THE 86BA2VTOX TMBUNE-SATUBDAY IXOIlNINtf,1 SEPTEMBER 21. 1895. 9 Facts of Interest . fd6meri: ; Readers, Symposium of Information, Partly Qrave, Partly Gossipy and Partly Qay. Harris Tl. Schenck, of Cltambersburg. I . Pa... write to the New York Tribune letter' In which he shows that the present tendency of the "advanced wo man" to don the garb of her brothers In the flesh Is simply a case of history In repetition. Says he: A famous Jewish "rabbi of Spain and Egypt. Mal monldes, A. D. 1135 to 1204. in his mt Important work. "The Guide of the Perplexed," Chapter 12, states that In the books of idolaters It was command ed that nlen. In the worship of Venus, the Ashtaroth . of the Phoenicians, tfhould wear the dress of women, and that women, in the worship of .Mars, the i-Moloch of Moses' time, should put on the armor of men. Macroblus, a grammarian of the fifth century A. D. cites UhllochorUB, who died H. C. 60, as statins the same thins;, and giving as the reason therefor that 'It was to nhow that .Venus was equally esteemed by botih male and female. It was not un common, Indeed, for the ancients to confound their gods and goddesses, making them sometimes male, some times female. Venus was represented by tine Cyprians as of masculine size, wealing a beard, carrying a sceptre, but pressed! as a woman. The Syrians wonhipped her attired as a man. The Romans ihad both a male and a female Fortune and an armed Venus, as Lac tantlus shows. I-ike god, like people. It was no wonder that the worshippers of such deities sought to imitate them as far as possible. This has always been true In the history of religions. So it came about that In religious wor ship these heathen were accustomed to wear a dress different from that prop erly belonging to theirsex. But the bloomer costume Is not with out Its defenders. Says the "Cleveland World: "The bloomer Is bound to take care of itself. The old women In the pulpits and out, on the boards of alder men and the sewing societies, who are worrying over It, might as well find something else to be nervous about, be cause they can neither hinder nor help women wearing anything that fashion decrees they shall wear. The bloomer, or its equivalent, la the natural evolu tion of- the freer woman; not because she Is any more of a man than she ever was, but because her greater free dom as woman requires habiliments adapted to her new activities. She has as much right to ride the bicycle as she has to ride on horseback, or in a car riage, or a street car. That being con ceded, her right to wear a garment that is not dangerous, dirty and inconveni ent goes with It. When her right to bathe by the seashore or river bank was conceded, the proper garments for the purpose evolved themselves. In spite of protests from press and pulpit, in spite of ridicule and denunciation, she donned a garb which left her free to swim and dive and did not endanger her life as her primitive bathing dresses did. Precisely the same stuff got It self uttered against the bloomer. But it won the game and now at all water summer resorts a woman without a - suitable bathing dress that was once stormed at and laughed at Is looked upon as a guy, and pronounced, as much of a back number as If she should appear In the dress of her grandmother on the streets. It will not be long be fore the new costume will be accepted as the dress for the occasions that suit it, and women will no more dare to be seen without it than they would dare to be seen at a ball, a reception, or dinner In street costume. Convention determines it. Women will strip them- swives to the hurt inch that lies between usefulness and decency and be as much respected as they now are when they do so in what Is called "full dress." Bloomers or the like have only to be come conventional to cease to attract attention. When they cease to attract attention they will cease to be sug gestive. If women had always worn short skirts no gang of corner loafe " would spend their ttme as they now ' looking at them lifting their skirts at muddy streets crossings. It Is suggest Iveness, not drapery, that Is scandal ous and lewd. If women can stand the rldjcule that has been lavished upon their absurd fashions, like the hoop skirt, the pannier, the low-cut dress, they can manage to endure the stupid talk that Is aimed at a sensible, ap propriate and really modest costume." - There Is plenty of good sense, by the way. In what a woman journalist says In Womankind. "The woman who meets men in business In a sensible way, thinking no evil," she writes, "In ninety-nine cases out of 100 will be treated respectfully and kindly; Indeed she will -find men much kinder and , more considerate , than women In busi ness dealings. In the possible hun dredth case, where a man shows hlm- , self a beast or a puppy (by the way, I believe a puppy Is a beast also, but will let it go at that), it is a very weak wo man who cannot maintain her dignity atid teach her lnsulter a valuable les son at the same time. During the years In which I was earning my living by newspaper writing I was frequently in tenements, cellars through the slums, among chained and guarded cuitvicts-r-and in drawing rooms, the worst places of all, sometimes, my lady and almost invariably have found men in rags, stripes or broad cloth, kind, courteous and helpful. In threading' my way through narrow by ways Ir search of some item of news, I have stopped to ask questions of the denizens thereof and never yet have I found a man so drunk that he did not manage to claw his hat off his head while he answered me in respectful, ' though somewhat tangled up language. .1 am not declaring that all men are saints; In business they will crowd and supplant women, which they have a perfect right to do 1f they, use honest methods. Men are just as good, Just - as honorable, as generous and as worthy of trust and confidence as the women. It Is time that this cry of working women against men be stop ped. If a woman respects herself she Will be respected; and this la the testi mony of those gifted with beauty as well as ordinary plain people like yours truly. We find what we look for In this World;' If we look for evil we find it, If for good, our search