IN THE AIR CHAMBER. J By STEPHEN HALLETT. JtOtV OHN BLATCHFORD, civil engineer, sat out in tlie O T o open, -with Ills eyes resting X " K reflectively on a round "0r strument, with figures en timing it, and a needle. It resembled an aneroid barometer, but It was not It was a peculiar air gauge, a Scottish Invention, and Blatcbford had not seen one of the kind since be bnd helped toulld the great bridge at Chepultepec, la Mexico. Then he was a subordin ate assistant; now, at elguty-nud-twenty, he was engineer of the Mar fcury Tunnel, under the river of that name, just outside the Important manufacturing town of Belcbester. Blatcbford'8 recollections of tropical Chepultepec, although doubtless excit ing, were, however, suddenly interrupt ed by the advent of a young girl, iwhosefootsteps be bnd not heard, and !Who now stood timidly before him. Ihe young engineer wns on his feet In an Instant. He bad a very gallant bearing with women irrespective of class but he wns particularly atten tive If they happened to be pretty wo men. "Did you wish to see me?" be asked, millng. "Oh, no, sir!" faltered the girl; "I thought that Is I came with a mes sage to " "One of the men, perhaps?" j "Yes." "You have a brother working down In the air chamber?" The girl blushed. "Not a brother a friend." "Ah! Well, the men will be up short ly for dinner, l'ou had better wait. 1'ou see, we are rather short-handed t present, and I am obliged to tend the gauge myself. Sit here and wait" She seated herself, looking very pretty, Blatcbford thought, with her scat, simple attire and thick aubvirn tresses; and the very first thing that caught her eye was the clock-faced ob ject which Blatcbford had called the "gauge." He saw her glance riveted tipon it, and good-naturedly undertook to explain that it registered he mount nnd pressure of air in the working chamber far beneath the river, where, at that moment, seven talwart men toiled at the tunnel. "Is It very dangerous?" she asked. "What the work? Well, that de pends. You see, air seems innocent enough, but It is a power not to be trifled with. Every man down at the bottom of this shaft is working at a pressure ot thirty-live pounds to every square inch of hiin. It is almost like being hugged by a bear. . When I press this lever this way more air is forced down." He touched one of the levers Just below the gauge and pointed to the needle. "There, you see, it Is now thirty-six, thirty-seven, thirty-eight, thirty -nine pounds to me square inch; and by a mere foucii of my finger it conld be forced higher even up to Ixty-five. This is almost strong enough to crush a man." "How wonderful that mere air should be so strong!" exclaimed the girl. "But what is the use of it this ir?" "Use? Why, we harness it and make it work. It helps us dig our tunnel under the river, by forcing out the water and mud. Then, besides, it is for the workmen to breathe. Cut, bello! why are you so pale?" ' Kate Maxwell smiled nervously, dis playing twin rows of perfect teeth. "Ob, nothing. Only 1 was thinking It must be very terribli to work down there. Suppose something was to go iwrong with the air-pipes, and they .were to get too much or too little air?" Blatehford, who, young as he was, Bvas familiar with death and danger, shrugged his shoulders. "We must take risks In every trade. If the men got too little air, the river or part of It would pour in and drown them; If they got too much and there iwas no way for It to escape, it would crush them. But, after all, it Is little liktly that either of these terrible things could happen, because, you see, It Is so carefully regulated and the gauge Is so accurate and reliable. Anyone of intelligence could keep the eupply at thlrty-tive pounds, which is as much as a man ought to stand." He pulled out his watch and looked at the time. "Hello!" he ejaculated, In surprise, the men are late in coming up to fiay." The girl shuddered at his words and cast an ominous glance at the great Iron door which barred the entrance to the air lock and led to the working chamber, as it was called, under the river. "Robert!" formed itself Involuntar ily on her Hps. Although none knew it, Kate Max iwell'g unaccountable misgivings were not without Justification. Even as the pair had been talking, seventy feet be low where they