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0% - JP‘I' 25, 1902. m: mo. 223. Time Card. GoInG 'NoRTH, ica ie0 se e a sean e® HODE: FACEORY, ~ cooper-stews“ - aoma soars. perstown..........i.... resecescscse 8 . opaFactoty. eséoncissse cesses - O P cae ces ree see see s exes see a oe e a aaa 6 wesp reer ® WGE ONOORNEBRL ..» ccs ies ens BK . ONOONE® ave seee sous ease C ~ . And- avery hour thereafter Last car leaves Oneonta. at 10:30 -p. m., and only | part flam-to pay: i f runs .to ° Hartwick. . Last. car l6ave6 | go certain famil! Cooperstown at 11 mp m., and only FURS | oy to Hartwiek Ar No. 10. Oneonts Local........... Nik & No.~ 2 Saratoga Express...... 9.3mm. 'D: 'No. 8 Boston Express... sees 10.54 am. | No. 19 Milk ... 12.35 pm. 12 No, 4 Boat Express. M 54pm No. 6 Passenger .. « NO. 14 .. .cc. . »«» .. 1220 um. FOR THE: wnsr. No. 15 Binghlmtonlhoca No. 1 Pussenger .... No. 7 Chicago Expr No, 17 MH... .....+ . No. 18 Pass«nger... & 8.20 an . 10 0am. 10.05 am .| 10.30 pm. 12. 40, pm | 'No. § Chicago Express. No 19: Pass gr; Sundays: oaly 11.00am. Trains 8, 18, 6, 17 and 5 ruin on Sunday. Time. tables showing local and. through train service between stations on All divisions -of D. & | H. system-may be ebtained at all D. & H.- ticket offices. I « 0. v. R. m. . To Effect June 16, 1902. TRAINS SOUTH. \ No.1} No.5 No.7 No.9 No. 1 | A.M. AM. AM. PJM. PM. Lw Cooperstown .... «8 00) 8.55) 11 851 3 25| 5 45: * 'Phoonix Mills ....86 12 8 00| 11 41] 3 3t 5 51: ~ Hartwick Se wiltordi..........884 9 10] 11.53) 3 44 «+ Portlandville..... 4> 0 25) 12:04] 3 54 F 7 [ 9 $51 12 15) 4 48] T 10] 9 12 17 «<7 20 10 On| 12 27 it-Davenport.... lo 15 12 31} A: Davenport Ctr... 10 23] PHAINS NORTH. 6 € 6 2 No. 4 No.6 No:. 8 Roseanne - wt AM. Pc 2.x. Ar Cooperstown -85{ 12; As l’hoenlx Hills ..10 29} 12. 13 * Hartwick Sem 2|*12 Or ’ uni]. ....lOl ji*4' Returning. leave and:6:7: ect at =o; solid FROM Bmanau'ron wEST, 1 30 &a.M ‘Dsily—‘Bniralo and Chicago sleepers. . lly—Limited. arrives at Buffalo f.- ail ly-Fast mail. arrives at anflo Chicago sleeper, (also Ithaca. con | “except Sunday—Local stations to | m --Ohservation parlor car, diner, id St. Louis. sleepers,. also Ithaca \3:12 - 13:1): Buffalo, Clevelan and Chic.go. EAST. 1'25 mm Dally—Sleepers for New York, also: 4:25am .Daily—Sleepers for New York, also coaches Dmiy—‘lcranton, New York, Philadel- | ad south diner, vest-bale! drawing rvioeandre lar-cogches. cept: Sunday-¥esatibuied coaches: cars: for New York, Philadelph & Duily-Locat passenger. . sily-Fimited ,- net-yobseryat one 'car and veatibirled. coaches. - ew ¥-rk and Philadelphia.. 5:55 p.m., except Sunday - -Local passenger.. 1: 453. 3-4 Daily’boaches and sleepers tor New Yor Traing. for Utica and intermediate atations. | .' 4.503.m.‘and4'00p dally-8:05 s. m., and. 55 p,: except 80 f For yracuse,, Owex nd Intermediate ata. tong, 5-00 R.: 20 and 3:25 p. m. -daily-8 15, A: M-» and 8 m. except Sunday. For information jegardjing rates, routes, Feser . vations, etc., apply to-J., ‘licket agent. ughamton. . n‘ F Pass. Agt. ©. J. QEAKENBUSH. D. P.. As cET ESTIMATES | FOR YOUR The latest style of New Type, exper- ienced workmen, good stock, the. - -__ jowest prices consistent with good work, and the: job. completed. on time. As. we pay cash for stock and labor, work must be: paid for “hen taken. Stranger: firpqulred to make | sco Watterson sCaustic Criticism of not bridge. .t | Kontm menus-re: of ‘wn’ I at“ 8.12 pm. s'ze‘fim high: . 120 pm. l-iOpm the No. 8 Chicago Ex 1cn....'.'.., 6.83 pm. 703m . cage a seee zolgm. 2.06 am:} \ f ..‘617*904*1145*338'53.: 5‘ est \Daven. | Daily-Through coach. and aleepera:| - | aqua 'C, there were then, as there still area und that genteel comfort breed f eti F'scandal and: travel without adventure, | | ing celebration of his papal jubilee re: ceive a present which so far has never Serum“ ) . Bimith, Lackawanna | N w York's Four Hundred. :00 a m | NOT influential GOOD §00IETY. ; me- I 4 20 . . > - clky Colonel-Editor Points Out ug. ye; Well born gentleman, p wivant. who lived us. 7, volity; an aristocracy without a. coterie de Rambouiliet F ‘t'eq'na from Icucumbers the dinners were An tues worth what they p B were dull, ~ but respectable. \the abode: of © In the beginning it was high backed attain.