li doubly, re warded." . A man who has made a careful study ,of women and their ways declares In. the Philadelphia Press that beauty de pends not upon the owner but upon the percelver; that it Is far more subjective than objective;' hence In a sense the world Is overflowing with pretty wo men, however plain they may appear to the average observer, for somebody Is . fond of almost every woman and sees her In her best and most favorable light. The fact that men wonder how such and such women who are decided ly plain have secured excellent hus bands confirms this theory, since no man marries a woman whom he con siders ugly. She may not seem ravish Incly beautiful eveit to her lover, but we may be assured that she la at least , pleasant to look upon to his vision. In short, there la no absolute standard of beauty even Hi a single country and ' among people whose tastes are essen tially uniform. Each person's private judgment form his own standard. -:: A brilliant woman ones declared that If in our life the game was a hundred, - marriage, under any end all circum stances, stood for at least fifty. It must certainly be admitted, thinks a con t rib- . utorvto the Press, that the holy estate ' of matrimony is not only a state or dained oy nature, ut that it hat a Urge ethical value m aa aff'otl.jj-Oi-"- moral development. Some pessimist has put it on record that most mar riages are unhappy ones, which is the same aa saying most lives are miser able. Yet the majority of the world's inhabitants today would doubtless agrco with the first opinion passed upon It after its creation and believe that It Is very good. It Is true that both men and women are fain to forego, after their earliest married days, the ideal of romance, dismiss the engaging Idea that they have married Into a race of saints or angels and learn to be well content with a loyal, loving and congen ial husband or wire. (Man-luge may well be called a life school, as great and more beneficent thun any other, since no other so constantly fosters the di vine quality of self-forgetfulness for another's happiness, and those who learn its lessons and apply Its pre dicts grow broader and deeper 'than any other single experience within the pale of human possibility can make them. SRLECTKD RKCll'KS: The New York Sun gives these valuable illi-eotloiis for cooking oysters: Kor broiling-, choose large, tut oysters, and wipe each one with a uot't cloth. Hprlnkle suit and cayenne pepper upon them, and dip 111 melted butter. Hull each one In cracker dust. Winter well a tine wire double broiler, mid luy on It the oysters. Let tlio tire tie hot and clear.' Sorve on round p.eces of toast, buttered. To bake oysters In the shells, open the hells, keeping the deepest one for use. Melt some butter and season with tluely chopped parsley and pepper. When slight ly cool roll each oyster in It. using care that It drips as little as possible. Lay the oysters in the shells, and add to each a little lemon Juice. Cover with bread crumbs, and place the shells In u dripping pun uml bake in a quick oven. Serve lu the shells. Oyster cutlets are excellent as a course for a luncheon. To muke them, chop very line a half pint of oysters. Soak two ta blespoon (ds of cracker crumbs In the oyster IKiuor and mix with the prepared oysters a cupful of tho whko meat of chicken, chopped line. Place In a sauce pan over the tire a tablespoonful of butter, and when it 1s melted stir into it a table spoonful of Hour. Add the oyster and chicken mixture and stir for a few mo ments. Add two eKgs, well beuteu. Mix thoroughly and take from the lire. Turn on a platter to cool, - When 'the mixture has become cold butter a cutlet mould and cover with breud crumbs. Pack with the cold mixture and turn out on a dish FpKnkled with crumbs. When all tho ma terial has been moulded, dip the cutlets In beaten egg and then In crumbs. Cook In boiling fat until a nice brown. Drain on paper. Serve very hot, with the fol lowing sauce: Put three, tablespoonfuls of butter into a saucepan. When melted, add the same quantity of flour and beat together. Add gradually one pint of white stock. Season with some sprigs of pars ley, a piece of mace, one small onion, find a few pepper corns. Let it simmer twenty minutes, then strain and put It over the Are once more. - Add half a cup of rich milk, and suit to the taste. Creamed oysters are delirious. To one quart of oysters use one pint of cream. Put the cream over the Are in a double boiler, mix a generous tablespoonful of flour with a little cold milk and stir into the cream when it Is boiling. Season with salt, a little cayenne pepper, utid a tea spoonful of onion juice. Let the oysters come to a boll In their own liquor. Drain oft all the liquor and turn the oysters Into the cream mixture. Have ready on a hot platter square pieces of toast well but tered and turn the mixture over them. Serve at once, Oyster patties may be made by using patty shells of rich puff paste baked to a good brown and filling them with a mix ture prepared as for creamed oysters. Oyster fritters make an excellent break fast dish. Drain the liquor from the oys ters, and to a cupful of the liquor add the same quantLty of milk, three Rg well beaten, salt an pepper, and flour enough to make a thin batter. Chop ;ho oysters and sf.r them Into the batter. Drop by spoonfuls Into very hot lard and fry to a light brown. Garnish the platter with parsley and serve as soon as possible. Oood fried oysters ure prepared thus: Use good-sized oysters, and with a soft cloth wipe each one and lay on a flat dish. Cover with a mixture of melt id butter, ayenne pepper and lemon Juice. Let ihem remain In this for twenty minutes, turning them often. Roll In cracker dust, then in a beaten egg, and again In the cracker dust, and fry In very hot butter and lard until both sides are a nice brown. Serve on pieces of toast. oysters may also be fried In batter. Drain the oysters and then dip Into a bai ter made of two eggs beaten light, one cup of milk, and flour enough to form a soft batter, and season with pepper and salt. Put equal quantities of butter and lard Into a spider, and let tho mixture be smoking hot before you put in the oys