V WELL - If ' .Swn.u?ithJTa,"ey of "Well-Enough" men are careless end ovou and free; ' -li (v$ t0Uand,tney t and they love a bit, and they grow old happily; ' ' ' J 0 "1 he hazy distance gleam the peaks of the unknown: ''Fame," . ' , (And none that has traveled that dilhcult steep can enter the valley again. The way ii o'er rocks, sharp and jagged and cruel; through fierce heat, with a dead i ,. ., n'"8 thirst; r I- While the water drips cool, far below in the depths of the way that to him is ac cursed. Eow he longs, all in vain, for a friendly handclasp, for the smiles that were ready , and true; But he may not turn back, so he struggles along, with the joy of achievement in view. And at last, oh, long journey; see torn hands and feet, nd face drawn and wrinkled . with pain! He stands at the summit of great desire, to dwell on his priceless gain. And then ah, the sadness of heart-break! was not that a man's cry of woe? or he longs to return to the land he has lost to the "Well-Knough" valley below. Urace G. Boatwick, in New Vork Tribune. ::: THE ::: UNDECEIVED LOVER. jJOj AM tired of this delay, si J Marion. I want the mat- 1 O tcr settied definitely, and I p at once." 0f "You are very unreason able, nuut," said Miss De lancy, shrugging her shoulders petu lantly. "Things of this sort can't be lurried up In a moment." "A moment !" echoed Mrs. Gardi ner. "Why, It's full three mouths since Grey rclham commenced visiting you!" "Set your heart at rest, aunt," said Marion, with .a glance of triumph shooting from bneath liei drooping, blue-veined eyelids. "If ever a man iwas desperately In love, lie Is the time of his bachelor freedom grows hort." , "But how short?" Wlll you be satisfied If lie proposes In a week?" , "Yes-but he will not.' 1 "Leave him to me!" said the tall tieauty. Imperiously. "I am as Impa tient as you are but I know very well It .will not do to show It." "It is shockingly expensive," said Mrs. Gardiner, plaintively. "When I took the furnished house for six 1 months, I supposed you would lie off iny hands long before this and the servants' bills, and the account for the coupe, with the driver in white gloves, nd-" "Spare me the reiteration of house bold annoyances, aunt," said Marlon, Impatiently. "You are supposed to be a wealthy dowager. I, your heiress niece. What sort of society do you suppose we could have commanded if people had known our real status?" "Well, I suppose you are right," said Mrs. Gardiner, disconsolately; "but. dear me, Marlon, if this last chance ..i.i ii f "It will not fail, aunt. Hawn't I told you to set your heart at rest?" Thus ended the colloquy between aunt and niece, and Mrs. Gardiner left the room to attend the summons Of her cook. ' Marlon rose slowly, walked, with the Step of a princess, to the full length mirror, framed in a net-work of gilt passion Tine leaves, and looked into Its surface. What a lovely picture smiled back upon her, flushed with the soft wine light of sunset. A tall, flexible figure, gull of unstudied grace; a small head, royally set upon the slender, snowy throat, and crowned with braids of allken black hair, colled round and round Ip- glossy profusion. Her com plexion was rather dark, but fine grained as satin, with a delicate crim son glow on either cheek, and lips full and scarlet as newly ripened cherries, Bvhlle her lovely black eyes, large and oft as velvet, gave a tender expres sion to the whole countenance. "Yes," murmured Marlon Dclancy, balf aloud. "I have beauty Grey Pelham has rank and wealth. Are Hre not evenly matched? What right bas he to ask for more?" The thoughts were yet flitting through her brain, when a servant en tered, with a sealed missive In her band. , "A telegram, miss, just arrived!" Marlon caught it from the servant's band and tore It open. "Miss Delancy," it read, "your rather Is much worse and more troublesome to-day, and I cannot continue to take (charge of him, unless arrears are paid top at once. If I do not see you soon, I shall bring him up to New York, and return him to your care. k I "SARAH DARBY." Marion flushed scarlet, and bit her Up until her small, white teeth gleamed irindlctlvely. "What a bother!" she muttered to berself ; "but It is just like that spite ful old Darby to carry her senseless threats Into execution. I must get ten jflollars from Aunt Gardiner to stop her knouth with; and the sooner the bet ter. Perhaps I had best take