“ and habits wholly unostenta— insult you perpet , {It vas all on account of mov‘ing up- It began with the sudden Mu. B. M. TINDAL‘I): Miles. swam”. sold o. | beutai jmatter how rich, turne ~'and gave them the middle of the road. |. | The tragic end of Fisk was for a time | Tan object lesson,. It let in a flood of | fiend signed for deedsof: stream; slight and. gave a moment's: «check to the | U cation & grand chamberlain; . “escribed, as Mr Dooley recent“? | set describe as the \bourgeoisie.\ In separating the sheep from the I. , | goats and properly ticketing the goats | shall ‘phemy? son # in lives singular- T y the sweat of his brow money _, I a character and 'a value, | | goes backward., 'The assumption of to- | | day,. becomes the claim. of tomorrow. | i In@ lind where-there-are no patents-of | f ‘nobility and where In some sort. money ] must set -the standards the rich them- T. i Zgor modern France suggestiVe» as these | I may be. Heds but g poor observer of I grimy and passionate, And left rider- . leas, a monster without a head. 1\ It is' beside the purpose to say that | | | there are rich men humane, generous, | 1 |ebaritable. So are there poor men pa- | wise,. conservative. \forces not individuals. we shall have | < ]] | to deal, and, though temporizing may postpone the day\ the- day is surely ' tfcoming when it is to be decided who. J |own the country, who control the gov- . I | ernment - the aggregations of wealth | ' | mainly piled up in a single ection or | _| [the hewers.;of wood and the drawers of | 4 | {water who do the work and fight the ‘ubattles and pay the taxes, the great h E s “E SMAR T SET tjjl'fi'OWnstone fronts, fs like one to an- | 'I difference between Crow whisky and other as 'two of a kind, and they lived exceedingly well. -They could. tell the rainwater Madeira. They played whist, But about the time the equestrian statue of the Father of His Country I went up and the palings around Union square came down and the order to | place his head to the rising sun and | nis tail to Dr. Cheever's church\ was Issued the nouveaux Fiches of the war came upon the scene. *** already started to accumulate, for- .| tunes to be~multiplied, millflonaires to: become as plentiful as blackberries, 2 Ecommon—not only common in quant - ty, but in quality likewise., Central - | park was made to the very hands of I these. That they should build their adred, it was his ; bla- .,grandiose palaces near it was inevita- In the early seventies New York's Fick] Four Hundred 'had. conie neither to 1d their patrimony nor their patronymic. ' \{| tien of class auperiority Too Be Ztlce of organized - money;-- percolatingr !'what is called society for pleasure, cor- ' e Ado brazen and noisy perhaps. Dt it undeniably rich. The men had not' \yet learned. the stony stare~sand the | swagger. of the bucks of the | : | Jardin Mabille aind the titled . me | of theArgyle rooms. The women were . { still women-God bless themi-a little | { vuligarized by so much Toney, but ig-\ t he imaginary lines 1 the:mind's éye of a.. norant of the pinchbeck airs and: ' graces. of the demimondaine and : the . unspeakable dirt of London and Paris. . Yet then. ag now.: the | beople. no silently aside orgy \of license which was exceeding. tits natural bounds and beginning to ‘make 'Itg influence felt in dangerous . figproximity to thosé regions where . lzwealth WAS recognized as paramount. . It was this which of the Stokes the modifi: . ' garians, who, given money ' enough, Z/ | set up a voluptuous principality, call \it the Four Hundred and, having made - . sure of its boundaries: and their isola- - | tion, proceed to make their own moral | code, hardly deigning even to ask the | rest. of the community, \What are you 1 . | going to-do about P\ +, —to extracting sunbeamsz' _The seagoing palace, the modern au- i to. the struggle: for equivocal notori- c ~_ety, the strife For titles, the eating | @ | from the tree of forbidden knowledge, | the aping of the manners of the for-: cign swell and the fancied great, the vmarriage as an experiment mnd .the sult of pleasure at home and abroad- | inshort, the constant striving after the . -- ostentatious display of wealth inevita- | . ble to. the sun worship of money-these '* are among the features that distin- gulsh the Four Hundred from other. | stch people, who do. not need to affect | ;any=thing, . who heartily despise. such . ;and positions, fixed, liye without &'] but whom the wantong of the smart 'one - be accused or bias—- Back of all this stands not alone a great moral problem, but a great na- tional and