RAILROAD TIME TABLES. FENN'A K. K. KAST. WEST 7.11 A. M. y.14 A. M. 1U.17 " 12.15 P. M. 2.21 P. M. 4.81 " 5.50 " 7.51 " SUNDAYS. 10.17 A. M. 4.81 P. M. D. L. & W. K. R. EAST. WEST. tt.57 A. M. 9.09 A. M. lU.IH '• 12.471 F. M. 2.11 P. M. 4.85 " tUti •• 8.40 '• SUNDAYS 0.57 A. M. 12.47 P.M. tS.ltiP M. 840 " FHIL.A A HEADING K. K. NORTH. SOUTH. 7.82 A.M. 11.24 A. M. 4.U0 P. M. 6.05 F. M. BLOOM STREET. 7.54 A. M. 11.22 A. M. 4.02 P. M. H. 04 F. M. J. J. BROWN, THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes tested, treated, fitted with glass es aud artificial eyes supplied. jl Market Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. Hours —10 a. m.to 5 p. in. Telephone 1436. Monroe Doctrine and Golden Rule. No one, we imagine, can find much fault with the terse statement of inter national policy made by Secretary Hay before the New York chamber of com merce the other evening. "The briefest expression of our rule of conduct," says the secretary of state, "Is the Monroe doctrine and the Golden Rule. With this simple chart we can hardly go far wrong." Continuing, Mr. Hay said: I think I may say that our sister republic* to the south of U9 are perfectly convinced of the sincerity of our attitude. They know we desire the prosperity of each of them and peace and har mony among them. We no more want their terri tory than we covet the mountains of the moon. We are grieved and distressed when there are dif ferences among them, but even then we should never think of trying to compose any of those differences unless by the request of both parties to it. Not even our earnest desire for peace among them will lead us to any action which might offend their national dignity or their juat send- of Independence. We owi them all the con sideration which we claim for ourselves. To crit ics in various climates who have other views of our purposes we can only wish fuller information and more quiet consciences. The address for two reasons was one of especial significance. The secretary was at the meeting of the New York chamber of commerce as the substitute of the late President McKinley, who had accepted an invitation to be pres ent, but a few days before his death had asked Mr. Hay to take his place, and the latter no doubt voiced the sen timents of the dead president touching our international relations. Again, the address, coming so soon after the sign ing of the new canal treaty with Great Britain, was interpreted as an authori tative utterance in regard to questions of international relation Involved in that agreement. It was taken to mean that Great Britain not only recognizes our right to build and maintain a strict ly American isthmian waterway, but our right and obligation to protect against foreign aggression the territo rial integrity of our sister republics. The soundness of the Monroe doc trine i 3 almost universally recognized by Americans. Why may we not also apply the Golden Rule to our relations with other nations, since we profess neither to fear the strength of the strongest nor seek advantage through the weakness of the weakest? The Dream of Independent Poland. That the dream of Poland free and Independent again taking its rightful place among the sovereign nations of the world has not utterly faded Is shown In the fact of the recent convic tion of several Polish students at Po sen charged with treasonable participa tion in a movement to re-establish the kiugdom. It is more than a century since Po land was ruthlessly partitioned be tween Russia, Austria and Prussia and her national independence drowned in blood and consumed In flames. Yet deep in the Polish heart there has been maintained a spark of hope of Its ulti mate resurrection. Seventy years ago the Poles made a desperate struggle for the restoration of their nation, but the result was the suppression of the Insurrection and the obliteration of even the shadowy form of national life. Thirty years later the Poles made another heroic struggle, keeping up for four years a determined but hopeless Btruggle for Independence against the mighty power of Russia, but at the end Poland lay crushed and helpless at the feet of her grim conqueror. Since then Poland has seemed hardly able to raise a hand for freedom, though the trials just ended reveal the fact that the hope of a redeemed and regenerated nation still finds lodg ment in some patriotic souls. Secret propaganda is at work, particularly among Polish students, and there is a revolutionary fund In Switzerland to which patriotic Poles at home regular