PUnMY uiiLiBii flF JHIIL 1MF FNFN UKEKA ! Eureka ! " shouted Hit conductor on the narrow- gauge train , as it wheezed and groaned up the final stretch of rail a that terminates in Eureka , once a pop ulous and thriving mining camp , whose reputation ranks second only to the famed Comst-x'k in the production of gold and silver dollars , but is now only a blotch of buildings crowded among low hills of sagebrush. Half a dozen people began the preparatory rustlings their des of weary passengers Hearing tination. When the train came to a halt at the depot , Ira P.rooks and his wife climbed down from the coach in the wake of their fellow-passengers. The mission whicJr lirought them from New Hamp shire Slate to this Nevada camp was not an extraordinary one ; .Jacob O. Marley , brother of Jane Ellen P.rooks , had struck out for the West in the early 'sixties , and after a desultory correspondence for ten years with the home folks , had ceased writing. In his last letter to Sister Jan-1 he men tioned the fact that he had discovered a big silver mine in Nevada not stat ing the exact location ; and from that stirring epistle Jane i'.rooks formed a glowing picture of Jacob as a bonanza king of the wonderful West. His fail ure to write since then worried good Jane ; she imagined her brother ruled by a jealous wife ; perhaps living in extravagant luxury , or mayhap the slave of his millions with not a mo ment in which to pen a letter to his fond sister "Jacob never did fancy writing materials. " Mrs. Brooks would not allow herself to think of this absent brother as a poor prospec tor , or the possibility of his departure to realms above. When an old aunt died , bequeathing to Jane a few hun dred dollars , she immediately planned a Western trip with no other thought than to unearth the errant millionaire Jacob. Of course Ira Brooks , her hus band , should accompany her , and since Jane's wishes were akin to law in her own household. Ira and she soon began their quest for Jacob O. Marley. The twain had been whisked , and jolted , and dragged to nearly every settlement in Nevada. Stout old Ira had seen such a surfeit of alkali plains , sagebrush hills , and uncouth mining camps that even his dreams were of distorted New England scenes , alive with Nevada eccentricities. After many weeks Glled with wild adven tures , the couple picked up an old scent of Jacob , and followed it to Eu reka , at which place the narrow gauge has already set them down. Mrs. Brooks piloted Ira to the Brown Hotel , and scarce waiting until the stains and fatigue of travel were re moved , the anxious sister made known her errand by plying the citizens of Eureka with questions. "Jacob O. Marley , ma'am ? Why , sure I knowed Jake , " responded one "Tip" Wortle ; "but last I seen of him he say , ain't you heard about it ? " "Heard about what ? Sir , I am Ja cob O. Marley's sister , and I am look ing for my dear brother. I say I am looking for my dear brother. " "Then you'd better prospect in that tli.ir bone-yard , ma'am , for Jake he got killed in a gun-light nigh outer thirteen years back. " Tip Wortle blurt ed out this information with the un candor of hab feeling a mining-camp itue , calloused by a familiarity with such minor details as impromtu duels : u ( I tin like. "Jacob killed ! Jacob dead ! " shriek ed Jane Ellen Brooks. "And who kill ed him ? I say , who killed my dear brother ? " 'A chap called Steve Atwood , ma'ain. /Jut you needn't feel so cut up ; why , before Jake keeled over he laid out Steve purttier'n anything I ever seen. Jane shrieked louder than before. "I don't believe one word of it ! Jacob wasn't the lighting kind. Dear Jacob Lill a man ? Never. I say. " "Wai , supposiu' you just inosey through that grave-yard , ma'am , and learn whether Tip Wortle's tellin1 you what ain't so. " Saying which , Tip indicated by a jerk of this thumb the cemetery referred to , and turned on his heel , leaving Jane and Ira Brooks to digest the startling bit of news that Jacob O. Marley had not only been killed , but had killed his murderer. "Ira , I will not believe that horrid man. He has confused dear Jacob with some one else , I say. " "No telling , Jane , what might hap pen In these uncivilized parts ; but sup pose we do as this Wortle suggests , and look through the cemetery , " said Iru , in a putting attempt to console the shocked sister. Jane acquiesced in a most woe-be- gone manner , and the two trudged up the unlovely street In the direction of Ruby Hill burying-grounds. When Nevada's great mining camps were young , and roj'stering , devil-may- care men frequented them , many things were done that scandalize the tamer generation ot this day , when these tokens of an earlier epoch come under its observation. Perhaps not every live camp had Its calamity grave yard ; but Eureka was not the only early Nevada town with a section of ground reserved for those men who met with an untimely end , or to put it more