MAN AND HI8 "Wlem fellow' kind ot wobbly and anoar- . tain or hli (rat, AM haa to work Ilka sixty for to get both end to mwt lThaa ha'e not of much account and hat to take whirt he can pet Ik people dou't oome lioukln' to be frlendt i. ot In, you bet I Tmey don't oome ayln' "Old ehap, I'm the only friend you're (tot I " And " Heroember that we're trot hers," and that kind of tommyrot No, Indeed t Aad they don't rt JphIihih orer you when friends are what you need. If fellow'a kind of Innmome and would like a friend or two Jnet to come around and Jolly Mm when thlnK are lookln' htui If the ehirt that he' wettrlu' li the only one he's (tut, Aad be DHver nhowed the publle that he's really on the spot, THE PROFESSOR'S REVENGE. J "Prof. McVlnt regrets tlint, owing to i his absence from town, Ills lecture on The Aspirate In Greek' Is unavoidably postponed." Tula was the notice that greeted the crowd of students as they surged In one mass to elass room No. 20 on the morning of June G, some two or three years ago. "Hello! what's the meaning of this?" aid Pennington. "The old fellow was here as late at 10 o'clock last night, for I was with him at the science plc nlo yesterday, and It was after 10 by the time we got back. He's gone off nighty quick!" "Perhaps he hadn't time to get his lecture ready," suggested one. "More likely his mother is dead," aid another. "Ten to one he's In love, and gone off to pop the question," added a third. At this there was a general laugh, In which you would have Joined If you had known the professor. Tall, lean and angular, with a decided stoop, and yes that were screwed up almost to vanishing point, he was hardly the personage with whom to associate any Idea of the tender passion. His age, loo, was against him, though no one knew exactly what that age was. If you saw him walking home from col lege along the esplanade you put him flown at 50, but when you saw his face aglow with enthusiasm as he lectured on the beauties of the Greek particles you changed your mind and said he might be SO. Anyhow, he was not popular. His flry Scotch humor was not appreciated It very often bit too deeply into the feelings ot his victim to be pleasant, and all who came beneath the lash of his tongue bore him no small grudge for what he made them suffer. Then he lived absolutely apart from college life, not even mixing with the other members of the staff. Consequently he knew little of what was passing around him, and was given credit for knowing still less. He had never been known to miss a lecture; even when one morning he found on his arrival at college that his class room had been burned out In the night he calmly remarked to the crowd of students near the door. "I think, ladles and gentlemen, with your permission, we will deliver our lecture ta the corridor." No wonder, therefore, that there was no small stir when this historic notice stared the world un Mushlngly in the face. "I wonder what It can be," said Eva Tiller to her friend Jemima Bates, as hey turned slowly from the class room door and walked away down the cor ridor. "Poor man, I am afraid there is something wrong; and he has no one to look after him or do things tor him. It seems a very lonely life." "Oh, he is perfectly happy In his work," replied Jemima; "he doesn't want any ono to look after him." Jem ima judged all men (and women) by her own feelings, which is a danger ous thing to do. "I don't know," said her companion doubtfully. "However, it's no concern of mine, so I'm off to the tennis field Instead." , Had she only known that it was a cry great concern of hers she would have given the matter a little more thought The previous day, as young Penning ton had said, had been the science pic nic Much to the -surprise of everybody, the professor finally accepted his invit ationthough he wrote first of all de clining. A perusal of the list of in vited "arts" was the cause of his change ot mind. The fact was Prof. McVlnt was in love it had taken som6 time to convince htm of the fact, and he bad argued it out pro and con with himself In every Imaginable way. But from the conclusion be could not es cape; whatever his premises, the de duction invariably came out: "There fore, love her." He began to notice it first in this way: Into his mind as he was busy in the preparation of hlo lectures, there would creep the surreptitious thought, "What will she think ot this? How will she take that?" Then he found himself thanking Providence that by Its kindly ordering the lady students at In the front row during lectures, su4, therefore, mere within range of Ills somewhat limited vision. The next thing that he was conscious of was that he was hunting high and low In his room for a pair of glasses far stronger than those he generally used and not ait all necessary for mere reading pur poses. Two