economic problem 'The s \| pretense that we have maligned any- x may fairly be called good society |: neot hem of being of the [ F ¥ C r | paper apologists to hide 'beliind the '| gelf respecting and the virtuous., It is) 'body or spoken outside: the record 42 & ° device of the guilty and. their news- of 'the of ~caste distinction - and the good along with the bad to the- uillotine Licentiousness, like revolution. never selves, before all others, should: 'look ° | to it that their colleagues in good for- 8 l tune do not disgrace 'the order-shball - !I we say of the Golden Fléecet-by their | ®! aisregard of common rights and their -_. | Andifference to public opinion. [ .do not need. to institute any his- | ai:to take to ourselves any,| Ancient Greece and Rome . contemporary lfeand no prophet at al} | .} who does not see that the whole trend | | of public affairs 1s set toward: an ult}: | mate conflict between the forces - of | prerogative, on the one hand, and the I ip: | forces of what the exclusive: few de- | - | light to call \the great unwashed\ -on. | | the other; between capita 'too often pvarlclous and grasping, It is with A Boy’s Wild Ride For Life. Brown, of Leesville, Ind., A and. Tung g’i :00. , Trial bottles free at: R. P Hattmck and all drugglsts « hks a lance s, % i+ Pour 4§,;i.‘ [many of the worthy rich CL 'taken sense of association make with |F \ these, is replete with evil auguries. _ | & Human nature bas not much changed | With magical rapidity wealth had | 'since man became acquainted with It. T tains 8,600 equare feet. ' end is toward the south, and the point. ; | marriage of convenience. the 'Hot pur: | . ind steel, | proceedingéa, who, with-fortunés secure E hbag taken -Cartello ten -yearg . terrupted labor to complete He writes: \I now - 'Like mar- | «commonality - of what Abraham Lin- T I coln called \the plain people.\ L¥ C> 2 Enlightened men would moderate |@ @@ that conflict. The scandalous behavior | & of the conspicuous: rich plays difectly | $ I to the lead of the extremist and the | Y | agitator, with unclean hands preparing | ¢ the pickax of the leveler fand the brand | | 1 of the incendiary. The indifference of 1} 'the guild of luxury and wealth, not to [! mention the common cause which too |:@; That we are yet upon the ascending. not the descending, scale of national development need not be denied, but | {we live in an mccelerated age, elec | tricity having annihilated time and | space, and, the Latin races doomed, | ? | Spain dead, Italy dying, France- down with an incurable disease-the causes i'before our very eyes—shall we not Beek to escape what seems to ~have t : been the destiny, not so much ot urgendwwth'lsths' & rupting the fountains. of 'the national credit and honor for profit? GREATEST OF Fl ATiRONS -The Lntest and Queere-t of New: York's Big Skyscrapers. Probably the part of New York that: Is attracting most attention nowadays from both visitors to the city andna-. - tives is the corner of Broadway, Fifth ] avenue and Twenty-third street, where: 'the \flatiron'\' building has just been, erected. This gigantic structure is one . of the architectural curiosities of the world, being a tall, massive building: | Ferdict from | $ fideatb to a short term ot Amprison:, | ¢ I 'The noxtous weed, however, 'had tak- | 2 { en-root. The bucket: shop was. to be-. | come an institution, 'the stock gambler ta power, ther- market as famillar to itWomen as to men. Mr. Carnéegle may | 1 give all of his millions to the noblest | | works, the Medirs., Rockefeller may en- | | gow a thousand schools and charities, |- while a dozen. billionaires may show\ by their wise and. lavish use. of money | _, | how 111 they think oC It except as the | _| means of doing good; but; as the poor |- / Jare. always with us, so, are. the vul from a mis } S with it, ' fiassociatlon. ently had not long 'been mar- lied _The girl had not yet lost | a air of trlumphant possession . ot a few weeks wear, the» EJust. made of common flesh ke other women. Sweetle lef . what., Dickie L ' i 5115.0“, and presently they settled it by getting partly what one liked, part- [ {ly what .the other Hiked, which is the | 41 | best possible way of settling matrimo- . Tniat differences y bride,. with' large eyes, delicate face | and the: perfect American girl profile. | I She was tastefully and rather expen- ] sively dreased too. Bo far all was as She finished luncheon : Ahead of her husband. 