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Time 03rd. Goma NORTH. Ooeonta.................. ga en Wast ...... & T.aurens........... . Ms. Vision........ ssseee savecsscans South HAPLWIGK:,.:........ ...... HATEWICK 22000 ise esse cesese ces Cook bummit........... sa se iersie C cooperstuwn”........................ 8:30 GoInG SOUTH. Cooperstown........................... '6 :30 Hope Factor . Phase Hartwiok « e. South Hartwick Mt. Vision. Finuréns ... . ... ...... West Oneunta ses Oneonta... .... ases seei aes Ani every hour thereafter leaves. Qneanta sat 10:30 p. m., and. only runs -to ~ Hartwiek. Gast 'car leaves Cooperstown at 11 :20 p. m., agd only runs to- Hartwick assess wsle s ee he ae are mesas Sufism . ©8:80 a mf Last ear \ flan-tanning Jung logo? f eng No. It P. sseuger. FOR THE wnS'r. No. 15 Bingbamtong x N0 1 P n OOOPIRSTOWI t. 0. V. #. 1L“; In Effect June 16, 1902. nok 10 - : 4. _*x°m*129, 9) +7 5] ir 83) a acle sil- 1124 1 10]°4 21 H . ; 1 10 , 21 10 xl'ilZ I4. 1 10 30[1240} - 10237, | tint C ‘ t‘oopersiown £ r Mills -d: 5. Ip Ret tuning. leave Errnorrvn JAN 26 1902 FROM ENG-BARTON WEST. 1: @a. m., Daily—Bunnie and Chicago sleepers.9 3:00 a. n.,. Daily-Limited, arrives at Buffal TX5 a. m. 800 'n. m. Paily-Fast. mail, arrives at Buf fio:] “7m be 00 . tole .s Chicago sleeper, (also limos .,con 11: 15:3 121? an, except Sunday—Local stud $ :25 p. M. Dali -—0bservalion parlor car, dines Chicago and St. Lonis sleepers. also Ithaca ~C connection. 3:12. p.m., Daily Through coach and sleepers G for Buffalo, Cleveland and Chicago. N4”. EAST. 1:25 8.) mh, Daily—Sleepers for Kew York, Als coge f 425 &. Ms; Dally—Sleepers tin: B coaches, TG a.m. Daily—qcmnton, New York lulu e - ~phizand south- diner,... yestibule: roont servme aud regnular-cosches 'O 08 [rs. M .y\ Baily— parlor car and; véestibu ton, New Y rk and Philadelphia. 5:5% p.m. ,exoeptrSundav—Local passenger. llX45p. m; Daily-Coaches and: sleepers 406) _ New. York . 4 fi‘a. m... in a is“ l termed 3 3‘s daily-128 mutasyreser Smith, Lackawanna 1 fenced workmen, good sipock, the . lowest prices consistent. with - good works andthe job /__ 'completed «it-fillers. ~ to apply to Zlon City. Seven months Relawareand Hatior Railtead- opp * ly, Q0 m \s ip ESS than A year ago John Alex- | self \Elijah the Restorer\ and: et of 'the Catholic Church in Zion, prophésied < that ere aunothér twelve: months should psss he would build a \city fot his people. The prophecy has come true, and today Zion (‘ity stands on the #hores of Lake: Michigan. ‘ Marvelous is not. too strong a word £] ago. it qus g -and procesdeéd WKF {outlaw drawing x3\ Btu} f amines and houselfiold goods. i nilroads have been taxed to care fo The latest style of New Type, exper- set ttered setueimens of. Ets tbday nuinber . DOG, and over a thousand homes have ‘7 been ere ctod. i \The Rév. John Alexander Dowie, £- : native of Edinburgh appeared in Chi» 2°. cago about ten of twelve years ago? He quickly stepped into prominence as a.. a missionary for tire Interna- - is the reincarnation of the prophet Eli~ « tian Catholic Church in Tlon, an or- zanization which now has 100,000 | members: piobably, recognizes him asj | its head aind contributes to Tim for its . . maintenance in cithe, rigidly enfofced, | of the financml increase of. all its mem- ' hers. fo s to g * Fion City on Lake Michigan 's shore utgrow it}, € cine a' member Of the Church F nan must give an annual 10; e personal magnetism or religious g fervor, the fact remains that hé is en- | 'Hsting recruits in. his cauge by' thou | wands, and they all render him. un- d.“ mestioned homage} aged obedience Hey filigrimséare dockingrfrom all cover I che United States ”fn ever y pa i inns have 'been rolling into:. The \ fs occupied.. Guests are pa \ike sardines in the hospice. The o low ig forced fo: Waukegan And, ot er s,» towns unnl such. time ags ander Donne, who calls him-, who is the founder and proph- . | : ‘marble temple, .,\;persons every boulevard Will lead to. this tem- \{ sheiter forthe fa Jifdevotross A |; No: business houses can encroach ader 6f healers lmvuif' come, in [= # 42, fact d | fiGnal Society 6f Diving \Healing of. ; which he afterward became president ] Opening his meetings in a tert, he soon , rew crowds, mado himself notorious | 3 31;th clisses of 2 [ who feel, the, burden 'of. the world on“ jowig's. ca; tab until his fol— { f ughim and have finally had all doubts it swept awhy by the force of- his mag- ' neusm. © i- hs / In' his secular capac1ty Dowle is - [ salled the genergl overseer of Zion. - Virtually he 4s the :owner of the city.. ' Absolute title to dotg-and land is not' siren. [ years. ;[ 4000. To every orie it attached a group, | of provigos. and from. Europe. 