tllCAOoX J: 4.OOQ.OOO ilTH the completion or me rent drainage canal, the tnx MH of Chicago ran reckon ,ruiou suin of Ct.'I.OtN).M)0 . I.,n t I 1. 1., .lit.. I. i.y have I'ufc imw -'- '"M 'iih.ii. ft possible incioeuioi npN 01 lifteou iuiiikiu tanner aiong ably more tbar 100.000,000.000,000 peo ple to coiiKume It. It It were IpCMd flat over the surface of the earth to the depth of one Inch, It would cover 111 noli, MiuiuitoUi, Wisconsin, Iowa, Missouri ami a good portion of Nc bruska. Ooold It lie attenuated to a Ucpm or three and a half feet, a row orU 1 monument to tne en- boat could travel over It for mere than a .1... IUI. lIlLl '.. HjW.itril t.lllS. Wj il I lull. .J I n Mb.. ......I.... I, lb. . I ,, .. f 01 rvl" i'u.v j ' uun n, t , a uie ruiuv, tuiunoig and yet it csiimnieu inai out l . canon or water per minute, were ' SjOOOuOli lple residing In Cbt- to ottempt to pump the channel dry. jmjO.UW) "nve uovcr si-en the It would he oivupled over Nl days In ! (Hi the north wall Ktand- the controll- i 0i wnom a isrgo proHirtion ; doing no. in continuous depth it is lug works. Where the river waters en- niam chunnel ends at Lockimrt abrupt ly lu a wait tlx feet thick, made of stone, and backed up by thousands of tons of stoue damped In from the "poll banks." There the channel widen from 100 feel the regulation width of the cut- to a "wludage biuln" ! feet w Ida, In which the largest ships can be turned around. Th.s basin, of course. Is locked on throe sides by stone walls extending 17 feet above the surface of the water when the channel Is tilled. rive' is so nasty, to nllert with as vagv poison that even I he toughest o' tl!l w ill not approat b It. Some. h,.weer. say also that it will I lie possible to see the bottom of the J Chicago Rlvar, something ttia present generation of eitiMM has been do I prlveil of. from the Illinois Central's I bridge at the mouth of the river to the i end of either branch no glimpse of the river's bottOB Is imv; poMltlsl Within I the coming year It I believed all of I the seerets of the depths w 111 lie revenl- cd. luste.nl of lining a Isittom of mud. the river will replace that with tell where It starts or where It the largest channel In the world con I almost passes umlerstand'.ng structcd by man. over 40.00n,(Kjo ruble IjlsnT" work mat lias ts.su nc- j yam or material navuig ooea taken HKAIl TKAP DA M, LOCKPOBT. ipllshed-nnd thw labor done ahowa It Is lsisslhle to construct tne ,it- igun ( anal .VI per ceut. cbosis-r than anticipated. It was a little sotue g for the engineers to dig a ditch trough snud for the conatructlon of s IN (anal. It was heroic for the rl;er to face fever and miasma at mama, the Krle canal was quite n i of work, but In coat. In mngultude. idllhVuItics to overcome, the drainage btimel of Chicago Is not rivaled by iee. channel Is divided Into two great Classes of work the earth accretions. here nil the excavatlona have been 1 Biade In the dirt, and the rock sections. In const met fug the watercourse It wits found wet-saury to literally take up a river, move It to one side, give It a new .i-o. and run the chaiinel through Die old course. When the flnnl route 0l the channel was determined It was found by the engineers that It would I be necessary to divert the DesplajfMM I lllver from Its then course the same channel through which It was coursing Iwhcii La Salle. Hennepin and Jollet Irame and thought It so great a body Of water that they could not Indicate their maps w here Its western banks Eere. in summer tne stream is ni lints a mere brook, but In the spring- when the freshets conic, It la one the most powerful bodies of water In State. Taking Into account, then, it a portion of the channel Is now .what was once the bed of the Ilet- IBM, ns entire ro,, Mouth of out of It. of which over 13,000,000 cu bic yard Is rock. More thau loti.oOO men have been employed lu Its eon structlon. the largest number of men at work at one time being 8,000, The possibility exists of developing along the channel a water power equal to I'l.OOO horse power. Public sentiment ut present Is against utilization for mechanical purposes, but the power which can 1h developed would be sii 111 dent to Illuminate every street and al ley lu Chicago with electric light. Less than two score of lives have been lost In the construction work, and no wages have bee'i paid of less than $I.W 1st day for labor. Between $11,000,000 and $7,000,000 worth of land was purchased by condemnation or otherwise for the right of way. The history of the construction of the canal Is Interesting. After years of preliminary surveys and llguring. prec edent necessarily to such a gigantic undertaking, earth was tlrst broken lu the great waterway on Sept. 3. 