THE OMAHA DAILY PEE: WEDyESDAY, OCTOBER 0, 190i. THE SILENT GATR t A Voyage lly Tight: (Copyright, 1001, by the 8. S. McHure Co,) I, The first van of the afternoon loosed him, with x others. In the prison yard. The other got out haltingly; sullen, fright ened, or shnmefaced; but he, the last In alight, hopped down on the gravel, hi quick blue eyes ablate with Interest, and hitching up h! wretched little pants, seemed Inclined to prove that he could dance, "Easy there!" said the warder with the blue paper In his hsnd. The seven wards of government hail fallen mechanically Into line, as the Jailer unfolded his list. Nearest to him, with a cowed and ashen face, was a man In a silk hat and frock coat; numbers two and three were evidently tramps; four had the appearance of a clerk; live was a listless graybcard who looked sulkily at homo In his surroundings; six would havo been dubbed a professional thief by any detective In London, and sovon was the adventurer who took such an amazing Interest In verybody else. He stood on a level with the thief's shoulder; fair featured and freckled, with a aparrow-like frame, and an expression rather like that of Dore'a eophyto among tho unsplrltual monks. HIh turn came presently. "Name?" said the warder, glancing at his list. "John James Turk." He had It pat this time, but he had for gotten It when called Into the dock of tho Old nalley In the morning, for he knew himself only as "Turkey." . "Aao?" "Fifteen." He knew no more than the wnrder how old he waa, but In answer to a question by the magistrate who had sent him for trial some one In court had called out "ID," and Turkey accepted It at that. The warder, a big, mild-eyed man of a different race, almost, from tho derelicts before blm glanced at the little sparrow hawk as he thrust the list Into his belt and shook out his bunch of keys. "Follow me," he sail to the squad. Turkey,, tingling In his ragged breeches, not so much with cold as with Intensity of Interest, was more and more captivated. He felt his dignity and Importance) as a prisoner. These gates of steel and solid walls, tho mute warders with keys and batons at their belts, nnd unspenkahle au thority In their beards, froze hlra with de light. He remembered Ills first pantomime, as viewed from the gallory, and felt llko It. Tho thief by profession, a gentlemanly young man In black, observing the tremu lous condition of his little neighbor, whis pered that he had no cause to bo fright ened. Turkey swelled visibly "Mel" said he. "I aln'tl I likes It!" Oh. you like It?" The thief was much nicer In accent nnd grammar than Turkey. Ha was In the upper ranks of the profes sion and moved In good society at railway j stations ana music nans, -wimi are you In for?" he continued. "Threo doss," returned the boy. "Three months, eh?" The graduate could not stoop to slang with the novice. "Mine's five years." Turkey eyed him more graciously. "You're a toff," he said. "Bvr In hofnro?" was the next nuestlnn. "Well-not-exactly." he said, with som I ba.hfulneis. "Not as you might say In 1 quod. But I bin through the school'" The "school," rendered Into tho vernacular. In the reformatory. As who should say that, though his education had not Included the university, he had at least been to Eton. "Ah!" observed the thief. "They should have sent you back thero, sonny, and not here." "Oar!" said Turkey, out loud and wrath ful. "Silence there!" echoed metallcally from the left. I An hour of unbroken silence followed; then two men In the broad-arrow livery camo In with bundles of broad-arrow clothes and boota, which they cast upon tho floor. "Pick your sizes," snld the warder. The order of the batb camo next, The first prison hath has a curious effect. Yon enter In your own clothes, and come out twenty minutes later disguised beyond knowing, a full-blown prisoner. Still the night of wonders waa not ended. Back went tho seven friends to tho recep tion room; Turkey In a warm cloth Jankot and moleskin trousers, sir ton largo for irktmm T5 -i ' him, and looking with his assortment of hid who seems to have associated with broad arrow marks, llko an exonerated criminals from childhood. Is lmmensol five of spades. Placed on tho scnlos the P1" of having got Into prison, and evt doctor found him a stone and a half below I dently fancies It will give him n new start the welcht nroner for his are. t'Llaht . labor," bo said to his attendant warden, who wrote It down. II. Aa the morning bell was shaken up and down the words, and hundreds of men cursing it