stood, a terrible scene 9nn being enacted. It had been a struggle for life In the darkness and oppressed atmosphere of the subter ranean air chamber, and her lover, Bobert Leslie, was one of the actors. A feud had for some time existed be tween young Leslie und another of the pressure-workers, Edward Dart, and this feud, of which Kate Maxwell iwas the hapless origin, had of late, for some cause or other, Increased, at least on Dart's side, to great intensity. Dart had always borne a good repu tation in Belcbester,. and was the sole support of a widowed mother; but bis temper wa) none to the best, and it iwas known that he could be vindic tive. It was rumored that his atten tions to Kate had extended over a couple of years, and had never been discouraged until the llaxen-halred Leslie appeared on the scene. At first the feud took the form of sarcasm, but this quickly developed Into great bitterness of language. Burly Jim Burns, the foreman of the gang, was obliged to act the part of peacemaker a dozen times a day, when, as he put it, "the youngsters' tongues got a-waggln'." "Let him alone, Ned," he would say to Dart; "what d'ye want to be al ways worrying Bob for?" Or It would be, "Drop It, Bob, or I'll set old Widow Dart on ye. She'll make it lively for ye, I reckon." On this particular June day, the al tercation between the pair began on their way to the tunnel; and Kate, who had heard, of the angry dispute, experienced a dread of open trouble between them which greatly affected her spirits all that morning. The flash of gibe and repartee continued as the two rivals descended the narrow tube at the base of the shaft into the bowels of the earth; and so far from bettering the situation, Leslie's self satisfied air and affected carelessness only made matters worse. For he was not without reason for satisfaction, al though the truth was known to only one other man in Belcbester. Kate Maxwell had promised, on the previous evening, to be his wife. And Edward Dart, the rejected suitor, kuew this knew it from Kate's own lips. This fatal knowledge, fatal to all his hopes and dreams, entered the soul of Ed ward Dart like a bar of red-hot iron. He was a bigger and stronger man than Leslie, and would relish nothing better than to carry the quarrel to blows. There was something grim, uncanny, in the idea of these two mor tal rivals being shut up together iu a narrow, dimly lighted box, seventy feet underground, for hours at a stretch. Once inside the air chamber, they worked for several hours silently. Then, just about noon, Leslie's pick ac cidentally struck upon Darts foot. There was an oath, a shuflle, and, like a mastiff, Dart was at Leslie's throat In this small space hardly bigger than a ship's cabin five uieii flattened themselves against the sides while Dnrt and Leslie fought like demons in the darkness, for in the struggle the lamp had been extinguished. Then there was a piercing cry Dart had got his hands on a pick; he was seeming ly about to wield it. But too late! his antagonist forced him backward; he fell with a crash upon a heap of tools, and Dart's arm and ankle were broken, snapping like faggots. For many weeks there had been peace between the successful and the unsuccessful suitor for the band of Kate Maxwell. The affair in the air chamber, which had deprived the tun nel of Dart's services, was put down to an accident. Mr. Blatcbford never heard of the battle between the two men. Leslie made a point of looking in at the Dart cottage on his way home from work to see how the man with whom he had so long been at en mity, and with whom he had to lately come to blows, progressed toward re covery. Dart had been rather a fa vorite of Mr. Blatcbford, and was not unpopular among the men, so that there was general regret at the injury he had sustained. When the news came, therefore, that the engineer of the works had of fered the convalescent man the not very arduous post of lock-tender, Les lie was one ot the first to congratulate Dart. But in her timorous, Illogical, wo manly fashion, Kate, remembering the conversation she had had with Mr. Blatcbford, was not much pleased at the news, though she brought herself at length to laugh at her fears. There was safety In numbers, and after all, it was not likely that even one ten times more