ly contribute. Time is awaited when the great powers are once more at each other's throat which, It Is hoped, will furnish Poland's opportunity, when the national standard will again be raised. Until there shall be a decided reaction from the prevailing spirit of national concentration, of the stronger powers absorbing the weaker, there is little hope of Polish independence. Cren the Coul Was Whitewashed. When the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York reached Ports mouth recently after a tour of the world, visiting the colonies over which the duke may one day reign, they found awaiting them a magnificent special train profusely decorated to bear them to London. Even the coal In the tender of the locomotive was whitewashed, partly to help in the dec orative effect and partly to prevent the dust from flying back into the coach occupied by the new Prince of Wales and wife and getting into the royal eyes or besmirching the royal features. There is scarcely an end to the lengths to which people will go in dis playing their enthusiasm over a popu lar favorite, particularly if they be loy al subjects of a monarch and are pay ing tribute to one of the household of the Lord's anointed, but whitewashing the coal would seem to be the limit. 'l'tie Kumilmi Empire, The Russian empire contains more than sixty-five independent racial groups. It is a veritable tower of Ba bel. Even with the omission of Siberia and central Asia there remain in Rus sia in Europe and the Caucasus alone fortv-six different neooles The Prisoner's Return When 1 enlisted, I thought I'd go aud say goodby to Dr. Miller's daugh ter. I was only a common farmer, an-1 she had another beau, a student at Amherst, but I remembered once at a party when she had to choose a partner she selected me instead of Jim, so I thought I'd go and tell her I was off for Dixie in the morning. 1 didn't stay long, for Jim was there. Martha went with him out to the gate. I reached out my big sunburned hand, and she took It in both her owu and held it quite a bit, and she said: "Beanie, I'm sorry | you're going to the war. You're too young a man and too good a man to stand up and be shot at." Then Jim appeared on the scene, and I went away half cursing my honest hand for being so big and so brown, while Jim's was as white as a lily, with a great Hashing diamond on the smallest of his slender lingers. Talk about standing up as a target for bullets! That's nothing, nothing at all compared with lying down to starve in a foul prison. As the days passed Into weeks, and the weeks, so long, into months so much longer that I lost all count, how many and many a time I looked at my white, bony hands and wished they were as big and as tanned as they used to be, and when I would have prayed for an ending of my mis ery, how well I remembered that Mar tha had said I was too young to die, and the way she had held my hand still thrilled me and kept me alive, and I said over and over to myself a thou sand times, with grim determination, what Dr. Miller had so often repeated, "While there is life there is hope," and at last I was exchanged and discharg ed. Oh, how happy I was to be set free! A great Joy buoyed me up for the long, weary journey home. When at last the stage set me down in the familiar village postoffice, I was so weary and wasted no one seemed to recognize me, but looked at me in a pitying way I could not understand, and so I did not speak to any one, but staggered down the hill to the old farmhouse, trying in vain to scent the supper or the clove pinks. I did not know my precious mother had been dead almost a year, but when I reach ed the gate I felt the change. It hung by one hinge and swayed and creaked with a dismal sound that seemed to me like the groaning of a ghost. It weak ened me so that I had to rest awhile before going down the long walk, still lined by my mother's flower beds. But, oh, how neglected they looked! As I neared the porch I saw a red calf tied to a lilac bush, one that my mother had herself planted on the day she was a bride, and then I seemed to know that she was gone. War kills women as well as men. She thought her only boy was dead, and she had nothing to live for. That was too good a house to be long unoccupied, and Dr. Miller had rented it to a needy family of foreigners, re questing that my room should be left just as my mother had last arranged it. The woman who occupied it allow ed me togo right up to my own airy chamber, where everything was sacred ly familiar. How deliciously