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sya Time Card. gong NoRTH. ,i cease ense ser senare rere r ns West. Oneonm................ . 6:30 a m South Hartwlek............ sek. HAREWIGK 22. cie ccc ces cree £ 190 8d Cook bummlt...,....... wease isl. $:0086. some. soUTH. COOPATSEOWNM..« .s eee casses - Di Hope Escher, fe a CRHRASO .» 1 60 cess. cas een ece ie e O3 Cook Smnmit....,.. .. Harthck South Haltwmk saiesessesesressssise Mt. ViS$IOA..;... .... is ss Laurens sex «lege cle ale s a seasie aersée: as essas «+sges0ee- Oneont® ...... .. And every hour thereafter aléaves Oneonta. at 10:30 p. m., and on'!y tuns oto Hartwieg. Last . car to Hartwick No. 18 Oneonta Local... No. 2 Sgratowa Expres No. '8 Roston Express. 1 NO. 19 MUR «ys ccc cc cesses 32295: - No. 4 Boat Express.... ..... $ 3 50 pw .No. 6 Passenger ... & Sl’pm. in; . 14 P. seenger... 6+ ' FOR THL west. : No. 15 anghamtonjboml «eas No- 1 Passenger .......> No. 7 Chicago Exp No, 17 Milk... i...« No. 13 Pasanger.. f No. 6 Chigago Exp » » 7 03pm No. $ Chicago Express.. «_ 2.06 am. No 19 Piss'gr, Sundays 0: nlv 11.04 am. 11.0 ° -am Traing 8, 18,6, 17 and 5 ran on Sunday. Time tables showing logal and through frain ) norvice between staitons on alt divisions of D. & H.system may be ébtained at all D.& H. ticket | oifices. Oflfll‘flkfl'lflwx 0543.7 ll. » In Effect June 16, 1902. TRAINS SOUTH. No.1 No.5 NoT No.9 No.11 A.M. A Tv Cocperatown .....6 00| 8.97% 11 351 8 25) 6 45 * 'Phcanix Mills ....8 12] 9 | ip 41] 8 81} 5. 51 \- Hartwick Sem...*8 17!*8 ¢ ’ 5+ Milford .....=....-8 «+ Portlandyville.....8 48]. Ar Junction..........7 00 Lv Junction.........-7 10) </ +s W. Day. (U & D)..7 20|1 «< West Davenport.. . Ar Davenport Ctr.... + . TRAINS NORTH. 'No. 4 AM. P 1004354615 PP 4 18] 6 24 og ** Phoenix Mills . I0 29 **.. fart ck Sem. *1023 5+ M v. (C) T. at Wast Davenp't\ his ‘Davenport Ctr. #: 4m an signal. 6 p. m. | Reiuitning, leave. at. 07a. m. snd 6:7 p.m.. Trains with -U; &: D. trains. FROM BENGHANMTON ° 1:80-@. Ties Daily—Bullion and Chicago sleapers. 3:00 A., I ., Daily—Limited, arrives af Buffalo 745.8. m» 800 A. M., Daily—Fast mail,. arrives at Buffdo ~ _ . p. m., Chicago sleeper, (also [rhsca con- net 3:25 p.-.M Dali ¢-Ohservation. parlor car,.diner, Chicago an connechon. ~ 8:42 .p. M.. Dally-Thro for Buffalo, Cleveland EAST. asd Chic go. 1254. m , Daily-Slécpers for New York, also ,. conches. 42 R... M+ Daily—Sleepers 'for New York. also | coaches. ll 155 g..m., Daily=-Scrantan, New York, Philadel: yestibuled drawing | phia and. south diner, I room. gervice and Treg ‘r'coacnesr 11 :0)@. m, . except . Sunday—Vesriholcd coaches. rlor cars for New York, Philadelph a | -Local passenger. Zflslp.m Duly—Limited. diner, observation , pastor car and -vestibuled comches, Scram) ton, New :Yerk and Philadelphia. . §:5% p. m.. except Sunday <Loca! passenger. | .. | ally-Coaches and sleepers tor |; 145 p. Mm. New York. Trains for Utica. and mtermednfe stations. 47:50 th.. \Wes f .and 4:00 p tions,. 5 :00 a a. m., and 8:10: p. m. except Sunni y. For information regardin@:rates, routes, reset I ply to J. L. Smith, Lackawanna: . vations, étc ., a Ticket agent, Binghamton.. 'C. W . LEE, Gen’l Pass. Agt. B. -Q AKENBUSH,D.P A. A? GET ESTIMATES 4 FOR YOUR JS\ 1 ~ (1. e ' aoa erves The: latest style of New Type, exper-l , «; enced workmen, good stock, the lowest prices consistent with: good work, and: the job completed on time. . As we pay cash for stop 1 and labor, work must be paid for when taken. eaves |; g Cooparstawn at 11 :20 p. to., and only runs .[ ..pmj . A.M. PDL PM.. No.6: No. § No.10 Noadé PM. PM. PM.-PM. | Cooperstown ... ;10 85 l\ 2m 1 40| 4 50, T. 20\ 0 erstown £ r Phoenix Millsf t p tary of war. \4 and S8 connect 'at Wost Daven © Roosevelt read the letters. . the affairs of state, reading the heart || “stow of a pretty baker's daughter. | Then it was that his face softencd | . his sceretary. he signed it.. * Lammert, the deserter, is free and . with his faithful little wife: St. Louis sleepers. also ithaca | a Po anche. ___ tion}. 11. ‘15 sa. m., except Sunday—Local stations. to |. Buffalo. . sh coach an sleepers; Strangers W111 be required to make a deposit when: leaving order. R sd 8 I Dr. ileg’m Remedies,. \l .|earbon By PRESIDENT] _s f'l‘oothsome Mixtures Which Are Also . Signs a. Document That Ref 7:00 a m | 7:15 a m.| I 30a m unites Soldier and Wife. | Private Lammert Deserted, Was -\ | For tile, Love of a New Jersey Girl _| wedded, Arrested and Sentenced to: |. L Pal-”o , but Released on President's With A smile of tenderness on ' his rugged features, President Roosevelt. dictated and signed a pardon for a de- h B sorter from the United States army, \ 8$0a m] Last car‘i says t \ New York Journal. On his desk in his Hbrary at Oyster“ : were spread & dozen or more blue | 'The | © [ cubes red beets, . s or paper and envelopes “Theodore Roosevelt.