the even ing express down to Berksdale at nee." She glanced at her tiny' Geneva sratch. "Yes, I have time; but I ought not to waste it now, of all times! One night's delay may cast some chill across the glow of Grey Pelham's Jove; but there is no alternative left me." t 'And the evening express carried Miss jDelancy down to the obscure little vil lage where her poor, crazed, old father sras farmed out, at the least possible rates of compensation, to a hard faced jwidow with a heart like adamant and sympathies dried down to the merest Shreds. Meanwhile, Grey Pelham, Esquire, In bis elegant bachelor sanctum, was pre paring himself elaborately for an even' ing can on nis rair goddess. It 'was a room whose adornment and decoration bespoke not only wealth without stint or limit, but refined taste and highly cultured appreciation. Exquisite, llt 'tle bronie groups glimmered on carved bracktU; itatuettsef alabaster leaned ENOUGH. By Helen Forrest Graves. from backgrounds of ruby velvet; paintings that an amateur would have valued at their weight In gold opened the glow of Neapolitan skies and misty Swiss valleys to the eye, and cabinets of rare cameos and antique coins tilled the recesses. But the student and philosopher were now merged in the enthusiastic lover. Grey Pelham had lost his heart to the mystic sparkles of Marion Delancy's marvelous, velvet black eyes, and "Love was now the lord of all," ac cording to the orthodox burden of song and story, lie was a handsome, well built man of about thirty, with brown hair, deep hazel eyes, and features, which if not strictly regular, were sufficiently well moulded, and possessed the rare merit of expression. The last sunset rays were just touch ing the stone cornices of the elegant mansion that Mrs. Gardiner called her ancestral Inheritance" not deem ing it worth while to mention the trifling fact that it was rented from a Jewish stock broker at a thousand dol lars a month when Mr. Pelham rang the doorbell. "Out of town?" he repeated, after the servant. "How unfortunate! Where has she gone, and when did she go?" Now, Margery being a new servant, had not yet learned the crooked ways and wiles of the Gardiner household, and unwittingly answered the truth. ".She's gone to Berksdale, sir, and maybe she'll be obliged to stay two or three days, I heard her tell the missus. It'a at Mrs. Darby's, sir, where" "Berksdale, eh?" Mr. Pelham knew that another train left within the next hour or so the last train that night, and he resolved to follow his bright beacon star forth with. Poor fellow, he had reached that desperate stage in love in which all spots where the beloved one is not are howling wildernesses. He slipped a bank bill Into Margery's not unwilling fingers, and hurried down the street. 'I will seek her out, and let her sweet lips decide my fate at once," he thought. "Marlon! How appropriate if the sweet Scottish name to her pure and gentle womanliness! All the Mar ions in poetry and romance are models of grace and gentleness, and she is no exception." (You see that Mr. Pelham was very much in love.) Berksdale was soon reached by the Iron feet of steam, but, rapid as the progress was, it failed to keep pace with the young man's feverish Impa tience. It was eight o'clock, with a full moon shining upon the fresh spring foliage, when, after having been duly directed to Mrs. Darby's, he 'set forth on his walk to the secluded village nook. 'Darby Mrs. Darby? She do be the one who keeps the old, crazy .gentle man, and a rare un she is to thump him round! Oh, yes, sir. Ain't more'n a mile beyant the big church a red house, with a big poplar tree in front." Thus instructed with regard to the locality. Grey Pelham felt that , he could not well go wrong. The red house, with a big poplar tree in front; presented no very inviting aspect as he strode up to the wide open door. The blinds hung on one hinge, creeklng dolefully in the breeze; the gate was tied up with loops of rusty rope, where nails should have been; and broken crockery, invalided tinware and heaps of oyster shells adorned the dooryard in lieu of vel vety grass and borders of flowers. Grey Pelham, wondering a little as to what business could possibly bring Marion Delancy to such a spot as this, knocked at the open door, but no one responded to the summons. He knocked again, and yet a third time, with no better success, and fin ally walked boldly into