soft and clean the bed seemed, and I cried my self to sleep. The first thing I heard in the morn ing was not the chirping of the robins, as in the olden time, but the loud bawl ing of that steer calf under my win dow. I covered my head with the bed clothes and was the poor, weak baby over again. When I awoke later in the day, good Dr. Miller was sitting by my bedside. He helped me dress and took me home to breakfast, where the talk ing as well as the cooking was all United States, but somehow 1 wasn't hungry and longed to ask what had be come of Martha. I soon found out. Her father was going to Ilolyoke the next day to hear her valedictory, and he took me along with him. It was a long drive, but we took it slow and easy, and 1 had my fill of fresh air and recovered my ap petite. We were a little late to the exhibition and found the chapel al ready crowded, but the good doctor finally succeeded in getting a seat well up In front, and there, right before us, was Amherst Jim. just as slim and white as ever. He fingered his watch chain and petted his mustache and made his diamond glisten and devour ed the platform with his eyes, just as he used to in the old red sclioolhouse when Martha was going to speak her piece. Now he was a full fledged phy sician and Dr. Miller's partner. We had a long time to wait. The essays were lengthy and learned, and Mar tha's was the last. The other gradu ates wore white, but she was aIT in black, with a crape collar. I looked questioningly into her father's face. He put his arm around me and whis pered, "She wears mourning for your mother—and for you." For my mother and for me—oh, the pnin of It! Oh, the Joy of it!" And, whether it was the pain or the joy or the crowded room or the way Jim look ed at Martha, I cannot tell, but some how everything slipped away into nothingness. When I came back to consciousness, the folks were all gone, all but Dr Miller and his daughter, and Martha was holding me as handy as she is holding that blessed baby now, and I was Just as quiet and submissive. Rpmnrknlile Self Control, "no's a man of remarkable self con trol, they say." "Well, rather! Why, ho can cover an entire coif course without saying 'damn.' " —Chicago I'ost. Kinct Mr*. JcineM. Mrs. Brown (indignantly)—ls it true that he said I was "fair, fat and for ty?' Mr. Jones—l'm not sure that he said "fair." Donlile I'lrnnnrr. Mamma—No; you may have either a banana or an apple, but not both. Willie—l'll take the banana, then. Mamma—l thought you liked apples best. Willie—Well, there's more fun in a banana. You can throw the skin on the sidewalk when you're through eat in.—Philadelphia Press. Extenaatlnir C'lrrnmNtnncf, Mamma—What makes you so ill? I hope you haven't been chewing to bacco. Tommy—O-boo-hoo! No, ma'am. Mamma—l'm glad to hear that, but what Tommy I was goin to chew it, but boo-hoo—l saw you comlu, an I swal lowed It. New Century Comfort. Millions are daily finding a world of comfort in Bnckleu's Arnica Salve It kills pain from Burns, Scalds, < uts Bruises; conquers Ulcers, and Fevei Sores; cnres Eruptions, Salt Khenm Boils and Felons; removes Corns and Warts. Best, Pile cure on earth Only ~'.V at Panles & Co s. drug store. - O'C • O'QC ■ o-a • O •O • O'Q j I THE ICEBERG'S I | SECRET * I V COFYBIUHT, 1S»01, BY C. B. LEWIS. Q b O O-O O-O OG O o o o o d We had been driven below Cape Horn hundreds of miles by a tierce gale lasting eleven successive days and nights, and one morning we found our selves among the ice aud almost wrecked aloft. The gale had blown itself out, luit the situation was one calling for the best seamanship and the keenest vigilance. Only steam whalers and exploring vessels get as far south as we found our position to be except by accident. During the three days we were putting the bark shipshape we were packed in a field of ice extending as far as the eye could see on every hand, and even had we been a twin screw steamer I doubt if we could have worked clear of it. It was field ice broken from the coast of some island, and some of the cakes were a good twelve feet thick and al most as hard as flint. On the fourth day we found ourselves driving down among six or eight great Icebergs, and the boats were provi sioned and other preparations made to leave the bark at a moment's notice. The odds would be a thousand to one that the boats would be ground to pieces in ten minutes, but we had to lake them. While we helplessly waited the field struck a berg which was esti mated to be a solid cube measuring about 2,000 yards