plainly ( jei ] with their boots on. At any rate. Eureka had a turbulent , pis tol-popping history , and the well-pop ulated calamity plot is the most vivid reminder of the days that are no more. One would imagine that early Eure- kans took a certain pride in the growth and appearance of this particular plot , for nearly every grave is , or was , mark ed by a head-board. And each board bore some little , significant inscription , apropos of the when , how , and whyfore of the killing. But Eureka underwent the hard-luck stage ; her mines dwindled to borrascas , and the faith of her stanchest citizens was shaken. Consequently , interest in the camp abated , and among othei tilings neglected was the calamity grave-yard neglected in this wise that of fresh arrivals there were none , and more noticeable than this was the decrease in the number of head-boards. Whore thoy disappeared to was a mys tery at first ; but the facts soon leaked out that prospectors , who could ill- afford to pay the exorbitant price set on lumber , were appropriating these "In Memory" slabs for the purpose of staking out claims. No uncommon thing to run across a location monument , bearing the locator's notice on one side , and an inscription or epitaph to some de parted man's memory on the opposite one. one.When When the wave of renewed interest in Nevada mines reached Eureka , Al bert Ileehe and Alfred Deremer re located an old claim of theirs , and awaited a buyer. This property lay conveniently near the grave-yard , and , as former location notices were nearly obliterated , fresh ones were installed. The new discovery monument was a head-board , and at each of the four corners of the claim a melancholy , grewsome grave-slab was imbedded in the mount of earth thrown up as re quired by the mining statutes of Ne vada. Ileehe , being of a grimly hu morous turn of mind , christened the new location "Sacrilege Claim. " Up the gritty and parched slope of Ruby Hill climbed the portly Ira Brooks and Jane , his wife. A warm , dry breeze puffed across the broken desert-country ; it dried the tear-drops trickling down Jane's cheeks , and burn ed the florid face of Ira. Here , there , everywhere within the confines of the cemetery , searched the relatives of Ja cob O. Marley. They carefully scan ned each mid every name on tomb stones , rounded wooden slabs , and nondescript sticks. No trace of the lost brother no inscription engraven in memory of him rewarded their gloomy explorations. As a last resorr , husband and wife separated , each tak ing a different course. The sun drooped low in the shimmering blue sky , the wind turned a shade cooler , and a bril liant after-glow emblazed the weird , wild stretches of this Nevada land scape. "Ira : Ira Brooks ! I have found him ! " Jane Ellen's wail cut sharply through the dry , twilight air ; Ira straightened up from a lowly position he had assumed in reading a decidedly queer epitaph , and , with his usual ef forts hastened to join Mrs. Brooks by the side of her brother's grave. "Oh. Ira , it is true : Jacob is dead , dear Ja cob is dead and buried in this wild , terrible spot. I'oor , poor brother ! " Ira paused before the head-board that was placed at the end of a long mound of earth , and in black letters upon the weather-staiiipd slab , he read : In Memory of JACOB O. MARLEY. Died March IS , 1S73. Aged about 35 years. Cool-headed and nervy to the last. "Yes , this is poor Jacob's grave , there is no doubt about it. Poor fellow , " wheezed the breathless Ira. "Oh , dear , oh , dear ! And why did they bury him way out here Ira ? * ' Why , I say , didn't they bury him in the grave-yard ? " sobbed Jane Ellen , mournfully. "Who can tell what these savages will do out here. But , see , his friends must have respected him : "Cool-head ed and nervy to the last , ' is written on this slab. " "The idea ! Why , dear Jacob was devout and peaceable ; not a fighting thing , as that must mean ! Poor broth er ! Dear brother ! He shall not remain in that grave , Ira. To-morrow , I shall have his body exhumed , and we will take him home and give him a Chris tian burial in the beloved town of his childhood days. " Jane , having spoken these words , shed copious tears on the grave of her brother , and then , placing her hand upon Ira's arm , the couple walked back to their hotel in the barbarous village of Eureka. Next morning the Brookses ascended Ruby Hill ; with them were two blue- shirted individuals , one of whom trundled a push-cart before him , in which were picks , shovels , and a long , coffin-shaped box. True to her word , Jane Ellen Brooks had made all prep arations to remove Jacob O. Marley's body from the unholy neighborhood of the calamity cemetery. Arriving at the barren spot , she pointed out the grave to the worklngmeu , and directed them to begin digging. The men looked rather amazed when * hey examined the mound , the imbed ded head-board , and noted the staring