ters. Do not crowd them. Turn thmn so as to cook both sides a delicate brown. Serve very hot and garnish with parsley and sliced lemon. To scallop oysters, one quart of solid oysters Is required for a dish that will hold two quarts. Butter the dish und put on the bottom layer of oysters. Cover them with a layer of rolled crackers or bread crumbs, sprinkle with salt and pep per and pieces of butter, and alternate until the dish is filled, using the crumbs for the last layer, moisten veil with the oyster liquor and a wine-glassful of good sherry. If milk Is preferred In plane of the oyster liquor, omit the wine and use spice to suit the taste, Itake in a hot oven thirty minutes. To prepare deviled oysters: Ch.ip twenty-five largn oysters very fine, mid add to them half a cup of cracker crumt'S, one tablespoonful of- melted butter, one cup of cream, and salt and cayenne pep. per to the taste. Butter well the rleotie.it side of the oyster shells and fill with the mixture, heaping It. I'laee In a dripping pan anu Dane in a not oven twenty min utes. Stewed oysters a,re always' acceptable. Drain the liquor from a quart of oysters and put It In a saucepan over the fire, and when at boiling point skim carefully. Place a auart or milk In a double bollir. and when it begins to boll add the oyster liquor, two laoiespooniuis or muter, three tablespoonfuls of rolled crackers, ami the oysters. Salt and pepper to suit the taste. Let them boil up ones and they are ready to serve. To Dickie ovslem. Put 100 laxirn nvntnrn. with the liquor, Into a porcelain-lined ket tle. Heat slowly until the oysters are very hot, but not boiling. Take them out with a skimmer and set aside In a stone Jar to cool. To the liquor which remains in the kettle add one pint of vinegar, one ounce of whole mace, the same quantity of whole cloves, and two large red pep pers, cut Into pieces. When M comes to a boll pour over the oysters. Cover the Jar ana put in a cool place. Tho rollowlng day put the pickled oysters into pint glass Jars and seal. The air, like the fight. w:il turn them dark, so keep the jars In a dark, HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS: Do not let stale flowers remain In a'.ck-room. Boll rice flour and water together for a good cement. Do not leave vegetables In water after they are cooked. Clean stoky lamp burners by boiling them In soda water. Paint palls and tubs with glycerine to prevent their shrinking. Rub vinegar on the Isinglass In atove doors, ana so have them clean. Kubbing with dry salt will remove water stains on the interior of bath tubs. . Muslin curtains, flarured ami rnflluil look well for narrow windows In apart ments, A teaspoonfut of ammonia added to dishwater . will aid . In . washing greasy dishes. Mice will oftentimes leave the nrermlses If you plug up tbelr holes with ordinary hard soap. Hay water sweetens tin, wooden and Iron ware. This la mads by boiling a lit tle sweet hay In water. If you wish to make your Irons smooth before putting them upon fins starch goods, rub them In salt. The best remedy for odorous drain pipes Is copperas dissolved in water and poured alowly through them. Mix turpentine In water with which the floors are scrubbed, and thus escape buf falo moth and carpet worms. Do not take the risk ot lighting a fire In a stove or furnace, not known to be safe, or one which is not understood. The round-ton trunk Is nu'.to sons bv. nd the newest and moat convenient has arranged that M can te set doss 'against the waif auu uuvuru wnwiui urmg mown lurwnru. Bteel knives will retain their brightness which they brought from the store if they are kept wrapped in tissue paper. When cleansing tin utensils, a small quantity of soda thrown luto hot suds will be found almost equal to scouring. To clean stovepipes put a pleve of slno on the redthot coals. The soot Is removed by the vapor which wUl be produced. Scarfs are no longer used to drape pic tures and chairs. Kor the mantel era bruldered china silk crepes are popular. To get clear of rats, besides usng traits, cats or dogs, try chlotlde of liaie. It Is sa'.d they never come where that Is pluce.l. Monograms worked In the finest French endiroldery are rapidly becoming popular as decorations for bed spreads and pillow covers. If you would avoid the danger of having milk burn when scalding. Just rinse out the pan wth a little cold water before the milk is put Into it. All embroidered articles, such as tray cloths, bureau scarfs, ft o'clock tea cloths, silk bourd covers and the like ettould be washed by themselves. Kerosene oil applied to flannel Is an ex cellent thng with which to rub old furni ture, or clean pa' nt, particularly the dirty linger marks around door handles. Fruit cake. If It is to be kept any length of time before eating and a good fruit cake Is nlwuys Improved by so do ingshould only be iced as it Is needed. Spr,nkl dry flour on grease spots on a carpet and In a few hours it will be nearly or quite absorbed. Then wash the spot In warm water and soap and all traces of It will have disappeared. ' l'atviit leather shoes are really beneficial for those who have dry feet. While moist feet are a real affliction, to have them perspire occasionally' softens them and O'lvveiils callous spots forming . 1.1 nen undergarments that are badly Malned with perspiration should have such spots soaked and washed in tepid water, without soap or soda, before add ing them to the regular washing, Klther washing soda or borax Is said to be better to use in the water for bathing purposes than ammonia, which hardens the ektln and makes It crack, unless used very sparingly at Infrequent periods. To have mealy boiled potatoes the water should be drained from them as soon aa they can bo pierced with a fork. Then they should tie shaken up In the kettle and set on the hack of the stove for fif teen or so minutes. Another error of frequent occurrence In the preparation of coffee for the table and which results probably from the habit of tea-making, Is 'that of using too little coffee In proportion to the quantity of witter. More coffee in proportion should be used than tea: that is, for a full eit of the Infusion an ounce to an ounce and a-hnlf of coffee, that