atäecordsmade , S LEFT BY BRYAN ROOSEVELT. AND ■ reds of Fleches Have Been Made tins Journey ina* ufThouaaud« of L.— Remarkable 1‘hyaical Eadur- L. Shown by Tbeae Two Candidate* Ike trails which William JeunlLgs u and Theodore Ro -evelt have Ip .u the maji of II.e l ut'evi Stat« > iv ldenees of the intricate civil z:r »h.ch each would represent, 1 .;«•». pries are only the evolution of methods which iu early days ipted a candidate to saddle Lis L throw a pair of saddleba * lu I of .dm, and to ride ,uto a ue gh- lg county to feel the pulre of the To-day the horse has become locomotive; the saddle-bags age, library and butfet cats; roads Inn Is a palace sleeping li.it is home to the candidate iu all kiers. times, and places; the scons Ules of muddy or dusty roads Lave Le the thousands of miieg of steel- Ll road-bed over which these palace Is thunder with the swiftness of a L-r pigeon. bt "there were giants In those [' has become accepted of the past. Hi.it the old-fashioned orator of the llt-rlding days of Lincoln and Rvccptioa, ........................................ n ............................................. tWO I ersons addressed .......................... MX'.UUO Bouquet» received........................... Speaker* uu tram........................... 5^ Newspaper mtn .............................. Word* by telegraph.... ..................234.UUU Words spoken ................................ Governor Roosevelt's train followed almost the same route as thl* iu ludl- aua. touching twenty-four place* for set speecbaa. About the same general experience was his. Indiana being considered a most Important state, the work was in excess of the general Western average, but even with that allowauce the tiguras are significant of the demands made ujion the physical aud mental sides of these men. •r are physical causes for breakdown. Must often such speakers have been regular lu all I lelr habits of life. They i cauuot adjust tllVUls»«’I V ♦•* Mt UUCt* tO bolted food aud Irra, ular hours for eat- i lug Food is uut d gusted as it should be and the body lacks its usual uour ' isbaient. “Above all thl*. as lu the case of Mr. Bryan especially, the »' zl.t uf UP*, ng the bead of a party's i ' tn r* has b»vtl distressiug. lie ba* bad more than the details of bis ow u tour upon him. Telegrams, lent rs. and ail the machinery of modem correspondence have buuud him to bi - ¡»arty's uiauage- tiient and have obtruded upon him when he should have been resting. "Noth ng lu athletics in prlxe-fight- lug. ruuuing, r ding, wheeling, or phys­ ical ra. ord break ngs of any klud lu Its physical aspect cau com ¡tare with the campaign work of Will.am Jennings Bryan. His perfonnam-e. In the light of mere physical effort and endurance, has been wonderful. Iu the matter of training and experience, of course, he has had the advantage of Governor Roosevelt, but be has been taxed as Roosevelt has not been. His cam­ paign stands out as a jnarvel of phys teal endurance.” much In bwadoo* and signs and sort of thing, aud 1 dou'l put ui faith In luck, but I was pre tty ue converted ou this trip. A bloude-u ta« bed Vtrglulau us med Mak 11. was a steady loser for the first hours. He played ’em well, but w ever be bad a big baud so nebody always bad oue Just a bit bigger, ou a bluff some fellow with more riosity tbau nerve or Judgment wi call hint down. At Just 11 o'clock tu got up from bls chair aud walked back ward arvuud the table thirteen times, offerlug uo expiauatmu for Ins straugi COUdUcL Uli the uext di al be bad a pair of trey*. raised It w lieu it cauie his say, stood two rakes from other Voc it Exertion. players aud set It back the limit. It th In considering the campaign work of the other, taxed lu. boldlug up au a,* a ti.au, the voice is the one thing that —ami didu't improve; eacl of Hie otli gives uneasfuess to the speaker aud his ers draw only oue card. Hardy put frieuds. W ith voice gone, his work up a magnificent bluff 1 never »ah Is at an end. and It 1* known that the a low