variously, twitched their blank ets about them for another sixty seconds, Turkey tossed his coverlet across the cell. ! Ho had slept without break, or Jar en a couch of everlasting elder. It was Novem ber, the London fog was In the prison, tho gas was already on In the wards and In the cells. It was a miserable hour of a miser able morning) but Turkey had slept and was awake nnd fresh. Turkoy was warm. Turkey waa sharp-set and knew that breakfast was a certainty In prison and Turkey was all rlsht. "Now, then, little 'unl" and Turkey'a warder took him In hand nnd showed hm how to mukit his bed and stack the bedding and bedstead against the wall, and how to swab his rell. When he foil In for hU first chapel pa rade there was a cVuckle In tho ward over bis outrageous fit, and when tho warder had passed to the end of the line he said: "You'll s-cuse roe, gents, I 'ope. Mother packed me portmantel In a 'urry. Tho la pa'a clothes, bm the tailor's took me Into Prison. Hopkins order for a soot same as yours 'all mark an' all." Heads turned, and Turkey was observed with attention. -"tllght about!" said the warder. S3?- J J n 4 ' U.X-z i -Ajr 1. i "EARTHS HAS SEEN NOTHING. NOR HAS FANCY DEVISED ANYTHING TO MATCH THE ASTONISHMENT OF TURKEY WHEN HE HAD SPELLED THE LETTER OUT." t Dut the heads went round again on the march to chapel. It was almost sensa tional. Tho noweomers begin their proba tion In tho worst nnd most uncomfortable ward In tho prison. They aro pariahs amid a population of pariahs, and the old hands, who are Just watting their turn for promo tion, nnd who expect nothing good In tho first month, acqulcsco In the oakum ward as tho Clapbam Junction on their Journey. It Is n nasty, drafty, ugly placo, but the passenger has to atop there. No one Jokes In It, however, and this wbh the reason that Turkey wbb stared at and approved of. Washed nnd trimmed, and draping his baggy clothes about him with an air, ho looked a child posing as a convict at a fancy ball. One dissentient voice wae heard. "Send th? likes of Mm 'ere! It ain't right! Wol was the Judge a'thlnklu' of?" "Ow!" said Turkey. " 'Ere's Jealousy!" Iu time he began to bo a puzzle and n trouble to the prison. When pulled up short his language was of the Dials, fruity; but the wnrdor who wrote bis name down for report generally wiped It off In the evening. A new prisoner, serving his first aentonce. ls watched by the head nrln. youngster undergoc heads of the s a sur veillance that he knows nothing of. Every one In authority has an eye to him. The doctor sums him up quickly, aa fit for hard labor or light labor, and squares or modi fies his first decision by private observa tion. The wardens kuow In a week or two what his work Is tike. After the wardens, the chaplain has mora to do than the rest with the tenderfoot, Tho chaplain took Turkey In hand and tho more he shook him up the better Turkey liked him. He was a chaplain with a method and a passion for his unprofitable! work; a long-haired, wild-bearded man, akull-capped and bound with a girdle, who fasted o' nights, knew every thloves' kitchen In London and talked thieves' Latin like a thief. Turkey was astonished at and awed by him; but, on second thoughts, he declined to be converted, He had begun by posing, "Us criminals," he said, "Is wldo chaps. We tnkes a lot o" glttln' over." The chaplain wrote In his diary: ".In. Ja. Turk. ('Turkey') Fifteen years of ago, Pickpocket, Three months hard. Curious Instance of tho effect of prison on n sharp ' uurgiary on a nij, scale ills prin clpal ambition, and ho thinks he will now bo able to pal with 'wide' men. If not burglary, would prefer to go to sen 'on a ship llko he saw In tho docks once.' Shall rcmombcr tills. Prison, of course. th worst possible place for him (the Judge was a fool who sentenced hlin); It feeds his queer little vanities at every turn, and ho thrives on the air of the place, which should bo poison to him." This was entirely and regrettably true. It was so new nnd grand to Turkey to be under lock and key with hundreds of grown men that he did not feel even the restraint of cell and ward. Steady work, to be sure, was not much to his liking, but as tho doc tor continued to keep him on light labor, ho had only one pound of oakum to pink In the day, Instead of three, and nla nimble fingers made nothing of that. When Ills first month was up his favorite offlrer got him a nice, cheerful berth In tin paper room, The paper room, as Turkey soon discovered, was the happy land or El dorado of the