GIANT TASK IN RAILROAD BUILDING Two Carloads of Powder in a Single Blast 230- 000 Paid for One Mile of Track 2629 Men Employed on a Piece of Track Being Built for the Wabash System Cumberland Md May 2 -Look out Look out Its going off was the wild cry heard a few days ago in Paw Paw a small mountain encircled West Virginia town on the new line of the Wabash twenty miles east of Cumberland when the ringing of bells and blowing of whistles gave the warning that in a few minutes the button would be pressed that would explode 8000 pounds of giant powder in the rocky mountain side directly opposite and close to the town For three days the people of Paw Paw had watched men carrying can after can of powder into the tunnels dug into the face of rocks As the number of cans disappearing in the mountain side increased the alarm of the people grew and some in terror left the town while those remaining filled their ears with cotton and wait ed for they knew not what At last when 325 cans of powder 8125 pounds had been emptied In the arms extending right and left from the inner ends of the two 45 foot tunnels wires laid and the tunnel closed the electric button was press ed There was a deep rumbling re port the whole earth seemed to rock as though shaken by an earthquake and tons of rock plunged forward and toppled over into the canal and river Carloads of Powder in One Blast Not a stone had been thrown a hun dred feet toward the frenzied town but 20000 yards of rock had been torn from the mountain side and many precious days saved the contractors who are building the link connect ing the Western Maryland railroad at Cherry Run with the West Virginia Central railroad at Cumberland and thus bringing nearer realization George Goulds dream of making the Wabash railroad an ocean to ocean line It was only the proximity of this blast to a town that made it particu larly prominent on this railroad con struction that is requiring a blast for almost every foot of the roadbed In fact it was a small one in compari son to some that have been fired In one blast in Sidling Hill mountain the charge consisted of 1400 cans of powder just two carloads and when it was put off rocks weighing half a ton were hurled through the air hundreds of yards across the Po tomac river and striking telegraph poles along the Baltimore Ohio rail road broke them off close to the ground It is this necessity for almost con tinuous blasting that has done much toward making this sixty five mile strip of railroad construction the most expensive of any built in recent 3ears with the single exception of the line over which the Wabash en ters Pittsburg The cost of building the first five miles from Cumberland averaged 250000 a mile and the average cost for the sixty five miles fs 100000 a mile In building this connecting link the Wabash has had to contend with an unusually large number of obstacles of a surprising variety some placed in the way by nature others by man Tunneling Through Solid Rock Until the advent of the Wabash it was supposed there was no feasible route through the narrow gaps in the mountains between Cumberland and Hancock forty miles save those fol lowed by the Chesapeake and Ohio canal and the Baltimore Ohio rail road It was this belief that has kept life in the old waterway life sus tained by the Baltimore Ohio Rail road company to bar out any possible rival Some years ago the Hon Henry G Davis then owner of the West Virginia Central railroad had a route surveyed through the country follow ed by the Wabash but it was given up as impracticable As a result it is not surprising that the construction -of this road is proving one of the greatest undertakings of years re quiring application of almost every method known in railroad building and the ingenuity of contractors who have built railroads in almost every state in the union has been taxed to the utmost Upon forty miles of this line there are engaged to day 2629 men 300 animals nine locomotives and nine steam shovels For eighteen months there has been no cessation of labor and It is hoped that in eight more the work will be completed Obstacles to Be Met An idea of the difficulties encoun tered can be formed from the fact that this line in forty miles crosses the Potomac river nine times the Chesapeake Ohio canal seven times the Baltimore Ohio railroad three times passes through moun tain ranges and spurs by five tunnels varying in length from 700 feet to 4400 feet through ridges and hills by innumerable cuts many of them over fifty feet deep through solid rock and some almost a mile in length and that a great portion of the road is being cut out of the rocky sides of mountain ranges directly above the canal One of the most unusual dif ficulties in railroad construction and yet the most troublesome on this line has been a disposition of the earth and rock removed in making the road lied a difficulty arising from the fact that the Wabash follows closely the canal route While waiting for legal right to bridge the old waterway it was necessary to push the construc tion work and to do this the contrac tors employed some striking methods At Welton tunnel a mile south of Cumberland a large wheel was placed on top of the mountain above the tunnel entrance cables were run from this across the river and canal to the low land where filling was neces sary and the rock from the tunnel was carried over in a large iron buck et suspended from the cables The laborers camp was located on top of the mountain and the men construct ed a 150 foot ladder leading up the precipitous face of rocks from the mouth of the tunnel and this ladder they ascended and descended many times a day In the construction of the Indigo tunnel a method never before employ ed in the East and rarely elsewhere is being employed