on every front and towering up over a hundred feet high. There was a grand crash, and the berg began to slowly topple. It was like a j tree falling, only much slower. It took | a long minute for that monstrous cube : to turn turtle, and as the top reached j the water the mass cracked in twain with a report like the firing of a can non. The sea kicked up gradually, opened a wide lane in the icefield, and the bark was headed in and had clear j sailing for ten miles before we found the passage blocked by one of the big- ! gest bergs ever set afloat. Had that i berg been measured I should have had ( some wonderful figures to set down , here, but it was impossible for us to j mm 111 'v '■fffi vV WE I'UT OCT AN ICE ANCHOR AND M.VDB FAST. more than guess at its dimensions. The waves had squared its four sides to a great extent, but above their wash the berg was full of hills, valleys and ravines, and it would have been iuipos- j slble to cross it. As there was no way to dodge the berg, we put out an ice anchor and made fast to drive with it until an opening should occur. The side on which we were was as straight up and down as a wall, and, though the wind was whistling far overhead, it was scarcelj' to be felt on deck. We passed a very quiet night, and soon after sun rise next morning the captain ordered me to take two men and pass over the field ice and get a view of the western face of the berg. If I found that it could be done, I was to clamber up and look to the north for clear water- As the great cakes of ice were wedged together in the greatest confusion, our pace was necessarily slow, and it was a matter of two hours before we turned the corner of the berg and lost sight of the bark. I judged the western face to be a mile long, but it was not as steep as the southern. About midway of its length we came to a gully, up which we toiled for a matter of 200 yards. We then found our way blocked by a cliff fifty feet high. It was a cliff of ice, of course, though here and there one could see a bowlder creeping out. It was blue ice, almost as reflective as a mirror, and it would have turned the edge of an ax like granite. Wo | stood staring and resting, hot enough i with our exertions, when one of the j sailors leaped aside and cried out: "I'll be shot if there are not ship wrecked people right here above us! Look here, sir! And why haven't they raised a shout?" What 1 saw and what we all gazed at with open mouths was a sight few men will ever boast of seeing. About thirty feet above our heads a man dressed as a mountain tourist, an Eng lishman apparently, was lying at full length with. K !«> face toward us. One arm was doubled np uider him, the other outstretched. lie was fully dress ed, had a cap on his head, and his eyes were wide open. There was a rope around his waist, and that rope led back to the body of a guide and still a second one. 1 say guide because from their dress and looks 1 believed them to be such. One was huddled up as if his bones were broken, while the other . lay sprawled on his back. The three j of us had waved our caps and cheered ' before the thought came to us that j these men were dead dead and frozen into that flinty ice for heaven only knows how long. And yet it was hard to believe it. We could see in their faces, and every instant It seemed a.s If they would* move a log or an arm. We had brought a rope wfth us, and I managed to lasso a bowlder and pull myself up on a level with the victims. I Judged that there was at Vast three feet of solid ice before them, j but it was wonderfully transparent. It was easy to guess what hail hap- : pened. Somewhere thousands of miles away, where a great glacier crept down ' to the sea, the tourist had set out with the guides to explore, and snow or Ice had given way under them and drop | ped them down perhaps a hundred feet. In time the crevaxe filled up solid, and as the Ice w:i- pushed down to the sea a berg was born, and the corpses were carried away with it. One could not say from the dr< how long a time had elapsed. We must judge from the faet that, though we reported the case three months later, the identity of the tourist has not yet been discovered. We returned to the bark to report what we had seen and 1 offered ti/ take ropes and axes anil blasting pow der and return and secure the dead. The en pt ain favored the idea, perhaps thinking it would profit its in some way. but ciretinistaiiee stepped into prevent me from • lining out my From"L C. S. IllmatraUd." Copyright,flfOl, by th« C«lU«ry Englae«r r oßip*«f. If you can read and write able to finish course of ¥£ ■ brain to make you able to JUL I earn more money. If you « way we have done this for A V/U ten years, write for a free —_ copy of our booklet, "Are Your Hands Tied?" or Salaried Positions j~~ ,{ I for Learners VilllA I Wc teach by mall Mechanical, iff M train , Electrical, Civil, San aa ay I llarf,and Nlalng Ka|;lneerln|;| ■ J&f I Shop and Foundry Practice) W W riTtJ Msf Mechanical l)runln|;i Archl- Jr ( lecture; Architectural Drawing! 