\ {_ » | The paper was a pardon for Rhine-z, : hold Lammert, deserter from the Unit- [ ed States Amrmy, sentenced to three| | years' xixnprisonment in Castle Wil- { A | Hams, lGovernors island. } ._ It meant very great happiness for | i the writer of the letters. on the blue I mignoneétte seented paper. When Lam-| | . mert. enlisted and was sent to Porto] | Rico, all because of an outburst of [ 4. fiery patriotism, he found down thereff, | 2 | in the; tropics that 'he used to lay [ - awakemights staring at the big, silver | -] moon, utterly misérable because hel! | couldn't forget a very pretty: girl of: | the name of Auna Kimball of Green- | | ville, N. J. So one day he secured the | fdlscharc'e papers of another | | | and back to Greenville came Lammert, } | and there was a wedchnq. €reenville's | . : local newspaper printed a very pretty? © + notice about the returned soldier and, | his bride. ; Somewhere near Greenville the pa- | f . { per fell into the hands of a bronze | T faced yl’orto Rican campaigner who | wore epaulets and who remembered | . Laimmert as a deserter. mornings afterward,, as the pretty tride was pouring Lammcit 'his break- fast coffee, a corporsl came into the | house and put & heavy hand on the de-. s _;.L gerter.| \ The bride, left alone, wept and was- Lammeért was sentenced: | She went to Washington and tried to. seo President Roosevelt and the séerb- Then she wrote to the. president. She got polite replies from |. [ secretaries, but she 'kept on writing to: I the president. miserable. Finally the secretary told the president about it, and. M. and he gontly gipiled. He smiled all ' the while he dictated the pardon to |, He was smiling when. Might Use a Telephone. rated into small sections. Not many | dress simply.. btAbUNABl—b SALADUS, Quite Inoxpens-ve. Salads are among the most. appre- | ciated of dishes at this season, and | 2 op they can 'be prep-tied in such variety I that every taste may be suited. One } g “HEART SOPTEKEDBY BRIDES PLE Al“ the popular ways is to select large fine leaves of curly\ lottuce and place [ on them several spoonfuls of peas, ~chopped beans and carrots cut 'into : fancy shapes. Thesaulad is then chilled, and the dressing consists of vinegar, |. pepper, Salt, oil, mustard and, if pro- | curable, a tiny dash of table claret. 1 f Cauliflower and Onion Salad.-Slice 1 two Bermuda onions rather finely and Soak them in a little salt and, vinegar ; for an hour. Have & cooked caull- flower thoroughly ehilled and sepa- onions and arrange in alternate layors with the cauliflower. - Serve with French dressing. Harlequin - Salad.-Cut into ‘otatoes. pickled cu-' PREPARING THE VEGETABLES. cumbers and raw tomatoes. fully. turn into the salad bowl. with gliced eggs, beets cut into fancy shapes, gherkips, stuffed olives and the [ : heart of a lettuce head. ’ Fruit salad may be made with any ji‘resh fruit served on lettuce vith . 'Fronch dressing. | be chilled before serving. He forgot | . This always should | DEATH.“ D NI rLLER HOW TO TRAVEL \ Few Fimely Hints to Women—Abe ways Dress Simply. It is whon she is traveling that you ean tell whether a woman is a lady or [- . not-in fact, never so much ags then. To be a good triweler is an art that only few acquire, but it is worth cult: I vating if ouly. for the gake of the im- } pression a woman inakes. . In the first place, let me urge you to | . A dirty train was nevor | 1 intended to be tlhe place for the exhibt . ~I tion of your best hat or even your see- . datly-8:05 &. t... and? \ tormndiate sta- - .m. daily—sun ‘l . - . . ; Pie—Can't you hear how- my heart 1 , beats twith love for you? l She-If you sat a little closer, perhaps Of C I could -New YorT Journal. The Aflront. - \Tut \tut Yop are not going to: it | tightM 1 - \I ain’t? Didn’t yer jest hear him call me er 'blamed eristocrat7\-Life. Mb— LC or mohair just as yen please, but 1t : ~ | must be plain, without frills, . Do not earry paper parcels or paste\ A plain leather or can- | vas 'dress suit case will hold all your {belongings and it can easily be car-. t ried to and from the train. [tion to this, a small alligator skin bgg | As sometimes useful Try to arrive at the station in time» I to purchase your tickets in a leigurely | {fashion and to attend properly to the | r. condition?” ve up from exhaustion aches,, backaches, 'and ? : No need to mention the de- c floor condition\ to. | Are you re your strength and hen # {Brown, of Leesville, € death's agonies from asthma, but this | I wonderful medicine gave instant relief {and soon. cured; him. He writes \I now impro cstoutlve Nervme. I am grateful ceived and recommend the Nervme wholly : on its merits as a nerve tonic and restora- ' tive.