This is the great est tunnel on the line being 4400 feet in length It passes through a Sidling Hill mountain range and makes the Wabash a straighter line and almost a mile in three shorter than the Baltimore Ohio It is being made by drilling the heading the full width of the tunnel twenty four feet and nine feet high through from the bottom or at a grade level and the rock will be blown down until the required height Is reached Old con tractors accustomed to driving the beading through from the top shake their heads and pronounce this meth od a costly experiment but Mc Arthur Bros say the strata Indigo shale is just right at this tunnel for this method and are confident It will be a success The heading is being driven from both ends at the same time and the men are within 100 feet of each other nine feet a day being the progress made from each end The men working from the eastern end have penetrated only eleven inches further than those coming from the western side The Stick Pile Tunnel In order to cut a roadbed through the masses of rock that rise straight up from the bed of the canal it was necessary to wait until navigation closed for the year In the meantime the holes for the blasts were all pre pared and when the water was with drawn about a month later than ever before thousands of pounds of pow der and dynamite were exploded in these holes and the canal bed was filled with earth and rock for many miles which must be removed within the next two months The only place where the Wabash leaves the canal and river for any considerable distance is at Bayard thirty five miles east of Cumberland After crossing the Baltimore Ohio railroad the river and canal at a diz zy height on a 1370 foot bridge five 150 foot channel spans with viaduct approach it strikes boldly into the mountains After running through tremendous cuts over deep ravines and through the Stick Pile tunnel 1600 feet in length it emerges from its five mile run through the heart of the mountain at Orleans W Va This is considered one of the heaviest pieces of work on the line but here as at many other places a compara tively straight line is secured with moderate grades and with a saving of almost a mile over the Baltimore Ohio route The first work was done on this connecting link on July 21 1903 and the contract called for its completion in eighteen months The delay and extra work occasioned by trouble with the canal rendered its comple tion within contract time an impossi bility Now October 1 is the date set for the opening of the road but it Is claimed January 1 1906 would be a nearer date From Cherry Run to Hancock ten miles the road is completed and trains are running on it For ten miles east of Cumberland the roadbed is ready for the rails and the three bridges are in course of erection At numer ous other places there are four and five mile stretches completed but there remains a great amount of difficult work to be done It is only the fact that work is being rushed day and night regardless of weather conditions and without regard to ex pense that makes safe the prediction that not later than January 1 1906 the Wabash will have this line open for traffic Endurance of the Jap In the orient there is a new art of war depending upon a new style of physique of a race which has never before been put to this work The Jap is short stocky and blessed with muscles big enough for a much taller man He is consequently able to do more work than a European of equal weight A rural letter carrier thinks nothing of distances for which we de mand horses and in exceptional cases the rickashaw man has been known to trot forty miles in a day dragging the passenger The daily drills of the soldiers include athletic exercises too severe for the average European sol dier such as running up and down long flights of stairs It is not sur prising then that their troops should coVer long distances and the reports of four successive days of thirty five twenty five thirty and fifteen miles of marching are perfectly credible They are reported to have marched forty- eight hours without food and with little rest and then to have fought well though captured men have iropped asleep instantly American Medicine I THE NEWS IN NEBRASKA j ELECTION LAW CASE FILED Matter to Be Brought Before the Court for Decision LINCOLN Chief Justice Holcomb granted Orpheus B Polk a Lincoln attorney an alternative writ of man damus compelling Secretary of State Galusha to appear and show cause why he should not placed on file a certificate of nomination offered by the Relator By agreement of attorneys the case which Is a formal one made up for the purpose of testing house roll 235 the biennial election law will be for hearing at the first sitting in June This was dpne to give the nu merous friends of the court who de sire to be heard an opportunity to file briefs Attorney General Brown filed a formal demurrer denying the suffi ciency of the petition and setting up the fact that under the law there will be no election in the year 1905 Al though Brown is formally the attor ney who will defend the law the ma jor portion of that work will neces sarily fall on the friends of the court The relator alleges that he has pre sented a formal certificate of nomina tion for regent of the university and that its acceptance was refused He asserts that he is an independent re publican candidate for the place Polk had intended to initiate the proceed- ings by offering a certificate of nom ination for the county judgeship with County Clerk Dawson but that official intimated that he would probably ac cept it for filing CAUGHT A RUNAWAY TEAM And Has Now Married Girl Who Was in the Vehicle NEBRASKA CITY A few days ago at the home of the brides parents occurred one of the prettiest weddings of the season It was