1803, on the Lemon t rock cut, and Hie day has since ticca celebrated ns "school day" on each succeeding anniversary. Since then the contractor have cut through twenty-eight miles of solid earth and rock, making u canal approx imately 100 feet wide. If the earth, loose stoue. top soil ("glacial drlff'l ex cavated were dumped Into Lake .Michi gan, Into forty feet of water. It would make an Island a mile square, rising eight feet above the surface of the water. counter the stone walls, they pass through the sluice pates and over the dam. The small gati-s can be lowered. cutting off the flow of the water, and I the dam can be raised, cutting off some more, when It Is neceasary. The gates can be shut down altogether, present ! lug an Impenetrable front, and the rear drop dam can be raised until It Is as high as the level of Lake Michigan. Then the water will stand still. It can not Mow uphill. Each gate weighs 20 tons, but so ulccly ore they counterbalanced that but few men nre required to work the machinery to raise or lower them. They are built In solid tnasoury. which sug gests ih" frowulng front of a fort, but this Is necessary, as the pressure gainst them Is tremendous The heavy granite and brick wall contains seven other spaces for additional sluice gates. which are now bricked in solidly. aw ait ing the time wlnti Chicago's Mipulatlon has so greatly Increased that the ca pacity of the channel can be doubled. Then these gate will be put In to per mit an lin-renscd uOW Into the lies plnllies. Hut the gates, while massive I of engineering work, are not enough without the bear-trap dam. It Is called a bear trap because Its shape Ugg its roe old deadfall bear traps which were ouee lu use by early set- I raswTt-i" n SSOTlOji or aATM oats. sand. The coagulated masses of sew age will disappear. Where there tins been no current there w 111 be u rapidly running stream, sweet and pure. The mass of tilth which bus aeon mulatcd at the stockyards will dlsup- lH-iir. The foul air which hns lufected the district about the yards will t)S n placiMl liy pure ulr. While the sewage will be Immediately perceptible at th mouths of the sewers where It enters GOING AHOl'T INCOG. MONARCHS SOMETIMES HAVE 8TRANUE AOVEN TLMES. Amnsing stories of Koyal I'rraon- ..f v ho lluve I'Ufiif I Tlimnelfi nt All Hlgns of Tbrlr Hunk and li.i, Mr i i ..in I'rniile. COMPLETED CHANNEL IN JOLIBT, CALL'MET TERMINAL BRIOOI OVEK CHANNEL. Chicago lllver through lta aouui sia nch to the town of Summit; by irth excavation to Willow Springs; Slough the old led of the Desplalnos Lemoot, partly by solid rock; cui- tag to Iorkport by the same process; rough the controlling works, past omen, to Joliet; to Lake Jollet; thence the Illinois River, and through that the mighty Mississippi. The entire etigth of the channel, maiming uuu wrtlon of the Chicago River used. Is aiHtut forty mCies, formed at a coat per Slue of aliout $.S2:,000. If Chicago did not stand at the sum mit of the watershed between tne basins of the Mississippi and the St. Il.nw rencc Rivers, the drainage channel might not have been constructed, and Illlteted or boiled water might have ben good enough for the millions. Hut. standing on the crest, an engineer eou.a readily see that If the wuter supply of the city lay on the St. Lawrence side of the slope. It was absolutely necessary that the sewage should not be deposit ed that. This being decided, the re maining question was bow to cross the divide and start the sewage west and south. Hence the drainage channel, innd that Is nil there Is to the problem taken up In 1880. In Its natural state tin- water of Lake