\>-Mrs. P. M. HocoBoom, Dalton, Mass.I ts: sell and guarantee first bottle Send for free book . Nervou# and Heart Diseases. Ad Dr. Mules Medical Co,. Elkhart, Ind. wand Lest, with its wreath of flowers or feathers; Wear: [ a hat especially designed for the 1 in a smart man- J ner, with a cou- 1 ple of wings or 'a chic ribbon : bow. /l the somewhat ¥ the brim, but be +] gure to. have the \V I ends neatly hem- | A plain f | | imed. it dregs covered ' ple, . beautifully fitting, \ J mads, smart vaist, shirt 1 board boxes. poor wea ened | | corn. ~ -/ Your a summonses. \may-be of silk checking of your baggage. This can 'be done if you use 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 I who buys everything which is sold in 'the car and passes her time munching candy, banangs, sandwiches and pop- % Such a proceeding is both inju- | y | rlons to the health fand disgusting to [ fellow passengers. 'not think of anything else to do, let her read the magazines. If a woman can- HELEN CLIFTON A BOy’s Vélld Rido For Life. | With family around expectin g him to \die and & son riding for life, 18 miles, to | 'get Dr. King's New Discovery for Con- sumption, Coughs and Colds, W. H. Ind.. ;aleep soundly every night.\ Like mar- velous cures of Consumption, Pneumonia varonchitns. Coughs, Colds and Gripprove is matchless merit for al} Throat and Guaranteed bottles 50c Lung troubles, dress ; 'and $1.00. Trial bottles free at R. P. Luce By wHartwmk 'and all druggists. . Drain the : small | Toss lightly and iJ Ornament | © geécagion, a rough |: straw ~ trimmed. To. soften | . was refused them. severe effect as | \L will have my degree,\ said \Miss |C frp) well as to pré- | gerve your hat I wear a loosely. itied chiffon veil | M: draped around with a dust. cloak or a sim- tailor - with a ' is the J'proper costume.; In addi- | endured. Rub the |- hard boiled yolks of four eggs through | 'a: steve into a bowl fnd mix in care | Add oil and vinegar enough to | make the dressing lke & cream, sea- | | | son with salt, pepper and a tablespoon- | | ful of anchovy paste and add to the | IMM - prepared vegetable RE - their course. a -time, but when the women squght to | [obtain the degree which was the just | : was ready. : done\to prevent her securing ft. Real ' ly sometinies one cannot help wonder | 0st { ing what sort of judgment will- be | dust cO@t |- meted out to men for thelr - egaturies |, long persecution of gifted, Women, Tof ; glastie - © re fA Woman |} Pressdent _I-o-wowwww-mew-Mi ip [ N the bricf sketch given in the en- | cyclopedias of Dr. Mary Carey Why did she what me ner pf woman she : own sex in the second. y 'E, Garrett, to whom let ,,ali girl students be. grateful gave $320,- | =A 1000 to Johns Hopkins to secure the ad- . / | mission 'of women. They could,then | compete for ' | Thomas entered as a student I guages. She soon found, howeve 1 not yet were girls there on equal terms with men, for they were not allowed | . to enter the regular classes for fnstruc-> | tion, but must get their learning pri- | rately outside as best they might. | its degrees, Sf lan- Then M. Carey Thomas migrated to - Europe and to Leipsic, in old Saxony, 4 I refusing to take a dégree from an f I American university that was so un- ; | fair to women. At Leipsic she and a 4 1 friend, Miss Gwiun, | three years, the only women in 'the de- .] partment of modorn.languages. 1 second year of their stay the Prussian | Vgovernmcnt made a request of Saxony . -| that it close the doors of its university | E to women students. | some Russian women taking the med- (l feal equrse at Leipsic were suspected | Q of: beln\ socialists. were students: The ' Thomas, président of Bryn Mawr | c6§ college for women, it is noted that..) After obtaining her diploma - of |« 1 A. B. from Cornell «university she stud- | 3 icd a year at Johns Hopkins universii ( ag ty, then went to Europe and was thrée | ~. years at Lelpsic, then for a time at, Gottingen, again changing to -Z f I Switzerland, before taking fini \degree of Fh. D., for which 'been working. 'so many tlines? The reason and Miss | 'er, that | . eral 'pécurity. 