or three times he lost his place In his notes and stood confused axnd put to shame before the class. thing that had never happened betore la all his experience. Finally he came to the conclusion that the tie which ho had been wearing when the senior otudant waa a freshman, and which he kaf worn ever since, waa a little the FRIENDS. They don't eoroe erowdln' round him, sor atlek ont their band and aayi "We're your friends, old man. we lore you we're the eame blood, anyway I " Mo, Indeed I Cut they wntch to Rle the boot to you when frlenda ara what you need. When thing have got to eomln' aa a fellow wanw m to, hen M pocketa are all bulgln' and blf clo'a are flue and new, When he Hm out proud and lordly and ain't Rot n tiling to fear, There's a sudden ohanRn comes over folks that used to wink and sneer. , They oome runnln' then to tell you that they'ro all yonr friends, and say That they've always been iloml anxious for to help you but some wny Tea, Indeed I Friends are always mighty plentiful when friends ain't what you need. worse for wear and must be replaced, and then what he had long suspected broke fully on his mind. Such a whole sale revolution could mean but one thing. Thus It came to pass that on notic ing the name of Eva Miller among those Invited to the picnic the profes sor suddenly changed his mind. He was a man of few words and prompt deeds. He would try his luck that very day. To describe his feelings during the drive to the scene of action would be Impossible. Strangely out of place In the middle of the chattering crowd, dis trusting his own powers and yet so bold as to amaze himself, the profes sor sat alone and neglected in a corner of the brake. The kindness ot heaven, however, aided a little by the cunning of man had placed the object ot his ad oration almost opposite him. So, while he gazed blankly into space, and was supposed by any one who gave him a passing thought to be elaborating a new treatise on "The Particles," he could all the time feast his eye unob served on the vision of beauty not two yards away. Lunch eaten, the whole party broke up and scattered In all directions, as parties will do till the end of time. Now was bis opportunity; he would follow the group containing his Idol at little distance, and surely he would get a chance ot speaking with her alone before long. Keeping the group in sight and himself out ot It, he dawdled and hung about, as Is tbe way of people who are doing their best not to overtake a friend a little way ahead. He walked forward, then back a bit, then' on again, then back, then stood stock still for a few moments, pretend ing to use his watch as a compass, and then, finding that some one had been watching his maneuvers with un feigned interest, bolted straight ahead as it he were shot from a gun. In less than two minutes he was upon the group, but, alas! his eyes had played him false again, and she was not there. What did ho want with Jemima Bates? Having tried to explain his sudden swoop down on those unprotected fe males, and having dismally failed therein, he turned aside, sick at heart, and entered a small plantation of young trees. A narrow footpath led through this, and as he neared the stile that opened on the fields beyond he saw two figures leaning against It. Another moment showed him Eva Mil ler and young Pennington deep In con versation and oblivious of all around. Quietly and unobserved he turned bacK, and on reaching his rooms that night he told his landlady ho had to go away by tbe early train for two or three days. Hence that notice on the class room door. The professor's dream was over; there was but one thing left revengo, and the professor settled down to plan and scheme how best to obtain It. Pcn- ningtqn was reading with him for a classical scholarship at Oxford, so the professor saw the way quite clear. In stead of one hour extra In the evening, he gave his pupil two, and sometimes even more, out of his own valuable time. He looked up all bis old notes and helps, and lent. thorn to hlB enemy; he corrected all his work with especial care and went to the trouble of writ ing out model answers for his pupil to copy. In short, painstaking and tbor- ough as Prof. McVlnt bad always been, he bad never taken such pains or used such thorough methods with a pupil before. Nothing was too much trouble for him. "At any rate," he used to murmur to himself, as deep in bis heart he nursed his revenge, "if she can't marry me she shall marry one of the best students Oxford and this place ever turned out." And when eighteen months later the news came that Guy Pennington had pulled off the top "schol," at Balllol the professor's revenge was complete, and his satisfaction knew no bounds. "Congratulate you most heartily, Mc Vlnt," said Dr. Smlthers, the physics demonstrator, "one ot your