Michigan Is unpol .IuimI and healthful. The carrying away lof the sewage means the doing away with costly aqueducts and great orti- Iflelal storage basins. New lork goes A'')' miles for Its water supply, ami the aqueducts which convey It have frost over $30,000,000. Hoston Journeys twenty miles, and has paid $13,000,000 'or a brick conduit and storage basins. Philadelphia la spending $'JO,000,000 In an effort to find mire water. Chicago by paying $33,000,000 for the drainage canal has pure water at Its lake front, frss of cost, save pumping through the mains. The supply comes from a nat ural basin 840 feet deep, with an area of 20.000 square miles 320 miles long snd 80 miles broad. The channel of the canal Is 38 feet deep, has s capacity for thirty-five feet of water, and a current speed of one mile and one-fifth per hour. Either tiers. It consists of two hinged metal leaves which present an Inclined face 100 feet In width to the waters. The place of Joining, known as the crest of the dam. can be raised by hydraulic power, the turning of valves allowing water from upstream to tlow Into cham bers under the dam und easily raise lis million pounds of weight. It has a total OSClllUUOli ..r ... fiM funt- I It cm be lalscd that much from Its lowest point If neceasary. To lower it other valves are turned and the water from the chambers under the dam are released to Sow out into the tall race and the great metal barrier settles slow ly iIoh n to the required level. Over the top of the dam the trees, sticks, barrels and Ice floating on the surface will be allowed to pass which would never get through the sluice gates for the reason that the water will pass un der the gates, leaving the surface al most placid and Immovable, holding all floating objects, nml In the course of time the windage basin at the end of the channel woulil be tilled with float ing debris from the twenty-eight miles of canal all hurried down against the end wall. These things will easily pass over the dam. The greut Intercepting sewer system which Chicago has Inaugurated is. of course, part of the plan for keeping the lake free from sewage and directing the flow of the sewers toward the river and thence to the drainage canal and away from the lake. In'j which they have heretofore emptied. All of the city sower are pnrt of the system to deposit contents In the drainage canal, to be carried away to the Mississippi. So thoroughly will the sewage be dl- ln order to arrange for "river diver sion," and control the stream at all times, so that It could not overflow and back up the 'Jhlcago River Into the lake again, n channel was cut, chang ing the course of the liosplalnes, nt Lock port Thirteen miles of channel 200 feet wide was dug parallel to the mtiln drainage cliiiunel, and a leVOe nineteen miles long was constructed to keep the Dcsplalucs from flowing Into the main drainage channel lu "flood tides." At the head of the diversion n spillway was also built, which Is aptly termed a safety valve. It consists of a great dan) of concrete and stoue, 307 feet long, and having a crest sixteen feet above thu surface of Lake Michi gan. Many contractors underestimated, to their cost, the work necessary lu exca vation. Finally the bulked effort was to accomplish the maximum of work with n minimum if men, and the great cantilever crane, steam shovels and other devices were a result. Incline railway carrying cars wen' used, vast sb l pans employed. A half-ton blast of dyunmlte on the rock sections was but on ordinary charge, tired several times a day. Millions of pounds of giant powder were used. The boring was done by pneumatic power drills. When n signal whistle niinouneed the tiring of the holes, the men scurried to shelter sheds. Tremendous explosions followed. At one time eight tons of dynamite were used In a single day. The controlling works at Lockport constitute the most Important part of the drainage system. These provide against the water ever diverting the current. Tbey consist of seven Im mense sluice gates, through which wa ters cau proceed to the "tall race," and thence to the Iiesplalnes ami a "tall trap dam." This dam Is in itself a wonder, and has been