black " 3 N. E. Cor. Sacrilege Claim" on the reverse side. But recalling empty pockets , and the generous wages promised , they began their job with a vim. Deeper and deeper grew the four- by-seven excavation ; higher and high er they piled the clayey dirt and rocks. Jane Ellen sat on the edge of the go- cart , watching the opening of her long- lost brother's grave ; Ira breathed heavily beneath a big cotton umbrella on the opposite side of the hold , and above them the bright Xevndsi smi glared down from a high , steel-blue sky. The solemn silence was broken by Jane's voice : "Ira , who are those men coining this way ? " Ira's near-sighted eyes photographed a blurred mass of rapidly moving ob jects upon his retina , and he became j ' alarmed. "It's the town authorities. .Tune , and they are going to stop us ' from exhuming dear Jacob ! " he ex claimed. "The idea , Ira ! Why , I got permis sion to remove Jacob's body long be fore you were up this morning. Those are not the town authorities , I say. " The men came on the run. There were two of them , and their appear ance was not in the least reassuring. Guns bristled about them , and rough clothes and scowling faces added to their war-like attitude. The tall man in the red shirt marched boldly up to where Ira stood. A huge , hairy fist shut off Ira's view to everything but the same menacing fist , and two glow ering eyes. "You , you varmint ! You old red tub ! Think you're playing a high hand jumping my claim in the light o * day ? Say , old wad , just per ambulate yourself and that female , and the rest of the kit off'u Sacrilege Claim , 'fore we sacrifice two silly old Yankees. Mosey , now : " Alfred Deremer rolled forth the words in a fierce tone ; his personage fairly radiated wrath , and Ira Brooks , judging from the unsteadiness of his knees , firmly believed an earthquake was rocking the whole of Ruby Hill. Thoughts of his own danger vanished , however , as a shrill voice drowned out the bass growls of Deremer and Heche. "Jumping on your claim ! Jumping on Sacrilege Claim ! Impudent , boor ish savage ! How dare you accuse me of jumping ? If I did jump on your claim , how could I hurt it ? Ira , Ira Brooks , this creature has insulted me. He tells me that I jump ! That I jump , Ira Brooks ! " "Aw , you ain't so cute , madam. Tell me what that there hole in the ground means ? Ain't you smart Easterners trying to get In on a good thing here ? " queried Albert Heehe. "Get In on a good thing ? Oh , oh , and right here at my feet lies dear brother Jacob ! Insult me over my own brother's grave ? " Rude , unthink ing wretch ! " "Brother Jacob's grave ? " interjected Deremer , who had been listening to Jane Ellen's tirade. Heehe caught his partner's eye , and the two suddenly lost their bellicose air. "My brother. Jacob O. Marley , lies buried here , and Mr. Brooks and 1 are taking his body out of this unconse- crated desert. Now , sirs , is that any of your business ? I say " "But , madam " "Whjer er " began the two prospectors in the same breath , but confusion got thebetter of them , and they looked strangely docile as com pared with the authoritative despera does of a moment previous. "Of course , you are ashamed , sirs. The idea of accusing a lady of jumping , in what way you mean , I can not im agine. Oh , my dear Jacob ! Poor , for saken brother that I should find him lying here ! " "You tell her , Bert , " whispered Der emer , loudly. "Can't you break the news , " an swered Heehe. Muttering a tragic "Well , here goes , " Deremer explained just how it hap pened that Jacob O. Marley's memo rial slab did not mark the site of his own grave , but the north-east corner of their Sacrilege Claim. Jane Ellen Brooks stared at the men in mute horror. To steal a head-stone from a grave was quite beyond her immediate comprehension ; to realize that it was her own brother's grave that had been robbed was a frightful shock to Jane. "Then , pray tell us , gentlemen , where we may find Jacob O. Marley's body. " The words came in a sarcas tic wheeze from the portly Ira. Neither one of the partners had the faintest idea which grave in calamity plot was occupied by Marley. "You shall be arrested ! Imprisoned for life , vandals , ghouls ! Oh. my be- oved Jacob , lost forever , forever ! And n such an ungodly spot ! Oh , dear , oh , dear ! " moaned Mrs. Brooks. While this scene was being enacted on the surface , the two men digging for the remains of Jacob O. Marley had been unusually quiet. Now one of them pitched up a shovelful of quarts , saying : "Ladj' , they ain't no corpse here , far as I can see ; but say , you Deremer , what d'you call that fer rich stuff ? " Deremer and Heehe , always on the alert for specimens , picked up some of the rock , and what did they see but flecks of yellow gold , freely speckling the quartz. Jane Brooks , her husband , and her hopelessly buried brother were forgotten. The partners danced a rat tling