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tro WATERBURY EVENING DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY. JULY 7, 1903. FROM A CAR Wl DOW! Some Odd Siglxts Seen at Mexican ' Railway Stations. ETcry'Dept Plttrm Otter Some ' tblmg New t er the Plctnreeqtwe JLoTinn; Tonriat Tbe Bearsrara , Md Their Method. It Is not the shining polish nor the luxurious upholstering: of a Pullman ear that mafces a trip through Mexico geem a leaf from the "Arabian Nights," bnt it Is the strange and interesting bits of life seen through the car vrin- The pfctTrrestnTe palm-thatched . huts dotted over the country and the, naive curiosity and assurance of the smiling native transports the blase Americano Into another -world. ' Every way station or depot plat form is a scene of amazing activity flow, mm M I TWO MUSICAL BEGGARS. ' wMle the train is in. Here is a quick lunch for the hungry peon for it Is seldom the foreign traveler who-tries the rather suspicious looking viands. " . "Hot tamales," a familiar cry; crisp tortillas made while you waft; aweet cakes, fruit, soup in evil smell-. Ing pots and gourds of pttlque, the na tive liquor. ' , Perhaps, here too, you will find the toy merchants -coaxing you to take a jnonkey on a stick home to the baby . It many of the stations you wm be hown some commodity peculiar to the , -.place. - ,; .' -'. ; ' 'Trapuato Is the strawberry , station the year round. As the train draws in scores of young men, bearing dozens of baskets on their heads, their shoul ders and in their hands', will come run ning and fighting for the first place, while, the cry of "fresas, fresas," is 3creamed in a dozen different keys. The unsophisticated traveler pays per haps a dollar for a basket and thinks , : himself fortunate in securing the lus- cious fruit but the wary one, who knows the Mexican trader, understands that the first price is a compliment to your purse and that the omnipotent dos reales or about 25 cemtfe win pur chase as much as he can carry. At one little town you win always - see two old men, bffind and withered with age. ' To a strommlng" accompani ment on two battered guitars you are regaled with La Paloma, sung at the topmost squeek of the wheezy old voices. ' A stolid old ' woman Is their guide and catches the pennies thrown "DEMI UN CEN-TA-VO." by the tortured by appreciative audi ence. " If your heart inclines toward dainty needlework the platform at Agnas Calieniles will appear to be a small Paradise, for here is the home of the Mexican drawn work. The venders swarm about the train; under the win dows they will camp if you so much as notice them. "Most beautiful most fine so very cheap!" Every stopping place has Its eager tradesmen and more eager beggars; but such beggars as they are, tiny, satin-brown, half -clad or underclad creatures; great brown eyes under masses of tangled black hair. The youngsters of the family are the recog nized beggars the younger the better and more effective. "Demi un cen tavo," .over and over, in a long drawn out whine. Out of the hovels along ' the road, popping out of the ground at every slackening of the train, over the roar of the wheels, in the brightest noon or dead of . night, you will hear the one English phrase known to every - Mexican beggar, "Gimme one cent." Or running an accompaniment to the winds iand the birds, the soft, monot onous sing-song, "Demi un cen-ta-vo." ' J ' ANNA H. CLARK. . Recoiling; Cannon Kin Box. BRIDGEPORT, Conn., July- 6. In firing a cannon Julius Delko, aged thir teen, suffered a fracture of the skull and died within half an hour. The cannon was mounted on a wooden block which, was not heavy enough for the recoil, and when DeSko polled the firing string the camion went up ward, striking him on the right side of the tskuIL Jttty 101&. 