prisoners. Hither were dls patched In cartloads, to be overhauled and sorted, the sweepings of tho houses of Par liament, tho government offices throughout tho kingdom and the general poatofflca; old ledgers, blue books, directories and all manner of waste paper. This Is nos a gay Inventory, but wait until you come to have the handling of the goods. For, scattered through the mass, were all the articles that man In prison most delights In, scraps of tobacco, packets of cigarettes, end3 of rlgars, string, postage stamps, novels, writ ing paper, coins, pins, pencils, and ecn penknives. It was the business of thu prisoners to tear Into mall pieces every thing that could be converted Into paper after handing over all contraband to the warder In charge. Hut Turkey had been privately admonished by prisoners residing In his ward what precious things a good boy would find In the paper room, and com mission had been given him for sundry articles, which were to be paid In toke. Hence, as soon as he had learned the way of the room, he began to be extremely busy, and thereafter sundry knaves languishing In chambers near Turkey's were engaged In writing surreptitious letters on House of Commons note paper, chewing tobacco and paring their nails, or shaving themselves with brand new pocketknlves, while the felon Turkey grew fatter on Illicit rations. There came a day, however. It waa on the return from work In the afternoon, Turkey tripped on the polished Iron stairs he lodged on the first floor of his ward and as he caught at the rail, something was Jerked from the Inside of his shirt and rattled on the flags below. A neat llttlu faggot of pencllo. "Halt, there!" said the warder of Tur key's party, when they reached the land ing, and Turkey was hauled from the ranks, Searched on tho spot, ho was a mero museum of smuggled goods, They were shaken from his shirt, they weru sorted from his socks, they were sifted from his shoes. Conviction, In a word, was flung at him In n lump. A whole bench of visiting magistrates heard all about the wickedness of Turkey, who' In due cotirse of time waa Introduced to them. "Should you llko to bo birched?" asked the chairman, when the cause had been considered. Turkey looked as If his dignity were a little hilrt by the suggestion, but he responded softly: "Well, genelmcn all. It ain't for a pora criminal like me to stand again' tho rools. If Ifa blrchln", It'a blrchtn'." "Wo can have you birched on the spot," observed tho chairman. Hut the culprit had tnkon stock of tho court, and gathered thu Impression that It was mainly with hlra. Drawing the back of his hand across his mouth, he said sweetly: "Fact Is, yer worships, I bin throo It. Dono mo bit o blrchln' nt the school. It wouldn't, ao ter say, bo nothln' new to me." Turkey's Impudence wns almost alwaya deliberate and deep-seated; but It was also utmost alwaya timed and calculated to a nicety, and glossed with an art which was klu to genius. He escaped the twigs. But h was kept In durance and on half rations for a week, and then sent back to the cokum ward, It was at this season that his great ro mance began. The oakum ward was tak ing exerclso In a new yard, which waa overlooked by a row of houses not thirty feet from the boundary wall, the prison being crlbbid In the midst of London. It was quite understood that Turkey was In disgrace, and he understood It himself and expressed his contrition. "Bound tor look you up agin, gents!" he said. But before tho hour's tramp round and about tho yard was ended a fresh charm had banished bis Interest In- his old asso ciates. An organ, Just beyond tho wnlls, was playing "Annle'a Got Her New Cock Feathers," and Turkey, as a matter of course, added his voice to the whispered chorus from tho ranks; but It waa not the sentiment of a favored air that moved hlin, He had seen a faco and a form nt a win dow. By and by, when the organ had been trun dled out of hearing, tho other prisoners became aware that n woman at a window was watching them hut Turkey had seen her first. "Saema ter me, gents," he said, smooth Ing his baby chin, "a hloke'a gotter git In prlsen ter find Ms gal, too!" In the hideous monotony of prison a' little nothing makes n monstrous stir and It was quickly passed about that Turkoy had a sweetheart and that the girl had followed him. Turkey helped the legend all ho know. He Invented a story of Interrupted love now on the point of renewal, gavo the woman a name nnd a blameless history and weaved In a hint about her bit of money. The tale was the