'The tailor takes \his | This was because |. But nobody de- | ' phansg' home in Bloomington, TIL, says | a 'specigF from that place to the Chi- [ ~} cago Record-Horald, to the post of best; | gunner in the United Stites navy is the R ‘Jump‘ of Lietitenant J. M. Poyer. f story is. an interesting one. ha- Ga Gris GaGa % Aitorm Causes Perturba» om, the omcers. so\ Few will escape short | 150 expense for the latest ssness of trying to: col- ilitary clothing by suits ' 11 ge six months salary to get a | 1 proper outfit, > = -This tailor has adopted a shrewd de- vice of. securing his debts 'by : insurance policies An officer opens an account| and then takes out an insurance policy, for $2,000, payable to his own estate, and plédges it with the tailor ag'collat- | note forthe balance due from time to | time, charges 6 per cent interest and. ; lets the thing run. If the officer inher- | its & legacy from his aunt or marries : ~a. rich: wife, he pays, as a rule, as promptly as possible, but if he is killed in action or dies of cholera the creditor doeg''not have to lie awake nights won-. dering where His money is coming 'from. ~Méegnwhile his investment in. ; the officer is bringing him & cumulative | Income. The ouly person who suffers | 'by this arrangement is the widow. From ORPHANAGE To FAME | ;.Brilliant Career of Lieutenant Poyer,' Best Gunner In Navy. From an jnmate of the Soldiers Or- The A chance rof Judge (then Congressman) | Thomas F. Tipton: of Bloomington tof he institution in 1877 resulted in his |. ofice iof: the boy. He learned that | young Po r was the son of a Union | Soldier killed during the war. His] mother had died from grief over they oss -of her husband. | Judge Tipton was fible: to secure his |'appointment 'by Président Hayes to j the Naval . gcademy at - Annapolis. 'f against the oppositit’m of the Lilinois | delegation in' congress, who had se- {f § .] 1écted another:youth. - ~. . Poyer' graduated fifth in his class., T jSince then his career has been bril- | ' Hant. «He performed a heroic rescue | ~ :| of sompsinmates from A burning build= | -] ing at Norfolk, Va. He gradually at- | f' tracted . attention to himself by his ac- | ~ | gung | Inthe navy. ris & phrase now familiar in the navy.; {Q'He had‘a conspicuous part in the re- 'M. COABREY THOMAS, PH. D., &. M. Queer world this. At that point in the game some of the professors at Lelpsic did a remark: | able act, considering they wore in. a | Of stite school under a government of | raid - militarism. They themselves had been | ULN . so impressed with the brilliant attain- | & ré ments and gifts of the American girls | that they personally faced the Saxon I. parliament and said they . would not | put women out of their university till . the two American Iadies had finished . reward of their devotion to learning it Thomas. w | She applied for it at Gottingen. \It T is not advisable to give degrees to wo | ; men,\ the faculty said. \f ¢ \Poyer's shooting\ ent na #1 maneuvers.. He has been' © of the four guns in the for-! tot of the United States bat- © ~f tleship. Kearsarge. ° + © manded the doors of Lelpsic be shut | ~ ' against men because of the known‘: b masculine socialists among its stu- | - dents. : The lieutenant and his men are thei cenit target practice of the ships: ¥ dt Higginson s squadron they | t ee bullseyes with one of the' s formerly considered a great | treat to heal Judge Barnard indulge in 'his favorite habit of wittily \chaffing\ That settled it for the {f ‘ yers 'and law Glerks who at- tended“ his chamber to procure orders. - orning in a crowded court-} all boy was noticed 'by the ' féqulck‘ yed judge passmg up papers 'in- : i to the bar from applying to ' for orders. From Gottingen the girls Journeyed apé on to Zurich in pursuit of that'degree.*} I1 At Zurich Miss Thomas continued her [._ . researches 'in modern: languages. At. the- Swiss institution of learning she | C prepared for examination in Anglo: man literature. In eight: weeks she Even at Zurich everything short of | positively refusing her a degree was. begin, the examinations were oral and ] { in presence of all the Zurich faculty; ' These learned gentlemen even med-: : dled with;the matter of the candidates' | attire and ruled that Miss Thomas must appear béfore them in full. even- ing dress, with train and white gloves. In that, for the occasion, absurd and - ] uncofmifortable.costume MZ Qateyfilhom- as sat three hours/while the 'profess- «Ors plied her with questions. the hard- est they could think of. She came of | triumphant at: every point, andthe | ; professors were then her most enfthu-> They gave Her the . highest honors in their se R . : , R BACS n thelr power her d6| | 'wopid rate because times are prospér- gree summa cum laude, and from that ] day to this Zurich grants Gegrees to . women-on equal terms with meh. Fol-. lowing Zurich, Dr. Thomas studied a[ Iwho bave formerly taught would, - own land, where she - hag been ever | : 1 since identified with Bryn Mawr, first . as dean and professor of English liter- year in Paris, then returned to her ature and, since 1894 as its president.: ° MARY. EDITH DAY. \2:3 * \She smiles. go sweetly when one: sends her a bouquet \ \¥es confound ‘it no matter who «ends it!