band played better, n ith all the voice is more likely to give away than feints of assured uervousuesa, fraqueut any other physical necessity lu a cam­ glauces at hl* baud. etc. paign. If hand shaking l>e thrust upon "lie drove one man out who bad a candidate until the bone and tissue ace* up and had the other on the run. of the hand are a pulp, the public will w hen a gust of wind through the opt u still come and will ra*[>ect the fact that door scattered the third player’s baud the man's right forearm Is In sling. But oue card getting mixed up with the If be cannot talk, most of the attractive­ discards, Of course, that hand was ness of the candidate takes wing. dead—the four remnauts of what had Nerve tax and the consequent loss of NAMES SPOKEN IN FULL. been a queen straight and Hardy tone hi the system are regarded as hav­ ing a direct and vital Influence on the Familiar Abbreviated Nickname* Have swept something like *375 Into h.s hat. He didu't even have to »how hl* trays voice. Dr. Oscar A. King, neurologist Been l>i*apt*earinir for Year*. ami professor In the medical school In "Have you observed," asks a corre­ tor bl* opponent had not put up on the the University of Illinois, lias found a spondent. "how the Jims. Sams. Bills, last raise, although Just about to do so when the wind killed his band. Now wasn’t that luck? Or w liat do you think about the thlrteeu walk-arouud queering the other fellow's hand? "Au hour later Hardy took a fresh pack, pinned the ace of diamonds from It on a waiter'« shirt front, tore up the other fifty-one cards and then marked a skull and crossbones In creme de nienthe on the waiter's shirt bosom Just above the ace. Ou the very uext deal, with only three nines on a oue card draw, lie bluffed a $l5o pot out of a fellow w ho held a deuce full! Now what do you think of that?" How to Choose G ihh I Meat. ■glas could have stood tlie »train of I modern inter-state canvass is Im- Isible in the opinion of physicians. Lsevelt, traveling 15.000 miles, mak I more than 300 speeches of nearly I. immi words, sleeping at sixty miles I hour and waking at all time* aud Les made a recot<1 that would have Limited a politician of fifty years L, Bryan, not traveling so far. but ling himself even greater in spee.-h- Ikiug and In the other activities of campaign of which he I as been tlie Li. possibly did even more. In voice, losevelt suffered: perhaps in nervous Liu be felt the work. Bryan, more lined In the art of public speaking, lowing better bow to save and spare L«elf, and having tlie experiences of treat campaign on similar lines lu Li. ha* been a phenomenon in endur- ■re. even In the eyes of the medical ■fession. Itrynn’s Active Work. Bryan’s first active work began on ■g. 31, when he visited Chicago for a ■ference with the national comrnit- ». llis letter of acceptance had been sighing upon him. but in response to Bls be went South and East as far | Cumberland, Mil.. back through lest Virginia. Ohio, and Indiana, to kleago. Then to Milwaukee, back to ki'-aco, and from that city westward rough a group of the central-West- In states. These were only prelim- ■ry movements. Ills campaign projxer kl.in at Papillion. Neb., on Sept. 24. ■11 three weeks after Governor Koose- blt's special train had pulled into De­ bit, Mich., for the opening speech of 1» campaign. A’ an example of Just how many du- H devolved ujhiu these cand:dates. ^ne of the figures from Mr. Bryan's jur of Indiana have been gathered, vey show: "no pies traveled 2S in ties touched 27 « ns passed .. M "N vn* spoken to moat subtle relation between the uerv- ou* system and the voice. "As a basic proposition," he said, “you may trace every impediment in speech to nervous Influences. Starting with this, the effect of a depleted nerv­ ous system on tlie voice I* plain. The mechanisms of the vocal organ* are In­ tricate of themselves, and the nerves which control these organ* multiply their complexities. Iu a failing voice, then, oue must always look to the con­ dition of the