1 /'A Plnmblnm Heating and Ventl /%/ jfl Iatlon) Sheet Metal WorWi Tele- I phony) Telegraphy) Chemistry) Ornamental Dealgni Lettering) Book-keeping ) Stenography Methods of Teaching; English Branches) Locomotive Running (for engineers and flremen onlf)| Electrotherapeutics (for - ~o— physicians and nurses only). I.t.bll.krd 1891. r.U 1= C.p11.1, 51..00.000. Hend for free circular, stating subject 7 «>??g|sSk you wish to study. Address ~ >\ . 1 Dept ' A ' ,nternational Correspondence SCRANTON. Or call on Martin Schweitzer Montour , _ J plan. As wo wore potting ready the j berg began to revolve in a slow and stately way, and at the end of an liour the western faee had turned duo south, and such a sea was beating on it that no landing was possible. To make our way over the* berg we should have needed wings. The move ment of the berg crowded the icefields, ami the result was the opening of a narrow lane to the north. We were watching and waiting for it, and the bark was soon warped in and sail ! made. We were lucky enough to keep j this lane until It led us quite out of i the floating ice and further danger, and looking back as wo sailed every | man of the crew saw tlie figures as ! th<' three of us had seen them. The spray seemed to dash against their frozen faces and the waves to rant and growl like hungry wolves, but we knew they would not lie given to the sea until their strange cotlin had drift ed out of that frozen and desolated sea into sunshine and warmth. SuiMTMt it ion* Ilrokcrn. "Wail street brokers as a class are as superstitious as women," said one of them, "and there is hardly a speculator In tlie street who could not own up to some pet superstition if he would. I mean tin? kind of nonsensical supersti tion that decides his action occasional ! ly. My own is about as silly as that of any man's, but as it has won me lots of money I am going to cling to it. It originated about eight years ago when I found a fifty cent piece on the side walk. It was tlie first money that I had ever found in that way, and I had a feeling that luck was with me on that day. I plunged on everything that I had I'i*en hesitating about, and when I settled up I found myself way ahead. After that I f«-il into the habit of keep ing on the lookout for coins in the street. You would be surprised to see the collection that I have at home, for I have never spent any of this 'lucky money.' It now amounts to more than six dollars, and that first fifty cent piece is (he largest in the lot. "On days when I have found a coin I have pushed my luck successfully. Once or twice when I have hesitated about doing anything in the market I have gone out and walked around the streets, hoping to find a coin. I never have found one on such excursions, and each time I stayed out of the mar ket, which proved to be the thing to do. I know as well as you do the foolish ness of superstition, but I can't shake It out of me."—New York Sun. The Lieutenant Governor. In his book, "Up From Slavery," I Booker T. Washington wrote: "The temptations to enter political I life were so alluring that 1 came very near yielding to them at one time. I saw colored men who were members of the state legislatures and county offi cers who could not read or write and whose morals were as weak as their education. Not long ago, when passing through the streets of a certain city in the south, I heard some brickmasons calling out from the top of a two story brick building for the 'governor' to 'hurry up and bring up some more bricks.' Several times I heard the com mand: 'Hurry up, governor" 'Hurry up, governor!' My curiosity was arous ed to such an extent that I made inqui ry as to who the 'governor' was and soon found that lie was a colored man who at one time had held the position j of lieutenant governor ot' his state. "I asked an old colored man to tell me something of his history. He said that he had boon born In Virginia and sold into Alabama in 1545. I asked liiui how many were sold at the same time, lie replied, 'There