vindictive than the man she had rejected as a lover, would injure seven men In order to gratify a grudge to a single one. Besides, did Dnrt still cherish a grudge? Is so, it was so well concealed that nobody noticed it, r.ot even Kate Maxwell. . But one day, coming across the fields, she observed a small launch In the river just over where the tunnel lay, making rapidly for the other shore, where similar works were also In progress and bad been for months. On it she recognized the forms of Burns, Tyler, Tocoek, and several of the workmen employed in the tunnel. As the gang were usually at work on the north side of the river at this hour, she stopped an acquaintance, in the vi cinity of the tunnel, now approaching completion, and asked him what it meant. "Oh," said the man, "they're gone over with Mr. Elatchford to work' at the other end of the tunnel." Kate closely scanned the occupants of the boat, and even took out her handkerchief and fluttered it in hope of a reply from her lover. There was no response. Terhaps he was there and did not see bee. Disappointed, she turned away, but wended her way to the head of the north tunnel shaft, thinking he might have been left be hind. As she drew near, the sight that met ber gaze sent a chill of apprehension through her, she scarce dared tell her self why. It was only the lock-tender Dnrt, with his arm still In a sling, studying the indicator. One hand was on the lever. It was the expres sion of his face which repelled Kate. "If there is no one down in the air chamber," she thought to herself. "why is he here?" Quite close she came, wltliout Dart'i I perceiving her proximity. His whole mind was intent on the gauge, bis Hps were Bllghtly parted In a most unpleas ant smile, and he muttered phrases to himself as he scanned the motion of the needle. The young woman was about to accost him, but before a syllable had left her lips, ber eye fell on the figure to which the fatal needle pointed. The gauge registered already fifty seven pounds of air to the Inch, and was going, higher. In other words, that powerful, relentless, modern force, compressed air, was flowing fiercely, yet silently into tbe chamber far beneath the river,' which, did it possess an occupant, would prove per haps a chamber of death. "Edward Dart!" cried Kate passion ately, pointing to the gauge, "what does that mean?" The man's hand sprang back from the lever, as to wrench the latter in its socket. "What are you doing here?" he asked roughly. "Tell me is any one inside the lock?" "Tell you? What for?" "Because I must I will know. Be cause Mr. Blatehford explained to me the working of this lock, and I know that that pressure is dangerous. I cannot trust you." Then she added, trembling like a leaf, "Where Is Hubert Robert Leslie?" "How do I know?" he sneered, al though beads of sweat stood out on his brow. His hand was back on the steel rod. "Then fake your band off that lever, I tell you reduce that pressure of air!" Dart made no movement The needle now pointed to sixty-four. In her frenzy for the supposed safety of her lover, Kate sought to drag Dart away from his post. Ho seized her In stantly with both hands, thus show ing that lijs broken limb had entirely healed, although he had seen fit to hide the cure, for purposes of his own. "Help! Help!" she screamed. A piece of Iron lay near by. She seized It and struck him n blow full on the temples, and the fellow collapsed like an emptied sack. Then she Instantly clutched the right lever and lowered it, gasping and choking In her excitement. She ex pected it lo turn the opposite direc tion, but to her terror, it continued to revolve as before. ' Sixty-live sixty -six sixty-seven Merciful heavens, what should she do? Instantly she grasped the other lever and exerted all her strength. Every second of suspense seemed an eternity. Kate Maxwell was now firmly con vinced that her lover, Bobert Leslie, was in the air chamber at the bottom of the shaft. How could she save him? She pictured him fallen upon the slime of the river bed, with the terrible compressed air, gripping bis body and slowly crushing it, as a boa constrictor would crush a hound. To reduce the volume of air would bring relief at once perhaps save his life. Her Hps formed a silent prayer, and as if in answer to that