emotional sustenance of tho oakum ward. A seeming reality kept It throbbing; tho face and the form wero always to be seen at the window while tho oakum party were on parade, and secret questions drew out the fact that they were not observed there by any of the prisoners who took exercise In tho yard nt later hour, clearly, the lady was Turkey's, Having expounded her charms nnd given himself out her hero, he fell In love with her and wished he might come to know her. But his ridiculous story held a grain of truth. The grazlolctta at the window a plump cne. If uncertain seeing could be trusted whom Turkey, of course, did not know from Eve, had a veal Interest In him. For that matter she had an Interest In all the prison, since the was engaged to be married to Warder TolUU But Miss Walker for the lady also had a name. and Mr. Tolllt called her Rosahad no sooner observed Titrk?v anion the felony of the oakum ward thin her heart had gone out to him. Not that It weakened In any degree where Mr. Tolllt was concerned. Miss Walker's Interest In Turkey was of another kind. From where she beheld him, airing his graces In the walled, gray yard, he looked Just the child ho was, falr-iklnned and falr-halred. and Miss Walker was pained and even Indignant. Under the tender smart of love. Turker grew Into exemplary, behavior. He studied prodigiously In school, for though he could read a little, he was barely able to write, and he wanted to send her a letter. He sought to polish both his manners and his outward man and went short of bread for a few days to buy soap from the outlaw next door. With soap and a pinch of dust he rubbed a faint mustache on his Up, de voutly hoping she would sea It, removing the ornament as he took his last turn round the yard. He lived solely for the hour of exercise. Every day, passing under the wall at the end of the yard, he cocked his cap and threw up his eye and he was cer tain she saw him and smiled on him. The oakum tarty sharlnr Turkey's constitu tional enjoyed It hugely. Then, to his extreme disgust, he caught a cold nnd tho weak-minded doctor confined htm for three days to his apartment and even threatened him with Infirmary. It was absurd the way that felon was pam pered. Still worse, when the three days were spent, the barometer having gone round dis tractedly to "fair, mild," the meddlesome medlclno man decreed that Turkey should be employed for a while In tho garden, a retired apot where no drafts entered. It waa a place which sensible prisoners peti tioned to be sent to, for the work was light and there was little supervision, but to Turkey, in love, It wns banishment In a wilderness. No, he wouldn't hoc. nor he wouldn't dig nnd he wouldn't shove no blcomlng roller about, neither. He had hta rights as a criminal, he had. and why didn't they aend him back to his own party? Take hta gorspel, he'd never had no cold In all bis born dayB. Now," Miss Walker had missed the des perado from tho oakum squad, and had In quired for him. A mother-like spinster of two and thirty, plump, handsome nnd revel ing In a legacy which meant affluence for her lover and hersclf. jslic was bent on try ing tho power of rnoney In the Interests of Turkey. She. had yp);pcd from Mr. Tolllt (who wished jurkey. jjn Khartoum) that If burglary failed Turkey was willing to go down to the sen In a ship; and she had a brother who owned a smack. A very little of her legacy would buy Turkey In as an apprentice. Sho bad It nil out with Mr. Tolllt, whom she wanted for her accomplice In her scheme for Turkey'a escape. Give Turkey Into her hands for twenty-four hours, nnd she knew how to arrange for him. Mr. Tolllt said Turkey had served two months of his sentence, and would be out In another month, Miss Walker said that If ho went baclc to Drury Lano he yould bo In prison again In a week, and that he must be out before bis time. Mr. Tolllt said It would be as much aa his place was worth and Turkoy began to be tho victim of a plot. Precisely at the same time he began to evolvo a very fine plot of his own. A cracksman who hnd Just come In on a very long sentence, had attempted flight, and a venture of that kind Is apt to l:e Imitated, Turkey, for his part, was In no great hurry to put prison behind him, but he did desire to do as It pleased him there and he didn't want any nonsense of garden ing. What If ho were to show that ho meant what be aald, by giving thorn the slip! An escape would make a man of him at a bound and set the seal upon his fame. Tho daring outlaw had broken