1663 For g of if A Fortieth rmhOersary War Story - f Copyright, 1903, by G. I Kilmer, WULY 10 to 18 was a week of bat II tie for the mastery of Fort Wag l ner, one of the grim guardians of ChaTieston harbor. "Wagner became one of two models long in use at the West Point academy. The other was Sevastopol. Captain Langdon Cheves of the Confederate States engi-, neers planned and constructed Wagner and gave his life in Its defense the first day. of attack. The Confederate out posts were driven in the 1 morning of July 10 by a sudden dash of Federals almost out of the sea waves, and when the guns of Wagner opened upon the Intruders Cheves started from his quar ters to report for duty on -'the walls. He was struck by the first shell that entered the fort and Instantly killed. The surprise of the Conf ederate out posts had been effected by General George C. Strong's brigade of 2,000 men, who had landed from boats on the southern end of the island. Every man' in the garrison remained on post the night of the 10th, believing that the af fair on the beach was to be the fore runner of an assault on the fort. Near daylight on the ilth the sentinels heard the advance of stealthy footsteps and made out ghostly forms of armed men climbing the sand ridges on the beach in front of the sea wall. Georgians and South Carolinians stood attheir places, holding their fire until their own pick ets came tn. ' ' ' At the heels of . the retiring Confed erate pickets the advance of the Fed eral stormers, led by Colonel Rodman, Seventh Connecticut, 4 mounted the walls. One of them climbed to the crest in front of a 32 pounder, , beside which stood lieutenant Gilchrist, com mander of the Gist guard artillery. Gilchrist challenged the intruder re ceiving for -an answer a shot from a rifle held so close that the powder blinded his eyes. The bullet clipped a lock of his hair and passed on. Sad- THB OTAItT.BUgE OR THE FATRA Kgr. denly the 32 pounder "opened, and the entire charge-of canister went through the body of the Connecticut rifleman. That cannon shot was a signal for the batteries to open, and under : the sud den, awful "fire of colombiads, carroh ades, howitzers and mortars the storm ing column was swept from the beach. ' Not only Wagner's storm of iron del uged the sandy plain In front, but Sum ter's shells raked the charging lines. "Aim low!" was General Strong's com mand as he placed himself at .the head of the storming parties. Just in front of the fort Vas a marsh, and after struggling through that the men leaped into the difch. A few climbed the bank and waited , under the shelter of the parapet for , re-enforcements. But .the enemy's fire became so hot that a line of battle could not survive the march. The assailants who reached, the . para pet ; fired" "blindly rover "theN wall t and picked off the gunners in the exposed angles of the fort, In retaliation the Confederates tossed hand grenades over the wall. Finally Strong declared, wtth tears in his eyes, it was useless and gave the order to fall back. : In the still more desperate attack of July 18 Strong's brigade was given the post of honor. An eyewitness In the fort, Paul Hamilton Hayne, the poet, described the thrilling scene In the Southern Bivouac. "The sun had al most reached the horizon," says Mr. Hayne, "when these regiments, glit tering in blue and gold, the last rays of the luminary flashing in ominous brightness from their bayonets, swords and epaulets, formed upon the beach, the Sixth Connecticut to lead and at tack the southeast angle of the fort, the Forty-eighth New York to pass along the sea front and, facing inward, at tack there, the other regiments of the brigade to charge the south front, ex tending inward toward the marshes on the left, while to the Fifty-fourth Mas sachusetts, colored volunteers, 1,000 strong, the honor was given of a posi tion in advance of alL y "They were to distinguish themselves in the ambitious and romantic role of enfants perdus. Colonel Robert G. Shaw commanded these men, and doubtless his pride and confidence were high as he beheld- 4 -Down the long and dnsky line Teeth gleam and eyeballs shine. "The Federal bombardment on land and sea suddenly ceased. A great 4 calm ensued, but It was- poitentoxand terrible. It seemed as If the heart of ; nature stood stm, awed by a prescience of the impending and fearful catastro phe. Gradually thesmokeot .the,can- nonade, swathed" about the fort for hours, so far lifted that the enemy were seen debouching from their first parallel and advancing over the nar--row approach between it and the fort. Then from the bombproof and sand hills the garrison quickly gathered along the ramparts. FieM pieces were