being about the proper proportions for a beverage of average strength. Many consumers connect the Idea of the strength of coffee with a durk or black color and fancy their coffee to bo thin and weak if It does not possess such color. This is entirely erroneous, as good, pure coffee is. never so, the dark color being Imparted by means of a little burnt sugar or other Ingredient. The true flavor of pure coffee Is so little known to some persons that many who drink it for the first time doubt of itt goodness because It tastes of the natural flavor, forgetting that coffee which does not possess the flavor of coffee Is not coffee at all but an artificial concoction for which many other things may be substituted at pleasure. HEALTH HINTS: Never go to bed with cold or damp feet. Never omit regular bathing, for unless the skin Is in active condition the cold will close the pores and favor congestion and other diseases. The phosphate of sodium does not foam when put in water. Take a teaspoonful In a teacup of hot water three times dally, an hour and a half to two hours after meals take for four weeks. This will "cure" the "bad taste" In the morn ing and clean the coated tongue. By rubbing the hands with alcohol and WHAT IS NEEDED IN CITY GOVERNMENT, Theodore Roosevelt Propounds the Doctrine of Hon esty and Common Sense in Municipal Politics. The recent address of Theodore Roosevelt before the Liberal club of UufTalo embodied a significant and forcible enunciation of the policy of honesty and common sense In munici pal government, and Is of national In terest. ' Below are some of the striking portions of ft: "The solution of the municipal problem lies In the application to it ot the com mon virtues." It Is perfectly simple common honesty, common sense and that reasonable amount of courage, of will ingness to accept responsibility und to stand punishment from a not-alwnys-ap-preclutlve press, which ought to be a qual ity of every American citizen. The surest way In which you can make a movement to better our politics full Is to have a movement troubled with pro scription for religious reusons. The two evils, I am almost Inclined to say the two worst evils, of which I know in municipal politics, and In some other politics as well, are, on the one hand, to discriminate against a faithful and efficient public ser vant because of his creed, and, on the other, to pardon and support an unfaith ful and Inefficient public servant because of his creed. In solving the municipal problem I have grown mote und more to believe that nor mally wo should not take into account questions of national politics. If one of your houses is entered tonight by a burg lar, what do you care whether that burg lar believes In a loose or a strict construc tion of the constitution? And If a police man runs him down, what particular In terest have you as to whether he Is a high-tariff or a low-tariff policeman? Itoes It not seem a little absurd to have to ask that question? Yet think of the fact thut practically that type of question bus been precisely the one that we have all been expected to ask In municipal politics. The problem we In New York have had to fuce has been enforcement of the law. That is not a question at Issue nationally. The problem of getting honest elections, the problem of seeing thut the pollen didn't take bribes and commit blackmail that Is not a party Issue. On every Issue that has come up we can proceed by an Inversion of the reasoning of a once noted politician who, six or seven years ago, at a time when he was president of the United States senate, said that the Deca logue and the Golden Kuie had no pla.'e In politics and that the purification of pol itics was an Iridescent dream. We have been proceeding upon the assumption that the Decalogue and the Oolden Kule are pe culiarly applicable to political life, and, also, that If a public official was worth his salt he was bound to try to show that the purification of politics was not an Iridescent dream. In the abstract nobody will deny that a publlo officer ought to be honest, but In the concrete It Is lamentable to see how we pardon It. What you want In your munlcUal authorities is, first and fore most, absolute honesty. Their views upon any conceivable question of public policy come second to that. You must have In an executive oflleer willingness to be faithful to his oath of ofllce; willingness, again, to show the common virtues; will ingness to behave with that measure of probity which you exact from every suc cessful business man, from every reput able lawyer. Another quality on which to Insist s courage. Be a man ever so honest. If he be cursed with a. sufficient quantity of timidity he Is a mere nuisance In any emergency. I think I am more apt to lose my temper with the timid good man than I am with the sharp, resolute, clever scoundrel whom I am going to light any- mt it comes to putting down a riot, make up your mind that tho person with whom to feel sympathy Is tho law-abiding clti sen, not the lawless. When people put themselves in opposition to law, start to put them down with a healthy desire to see that they get put down quirk, and if any damage comes, let It come on them and not on the men who have refrained from violating the law. If you think It right and If you are honest you must think It right to enforce a given law, al though there may be a doubt whether local sentiment Is or Is not In favor of that law, go on and do It and If the senti ment Is against you, your duty Is plain. You recognise public sentiment as em bodied In law. The remedy of the public If they do not like your action Is to turn you out .at the end of your term. And don't be afraid of that either. There are prices too dear to pay for success or to pay for retention In office, and one of those Is the loss of self-respect. I believe In all proper humility; I be lieve In cultivating a spirit of Impartial ity; but I have never gotten to that point of impartiality where I could regard the law-breaaer ana me man wno sept ine law as equally good, and I never have got- o thst point in city government I would say that the opponent who ed In dishonesty among public of- waa aa goon aa tns man, wno De ls