4 ouaries proselytmg for- his,” | suppl . . fivery | l I [variable shed, stable and tent on the J | youn .> fififififi*fiifififilflf How It Has Sprung Up . Like Magic on Lake . Michigan $ > Shore fl. £) > gp =\ fig‘i'flxeeps the: bubble affioat and works 7 & C » eye and alert mind 'of John Alexander : Dowie, Zion City is forty-two milés north. of . Chicano 'and an. equal distance south of Milwaukee, on the line of the Chica- go and Northwestérn railway. For 2% miles itg:/eastern edge is washed by the . waters of thre: 'like. Fromthe shore the tract of 6,500 acres which at present. comprises Zion 'City extends some . ] four miles. west, broken here and there by stretches of woodland 'The prog- pect is ong of:exceeding natural beftuty. - | The land, under the art of the land- scape gardener, will make a superk . setting for parks, lagoons, bridges and boulevards, gall'of which are embraced . An. the scheme 'of beautification. Tlie makt avenues of Zon City are , | faid out 150 feet wide and the grand . ';.b0ulevards twice that width, .with 100 cot parkways . t e-fmiddleH In: the enter swill ris té day a magnificent. projected to seat 80, 000 © Every avenue in the «city and ple, At present a temporary tabernacle - of wood, seating 6,000 persons, fur- . f githful Pt their :43“~\-\ .‘;lfiflg t residential territory, no dwelling - «hall bein the commercial district, and | no factory shall be in éither, All man- ufacturing plants will be located on : Zion City. tisfmaking the brick with. which it is 'being built, 40;000 being, the daily output Chief afuong the industries will! be now in operation. It [-1g, the only Slant of its kind in imérica. | [ It is housed 'building. § [ covering, five acreg, with cight acres - of floor space. TC's managed by im- © wported talent and the Tbighest' existing - ' scale of wages is pa d to employees. -| That also is one of Dowie s- decrees 'that labor shail be paid. according to its full worth. Within five years he ex-: | pects that every inch of available space \In the factory , district will. have Been : 'taken; that a: great harbor will have | been built, that. vessels of commerce , will lie thick along t shore, that: thousands of * men C win ployment ard,. that,\ y , w be used, every brain Be: directed 'to | - ward the advancement of the faith oi? Zion. .. y* The followers of Zion? are composed .~ more theorptica their shoulders and the more simple sort of folk, who want to u ‘derstand, but can't, and are willing to periujt | other people to think for them. Theyr 1re' not impulsive people who sccept . Dowie and his religion in an instant, 4n | camp meeting fas bion but are those whohave studied in their minds about: Leases. are, executed for 1,100 These leases expire July lo, The lessee agrees not to | ase the land \for any purpose contra-. +y to the will of:- God, and particularly hot for the sale of drugs, tobscco or L alcohol in any fori, houses of 1ll'fame, theaters, gambling houses, hog raising or selling\ C Upon of the covenants of © the, lease the land is “forfeited and re- verts to Dowie. or hig} successor . Moreover, there are to be 'no dance nails and no secret lodgerooms in Zion © “on DOWI'E IN manner. BEFORE: ZION ' 1; « B9USR, GHIGAGQ;, | >_ .. . ; ' 17:101ty. These gre considered agencies of 'I ithe devil -for the degradation of the . | | people. Swine are forbidden because, | :A in the belief of Zionists,-G@od's ban' is | e nthem. Pork is declared to be the rect - cause of ° cancer, : tuberculosis, rheumatism, scrofulacholera and oth- 'i. N ci [ The Dowicites fre all ong large family. womgn who serubs. or the man who ' “digs is afs. great an aristocrat As the { ' most,cu‘ltured in Zion. ° * Tddo him justice, Dowie has done, reat good among these persons whose |. money 'he has secured who are incapable of working he has (taught to be industrious. Shatters All Records. tumors. _ When: all failéd, Bucklen's Arnica Salve soon cured him. 'Paing. «l R. P Tauee ’s Hartwick and alldrugglsts 3:9!