ranged, the artillerists doable shotted their guns, and '.'Bach gunner moveless by bis piece with rigid aspect stands. The ready lanyards v firmly grasped to bold, tm trembling hands; So moveless In their marble calm, their stern heroic grilse, . They look like forms of stained stone, with burning human eyes. ' "On rushed the Federals at double quick, saluted by a simultaneous out break of hot shot, an implacable, con centrated fire from Sumter, Gregg and James island. Conspicuous In the van, on came the misguided and unfortu-, nate Colonel Shaw, his long hair wav ing behind him as he led his sable en fants perdus. A portion followed him over the ditch and planted, their flag on the ramparts, where the colonel was shot and Instantly killed. The others, however, could not endure the sight of that gaping ditch or the revolting sen sation of winged metal viciously near. ' "Some of the, frightened creatures ran like deer, others in the base paraly sis of terror prostrated ' themselves upon the r ground, crawling along on hands, and feet. Then a grand deed which the old north men would have called , a deed of derring-do was per formed by the men of the' ever domi nant ' Caucasian race, the thought of which as I write, a quarter '. of, a cen tury after its occurrence, makes my heart beat and my pulse throb tuinurtu ously. ', Across the narrow and , fatal stretch before the fort, every inch of which was swept by a hurricane of fire, 'a besom of destruction, the Sixth Connecticut (and Forty -eighth New York) charged with such undaunted resolution upon the southeast salient that they succeeded in the very face" of hell, one may say, in capturing It" The commandant of Fort Wagner; General W. B. Taliaferro, describing the charge, surpassed tn fervor the enr thusiasm of the poet Hayne. Said he: "The Confederates, with the tenacity of bulldogs and a fierce courage arous ed almost to madness, poured from the ramparts and embrasures sheets of flame and a tempest of lead and Iron. Yet the Intrepid assailants rushed on like the waves of the sea by whose shores they fought They fell by hun dreds, but they pushed on, reeling un der the" frightful blasts that almost blew . them to pieces, up to the Con federate bayonets." : J. -Cw'. V -h; : 'The Sixth Connecticut and Forty eighth New York belonged to General Strong's brigade. It was 8 o'clock and fully dark when the assailants, to the number of 700, entered ' the bastion; Soon after dark Cokraei H. S. Putnam " charged with the Seventh New Hamp shire in"the wake of Strong and in the confusion and darkness assaulted ' the very, point held by Strong's men: The bastion was heM for tlr::ie-hours, when the survivors, 140 In all, surrendered to a party of the garrison led by Cap tain W. H. Ryan, who was killed In the counter assautt , v - Continuing his description, Mr. Hayne says: "The history of -war, rife with terrible . conflicts, can show no more terrific strife than this; I have I conversed with old Confederates to re gard to the night succeeding this great assault and have remarked how sea soned veterans shudder when they re call Its horrors. ; Wearily the , dark hours passed, and Sabbath morning, dawned over the sand hills, and every detail of the scene Was brought out in bold refief. Men lay In every possi ble attitude, with every .conceivafcie expression on their countenances, their limbs bent into unnatural shapes by a fall of thirty feet "In the salient on the ramparts; they lay heaped up, often three deep. Con spicuous among them was", a tail, su perbly formed man, an officer, whose calm features, only the more ' clearly cut by the chisel of death, gazed to ward the cloudless sky a . breathless Apollo! This was , Colonel Putnam of the Seventh New v Hampshire. Al though, horrible to relate, the entire back of his head had been blown off, the wonderful beauty ,,of his face re mained unshadowed, evoking from his foes a sigh of pity. On the crest sur rounded by a few a very few of his sable troops, at the foot of the flag he had vainly planted, was the body of Colonel Shaw. One would have thought at a cursory glance that it was the corpse of a mere boy." X , : ' The assailants of the bastion repre sented nearly every regiment In Strong's brigade, but