a little sitting room, where yawning portals seemed to Invite entrance. A single oil lamp burned on the table, by whose light he could just find his way to a chair. "I suppose I may as well sit down here and wait until some one comes," h'e said, resignedly to himself. As he did so, he became aware of voices in the adjoining apartment, raised high in altercation, and of a name spoken in shrill tones a name lear and precious in his" ears. "I tell you, Miss Delancy, "tnln't enough! Two dollars in a week won't pay his board, let alone the clothes and the lodging!" And Marlon's accents, silvery sweet, answered in low, measured tones: "Two dollars a week Is & great deal of money for an old man who can chop wood, and dig garden, and help you so much about the house." "But he won't help. Miss Delancy he just tits and mopes the whole time. The doctor says he ought to have wine." "Oh, nonsense! I can't afford to buy him wine! That's all an absurd no tion!" "Well, he Is your own father, Miss Delancy; fix It nny way you please, and It ain't hardly decent to let him starve." "You are too extravagant In your Ideas, Mrs. Darby, What can an old man like that want of new clothes and dnlnty fare? I tell you, I can't afford to pay you more than two dollars a week; my expenses in New York are ruinous, and" "Then you may as well send him to the poorhouse at once, Miss Delancy. I won't undertake to keep him short of three dollnrs, at the very least" "I don't like to do that," Marlon an swered, hesitatingly, as if the idea commended itself to her as not imprac ticable in some respects. "People .will talk." "They'll talk Just the same if you let htm starve to death here, and good deal worse." "It's a great nuisance," said Marlon, Impatiently. "Well, I suppose I will have to pay you twe dollars and a half." The other woman grumbllngly as sented, but added: "Don't you want to see him? He's talked a great deal about his pretty girl's comin'." "See him? Oh, no, not for the world! It always racks my nerves. You needn't tell him I've been here!" "Well!" ejaculated the other; "if you ain't the coolest one, Miss Delancy! I don't set up to bo the most devoted daughter in existence, but If my father was like your'n, I'd waut at least to see him once in a while." "What would be the use? Here's the quarter's money in advance; nnd if he gets violent or troublesome again. Just lock him upon bread and water! Now, show nie to my room, please, for I've got to get back In the early train to-morrow morning, before my de voted cavalier misses me!" "Then it's' true that you are going to marry a rich man down in New York, Miss Delancy! Squire Frothiiig ham said you was, but, la! there's heaps o' reports that haven't no more foundation than a whiff of smoke." Miss Delancy laughed triumphantly. "You will see, three months from now, Mrs. Darby. That's right; get the candle, for there is nothing that spoils my complexion like want of sleep!" Grey rclham had sat as motionless during this conversation ns If lie had been turned to stone! Honorable gen tleman that he was, he would have scorned the Idea of eavesdropping; but he had been spellbound thunder struck. Was this cold hearted, cruel worlding, whose very natural affec tion seemed frozen in her veins, the Marion he had worshiped with such blind, unquestioning idolatry? Was it possible that he had been deceived all these months? Like the downfall of some superb ed ifice, undermined at once and entirely, his dream of love crashed to the earth! He buried his face in his hands, with a low, bitter groan, given to the mem ory of the Marlon whom he now knew had never existed, save In his own imagination. Then he rose and went out In the cool, clear moonlight, staggering like one just risen from a bed of serious sickness. He was thankful now that he had encountered no one thnt he was free to depart without question or doubt. Disenchanted undeceived! The blow had been a cruel one, but Grey Pelham recognized the kindness of the Hand that had struck it, and returned to New York, resolved to bear It with what equanimity he could. Miss Delancy waited, but waited in vain, for Mr. Pelham's anticipated call; and finally at the end of three days dispatched a little pink note, per fumed with the ottar of roses, to ask the reason of his unwonted absence. The servant brought back the note unopened. " "Please, miss, he sailed for Havana this morning!" A month