- te | the : lowlands shirtin\ the lake shore. f a daily em- [ t nil 4° w +d. 4+, i leghanies 200 706i! Incident ' of Chinese | pears to be able to buy. ' his inteipreters. The municipal government of Zion [ ity is like that: ofothgr Ellinois towns, : There ¥4s no class, no caste, and the He 'has: taught them- reverence, iand such as, it is, he has‘f Twwe in hospital; £. A. CGulledge. Ver.} 'bena, Ala., paid a vast gum to doctors to | cure a severe case of piles, éawsing-24 .- nflammation, conquers Aches, kills the : taught thom a religion. Ife has mad [ them happy. He has given them good He cares for the disabled ah :. He shoulders fll | the responsibility, does all the reason-l. R ing and scheming, pays all the bills,‘:\ homes. feeds the hungry. ¥ make it greater, a Such is the story of the wonderf‘ [ Zion City on Lake Michigan, of* the Catholic Church of Zion, of the: man | who founded both and defigns they{terifhan w shall live untilthe second coming. of | purpose .. | Christ, whose forerunner. and rophet ; ] J ohn Alexander Dowie claims to be. Yearning For in cigar by de lady cram wit? de coil'ee.”—Wash1ngton Star f His-our! Now Leads All the Other Staten. The center of Uncle Sam's apple bin {bas been shifted west of the Allegha- . niles, and the state that leadsin- the. {growing of the national fruit is Mig- | {sour This is the burden of a paper read by Professor W. A, Taylor, po- tion in the United States department | crat. Professor. Taylor completed his. paper several days ago, but just before the time for reading it he received from - 'the census department advance sheets~ 'dustry of the United States compiled: - from statisties gathered by the twelfth ' [census, the matter being brought down - to June 1, 1900. trees in the commercial orchard Areas \Lof the United States is 210,000,000, an-\ Hncrease of 45, 000,000, or more than [40 per cent, over 'the apple area of | (1890. .This commércial area of 1900° yielded in 1899 somewhat more than 175,000,000 bushels of apples. By dis- © 'tricts the north Atlantic apple section - | Has 39,500,000 trees,. the south Atlantic | :~2o,oOO 000, the north central 92,000,000, | | the south central 31,000,000 and the western district, including the Rocky. ] mountain states and the Pacific slope, ' 13,000 006. iF. Out of the total number of trees in athreefifths. These are divided among - \The lesson, said Professor Taylor 'In his address, \Is obvious. We in the: east must be prepared to meet the keenest competition from the west.and 'gouth.\ It is, now assuredly true that. the great apple bin of the United States 'has been shifted to the west of the Al- © KN EW CHEN’S FEATHER. Prince'- ~~ i © Visit to New York, \ Prince Tsai: Chen: of ' China went : sightseeing and visiting in New York |- the other-afternoon. 'He was received 'by Acting Mayor: Forneg in the. city | | hall, looked over the lower city from the innacle of a skyscraper and drove through Chinatowit th royal state. While returning to his hotel, a short * distance from it, there stood on a cor- ner four Chinamen.: Each had £ bun- : dle, of soiled or cleansed . clothes, and each wore .a jacket of | cheap plum colored cloth.. On the head of each perched 'one of those funny felt bats that nobody 'but a Chinaman in the Unite® States ap- As the prince went by they crossed their hands and. made odd gestures, 'They recognized , .the peacock feather if not the man -who wore it. 'Prince Chen spoke a word to one or Then 'he turned and ade to the four Chinamen on the: sidewalk a profound bow and smiled the while and waved his fan, - Long I after the parade of. carriages had : pagsed the quartet stood as if in a , trance gazing at each other. It was hall {bit of old China in New York FRUITS AND FLOWERS , The cherry likes a good soil, but is- very impatient of muth moisture. must have good drainage to do well, wanted, it is an excellent rule to re- make a large growth, and this' is the- ; best time to shape the tree,. In forcing strawberries they should I not be allowed to -overbéar or the fruit will be small. A moderate crop of good fruit is better than a large yield. of | 1 Email berries, \ Walnut, hickory, pecan and other ' 7 x Alli . , put trees make exe-llient shade along 'on Har A hall; the new. Columbia uni- | ‘ ersity building“ resembles the dome 1 given by Seth Low to | {thie university, 'which 1s near by. ~A] [ the roadsides and i.. ins pastures. The . able for this purpose. Begonias grow well in a light, sandy : loam, with a small addition of leaf mold. They are quite at home in the: Ain't N’o Such Thing. \What we need most in this-coun- - try,\ said the political reformer, “is an honest count.