nervous system. In the cases of Bryan and Roosevelt, the tilings most calculated to derange their nerves are those which react upon these nervous systems. Unquestionably the two things which most do this are ex­ citement and the sense of opposition In an audience which every political speaker lias to face.” Gets Little Rest, “Physically, too, the work of a great campaign ou the railroad* tells upon a speaker. There is a loss of »leep al ways. Towu* through'which a train may pass in dead of night ofteu turn out crowds who at least awaken the candidate. Then the exigencies of au Itinerary force him to get up early aud go to bed late. "But even if a man sleeps soundly the night through ou a railroad train lie is not rested as he would have been had he slept in a stationary l>ed. There is reason to believe tl.at lu tlie soundest sleep possible lu a fust-movUig tra.u the muscles are making rmcoMclOus effort* to neutralize the movements of the tssly caused by swaying* and Jolt­ ings of the train. Tire nerves prompt this, anil to the extent that they are kept awake the whole system Is af­ fected. As the nerve* are affected, too. tlie tendency toward Impairment of the voice Is Increased. In many ways they tend to this, chiefly by dis­ concerting the speaker and causing him to waste lung power. “Irregular meals and exposure to night air and to changes In the wen th I.et us Imagine ourselves before a butcher'» block having ou It four pieces of beef presenting face* from the round or sirloin. Oue is dull red. the lean being close grained and the fat very white; tlie next 1* dark red. the lean loose-grained and sinewy am! tlie fat white ami shining; the third 1» dull red. the lean loose grained and sinewy and the fat yellow; the fourth is bright cherry red. tlie lein smooth and me­ dium-grained. with fleck* of white through it. ami the fat creamy neither white nor yellow. The first of these 1» cow beef; the second, bull beef; tlie third, beef from an old or ill-condi­ tioned animal; and the last is ox beef. Ox beef that from a steer I* tlie JucleHt. finest flavored, sweetest ami most economical to buy of all beef. It 1* called "prime” when the lean is very much mottled with the white fat-flecks, and when it I* from a heavy. young animal (alsiut 4 years old), stall fed ou corn Beef from a young cow that ha* been well fed and fattened is uext in merit to ox beef, Beef from an uu matured animal I* never satisfactory, being tougli and Juiceloss. It may b, Toms aud other old time abbreviations easily recognized, as its color is ¡tale of boys’ front names are disappearing aud Its bone* small. Woman'* Home from among the youths of the present Gompa ulon. generation, together with tlie diminu­ The Practical Hide ol' It. tive Jimmy, Sammy, Billy, etc., which “Thera Is so little money iu liters time out of mind prevailed among mas cullue youngsters? For some reason lure." said the wife, “Unit I think you the l>oys have largely discarded the free would be wise to choose some other aud easy way of addressing oue an­ profession. Why, the man who run* other that come* natural to Ingenious tlie ice wagon makes more than you do; youth, substituting for the more rollick tlie butcher goes out driving every Sun lug Tom, Dick aud Harry, sanctioned day; tlie baker wear* a beaver and a by Immortul usage, a stiffer form of ad­ linen collar, ami the real eslate man dress which does not match well with lias three diamonds In a white shirt, to the freshness of boyhood. The same say nothing of tlie coal man. who goes to sleep In church on a velvet pillow appears to be the case with the female every Sunday the Ixvrd sends!" Juvenile*. Even among little girls play­ “But—Molly, think of Geulus; wlial ing ‘ring around rosy,’ the Bessie*. am I to do with that?” Maggie* aud Katie* are disappearing, “Tlie laird only know*. John! But giving place to the stilted substitution how nice It would be if you could only of Elizabeth, Margaret, Catherine and split It Into kindling wood nt so much the like. This change has not had its a cord or swap It off for a barrel of origin in the volition of either the boys flour and a sugar cured ham!" Atlanta or the girl*. They have evidently been Constitution. 