best suc cesses; won't Miss Miller be glad!" "Oh, nonsense," returned the profes sor, "no credit due to me at all. A fel low with brains like that could get any thing, no matter who prepared htm. But" with a sign "I'm very glad for her sake." "Yes," answered the doctor, breezily. "she always was proud ot her brother. Good morning, McVlnt!" and he was gone like a shot The professor stood rooted to the ground. Her brother! Her brother! What could It all mean? And then was seen a sight such as never before was witnessed by gods or men. Students on their way to college stopped, amazed. Amiable old gentle men out for their constitutional forgot tbelr amiability, and swore horribly as they were rudely hustled and pushed aside; elderly females screamed, "HI I Stoo thief 1" butchers' boys wbisUad t.n.1 cackled; servant girls craned their heads out of wlndowft; little dogs bark ed and yelped for pure delight; and all the universe stood still, Prof. Mc Vlnt, gathering up tbe skirts of his ample gown, flow down the length of the esplanade In pursuit ot the unsus pecting Smlthers. "Brother, did you say," he burst out. as he cought tbat worthy by the arm: "did you say he was her brother?" Smlthers stared blankly at him. for moment. "Oh, I had forgotten," he said, looking around with an annoyed air. "What a fuss about nothing! Of course I said brother though he Is real ly only her step-brother, Pennington's father died soon after he was born, and his mother subsequently married a Miller. I thought everybody knew that But what dli.erence does it make?" That was a question the professor declined to answer. What difference? Why, this difference that before 10 o'clock that evening the professor had told Miss Miller of the episode ot the stllo (among other things), and she had laughingly said: "You poor dear, and so you really thought Guy and I were lovers. You see, even professors don't known everything. And to think we have wasted eighteen months 1" Whnt the professor said in reply, history does not record. Black and White. THE SMELLING. EXPERT.. A Valuable Man Who Really Earns His Living by Following His Note. One of the curious trades of New York Is. that of the smelling expert, man who enrns his living literally by following his nose. He is employed by manufacturers of perfumery. It Is his business to Judge ot the character, quality and value of the materials that go to the making of perfumes. Much of the perfumery made in this country Is Imported from France In the form of pomatums, and extracted with alcohol. The smelling expert Judges the quality of pomatums. An other and even more remarkable part ot his business Is to examine a popu lar Imported perfume, determine from the smell of what It is made and en able his employer to produce It here. Like the experts ot the distilleries, who will take any given wine or spir its, and after examination produce a counterfeit which only a connoisseur could detect as such, the smelling ex pert by means of his unerring nose makes possible the production here of any perfume that It Is desired to Imi tate. Possessed of so valuable a nose, he takes the utmost care of It He does his best to avoid taking cold, and guards himself with special care when the Influenza comes round. A single bad cold may disable bis nose for weeks and throw him out ot employ ment He avoids also, aa far as pos sible, all strong odors, good or bad, to preserve the delicacy of hla olfac tories. The profession on the whole Is less injurious to health than that of the tea taster or the wine taster. New York Sun. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. Specimens of four, five, six, seven, eight and nlno-leaved clovers have been presetod to Queen Alexandra by a WelBh lady. Water Is so scarce In the Japanese island of Oshlma that it Is the custom (or a brldo to take a large tub ot drluklng water with her to her new home as a kind of dowry. On the south coast of England there is a hotel in which a tropical tempera ture is constantly maintained by means of steam pipes. The guests are mostly pensioned oillclnls and officers who spent so many years in India that they cannot endure ' tbe climate of England. X The most crooked railway In the world is one from Boswell to Frledcns, Pa., the air lino distance being five miles. The road doubles on Itself four times, and at one point, after making a loop of about five miles, the road comes back to within 300 feot of itself on a grade 60 foet lower. A peasant in the Swiss 'canton ot Zurich, on a recent morning, found In his stable a utork that had apparently been left behind by his companions on their way to Africa, The bird, which seems to feel quite at home with the other animals, goes out for a walk whcti the suu shines, returning to the stable in the evening. Chinese doctors are very particular