\ «\They ain't no. such thing,\ declared Mr, Nuritch. \L know all.about 'em, for , phia Press. o_ Not a. Joke. in the paper about your new fight shoes, dear. & -Mr. Crimsonbeak-You're joking! \Well I thought it was. It's bea man. Absentminded Beggar. . \Have you really no affection LOF any dear?” she asked of her | - other girl, Subdites } fiance. IKE a *No,\ replied the drug clerk absent» }! J Best salve in the world, ,25¢. at. mindedly, \but I have something just ag good ”—-Philadelphia Press. R ~ r aho ul , ¥ , dd dL nu n a is vt nA ae . 3925‘va § & ou r sx e In me $=Bi*ve 9a e ae \ iE PUBLIC SCHOOL. Social Factor. 7 of \the nation.- 'The public H are neglecting our op- Eben] as. \ I be- open at all e UNCLE SAM’S APPLE BIN. ‘ f {being done in New Yorm‘Chicago-and mologist in charge of field investigan A «of agriculture, before the national AP- | /}; { ple shippers' convention in Hochestér, - |N. X., says the St. Louis Globe-Demo- fof statistics bearing on the apple in- | According to figures of the, twelfth j censug, the total number of bearing - Amost. vifhout 'expenge. > [ the country the north and south central |. \The | districts possess 128,205,000, or nearly . mos new structure. | here\ 'With all flowers, if the seeds are not |- tages at High Wycombe, Bucks, ' Eng- y-\A . workman discovered I- move the geed vessels as. soon as the : Fa. calendarcoin «dated 1TT9T. It is of* § |: bloom fades. -_ | Usuglly in the first year after the or- | | Chard is planted out the young treeg ity Sunday,: the everyda» ‘calendar for the year. chorry is about the only fruit tree smt- . my daughter married one.”——I\hiladel- Mr. Crimsonbeak-Here's an article . Johnston, of Broughton. Ga., \that often [I war un@ble to work, 'Then, when fevery hing\ else failed, I was wholly ced 'Much In Little! ”-—Yonkers States- | King's. New Discovery for | . consumption [Ty from Asthma, till is curedher, and all tour- xp'arlence goes \to show it is the» we have in the large cities, This is other cities. { . The 'common people fre the only people An this: country;, neglect them. entsnas well ag their children. The centers, places where the fathers and mothers may congregate. People are that I plead. It is for the whole peo- tial principles of a democratic form. of | government . I The making of our public schools .a >- social center would not increase the It. could be done gL - schooltax levy. The public -. schoo has on its hands the possibility | Of mg ng an centeér, regardless ‘ 'theologicat differences. The public | Taylor in Michigan Moderator. like Newfoundland Dog. kindnéss, the highest type of canine subje id's Best Ff tiend,\ is today al- Mr. Nich; most comnion and numerous in New-}. foundland are a wretched mongrel | | Face,: cowardly, thievish and given to }. . | sheep killing Starvation and néglect [- ., | have, killed out the old Newfoundland | ~ jbreed, which thrives better anywhere |- | jexcept on this island, the place of its | porigin —London Times. P Japan’s Democratic Emperor. I ‘There is no barbaric splendor about urt of Japan, nor does the em- gist on fantastic forms of hon- : age. ~He is just a plain individual. His guests, 'he receives standing, and heen- réely into conversation with all. [ ere isrscarcely a Subject that does } rot | terest hinx or one on which he is - not well Informed. A delightful host, ~ it is;his custom to surround himgelf with 'clever men, men who are the- | Shining lights of their professions. En- soldiers, scientists-every class of per- | has won distinction iy wel- artists, musicians, writers, come.. at the royal table, for it is one‘ that in the distribufions of his favors [he 1s thoroughly impartial —Indianap- : Lolis. News. 5 ./ ' Dryden'n New House. The housé of John Dryden in Gerard | street,. London, 'has been recently de- molished. 