'put up tq It.' Feme higher authority must be res|H>nslble for tills priggish­ Oyster* Have Many Foes. ness. and from its general exteut It Is The oyster appeura to la? the most likely due to misdirected Jnstructlou in perfectly protected creature in the sea. the schools. To uo other aoureq could yet it falls a victim to the soft aud ap be attributed expt* sslons now beard paretitly helpless starfish. The meilei-l Among Itoyd at play, such as ‘Samuel, of attack 1» curious but effectlva. Tlie do not throw the l>all so hard; William starfish clasp* tlie oyster lu It* five cannot catch it.’ No boy, who I* not a arm* aud quietly wait*. Presently tlie prig, either by natura or education, but oyster opens It* shell in order to get would say ou a subject of that kind: food. Thl* I* the chalice that the «tar Sam. d-m't throw tlie ball so hard; Bill fish has been waiting for. and II can't catch It.' This I* as Idioma tica Ily­ prompt inject* Into the shell a little red as correct a* the other form and collo­ dish fluid. quially preferable, while devoid of the This act* a* a poison, paralysing th< stiffness unsuited to youthful expre* gnusiles f>f the oyster and thus uiakiug It Impossible for the creature to dose sion."—Philadelphia liecord. Its shell. The starfish doe* not take DRIVING OUT THE HOODOO. the trouble even to remove the oyster from its shell, but eat* It in Its own Marell* Story of How a Hout hern- home and eventually crawl* away erlhunac-1 Hia I nker t.uck. leaving lielilnd tlie gaping, empty shell Mar» us Daly, the Montana million­ aire. tells of a poker game with some When the laird find* a surplus I t of peculiar feature*. "The game," »a.d babies on hand, be leave* thi-in with Mr Daly, "was in progress the second people traveling over the country In night after we sailed. 1 don’t believe movers' wagon*. WHERE THE GUNBOAT NASHVILLE WENT WHEN SHE LEFT ST. LOUIS IN 1899. When the United Rtatefl Kunb .nt Nashville vm Ht. IxMiis in the «pring of 1S99, the demonstration attending her reception marked an ep«)< h in the uit> « history. The Naahville wan the first oeean-going war reaael that had ever »teamed up the Father of Waters to the metrojKiliB of the Sliaaistlppl valley. Hence the inherent atter.ding her arrival. All the raiir- ada entering the city ran excursion train», and people came from the surrounding Ktatew, anxious tj gaze upon the pioneer from Old Ocean’s depths. Leaving the city amid the a«uis people declare that the v<*«<«el niigbt just as well have carried merrhandiae a* implements of war. and they intimate that the destiny of St Louia is to beepme a deep water port. FiC OCEAN TUk. VtMtL M1 g HTJU.IT A* U M.L UAlk L AERLMD MERCHANDl^ A4 IMFLEMEM» AM THE HOG IN HISTORY. reflections on pork as an ARTICLE OF DIET. M.,nv Contention* Have Arisen Over It* I *< a* Food Mu. h-Malians I Animal that Resemble* Mau m .Mor* than Oue Respect. The bog of to-day coustltutM uo les* ban 370 diflereut artteies of coinuierce. tnd uext to cottuu aud wheat turuishc* the l.ttgot value* lu exports from the United State* It* uauie ha* b.iome au epithet. It* application to mau means greed and bfuVishnesa. It I* com- mold) supposed lu lu- a »caveuger, like the puddle duck. It takes tuud baths. Fo do men. 'here I* much virtue lu tuud. The Ilog luttlies iu l»ools of It to cuat his skin against attacks of insects; man dips ill* festered hide lu It to lm- prove hl* circulation aud draw out tils gout and rheumatism. The hog Is pachydermatous; so I* nutu not with standing Cuvier's classification. 