about. the distinction between physi cians and surgeons. A Chinese gentle man was struck by an arrow which remained fast in his body. A surgeon wan sent for, and broke oft the pro truding bit of the arrow, leaving the point embedded. He refused to ex tract' it, because the case was clearly one for a physician, the arrow being inside the body. A Viennese engineer has construct ed a small sailing yacht made enTlrely of sheets of an Austrian dally paper. The yacht is 15 foot long and three feet wide, is decked all over and is provided with a centreboard. The bull, deck, masts, sails and rudder are all of paper. The Inventor has made many trips on the Woerth See, in Ca rlnthla, and has proved that his paper boat can sail rapidly and oafoly even when the water 1b rough and the wind high, Braver. "Do you think tbat women are as brave as mou?" "Braver," answered Miss Cayenne. "You will observe that the scientists who keep talking with terror about tbe bacilli In a klai are all males." Wash ington Star. NEW IDEAS OF CHARITY. MODERN 8CIENCE RECOGNIZES HUMAN LIFE'S 8ACREDNE8S. TV. ' i , Rational Efforts to Reclaim What Is Worthy In Humanity Old Interpre tations of Pauperism Passing New Philanthropy Fighting Tuberculosis. Old ideas of charity were a bushel ot potatoes and a sack of flour. This was undisguised In Its brutality, fantastic in Its ugliness. Around the hateful and degraded name of "pauper" had accumulated centuries of funereal hopolcssnees, mockery and despair. Feeding the poor Was simply a busi ness of keeping an excrescent part of the population from starving to death, out of respect for the dominant sense of decency in the community. Potatoes and flour, and meat dealt out at stated intervals; coal twice a month in winter; the office ot the county physician open for an hour a day fur a conclave of dolors, dumps and disease that left the doctor waver ing between anger, disgust and heart Blck Indifference; craft and whining and obstinacy on the one side, and iron-faced rigidity on the other, month after month and year after year, until death, more truly charitable than so ciety, stepped in for mercy. Then, for the ultimate Indignity, the undertaker who had the contract to bury paupers for one-sixteenth of a cent a head, with the privilege to get what he could from relatives of "the dear departed," and the solitary hearse pounding a weary sing-song from the frozen roidway: Rattle their bones over the stones, They're oniy paupers whom nobody owns. Pauper, poorhotise, Potter's Field. In all the language there can hardly be found three words that convey to the lively Intelligence more of horror and odium and rank misery. Melancholy minor poets have weaved pathetic lines about them; mothers have frightened fractious children with them; preachers more eloquent than dutiful have con structed beautiful perorations on them. And In time there has attached to them a shame that has made of such official charity a rampant and disgraceful farce. Such was the old charity such, per haps, the charity that still is practised In communities that have lagged be hind the procession. But there is a new charity the charity that "edlfl eth," the charity of hope and comfort and restitution. It has not quite come, but it is coming; and it brings, not flour and' potatoes merely, but light and life and the desire for them. As Dr. Felix Adlcr said the other day, the essence of charity Is to save life. We may add, by way of contrast, that the old Idea was to save trouble. Nowadays It Is not enough to keep the decrepit and the decayed from dying In melo-dramatlc squalor; the 20th cen tury purpose goes deeper far than that, and seeks not only to prolong life, but to make that life of some contln uod service In the general scheme of usefulness. What is a man, indeed, if his chief good and market of his time be but to sleep and toed?" Derelicts there must be yet, of course, hauled up tight and dry on the Islands of East river; but for every one of these, there are saved scores ot others who are worth the saving, These hopeless ones are but the ravel lngs of a discarded fabric, an evolu tionary necessity. In reading history one can hardly fail to have been struck with the ap palling waste of human life that has marked progress. Eliminating all wars that have strewn the valley ot the Eu phrates, the banks ot the Nilo, the shores ot the Mediterranean, the for ests of Germany, with butchered dead, tucre has been such squandering of mankind as horrifies the modern con science. Disease, hunger, neglect. Ignorance, sheer wantonness anu brutality, have warred upon costly human life, more and more terribly as you search back ward through the centuries, till the marvel is that the race uld not, ono time or another, end its existence in a rovel of Insensate -sacrifice. The sacredness of a