'A \jérry built monstrosity\ 'his \heer érected in its place, and the.; ¥aemorial tablet with the inscription, | | \John: Dryden, poet, lived here;> B. | 1631 fD 1700,\ is now attached to the | 'This: is not the only | instancewof a house: bearing a tablet, ' stating that a certain great man, \lived : *+ 20 hen he never did live there, as } the fraudulent tablets to Hogarth in- © Leicester square, to' Turner in Queen | Aune street, Marylebone, and to Byron: Ain Hones street testify * t It E Old Calendar Coin. land. Frecéh op er and about the size of a four shil- whole’ye r, with special reference to ESeptuages ma, Advent, Lent, Easter, Holy Thursday, Whitsunday and Trin- Of the other side there is As seen fr In certain angles the dome ndo~ observing the- likeness remarked,\ | «Why, the Hbrary has dropped an egg, . '€A4t99-_ Shade, but require a warm, mofst tem- | ghasn it? New York Press. |-perature to develop best;- 20 ~ Proton-c. do Jit'fi‘i 'pretonse . hat they know is unreason- {able, - foolish and unfair. - Atchison Globe. v . J o. All Ware Saved., © © \For years I suffered such untold mig- ery A-om > ~Bronchitis,\ writes J. H. My wife sufféred intense- best.- p medicine in the world.\ > Lung. diseases. 22g a. ‘er of every community, the | Ad- the public ownership of the . Mhool is the best example \of 4 new, welded for a larger 4 \that to which we are them. 1 { Northfield Seminary For Girls, founded | ed, He public school should,‘ ly a few hours a | reception of all the - to take advantage of . BDon't let us | It is the business of | the public *Bchool to enlighten the par- { public schools should be made civic | 'good as they know. It is the busi-. -of the common school to teach > them what they should know. I know | no-. better place to counteract public, 'abuses than in-the public school. It is 4 not in the interest of our finer element - pie. Some of dur otherwise compare-j tively well informed native born citi- zens have little or no idea of the essen- : 0, { sehool-is the soul of the great religion | of .: democratic relationship ———Graham' , Much ag we may regret it, the fact is |- {that the Newfoundland dog, the em-} - bodiment: of courage, intelligence and | 'excell¢nce, the animal that formed the | 'of Landseer's famous painting, | t _ tinct In the United States the . animals pave vanished completely, and I had itsnot been for Mr. Edwin Nichols | 'of South Kensington they would have [ died: out An England as well, . \ols is now, we believe, the sole breeder | of Newfoundlands in the world. Even 1 . of work is probably the most able ' of the present day. This field is the 1 Bible study and Bible teaching work which D. L. Moody started during the | ' charge of William R. Moody, While excavating at some old cot- | ; piéce. On one side are clearly en- | fgraved the dates of the Sundays ofthe | Grown peoplé | t dead 'éarnest and will fight for - { months to back up a silly pretense, a sconvmce vou it's unrivaled forl Guaranteed nd$l 0G Trial © bottles ftee \ ; iHarbwrck, and 'all ' ~f = ,:‘ on ° STUDYING THE BIBLE how pwigkt L. Moopy's work is- CONTINUED AT NORTHFIELD. 'Thonsands Annualiy Gather on the: Beuufli‘ulCampus of 'Gifls' School. | > Rev, G. C. Morgan,Suceessor of the, Creat Revivalist. Northfield Bible conference, held at the by Dwight L, Moody, hag been one of . :the most important religious gatherings . of the summer, Thousands of people who have heard ' ~by his wonderful personality return ~ year after year to the institution found- Guests come early and' r later than, formerly Beginning | the, commencemients of the Northfield - Seminary For Girls, Bible addresses for the summer guests are held nearly : every. day until the stidents' return again in September. The present season has been m many tory of Northfield. The students' con- | the speaking was of a high order. The, \work done by the students in the: classes was thorough and i’arreachmgi in its results, but the chief feature of _ the summer has been the daily ad- - dresses by the Rev. G. Campbell Mor- gan, whosfllls a place entively his Own. , Mr. Moody. excepted, has exerted a' stronger influence than Mr. Morgan,.\ Mt. Moodys 'succéssor inevangelistic work, first preached 'in the Moody Bible mectings at Chicago in 1896. claims -the title of successor to Mr.. Moody. He believes no one can fill 'the place made vacant by his death. Last year, With the sanction of W. R Moodymson of the evangelist and | the directors of - the Northfield and | Chicago schools which bear Moody's | name, he came to America to take the place.of the dead leader in the exten- | | ston and promotion of Bible study., Mr. Morgan's departure from Lon- occasion of a demonstration in: 1 City Temple, in which all denominaé : tions took part, and s led by Br. tions took part wa y | Press. Et resembles an open street car | Joseph Parker, Rév. Mr. Morgan is about forty-tour years of age, and in his peculiar; last few years of his life. nearly 100 acres. auditorium are under- the general older son of. the evangelist. in charge of the mectinfis fild at Rec- which Dwight L. \Moody is buriga. 