subsequently the exasper ated creditors of Mrs. Percy Gardiner met in the elegantly furnished house, Just In time to deplore their own dill. toriness, for that smiling matron had decamped, leaving an array o debts behind her that niigut have awea tlie notorious Mrs. Chadwlck, the Ohio prisoner. And that was the disastrous end of Marion DeSancy's matrimonial cani paign! New York Weekly. ' Kisses Classified. Some individual with oceans of time on his hands has conceived the idea of hunting through the works of English novelists for the purpose of finding all the adjectives used to qualify the word kiss. The result is as follows: Cold, warm, Icy, burning, chilly, cool, loving, indifferent, balsamic, fragrant, blissful, passionate, aromatic, with tears bedewed, long, soft, hasty, into icatlng, dissembling, delicious, pious, tender, beguiling, hearty, distracted, frantic, fresh-as-the-morning, breath ing fire, divine, satnnlc, glad, sad, su perflclal, quiet, loud, fond, heavenly, execrable, devouring, ominous, fervent, parching, nervous, soulless, stupefy lng, slight, careless, anxious, painful, sweet, refreshing, embarrassed, shy, mute, ravishing, holy, sacred, firm, hurried, faithless, narcotic, feverish, Immoderate, sisterly, brotherly and paradisaical. The task seemed inter minable nnd he gave it up at this stage. London Tit-Bits. Concerning- Kline Eyes. This country uses more than three thousand million lace eyes and hooks iu a year. Every man, woman and child will wear out on an average two pair of shoes in twelve months. The majority of people have two feet and there are twenty eyes and hooks in each shoe. Use your arithmetic and see what the total is. It foots up to two millions more than three billljn. Milwaukee Sentinel. iUCjalaJ. ill 11 V Watering the Poultry. May we speak agalu of watering the poultry? 'This Is generally the weak point In the poultry yard. Bad water Is a wonderful vehicle for carrying dis ease. Provide cliin' water and keep the drinking vessels clean. Have nil arranged so that the young chicks can not get Into the water. A shallow ves sel filled with large gravel and then with wnter, as mentioned iu a previous issue, makes an excellent watering place for young chicks, but both gravel and vessel should be cleaned every day or two. I'p-to-Dute Farming. Reclaiming Muck Farm Lands. Muck soils, when properly drained, are of great value, and many lands which have In in Idle for generations can be reclaimed to great and lnsting fertility. Experience, or the use of ex perience of others, Is, however, neces sary in their draining. Such soils settle rapidly when drying, and if tile Is used It must be laid at considerable depth. Most of such tolls are underlaid with sand or gravel. In such cases holes or wells can be sunk at intervals down to this sand and the tile !lues run or emptied Into them. This Is sometimes much easier than the digging of deep open ditches Into which to ruu the tiles. American Cultivator. ,Tnt Itefore Pasture. It is not an easy matter to keep up the flow of milk except by heavy grain feeding during the period when the pasture is not yet lit to graze heavily. Just before good pasture wo find It an excellent plau to tempt the cows to eat as much of the roughage as pos sible, so we cut the cornstalks or the straw, whichever happens to be avail able, in very small pieces, and after wetting It well mix a portion of grain or a few vegetables chopped fine through the fodder. It is a freakish cow who will not eat this dish with avidity, even though It has been pretty well stuffed with roughage during the winter. Wo even go so far. for the 6ake of change, as to drop the corn stalks and give them the cut straw fixed In the manner specified, later going back to the cut cornstalks, but in both cases wetting the fodder so that the grain used, sometimes cornnieal and again bran, will stick to It, else they will mouth It over and eat the grain without the fodder. Indianapolis News. Frlentllic Fni-itilntr The recent discussions In the Aus trian papers on the subject of Indirect medication have been followed by vari ous articles in the French papers. The agricultural-bacteriological station of Vienna Is continuing its experiments with the cultivation of vegetables, in creasing by artificial means the propor tion of salts of iron contained in them. The Idea is by no means new, as in 1579 Dr. Miraud wrote a book showing