\-Puck.: DPundonald Aboiishes the Sword. The Harl of, Dundonald, the new [ =I\. - commander of 'the Canadian militia, | 8 ~ 'has Just issued a sweeping order abol- - ishing the sword as a cavalry weapon,. says a Montreal dispatch; Mounted troops, Lord Dundonald declares. must. '- depend for efiiciexiuy Oh the rifie, and' he recommends that officers and men. [; fit themselves to obtain musketry cer: .| ftificates. The carbtfuées now in tise will .: Tbe replaced gradually bx rifles. w- rimes, ¢ . Saxon and English, also in Gothic, old |! . and middle high German and in Ger- \iw o‘anmittea you?\ said the judge, | rand AB. the boy innocently responded, | “turning toward the door and indicating - 'the Adorkeeper with his finger, \That | ' gentleman at the door,\ the assembled | gilawyers fairly 'gereamed in their laugh | 'ter at the judge's overthrow - New | York Times. - cording to Superintendent Barrett. of the Towa department of public in- struetion, only oné-fiftieth of the At- | tendance at the county institutes in } 4 Iowa this Summer has represented the | I maleelemcnt, ' portion .of female teachers to rales in the institutes has been as about fifty | In other words, the pro-. to- oné. In one institute Of 125 there | way one lone, solitaly man. In anoth- | cer institute of 195 there were 191 fe-} male teachers The explanation given by . Superintendent Barrett is plausi- 'ble, \The male part of the teaching population,” he says, \is decreasing at ous, and men see they can make more money in other lines. If times should,. change for the worse, then many men, | : brush up dgain, obtain certificates, at, i tend institutes and go back into the : schoolrooms.” Because 9 P RE Just tho pure codes-bean. - p ' Bécause:the: seals ack ] ago insure | -| curate work in firing. the thirteen inch rhages, [THE WORX OF PEARY What the Intrepid Explorer | i seat in the TUuited Stat is Congressman Charles Curtis of Kan- sas. Through a most romantic career | Has Accomplished. ‘THE GEOGRAPHY OF GREENLAND.| Important Additions to the World's Knowledge of the Northernmost Land-The Track of Polar Arctic | Explorers Strewn With Graves. Some of Those Who Have Perished | In the Search For the Pole. | While Lieutenant Peary, who has | .Just réturned from what he declares: [to be his \last dash for the pole,\ . failed to reach the goal of his ambi- | tion, it is believed he has contributed | as fnuch to the fund of knowledge | about the frozen north and sacrificed; farther north than anyuother =Americirn I explorér has penetrated.. . Tieutenant Peary brought back. with | 'him perhaps the most interesting col- lection of curios. ever taken from the | far north, which includes Eskimo ca- | noes, sledges and implements of all. kinds, a musk ox, a walrus, ten of . the dogs which dragged Peary's sledges | over many a weary mile of ice, and a hundred other curios, large and small. 'The Natural History museum will } reap a rich harvest as the fruit of . Peary's-labors, for he has skins and | skeletons of all the animals which are hanted in the barren reglons. seen with two horus was shot by one of, Peary's Eskimos at Cape Sabine. graphical knowledge, surveying the northern limit of the Greenland archi-z pelago so that it may be mapped and completing the task of deterinining the } Shape and extent of Greenland, in prog- |- regs since the Norsemen . nearly 1,000 years ago. His part in the: whole includes the survey of a part of | the unknown coast of Melville bay on | the west coast; the determination of | the extreme northwest coast and- of: the entire north and northeast coasts -as far south as Independenée bay andf :the rectification of earlier surveys, making important changes in mapping . narrow -channel leading | through Smith sound to the part of the | Arctic ocean washing the northern | the long, shores of Gréenland. In addition to his [ coast work he has traveled 2,400 miles | on the inland ice cap, defining its | northern 'termination, and has twice; extending | - farther gouth the mapping of its west- He will henceforth be} . crossed - JG'rz-innell Land, ' ern Shores. known as the ploneer in extreme north- | ern lands, the one who went beyond\ 'the ancients called Uitima Thule, as the northernmost -of the earth. inhabitable portions 'The Duke of the Abrugzi holds the: record for approaching nearest the which was seit to Peary by the Wind- ward on its voyage to bring him home. which was 86 de- in safety The record of the search for the pole sion. ! glong the cold trail. Some have 'been On Cape Sabiric is the solitary grave | of Professor August Sonntag, the as- tronomer, genius of the Hays expe- I dition of 1860.. Two bones and the skull, whitened by long exposure, are. all that remain of this hero. f On Littleton island, not far from the grave of Professor Sonntag, is that of Christian Ohlsen, who was buried : tion