life seems. In deed, to be a modern idea; and, despite all the waitings of the pessimists, the great tact stands out like a signal In the dawn, that the humanity of hu manity is a discovery of modern ilmes. Tbe death of that mother and babe, through some sad and sorry mishap, ot hunger and cold here in New York the other night, was an event more shocking to the public mind than the loss of hundreds would have been to the ancient or even the mediaeval feeling. So all the skill of modern science Is concentrated upon the saving of life, a little inspired, perhaps, by the "fun of the thing," as one enthusiastic med ical student has expressed It, but more by the distinctly modern notion that every life is in some way valuable. And so again, modern charity, such as Is represented by the Charity Organi sation society, feels that Its duty Is not merely to relieve, but to revive and to restore. Tbe agents of the Charity Organiza tion society found, in their daily walks and talks among the poor, that an amazing proportion of the destitution that they were called upon to remove was due to the ravages of one disease. Reports year after year dwelt upon this fact, and gradually there came into tbe minds of tbe workers and thinkers of the society the suggestion that to supply food and fuel and cloth ing to the victims of that disease was but to temporize with it, and that the larger duty of the organization was to combat the disease itself. Out of that suggestion cams the for matlon of the Committee on the Pre vention of Tuberculosis, and the be ginning, in September last of a cam patgn against the disease, it Is an ex periment of much more than passing or local Interest, and an undertaking of a magnitude tbat was scarcely per ceived at once even by the men to whom Its Inception Is due, Statistics in piteous accumulation show how consumption has crept Insidiously through tne tenement districts, and left trail of desolation such as HI be comes these latter days of light. There Is a house In Chinatown where in three years '87 persons have died ot consumption. Let that Item suffice for the statistical element In this ac count of the new charity. In nttacking this blight a kind of recrudescence of some horror of the dark ages, an absurd anachronism In this era of scientific defiance the committee on tuberculosis has divided its work into three branches. Theso are research, education and relief. To ex plain them briefly: The relief Is the least difficult part of the undertaking. If a man be sick, be must have medicine; It he cannot work, he and his family must be fed. Through the regular agencies of the society food and the services of physi cians are provided. Research Involves a study of the conditions that have made possible so fatal a progress of the disease. The Investigators' purpose to learn why such and such houses have been pe culiarly liable to outbreaks of con sumption among their tenants; why certain districts have suffered more than others; to what degree careless ness In sanitation has been responsi ble for this Elckness; whether the fre quency of tuberculosis among tailors, for example, is due to their sitting much in a cramped position or to the fact that their workrooms are often damp and illventilated; and what fig ure nationality plays in the general re sult. Curious facts already ascertained are that, in the districts of the city with which the society has particularly to deal, more males than females die of the disease, and more colored persons than whites fall victim to it. In the year 1900 there were in New York City 81C2 deaths from consumption. By far the most Interesting, if not absolutely the most vital part of this work, is that devoted as educational. It is, moreover, the most delicate, the most difficult Nothing in the world Is more trying than ignorance, particu larly that Ignorance that lands at El lis island tn company with suspicion, and chooses rather to die of an uncom prehended malady In a garret than to be advised. For another reason, too, this task is embarrassing. It is not designed tbat there shall be spread through the tene ments any overpowering dread of con sumption, so that men and women shall quail and quake as it in the pres ence of a new-risen destroyer. Tbe message which will be delivered will bo one of hope rather than of fear. The tenement folk will be told that the di sease is curable if the doctors but be given a chance; that it is communi cable, but not contagious; that all that is required of them is to take care of themselves and have a thought for their- kindred. Specifically, these people will be in structed in elementary hygleno, bo that ,they may, by proper diet, cleanliness and exercise, keep tbelr bodies In a condition to combat the disease, and in the disposition of excretions so that the germs of tuberculosis