hsnesty. , ten f wheh beltJv flolats lleval afterward n pure sterilised water a per fect cleansing results. Alcohol dissolves the aetmceua substances on the skin to which bacteria adhere, and the water sweeps them away. - Water can easily be suerii.ieu by "boiling, and this simple method may be mad useful In many The very best disinfectant and deodor iser known Is copperas. A double hand ful dissolved In a bucket ot water and used to wash drain pipes and receptacles of waste material will keep such places above suspicion. The water In pitchers audi flower holders should be changed ev ery day. on attention to such seemingly trivial details may hang a human r.fe. Fruits axe generally healthful, they cool tho blood, and. by their aper.ent quali ties, aid in digesting other foods, but they do not agree with all systems; n that in stance they produce a sour stomach, fer ment Instead of being digested, cause irri tation and often produce eruptions on the skin. Unrip and decayed fruits are not eatable, but good fruitsi are generally wholesome. A well person must know what to eat and what not to vat to re ma. n so. An Kngllsh physician has Just written an art tie, the result of recent rases of diphtheria In which his Invesfgutlon proved thut in several rases pet cats had been the carriers of this disease to tho houses of a certain neighborhood. He be lieves cuts have a pi-collar throat dis ease which results, when contracted by tinman beliiKS, in diphtheria. He pleads thut cats should be wntched. and when they show evidence of illness they should be isoluted. LITERARY INDUSTRY. Addison usually prepared one of his essays In a iluy. Kulwer Lyttoii usually composed a novel lu about s'x months. Dumas His usually required about six months to write a story. Motley took six years to write "The Rise of the Dutch Itepuhllc." Samuel Holler required two and one-half years to finish his "Hudlbrus." Kolierlson required six years to pre pare his "History of Charles V." KiiKcne Hue required e'.Khtcen months to product the "Wandering Jew." Suulliey Is said to have written "Tha lnlia, the Destroyer," In six months. Mrs. Krownlng commonly wrote one of her short poems at a single sitting. Campbell composed his poem, "The Bat tle of lloheiillnden." In a single day. Mrs. ilemiins commonly devoted two or three days to a short story or poem. Tasso required between live and six years to write his "Jersusulem Delivered." Swift employed the odd hours of over two years In work on the "Tale of a Tub." Thompson required three years of time to write, revise and finish "The Seasons." month. Hawthorne spent from six months to a year on the composition of each ot his romances. Dante began his poem, "The Divine Comedy," almost thirty years before he finished It. Holland Is said to have spent the leisure hours of over three years In writing "Kathrlna." llallam consumed thirteen years col lecting the materials for his "Literature of Kurope." Jeremy Taylor commonly took the last three days of a week to finish his sermon for Sunday. Sir Thomas More devoted the leisure hours of over three years to tho writing of his "Utopia." Lord llrouchnm commonly spent three or four weeks In study before writing a great speech. Richardson, the novelist, generally de voted two or three years to the composi tion of a novel. Von Rnnke is said to have devoted near ly thirty years to his great work, "The Lives of the Popes." Locke Is said to have spent over six years In the preparation of his essay on the "Human Understanding." St. Louis Olobe-Democrat. I have spoken ot showing Americanism In creed. Now show it In race. Iteinem ber that the one being abhorrent to the powers above the earth and under them is the hyphenated Amerlcun the "Uermun- American," the "Irish-American," or tho "native-American." He Americans, pure and simple 1 If you don't act on the the ory that every man who in good faith as sumes the duties and responsibilities or an American citizen in a spirit of true Amer icanism is un American, and Is to be treated as such. If yousilo not act on thut spirit, you ure yourselves unlit to take part in managing our government anu you ure bound to make a failure if you try to better the condlt.on of our cities. Let me illustrate what 1 mean. The other day I spoke on the East Hide with two of my fellows In this administration, the presi dent of the excise board and the counsel of the excise board. We three all spoke on precisely the same lines, on precisely the lines that 1 am speaking to you here tonight. The president of the excise board is a uatnollc, born in Ireland The counsel of the excise bonrd Is a He brew, whose parents, or he himself, were born In Uermnny. v e are all three Anier leans and nothing else! All three of us believed that only the United Hlates flag should float over the city hall, and wo ail approached the problem from the point of view of common honesty, of common good faith, and believed that we could solve most of our llluulties In New York by the application of such old time-worn remedies as tho commandment thut "thou shall not steal, and oliiers of similar aim pllcity. The science of good municipal govern. tnent Isn't anything recondite. It is not like the higher mathematics or anything vl that kind. Any moderately bruvc. honest man, with common sense, who is prewired to do whut he thinks right, what he thinks according to his lights Is the decent thing to do, without regard to the effect ethrr upon 'himself or upon the party with which he is connected he has got to disregard thut, gentlemen, If he Is going to accomplish unythlng that Is worth accomplishing any man who will have those qualities can do something decent; he can accomplish sometning in mir tniltilclnnl lift. We doubtless shall from time to time make errors. If we did not we would probably make nothing else. If you are going to "lead freely" you have got to "take punishment," If you will allow mo to speak In the language of those who box; you have got to "take punishment" when you "lead freely," but you can only win the battle by being aggressive. If you stand off: If you stand nloof; If you never do anything for fear of making a mistake, you won't get anywhere. As I say. we are