supplication, the needle of the gauge at last wav ered in the balance, then began to slowly move In the opposite direction. When it got to thirty-five she would depress ilie lever and stay its (the needle's) course. Fifty forty-five forty figure by figure it turned slow ly. Thank God, the danger was past! But horrors what was this! Al though she pressed with all her might, the needle continued to turn, after thirty-live was passed. She sprang at the other lever; she gripped It with both hands; she shrieked for help. If it reached a certain point, the water would be unchecked, and it would flow into tbe air-chamber, and Leslie would be drowned like a rat In a trap. Thirty twenty-five twenty-four twenty-three twenty-two! Could noth ing be done! Twenty-one twenty nineteen eigh teen. In vain the young girl put forth her full remaining strength. Dart's fall must have destroyed the nice mechanism of the instrument, and Kate had thus become, unwittingly. an accessory to her lover's murder. The needle pointed to nine and was still descending when she fainted ct the door of the lock. A few moments Inter, John Blateh ford, engineer of the Marbury Tuuncl, at last completed after many months of labor, came up the shaft, cmi;iic followed by his little gang of faithful workmen. At the spectacle which met thel? eyes, they stopped short, and Robert Leslie, as pale as death, flung him self beside the recumbent form cf his sweetheart, who lay white and sti.l, scarce two feet from tho creat ircu door which barred tho way into tho tunnel. Several of his comrades turned their attention to Dart, who was subsequently borne home, suffer ing from shock. When Kate Maxwell recovcrcJ con sciousness, she clasped her Ibvcr clcsc ly. "The gauge," she nurmued, stretching out her Cnger. "I Oought you were dead down thcr?. And tbe levers would not work." Mr. Blatehford cxautned t'J2 indica tor and levers while she s;iokc. Then he gave a low whistle. "By Jupiter!" he said cuiel!y, "you turned cu les3 air at the rlgUt nonent, Mistress Kate. I was out six feet In my reckoning, and the two eads cf '.he tunnel met socuer thaa I expected. But if we had met, with tbe pressure here at sixty-Cve, whether there had been an explosion or not, it would have been rather rough oa Leslie. Ho would have been paralyzed for life. That's the worst of putting a sick man on duty: there's always the risk of a relapse at the wrong moment." . Kate Maxwell, looking up into her lover's face, was silent New Toils Weekly. i A Hero of Panama. Career of Herbert O. Jeffries, of New York, Commander of tho Pacific FlotillaStormy Incidents of Guatemala Under the First Barrios, Tyrant and Despot. , JttOJ. F it is ever written, the (- story of the life of Herbert O I O O. Jeffries, commander of j( the raclflo flotilla of the KW new Panama Republic, will make the lurid tales of our West ern scouts seem to fit only for the nur sery," snld the member of the Geolog ical Survey, who has spent consider able time In Central America, says the Ban Francisco Bulletin. "It was my privilege to be on terms of good fellowship for several mouths with this daredevil soldier of fortune, and I gathered sufficient Information concerning his remarkable career In the turbulent Central American repub lics to satisfy me that be has not had a surfeit of the commonplace. Very little of this Information was obtain able from him, for, like many men of bis peculiar type, he was not given to talking about his own deeds. "Jeffries Is a New Yorker by b'lrtb, a graduate of West Toint. and a nat ural born fighter. He is an athletic blonde, about five feet nine Inches In height, of calm and quiet tempera ment. "In his seventeen years in Central America ho has been a prominent fac tor in every important revolution in Guatemala, Salvador, Honduras and the United States of Colombia, lead Iitg the forces of the Government or the revolutionists with equal courage, and usually with success. It cannot be said that his rewards were ever commensurate with his works, the adage, 'Republics are ungrateful,' provins true in his case. "Jeffries was the general In charge of the forces that fought Guate mala under the first Barrios, a tyrant and despot. Several of the bat tles which lie directed were marked by deeds of heroism, and were full of slaughter. "In