the most of them were from the Sixth Connecticut and Forty-eighth New York. The last named regiment entered the fight with 510 offi cers and men. Its death roll was -85; wounded, 112; prisoners in the bastion, 73. The loss In the Sixth Connecticut was 15 killed, 77 wounded and 48 cap tured. Shaw's cotored regiment lost 180 out of 1,000 borne on the rolls. GEQRGTD L. KILMElR. THE FURTHEST SOUTH A New and Wonderful Record ,tn Antarctic Expleratioiu Expedition, Headed lry Cup. Beott . Beaches a. Point Two Hwntred and ; Seven BUIes Nearer Pole Tkam ; , f ' Preriona Kxplererm. . .1 The safe return of the relief . ship Morning to New Zealand gave to the world the news that Capt Scott, of the AntJirctic exploration expedition, had penetrated to the , most southern point ever before reached bi- man, but it did not give the details of the Journey, or the hardships endured. , To-read In the newspaper that an X expedition has reached .207 miles nearer-theSouth pole than any other expedition had ever been able to do, is a cold, bare, unfeeling-fact but to follow In the fuller details the men who have had the nerve and the endur ance to cover those 207 miles, to witness ' ' Husband ln an aside to hfs wifeh-If you can't think of some more anecdotes of our chQdren's smartness let s go home right away, for they're getting readyto teO us tilings about their own. -Baltimore American.' The Walter's Method. "Naw," said the head waiter, "that man that jest went out ain't worth much." ' ' ; "How do you know?" inquired the favorite customer. . . ' "Oh, if s easy for us walters-to- take a man's measure." ' "I suppose you measure him from tin-to tip, eh?" BxifiCalo Times.' . Hla Optnlon. ' Mrs. -Peckem 1 wonder if a man ever does get too old to marry. Peckem Of course not Age doesn't always bring .wisdom. Iejaxor. 2&wa- THB DISCOVERY FLYING BUNTINO IN HONOR .' ; OP Q&PT. SCOTTS RBTURN. Xr the suflerfngs and prlvatlons of cold and Ice and snow, to stay with them as they push ahead after their dogs have all died unoler the desperate-conditions and they continue : the Journey dragging their own sleds; to walk for days at a time through -dense fog, and darkness, so that there was uncertainty, asto the direction and difficulty in picking ftbe way, ail this makes one realizeat what great cost the scientific dataof the worlds Is enriched, Jtnd the public placed in-the possession of information in regard to hitherto unknown and unexplored re" giomr. , , . ' X'''. y- W''''.;''. That Capt ScottltasTslready achieved more than any offals predecessorsT3ince Sir James Ross is made evident by the later information given out But not satisfied with that which he has already been able to accomplish, he sent the re lief ship back choosing to- stay another year and tryp for still greater laurels.' The ' ; utmost J., harmony has prevailed amongst the members of the expedition; Lieut Shackleton, who was too 111 to stand another winter on board theDis covery, returned to New Zealand with eight other of the men who were inca pacitated. ' ';- .".'.; It was during the great sledging jour ney to the south that Lieut Schackleton burst a blood vessel tn one of Msi lungs, while still 200 miles from the-sMp, and nearly died from exposure. It was a most , remarkable journey which Capt Scott, the lieutenant and Dr. WHson made, while the Discoverer was lying in winter quarters In McMnrdo Bay, Vio toria Land. The party penetrated" to a latitude of"82 degrees, 17 minutes, south, which',; as we have already said, Is 207 miles furthers. south than ever before reached ; by man. And In gaining this point Capt I Scott and his companions traveled over'800 miles. Theexpedition was made under the-most trying xxhkH tions. ' As they Journeyed southward. RASPBERRY NOVELTIES, FINDING THE RECORD OF THE DISCOVERY AT CAPE CROZIER. . - the snow became softer, and thestrain told quickly upon the dogs, which broke down and ultimately died. The party then had to do "relay" joorneys-taklng three sledges on for a couple of miles and then- returaing-foT-thther three -and in this manner-progress was some times reduced to two miles a day. To add to their hardships thick fogseexxvel oped them, and for five days the party had to steer a course in the dark. At