prison to Join the woman of his heart! He would be chased, and would have to He In hiding; she would shelter htm, nnd when the police had abandoned the pursuit they would fly together, and perhaps set up as robbers. With these high thoughts to hearten him, he saw that the garden was not without advantagca. For instance, he was practi cally his own master there, A warder oc casionally went the rounds, but nobody showed any special Interest In Turkey. The chief obstacle waa the man with the cut lass. This was an officer who patrolled the gravel walk circumventing the prison, at tho foot of tho high, smooth-faced wall, and who was never absent. Turkey could not, of course, bo nwnre that the guardian of the path In this par ticular walk wns Miss Walker's Mr. Tol llt, and It was equally Impossible he should know how sincerely Mr. Tolllt wished him on the other side of the prison wall. Com pelled as he was to regnrd him as a foe, Turkey nevertheless felt an Instant liking for Mr. Tolllt, who was of great stature, and, with his cutlass on his shoulder, rather terrible to look upon. Approaching him on the second day of their acquaintance he said: "Mister Tolllt! Oh, Mister Tolllt! If you waa to ceo a criminal cove a-shlnnln' up that thero wall, wot 'ud you Jest about do?" "Hey?" said Mr. Tolllt. "Well, It you were tho 'criminal rove I should say: 'Come down off that, else I'll warm you!' If It was anybody else I expect I should carve him!" "A-courso you would Mister Tolllt!" said Turkel, delightedly. "An'," he added with unction, "I lay you could enrvo Mm!" To himself he remarked: "But I bet I does you In tho eye all the same, Mister Tolllt." The very next day an occurrence which was neither more nor less than extraordi nary decided him upon in-medlato action. How the letter camo there ha not been known; Mr. Turk himself Is unaware at this day of the hand which delivered It. It lay among the cabbage stalks, at the aj.ot whero Turkey must see It the moment ho was turned Into the garden at half-past R. His name was on the envelope. In capitals, and the tnclcsure wna In capitals. In a sense, It was vague as a tetter from the shades, for It was dated from nowhere and signed by nobody. Turkey hammered It out to this purpose: LET THE BOLD TURKEY CLIMB THE WALL. THE LADY WILL BE THERE. Earth has seen nothing, ncr has fancy de. vised anything to match the astonishment of Turkey when he had spelled the latter out. The lale he had bamboozled the gang with was a t.uie one In splto of hlmiclf. Ho was to escape, assisted by his lad). What was more, with the letter In hie hand to Inspire him, he know the very way that he would do It. At S-05 In the evening, when all the gang hnd Just been marched In to supper, he was sitting nstrldo the outer wall, his nice mole skin trousers In tatters, tnklng a last look at the prison. He was leaving It not quite without regret, for (although he scarcely felt this at tho moment) ho had never run away from home before. He was bleeding at the hands, and worse at tho knees: he was triumphant; he was a trifle sore at parting, and he had Just strength enough to drop down upon the other side of tho wall. He was faintly conscious, when ho touched ground again, that a person In a hood wrapped him In a cloak, tossed hi prison cap back to the governor and lifted him Into a chariot. It waa a sickening experience when, on awakening, Miss Walker threatened to box his ears for trying to kiss her. told film she was engaged to be married and old enough to be his mother, and locked him Into the attic to prevent him from return ing to prison. From the attic window he could see tho oakum party going round the yard and he cried with rage. He Is mate of tho Rosa Walker and If any one were to read this story to him he would repudiate It with language. Table and Kitchen Practical Suggestions About Food and the Preparations of It. Hull)' Mi'inia. THURSDAY. URKAK FAST. Fruit. e. i ,.,CcreB, Cream. Stewed Mnneys. Steamed Potatoes, hahy l.unns. Coffee. LUNCH. Beet iirotli. egetable Croquettes. Brown Sauce. Krult Knlnil. Cheese. Wafers. Tea. DINM'IR, Cream or Barley Soup. Fricassee of Mutton. Hlce. Scalloped Swcut Potatoes, reach Taplocn. ' Coffee, BREAK FAST. Fruit. Cereal. Cream, creamed Salt con. Hashed Brown Potatoes, hlce Waittes. Syrup. Coffee. LUNOil. Broiled Oysters on 1'oast. Brown Sauce. Celery Mayonnaise. Brown lirenu. Collage Cheese. Cereal Coffee. DINNER. Clam Broth. Baked Fish. Dresseti Cucumbers. Plain Botleu Potatoes. Cream ttiuice. Potato Mayonnaise. Peach