may have no chance to propagate in other persons thnn those already afflicted. New York Post The "Sudd" of the White Nile. A recent number of the Geographical Journal contains a paper on the "sudd" of the White Nile, by Dr. Edward 8. Crispin, explaining the method ot opening up the true river bed employ ed by Major Matthews, who command ed the Sudd expedition of 1901-1902. Tho first dllilculty is to find the posi tion of the river bed; this is done by probing, the depth suddenly Increas ing to 15 or 20 feet. Next the top growth, consisting mostly of papyrus, is cut down or burnt; and It was noted that when the papyrus was fired the fire frequently spread along what was afterward found to be the true bed of the river. Men are then landed on the clean surface and the sudd cut along the river bankn with saws; next trans verse cuts are made, dividing the sudd into blocks of sl.e convenient for the steamer to tear out The bows of the steamer are run Into the block, and the loop of a steel hawser, both ends ot which are made fast to the steamer, is passed over the bows and trodden into a trench cut on the surface ot tbe block. The steamer then goes full speed r.stern, men standing on the hawser to keep It In position, and after a number of trials the block is torn away. The block is then towed clear and cast adrift to float down stream, when It is gradually disintegrated. The chief growths in the sudd are papyrus and tiger or elephant grass, a kind of bamboo growing to a height ot 20 feet or more. Up these climbs a creeper ot the convolvulus species. There is also an abundance of am batch and a long sword grass that cuts like a knife, known as "oora soof." The steamer could cut its own way through tho latter In the presence of a current, as It would .break up and float down stream. In the absence of current It does' not float away, and obstructs the steamer by fouling the paddlewheel. Another source ot obstruction Is a very light kind of duckweed which covers some of the small open pools. Nature. Particular, "Miss Kitty Darling," he began, "Sir," Interrupted the young wom an, "you will oblige me by not paus ing so long between my first name and my last" Chicago Tribune. THE JEFFERSON SUPPLY COMPANY Being the largest distributor of General Merchandise in this vicinity, ia always in Fosition to give the bet quality of goods, ta aim ia not to tell wou cheap goods but when quality ia considered the price will al ways be found right. Its departments are all well filled, and among the specialties handled may be men tioned L. Adler Bros., Rochester, N. Y., Clothing, than which there is none better made; W. L. Douglass Shoe Co., Brockton, Mass., Shoes; Curtice Bros. Co., Rochester, N. Y., Canned Goods; and Pillsbury'a Flour. This is a fair representation of the class of goods it is selling to its customers. B B B iiuiiiiiuiiiuiiiiuiuiuiuiiiiuiuimuiiauiuiuiiauiiauiii PROMINENT PEOPLE. ' The Gorman Crown Frlnce is said to be an expert skater. King Edward is snlrt to bo the latest victim to tho fascination of tbe cake walk. The Cznr hns sent .."000 to President Loubet for the relief of the destituto French fisherfolk. 'Andrew Carnegie hns offered to give Brnlnerd, Minn., $12.0W) for a library nndcr tbe usual conditions. The condition of Charles M. Schwab causes some anxiety, though the re ports given out say that he is well. The Presidency of the Golden Rule tongue, Just established at Iinyton, Ohio, hns been offered Senator Uanim. Judge Ide, of the Philippine Commis sion, has been granted six months' leave of absence. Ills health is Im paired. The King of the Belgians hns paid a private visit to London. In furtherance of a scheme for the better government of the Congo. Henri Willcm Mesdng, the Holland painter, hns decided to offer his fa mous collectlou of paintings to the Dutch people. The collection Is valued at several million florins. W. II. Osgood, of the United States Biological Survey, hns Just returned from a biological exploration of the base of the Alaska peninsula and the region between Lake Clark and the Nushngnk Itlver. Benjamin Kldd, the economist, who hns JuBt m.'ide n tour of the new Brit ish South Africa, snys he believes the country to be richer than the United States west of the Mississippi, and be lieves that Its future is, assured. Pope Leo XIII. retains his interest In his native village, Cnrplnnto. He enjoys visits from the natives, and be hns done much for the Improvement of the place, giving It, among other things, waterworks and a hospital. He has directed that the house in which be wns born bn converted into a Pope Leo Museum. SPORTING BREVITIES. Purses for this season's horse show t Boston will aggregate $20,000. H. E. Temple hns been elected Cap tain of the Columbia freshman lacrosse team. Dr. Julian Chase, of Providence, It. I., has