last after traveling altogetherSOO miles, the party reached the Discovery, and found, to their delight, that the relief ship Morning had arrived, after dis covering the record .of the Discovery's voyage; which had been deposited at Cape Crozier nearly a year before. Be fore the arrival of the Morning great privations had been experienced, part of the supplies having gone bad. The Discovery was re victualled and the ex plorers are now able to spend a com, fortable winter, and to continue their work for another year. . In the mean time efforts , are being put forth to or ganize . another , relief expedition from England to go next year, and it Is inter esting to think what greater achieve ments Capt Scott win have to report to the world at that time. . ; . ' I j JOEI, MURDBB. : Lehteh Valley, Pier Burned. . NBW YORK, July e-ilre destroyed Pier H of the Lehigh Valley railroad in Jersey City.v The pier was used ak most exclusively for the storage of flour, and $100,000 worth of tbe-staple was consumed. The estimated damage to the pier and contents is $250,000. What an unlimited , stock of ex cuses some people , ' have. Atchison Globe. v' Fosn, Ploat, Ptff, Socp, CtrpB, Paste . and Puddlaar Sansee. . Raspberry , Foam- Crush a quart of raspberries, breaking every berry. Sprinkle over hatf a teatrupfnl of -sugar and set aside an hour or more. Beat two eggs very light and frothy, add two tatolespbonftds of sugar, stir into the crushed berries and serve immedi ately. Garnish witii especlaUy large berries. Float Crush a pint of very ripe red berries and press through a sieve to remove the seeds. Beat in, a little at a time, powdered sugar and the beaten whites of eggs until two tairfespoonfuls of sugar and the whites of four eggs have been used. : PufEs. Make a batter with twcbeat en eggs, half a teacupfnl of milk and half a teacnpf ul of sugar; add half a teaspoonful of salt and enough flour sifted with two-teaspoonfuls of baking powder to make a moderately stiff bat ter and stir in twoy teacupftrts of ber ries. Butter six teacups, fill half full, put in , a steamer cover and cook over boiling water an hour. Serve wffh orange sauce. Into a teacupfnl of hot water put a teacupfnl of sugar; add a few pieces of orange peeL When it boQs stir In a tahlespoosfuf of corn starch wet with a Uttie orange Juice that has-been extracted from two soar oranges. Now add the remainder of the juice, take out the peel and add half a teacnpful?of better, stirring weTL - Soup. Cook red or black raspberries in a Utile water until they part .wffh their juice. '. Squeeze, strain, adfl water to make the desired flavor; boll, skim, and to every, three pints add a table spoonful of cornstarch dissolved in a little of the Jutce when coM and boll a minute. In warm weather serve cold, with a lump of ice in each dish and a tabiespoonful of whipped crew in. i In cold weather serve hot! with crackers crisped in tbeoven. Cups. Sift two teaspoonf uts of bafc ing . powder ' with two . teiicn-pftQs of flour, and with a BtQe ; water make a soft dough. Batter large evps, drop In a Httie dough, then a few berries; use dough and' berries to ATI the -cups about half full. . Set the cups in a dish of hot water, put ta the oven, cover closely and cook half an hour. Add boiling water, as It eraporates. Serve wffh milk or thin . cream sweetened wTh maple sngar. ', Paste. Put two-qnaxtsof red" berries In an earthen jar, set tiie Jarin boXftng water over the fire and cook until the. juice Is extracted, then rub through a fine colander or -f sieve . to remove the seeds. Mix with this an equal weight of sugar and cook to a firm paste, stir ring ail the time or ft may; born. Spread evenly, on plates, dry to the oven, cut In smaD' pieces, dip in pul verized sugar anid can. For use soak the pieces overnight in cold water and simmer slowly. ; Sauce For Puddings. Coot a pint of raspberries with twofhtrdsa & a tea-'J cupful of sugar In teacupfnl of wa ter Strata through a sieve and add a teWespoonful of butter. Thicken with a very little cornBtarcnr-C)oxrntry Gen tleman. . '. x-. rs; x J':- Fruits That Make eTr. ' , A' A -common mistake in jelly making Is the adding of too much water with the fruit with the .idea that more jelly win be the result