'Then she made Sweetle was a pretty it should 'be. a break. in good manners that was. as .A fathomless chasm. She picked up the table napkin and in the eyes of all mankind : deliberately and carefully. wiped and ipolished her pretty teeth | Then in a volce purposely, | ltoud, nasal and strident, in which the | crudities and unculture of generations. sounded, she said: \Dickie when we 'come here again we'll go to 'the up- | stairs dining room. They are such a | common, low set of people that eat | down: here}? That gir} must have been - brought up in the same family as the I well dressed young man next me in a | -| train' who: sat with a toothpick above: t. his .ear; put there like a pencil 'for con-. f ~venience for use at intervals! # H _ The National Boot and Shoe Work- . 'ers' union. has a woman organizer to |: travel among her sex employed in the | #2 # hal | It is not; enough to have no bad hab-. § | its: It is even more necessary to have ;| some good ones. # # It is now acknowledged that King . H Edward’s «safe recovery from his des- NEW roaxs “nurses\ nornnmo. ' | of trinngular ghape. It stands upon a bit of . land shaped like a flatiron. .. whence it derives-Its name- - .> _ The \flatiron'' building is twenty-one stories. in height aud towers 285 feet. above the pavement. Each floor con- Its broader of the fiatiron looks up Fifth avenue. 'The structure is composed of stone} is of the latest approved | fireproof construction. and cost $1,500, 000. - Viewed from the north, the \fat . . Sron\ building resembles nothing Bo 1 much as the bow of a gigantic ship. A WONDERFUL JEWEL. Extraordinary Tonal Which Is to Be. Given to the Pope, Pope Leo XIII. will on the approach been surpissed, says the New York. Times. It is a topaz found in the mines 1 of Mings Geraes, in Brazil. This stone. I weighs no less than 1,784 grams, but what doubles its value is the work | ° which has been expended on it. 'One: of the most skiliful lapidaries in the world, the celebrated Neapolitan. - Professor Andrea Cartello, formerly | director of the Naples museum, has en- graved; in relief on this incomparable | gem a figure of Christ in the act of |/ where the rule is touch one, touch al}, | breaking bread at the last supper. It l a rule which during:the: reign of ter- T | ror brought thousands of the innocent.. unin- destined for the head of the Vatican, and he has spent no less than - |: $80,000 in diamond dust to accomplish ' the work. 'The topaz at one time belonged to the bouse.of Bourbon, It passed to M. Ni-. colas Cartello and Mme. Ermengarde ' Count de Caserta; The datter, 'In a let- ter:ito the Duc delia Torre, said that the |. work 'of the engraving so much sur- passed the: value of the that he © left the artist's family full iberty. to ; 1 dispose : the. wonderful jewel could. be offéered- of it, but he should be -hrppy f: by. the faithful to the holy father.: - - modern: Ger the Archbishop Guistrio Adami gand . | the Marquis ' de Balite Marlo: Foma: |'celll a committée has been formed to | - offer to Leo XIII..on his papal Jubilee ; this Jewel, worthy of any sovereign, The committee is desirous of receiving . * | contributions from Catholies: In all ' | parts of the world to enable them to- © purchase it f An Artist’s Mustache. 'The mustache was not viewed with . I favor in England in the middle of the' last century, An anecdote ig told of- the late Thomas Cooper, the English artist, to illustrate it. He wasg brought: before a magistrate in 1846 on some minor charge and was described in the police report as being \fashionably dressed; with fargo mustaches.\ The: ~LAll right. - | the new woman all round. dred. girl telegraphers. in the Western | ' Union offices sent her a petition asking | I Ing to~a for bélr g alive. is Chef | 'The director of the: National museum € | at: Naples, M.~ do Petra, expppsses his | opinion as. follows: \This topaz: is. the :| most exquisite example of \times of engraving on: hard: stone. Un- 'pérate-iliness was largely due to the | indefatigable care of the noble women | | trained nurses who watched over him. | Maybe, women's services to-j { the human race will be appreciated by | and by: =. Le « n # =| \ ~élen-Gourt t85-earning - that their pay 'be raised and sctting | forth reasons why this was a Just and | reasonable request. People get helped | who help themselves. Miss: Gould took the matter into consideration, with the | ; ,\ result that the women received a sub: | 55 N stantial increase of galary. a i Girls. noti¢te the 'poor old women whom you meet every day, feeble, | awkward shabby, stumbling bodiés, [ | with thelr deprecating, ignorant, \'fraid smile,” 'As though they were apoligiz| all mankind and the Almighty |. 