were li\. of us—my self ami brother and three mules.' " Kinti lisiiir anil ilie VOHIIK Reporter. On one occa-ion Oscar 11. went to Gothenburg to rid a dedication or the opening ol s. ething or other where he was exi > < d to make a speech. An enterprising reporter in tercepted him at a railway station I upon arrival to ask for a copy of his manuscript In advance in order that it | might be published the same after | noon, for there would be no time for a ! stenographer to write out his notes i after delivery. The king greeted him pleasantly and explained that he had no manuscript; that he intended to speak without notes. The reporter was very much disappointed, lie told the king frankly that lie was a new man and that his future standing with his employer might be seriously affected if he failed to get the speech. King Oscar responded sympathetically, motioned to the reporter to get into his carriage, and while they were driving to the hotel gave a brief synopsis of What he ex pected to say. Chicago Keeord Herald. How to Mnke Tooth Ponder, Cnstile soap and orris root in equal parts make a cleansing and fragrant tooth powder If .h sir. d, an equal part of precipitated etialk may be added. t BICYCLE SUITS. Skirts Are Longer and Material* Heavy. Bicycle skirts are being made much longer—so long, in fact, that they may also be used for golf. It is noticeable also that the goods used are of darker shades, black, navy blue and iron gray being the most popular hues. The stitchings are less broad than former ly, and, in fact, much of the heavy ef fects are being done away with. Double faced goods are no longer a necessity now that the increased length of the skirts prevents them from blow- PARISIAN COSTUME. !ng up so easily. Many of the latest costumes are made of lightweight cov- j ert or hairy cheviot lined with silk. I The jacket of such a suit Is pretty made blouse fashion, ornamented with tucks and fancy buttons. The latest Parisian cycling costumes simulate an ordinary dress with its skirt cut so as j to reach to the ankles. Such a model is shown in our ilhis- j tration. It is made cf gun metal gray J cloth with the vest, turnover collar \ and cuffs of royal blue velvet. The skirt is laid In plaits down the center of the front gore. These plaits are hold half way down to the knees by stitchings. The same effect is given in the back. The jacket is trimmed with lointed strappings. It fastens with three buttons part way down, where it opens over a snug fitting vest of vel vet. The lines of the Eton are cut short, so as to reveal the wide bolt, idso of the velvet. A jaunty turn down collar and velvet tie give added chic to this smart coat. The hat, which is of rough gray felt, is trimmed with a scarf of red and blue plaid. .Irnic CHOLI.ET. Kvery th I »IC For I «e. That dear old lady, Julia Ward Howe, bids the young homemaker to have nothing for show. She says in Good Housekeeping: "Let your rooms look as if they were lived in. Provide convenient cases for your books, com fortable chairs to sit in, tables or desks at which one can write with comfort, pleasant pictures or engravings to look at. Do not envy the melancholy splen dor of superfluous apartments rarely opened and full of ghostly shadows. The time and money expended in tho care of these possessions are out of all proportion to any pleasure that can be derived from them." llow to Cook Fein. Skin and cleanse the eels and cut in two inch lengths. Slice half a pound of fat pork and fry to a crisp: take out the pork and put the eel in a pan. !!' small, sot the lengths up on end. but if large you can put them in the pan lengthwise. Sprinkle with salt and a very little pepper, add half a cupful of water and cover lightly, so that part of the steam can escape; put oil a lire and cook until the water has all boiled away and one side of the eel is fried to a nice brown; then turn over carefully and fry the other side. A Nportamon. Willie—How would you define H true sportsman? Papa—He Is a man who believes In giving every kind of game creature a chance for Its life and then Is disgust ed if the poor creature escapes with it. —l,l fe EVENING GOWNS. ionutilf find IVoTfl I rimminfffi. Evening gowns are noted this winter I for their rich materials and tine work- I manship in the way of embroideries, application, etc. Lace seems to be the favorite material. Tucked chiffon, soft silks in all the delicate colorings, erepe de chines, and liberty satins are also very stylish. Panne, especially in black and in the Persian and