'The work of managing 'the institu- rests on the shoulders of his son W. R Moody. This entails 'an enormous amount of labor. 1 the gchools, he 'must also raise each year the enormou§ suum of mony re- - quired for their maintenance. the cause. _ ; . , To all this isiadded the management sands of visitors, its great corps of This' difficult task 18 most satisfac A 60. Fifteen Kinds of Kisses. . * The monks of the middle ages divid- | ed the kiss into fifteen distinct and sep- arate orders—the decorous, or modest 'kigs; the diplomatic, or kiss of policy; | the spying kiss, to ascertain if a wom- | an has drunk wine; the slave kiss; the kiss infamous, a church penance, the academical kiss, or joining a solemn of: healing some sickness; the kiss of étiquette; the kiss of love, tho only real kiss.-London Tit-Bits. * resto For more thin twenty years the | Dwight T.. Moody and been influenced | | ed by the great revivalist for the 2111'- [ < & - 1 pose of Bible; study. aoa s : R \Yo tomronté inwhichg. he. Northfield season b. j \Tocated than by making itself. a | June . #1 center, a social settlement,, such { t respects the most important in the his-. ference. was the largest ever held cand U ; Itis not too much to say that no man, - Rev. C. Campbell Morgan, who is l Rev. Mr. Campbell by the way, dis-. . fthe tutor of Prifice Ching, the prime jof young Chinamen who were gent by ] the Celestial government to the United | States in 1872 to study American 1 methods and laws. He studied at Phil- fa valuable representative of China in | Novel Observation Car Used by Ca don, where he occupied the pulpit of | :the new court chapel was made| they geld | ._ One of the delights of the visitors: I to Northfield 1g, the beautiful.situgtion;, | of the buildings of 'the three schools. The institution was started in 1879 by | 'Mr. Moody by the purchase of a few ~acres of barren soil- on a group of. bare, | . Sandy hillocks overlooking the. valley | of. the Connecticut This was grg du-] ally added to until today it comprises | Foday the semiiiary T surroundings are beautiful with 'tich sward and towering trees. l. During. the session of the Bible 'con- ference several meeting aré held daily, ; at which the foremost. preachers may : 'be heard. 'The meetings in the big“ the- . The: I younger son, Paul, who has recently returned from L‘urope, where 'he has. [ been studying in theological schools, is. reation hall on Round Top, the Kill on |f, gong and at the same time clears | the indicator on the starting fence for | tions founded by the evangelist now | In, ad-, | dition he edits a magazine devoted to- of the Bible conference, with its thou- speakers and the many details inci- | dent to providing for A great assem- 1 blage during three months of the year. | \Fhe immediate care of the thousands: “of guests who attend the conference | falls on Ambert G. Moody, a cousin. | You have fill latighed at children for isfa [ \pretending\ in 'play. torily performed. - Visitors at North n field have a choite of accommodations. . One may occupy a tent on the beau- tiful campus or be provided with quar- . ters which compare favorably with | 4 the best mfitropolitan hotels, | to be the roughest of all. slipper kiss, practiced toward tyrants; |} 'the judicial Kiss, the feudal kiss, the , \ religious kiss (kissing the: cross), the | - 'brotherbhood: the hand kiss, the Judas I 'Kiss, the medical kiss, for the: purpose | New CHINESE MINISTER, to American Ways. 'the popular Wu Ting Fang, is no / eral years here ag & student at Am- 'the oldest families in China, which means a great deal in that country, |_ Until recently Sit Liang, who is 'BIR LIANG CHEN TuNa. minister of China. Sir Liang is a wid ower, his wife having died about a < year ago. for the present, it being the policy of | the broader idea of western c1v111za- I tion. « Sir Liang was one of a large number lips academy,. Andover, and later en- E fered Amherst, but 'before graduating I | was recalled to China. At the time it was said that the boys [were getting too much Americanism, | | He had absorbed many western ideas . | in the meantime, however, and took | them back to the Celestial empire. _ Sir Lang's e#ppotntment is* due, It is; said, to his knowledge of the United [ States and his education on the lines which have made Wu Ting Fang such the United States; He is fond of