studied and ad mired by engineers from all over the world. v- ..,,1,- nr flio sluice rate and the . ." a m mm. in nf AixhU In for light water craft from the lake to lug iium t 1 1 rv -- but are necessary ai the river or channel, no greut discolor atloll of the wnter will take place. The inhabitant- of the Valley of the Illinois, those of Jollet, will not suffer ul effect from the waters of the chan nel. The old picture w ttlch was drawn of Jollet overcome by fumes from the stream of the chunnel Is u false one. The water will be entirely pure when I J.M lt.nMplk I .1 , 1 1 i . I . ..I..,, 11. Illinois River. In fact, It Is believed that It will be purer tnan the water now In the Illinois. An element of the construction of the canal was the effort systematized to control the large number of workmen employed, and maintain peace and or der throughout the sanitary district. A force of sanitary police was enlist ed, a uniformed, orgnnlr.cd body, which did excellent work In preserving the peace and enforcing the laws. It will I lie rendlly understood that this great body of workmen, not of the highest order of Intelligence nt best ami sur rounded at the stsrt with a hundred nml one low dives and saloons which sprang up In the canal towns and set tlements, were a bit hard of manage meut. Hut there never was any seri ous trouble on the channel, not a strike of any consequence or a riot. Pay days brought the usual grist of drunkenness ami slight affrays, bur no trouble as serious as was anticipated by the city police ever occurred. The $33,000,000 expended on the drainage channel Is a large sum; It Is fully two-thirds of the COS) of cutting a ship canal to connect the greet lakes with the Mississippi, navigable to all steamers plying between New Orleans and St. Louis, when plans for changes I.Oi)KIN; CP THE til M . luted by the time It reaches the great river It will make the Itliuols far clean er In appearance than the Mississippi Is now, and so far us the fear of resi dents of St. I-ouls and towns In Cen tral llllnota that the drainage channel will bring disease and death to them are concerned, eminent scientists have declared tliat tlsh will live lu the drain age canal throughout Its entire length. With the lake soirlng Into the Chicago river channel at a speed of one snd oue fourth miles per hour fishermen msy cast their lines from sny of the docks along the river, which will be filled with pure, clean lake water. I he channel offers a pieejsnie way the all times, for the sanltory district must by law control alsoluteiy ua smouni 800,000 or 000,00 cubic feet of water of water Bowing through the channel. can he carried through It per minute. If the water covering this forty miles could be taken out and land-locked. It would make a larger lake than any In Illinois, and fully the equal of Mlnne tonka or White Hear In Minnesota. If an effort could be made to drink It Hp at one guJj It srviitd take cunslder- aud must not let It exceed 300.000 cu bic feet a minute. This dam and these gate can be so manipulated that oatf a pint of water, nr no water st all. can Is- allowed to flow Into the It.-eplalnes. and again they can be so arranged that the capae . . . a i a rW itj of the channel can Ut doubled. The . rival at present. Lockport that can tie equaled nowlitre so far i sarety is ronceruea. me Jourm-v down the stream through the beautiful alley of the liosplalnes Is extremely picturesque. With water practical! v odorless, none of the foul features of the old State canal are pres enL Lug : - - '.aim tbst for the first time In nearly forty years fish con lire In the Chicago lllver. Home pi-ople lo not know that tlb csnnot live Id the This is true, ine In the M Isslppl are curried out. Ht HI. the Investment will show amply for the pains and labor Involved, for the drain age channel will be navigable by all vessels of draught not more than tWSB ty-three fist, and It will enable the next move with facility the Improve ment ol the Deeplslnes ami the Illi nois Hi w i s as far ss I' tics. Fool D 2 a Ipldet In Ills Parlor. A nc -t Housing and Interesting cv periuieiit Is In the reach of everyone who bus u tuning fork. Take It to a