The more water is put in the more time it win take to cook it-out before ; the jelly wIH begin to form. - XX -:; '! ''X-,' Anofher mistake Is trying to be eco nomical with sugar. There should be measure f or measureof fruit juice and sugar, and anything less wffl not re sult in as good a jefly and sometimes In no jelly whatever. There certain fruits that will jelly easily; wtnle-others it Is impossi ble tawbtaiorteay good Tesufhr from un less gelatin to added. Grapes and cur rants make an especially fine jefry. Raspberries and blackberries need a IttQe more add to make firm JeDy. One-temon to-everyptat of peach juice win make a mostdefickios eny, as it needs-tbe-adWOonal'taTt of the- temon. . Greeo grapes make a good jeDy, but they, will require' more, than the ordS nary allowwnee of sugar. One-tMrd more sugar than jnce wCl give the right-proportion. ' III BIL110BE FOREST A Practical School for Foresters on the Vanderbllt Estate. rnwtleal Metled , Praetleea Time HaTOr-Taatspht sLoImb t tbe Ettre CMnti7-Brd Wrk Ft. tare 4 tbe Seheel. The increasing demand in this coan try for men trained in forestry has led to the establishment, in various parts of the United States, of schools for the study of forestry, a There is the New York State college of forestry at Ithaca, a school at Cornell university, estab lished in 189S; the Tale forest school at New Haven, established in 1900; the BOtmore forest school, conducted , on the great estate in North Carolina be-' longing to Mr. George W. Vanderbilt; and many of the state agricultural col leges now offer general courses in foiy estry. The Biltmore estate, was prob ahly the first private estate to put into careful practice the principles' of or- This estate, which contains , 110,000 acres, situated in the beautifnl region about Asheville, North Carolina is cer taDy a broad and interesting field for the pursuit of Chetstndy of forestry, and it is no wonder enthusiastic students seek the advantages offered there. ' The student at Biltmore is expected to re main for twelve ronsecutivtli months, and to fmish the work fothaime. The course, not being so long as-at Cornell or Yale, does not lead toa degree, flome of the Biltmore students have had in eiuded in their year's work three months of travel and study in Europe, that they might become acquainted with forestry; methods and results abroad. Dr. C. A. Schenk, the head of the Biltmore-school, Is a forester of German training. X It Is advised for-an those that desire to be come skilled foresters to make a person al study of the work as carried on in kn-ope. -j Xs.'- X '. ' ,", r K was In 1S31 that systematic experi ments -tn practical -f orestry were begun upon the Biltmore estate. The forests had suffered from "ftre.grazii'-aitd ex cessive lumbering" the three arch en emies of forest life, and when the experi ment was started the- best trees had al- ready been cut Butnnderthe manage- qnlred of the forester; soon, teaeed; novice win discover the difference be tween camping in the woods for recrea tion and working tn them. But then the outdoor life and the Intimacy with nature, of which this work requires so much, win in itself be a pleasure tonot a few." It is a Iffe thatappealsespeclal ly to youth, and the applications for .phtces hi the : school outnnmber very considerably the places available. t Graduates , of the schools of forestry experience small trouble In seem ing po sltions. ! Some of the men that have taken the course offered at Biltmore Forest school are employed by our na- tional government ,In the conservaflon, -of her forests, others are at work irrCa nadlan government; "still others are Ixi the employ of state governments, of owners of private forestsandomeharre 1 gone out to the Phttipplnes to practlc , their profession. j ' A Only Sampling It. ' t In the grocery division of s Wg tJat ' partment store a 'young, woman ire r making: an exhibit of a new prepasra- "VV uon ox wneai. un ine conxnter my front of her were little plates. TbesS she filled,; from time . to time wtth' freshly cooked ! samples, which ah passed out free to customers who wished to try them. , ' . ' One man, a lean, dyspepGe locS&rgf person,- had emptied his dish with evident relish, ana the young wbob' an; sure