pompadour col orings. makes handsome princess dresses. Lace plays an important part OF BLACK POINT i/ESPitrr. In the trimming of dinner and dancing gowns. Frequently tlie entire gown is banded with insertions of different widths. These insertions are alternated with tucks so that scarcely any of the original material is seen. Today's picture shows a gown of black point d'esprit over white taffeta. The skirt, which is plain and clinging, Is ornamented by arabesque designs traced in black cliantilly lace. The Mouse waist is also trimmed with chan tilly applications. The sleeves, which reach only a few inches below the shoulders, are supplemented by a large puff and frill of white chiffon edged with lace. The belt and buckle are of cut jet. JUDIC CHOLLET. HIS WIFE IS OUT OF TOWN, j We see a man with under lip that has a downward droop. Upon his face a scowl as if he'd fallen in the soup. He roams about the bury streets in an uneasy ! way And puts a surly accent on the things he has to say. He goes into a restaurant and drops into a seat And wonders why they've nut a tiling at for a dog to cat. And if you care to seek the cause that makes hint feel EO brown You'll not have very far to look; Ui» wife is out of town. Wc see another man dressed up unusually gay. He wears a smile of gladness and a buttonholg i bouquet; He joins the cruising parties where the white top- ■ ped schooners sail And goo goos all the pritty girls who chance to cross his trail. At striking of the midnight hour he yet is on ths street. Is strenuous in his efforts to control his wabbling feet; He wears his hat tipped sideways on bis beer be fuddled crown; The mousey knows the cat's away; his wife is out of town. —Denver Post. How to Prena Chicken. Draw and singe a chicken. Wipe well with a damp towel, putin a kettle and cover with cold water, place over a moderate fire and simmer gently un til the meat falls from the bone. When about half done, add a teaspoonful of salt. When done, take the meat from the bones and cut it into small pieces not over half J:IJ inch square. I'ut the bones and skin back into tlie kettle and boil until the liquor is reduced to a pint and a half, then strain and season to taste. Mix tins with the chicken, pour the whole into a mold and stand it in a cold place over night. When hard and cold, turn out of the mold, garnish with parsley an ! servi Tlicre !i Oi»t iltrl ioll. River.- S >ll !' • :iU a stovepipe hat look - punk ' • mi'. \on V I'.rooi \ 'i iiiist;:iderst< od me. I said you I ' ..«-i 1 punk in a stovepipe hat.—Chicago Ti iliune. "How ridici: . for you to fall In | love with it nrisil 1 don't believt lie i \ t-r sc ! a ;>i( :i*re." "l».i | l.i •sif he marries lit Nerve Slavery. It is present-day conditions —heaping burdens of work upon the nervous system that tells the story—premature breaking up of health. It tells why so many men and women, who so far as age in years is concerned, should be in the prime of health, find them selves letting goof the strength, the power, the vitality they once possessed. It is be cause that great motor power of the body, nerve force, is impaired. Every organ de pends upon its controlling power just at much as the engine depends upon the steam to put it into action. An engine won't go without steam. Neither will the heart, the brain, the liver, the kidneys, the stomach act right without their proper nerve force : supply. Let any organ be lacking in this essential and troubles begin—some of them are Throbbing, palpitating heart. Sleepless nights. Sudden startings. Morning languor. Brain fag. Inability to work or think. Exhaustion on exertion, Flagging appetite. Digestion slow. Fooo heavy Easily excited, nervous, irritable. Strength fails. Loss of fit sh and muscular power. Settled melancholia. Utter tiespondency. A picture, hiiieou-, but easily changed to one of brightness by use of I>r. A. W. Chase's Nerve Pills. They build up the nerves and supply nerve force. The above *> the genuine package of Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Pills, are sold by deal ers or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Company, liuff alo, N. Y Price 50 cents. A FIGHTING GOVERNOR; I fllnncmta'a Who W«*+* to SIHHMII Itallroatl Combine. Few fights against combines have aroused more interest 111 tliis country tbau the one now on in the northwest- j era states in opposition to the consoli- ! dation of the Northern Pacific and the [ Great Northern and Burlington rail- | roads. Governor Samuel It. Van Sant of Minnesota, who