spider's w.b, set the fork vibrating and tom h tne edge of the weti lightly. Mr. Spider has the honing sound eon rend to tdnt by the thread or his web. Be will run to the center of the web quickly und feel oil around until be touches the thread against which the fork Is sounding; then, taking an other thread along. Just as a man would take an citra piece of rojie, he will run out to the fork and spring upon It. Imagining Hint a fly has l-eu enmeshed, fur the soundlug of the fork against the web eSMttf sliuuloUrs the bussing of a &x. Many amusing stories are told of l he adventures of royal personage wh-n they have divested themselves of what may ! culUsI their oitbinl di-s and assumed the guise of ordinary mortals. And no one lows more to tell these tales of misadventure than the revalues themselves. The Czar at MI recounts the story of all ex pet W'lioe he had some years ago lu Scotland. It was In the early duve of his cycling cutbustnMii. and lie was riding lu company with Princess Maud. When the rOMj cyclists were walking with their machines up one of the steep hills near Ha'.moral they overtook an o'.d Scotchman, vv ho vv Ished Hu m "goods diiy" and Seemed disposed for gossip. The young pair entered into the spirit of the adventure nml chatted merrily slwul their cycling until they rcuched the top of the hill. Hcfore they re mounted the garrulous old iiuiti looked wondering!)1 at the muctuuc and said: "Wcvl, wvcl. they're grand thing for you toon lasses and laddies." When they had got out of hearing the royal pair literally laughed until they cried, mid the Cxur even yet answers to the name of "the toou laddie" among his cousins. Not many months ago the (iertnnu BmperoC sustained a shock. Like King Leopold of Belgium, tlie Kaiser lOfW ucciudoiuilly to take a solitary nimble In the country, due day last summer wlillo at l'otsdilin he hud wandered farther than usual, und at dusk found himself, dusty ami vveury, still a dozen inlles from the palace. When at tills stage a country woman driving a cart Overtook him he greeted her politely ami asked her to allow hint to take a seat lu the cart. The woman ksikisl down critically ut the dusty and dlebot clcd i. ..iii, and whipping up lwr horse said: "Not me; I don't like the look of you." Some distance uheiid a mounted patrol stopped the woman ami asked what the KmperoV had said to her. The KalserV" she queried In amaze ment. "What Kaiser'" Then, as the truth gradually dawned on her site turned pale, gave a frightened look at the dusty llgure coming nearer and drove rapidly away. Ex (Jmvii Emma of the Netherlands nml her daughter, the (Jueen of to day-, had many nmtixlng experiences In their wanderings Incognito. Last sum mer, when they were staying ut MM of the hotels 111 the Tyrol, the young queen won all hearts by tier sweetness of disposition and vivacity. There was (uie young Englishman who was so overcome by her charms that he fol lowed her everywhere In spite of a frowning uiiiminu, and. It must be wild, with some mischievous encouragement from the daughter. Ills attention nt last became so marked (hut one day the young girl and her mother disap pears! without warning, and It was only some days after the young Eug llHhmnti leunssl through the nevvspn- frtn llmt ttSSI VWISPJSJ !nltT bS lllo! WIMM-d so iMTHlstciitly was the Ijiiccu of Hol land. Many good stor! are told of the cu rious adventures of lucn Margaret of Hiiy on her niouiitnlinvrlng rieur siotis. The story of how she entertain isl a party of tourist climbers lu one of the mountain huts Is well known, but few wiio have heard Of another little adventure which befell her last sum mer. The Oueiii, whose energy Is al ways the envy and diwpnlr of her suite, had wondered away from her attend ants, and had not only lust her way but was Isrth hungry and fatigued, when she saw a peasant's cottage In the ills ta tics'. Making her way to It, her knock was enewered by an old is'iisant woman, WhOCfl she asked for rest and refresh melit. "Come In, my dear, and wej eoine." the kindly old peasant said. The Queen entered mid Insisted on helping her hostess prepare the simple men! of milk and bread. When the belated nt