of making a sale, addrosse? im with her. most engaging smile. MWell,w she said, "how do yon Eke our new breakfast food? j lt oxtly li ' cents a,', package;1 , X "It is very goocT," he repfSed, eet ting down the dish, (btrt I never eat any Ion. 3 breakfast. Youth's Coiapaaf . ,Mrs. DeGafbbe Do you know taty thing about cooldng--lubs? ' . ;Mrs. Stayathome -No, bnt I know all about cookingf everytMag-, eisea Baltimore American. t .J A VO'IBERFUL , T.'ECICtLi. ' : ) Very d3aphanons dresses are worn by the young peopte, chiffon and tnOe and kindred stuffs taking . the lead. Many of. them are trimmed wffh nar row: ribbons and many spangled wHh silver; bnt tn' nearly every tastapce the backof tiarm or the entire arm, from the shoukier ' to the elbow, la veiled either with a pendent sleeve -or with drapery. The bodices are not so much pouched as they were; indeed, some of them are severely plain and many have deep belts. CCEERHVQ THE FORESTS XT. BOJXMORKj , ment of Dr. Pinchot, Mr. VanderbllCs fciteBter,relnnxovements were made air Char woodlandsof the estateand what in flnw years wa-lsoM fromheorest paid for the: work of improvements of those years. . : It was an object lesson to 'thewhoeccrtrntryespec 88we4iave6aJd, the forest was not at ail a superior-one and wood braught.but Dow prices in the aietgttborhood about Biltmore. The BHtmore-f orest will long stand as-an iSustration oT the -good re sultsbtstned in practteaT1 forestry. In-dQith3n-i-therot1nal'for on the estate is a wonderful coHection of trees, shrubs and plants gathered from an parts of the world. The original .forest contained "72. species of trees; hi qnantfly -f c43kTwlng-the given white oak, black scarlet and Spanish oaks, chestnut hickory , cfaesntut oak, black gum, maple, and tulip trees. At Biltmore-is an arboretum, perhaps the finest in the world, extending from a point near the mansion .for a distance of five miles, and containing a collection of 9;000 dJfflerent kinds of trees and tflirulw. " , X--y X "i :'X) -' i---:.' The young man that enters the Bilt more Forestry school must bring with him his own horse and riding eqedp iDent and must be prepared for a good doseof outdoor life and Che .endurance of hard "work. An authority writing of this new profession-says: "The workln the field i&often arduous hr toe extreme, and a rugged bodily, constitution la re. For Bhlcmand Kervoos Disorders, soc!b ftS . Wind Mid Paia in tbeetomach, Sick Bend- , che. Giddiness, Jnlncsa and Sxrellin after xneala, rjizztoesandmowaiueaa, CokiCbUfci Flnairfngrf"HratTw of Appetite, Short ness of Breath, Costivcncss, Blotches on the Skin. Disturbed Steep, Prfehtfetl Dreams, and ail Neivonsaiwi Trerabfinjr SenstttkMrs, AJJE fTWTDOSE wiu mi Rap, a ' jwery sanerer a-eai ugsfty invtlen to-try on Box of these HOs, and tittev win be aels nowleded to be WJJ&3T A E1VAL , . WEJBCttABPS VltJLS taken as direct ted, wUl cgatckly i esiore Fcmateg'to-coiii. yiiete . health. Tliey pt ouxptl f xeiikove auy obstmo tion ur Ixieulatitytheaystexn. Potm Weak Ctorrrsch, f: Disordered L!vcr9 theygctflke cmIe a few dose work. ' wonderrapon tbe Vital Orgaaxs; Strengthen ing the muacular System, .restoring theiong: lost Complexioo, brinsinsr back tbe keen edge of appetite, end aTonshr with tbe ' RoeebnartT Health tbe w&ole ply steal energy of the town frame. , Thesa : are facts" admitted by thousands, in all classea-of aociety, and one o tbe best gnar- ; antees to the Nervous and Debilitated ia that BEE CHM.VS Pti.LS.tmve th& Largest Sate of any Potent KAetUcitres In ttw World. . , - Beecham's XPWx bare been before ,tne vnbibo tor ixoit eentary, hkI re tJie most ppnirtamilrxtirtyjtjkstBe. ' v PjrepawkUmly by Thome BeeeTMMSft,' Helens, mad. S& OwaaAJSier Soldeveij hImiv liboxee, ZOe.aoadTtSo." V r 1 YtfuCan Drink G-lass After Class r v , Moofbeer ItWULOOTOO good, and the . mote yotttrtnte the better yon Ifke ' tt. Pttanototrtytbe D6M ot tonics, DOS tbe mostrefrestabaar aodoeltgiitfniofau bereragea for - hot "weartbeE. SoldeverTwhere.or by mft ior2S oenta. A package makes frve-gal. Ions. Bewareofimltatioris. . CHARLES B. HIRES CO., Malvern, Pa. i I ''mi mi hi mi mi iiimiu tm :' : 'I The Largest Selling Br&nd of Cigars in the World, THE BAND IS THE SMOKER'S PROTECTION