those fights, as In all others. Jef fries led his forces, a custom which, perhaps. It Is unnecessary to remark, Is uncommon In those countries, where marksmanship Is not a strong point, and where the mnchete has a more prominent place In battle than the musket. You see, your average Cen tral American, being afraid of his gun, shuts his eyes as he pulls the trigger, and the commander in front stands a good chance of being perforated In the back. "Jeffries fell out with Barrios, and was exiled and a price set upon his head. Ho fled to Guatemala with Gen. P. P. Brannon, a redoubtable Pennsyl vania fighter. "Both were welcomed by Don Luis Bograu, known as tho D!nz of Central America, then President. T'jcy planned the ambuscade wbLn resv.Ited In the slaughter of nearly 400 Guate malan Invaders. "Under President Bograu's adminis tration Americans were Rtrielly In It. Concessions were granted them for nearly everything they asked, and peace prevailed throughout the land. "An American named Cecil was made administrator of the telegraph lines; n Virginian built the water works and a wagon road to the Pa cific coast; a Loulslanian was chief of police, and Major Burke, once State Treasurer of Louisiana, managed the mineral resources. "Among the Americans who flocked to tbe capital at Tegucigalpa was a New Y'orker named rainier, a polished gentleman and the possessor of a mag nificent baritone voice, rainier nnd Jeffries became chummy at once, and for months were Inseparable. Both were In demand at social functions. Jeffries being a fine tenor singer and pasionnteIy fond of music. "Their popularity aroused tho jeal ousy and envy of Cecil, who, while carefully avoiding Jeffries, constantly sought a quarrel with Palmer. On the nig'jt of a Presidential bal!, Cecil, Crunk and noisy, met Palmer In the barroom of the Tlcadllly Hotel, gross ly insulted him, and then shot him dead. So- powerful was Cecil's influ ence tl:at he was not even arrested. "Jeffries was at Yucatan, two days distant by tho usual mode of travel, but he made the journey In twenty four houra, killing two mules en route. He wired Cecil that ho was coming to kill him. "When Jeff lies rode, up to the hotel, fully twelve hours before he was ex pected, he found Ceil In lb barroom surrounded by a nuxber of native of ficers, boasting of what he would do to Palmer's friend. Jeffries' entrance was ths occasion of a stampede on the part of the natives, many of whom threw themselves headlong out of the windows In their frantic efforts to es cape the calm, determined looking man In the doorway, whoso big re rolver seemed to cover every man in the room. "Two shots rang out almost togeth er. Jeffries, strode Into the yard, quietly mounted his mule, and, without a look backward, rode away. "Cecil was found a few minutes later, dead, with a bullet In his heart Just over the panel of the door through which Jeffries entered, on a line with his head, was the mark of Cecil's bullet. It was a duel to the death, and Palmer was avenged. There was no trial. "Peace proving tiresome, Jeffries and Prannon wandered over into Salvador, where they engaged In railroad build ing. When Brannon presented a bill of aOO.OOO pesos President Ezeta, 'Lion of the Frontier,' and the biggest rob ber that ever went unhung, promptly arrested them ana sentenced them to be shot. "They were chained to a stake In the cuartel yard and doomed to die at sun rise. In some manner, which neither would ever explain, thej extricated themselves and clambered over the wall. "On stolen mules they started In the darkness for the Honduras border. Be fore daylight a party of Ezeta's noted black rangers was In hot pursuit "Near the border Brannon's mule was killed and he received a bullet In the thigh. Jeffries strapped blra to his own mule, and in the darkness they crossed the line Into Honduras, where they were safe. It was five days before Brannon received proper medical care. "In 1893, under the rule of the benev olent old Don Ponclano Lelva. his nephew, Nuilln, started a revolution at ruxlllo. and Jeffries was sent out with a smnll party to capture the reb el. The task proved an easy one, and Nuilln vns captured In a narrow mountain pass In less than a week, losing only a few men. "From Honduras to the United States of Columbia was only n