18 and to \lean.\ Aims 2 # ; restaurant the other day I sat pposite A young couple who evi- | . | two days : [| One day a western crook was on a Here it Is: Two hun- | They were satisfied } to remain weak and' ignorant and tim- It was too much | uble to be and do anything else. Is | this ”hatyou are coming to? ' 3 SToRIEs OF w. F. HOWE | Toothgome Mixtures Which Are Also 6 | Some That Are Told of the Famous Criminal Lawyer. |gRow HE ALMOST SHOT A JURYMAN \Ti‘WGll Known New York Attorney : 'Once Carried His Realism to the - Verge of Tragedy--Odd Experience With a Crook-His Successful Meth- ods In Winning Juries. York, the famous. criminal lawyer, at one time narrowly escaped taking the 'life of a Juryman in the court of gen- | | eral sessions in New York He was | speaking in defense of Alexandér | Huppe, on trial for __arn that after all their killing Frank Kretchmap, says a Chicago exchange. The pistol with which Kretchman was | slat lay on &A table in front of Mr. Howe, who in the course of his ad- bFA4 C ht it advisable reins-aste- A| to the jury} how the tragedy, according T to the de ense, occurred. He showed } 1. & how the two men stood 'and then, rais- | |. \. “Now, gentlemen, to make this mat- | ter perfectly plain, I'll pull the trig- gel. at Attorney Davis, springing to his feet. \That gun's load Lawyer Howe turned as white as his ; L- shirt fromt and sat down in a half | | dazed way, realizing how near he had | fm-~ come to blowing a hole in the juryman | | at. whom the gun had been pointed. | /f 'The late Willliam F. Howe of New ‘ \Hold on!\ yelled Assistant District | SEASONABLE SALADS. Quite Inexpensive. Salads are among the most appre- clated of disles at this geason, and they can be prepared in such variety I that every taste may be suited, ~One {- of the popular ways is to select large fine leaves of curly lettuce and place | on them Several spoonfuls of «peas, | | chopped beans and carrots cut into fancy shapes: The saladis then chilled, and the dressing consists of vinegar, | . pepper, salt, oil, mustard and, if pro- | curable, a tiny dash of table claret. Cauliflower and Onion Salad.-Slice | for an hour. Serve with The latter tried to smile, but the effort | { € was a ghastly failure, and it was some}; minutes before Lawyer Howe was able to procee(l. Huppe was convicted. of manslaughter and sentenced was concerned. He loved to He always wore several> far as dre wear A c p William. F. Howe probably appeared | in more than a thousand murder cases, | says the New York World. He was 'one of the most picturesque of men as | thousand| dollars' worth of jewelry. A. Hig handi solid gold. : never in succession. 'car-4in which Mr. Howe, who had been trying a cage and was very tired, had fallen snatched. Mr. Howe's valuable diamond pin and ‘anded it to his partner, who | said the New York thief I son with salt pepper and a tablespoon- ful of anchovy paste and add to the | | prepared vegetables Toss lightly 'and - turn . into the salad bowl. f‘That man will have to defend you be- fore many days are passed,\ 99 ° When man, who said: 66 7 column—i In the trial 'of a case Lawyer Wil: lam F lutely 'the New York Times. Gifted with a. Howo's procedure was abso- Folce of unusual range, he could paint | a. word picture with remarkable Imag: | mul ute 0s iffrect and at the fame time en- | A Few Timely Hints to Women-Al- | diflogue with consummate art. | every dramatic: possibility : troom. In his famous of Ella Nelson, who shot the ' had played her false, he- stopped sud- denly in the midst of an impaesioned : appeal. 'The prisoner was seated next .to him, heavily veéelled in black, her} head buried 'between her hands. Mr. Howe. unexpectedly wheeled around,, seized. her wrists, quickly pulled them apart and held her arms distended so t t her| features were exposed to the: gaze of he Jury, exelaiming: |_ R “Look at. hose features, proclaim{n A newspaper says that some New.” | York brokers: have decided that theyg 'will not allow womento buy and sell}, stocks 'and to specilate through their offices. ful! a R Buffalo 18 a good city for women. It |. | has fifty lady physicians in good prac- | ' tice, at least one woman who is mak- | Ing a fortune in the pickling and pre- | serving business and public spirited feminthe associations that possess two | + of the handsomest and most conven- | Tent women's clubs in the world. Per- haps . Buffalo is near enough to Roch- [ eater: for its women to be inspired by | de .Ciritits Castro, who offered it to the . fGenm‘ Susan B, Anthony. a H. mam, . ng ”its; When there is a wedding among | td your Friends, send always best wishes. I 'Wait till the pair have been married T and fave lived happily ten years. 