1 liave seen men know meu to-day, with skins thicker thau the hide of the rhiuoe'eroa. l'be hog ts otnuivorAua so Is uiau. The bog Is carnivorous by choice so I* man. The hog is herbivorous, grauivorou*. gnininivorou* and phytivoroua by edu- ration so Is man. These reflection* are Induced by the ludignitlej offered a useful animal, rhe hog was the cleanest of beast* until man built a sty and Imprisoned hint lu filth, fattened him on filth, killed him iu tilth and ate him In tilth. No snlrnal. wild or domestic, is so clean thout its bed as the hog. It want* pure. tweet, fresh straw every time. The bog lias brains. It lias beeu known to txcel tlie pointer In sieiitlug quail. An lutlientie Instance i* mentioned by Bingley in “Memoirs of British QnAd •upeds" of a keen scented sow that sould stand at birds which the dog» mlng on he ¡»allot beside the children, priv leged to the liest lu the house. The hog caused the biggest mutiny •ver known In the history of the world, ind was responsible for men being »town from the muzzle* of cannon When Great Britain shipped cartridges o India for tlx* native troop* site reck med without tier host, for tlie amtnuul ion was greased with lard, which so iffeuiied tlie religious scruples of the vepoys that they arose as one man lu 'ebelllon. The American hog nearly ■nused war bi-tween Germany and the ('tilted Ktntes ami only the diplomacy >f Whltelnw Reid obtained for the anl- nal admission Into France. Moses and Moliammed were opposed to tlie liog because, while It divides tlie u»of nnd Is cloven footed, yet It chew* lot the cud. Tl,r camel Is not eaten tor o|>|iosltc reasons--It chew* the cud. mt I* not cloven footed. The hnre I* ilso unclean, las-suee while It chew* he end It divides not the hoof. All clv- llzeil nation* have passed aud repassed aw* governing what a man shall eat ind bow much It sliall cost him, but tin* >uly Huinptunry mea*ure Unit ever «food tlie lest of time I* tlie law of Mose* concerning the hog. It bus been m tlie statute book for 3.3U0 years. although it Is not made of gold It uu-au* more to the African* of the Gold Coast than the auciiut seoue stuns which forms the support of the corona- tlou chair of Eag.aml siguibe* to fha loyal Britou. This symbol of authority, on which the king* of tlie Asbautees liave beeu crow nevi tor nearly K*> year*, la do tbiy . d > BteM of iiii . uk - able workmanship aud a* a «¡toil of conquest. It w aa captured from the Sultan of Jam n early tn Uie eeutury. Its ba*«* I* au oblong piece of woovi, heavily gilded lu tlie center of this la a gilt supiMjrt. resembling a char­ coal brazier, uu each sivle ara square ¡»1 liar*. Tliese, with the brazi.r, *up- ¡ailt ik concave m it. The stool la not th» only article tu tlie regalia. There Is a state umbrella and there are goldeu axe* aud curiously carved scimitars. After ill* < ntliroueiiieut tlie king oc­ cupies tlie gulden st.Hii only ouee a year Tbs rest of tlie time it I* put ou oue of tlie richly carved arm cbalra | for which the native* are famous and kept near III* usual seat. When Gen­ eral WolM'ley captured Covniaiode, tlie Aahautee capital, lu I n , I. the stool hud beeu seeratiy removed ami It ha* re­ mained ever since lu the possession uf ! tin* tribesmen. The last time a white man saw It was seven years ago. King l'raui|ieh bud uot been able to afford the coronation ceremonies, so he sought a loan of FJ.nH» from tlie British for th« purjiose. When the commissioner* sent to negotiate the affair were uabered Into tlie monarch's preseuee a tiand of , musicians played ou elephaut*' tusks. 1 "Under a large and gorgeoua canopy," say* Dr. Freeman, oue of tlie coiiiiuls- sloner*. "atood a roomy chair of native j manufacture, studded with bright head­ ; ed nail* aud enriched with silver orna­ ! ment* and ou till* reposed tlie cele­ ! brated royal «tool. 1'reiupeb was seat­ ed ou a similar chair under hl* ow n um­ | brella *nd not under the canopy.” Early in llkx) tlie astute Asliantees de­ clared they lotild not pay taxes to a governor w ho had never sat upon tlie gnlden stool. To be aide to sntl*fy their scruiiles Str Frederic Hodgson be­ gan tlie search for tlie royal emblem which resulted lu tlie recent wur. | Science ^Invention HOW TO MAKE A FILTER. , itere Are Two That Are Ferviceabta and Eaallg Cenatrneted. Two inexpensive inters, which can easily be made by any bandy person, ara shown in the accompanying illus- liauous l .g 1 show* a titter tuadv out of two stouepots or Jars.. The lower one lia* a hole drilled at the side near the liottoiu. In w hich u faucet 1« loiert- •<1 to draw uff the Altered water as de- aired; or. If this caunot lie done, tie top jar can be removed ami the water dipped out. I lie top Jar iniiHt have a boh* drilled or broken lu th«* liottoiu. and n small flower ¡Hit saucer ln\ertee crowning lu a puu with butter. 