breakdown , hugged one another rapturously , and took on like foolish school-boys. "W What ails them , Ira ? Have they been drinking ? I say , have those creatures been drinking , Ira Brooks ? " Albert Heehe answered Jane's In dignant question : "No , you bet I ain't drunk , madam. Hurrah for you : Look here , did you ever see gold quartz to beat the likes o' that ? We're rich , and you say , you didn't find no bu- ied brother , but the richest gold mine n all Nevada ! " So carried away was Heehe that he actually embraced the trembling , hor rified Jane , hugged her , and then , in his bubbling delight , fairly shouted : "Madam , you gets half interest in this vere bonanza. Half interest , and no expenses ! We're all richer'u Croesus , ) oys and girls. Hurrah for Mrs. Brooks ! " Well , so it turned out in the end , and although it required a good bit of ex plaining , of reasoning , and cajoling , Jane at last accepted papers that en titled her to a one-half interest in Sac rilege Claim , which proved to be as wonderfully rich as the partners proph esied. And , although Jane Ellen never found poor , dear Jacob's last resting- place , she did find herself a rich wo man , whose heart warmed toward the impetuous mining-camp people to such an extent that Eureka still harbors not only one indefinitely located Jacob O. Marley , but Mr. and Mrs. Ira Brooks , Argonaut. VALUE OF WIDE STREETS. Tendency Toward Squalid Conditions in Narrow Thoroiitrlifared. A narrow residential street may be a very attractive one if the houses stand well back from the street line , with pleasant grounds about them. In a growing town , however , the danger from such conditions comes with the inability to convert the street to busi ness purposes or to erect more com pactly disposed dwellings. If business comes in , the transition is commonly marked by jagged lines. Commercial structures , often of a cheap and unde sirable aspect , are built out to the street , while the dwellings htand re cessed back at irregular intervals. And when at last the street is fully occu pied for business purposes , it is alto gether too narrow ; the ro.ulway and the sidewalks are cramped , and often a widening has to take place at the public expense , if built up closely to the line with dwellings , the street is likely to lack air and sunshine , and the tendency is toward squalid conditions. An excellent remedy for these evils is offered in the Massachusetts law that empowers municipalities to estab lish building lines at any desired dis tance buck from the street line. When such a line is established no buildings can be erected on the intervening space. The municipality acquires an easement in this strip of land , which can still be used by the owner for any thing but building purposes , and on the establishment of such a line owners may claim damages , as in case of tak ings for a street widening. It is , how ever , commonly more of a benefit than a damage to have property thus re stricted , for it assures a more per manently desirable character to the street ; and in case a street widening should ever be called for no obstacles will stand in the way. By taking the restricted steps there will be ample room for the wider roadway and side walks. Ideals for attractive street planning are to be found in many parts of the United States. There is nothing more charming as a rural street than that of a New England village at its best- lofty aisles of leafage , the trees with feet in a carpet of turf at the side walk border ; the houses , quiet and tin obtrusive , standing well back , and marked with the true home charac ter , whether they are humble cottages or abodes of the rich. The noblest de velopment of such rural streets is to be found in the old towns of the Con necticut Valley and in Western Massa chusetts. There the main highways have an extraordinary generous width , often giving room for quadruple rows of old elms and broad spaces of turf , the roadway requiring only a narrow space in the total width of the thor oughfare. Century. TWO FACETIOUS MEN. How a Persistent Author Finally Sold Ilia Story. This is the true story of two facetious men. One is an author and the other is the editor of a magazine. The author is mentioned first , not because lie is of more importance , but because he fig ures first in the narrative. An author j is never of more importance than an editor until he gets a reputation , and not always then. This author didn't have the reputation , but he had enough ' persistence and nerve to answer all , purposes. He was trying to sell a story ( to the editor , but the editor didn't seem i inclined to buy. Thereupon the author , threw down the gage of battle and b < > - j gan sending the editor many messages i with his manuscripts , says the Brook lyn Eagle. "I am taking the magazines in turn and it is your turn to buy , " he wrote on one occasion. "Two editors capitulated last week and now I have plenty of