the marriage of Miss Nora Miller to Mr Joseph Led better of Jufieau Alaska The wedding was a very elaborate affair and a large number of guests were present The bride is the daughter of Councilman Frank Miller and wife and one of the handsomest young ladies in the city The groom is a wealthy merchant of Juneau After the ceremony the couple left for the south and will travel until the latter part of next month when they will go to their northern home This wedding is the outgrowth of a romance The young lady was up in Alaska two years ago with her cousin visiting her uncle a wealthy banker of that country and while out riding one day the team took fright and ran away They were headed for a high bluff when caught by Mr Ledbetter who chanced to be out riding on horse back The young man was invited to the bankers home where he met the young lady twice before she returned home Mr Ledbetter fell in love with her and the following year made a visit here The groom has become wealthy since he went to that north ern country He was a comparatively poor boy when he left his home some seven years ago to go to the frigid north to carve out his fortune OLD VALUATION STANDS Pullman Car Company Assessment Remains Unchanged LINCOLN Pullman car magnates may rest in peace The valuation will not be increased over the former as sessment by the state board of equali zation This was apparent when the members listened to desultory argu ments this morning and then laid the whole matter over until another meet ing State Treasurer Mortensen favored a valuation of 100 per cent However it was moved by Secretary of State Galusha that the valuation be the same as last year and Land Commis sioner Eaton thought that he approved such a course However it was de cided to look into the franchise value a little bit But it was stated that the valuation would not be raised and the representatives of the Pullman inter ests did not seem worried As to Common Law Marriage The supreme court denies a motion for a rehearing in the case of Soren sen against Soressen from Valley county involving the right of the child of an alleged common law mar riage to the large estate left by a wealthy farmer The court holds that there is a presumption of the exist ence of marriage which arises from co habitation and holding each other out to the world as husband and wife and public policy will not prevent a child born of such relations from avail ing himself of such presumption in a contest as to legitimacy Cleveland Helps a College LINCOLN P L Jackson financial secretary of Hastings college at Hast ings Neb went to Princeton N J for the purpose of asking ex President Cleveland to contribute toward the en dowment fund of the school A dis patch received from him says that Mr Cleveland has made a liberal contri bution Must Show Ability to Maintain Wife LINCOLN The supreme court holds that Fred Goddard sentenced by the Chase county district court to nine months in the penitentiary for wife desertion is entitled to a new trial because of deficient evidence and be cause the information fails to state that he wilfully and without good cause neglected and refused to main tain His wife The dpficiency in the evidence the cout states lay in the failure of the prosetntnn to prove STATE NOTES A fire at Auburn destroyed property to the value of 5000 The new Christian church at Peru was dedicated last Sunday Grand Island will probably institute a rock pile for transgressors A new flouring mill of 100 barrels capacity is to be built at Brainard Charles Jones will open a parK at Beatrice with boating on the Blue as a feature The Methodist church at Nebraska City has just celebrated its golden anniversary Kearney is perfecting arrangements for putting a first class base ball team in the field Final plans for the remodeling of the Burlington station at Lincoln have been completed Nebraska City saloons are now re quired to close at midnight and to re main closed all day Sundays Charged with statutory assault on his 16-year-old stepdaughter Anton Nelson of Kennard was arrested in Fremont Campbell Bros shows which win tered at Fairbury gave two perform ances in that -city and then left for the seasons tour Timothy Sedgwick of York was low man on the major fraction of the state printing Several minor contracts were secured by Lincoln firms Food Commissioner Thompson of Hall county has been reappointed by Governor Mickey He received his first appointment two years ago from Governor Mickey The work of tearing down the old court house at Wahoo is now in prog ress the material to be used in the construction of a dormitory annex by the Luther academy Fremont is to have a Chautauqua assembly the coming summer given under the direction of local people Rev Frank Emerson James has taken the initiative and is already engaged securing attractions State Treasurer Mortensen has bought 60000 of Boyd county bonds at face value the bonds to begin drawing interest July 1 The bonds are dated April 2 1905 draw 4 per cent interest due in twenty years H E Hassinger for years the pro prietor of the New York Racket store in Seward has sold out his business and accepted a position in the civil service for which he intends to leave before the middle of the month Cnarles Mcintosh of Tecumseh the man wanted on a statutory charge is still at large despite the efforts of Sheriff Cummings to locate him A child was born to nis alleged victim Miss Gates While he was engaged in unloading refuse in a subble field on his farm in Hall county Dietrich Steibecks horses became frightened he fell in front of the wheels and the wagon passed over him crushing his ribs and fatally injuring him As yet Charles M Chamberlain of Tecumseh has failed to secure a suffi cient number of signers to his 25500 bond for trial on the