11« quotes from honor of a station, lie had not goue a friend tlie statement that bugong | to a man when he hns got a boll ou far whet, a heavy shower obliged him moth* ara cooked by tlie native* on bot his neck. The only husbands that nre ever to take shelter under a tree and seud a ashes and eaten with gram gusto. little gossoon running imck for bls utn French inetcorologlst* engaged in the "managed” are tlie ones that women lirella. exploration of the upi»i*r air by means talk about, that they don’t have. “Ill* reverence Is afther sending me of captive balloon* have found that, You can get the truth out of a woman to bring Ills onil>r>4l.” said the t»oy. owing to the i-floct of the sun's host on by flattering her. hut to get It out uf a Iinrstlng Into the caliln. tlie bulluona. the best results are at­ man you have to get him senrad. "The saints ¡ireserv« os!" said Mike. tained at uiglit, and their must suc­ Every fat woiuau thinks tlie Turks “Maybe it s tlie thing lie left le-yant.In cessful nxpcrluivtit* hav« I h - vii ¡»or- are not so liad after all. because *l»e tlie corner,” uiul seizing the umbrella fvtlucd by luuoullght. The balloou* has heard that they think thin women lie tried to puss through the door, but carry self registering thermometers aud are ugly. tlie entrance wn* low and narrow utid liuromcters and attain cuormuu* Whenever a mau and a woman g»-t the umbrella large mid wide. Without height*, varying lietween and married, at least one of them doesn't i moment's hesitation he caught up a fd.lS*» feet The highest flight recorded do as well as he or she might have don« «¡>nde and began shoveling dowu the by the lustrniuciita Is nearly nine and for himself. wall at either side of the door. one third miles. Every woman whose tinsbaud can “Man alive." Mild the priest, appear­ l.aM wiuler there was discovered at never pay Ills debts believes the world ing oti tlie ermie, "what are ye at?" CliateaiKlun In France an example of “Mliure. It's makln' way 1 am for yer I the rnre phenomenon known In ¡sipular will realize some time what a great riveretice’s oinlirall,” said old Mike; , phrase as "Uie king of rats.” It con­ man she married. Ix»ts of wouieu go through li* think­ "divll a bit of it'll go through at all. at sisted of seven living rats Inextricably all.” "Ah, nonsense, man,“ said bis Innind togetlu-r by the Interlacing of ing that all th»? other people think they reverence, laughing, and stepping In­ ' Hie tails. A photograph of the slngu- ere artistic simply t»e»-au»«' they keep side he took the umbrella out of Moira's i lar grnop. together with a description. their hair mussed up. The only difference between a mar­ band and dosed It tiefore them. I was »»-ut to a s«-lcutlfi<- journal In Paris. Old Mike stared at It aghast. Then Th« name king «pertdea. blue. see«!, will evince a degree of care for Mrs. Newlywed I Imp« you tried t* ftie H-«l« which Is almost touching. rtie nnnolini-.-;rient that the recent up rising was tbs result ef attempts of ths , cheer him Op. They wil curl their leaves upward as “Oh. yea. I showed him rny button­ far as «*a<-b can go to cover the m*«*l» governor. Kir Frsdefic Higlgwai. to re- over tbs sat n-d relic »•< geucrally In­ lees shirt add that new Ue you bought and protect ttn-m from the sun till the terpreted lu two way* by Aruerlcaua. me.”— Judge. ,*nd. and often oue will find teeadn that Either the British were attempting to are »|Ulte dead, sun klll»*iT)e