Socie. ' ty and, It is expected, will do a great' | deal of entertaining in Washington. It: 'is stated that he will assume his duties {about the first of the year. ,~ Sit Liang was sent to Englard as the | special envoy of the emperor of China to King Edward’s coronation NEW RAILWAY WRI N KLE. nadian Pacific In the Rockies. _ clfie Railway company has Just put. into service, says the Philadelphia 'and will comfortably seat fourteen per- sons, although possibly tiventy could. be accommodated without crowding ; The seats are upholstered in leather, 'two ends are plate glass windows, thus: affording unobstructed views of the} o electric gasoline engine, and a speed of renty-five miles an hour can be at- tained. - \ New Signals For Starting Trains, éd a new system of starting signals at ithe Union station in Pittsburg; says | tbe St, Louis Globe-Democrat. Two. | minutes before a train is ready to | leave the Union station the assistant | station master notifies the train di- | how am I1 to live happily mm a rector at the Fifteenth street tower by | but ho : raising the hammer on éither of 'the . by causing the hammer to fall against | the track. The ticket examiner at the. at the tear of the train starts the trair by one blast of a signal whistle. Im- station the train director at Fifteenth 'The system will not | 'the public by the fact that two min- start. The First of Tis Kind. The peacé agreement between the | British and Boer deaders is typewritten- and is probably the first instrument | .of the kind, gays the New York Even-. is described as being in a \fine clerk- ly hand.\ The others are all} some- : what rougher, and Delarey's is stated | By the waym he splits his name into three syllables, The next hardest thing to getting up in the world is to keep from gettmg Ldown, ~ \W'or‘!'e For the \Politicians. \Do you think that sugar is unwhole- some for children?\ asked the anxious | : parent,. \well answored the physician, \my | [ observation is that it isn't likely to do children nearly as much harm as it does politicmn‘ \-Washington: Star chore oue a nes Sir Liang Chen Tung Is No Stran’rer i Sir Liang Chen Tung, whom the em- | {peror of China has selected to succeed ; stranger to America, having spent. sev- [ herst college and othor educational in- - : stxtutions. 1. Sir Liang is a man of fine education- | al attainments and belongs to oné of . now thirty-nine year$ of age, was | It is not believed. that he | | will bring his children to this: country | the higher class Chinese to have their ] children well grounded in the Chinese \| idea before opening to their knowledge | The latest wrinkle in railroading is . l4 motor car which the. Canadian Pa- F visable for magnificent scenery in the Canadian | | Rockies, where it will be stationed for | \the use of vusxtors at Banff and the 1 other resorts in the mountains. T The motive power is supplied by an 1 The Pennsylvania railroad has adopt- | gongslocated on the riser of the plat- | ~ form adjoining the track the train is | . to depart from. 'The train director at | Fifteenth street ansiwers immediately 1 proper time closes the gate and clears | | the starting signal. When thestarting feignal has been cleared 'the - flagmga Besides managing | mediately after the train 'has left the | 'Street restores the starting signal to a | normal position. only serve trainmen in making prompt | dispatches of departmg trains, butalso :| utes after the gong rings a frain will | ing World, Louis Botha's signature | thus, \de la Rey,\ while his redoubt. | Able colleague of the late Free State | . -* signs himself \Christian de Wet,\ also . Cbs | with a sinall d;\ f ; P eree‘s Golden Medical D - f\> Child Memories, _ Just two little pattering feet, Just two big bright biue eyes, And a smile like the. April sunshine Chasing the clouds from fhe skies. Just a little warm hand in mine, Just a sweet little mouth to. kiss, Just a sound of merriest laughter And a. cup ‘running over with bliss. Just two little shoes in &. drawer Laid by with reverent care; Just a faded old childish portrait And ag lock of golden hair. Just a few broken toys in a cupboard, Just a dolly all tattered and torn,. But a stab through my heart when I __ see them. ~ And a. pain too deep. to be borne. ' Just two little feet run on before, Swift to the Lappy home; Just a child on the threshold waiting And calling to mother to come. ~* Just a dream of Joyous meeting 22 And an . cager welcome