that the therapeutical virtues of, vari ous vegetables might be increased if alimented with certain substances con taining medicinal properties. Iu 1SH0 Dr. Chainpouillon communicated to the French Academy of Sciences' the re sults of his experiments with the strawberry plant and the vino which had been watered with nitrate and carbonate of potash. Dr. Champouillon mentions two cases of dropsy which were cured by a diet of strawberries saturated with nitrate of potash and white wine mineralized. In 1)7 M. Eniile Levy tried the ex periment of feeding fowl with corn and salts of Iron. It appears thnt the eggs thus obtained contained a fare share of these salts In a form perfectly nssim-liable-Newark (X. J.) Sunday Call. liRfllbllCB. The radish Is one of the early season garden crops, quick growing and hardly. For best development it re quires rather cool weather, and to grow tender radishes it Is necessary to have a continuous growth from begin ning to end. As soon ns the ground can be worked In spring sow large, heavy seed. The Issoil should be clenn, rich garden soil. It is advisable to sow a new crop every ten days, to keep up a continuous sup ply. In about four to six weeks after planting the radishes will be ready for table use. The rows should be from six Indies to a foot apart, and the seed covered about half an inch in depth. Drop two or three seed every inch in the row. It will requite about an ounce of seed for 100 feet of row; eight to ten pounds for an acre. When grown in hot weather radishes are apt to be stringy and tough. Winter radishes are planted tho lat ter part of July or the first of August, and are grown the same as turnips. Being firm and tender they keep well over winter if stored in pits or a dry cellar,. The most popular market radish is the French Breakfast, Scarlet Short Top, Chartier and Wood Early Frame. For winter the White and Black Na ples and the White Vienna are very good. Indianapolis News. Raisin? Hntlinufce Vegetable. A general discussion of the vegetable raising was n feature of n recent meet ing nt Horticultural Hall, Boston, Mass, W. W.Rawson was the principal speak er, nnd he estimated that nearly 200 acres In Massachusetts aie under glass. The product Is sold In Boston, New York, riiHadel-ihia, Buffalo and Chi cago. The vegetable grower to-day should have several houses in order that each may be at the proper teni pernture. Iu no other pert of the t'nlted States has the growing of vegetables under glass reached the point of perfection that It has here. Th"re are more than 1200 market gurdcuerg who bring pro duce to Boston, and the number Ib In creasing. To-day It Is a problem what to grow, and the man must study the market, know how to produce a good crop by close attention to details, and confine himself to a few kinds he is most familiar with, and which are best adapted to his soil and mnrket. Mr. Bnwson advocated growing vegetabh s by electric light, and the use of steril ized soil. He thought the cucumber crop could be Increased fifteen per cent, by the use of the electric light. Vnrnum Frost, another well-known market gardener, said It was an Insult to common sense to speak of growing vegetables by electricity. He had never used It nnd never would, nnd It was a good deal like another "fad" which Mr, Hnwson had started of painting glass white. J. C. Stone said be liked to hear these comments, because when two mnrket gardeners lived in the same town nnd disagreed bo well, it was a sure sign that both were good growers. American Cultivator. Thrifty Toinntn Plants. . This Is how I raised 13,000 tomato plants after March 10: I planted part of them in a hotbed ten feet long and two nnd one-half feet wide, In rows about three Inches apart. This gave room to cultivate them. I sowed the seed thickly In trenches one Inch deep and covered with soil. When the plants came up I thinned to nbout 100 to the row. I planted the other bed the same way, but this bed was In the plain soil and was five feet wide and nearly twelve feet long. This allowed me to cultivate from both sides. When the plants were n week old I carefully loosened the soli between the rows with a table fork, but did not disturb the plants. I did this twice a week till they were large enough to set out. When they were ten days old I sprayed them with n gallon of liquid manure to n pall of water. If the manure Is used stronger It will Injure the