tendanta reached the cottage they found the (Jnccn and the old woman gossiping and eating with all the free dom of old frh-nds. and It was not until some days later, when a hand some present arrived at the cottage, that the woman burned how she luid enssTtalnad iwr Queen. BANOOR'S DEAL TRADE. Once Prosperous Industry In the Old Mslne Town (lets Nw Life, Itangor's deal trade, after many years, bus come buck again, and to day there are scenes uloiig Hie river that recall the times when mUiloiis of Pen obscot logs, sawed Into thick plunks, were shipped nwtiy every your to the porta of the United States and ail over continental Europe-1 be limes when prices of IihiiIht mid everything else wen- high, and WBOfl the Yankee wood en sailing ship was still a queen In the fleet and winner lu (ho race for the world's deep-water coiinneree. As Annie Iixlcy used to slug with tender regret of "the dujs of '49," so the liSli gor suiloriiiun uud lumberman sings lu his heart of the days Just Is'fore or those ofliT the war. when shlm were many hen- and business brisk. Away bui k befOTS the war 1! ii, g.-r did a smashing business lu luiuts-r with many srts lu four continents, and after tin- war the buslio s was re fired ti some extent. Countless mill ions of feel of ileal were scut to th DnMed Kingdom and vast quiiutlttca of "3 -by -U stuff" to South Africa, while the wealth of IVuulsK-ot's clear ami wide white pine was sent tend all over the West Indies. Prices were for the most irt gisid. wages high fiw stove- don-s, freights also high, and sailors' pockets were seldom empty. Times were flush In the port of Hungur In those iluys. The vessels that used to come to Hongor In that time for foreign loading were among the beet specimens of wooden construction ever turned out anywhere, and the tbs-ts that used to gather at High Head ibs k were a de light to the sailor's eye and a satlsfsc SJol to the heart of all imlrlotlc Amor I cans. In rcistit years there luive hfMffl some notable sea congresses at theee oaiue docks, but there Is a vast differ ence between the aid flattg and new. Nowadays the foreign trad done sline-t entlrrtl In foreign loins, and even the foreign sailing sc. are being er-wiled out hv lit and Norwegian trump teumslilis carry so much ul a loud and g qu and cheaply. Hut Hangor I (hipping ib-ol with a lot of other stuff, to f Mrta, ami I glad of It. even If the no is doue in foreign steamed year LV.Oisi.Oul fvt of deal wen 11. and this year the cXrtntlot Is- as much or more. Some of steamers take a much as feet; others from 1,000,000 to JM tine of last year's Heel Mntod o feet. The trump steamers load qu carry a big cargo, ami onss the lu ills-ill fourteen days. They imit men, have no resilrs that can lx On this side, and leave Utile nionl the Hirt. which Is one n-avui why are not liked. Sometimes a in: four or live of Hie deal steamel In Hangor ul a time, loading of wt for cargo, and strangers are sun . . . . inch b i shins so nt np i ning in thlS lllLG stater river, Borne of the eteame O mm of 8,000 tens gross, and draw tvvl SlTtA. 1 I lOtS Ol and twentj four fis-t of loaded, Hut the Penobscot is art GlldS VrV lCW r ,r. ami with the expenditure ' moderate sum for dredging cou made safe for almost any vessel navy, at a distance of twenty live from the bend of the bay. arance i all u per iiibii Old I. sees. It was linen, embroidered Hid cot work, sometimes combined with what is now known as dnwn thread work, from which the laivs of to day SVOlvod. The cut work was made by the nuns when practically nil Industrie! vveie curried on within the walls .if the con vent. "Nuns' work" It was called, mid an old manuscript Is extant which sets forth that n certain great lady wns "as well skilled Iii needlework a If she bad been brought up lu a convent." Prom tin- darned netting to tin- lace with light ground, such ns are used Slow, Is mi easy transition; then the beautiful "stitches In the ulr," ns ills Unci from stitches worked on g tlrm ground, wns made, nml the evolution of luce was complete. It Is delightful lo think Hint the finest stitches which wen- employed nt Venice, Alencon ami Argon tan, when those places were at the height