charge of embez zlement He is going out among his friends under the care of the sheriff soliciting signers At Long Pine while Rev A L Tainter pastor of the Methodist church was holding services his house was entered and 23 in small change the Easter missionary offer ing and his overcoat were taken The thief was arrested Notices were posted about Schuyler of the loss by some one of 700 600 in 100 bills the remainder in bills of smaller denomination The loser was Murt McKenzie who walked from his home to the postoffice and back Sun day and while on the trip suffered the loss as recited The money has not been found George Hefferman of Jackson Neb was found dead in his room in the Hotel Locke at Sioux City He had been in the city on a drunken debauch and is supposed to have accidentally turned the gas on during the night Harve Beckner who was arrested at New Richmond Wis on the charge of deserting his wife and eight chil dren was brought back to Nebraska City by Sheriff Shrader and will have his hearing before Justice Timblin He states he and his wife agreed to separate and he made all provisions for the care of his family before leav ing there Members of the state board of equal ization are anticipating trouble in con nection with the amendments to the revenue law permitting county as sessors to correct real estate assess ments Reports from Sherman coun ty indicate that an effort has been made to reopen the real estate assess ments made last year under the pro vision for quadrennial valuations of such property As M L Neely a young farmer of Otoe county was going home early Sunday morning a Missouri Pacific engine and three cars caught him at a crossing and run him down His bug gy was crushed his horse killed and he was badly injured bet will prob ably recover Exeter has a new industry and manufactory by the name of the Bril Iiantine Polish company an entirely new process and compound in liquid form for all kinds of cleaning and polishing work uas been discovered which is claiming considerable atten tion locally at present T jfiT rWfiipWW nWipiKH jpRjeftftlp i FOOD VALUE OF FRUIT Prejudice Against Its Liberal Use Is Result of Erroneous Notions There are many popular but un founded prejudices against the dletic use of fruits It is generally sup posed for example that fruits are conducive to bowel disorders and that they are especially prone to pro duce indigestion if taken at the last meal The truth is the very opposite of these notions An exclusive diet of fruit is one of the best known rem edies for chronic bowel disorders During the late war large numbers of the soldiers suffering from chronic dysentery were in several instances rapidly cured when abundantly sup plied with ripe peaches Fruit juice may be advantageously used in both acute and chronic bowel disorders Care must he taken however to avoid fruit juices which contain a large amount of cane sugar Juices ot sweet fruits should be employed or a mixture of sour and sweet fruit juices or acid fruit juice may be sweetened with malt honey or mel tose a natural sweet produced from cereals Raisins figs prunes sweet apples and pears may be mixed with sour fruits Indigestion sometimes results from the use of fruits in combination with a variety of other food substances but fruits taken alone constitute the best possible menu for the last meal of the day The combination of fruit sugar cream bread butter cake and pie may well produce bad dreams and a bad taste in the mouth in the morn ing The use of fresh or stewed fruit alone without any addition whatever will produce no disturbance and will leave no unpleasant effects behind to be regretted in the morning Very acid fruits sometimes disagree with persons who have an excess of acid and those who are suffering from chronic inflammation of the stomach but with these exceptions there Is al most no case in which fruit may not be advantageously used The notion that acid fruits must be avoided by rheumatics is another er ror which is based on inaccurate ob servations The fact is rheumatics are greatly benefited by the use of fruit At the same time they should abstain from the use of flesh foods of all sorts beef tea and animal broths and all meat preparations also tea and coffee as well as alcohol and to bacco It is of course possible for one to take an excess of acids as one may take an excess of starch or any other food substances Vegetable acids differ from mineral acids in the fact that they do not accumulate in the body but are assimilated or util ized in the same way as sugar and al lied substances Diseased Cattle for Slaughter A deliberate attempt to send a car load of diseased cattle for slaughter in New York was recently foiled by the State Agricultural Department Word was received of the shipping of the stock and the car was intercepted in the railroad yards in New York by the departments agents Of twenty cows found in the car three were in a dying condition and soon expired Eight others were suffering from advanced tuberculosis and at least three from pneumonia It was also learned that several others of the herd had died at Utica before they could be transferred to the car on the New York train It is intend ed to prosecute the shipper of the cat tle A Substitute for Leather An English inventor has devised a perfect substitute for leather which can be used for boots shoes and for every other purpose for which leather is employed The new tissue is called wolft It is being extensively used in England having been adopted by the London Shoe Company especially for walking shoes on account of its coolness and its lightness Wolft is more durable than leather and is much more waterproof while at the same time more porous which makes it a nonconductor and to a large de gree obviates the necessity for wear ing