Cake. , Whipped Cream. Coffee. SATURDAY. BREAKFAST. Fruit. Cereal. Cream. Mutton Chops. German Fried Potatoes. White MilttlnB. ColTcc. LUNCH. Macaroni Balls. Tomato Suuce. Shrimp and Celery Salad. Fruit. Wafers. Cereal Coffee. DINNER. Ukra and Rice Soup. Fresh Beef Potted. Mushed Potatoes. Creiuned Carrots. Browned Turnips. Lettuce Salud. Deep Apple Pie. Coffee. SUNDAY. BREAKFAST. Baked Apple. Thin Slices broiled Hnm. Cream. Creamed Tomatoes. Baking Powder Biscuits. Coffee. DINNER, Clear Soup. Roast Duck. (Unlet Gravy. Applo Sauce. Mashed Potatoes. Browned Turnips. Orange Salad. Pumpkin Pie. Coffee. SUPPER. Shrimps 11 la Nowhurg. Thin SHccb Bread nnd Butter. Tomatoes staffed with Ciicumbera. Cheese. Wafers, Cereal Coffee. WIIK.V game: is in season. All n u I'nrtrlilKo, Pin tun, Well Fed nml Fnlr. Game holds a very different place on our list of foods from that glvon It by our early American ancestors. With the first settlers It was a necessity and In no sense a luxury, either by virtue of Ita price or scarcity. They had hut to take down their trusty flintlock from Its place over the mantel and go but a tew rods Into the forest around their homes to find their meat market, supplied with the very choicest game of tho soason, without cost or price the only thing needful being a firm, steady aim. Game still holds Ita place among the "first families," but how altered tho conditions. Scarcity and price have relegated It to tho luxurlea and abundance of other meats have made It a non-essential, except to those who have the Inherited taste for this wild and "woodsy" meat. Game, as found In the markot of the present day, la not very generally appre ciated, owing to this "wild flavor" and the length of time It Is usually kept, and often, too, owing to the carelessness of the hunters. The very noticeable flavor peculiar to wild game and enjoyed by thoso who have Inherited their taste for It, Is Imparted to tho flesh by the wild food the bird or ani mal feeds upon. This may be removed when It is disagreeable to thoso who do not rclt6h It by careful bleeding as soon o the animal Is killed. This Is done bv opening the largo vein found under the tongue of both birds nnd animals. The body Is flrst suspended from the limb of a tree, with head downward. If tho birds are to be cooked Immediately, tho feathers should be removed by stripping them down carefully and quickly from the tall to the head and tips of winss. Tho feathers will come off very easily at this time whllo tho bird Is hanging, Tho huntcrb cut a silt Inside the leg and lengthwise of the body, remove the entrnlla and wipe nut the blood, then All tho body with prairie grass. This keeps the birds In form nnd dry. Game Is considered h valuable meat for Invalids, as tho flesh Is moro easily di gested nnd has less fat distributed through the meat than the tahio birds. Fresh game should be given and no risk taken In giving meat that la not In the very best condition, oven though "keoplng" brlngH out tho flavor and makes the flesh moro tender. All shot should be removed at onco from the flesh. Do this, If possible, even when the game Is not Intended for Immediate cooking. 1 How to Pre pure (or ('noklnir. To remove pin feathers from game, plunge Into a pan of boiling water to loosen them Never wash game more than Is absolutely necessary; frequently a thorough wiping Inside Is sufficient. The skin needs a moro complete cleaning. Large birds, like pheasants, peacocks and prairie chickens may be made more delicate In flavor by soaking them for eight or nlno hours In cold salted water, or parboiling them In water to which you hava(added an onion and a little vinegar. To removo any unpleasant odor or flavor from wild fowl, peel the yellow rind from a lemon and place the lemon Inside tho fowl before cooking. When birds are kopt for some time before cooking they should have a piece of char coal laid Inside; this wilt prevent Its be coming too strong. Do not remove the skin or feathers from game If It Is to "hang" any length of time. To keep rabbits or squirrels sweet and fresh foi several hour before cooking and after skinning them rub well with salt inside and out and placo E WAn JL JACI sre different turn all others in many other things In solid construction. In reasonableness of nrlce. If you V m aro coins: to liuv furnace, send for our freo furnace loot contains useful Infor mation about ItrntJncidl mcnslotio.nirnace resula tlon, ventllutlon, etc. MT.ITE or P. D. OECKWITH. DawsU,ltUh. Mahrrt of KrtkvilVt VMc, thf nntt Mmoul tl"e