bound to commit errors, but on the whole we know we are raising I am tempted to say we are ranung incal culably higher the standard of publ'.n morality, the standard of decency. Wo have done It absolutely without regard to party. We have acted absolutely without regard to creed; we have acted simply as honest American citizens, and I feel that we have a right to challenge the support or all otner honest American citizens. In closing I have but one thing to say. We have at times been told, sometimes as a threat, sometimes ns a warning, some times with a note of entrenty and de spair from the mun who told us that our course was Jiopnriliz.lig the reform move. meat: that we had made the reform dose a little too drastic. To that I ran nly answer this: Thnt .If our people when they won this election did not mean whnt they said, they would better have Inst Itt that If we can only stay In power at the cost of doing exactly what we denounced our foes for doing, we would better go out or power, we may lose: nobody enn prophesy exactly what will turn out al ways in American politics: We may lose, but we m'ght have lost In any event, and If we had lost and not done whnt wn deemed right, then we would have merely been covered with infamy, and If we had kept in and had not done what we thought was right v.e would nave gained nothing, I would rather, of course, see our system. the system of honesty and decency, per petuated; I would rather see the people who tMnk as we believe all honest of ficials should think keen the reins of power, but I would Infinitely rather see our people loso than see them flinch one hair's breadth from the course we have merged out. I have Immense faith ultimately. In the sober Judgment at the American neoule. I believe that thev are a law-abld'ng end an upright, people, and I know that Re publican government Is worth preserving only on the supposition that In the long run the mass of the voters will stand for honesty and decency, but I admit that at some given election, under the Influence of some particular, demagogue, or misled by some particular emotion or chain of vents, they may so wrong, and I ran nly aay that I would Infinitely rather lose ttower because o having enforced , the laws honestly than keen power st the cost of corrupt connivance at law-break ing and corrupt association wits law- lasers. In .the Wonderland Of North America. Over the Unsalted Fargo. X. D July 22. American trav- elets, as a rule, belong to two classes these for business or personal reasons anxious to reach their Journey's end as soon as possible, and those who are traveling for pleasure und education, desirous of learning all they can of the country which they traveme. The for mer mubt con II lie themselves to whut can be seen through tho car windows of a fust Hying train of thirty miles aa hour night ami day und what they d. Uarn of the country traversed. Its rivers, kikes, plains, mountains;, can yons, deserts, cities ami villages, and also Its people, must be from glimpses obtained in thin way. The latte r class. when possible, stop off dally and mudy up the country enroute. 'Ily tho cour tesy of Genera! vasnger Agent t'hurlia S. Fee, of llhe Northern l'ucillc. we are enabled to make this trans-con- tlncntal tour from luiluth to the- i'acltlc coast by daylight, stopping at the vari ous places of Interest through Ihe country sonich In agricultural and min eral wcaMh, which has been mainly devtkipcd by this groat road. We In vite our renders t" Journey wlITi ua as wo go. J rent credit b due 'the North ern Pslflc for threading Its wuy over the wide pin-Ins and Upland valleys of Minnesota. Dukotns, IMontana, Idaho and Wyoming mid hewlui? a pathway througn the lofty forests of the Cas cade mountains to the l'ucillc; slope, when their principal Inhabitants were only wild huffnloa and wilder Invlluns; through a region once decried as a cold. liarren, useless zone. An Almost .Miraculous Transformation. Tliils region now possesses lihe largest farms In the world, the greatest mines in the world, the noblest forests In the world and the bravest people in the world, for none but brave and enter pricing people leave the comforts of the eastern home to live on the cuttle plailns and In the mining oampn of Montana, and lumber camps of ldafro nd Washington. This groat Northern Pacific railway, with Us brantihes, covers nearly 4,000 miles. This system passes through seven of the largest states land terri tories at a rough estimate, one-sixth of the area of the United States devel oping one of the fairest sections of our country, exceeded by no other part of the union ln Its wealth of, .natural re sources and salubrious cllmlate. This road Is divided Into nine divi sions, during which are three changes of time, of one hour each. Starting with eastern time we date back our watches one hour at St. Paul to cen tral time; at iMandan, one hour to mountain time, and at Hope, Ida., one hour to Pacillc time. These divisions are well marked natural boundaries. The first Is I.Minnesota division, which extends from Fargo a distance of 2S3 miles to the lied Hiver of the North. It lies wholly In' the state of Minnesota. The great attractions of this state are Its pine forests, which cover nearly one hulf of Its entire area, and its numer ous beautiful lakes, variously esti mated from 7,000 to 10,000. These ex tend right through thu central part of the state on both sides of the railroad to the prairie region bordering upon the Red river. So numerous are they that this region Is known as the "Lake Park Region." A lake Is 'an object of Interest, whether It be large or small, round or narrow. If one lake compels one's admiration, what think you of a region like this thatcontains thousands of them lakes deep and lakes shallow, lakes large and lakes small, lakes with wooded shores and lakes encircled .by waving grass, lukeg with romantic Islands and lukes as smooth and placid as glass, and all of them, however va ried they may be In scenic beauty, of the purltt crystal water. Through this delightful section the Northern Pacific winds, and the outlook is at times .beautiful in the extreme. All through this "sky-tinted" region the railroad Is