home .; Just two little outstretche And n glad cry, ble: A PROPHE 1G I The Peculiar Ring That Was Owned- by hiarquise du Barry. Marquise di, Barry, whose lovely f head fell into the basket beneath the guillotine in expiation of 'her lev1ty, f A extravagance and folly, had in her pos- session a stone of which the Paris Jewelers were unable to tell the precise nature. ' There Appedireéed upon it below the surface and as if under water an out linge of A picture containing human fig- ures. Strange to relate, when first the gem was given to its afterward unfor- [tunate possessor this outline was not ~ cclear, but after it had been some months in her possession it grew more vid. © One day the negro boy, Lamor,. who- was afterward instrumental, from re- J- venge, in the downfall of the Du Bar- | ry, declared, looking at the jewel, that | he could decipher the figure of a wom- an with disheveled hair leaning be- |fore a scaffold and surrounded by a crowd, while beside her stood the exe- _ L cutioner A strange but authenticated circum- stance is that the negro servant boy precisely described the guillotine. Dr. Guillotine had not then invented his selebrated instrument of death, nor yun. Snatchmg the jewel from the hand £ the gervant, Mime: du Barry exam- érowd, the death knife falling, and, with a ery of agory, fell sense. less to the floor Lia-ht on an Did subject. O1d Mrs. Hubbard, several years aft- | er the poem appeared in prmt describ- 'ing her fruitless visit to the cupboard in search of a bone for her poor dog, was speaking of the incident to her ] next door neighbor. \In the first place,\ she said, \it wasn't worth making a poet about, get it right. 1 saw the dog was hun- ijgry, and I went to the iccbox and got 'a nice plece of raw beef for him. I don't feed my dog bones. And if I did I wouldn't keep thein in the eupboard. The cupboard wasn't bare, either. It was just as well filled as anybody's.\ \What do you suppose made the fel- llow say you went to the cupboard?” asked the neighbor, \He\ couldn't think of any other [rhyme for Hubbard,\ replied the aged ] dame, lighting her pipe with a fresh Legal of fire. | puff) make me tll‘Gd'”—Cthfl“‘0 Trib- *These (puff) poets (puff, une. 0 The suniuie‘r Girl. . \Everything is arranged, dear,\ said the happy young man who had sched- a new combine, \and by this time tomorrow we will be one,\ \Fes George,\ answered the fair 1 bride to be; \but. when it comes to ice there is a movable roof, and in the | cream don't you think it would be ad- you still to order two lates?’ —Ch1cago News h Optional. \Say mai!\ **Yes, . Reginald.\ \Kin any little. boy be président + when he grows up?\ \Yes Reginald.\ \But say, ma!\ \Yes Reginald.” \He- don‘t have to if he'd ruthér be 'a first base man, doés he . olis News,. - What “to - lilo. > Belle-Re has money, you know. - Emima- ¥es{ I apprecxate that fact, man who is my inferior? \Don't let him know it.\-L The man on the stage who does the : trick of escaping from firmly tied ropes, | submits to the bonds with a smile. | knows he can get out of the ropes that are being knotted. Put the sime man in 'the woods and let Indian captors bind | him to a tree for torture and 'he would struggle to the last a, gaunt the bonds. When the stomach is diseased there 'are bonds being woven every Hour about : the organs dependent on the stomach- heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, etc. The olly of mankind is to passively submit to: the fastening of these bonds with fo . effort to escape until the pain they cause rce’s Golden Medical Discovery lise of the stomach and other f digestion and nutrition, - It i of heart, liver, lungs. kid- neya ind other organs, when these dis- |origin-in the diseased stomach, \For a long tune I was suffering and was ' hardly able to get about,\ writes Mr. Andrew J. ennings. homas, Tucker Co., W,. Va., Box $94. “$115 bothered with kidney trouble and my whole system was out of \order; had no petite. 'A friend of mine told me to try Dr. Discovery.. I did andthe first boftle restored my appetite, 1: too six bottles of 'Golden Medical Discovery\ an 'some of the ' Pleasant Peliets' and feel. like & new person,\ . b Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets had the horrors of the revolution be- - ined it, saw the kneeling woman, the- {angry aled to become the freight paying Lead . th 2T and, in the next place, the man didn't o ceases, as is often the case, have their °