In Me unrlJ, HuHed 0U I'uriiMPc urn Tor lo In Omaha by Milton Rogers A Son S IN NEVER, EQUALED. EVERYONE GUARANTEEDTllSsoi-O N G EST. made byCHARTER OAK STOVE RANGE C0.ST.L0UIS bits of charcoal about them, cover with a cloth and keep them In n cold place. Venison This meat Is generally best en- Joyed roasted or broiled, especially If tho roasting can ho done before an open fire. Those who do not like tho slight "musky" taste will find the flavor more dellcato If they make It Into a fricassee. J To Roast nirds Wild duck, grouse and pheasants, are best roaated. Allow thirty minutes It roasted plain and longer If stuffed. The flavor Is best preserved If I thoy aro served without stufilng; they should be seasoned with pepper and salt and butter only; place n good-sized lump of buttor inside each bird truss; and skowor nnd place In tho oven. Uaste with moro butter If required to keep tho birds from becoming too dry. If stuffing Is used, a plain bread dressing Is the best to preserve the flavor and a piece of bacon or fat ham akewerod or laid on over breast and thighs. A most dellcatu way of dressing small birds Is to dip n largo oystor In melted butter or beaten egg nnd then cover with soft, coarsu bread crumbs and place Insldo thn bird. A mashed potato stuffing la also delicate and la often used for stuffing for braised squabs. Larding Game Tho natural navor of birds Is destroyed or disguised to a great extent when they aro larded, hut for tho dry meat birds larding linn Us advantages; thn fat pork moistens the meat, if larding Is dono properly, and at the same time bastca the outside, preventing a hard, dry skin. Gralnfed young pigeons and partridges that friqucnt the grain flolds and atubble are thu beat and aro equally good broiled, roasted or baked. Roa3t Blrda Cut off tho neck ao as to leave twu-thlrdr on; draw carefully, being careful not to break the gall bag In the liver. Remove everything from tho Insldo, especially tho lungs that aro Imbedded In the ribs and will impart a bitter tnste. Draw the Icrb up clone together and tie loosely; fill with a plain well-flavored dressing of bread, or the oysters or potato stuffing, filling rather loosely; lay the birds In a baking pan, placing each one on its back on a strip of fat, salt pork or bacon. Arrango In rowe. Spread them thickly with butter or lay strips cf fat salt pork over them; put a little water In the pan to pre vent burning to the pan; bake half an hour If birds are yuung. Dlrds may bo prepared In tho same way for braising and placed on a layer of carrots, turnips nnd onion cut Into dice nnd a little parsley, with Just enough water to cover tho vegetable. Then the cover Is put on and tho pan placed In a hot ovcu. Old pigeons are nice cooked this way, but It is not the beat way to cook young birds. Prairie Chickens Sauted Young prairie chickens are very nice fried or sauted. Joint tho chicken and aeason with aalt and pepper and sprinkle with flour and let stand In i cool place Heat enough bacon tat or vegetable oil to cover each piece. Dip the pltcea of chicken In b?aten egg nnd broad crumbs, put Into tho fat without crowding and fry n nice brown, Do not hive tho fat too hot, aa It will requlro thirty to forty five minutes to cook tho chicken. Keei covered until the chicken la brown enough to turn them; leave uncovered. When all Is sauted, keep hot whllo you make the sauce. Measuro tho fat In tho pan nnd for a pint of tho sauce take four level table spoonfuls of tho fat, four level tablespoon fills of sifted flour nnd a pint of milk or one-half pint of milk nnd half pint of chicken or voal stock. First melt your but ter, but do not brown; then atlr In tho flour and when unonth add tho milk and atlr tin til It beglni to thicken nnd bollH up. Seaion to tasto with Bolt and pepper. Old birds are not 6o good this way and must lay over night sprinkled with salt. They are better boiled, brnlscd or frlcajsced, Pratrlo Chickens Kteamod Wash tho chlckfn thoroughly snd quickly In worm wnter, using a llttln soda In tho water; rinse and dry quickly, fill up with plain dressing, sew up, tie down the legs and wings and plare In n steamer over boiling water nnd steam until tender. Then placo In a dripping pan, spread thickly with but ter, dredgo with aalt, popper and flour and place In the oven. Ilaato with melted butter until a nice rich brown. Servo with applo butter, or spiced wild grapes. Quail on Toast Dry-pick tho blrdfc and singe over tho gas flame or a tablospconful of alcohol poured In a saucer. Cut off the