short step for Jeffries. His work In behalf of the Government last year is quite well known. , "He came to New York two years ago and married the girl of his boyhood choice, andshe remained with him during bis last campaign. Jeffries owns nbo'.:t fiO.OOO acres of valuable timber land on the line of the Tanama Canal, so that his Interests, naturally, are with the new republic. He can be counted upon to give a good nccount of the little flotilla under his command If the opportunity is presented." Tlralns Come From the. Farm. "The Chautauqua meetings In the country are the manufacturing centres of material to re-enforce played out and sluggish cities," said the Itev. Frank W. Gunsaulus before the fifth annual sesion of the International Chautauqua alliance In Victoria Hotel yesterday afternoon. "Tho country boy's best chances for , education are found at tne summer meetings. How many have benefited?! A recent canvass of the city has shown this: "Out of one hundred of Chicago's prosperous business men I found that eighty-four, beginning with Marshal Fleid, came from the country. Seven-1 ty-slx out of one hundred of the best lawyers came from the country. Seventy-one out of a hunderd of the best physicians came from the coun-' try. I "The idea prevailed that the best privileges of life belong to a class of self-constructed aristocrats, but the fact Is that these privileges belong to the p&or, ordinary man, and tbe Chau- ' fauqua meetings have taken them to i him. The purpose of the meetings Is to build (he real American civiliza tion." Chicago Inter Ocean. Intercut 111 the rlntnlito. There are larger birds than tho fla mingo, nnd birds with more brilliant plumage, but no other large bird is so brightly colored, aud no other brightly colored bird is so large. In brief, size and beauty of plume united reach their maximum of development in this, re marknble bird, while the open nature of Its haunts nnd Its grogiiriousness seem specially designed to display Its marked characteristics of form and eoior to the most striking advantage. When to these more superficial attrac tions Is added tho fact thot little or nothing Is known of the nesting habits of this singular bird, one may. in a measure, at least, realize the intense longing of the naturalist, not only to behold a flamingo city without ques tion the most striking sight In tbe bird world but at the same time, to lift the veil through which the flamingo's homo life has been but dimly seen. From Frank M. Chapman's "A Fla mingo City," In the Century. Tho Callrsto Hoy's Cushions. Nothing so pleases the heart of a college boy as a new pillow for his couch i:i tho dormitory room, and the number ho has usually represents his summer's conquest and the nimbleuess of. his sister's fingers. Tho favorite design is a satin pillow in one of the shades of his university's flag, and In tho centre or one of the corners is tho college shield heavily embossed in embroidery of the second shade. Flag-shaped cushions in the proper colors and stamped with the names of any of tho larger universities, are at tached at the points of the base by a rope cord finished with big tassels, so that the pillow can be hung over the back of a chair. New York News. Feline Sarcasm. The freezer had been left on the back porch and the tin cylinder Inside was filled with delicious cream. The cover was not on tight nnd a predatory cat had crowded it off nnd was looking at the toothsome stuff and at the same ! time licking her chops with delightful j anticipation. - "And to think," she said, in her pur ring way, "that St Louis society is all , torn up over the question of whether ! Ice cream should be eaten with a fork or a spoon. How ridiculous these ab- 1 surd mortals can make themselves!" And then she dipped her whiskers In the trapped mass and industriously regaled herself. Cleveland Tlula Dealer. LICHTNINQ hODS ON SHIPS. experiment! nf Many Vmm B? Proved Them Useless. Several Europeau shipping periodi cals are advocating the use of light ning rods on ships which convey ex plosive compounds. One of these papers notes that on a recent voyage the foremast of the Umbria was struck by lightning, which shattered It to bits. The writer of the article stated that "If tbe ship had been fitted with lightning conductors the current would