been elected President of the American Automobllo Association. The players of tho Xntlonnl-Amerlcan tenms elenned up between $ihjO and $700 each on their trip to California. Georgo H. Ketchnm, owner of C'res ecus, hns purchased Tho Conqueror, a stnillon with a trotting record of 2.12'i. The Corinthlnn Yacht Club, ot New Haven, Conn., hns appropriated $113,000 to build a new club house ut Morris Grove. James A. Ten Eyck, the celebrated professional sculler, has been engaged to conch tho .crews of the Syracuse University. At the annual merlin? of the New Jersey State- CJolf Askuc'iuImi the sys tem of tho "par score" for each course was adopted. Barney Dreyfus, of rittsbtir.tr, acting for R syndicate, has obtained an option on tho Philadelphia National League Buseball Club. Morris Wood nnd hla brother. John Wood, won the two chief events lu tho skating races on the Shrewsbury, near Red Bunk, '. J. The Crescent Athletic Chili, hockey champions of the United Stales, de feated the Montreal team, champions of Cnnndu, by a score of 3 to 4, In Brooklyn. Hush Jennings says that he will quit basebull for the law, iiu the peace treaty between tho Nutiouul aud Amer ican League clubs will moke work on the diumond unprofitable. The world's record hltrh Jump on skates, has beeu broken at Pittsburg by W. E. Quluu. Ills Jump was four feet, three aud oue-bnlf inches. Hla former record wus four feet Russia's 8alt Lakes. Probably the moat remarkable lake In the world is one with a coating ot aZt that completely conceals tbe wa ter. It may be seen at any time dur ing the year, fully exposed, being seen at Its best when the sun is shining directly upon It. This body of water Is one of the saltiest of tho salt lakes, and Is situated near Obdorsk, Siberia. The lake is nine miles wide and sev enteen long. The salt coat Increases six Inches In thickness every year. The many Islands with which the lake Is studded are said to act as braces and to help keep the arched salt cruBt la position,, . . BUSINESS-CARDS.' p MITCHELL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. nmA mm Wm u.i - Commercial liotel, Keynoldeville, Pa, M. MCDONALD, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary Public, real aetata agent. Patents cured, collection! made promptly, Offloa In Nolan block. KornoldaTllfo, p." gMITH M. MoCREIOHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Notary Publle and Real Eetate Ae-ent. Op. lectlona will rereWe prompt attention. OflfoS fejaTUto p"' hlo0aw P"Ooe, jyR. B. E. HOOVER, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Reeldent dentist. In the Hoover butldtnS Beit door to poetofBoe, Main atreat. -Gentle! neee In operation. jyn. L, l. means DENTIST, Office oa second Boor of First National ban building-, Haln street. J)R. R. DaVERE KINO, DENTIST, aennd Saav 1knfin11a1llM 9mml Office on Eatata Bli tata Bldf . Main atreat ReynoldiTllTa, Pa. J)R. W. A. HENRY, DENTIST, , Office on eecond floor of Henry Brae, arias building. Main atraet. E. NEFF, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE And Real Estate Agaat, BayMlojTlUe, Fa. tine ran, cn II AT LfWnci liUlaUILUCCCi KEDEI YOUNG'S PLANING M I L L You will find Sash, Doors, Frames and Finish of all kinds, Rough and Dressed Lumber, High Grade Var nishes, Lead and Oil Colors in all shades. And also an overstock of Nails which I will sell cheap. J. V. YOUNG, Prop. EVERY WOMAN Sometimes neeiia reliable J BkMHlily regulating1 mertiolne, JL DR. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL p!LLS, Ara nromplaafeanl certain la result Thaawnh tu Xr. 1'uaJ'a) nersr ulaappolnt, il.M per but Tot aala by B. Alaa. Stoka. WHEN IN DOUUT.TRY HWMllWmi.inuh and have curd thouu&ei mi amsoe of Narvoui DtMia, tuck uUobiliey.DiuliiMi, SlMpl nit and V erlcocale, Atroply. Be ?hy clear the brala.auflngrkca the circulation, make dlf ettlsa parfact. and impart a aeallh vigor to the whole being. All draiae end loaeee ere chocked mnff llXlin f4rmantnllf Untaae aaUeeta lUllgflgaill, properly cured, thou- eaedi a often worrlee them Into Iiuaaitv. Coeeumaw ttoe or Death. Uallad aealed. Price f i per boa; S beaea, witk Uoo-clad A uaraatae to euro f raniud Ike amuy, tt-ao. Send tat Ireo beak. For aala b Br. Ales Stoke. Within 25 years American astrono mers have won as many annual med als of the Royal Astonomleal Society ut t-ug:anu. as astronomers of all oth er i-uuiunes, except England, blued. com- Madame Chang, a Korean woman ot high caste, has arrived in California on a mission ror her people. Her ob ject Is to learn American ways, hav ing: done which she will return and In troduce them In her native country. William Cyl, the Adams Express Company's messenger, who once made so bold a stand against the Burling ton train robbers, near Marcus, 111., will bo presented by the company with $1,000 in gold.