leisure tc devote to you , " was another message. "You'll save yourself a lot of trouble if you take this story , " was one of his later threats , and he followed it with this cold-blooded announcement : "Ev ery editor that I have 'gone out after * has had to surrender , and I'll get you yet. " He informed the editor that he was strong and healthy and could not be tired out : that he had eighteen stories yet to submit and was constantly add ing to the supply ; that he never did like a man who balked when it was his turn , etc. Then the editor thought he would try his hand at a joke , and he sent this crushing message : "We enjoy your letters very much- more than we do your stories. " This ought to have settled the author < but it didn't. He came up smiling and scribbled this beneath the editor's note . "All right. I'll sell you the letters. " He inclosed this with another story and ] the editor took the story. His answer i was laconic , but satisfactory. j ] "We surrender , " it said. "Inclosed please find check for your last story. " Poultry for South Africa. A good trade in poultry is now being carried on between New Zealand and South Africa. Until noon , a boy works as if he got up too soon that morning , and from noon until night his mind is off plan ning schemes for staying up late that night iMwi.iui.uiiiun.wi Xi.H .iitJIililiW W . . . . H . , Vegetable Preparalionfor As similating Hie Food andRegula- Jt , ting die Stomachs and Dowels of Promotes Digeslion.Cheerfur- ness andltest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor > Iiiicral. OTIC. Jiaxpe ofOMArSAMUELPITCHER jllx.Senna. < Bocheltr Sails - 1 Claifltd. Sugar Flavor. Aperfecl Remedy for Conslipa- Ilon , Sour StomachDiarrhoea A * Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- ness ami Loss OF SLEEP. Pac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. Cairyou better invest * L75 forjyour entirel family circle than in ajyears subscription f ffir tills slip . and send It at onco with ยง 1.73 and you W 1 wlll rec.olvo All the Issue * of The Youth's Companion for the remaln- ks Of 1902. The beautifully Illustrated Douhle JTmnbers for Thnnks- sr , Christinas and Xew Year's. TTT Tlie Companion Calendar for 19O3 , lithographed In twelve - * - ' * - ' colors and gold. And The Companion for the 52 weeks of 11)03 a library of the best reading for everjmember of the family. TCH - , THE YOUTH'S COMPANION. BOSTON. ccoooccccococccooccccccccccccoc 8 Mexican MUSTANG LINIMENT 8 IS THE BEST FOR. Cuts , Old Sores , and All Open. Wovinds iOOOCOOOOOCOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOCOOOCXXXXX3OCO < Tranquility. Who does not Invea tranquil heart , a s eet-tempeied , balanced life ? It joes not matter whether it rains or ; hines , or what misfortune come t" t se possessing these blessings for t ey are always sweet , serene and That exquisite poise of charactei putter. " New York Sun. A small boy is never so industrious is when it is time to go to bed. THE CATARRH A > FOKCATARRH HEALING CURE FOK Ely's Cream Balm Jny and pleaiant to isi. Contain ! no in-1 arioni drug. It ia quickly absorbed. Gives Belief at once. [ t Openi and Cleanses - g - , ij p A 1 % Allays the Na Inflammation. al Passes. PQI Q fo H - AD 3eala and Protects the Membrane , Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Large Size , 60 cents at Driutriste or by mnil ; Tns ! Size , 10 cents by mail. ELY BROTHEItS. & $ Warren Street , New "York. Tboipson'sEyeWater ( . N. U. NO. 746 47. YORK. NEB H For Infants and Children The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Thirty Years . . THE CtNTAUH COMPANY. NEW YOBK CITY. Proof ot Filial AflVct on. 1 Wheo a Carthage father became si b idly jagged a few nights ago tbafc be could not walfc , his muscular son threw him over his shoulder and ' totecl" him home much as he would have carried a sack of flour an ex hibition which tends to disprove the theory that filial affection is decreas ing. Kansas ( Jicy Journal. No wonder a man kictfs when ! 6 comes to footing the butcher's bllL What a pity it is that a law pre venting the birth of fools is Imprac ticable. No trouble to get breakfast quick If y * have Mrs Austin's famous Pancake Float. Your grocer waits to supply you. Any woman who admits that b r shoes are too tight is inclined to be masculine. You can do yonr dyeing In half am hour with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. Kissing may oe unhealthy , but- nothing risked nothing gained. Mrs Wlnslow'f SOOTtUVt si KUP for chlldw. teeming , softens the . . yams. rtrfue > lna ma.tl a alia } a pain , cures wlnrt colic. 25c liottle. It dcens't matter if a woman isnt pretty if she doesn't know she is ugly. I ) If you love your wife , make It easv for h r to pet breakfast. Take home Mrs "Austin's Pancake flour. Gonsistancy Is a jewel that is oftea swapped for success. Use the Famous Red Uro-jj Ball Bine. La rga 2-oz. package 5 cents. The Russ I South Bend , Ind.