is leading the bat- ! tie against the roads, says he has the i support of a number of other govern- I ors. Vhe affair promises to be fought j to a finish and will be a bitter one while it lasts. Governor Van Sant has an Interest- j lng career. He enlisted under Presi- j dent Lincoln's first call for 75,000 men, : but was rejected on account of his age, | —— •V> 1 I : i • "s " ■ * I . ■jc2E 1 ™ ■ygwjpEi * ~ issi " "" GOVERNOR B. R. VAN SANT. being not quite seventeen. Again he tried and was rejected, but finally was j accepted as a member of Company A \ Ninth Illinois. Before he was allowei togo to war, however, he had to have j a written permit from his father. The governor was a great favorite not only in his own company, but throughout the regiment, and was in the thick of many famous battles. Aft er the war he studied in New York city for some time and then went to Gales burg and graduated from Knox col lege. Soon after his graduation he went into business with his father at Leclaire, la., and they built one of the first raft steamers on the Mississippi. For a number of years Governor Van Sant was general manager of the Van Sant & Musser line of steamboats. He | went to Winona, Minn., in 1883 and i was closely identified with the city's | best interests and actively assisted in ! all public enterprises. For two years he was in the council as alderman and j was the unanimous nominee of the Re ! publicans for the office of mayor of Winona in ISBB. Later he was sent to the state legislature and in 1895 was speaker of the lower house. This is his first term as governor. ■ THE DES MOINES' SPONSOR Mian Fmnopii E. Went, Who Wm Se ! looted to Clirlnteii Sen Warship. The city of Des Moines, la., is not ! greatly pleased with the battleship that j bears its name, but extremely proud of Miss Frances E. West, who was se lected to christen it, for few American warships have had fairer sponsors than the new cruiser Des Moines. Miss West is one of the belles of Des i Moines and very handsome and accom plished. She is a musician of ability, and her family is one of the best j known in that city. Her mother was a Miss Chase and was connected by ties of blood relationship with Chief Jus tice Chase and Prescott, the historian. The father of Miss West is a type of the successful business man and la very wealthy. The Des Moines is a protected cruiser j of 3,200 tons, with a speed of 1G.5 knots an hour. She is armed with ten 5 inch guns, eight 0 pounders, two 1 pound* MISS FRANCES E. WEST. ers and t%vo rapid firing Colts. She has twin screws and is of the same type as the Denver, Chattanooga, Gal veston, Cleveland ami Tacoma. This is the second time an lowa girl I has been selected to christen an Amer ican warship. Xliss Mary Lord Drake, daughter of Governor Drake, gave the lowa her name when she was launched several years ago. Ever since her de but Miss West has been one of the leading society young women in E>es Moines. She is a graduate of Vassar and has traveled widely in Europe. The Connecticut man whose life was saved by a package of love letters in his pocket that stopped a pistol ball ought to marry the girl without tin- , necessary delay if only to show his j gratitude. Our far flung thermometer line em braces about all the shades of temper ature from zero to fever heat. At ; Moorhead. Minn., tlie other day it was 8 degrees, while at Key West, Fla., it was (58 degrees. Only an !•'.\ porlniontal t'rui*e. Philadelphia, June 7. —The old Uni- ! ted States frigate Hartford, now used as a training ship, arrived at League Island navy yard late yesterday after noon from Hampton Roads with 400 landsmen for the battleships Indiana and Massachusetts. These battleships have been ordered on an experimental cruise with a view of determining how quickly a portion of the fleet can be mobilized. 112 The llaromclrr. The barometer drops almost exactly an Inch for 1,000 feet of ascent. lljlljl in in... fe warn lo to all Ms of Printing •iS A n I IK! I Ill's Hem. II ill MR. lis Bat. i r A well pr'iitc- 1 . tasty, Bill or l.et w/ ter Head, Po.-t r A )lt Ticket, Circular, y»Y Program, State r>j ment or Card L w an advertisement for your business, a satisfaction to you. " lei Type, lew Presses, , Best Paper, Stilled ffort A Promptness \ll you can ask. A trial will make you our customer. We respectfull" ask that trial. OU.i LTOCK OF TRIMMED HITS was never more complete. We have just rtctived from New York an in voice of the latest effect in outing and ready-to wear HATS. infill 122 Mill Street.