have been deflected from the ship." The value of llgntnlng rods for ships was investigated by Captain Folger of Nantucket, Mass., a brother-in-law of Benjamin Franklin, the inventor of the types of lightning rods In common use the world over until a few years ago. After Folger, many other Ameri can and British shipmasters studied the lightning rod question, with the final result that thousands of experi ments wl masts fitted with lightning rods adduced the belief that they are of no value In warding off lightning. As a matter of fact, abundant evi dence exists In the acbives of Ameri can, British and French scientific so cieties that thousands of ships pro vided with lightning rods were struck by lightning. Time was when naval aud army magazines were lilted with lightning rods. That practice ended years ago. It Is only among believers in divining rods and fortune tellers that confidence In lightning rods exists. American Syron and Shipping. WISS WORDS. . Some men think they have nothing to be Ihanful for unless their neighbors have had hard timeb. He that ovcrcometh shall Inherit all things; and I will be his God, and he shall be My sou. Rev., xxl., 7. When a man has hi. treasure In neaven he dots not wake up in a fright every time be hears a mouse lu the house. The kingdom of heaven Is heart recognition and heart obedience to u Father's spirit living and ruling within om own. John Hamilton Thorn. Take thy self-denials guyly and cheerfully, nnd let the sunshine of thy gladness tall on dark tilings and bright alike, like the sunshine of the Al mighty. J. F. Clarke. "I have to work like a slave," said a good woman, weary with her worries, but the answer cam from a more way-wise comrade: "Oh, but, my dear, you can work like a queen." Frances1 Wilhtrd. A Tost That lalleil. Two men were walking along & Kan sas City business street. "Do you know," sa'id the Kansas t.'i'y man to his country uncle, "that you can hear all sorts of subjects discussed In a barber shop?" 'I always shave my self," replied the country uncle. "I haven't been In n barber shop for years." "Well," contiuued the cily man, "get Into a barber's chair and you'll hear one barber talking to a customer about the war; another will be talking politics or football; a third discussing shows, nnd so it goes. Here, come in this shop and wait while I. get a shave. You'll hear n lot of free discussion." They entered the shop and found three barbers work ing and one Idle. The Kansas Cily man got into the empty chair and was there ten minutes. The only words they heard In the shop were "Next" aud "Thank you." Kansas City Times. Kitten Aroused Dog's Jealnnsy. A curious instance of a dog's intelli gent Jealousy is reported from Liau ishen. Ahappy family there consisted of a lady, a cat, a kitten and a Yorkshire terrier. All four were on excellent terms until the terrier took umbrage at attentions which its mistress be stowed upon the kitten. The terrier straightway began to dig a bole in the garden, and finished Its task to its satisfaction in three days. Then the kitten disappeared. A search was made, and as the terrier was seen patting down the earth over tbe ho'e which it had refilled, the soil was removed, and the kitten was found to have been burled alive. The dog was punished, but it took tbe kitteif to the grave again, nnd the following day took it to a ditch and left it there. London Daily Express. Colorado Potatoes. The largest potato ever raised In the State and probably anywhere in the world was grown this season by James Warren on the Hoover ranch, nine miles east of Greeley. It weighs nine and three-fourths pounds and U com posed of several outgrowths. It shows only one stem and gives no indication of ever having been more than one potato. The Hoover ranch is located on the extreme eastern edge of the cultivated section and close to the open range. The field from which the tuber was dug produced 200 sacks to tho acre and It wns an easy matter to find hundreds of potatoes in the field weigh ing from three to four pounds each. Denver Republican. 