of their glory In the sixteenth and seventeenth centurion, are not a forgotten on. Hy melius of microscopes and patient toll on the part of Hie workers, tin- method of making Hie delicate effects has been rediscovered nml Is used III the fac tories of to day. Should one go Into n luce shop now und nsk for "u prelty winter luce," "n nice length of spring lace" or a "use ful autumn variety." the seller would doubtless think the designing pur chaser was a lunatic. In Hie reign of Louis XV, however, no such Idea would have entered Ills head, for so INipular was lace that the fabric was specialized In this milliner. Argeiitan ami Mem on rather thick nml massive laces, for those days Hie designers were still under the Venetian Influence were culled "winter" laces; the fabrics of England and Mechlin, on Hie other hand, ere re "summer1 laces. HnMKlfKX ' m i a u ana a m How The Ham I'ln Money. The English society woman ds-s not hesitate to turn an honest H-imy lu many ways which women of equal standing In other tuitions might con sider lufru dig., says a writer In Har per's Hasar. It Is n NOUfjfnJMd fact that many a well lsrn dome ha traded Upon that station of life In which Providence was pleased to place her by selling the eiitn e to Hie most select driiw lug rooms to such of her newly rich country women ns desired to pur chase the privilege; also, the noble lad Of limited purse will lend her name to the invitations and her presence nt the entertainments of the socially am bitious woman who Is able to pay for the benefit lo Is- derived therefrom. Latterly ninny stories have lss-n afloat of some American women who have thus gain- -I 0 root hold iiMn the social ladder of the English metro;s)lls. Only this season It has ls-eti rumored that Miss Astor was ls lug chapj-oned by an imp, unions countess of Scotch ex traction, who was to h- reimbursed for tier II and trouble by the tidy sum of glft.OOO. An easy way to pay one's tailor's bills has hecu devised by an other member of the Hritish nristoc- rucy, who has allowed the aforemen tioned tailor to print the following ml verUeemoul in a Dumber of fashion Journals: Linly Mury Suckvlllc writes, saying of street Is the ouly tailor who has ever given her u long wulstcd effect" I'mpss-sdns ( nttlnss In Hind. There are ninny plants purchased which could Is- easily produced from cuttings, uud such work should be done early In the ynr. The Kansas Experl meut Minimi has given th mailer Us attention, uud bus made the work of propagation by cuttings much better understood, especially on the part of women, who have heretofore relied mostly ou outside sources for new plants. It Is not too soon lo begin root ing the cuttings of plants In 1-Vbnntry or March, ami It may be also done biter ileninlums that are from cuttings early In the season should be covered with blossoms In summer. Among the plants that may be propagated by cut Hugs an- the coleus, Iresiue uud iilther manlhaila They may US started lu s box In a window, the box to be of any size desired lllld live Inches di ep, tilled with clean sand. Wheii the cuttings are tlrst made they should be shaded during Ibe heat of the day, and sprin kled several limes a day until (he cut tings become thoroughly established, the ssnd to be kept always moist and wet. Cuttings are also sometimes root ed lu a deep plate tilled with sand that Is kept moist. It Is not difficult to se cure plants from cuttings with care In the work. Visitor to Hliaksp sre's ilous". The a mi ii al meeting of the Lrusteo of Shukspcam-'s MrUipluce was held the other day ul Sirutford-ou-Avon. i'h committee reported that during t: . ..nr more than .'H.(i persoua hud paid for siluilaalon to Nhakapcan-'s bouse, n-prcaeirHiig thirty-five different nationalities, and UMTS thsn lOO.OUl hsd vlsltisl Anne lluiuuwuy's cottage St bhvOUsrjr. the state Judge luid eel which in- express ami vet In- was - " trial, lie therefore am. plriint In this way: "Yov- yon will give me your word ilia " won't steal when vou get to Alhil. I'll see what kill be done about setidii- you there." "Judge drover," replied th voting man, drawing himself up with great dignity. "I go to Albany un pledged, or 1 don't go nt nil." Mrs Siillle Marshall Hardy, who Is d. s, en, hint of Chief Justice Marshall, visited the Supremo Court chamber lu Washington ns-etitly. and was Intro duced lo Justice Harlan by a function al of the court. She wns thee seated under the bust of her distinguished an cestor, and JiiMtlce Harlan whispered to Oh lei Justice rullari "That little WOBMUI there under Marshall's bust Is his great granddaughter." The Chief Justice look.