'Then _send~congratulations the heartiest. # i It has: been brought to light. that that. great man, Professor Gottfried. Wil-] helm had one of the lightest | weight brains on record. There is now - | hope.,for. women, lan't there? & a At the summer school of the Univer- | sity of California more than half the . students were women;, and they came] from nearly all parts of the earth, par-. 1. ticularly 'from the far orient. The new | woman ig moving all around the world. . ~* - _ i% # Art Journal of the date, commenting PH | p it, said that \no member of the Royall, gcademy perpetrates the atrocity \of |: «<mustacbes, a most un-English affecta | tion.\ I the academy a few years later. ~] - With family around expecting him to-] miri meni 1B dig, and a son riding for life, 18 miles,. to I {get Dr. King's New Discovery for Con- Id. physlclan as he felg the 'pa- sumption, Coughs and Colds, W. H.. the old. physicla s he felf P endured\ death's agonies from asthma, but this j . (wonderful medicine. gave instant relief: ' {and soon cured him. I sleep soundly every night $) | | velous cures of.Consumption, Pneumonia | | Bronchitis, Coughs, Cold#and Grip prove | [is. matchless merit for all Throat and troubles. Guaranteed bottles 50c Mr. Cooper became a member o A Change Suggested. - \What is your occupation?\ asked tient's pulse. \I'm an opera singer,\ was the reply. “Ah'” exclaimed the M. P. \Wha . you n you try singing in a church eéhoir.\= Chicago News. a #whallow pool either the mud lying at the bottom or the Image of the blue ' sky above.\ is a change of air.\ Suppose From Bir John Lubbock we takethis Jp ennobling thought: ' \You may see in a _ Dear, dear, but this is dread | ; | friend > f badly affecte | &csh.and pure, nbn c Brg immer = nter a plea of mur der in the secon . But the ury round her “not guilty.\ srnenuous in GenERrosiTY | Story or Detective William. Cralc'. Open, MHeartedness. William Craig, Président Roosevelt’ late bodyguard and the victim of some € one's carelessness in the recent acc dent at Pittsfield when the president. | was injured, was one of the most ge | erous men in: the service of Uncle ‘ Miss Theresa Torgatsch is now Bu- |, ipel'visor of the German teachers in. the I for apublic schools of Chicago. She is Ger- | nan: born and university bred and | T noted 'no less for her knowledge than | [for her teaching ability. Her prede- | for | cessor in office was a man, Dr. Zimmer- | ost... | ispendin his money freely among friends. A few nights before he. ,“Wait; £3 minute, Jim,\ he said; \I . \What for?\ asked the friend. nt you to tike a necktle with | me,\ an awered Craig. ' want yfiu to come. in here with me. \I w The friend protested that he had all where . Craig's expense. . \Tis. Better so. her ideal. Condition Serious. Visitor (at insane asylum) - These are bad cases, aren't they? . Guide-Yes, sir; this is the pingpong | | ward.-Town Topics. An: American: syndicate ig said to be| ting for the purchase of the' negoti; fpachg. keeps LION coma} 2 rou arate n nce , Moxie in volcano Popocatepet! for the: pose of securing. its sulphur de- numbers and raw tomatoes hard boiled yolks of four eggs through ' 'a sleve into a bowl and mix in care- | 'The western crook it. Howe alighted from the- car, he was met 'by the New York | : French dréssing. itinctive and inimitable, says | egree. thinking: con: [-R viction for the higher crime certain; 'I board boxes.: ried to and from the train, 'the neckwear he wanted, but Craig, | tion to this. a small alligator skin bag I ' who was a physical glant, grabbed 'his | ind. forced him into the store. . e made him accept a tie at: . checking of your baggage. Mae-Every woman cannot marry | FEthel-No, and I presume it's Just. as well that she can't. Ideals are sel- | 1 dom good providers -—Puck Miss Myra Lloyd Dock of Harris- | burg is- A. member of the Pennsylvania - forestry raservation commission «and. one of the most accomplished botanists , My! | | fellow passengers. I C Hemorrhages of Lungs . C “Sev ral years since my lungs were so} (L at I had many lrhages.” writes 'A. M. Ake of Wood, Ind | @I took treatment with several physi i fans without any benefit. Ithen started | § | to take Foley's Honey and Tar and my: lungs are now as sound as a bullet, I. recommend it in advanced stages of:lung. A [trouble.