compelled to twist, turn and dodge around knolls and hills to avoid being carried pell-mell Into some of them. Finest American Fishing. Ground. I should be negligent and unjust If special mention wus not mado of the chain of lakes at Detroit, iMlnn., where we stopped off to see and sail. Detroit Is 2110 miles from St. Paul and pro nounced the finest Ashing ground on thu continent. This noted chain teems with line gamey fish of many vnrieties. The ten bodies of fresh water which form the chain were dotted with ang lers from all over the country. In row, sail and steamboats. A novel feature Is a steamboat capable of carrying 300 people on a three-hours' sail through the entire chain at the rale of fifteen miles an hour. A lock SO feet long by 14 fed wide and feet drop, connects one of the chain and the 'Red River of the North. This town, located 1,500 feet above sea level. Is pretty, clean nnd enterprising In appearance, has a Now England air, and Is destined to become some tiny a famous summer resort. Hotel Minnesota, located at the head of the chain. Is a llrst-class hostelry and deserves special mention, Uefore arriving at Detroit the tourist passes through Brainerd, the "City of the Pine." Here the main line branches off to St. Paul. The machine shops of the road aro located here. Hralnerd Is a bright and Interesting town, demerging from the deep recesses of the forests nnd passing through the lake region refercd to, we find our selves In a level prairie country, miles and miles In expanse, when an hour's ride brings us to the narrow fringe of timber that murks the course of the famous Red River of the North, whoso fertile soil has attracted hundreds of thousands of eastern people, and mado them rich. Not a little surprise, how ever. Is occasioned by the discovery that Ihe valley of which we have heard and read so much Is not a valley at all, bnt a great plain whose slope toward the river Is so slight as to be almost Imperceptible. The Rod KUcr of the nrth. This strenm Is thus named to dis tinguish It from the Red river of Louis iana. It hns two branches which flow due north for over two 'hundred- miles and empty Into Lake Winnipeg, In the province of Manitoba, and navigable from Farro for steamers of 250 totiH burden. The Rod river marks tho boundary line between Minnesota and Dakota. This renowned Red River Valley who has not heard of It? Is from sixty to eighty miles wide, and 300 miles long, embracing an area of 67,000 square miles, and It is claimed that eighty per cent, of It is the "best land on Ood'a earth." The soil con sists of a rich, black Inam from three to seven feet deep. The whole valley Is well watered by naturo by a number of small rivers, which perform the double office of supplying water and draining the land. Here are the great wheat fields of tho country the land of mammoth farms, of thousands of plows, of reapers of harvesters and threahlng machines In great numbers, and armies of attendants working them. We see the harvesters at every station, hundreds of them sent out free by the Northern Pacific railway to gather the immense crops. The rail roads are taxed 'to their uttermort capacity In hauling away the long lines of freight trains made up of loaded wheat cars alone. Night and day the loading ot theae trains goes on until the year's surplus of golden grain has been shipped to the great mills of Min neapolis and Duluth. Moorhead and Farfo. Where the Ailroadi o rouse the Red river have sprung up the cities of Moor head and Fargo, the former In lilna Northern Pacific from the to the Salted Sea. sota, the latter In Dakota, With such advantages of situation as they possess, these cities must increase In commer cial Importance with the development of Phis rich country surrounding them. iMoorhead is a well-built city of 4,000 population, at an elevation of eighty four feet above the sea level, and mllcj west of Duluth. It has tine busi ness blocks, flouring mills, grain oleva toi. and attractive residences and pub lic buildings, among which ds "Bishop Whipple's school," under the control of tho K pit-copal church. Immediately across the Red River of the North Is the bustling city of iFurgo, connect ed by Immense bridges which span the river. Fargo Is the largest city In Iu knta and called tho metropolis of the Red Ri'.ver Valley. Its Importance Is largely due to the railroad systems, of which It Is a central poinut. The arri vals and departures of paastngtr trains number twenty-six dally. The growth qf Fargo began when the Northern I'a cltlc reached the Red river In 1S71. Fargo has a population of 8.000 and Is a lively type of a new western town, wMh all the modern Improvements. A noticeable feature was the two-story brick buildings. This plan wos agreed upon after the disastrous fire in when 200 acres right In the heart of the cHy wais totally destroyed. Here are huge elevators, flouring mills, several manufactories, twelve churches, twenty-eight hotels, three daJly newspapers and educational facilities exceptionally good. The Northern Pacific Elevator company has It headquarters here, owning over fifty elevators and many wartihouses. Our Sunday stay was of peculiar interest and profit. Bonanza Farms, At Dalrymple, eighteen miles from Fargo, nnd at Casselton, two miles farther weBt, are the great wheat farms of Oliver Dalrymple, comprising 60.000 to 73.000 acres, all under cultiva tion. These acres are divided Into tracts of 6.000 acres each and sub-dl-vldod into farms of 2,000 acres each, on each of which is Is placed a superintendent, book keeper and storehouse of supplies, and as the result of the thorough system employed this farm can raise wheat and deliver to the railroad at a cost of 35 cents per bushel. The net profit on a bushel of wheat Is seldom less than 10 cents, and the average yield per acre imay be eafely put at fifteen bushels. The Casselton farm of 20,000 acres employs 400 men In harvesting and 600 to COO In threshing. Over 250 pairs of horses and mules are used, 200 gang plows, 115 self-binding reapers and 27 steam threshers. About the first of August the ' harvester Is heard and those who have witnessed the opera tion of securing the golden grain will never forget the