-.l toward the little woman. nml then said: "Tell her I am afraid the bust may fall on tier." "I'm not afraid," returned Mrs. Hardy; "noth ing nil earth could please tne so much as to have my great-grandfather's head fall on my shoulders." An Australian, coming up on a re cent steuiuer, fell lu with two sharper who led him Into many wngers. They were so Invariably successful that ho became suspicious that tlfey were "flx Ing" the Is'ts, but each new proposi tion was so tempting that he could not resist It. At Inst, ns they approached the Qdldeg Hate, he counted up the remnants of hN roll. "(Jentleuien," he said to them, "I find I have Just twenty two dollars In American money left. Now. I will risk It nil If you will let me MUM (his Inst ls-t." The others were curious, and, knowing they could not lose much, consented, and asked what his proposition wns. "It Is this." be said; "I'll bet you twenty-two dollars Hint I can yell louder than the ship's lleeiB WhlnlsH Of course, I'll lose," ho added, "lint, by Jingo, I know the wnls-th- can't Is- fixed." Prank '-. Man tea InBa in the Atlanta Constitution Of a couple who applied to a rural Justice of the s ace for total dlvuri-o. The Justice called the bailiff and asked lu a whisper: "What's the law on that pint?" "You enn't do It," replied Ibe bailiff; "It don't come under yer Jurisdiction." "We're wlllln' to pay cash fer It," replied thu husband, not understanding the nature of the con sultation; "I've got Hie money In this here stockln'." The Justice looked grave. Then, adjusting his spectacles ami addressing the man, he said: "You know ed 'fore you come here that 'tvvarn't fer tne ter separate husband an' wife, an' yet, you not only take up the lime o' this here valuable court with yer tall, in', but nckchully perpoae ter bribe me with money! Now, how much has you got In that stockln' T" "'Hunt six dollars an' a half, yer honor." "All right, then, I fine you Ave miliars fer lirils-ry, an' a dollar an' a half fer tak in' up my time with a case whn I my Jurisdiction Is out of, an' may tin- Lord have mercy on yer soulP Why I'urplo lleosme Imperial Color. Purple Is-came the imperial color be cause of Its enormous cistt and rarity. The only purple known to the nnch-uts WHS the Tyrlllll purple, which WUS ob tained In minute quantities ouly from s Mcdlterrnuellll species of shell fish called the mures. In the time of Cic ero, wisil, double-dyed with this color, was so excessively dear that a slnglo pound weight cost n thousand denarii, of about 3.1 sterling. A single murex only yielded u little dnp of the secre tion, consequently vary large uumtiers had to be taken In inter to obtain enough to dye si in a very small i unit of wool. Amo.ig more thou one of Hie nations ,,r antiquity It was deaUS for any one but Hie sovereign or so pn no- Judges to wear garments dyed with Tyrliui purple. I'pan the aeeeSNhm of Julius Caesar a luw was passed fur blildlng any private person to wear IL New I iploalt IV A (b-rmiiu bus produced a new explo sive. It Is couissM-d of liquid oxygon, sulphur ami i-arhou. It has to Is- pre-pun-d Just before ri-qulred for use, snd must be exploded by iiw-fuis of a deton ator. There Is consequently no danger in transport or from on outbreak of lire . to tho explosive when ready fur service. In the Horseless I- mure. The following Is the Chicago Trib une's prognostication: "What was Hie mntter with that cub river you were culled to see last .cek'r" asked iKx tor Squills. "As m-srly as I cau describe bis ease," answered Doctor Kalluuiel, "It Is automobillouaucss." A Flsln lr ,lt. Jane I umb-rstoud she comes of very old family. Lily Yes; you ran aee the family t rait In ber very clearlj. June What trait? Uijr Age.-Tit Ilk