died while the Advance was win- tered at Fern rock. They lie buried in the little observatory there. {[ On the west side of Smith sound, at Baird inlet, George W. Rice of the Lady Franklin bay expedition is buried - An the Loe. Five gailors -of -the © Sip John Franklin expedition are also.. buried in the ice on Cape Babine. . ~ 'The grave of Captain Charles Frar- . is marked with a brass tablet. . It is near Thank God harbor, whereimlfl1 the independence lof Venezuels, when the latter country- obtained pos- | 'The Venezuelans say | that the sovereignty of their govern- i | ment-over the island was confirmed by he died Nov, 8, 1871. Wherever arctic expeditions have by falling over icy cliffs. | (Joni Vln 7 N cw“ Y curls State. Cogl has been discovered in the Sha- wangunk mountains, near Wurtsboro, ' Sullivan county, N. Y., about sixteen miles northwest of Middletown, N. ¥. | | The discoverers are two. brothers named Greene, who were miners in Penngylva- nia and who on account of the coal strike went to Wurtsboro and found: employment as woodchoppers. They noti¢ed pleces of rock that contained sulphur and looked very much like coal. They found just under the sur-. face a vein of coal eighteen inches: . wide, which became wider as they dug. The écoal is anthracite, but it ig net so- hard as that found in Pennsylvania, Cured Heme! rhages of Lungs | \Several years since my lungs were-s0. 'badly affected that I bad many hemor-] \ writes A. M. Ake of Wood, Ind E] \I took treatment with several physi <] cians without any benefit. I then started | | {-to take Foley's Honey and Tar and my} HMunge are now as sound as a bullet. I l recommend it in advanced stages of lung trouble.\ For sale by all dealers and -at Rufus P. Lice's, Hartwick. The | rarest of these is the two horned nar- | whal, the original of the unicorn. The only specimen which has ever been | | a-goin' to be the people's leader, pole. He réached latitude 86 degrees: 5 Peon ps 88 minutes north This was an item | : in the assorted news of the world | 1 Hall. { cold, T'll make it hot for 'em. | Peary's point in latitude 84 degrees 17 1 minutes is still this side of Nansens‘ I «farthest north,\ l grees 14 minutes. It had been expected that if Peary reached the eighty-fourth I . or eighty-fifth parallel that he would: surely accomplish another five degrees Tout of the state convention. there with both feet an' push in the s cus gmen that couldn’t get to the polis. The number of deaths, however, has | been comparatively small, amounting {f don’t mike any difference » .to fewer than 1000. Every man of | them, however, was a picked man and | a hero. Their graves are scattered all> 'been they have left in their trails iso- | soos ths hole lated graves of comrades who have died of exposure or have been 'killed INDIAN SEEKS SENATORSHIP Congressman Curtis of! Kaw Tribe Would Go Up Higher. An Indian is now a ca didate for a senate. He 4 he has climbed the ladder of fame from & poor Indian lad to'a position of | *** KSB prominence among national lawmak- | erg. He started out in life as a Jockey {on the race track, then \trained bron-. j . chos, drove a hack, swept out a law of- fice in pay for an opportunity to study : law, was admitted to the bar, elected | county attorney and then went to con- | | gress. Mr. Curtis, says the Omaha World- Herald, belongs to the aboriginal race world. His mother was q member of | the Kaw tribe, Mr. Curtis' mother | died when he was about three years id, and he went to live with. his In- dmpther mear Connell Grove,\ | grandmother is. mentioned in the treaty with the Kaw tribe in 1825. By this treaty she and her sisters were given what is known as \Kaw Milé Four,\ the tract of land upon.. which the city of North Topeka‘is now of land Congressman Curtis was born in. 1860 and his fine new house marks the place of his birth forty-two years ago. Of one incident of his childhood Mr. | Curtis has a very vivid memory. He home from school in Council Grove when he saw a war party of naked Kaws, painted and in war feathers, ' mounted on their poniesl swoop down: from a hill overlooking the town and dagh through it toward a hill on the other side. Mr. Curtis, u rehinlike; want | ted to know the why of all this, and one- In the past four years Lieutenant | Peary has added a good deal to geo- | of the chiefs paused long enough to - tell him that they were on their way | cout to fight their hereditary enemies, | the Cheyonnés, and to hold them back -from the town till they could fortify it a little. In a barn near by a large number of Kaw Indians gathered, and when the Cheyennes swept down through the town they passed this barn. A fierce shower of arrows stopped them, how- ever, and, leaving many of their - braves wounded and dying, they