heads' and the legs at the first Joint; placu In salt and water for ten minutes, drain and dry on a cloth, cover with bacon or butter, season with salt and popper and place on a broiler; broil ten minutes on either side, brushing frequently with melted butter. When done placo each bird on a slice of buttered toaat, with breast upward, garnish with parsley and serve with creamed celery or cucumbers. Wild Goree Roasted Soak In salt and water for twelvo hours befcre cooking, and If you are not suro that It Is young and tender, parboil It for an hour at least. Old geese aro better boiled or steamed, for roasting they rhould not be mire than S months old and very fat to he tender and Juicy. A green goose, i months old, la con White Smoke from Soft Coal Routul Oak Furnaces have large feed doors, burn wood or coal; but uliatcer they burn, give greater heat titan m other furnaces, because nil the jjasci nnd nearly all the smoke is consumed. The smoke 6 white from a Round Oak Furnace hurnlnrf soft coal; that means no waste fuel. Th principle is not new, nut the application to the Round Oak is new in that no noies are cut tmougii the fire pot. Round Oak Furnaces a Hound nnd 0W FurnaM Willi OUICI iter casing remoreda HE L FAIN iIerfectEakes. rUELJAVERS. LAST sidered a very rholce dish by a New 12ng andnr. II should hang at least twenty-four hours before cooking. Cut the neck off closo to the back, but leave the skin so It can bo drawn over and down on tho back under tho wings, whcji they nre placed In pcaitlon. Flatten out the breast with a rolling pin; tie wings and legs securely Into place and All locxtcly with a plain bread stuffing. Sew up securely and. If the- goose Ih not fat enough to bastn Itself, lay strips of salt fat 'pork over tho breast and tie In place. Put n llttlo water In the dripping pan, add n little salt and pepper and baste the goose frequently with this. Turn occasionally so as to brown even on all sides until tender and a iilcu color. Serve with glblet gravy and applet sauce. "Gnrlnnil" Siinei nun Itutiiiea Awarded firs', .rlj3, Paris exposition, 1000. SOl'VKXntS )!' n .VKHAI, TIIAIX. (In'il nml .SIMi-r Collin I'lnceil on the) Xli'i'l Itnlln. The deslro for souvenirs upon tho part of the large crowds lined along the railroad tracks r.t eveiy point was a distinctive fea ture of the McKlnley funeral train, relates ths Pittsburg Post. Tho moat popular of all the methods adopted was the placing of coins on the track so that the train might pass over them, smashing flat the pieces of money as a mark of Identification In year to come. This practice waa not confined to any particular poldt or crowd, but was In dulged In generally all along the route. The mutilated coins wero afterward gathered up by tholr owners and displayed with much pride. At some stations, according to the train conductors, so many coins were placed on tho rails that , It caused n slight Jar to the cars as they pinned over thorn. Coins of different denominations aggre gating nt least several hundred dollars were fctrewn nlong the track at Union statlotf. Kven these relic hunters seemed to appre ciate the occasion and surroundings and In stead of making a rush for their property as soon ns the train had passed, waited un til It was out of sight before picking up the crushed coins, nnd by common mute consent each was allowed to have his or nor own without the least quibbling among them. At Roup station a prominent and wealthy resident of the 8badvalde district placed a 110 gold piece upon the rail. The approach of the train started to shake It off, but it managed to remain, long enough to have Just a small portion of It nipped off, at If done by a knife. The owner Is quite a collector of aouvenlrs and oddities, and when he picked up his coin he stated it would occupy the most prominent and conspicuous place In his targe collection. NOTICEIll uusorvo inis uiuo iifnaiuic on every Jar of LIEBIG COMPANY'S EXTRACT of Beel Pot KITCHEN Pot Sick Room iJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJMSJiJJJlJH You Will Bo Dollarhtorl rrlth llili arpalltlnir, trtntth-clrlntr iooi. Grand It pr-aiMteil in 1 sttrlltiett. A pound pacing eoalalni ill llmrt tht nutriment or latllc. It If erUp and nuMIU (not hxd or muthjr) and fculldi itrn itrragth or atbutos end Inrilids. Womin an4 ehlldnn tbrlra by Hi uii, Erery pack of Onulni Uranola ban a ciotur of th fUttl Crk SaatUrtum. Boll by all grootn. Btwari of Imltatlona, Drink Corn.-nel Cereal (instead of coffee) and sleep well it leaves ths nerve Bijoux,