scene. The sight of these Immense wheat fields stretching away farther than the eye can reach In one unbroken sea with golden waves is in itself a grand one. Just think of a sea of wheat containing twenty square miles 13.000 acres rich, ripe and golden, with the long procession of reaping machines moving like bat teries of artillery formed against the thick-set ranks of grain. Raeh win. chine is drawn bythree mules or horses and with each gang Is a superintendent who rides along on horseback and di rects the operations of the drivers. There ore the mounted repairers who carry with them the tools for repairing disabled machinery without delay. Thus the reaping goes on with the ut most order. Think of 115 reaping ma chines traveling In line together cut ting a swath one-fifth of a mile In width, laying low twenty miles of grain In a swath of that great size In the course of a single day. No brass band, no drum beat or shrill note of the fife, but the army moves on dally, a solid phalanx to the music of its own ma chinery, the reapers tossing the bundles spiritedly into the air, each binder do ing the work of six men. J. E. Richmond. Piles! Piles! Itching Piles. Symptoms Moisture; Intense itching and stinging; most at night; worse by scratching. If allowed to continue tumors form, which often bleed and ulcerate, be coming very sore. Swayne's Ointment stops the Itching and bleeding, heals ul ceration, and In most cases removes the tumors. At druggists, or by mall, for 10 cents. Dr. Swayne & $011, Philadelphia. The Nickel Plate Road, as the Low Rato Line, in connection with the Rest Service, receives the enthusiastic support and praise of all delegations, conventions and assemblies INI OF SCRANTON. dill Special Attention Given to Business and Personal Accounts. INTF.FERT PAID ON TIHR MPWTR. m. PLEASANT COAL AT RETAIL. Coal of the best quality for domestic kse, and of all sizes, delivered In an t'rt of the qlty at lowest pries. Orders left at my Ottlco NO. IIS WYOMING AVENUE, Rear room, llrat floor. Third National Bank, or sent by mall or telephone ta the tnlna, will receive prompt attention. Special contracts will be made for the ate and delivery of Buckwheat Coal. WM. T. SMITH. THE SCRANTON VITRIFIED BRICK TILE NUFCTURIKG CO, MAgans o SHALE PAVING BRICK AND BUILDING BRICK Ofllssi 830 Washington Aveans. Worksi Way Ass, la B. A W. V. tu M. , M. H. DALE, Central Sales Agent, 9cranton, Pa on That insistsfSon M ) keeping tstdof sj I' f Lw f tag's Seai Rslnf In tlie house l- Why, the wise mother. Because, whe taken internally it cures In t few mlnotes, Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headacbe, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, .Stunner GompUIn Colic, Flatulency and all interna) pains. DOSE Half a teaspoonful In half a tumbler of water. v Used externally, tt will cure Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Mosquito Bites, Stinn of Insects, Sunburns, Bruises, Burns, Scalds, Couftu, Colds and all throat troubles. . Kadway's Ready Relief, aided by Rad-. way's Plus, will cure Fever and Agues Ma larious, Bilious and other Fevers. ' v Fifty CnU Bortlt. Sola try PriaMs, BAOWAV tt CO,, Hew Yerk.) RAD WAY'S PI Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. CmaM perfrct dignttion, compute SMimilstlon and healthful recularity. Cure coosiipstiea and Its lone I'M of unpleasant symptoms and raja, venats the aysUm. Hi cent a hex. All droa g-luta. EVA M. HETZEL'S Superior Face Bleach, Positively Rtmom ill Field Blemldi No more Freckles, Tan. Sunburn, Black Beads, Liver Spots, Pimples nnd Ballots Complexions If ladie9 will use my Su perior Face Bleach. Not a cosmetic, but a medicine which act9 directly on the skin, removing all discoloration, an one of the greatest purifying agents for the complex ion In existence. A perfectly clear and spotless complexion can be obtained In every Instance by Its use. Price, $1.00 per bottle. For sale nt E. Nf. Hetzel-s Hair dressing and Manicure Parlors, 330 Lack awanna ave. Mail orders filled promptly. The best wearing, most stylish, and the greatest value of any $3.00 Men's Shoes on the continent Beat calfskin, dongola tops, solid leather soles, with all tho popular toea, lasts and fastenings, and Lewis' Cork, Filled Soles. Each pair contains a paid-up Acci dent Insurance Policy for $100, good for 00 days. Wear Letrla'Acoldent Insurance Shoca once and you will never chance. The Insurance pes for "full measure." Talk with your dealer who sells Lewis' 6hoea, FOR SALE AT Globe Shoe Store 227 LiXKA. AVL. SCRANTON, PA. - - EVANS & POWELL, Prop'ri Complexion Preseirsd OR. HEBRA'S I VIOLA; CREAM fmont FfsaUn, Plmelaa. LW MeK.Blacl.hmS; Seaborn anff Tan, and ro atorta tho akin to its origi nal freahneaa. producing a dMi and neallhv oom- fnpiuationa and .perfectly harmless At aH tbuulsts, oc mailed for SOcta. Bend for Circotarj 1 VIOLA MCIN 80AP nKr hai - a SSa rtura Bm. aaK a u Hlaal Mtola asst. alwM. Srloa 35 C.na. ' G. C. BITTNER & CO.,Tottoo,OW ejjMhtby Matthews Bras. and Jeh CSeafs sr vms Hiantrr Mtawit Aarweainaej aJ'MemtUai iKiusitm HEADACHES This MinthoS will enra vnn. A wonderful boon to mitTcrart from Calda, lore Threat laSsawrs, BrwpcalHe or II A I l EVIB. At immtdiaurtliff. An ell ' remwlr. oonTentent to evrry fa peflkt.Najy to sue on tnt indication of cole. Vatlana vm Eatoets remanent Curs SaiUfMltonararteedormenernfnMted. Prima & eta. Trlalfrca nt DnKglnta, Rraliterad aial( (Beeaia. a7.C0ani(tr.,IkwliTnBa,ai.i, QTyssagsntAirraB MTItnT Tli nraat ana aaff rt rem nly fi? kill lllllla all ikln dlMatoaJEcMma, Itch'Bali BtfeMsajiM flnraaIlurua, Cuts, waadarfal rem Ht for rlXF.S. rrlea, at Drug-nai aa Brttorbrmnllprapilrt. AddrMatT. DStUftfl tiff r sals by Matthews Bros, and Jobs neiBs. VIGOl! r.lEf Cully, Qiilokly, Permtsently Restored. Weakness rtarraaaaeaa, Deaiuty, ana nil tns tram of evils from early arrora or later exegeses, toe reauiu ok overwork, sickness, worry,' ate. nil strength, Oevel oomant and tone srlren ta isvery organ ana pornoa ormn and 1 of the body. Simple, nat nethoda. Immedl' oral mi ate improvement seen. In ImmhIIiW SUM! MfapannM. ltnnk. axpianatlDB ana pniois maun um ERIE KEDlOaL 00, Baffale, Mj fltsNV X-nsT 1 SS. 1 1 Am r. I