re-\ treated, leaving the Kaws victors. This was the last fight between these. | tivo tribes. Mr. Curtis' father thought . this was rather too strenuous a life for his young son, so he sent for him 5 go back to Topeka. |. - DEVERY ON HIS VICTORY Déclares He Will Occuny No \Cold Seat\ In Tammany Hall. \I've licked thein fellers Sheehan an' Goodwin an' done 'em up brown,\ said ex:-Chief of Police Devery to a New ; York Journal reporter in speakmg of his victory in the Democratic primary . elections in New York. \'They said I wouldn't get no more'n 500 votes. L. got close on to 1,700, an' the next time they won't get a look in. Now, I'm I ain't a-goin’ to occupy no cold -seat in Tammany Hall pelither, same as they gave to Sheehan when he was in the : If they try to make the seat “Now let's gee if Hill an' MeGuire an' Gene Wood are a-goin' to keep me I'll be door if necessary. I won out, even if I was up ag'in the dirtiest, trickiest. |politiclan in the state of New York. { Shechan tried all kinds of four fushin' to beat me. ; [ is a record of suffering and death. It | | has 'been going on with longer or | shorter interruptions: for 650 years. In | 'some generations it has been absolute- iy ignored, while in others the desire to discover the' pole and learn its Secrets has amounted to a public pas- [ Him or hig people even went so far as to send out cire'lars forgm my name to ’em, askin the peo- : pie to vote ifor Sheehan. saw through the trick and came out 'strong for me. 'was to frighten off about ©600- of my | The people Another dirty trick votes by fake challenges an' busuiess Aw, well, forgit it. I'm the leader now, an' This tribunal sat at The Hague and | gave a decision partly favorable to the.. ' contenti f bot tions. ' despoiled by huge burgomaster gulls, | ons of both nations I while others remain inviolate as when left by saddened comrades of the dead. | The dispute about Patps, which has accentuated the present controversy, . 1 became acute but recently. 'The island ; 'of Patos, or Pato, is in the northern { entrance to the Gulf of Paria and Hes. | near the middle of the strait which is | known as the \Dragon's Mouth.\ a few miles from the matuland of ¥en- ezuel@ and a little farther from the. | shore.of the British islan{l of Trinidad. - In an atlag of recent date Patos is re- | here by Dr; Kane s exp edition in 1853. lg'corded AB A& Venezuelan : 'Two other members of Kane's expedi- | It is. sland old, as similar protests were made by . Venezuela in 1859 and 1867. according to which Trinidad was ceded - .to England, and the British eonsider 'that the island of Patos is tributary tto Trinidad. Venezuela contends that 'the island was not mentioned in that: treaty and consequently did not pass . ' into the possession of FE mained under the sovereignty. of Spain | ~ ‘ escape from th: gland, but re- . known quantity: |-careful of is not to underrate them or, | land forming a rival combination, cannot compete with your railways, cory thousand, of ours. have- 80,000,000 people here and unlim- { sels. , men in the British navy. {all the men we want. F antiquated ships is also greatly 'ex- | aggerated. 'We have a few old timers o IL , but are graduglly gefting rid of the“ f! \_ 'I must admit, however, that,K»* \~ % | Great | .:Br1tain claims the island by virtue of | the treaty. of Amiens, signed in 1802, e Says; Ate Am Unknown Qnun‘tlty—vneaulness In Great Brit» _ ain About the Shipping. Combine. ~ Rear Admiral Lord Charles Heres- ford of the British navy, who arrived andis proud of the fact that his In- in New York the other day, I dian forbears were here when Colum- bus thought he was discoyering a new | 'and navies, naval maneuvers and the shipping combine. He said: WBS. asked for his opinion on various. topics ° and\ talked at some length on armies \I. have no more criticisms to mike | on our army andnavy. They have im- 'proved greatly since the South African 2 { war. j' Boer war of what great value movable heavy guns are. No country had ever been able before to do what we did- | I think the world learned by the. take heavy guns from warships and . use them in the field. built. In the homestead on this tract | ''The latest additions 'to our navy, submariné boats, are largely an un- What we have to be | then again, overrate them, We bave fire of these vessels, I think, and are was cight years old and was “comingii'usmg two types, one of which is the Holland. If the submarine boat turns out to. be & success, It means the key. to the' situation in the chanriel &s far as England is concerned. 