plants, But how they did grow treated this way! When about six Inches high I transplanted to another bed, giving them more room. This should be done nbout twice before they are ready to place In the field. This was the l!0th of .May here, and the plants had stalks , lis large as a lend pencil and were ten to twelve inches high. I kept up the cultivating and spraying all the way through. Perhaps nil do lint know how to get the liquid manure. Bore the bottom of n barrel full of holes; place it on blocks in n slant; fill in a little straw, then stable manure to nt least two-thirds full. Place boards under neath to ruu off the liquid; then pour on two pails of water. It will run through in an hour or two. Then pour on wnter enough each day to keep the supply of liquid just as youi needs are. This liquid is Just ns good for other plnnts. Phoebe Journey, In The Epitomist. The Cause of Tuberculosis, The Cornell University Experiment Stntlon in bulletin 223, just published, gives most interesting facts about this dreaded animal disease, its cause and how it is spread. It says that the disease is caused by n micro-organism, the bacillus tuberculosis, which nre only visible under the microscope. The bacilli nre often found in tuberculous cattle and people, and differ very littlo iu appearance and belong to Iho same species. The bacilli escape from dis eased animals, in the saliva and mucus from the mouth, also from the pus from tubercular abscesses that open through the skin, nnd in the milk of the cow. Some cows show fifteen per cent, of them iu their milk. The Infection and spread of the dis ease among animals is largely through the digestive tract, and by Inhaling particles of dirt or dust carrying bacilli, or by getting them into wounds of the skin. The hitter is possible, but not common. Healthy cattle "nosing" with Infected ones, or feeding and drinking after them Is the most usual way of In. feclion. The infection of calves by feeding tht'in milk from tuberculous cows Is a frequent means of spreading the disease. This upon calves is slow and sometimes does not show the dis ease for years. This is on 3 of the very important ways that the disease is spread among breeding h.rds. The disease is often fouud in swine fed upon milk from infected cows. Last year the United States meat in spectors condemned about 20.000 hogs for tuberculosis. The same result may follow when milk from Infected cows is fed to children or adults. Practically the only way tuberculosis gets Into a herd of cattle is by the introduction of n tuberculosis animal. The disease Is of very slow progress In developing. If often requires years for it to destroy" Its victim. The germs pass into the blood or lymph and are carried to other parts of the body, where each germ starts a new tubercle. The tuberculin test is by far the most reliable way to determine whether animals have any trace of the disease. There have been many unjust things said about tuberculin nnd mauy cattle owners have come to fear that it is a danger ous agent to use. It has been found, however, that tuberculin is ns harm less ns need be to the health of the animal. The dangers that are supposed to come from It are the results of poor tuberculin, unclean Instruments, of other avoidable causes. The tuber culin Is a prepared fluid. If the ani mal Is sound when tuberculin Is ln Jccted no reaction Is observed. If, how. ever, tho animal contains the active tubercle there Is a reaction which shows Itself In a rise of temperature beginning tor from eight to sixteen hours after the Injection and continuing for rroin six to ten hoars and possible, longer. THE MODERN FARMER. ITow He Lives s Compared With Fifty Veers Ago, THE farming life of to-day, as contrasted with that of fifty years ago, Is a paradise of comfort and convenience. The lonely loghouse, remote from market and devoid of advantages that a half cycle of time has made possible, would scarcely appeal to the present day farmer. The twentieth century soil tiller has practically all the modern comforts. His mall is delivered daily. He has telephonic connection with the buying and selling world, affording the best opportunities for marketing to advan tage. His home is of recent architec ture, constructed of wood, brick or stone, and well furnished. He has modern plumbing and modern heating, and with the advent of acetylene gas, he has modern lighting. At night his home