\ For sale by all dealers and *at Rufus P. Luce's, Hartwick. omer - 192 mew aoi. glistened with diamonds. | | | Even the buttons on his cap were of | | d. The initial letters on the { 'buttons were set in diamonds. His | | neckties were remarkable, Mr. Howe | - wore the same sult of clothes |- fully Add ot and vinegar enough to with sliced eggs, beets cut into fancy | owe, some f ool stole your pin. shapes, gherkins stuffed olives and the | Please excuse the fellow; L heart of a lettuce head. Fruit salad may be made with any ] freon ~#fralt herved~ on lettuce with | This always should | R | the earth now favors anmial life, but it «@ will probably not be so a million years |- be-chilled beforeserving. BEATRICE MILLER. How To TRAVEL. ways Dress Simply. _ It is when. she is traveling that you: -can tell whether a woman is a lady or ' not-iIn fact, never so much as then. |- | To be a good triweler is an art that | only few acquire, but it is worth culti- : vating if only for the sake of the im- ' pression a woman makes. | , , In the first place, let me urge you to dress simply A dirty train was never | intended to be the place for the exhibi- I tion of your best hat or even your see- ond best, with its wreath at flow¥£5 the cream should be only slightly sour. 1 a hat: especially | J designed for the: 1 occasion, a rough |. straw trimmed ‘ , feathers. {In a smart nan: j ner, with a cou- la chic ribbon} , bow. gevere effect as ~ A sure to have the \ | ends neatly hem- | \ | med. . A plain [ Al dress covered} Uwith a dust}. cloak or a sim- | Re ublic. | pie, beautifully | _ p I tailor | -- with a | shirt | f fitting, A made, sma rt waist, is the | ] proper costume. | 4 Your dust coat: ° A BIMPLEPEFES- - may - bo of Sil ~|'or mohair, just as you. please, but ° must be plain, without frills. ' Do not carry paper parcels or paste\ A plain leather or can- | , Drain the | Orpament | § ple of wings or | 'To soften ; 'the somewhat: well as to pre: f from the dust\? a. loosely ed chiffon veil. und | churning done at the right time the j butter will become solid and be easily SHORT STORIES, ® The charge for a dog taken to Europe en the main lines of steamers varies | from $10 -for a lapdog to $30 for the larger animals. The old receiving ship Vermont, whose keel was laid in 1813, was | burned at Eastport, Me., recently for : the- metal in her hull. It 1s said that almost every steamer | from the HKawailan Islands that arrives on the Pacific coast brings hundreds ~of Japanese laborers. A natural soap mine has recently ' been opened up at Ashcroft, B. G. The two Bermuda onions rather finely and | MAtet!A! in which the active principle soak them in a little salt and vinegar - Have a cooked cault- | flower thoroughly chilled and sepa- [ [rated into small sections. onions and arrange in alternate Inyers | I with the cauliflower, 'French dressing. . : Harlequin Salad: -Cut into small | '~cubes red beets, potatoes, pickled cu-u, is borax is being taken out by the ton. Rev. J. H. D, Inckrey of Cambridge, ; Mass., is trying to secure a building there for a home for colored students at Harvard. Itis to be called \Emancti- | pation building.\ Artesian wells made possible the growing of melons in Colorado, crops Being successful several years running, 'and then a sandstorm came along and cooked the melons on the vines.. || ' Because they - objected to its noise : | same residents of Paterson, N. J., bur- ; | led a churchbell recently after it had 7 | been taken down pending repairs in | \the church. 