then bake it till I see it ia done." Troy Times. Woman's Great Ambition. It is funny, but true, that the highest, aim of the meet advanced woman ia to do something aa well as a man does. Milwaukee Journal. I the Reaann for It. "If cigarettes cause insanity, why don't more yonng men go crazy?" asks a correspondent. That is an ensy one. Brains are a prime requisite to an at tack of insnnity. That's why more cigaretto smokers don't go to asylums. Pomona Progress. A lady of Eastbourne, England, has just offered the sum of f.ViO to the Sea men's mission if the society will ap point a render for that town, nnd tho offer has licen accepted. Tho fisher men of Enstbonrne are nil residents, without any admixture of nanticnl strangers. A negro living near Chokee, Ga., is the owner of a hound which, he says, attends all the religious meetings of the negroes, stands up and tries to follow them in the singing, and regularly goes to the altar to be prayed for with the rest of the mourners. We know nil about the plants of the Old World and their sober characters. What they can do in our New World has to be still more developed and Is an other thing. In speaking of the solidification of a body by cooling, Professor Dewar says that water can be made to become solid by the evaporation of a quarter of its weight. Bathe in pienty of sunshine as well us in plenty of water, and don't forget to dry rob morning and night. It will add years to yonr life and vigor. Fncemnking was first done by Bar bara Uttmnn about lfi.1t, though the in vention is claimed for an earlier dnte by France and Italx. It is an interesting fact that ont of lixteen cities of over sno.lino population In the United States, fourteen, or over 97 per cent., nre nring the electrical rail way system or equipping roads with the system. Serpents together constitute one order of the class of reptiles, tho oilier still existing inonilcrs of ; h.it class consti tuting three other plainly distinct or ders, namely, crocodiles, lizards, tor toises. Forgot tha Others. Mabel There are now over 4,000 avo cations open to women. Clara Dear mel What are they? Mabel Let me see. One of them in marriage and another is is Dear me! I've forgotten the others. New Vrav'.- WnoUr. AT HAND In a dangerous emergency, Ateb's Cnr.nBT ( Fectorai, Is prompt to act and sure to t cure. A dose taken on the flrst symptoms j ot Croup or Bronchitis, checks further prog- -ress ol these complaints. It softens the phlegm, soothes the Inflamed membrane, and Induces sleep. As a remedy for colds, coughs, loss ot voice, la grippe, pneumonia, and even consumption, In Its early stages, AYER'S Cherry Pectoral excels all similar preparations. It Is en dorsed by leading physicians, Is agreeable to the taste, does not Interfere with digestion, and needs to be taken usually in mall doses. " From repeated tests In my own family, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral has proved Itself a very efficient remedy for colds, couRhs, and the various disorders ot the throat and lungs." A. W. Bartlett, Plttsfleld, N. H. For tha last 25 years I hate been taking Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for lung troubles, and am assured that its use has Saved fily Life I have recommended It to hundreds. I nnd , the most effective way of taking this medl- j cine Is in small and frequent doses." T. M. ! Matthews, P. M., Sherman, Ohio. "My wife suffered from a cold; nothing helped her but Ayer's Cherry Pectoral which effected a cure." R. Amero, Plympton, N. 8. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Prepared by Dr. J. O. Ayer k Co., Lowell, Mate. Prompt to act, sure tocure $1,000 TO THE MAN That breaks tills record. This Is June S, and I have received since May 1.1, lit putlciita thai were ultlicted with tax) worm. I re moved clitlit of them unci have two preparing for treatment. Now. some uf the supposed bright IIiiIiIh of Alleiilieiiy, I'lttsbuin and suburbs say I buy the tuuo worms, cam-ei-H, etc., that 1 exhibit In my windows, from the hospitals. In answer I simply olTur to give fl.eouto any of these all-wise Ih-Iiiith if they will produce man nr set of men that will meet and compete. Willi me before the public on cure of tune worm, cancer catarrh, scrofula, or nil the an culled Incurable nll nienlHofthe liiiinun family. Further, I will take mv Hystem Kenovalor and ko on public exhibition with any or till such all-wise people, all patent medli'tno men and all advertising-quacks lathe laud and take like eases us I hey comu and heat them uurl prove to the public that they do dot know what the human body Is composed of, or If they do, they do not know how to treat It in sickness. I treat throuKlt tho blond Willi nature's remedlus, risits and herbs. 8ysteni Kenova lor Is a non secret, honest preparation, com posed of dandelion, Mayupple.iiiichu, quassia, cinchona, c uscara.saurada, Kent lau.sassafraH, bonesct, kidney wen t and saisaimi'ilu. Hystem Renovator costs H.( per bottloi or 6 Unties for V.UU, ut II. A lex Htoke'a or nit. j. a. mutiiooN, 47 Ohio Ht Allegheny City; I'a. Oftlce Iloura-S A. M. to U I'. M. Hour for ('onsullalloii-S A. M. to 1'. M. ruinduy olttce hours and for consultation a A. M. to 12 M. marieeasr Matiufuotiirlng Kiibbor Mumps, fend for t'rivo I.lnt of Oullltrf, to J. V. W. Ilorniau a Co., 1M7 BhM Ueriuan Street, Bultluiore, M4., U. 8. A. MONEY ED. GOODE REYNOLDSVILLE, PENNA. IMf Opposite Stoke's drug store. it JHB STflg' Is a first class family journal, published every Wednesday at lleynoldsville, Pa., by C. A. Steph enson, contains all the local and general news; the subscription price is but Si. 50 a year in advance. The job department is replete with the latest designs in type, and Letter Heads, Note Heads, Bill Heads, Statements, Envelopes, Posters, Circu lars, will be turned out with neatness and dispatch. fls an fldvertisino Medium it outshines them all. SIcKec k Warnick 1IEADQUAKTEKH FOR Fancy and Staple GKOCE1UES, Oil, Flour i Feed. An elegant line con sisting of sour, sweet and mixed pickles. Onions, chow chow, olives, cauliflowers and others too numer ous to mention. COTS Ph f An endless vnrietv on irvj . hand; always Iresh. Try our fruit and HS W chocolate cakes. "Waehburne's Best" leads the list; it's a dandy. Try it. We have in stock, "Our Best," "Straight," "Imperial," "N. W. Patent," "Pilgrim" and others. We have no oil wagon on the road but we deliver you a 5 gal. best 150 oil for 50 cents. Get our rates on oil by the barrel. O A FULL STOCK of (food in our line alway on luitul. Highest market price paid for country produce. I GOODS RECEIVED ' DAILY. : : 2fO OLD GOODS j FOR SALE. : McKee & Warnick, The Grocers, Cor. Sth and Main St . . . Reynoldsvllle, Fenna AX 'JVS B 'A RC A I want to close out my sum mer goods to make room for fall stock, and will sell AT COST! Outing Cloth, 6J cents, Sold before for 8 cents. Outing Cloth, 8 cents, Sold before for 10 cents. Outing Cloth 12 cents, Sold before for 12$ cents. Challie, 10 cents, Sold before for 12J cents. Challie, 10 cents, Sold before for 15 cents. Sateen, 10 cents, Sold before for 15 cents. Indigo Blue prints 6 cents per yard. Men's Seersucker Coat and Vest at 65 cents, Sold before for 9 1.00. Men's and Boys' Outing Shirts At 19 cents apiece. Men's suits at $3. 60, Sold before for $5.00. All Men's suits reduced From $2.00 to $3.00 per suit. Children's Suits $i.oo Now is your time to save money. These goods are all new. 1ST. Hanau. Sue Goools