Is as attractively illuminated as that of his city brother, for It Is a sug gestive fact that "acetylene for coun try homes" has so appealed to the farm er that of the 80,000 users of acety lene gas in the United States the farm er is one of the largest of all classes. Ever seeking the best, be has not hesi tated in availing himself of this new light. " The continued growth and progress of this great couutry, ever a cause of wonderment, has no greater exempli fication than evolution on the farm. Already the farmer is becoming the most envied of men the freest, the healthiest, the happiest! Booker Washington's Story. Booker T. Washington told a story In the dialect of his race a few days ago at Cheney Industrial School for Negroes which will probably be re membered longer than the more Bert ous part of his discourse. Mr. Wash ington said that a short time ago he was called upon to address the mem bers of a negro church In Alabama which was having troubles with its finances. The pastor had not been paid In a year, and the running ex penses of the church had not been defrayed. The negro educator told the members of the congregation of their duty to the church and its pas tor and expostulated with them on their unchristian-like conduct All the time he was talking an aged. negro In the rear of the church was shakhig his head nnd saying: "Ain't g'wlne to pay no mo' money." When he hnd repeated this several times Mr. Washington asked the brother to explain why he refused to help pay the pastor s salary, and the old darkey replied: "He preached dom fame sermons last year and de year befo'. Dey has been paid for and ain't g'wi-ne to pay no mo' money." Philadelphia Record. Hyde's Luxurious Stables. James H. Hyde, the storm center of the Equitable fight, Is reputed to have the most splendid stables In America, There Is a special room devoted to the harness, spotless and shining as tablo silver. In a case are curbs, bits, bells, stirrups and whips. There are carved wooden cases, containing veritable museum of old stirrups, pos tillion whips and hunting horns, and a great hall containing not less than 28 carriages. Where Money Is Useless. On Ascension Island, In the Atlan tic, money Is quite useless. The Island Is the property of the Brit ish Admiralty and Is governed by a captain. There is no private prop erty in land, so there are no rents, rates or taxes. The flocks and herds are public property, and the meat is Issued in rations. So are the vege tables grown on the farms. BOOK OF BOOKS. Over 30,000,000 Fobllshert. An Oakland lady who has a taste for good literature, tells what a happy time she had on "The Road to Well ville." She says "1 drank coffee freely for eight years before I began to perceive any evil ef fects from It. Then I noticed that I was becoming very nervous, and that my stomach was gradually losing the power to properly assimilate my food In time I got so weak that I dreaded to leave the bouse for no reason what ever but because of the miserable con dition of my nerves and stomach. I attributed the trouble to anything In the world but coffee, of course. 1 dosed myself with medicines, which In the end would leave me in a worse condition than at first. I was most wretched and discouraged not 30 years old and feeling that life was a failure! "I had given up all bore of ever en Joying myself like other people, till one day I read the little book, "The Road to Wellvllle." It opened my eyes, and taught me a lesson I shall never forget and cannot value too highly. I imme dlately quit the use of the old kind of coffee and began to drink Postura Food Coffee. I noticed the beginning of an Improvement in the whole tone of my system, after only two days use of the new drink, and In a very shor time realized that I could go about like other people without the least Teturn of the nervous arena that formerly gav me so much trouble. In fact, my nerv ousness disappeared entirely nnd ha never returned, although It is now a year that I have been drinking Tostum Food Coffee. And my stomach is now like iron nothing can upset it! "Last week, during the big Conclave In San Francisco, I was on tho go day and night without the slightest fatigue", aud ns I stood In the Immense crowd watching the great parado that lasted for hours, 1 thought to myself, 'This strength Is what Postum Food Coffee l:ns given me!' " Name given by Tostuin Co., Brittle Creek, Mich. There's a rottson. The little book," Tho Road to Well ville," may be found In every pkg. UUSINE33TTARDSV M. MsDO.NAO. ATTORNET-AT-tAW, Rotary fnbllo. real estate attnt. Patents leeilred. coilrrtlrinfl made nromptlv. bases) In nyn Heat building, kernoldsvllle, Fa. TJH. b. S HUOVER, REYNOLDS VILLI, FA. Itlrtini dentin. 