'The congregation later dug I it up. Bt. Louis enjoys the distinction of | furnishing & French audience when- |L ever a Frenchman of eminence visits \I: that city, who can understand and ap- . preciate what he says. land New York are the only other two {cities in the United States that can New Orleans do it. | - DISAGREES WITH HOUGH. | ProfessorDoolittle Doés Not Believe Mankind Can Exist In Mars. \When be says that Mars, Venus and Mercury are inhabited, Professor igh prpbably means that he would to believe they are,\ said Professor oalittle, the University of Pennsylva- astronomer after reading the Chi- R dlspatch in which Professor rough declared it his belief that Mars, s and Mercury were inhabited by n beings far superior to those of his . world,. says a Philadelphia dis- atch to the New York Tribune. \' \No one knows what the conditions on the other planets are,\ continued Professor Doolittle.: \We can only guess at them, and that is what my friend Professor Hough has done. My lown opinion is thet there is none of Rub the 'the human race on any of the other planets. If any life exists there at all, it must be of a lower order, according to my theory. Accepting the conclu- . | stons of biologists that the laws of life are as universal as the laws of physics candchemistry, it seems impossible that any life can exist on Mars or Mercury. 'Those two planets are many millions of years ahcad of the earth in the process of evolution They are more like the | moon, a solid, frozen body, where wa- ~ter and air do not exist. How,, the could any except the lowest .orde animals exist there? Everyth hence. Then the carth will have prog- ressed to the stage in which Mars, I Mereury and the moon are now, and this will be nothing but a cold, frozen 'mags of metal without air or water. Life will have disappeared \ \DAIRY NOTES. Good butter should be solid from the time it is put upon the table. Any excifement in the dairy cow tends to lessen the flow of milk. Failing 'to get all the buttermilk out causes butter to become rancid soon. To obtain the best results in churning In winter the cream should be warm- \ed up to about G6 degrees before put- ting in the churn. One advantage in brine salting is that it almost entirely avoids streaked or mottled butter. ~ The milk should always bo skimmed : while sweet and the cream then allow- ed to turn slightly sour. Sometimes butter has white specks distributed through it. This is caused by oversourness in the cream. In butter making next to controlling the temperature is to churn often while the cream is in good condition. With temperature under control and handled. On the farm to make the most out of ''the milk and butter some of the cows should be 'bred to come fresh in the pring and some in the fall.-St. Louis A woman’s RISHK rapeze performer is greater than a E 'She must bave a man's courage f man's. muscle to succeed, . But sah t: also work under conditions of which 'a 'man knows nothing. Many d. to women actot lats inust vas dress suit case will hold alt your w belongings, and it can egelly be car- is sometimes useful. Try to arrive at the station in time. |: to purchase your tickets in a lefsurely | fashion and to attend properly to the. In addi-} - This can | 'be done if you mse a little forethought. | ° « Above all, keep your presence of mind Before I close I want to make one | more remark, It is about the woman | who buys everything which 4s sold in | ,. the car and passes her time munching | ° | candy, bananas, sandwiches and pop- | corn. Buch a proceeding is both inju- | rlous to the health and disgusting. to | v' pi 6 If a woman can | not think of anything else to do, let | ,, her read the magazines. HELEN GLIFTON. Believed in “Turn About.\ One day mamma told Milton that he f - was older than the baby and must let} - the baby have his toys if 'he wanted 1 them because the baby was the-littlest. | : Milton was very good and went in [ gearch of other amusements all day. The next morning we beard A cry | from the children, and, going to find { the ecause, Milton was found endeavor- | Ing to collect all the toys in the room | 'and at the same time keep the baby | away from them. Upon inquiring 'the { \trouble Milton said: | 06 \I let him: have my toys and be the | clo littlest yesterday, and now I'm going [ ta be littlest today.\——~Little Chronicle. “mes Cures: female weakness. It makes- ake. A omen: strong and sick women teasure I write to-day in praise of Dr. , his medicines.\ says Mrs. Mary Con- A : Co., Tengu. \Was dise s¢; the back of my gould not lie in bed and I and then I would have waist down I could scarcel: ould; feel almo Pierce's Favorite i‘or I took {our med:- ousework and help Words cannotexpress fee.\ y letter, free. All as strictly private li’ Address Dr. Senge Medical g .more than a thou- apot free on recaipt expense of mailing “tent stamps for the 24: gaqmw poem ”my, “waif“ wfi pase