1 Yankee Modesty. Venus, she of the broken arms, and the discus thrower have been ignb niiniously banished from all buildiugs controlled by the school board of Glou cester, Mass. Toor Venus, she has been gazing unabashed upon the world these many centuries, and the discus thrower has been making his east with never a thought of sweaters, but Glou cester has cried, "To the basement with the baggage and her trouserless fellow!" Naked Truth had bettei lie low In her well or the school board of Gloucester will send the hussy pack ing with her classical companWus. Portland Oregonlan. . BUSINESS-CARD. M. MoDONAUl. ATTOn N FT-AT-LAW, Rotary pnbllo. leal -flute leant, rata sr-cured, coilfotlr.n made prompt?. Ofaei lo Nymlcaie building. ileynoldsvllle. Pa. JJH. B. K nnOVEll, ' REYNOUiSVILLB, PA. ' Resident dentist. I., the llnoTr balldlu astn "tret ;"tl-ns In onTatlng. J)R. L. L. MEANS. DENTIST. OfBce on seonncl floor of First Na tional bank building, Main street. J)P.. E. DEVEKE KING, DENTIST. Office on second floor P.eynoldsvlllt Kenl Kstato Building, Main street. Knyno.Ulsviile, Pa. NEFF, " ' JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Ajd Keal Estate Agent. Keynoldsvilln, Pa, gMITH M. McCRKIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Notary Puhllo and Ileal Entote Agents. Cel. lecilnus will rrculve piompt .itmlun. OfBoe In ilia Keytiolilsvlllo rittnlwBre Co. Buildlof, unlu street, lupnulJsTilla, l'a. 0 - 1 a 1 TTAT TTVT - PLANING . MILL You will find Sash, Doors, Frames and Finish of all kinds, Rouijh and Dressed Lumber, High Grade Var nishes, Lead and Oil Colors in all shades. And also an overstock of Nails whicU I will sell cheap. J. V. YOONC, Prop. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Whs nt-Ko. 1 red 1 04 Rye--Nn. S 88 Corn N". S vellow. fur M No. Srellow, shelled 60 Mixed esr 4 Oats No. S white " No. 8 whitu 81 Flour Wlntnr jmtent 0 '!' Btralplif winters .. 6 ;o Uy No. Itlmothy : W 51 icrer No. 1 14 (M Feed No 1 white mid. Ion W t) Brown middlings W ' llrsn. hulk M W Straw Wheat 7 00 Oat 7 0J Dairy Products. Butter Elpln creninery SO Ohio creamery 18 Fiuicy f oiintry roli H Cheese Chio, new 1 New York, new 11 Poultry, Etc. Dens per lb 14 ChtrkmiB dressed 1 Turkeys, live 10 Kgus-ta. nnd Ohio, fresh 8 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes New per hu f Cabbage per bbl 7 5 Oiilons per I arrel 17 Apples per barrel 15J BALTIMORE. Klour-WInter Patent $151 Wheat .Nu. 2 red 1 14 Corn mixed 6j Kcun 21 butter Creamery & PHILADELPHIA . Flour-V lnier Patent $5 l" Wheat No. Sired 1 10 Corn tso. itmixed M 68 Oats No.il white 86 Butter Creamery, extra .... 45 t!Si Pennsylvania firsts 24 NEW YORK. Flour I'a ten Is 6 0) Wheat N". 2 red. 1 H Lorn No. 2 bn Oats No, 'i White bM lintter C'ieauiry 45 tlta'S . 44 LIVE STOCK. 10 89 69 61 49 S 85 ao 6 85 13 00 14 50 33 00 19 50 21 00 7 60 750 81 19 14 14 14 13 IS 17 80 CO 1 i0 1 4 43 5 80 1 W 60 S6 46 5 75 1 11 59 37 4H 46 90 1 19 00 87 M 45 Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra heavy, HfO to 1609 lbs IS SO 5 43 Pilme, ItCOlo 1400 lbs 5 (XI 5 15 Medium, 121)0 to 1M4J lbs 4 50 4 90 Tidy. 10.".) to 1150 4 8.1 4 60 Butcher, m lo 1100 lbs 8i0 8 75 Common to lair 4 no 4 75 Oxen, common to fat 4 75 4 00 ( oinnion toiinod (at bulla and cows 4 50 8 50 Milch cows, each 18 Jl 50l)i) Hogs. f rime heavy hoiis l 4 80 4 P5 Prime medium weights . 4 no 4 8T Beet heavy yorkers and medium.!. 4 75 4 80 Good pics and llghtyorkers 4 80 4 45 PUrs. common to hoiaX 4 4U 4:l Houghs 8 70 4 lo Blags 8 45 8 5o Sheep. xtra, medium weiuers f IS 10 8 25 Oood to choice 4 75 500 Medium 8 75 4 60 Common to fair SOI 4 50 fearing Lambs 4 0J 6oO Calves. Vcal.extra 5 00 7 50 Veal, good to choice 8 50 4 6J eal, commou heavr 80J 370 NEW USES FOR POTATOE3. Grated potatoes soaked In water la the proportion of two medium-sJa-ed potatoes to the quart, make an ex cellent liquid for washing woolen goods or for washing delicately col ored fabrics. A slice of potato will clean oil paint ings without Injury, and dipped in baking soda will brighten silver. Chopped potatoes and a little soda or ammonia will remove all cloudiness or dlscoloratlous in carafes or vine gar cruets. Brighten tho zinc under the stove by rubbing with raw potatoes. If quickly done, raw potatoes will remove spots from a polished dining table. Finish with equal parts of tuiy pentlne and melted beeswax.--Hom Ccleneo "Jncnxlne. Some women will believe things In novels that their husbands couldn't make stick with affidavits, declares the Galvebton News. '