1.. tli a Flxover natldlaa sain fctrteft. Gertleneps Iu operating. J)R. L. L. MEANS. DENTIST. Office on second floor of First TTa tlonal bank buiiuiiig, Main street. J)R. B. DEVEttE KING, DENTIST. Office on second floor lynoldsrfIl nem jisiaio jjuuomg, wain street, BnynoUlsvlile, Pa. J NEKF, JUSTICE OF THE PEACH Aud Itefil Kstato Agent Keynohlsvllla, P. gMITII M. McCRElGHT, ATTOKN BY-AT-LAW. Rotary Public end Heal KHtate Agonte. Oel leotlons will fcfirft ptorni't attention. Ofllo In the JinynoldHTllle Iianlware Clo. Building, Main street, 1ujuo1JhiJU Pa. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat No. (red 03 OS ( Kye-No.2 (in 91 Corn No. 2 yellow, ear 611 W ; No. yeiinw, sneuea oo 51 l Mlied ear 48 4' Oats No. S white 8!) 8 No. 3 white 81 Flour Winter patent & SO 6 00 Fancy strnlitlit winters 5 45 5 SO Bay No. 1 Timothy 1! 75 18 0!) Clover No. 1 1 75 18 00 Feed No. 1 white mid. ton St 0,1 ! 60 Drown middlings is 6') 18 Bran, bulk 18 00 IS l i raw Wheat tt 75 7 00 Out ( 73 7 0 0 Dairy Products. Butter Elgin creamery t 80 8 Ohio creamery m Fancy country roll in 14 Cheenn Ohio, new 18 14 Hew York, new 18 14 Poultry, Etc. lions per lb f 14 1'c Chickens dreased 10 1H Kegs Pa. and Ohio, fresn 1H 10 Fruits and Vegetables. Apples bbl s 5) .1) Potatoes rnncy white per bu,... 30 8 Cabbage per ton js ( gi 00 Onions per barrel y 50 8 Qj BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent I ft 05 S Z Wheat No. 11 red 03 gt Corn Mixed 51 fjt Ekks 16 m Butter Ohio creamery -u ii PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent I J SO 5 75 Wheat No. red 99 101 Corn No. 2 mixed 60 il Oats No. S white 80 87 Butter Creamery 114 & Eggs Pennsylvania firsts 16 17 I NEW YORK. Flour-Patents I 09 6 80 Wheat No. S red ' Corn No. S ! JJ Oats No. S white J Butter Creamery J Msgs Stale and Pennsylvania.... 17 " LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 14W) to 3000 lbs 18 85 6 50 I'rlnie, 1300 to 1400 lbs 615 6 Medium, 1200 to It 00 lbs.. o 90 6 15 Tidy, low to 11M) 650 ' 68i Butcher. 900 to 1100 875 4 10 Common to fair 8 50 8 75 Oxen, common to fat K75 401 Common toitood fat bulls snd cows 50 8VI 11 Uch cows, each 16 00 45 00 Hogs. Prime heavy hops t&80 685 Prime medium weights 683 5 "5 best heavy yorkere and medium 680 6X5 , Good pigs and Ughtyorkers 6 40 6 n0 Plus, common to good . 4 7) 4 HO Houghs 8 7 415 btaga 8 25 8 JO Sheep. Extra S S00 6 10 tood to choice 4 75 4 SO Medium 4 4 75 Common to fair., t.V) 4 00 Lambs 650 6 00 Calves. Veal, extra . 4 50 6 50 Veal, good to choice aJ 4 50 Vtal, common heavy 80J HJi The man who goes down with his engine in a wreck is considered worthy of great commendation when the truth is, as all railway men are aware, that the unfortunate in such cases lost his nerve at the CTitica! moment, and hesitated to Jump, de clares Scientific Engineering. When an accident is Impending the cool and collected engineer shuts oft steam, applies the brakes and opens the valves, all of the actions taking a few seconds. Then he looks out for his own safety. Another man becomes so fiightened in f.e presenoe of great danger that he does nothing, not even the possible, and he Is the person likely to wear a martyr's crown. Remarkable are the revelations which have come to light with regard to the Miller "syndicate" swindle. Schleslnger, who fled to Europe with a largo share of the plunder, is dead, and Ammon, who was found guilty of complicity in the robbery has been . in prison. But in Brussels a hand some part of the booty is said to have been found, and strenuous is the effort to lay hold of. It. When the spoil has been once thoroughly Iden- ' Ulied the attempt to get it. will reaci It j climax. But what hope is there of just redistrictlon to the original owners from whom it was "convy d?" asks the New York Tribune. Commenting ou the effects of the iime novel and the sensational play in increasing crime the Insurance Monitor says that the criminal classes in America, are increasing faster than the pc. '-.Hon and that most of the thefts a-4 burglaries are committed y minors or men In their early 20's.