rubbers which are needed by one whose feet are clad with leather only when the slush and mud is so deep that the feet are half buried at every step Frances Willard and Fashionable Dress Said Frances Willard in one of her last addresses speaking of the ad vancement and present status of women But be it remembered that until woman comes to her kingdom physi cally she will never really come at all Created to be well and strong and beautiful she long ago sacrificed her constitution and has ever since been living on her by laws She has made of herself an hourglass whose sands of life passed quickly by She has walked when she should have run sat when she should have walked re clined when she should have sat She has allowed herself to become a mere lay figure upon which could be fastened any hump or hoop or far thingale that fashion mongers show and ofttimes her head is a mere ro tary ball upon which milliners may perch whatever they please be it a bird of paradise or beast or creeping thing She has bedraggled her sense less long skirts in whatever combina tion of filth the street presented sub mitting to a motion the most awk ward and degrading known to the en tire animal kingdom for Nature has endowed all others that carry trains and trails with the power of llftine J them without turning in their tracks but a fashionable woman pays lowli est obeisance to what follows in her own wake and as she does so cuts the most grotesque figure outside a jumping jack Sho Is a creature born to the beauty and freedom of Diana but she is swathed by her skirts splintered by her stays bandaged by her tight waist and pinioned by her sleeves until alas that I should live to say it a trussed turkey or a spit ted goose are her most appropriate emblems Food Value of Eggs Eggs are a very nourishing food and represent two important ele ments fats and proteids in an easily assimilated form A single egg weighs about one and one half ounces of which one ounce is white or pure albumin and one half ounce yolk The nutritive value of the yolk is greater than that of the white though its bulk and weight are small er Its solid constituents are about one half of its fat Fresh eggs prop erly prepared are readily digestible The best mode of preparation is whipped raw or cooked for twenty cr thirty minutes at a temperature of about 160 curdled The yolks are more easily digested when boiled hard and the whites are also easily digested when hard boiled providing care is used to reduce the coagulated white to minute particles which may readily be dissolved by the gastric juice A single egg is equal in value to a dozen oysters Very Dissipated There are a good many persons who might be said to be dissipated and all broke up according to the Japanese use of the word illustrated in the following anecdote They are telling in Boston of two or three Japanese students of rank who have been in the habit of dining each Sunday at the residence of one of the prominent citizens of the Hub On a recent Sunday one was absent and when the host asked why one of the guests said solemnly Oh he cannot come He very very dissi pated The host thought it best not to make any further inquiry at the time but after the meal he ventured to ask the same young man in pri vate You say Mr Nim Shi is not well No he not very well he very dis sipated He hasnt been drinking Oh no no he no drunk Not gambling No no gamble May I ask what he has been do ing then Oh he very dissipated He eat sponge cake allee time he all broke up now RECIPES Mashed Peas With Nuts Soak a pint of Scotch peas overnight in cold water In the morning drain and put them to cook in warm water Cook slowly until perfectly tender allowing them to simmer very gently toward the last until they become as dry as possible Put through a colander to remove the skins Cook the peanuts separately drain from the juice rub through a colander and add to the peas Beat well together season with salt turn into an earthen or granite ware pudding dish smooth the top and bake in a moderate oven until dry and mealy If preferred one third toasted bread crumbs may be used with the peas and a less propor tion of nuts Serve hot like mashed potato Graham Gems Place one pint of cold water in a crock add one egg beat water egg and a pinch of salt together Then add 1 cups of white flour and cun of graham flour beat thoroughly and bake in a quick oven Irish Corn Soup Take one pint of slice potato cooked until tender add one pint of corn pulp obtained by rubbing cooked dried corn through a colander Season with salt add wa ter to make a proper consistency re heat and serve Split Pea Soup For each quart of soup desired simmer one cup of split peas very slowly in three pints of boiling water for six hours or until thoroughly dissolved When done rub through a colander add salt and a slice of onion to flavor Reheat and season with one half cup of thin cream or a spoonful of nut meal pre pared as directed below Remove the slice of onion with a fork Serve hot with croutons Croutons Cut stale bread into small squares or cubes and brown thoroughly in a moderate oven Put a spoonful or two of the croutons in each plate and turn the hot soup over them Baked Parsnips Wash scrape and divide drop into boiling water a lit tle more than sufficient to cook them and boil gently till thoroughly tender There should remain about one half pint of the liquor when the parsnips are done Arrange on an earthen plate or shallow pudding dish not more than one layer deep cover with the juice and bake basting frequent ly until the juice is all absorbed and the parsnips delicately browned Serve at once Orange Nectar Extract the juice of six oranges and two lemons being careful not to get the flavor of rind Add enough water to make six glasses of nectar Sweeten 1 4 h 1 Y f