'The only trouble with them now is that they are | not able to take care of themgelves: { They have to be egrried on warships | from place to place. © Warships in ac- j tion need all the room they can get. ''When you ask me about the ship-. plog combine, I must confess that we are a. little frightened. Not at the probabihties however, but at the pos- sibilities of such a combination of in- | terests. It is ridiculous to talk of Eng- We and it is well known that it is the through raté that pays. England would not establish a bounty or sub- I sidy con her ships for if she did you could put up a million of pounds to;ev- Then again you dted means. \Naval fighting is Hike army fighting. On shore you have the infantry, which can be compared with the small ves- 'The feld guns can be likened to the cruisers and the heavy artillery to the battleships. Forage wagons take the place of transports, and so on. \It is not true that we are short of We can get Our burden of bas gone ghedd of us in the f- she has taken her old ships ant . modeled them. An’ ‘ \I cannot make any comparison as to the superiority. of guns over armor, or ' vice yersga. While a shell might be able to penetrate a plate of armor set l in a direct frontal position, a slight .de- flection of the armor plate would ren- der' the shot almost useless. That is why, in time of war, so few of the shells fired at a vessel cause great damage. . Small armor cannot be rec- ommended too highly, however, A | bursting Shell, which used to kill a great number of people, has been ren- I dered less dangerous by this, smail ar- mor, which catches the fiying pieces. \The targét practice in which our battleships the Majestic and Terrible sunk the Belleisle taught us a lot about the different types of battleships and . their respective usefulness. Fized mor- 'tar batteries are, in my opinion, of no value shooting at a 'moving target. | No, I do not think they could hit a | ship moving at the rate of eighteen knots an hour or even at fourteen knots H . Dog Prevents a Train Wreck. ¢ Robert Wallace's dog prevented the ' wrecking of a Colorado and Southern freight train on a burning bridge near. Denver, says a special dispatch from ' that. city. © Persistent barking Awakened [ Mr. Wallace, who scolded the dog for disturbing his rest and went back to bed. The dog, however, would not be 'aulet, and 'when MF. Wallace arose again it ran barking and whining from the house. Wallace followed far enough to discover the wooden bridge on fire. He then aroused the agent in time to The controversy over [the island is Sas the hm“‘;j. i ,iWho escapes from jail is by no means free. t apd punishment is written over against He is under the ban of the law bis name. . Soon or .._ Tate he will b; F caught a 1 bear adde Those who the treaty signed in Madrid in 1845. | of Avs {They also point to the geographical | th position of the island, which, they de- | as clare, is less than three miles from the { Venezuelan coast. Rubbing It In. Phrenologist-Your son will die in jail. Mother-I am very glad to hear it. Phrenologist-He will live to serve out his sentence.-New York Press. never . Mining King Stratton's Generosity. Winfield S. Stratton, the Cripple Creék mining king who died the other . day at Colorado Springs, was upon a . certain occasion in 1896 appealed to. 'by Wharton Barker for aid in the sup- h port of the latter's silver paper, the American. Stratton immediately asked him how 'he stood on the income tax question.: Barker was staggered. Here was a man with an iminense income, and 'he: wanted a contribution from Stratton. \Well Mr. Stratton, I don't know. how you feel about it,\ Barker blurted: rich man ought fot to pay his share: for the support of the government in- - proportion to his wealth.\ ~ \Néither do I,\ said Stratton, and he gave Barker a check for $5,000. mm cn r Pd I I suffered from - very obstl sig,\ Writes R, | Ave:, Toronto, Ontario. \I tried a. I Per of remedies without sucéess. I . faith in them all, ¥ was so fargone that I could © *Golden , Medic treatment. I had deriv ed s0 much benefit that I | continued the medic : bottles and are convinced it 'has in my case ac- : coniplished & . tiouélé recommend it to the thousands of dys- . PSP out, \but fer myself 1 don't see why a/ penelgyyfor tempor- aryrelease, h - Dr, Pierce's Gold- -en Medical Discov» ery cures dyspepsia 'and, other diseases of the stomach and organs of digestion 'and nutrition, Its cures are lasting.. \For about two years: ease of - ia of“ a? K eat nun nally-lost Secord, - sot bearany sold fapd on my stomach for“? glue, felt melancholy and depressed. Co: sleep ar follow my anon (ttasmith). Some four months R; ncn recommended 'your Discovery After. a week's I have taken three ermafient cure. L can.conscien- throughout the land.\ Accept no substitute for \Galden Med- ic# Discovery.\. There is nothing \j : as good\ for diseases of the - blood and lun; % Sire Dr. Pierce sgzleasant Pelicts stigy *