CIGARETTES FLOURISH STATISTICS 8HOW ALARMING IN CREASE IN USE OF "PILL." Efforts of Anti-Cigarette Forces In 1910 Balked by Increase of 1,856, 487,308 Cigarettes In Coun try's Output New York Like a tack In a taxi cab tire comes the news that the ef forts of the antl-clgarette forces had no other result In 1910 than to In crease the output of cigarettes In this country by some 1356,478,308 of the little cousins of my Lady Nicotine. Except to freshmen and sophomores of "frats," where pipes are frowned upon, the Idea of one billion, eight hundred and fifty-six million, four hun dred and eighty-seven thousand, three hundred and eight cigarettes Is a mere mythoplastlc figure, flexed to fit the fancy of the mathematical mind. For the benefit of all citizens not In cluded In the foregoing these statis tics are furnished. Taking the aver age length of an honest cigarette at two and one-half Inches, the increase for 1910, if placed end to end, would make a string 73,403 miles in length. This would be sufficient to build an unbroken line of cigarettes around the world, and then third track the system. These, be It understood, are cigarettes of American make, from the native otrnlp-ht riitn of Vtrplnfn tn the actual and only "pills" smoked by the sultan, and made somewhere down in Greenwich street. No one in the trade know why there has been an Increase. Probably boys who read novels have more money, says one. That the Increase is due to the fact that hotels proylde smoking rooms for women Is denied. Dealers do poftft to the increase, in the enrollment at the larger Bchools and colleges as a possible factor. N HANDLING YOUNG PLANTS SEEK A MISSING MAN Seat Method Is to Transplant Them to 2-Inch Flower Pots at Young Age Till Warm Weather. (By H. H. 8HEPARD.) The best method of handling yount ilants ia to transplant them to two nch flower pots at a very early age. teep them in a protected place till lettled warmer weather, then trans jiant to the open garden. In this way, :he young plants are not affected by :he change. The ball of earth from the pot :ompletely binds all the roots together io that there is no drying out nor any :heck In growth. Transplanting from small flower pots may be done at any time of the day, clear or cloudy weather. The pots are good for a life lime, or till broken. Improvised pots of various kinds may be used for starting and trans planting young plants. The best of these la a wooden quart berry box. With it, box, plant, and all may be set In the permanent garden space, the box Boon rotting away. Tin cans with the ends melted off and the seams unsoldered make fairly food transplanting pots. A string is tied around to hold the can together while the plant Is growing and re moved at time of transplanting, allow ing the cylinder of earth to easily slip out Similar results may be had by making pots of card board or o' heavy oiled paper. KANSAS SEER IN SEARCH UN EARTHS THREE SKELETONS. BULL TERRIER FIGHTS BULL After a Furious Battle Both Succumb to Wounds, but the Bull Dies First New York A flght to the death be tween a thoroughbred English bull terrier and a Holstein bull took place at the stock farm of Eben Grover, at New Durham, N. J. The dog was a perfect specimen of the breed and was valued at $760. It took a dlBllke to the bull, a $1,500 animal, immedi ately after the latter was brought to the farm. The other night the bull was placed In a large box stall. When an employee opened, the door the dog slipped in and in two seconds the bat tle was on. The dog whirled atout the stall with lightning speed, leaping at the bull's throat with snapping teeth Twice the dog was pinned agatnBt the wall of the stall by the horns of the brute, but Anally by a quick spring sank iU teeth in the throat of the bull. The great animal, roaring with pain, swung the little dog about and dashed its body against the walls, but it would not let go. The battle had raged for an hour and Grover, with his Bons, had en tered the stall twice at the peril of their lives when the huge bull sank to hie knees and toppled over dead. Tho dog, loosening its hold for the first time, limped into a corner of the stall and died within a few minutes Grover's right leg was badly torn by tho dog's teeth. A SAVINGS BANK ON WHEELS Paterson, N. J., Has Novelty In Shape of Auto Bank, Fire, Bul let and Burglar Proof. Paterson,' N. J The city of Pater son now has a bank on wheels. It is fire-proof, bullet-proof and -burglar-proof, and can travel 50 miles an hour when being chased by would-be loot ers. This auto-bank, Is expected to revolutionize the banking business, especially in the outlying districts. The car is fitted up" with desks and compartments for books, checks and papers. A solid steel safe Is In one corner of the machine. A small win dow guarded with heavy steal and brass bare and a liberal supply of flre irms. afford the clerks protection from "hold-up" men. Officers of the trust company are f the opinion that the sending of the "bank" through the country will be welcomed by depositors, especially those who have no place for keeping rash or other valuables their homes sr business places. Ring Cut Out of a Cow. Pittsburg. Pa. When Ethel Gray Chllds lost her diamond engagement ring, a few months ago, she tearfully told her sweetheart, Howard L Slbold that she would not marry him until ihe could find the ring. A few days later a veterinary surgeon was called to the Chllds farm to treat a valuable cow thnt had a tumor on Its side, and In the tumor he found the ring. The girl had fed apple peelings to the sow. The wedding bells rang out 1m mediately. ORCHARD AND FRUIT GARDEN After Trees Are Trimmed Trunks Must Be Scraped Should Be Scrubbed on Mild Day. 8craplng the dead' bark from the 'rult trees will add much to their ap pearance and produce a healthy growth the coming season. A steel Hoe ground sharp, with a short han lle, Is an excellent scraper. Only he rough old bark should be re 'noved. After the trees have been scraped and the dead and broken Imbs sawed off, scrub the trunk and arger limbs with luke-warm soap suds; mix one quart of hard-wood shes in each bucket of soap suds. he scraping and serif, blng of the rees should be done In the middle ol i mild day. Spread thick dressing of -otted manure around each fruiting 'ree. The manure should be plowed r forked under. If much wood Is Mirnt In the coal stove, the fine ashes hould be spread around the trees, as here Is considerable lime and potash 'n the ashes. Just what the trees need. Have a sharp saw and knife, make i clean cut close to the Umb, the -vound should be brushed over with grafting wax or shellac varnish to prevent the rain from entering and 'ottlng the wood. If a new orchard Is to be planted the ground should be deeply plowed Just as soon as the ground Is in good condition for plowing. Result of Testing Corn. Had the farmers of Nebraska, in the spring of 1910, planted their fleldB with untested seed corn from the crop of the year before, as they had been ac customed to do, It Is figured that there would have been a shortage of 25,000, D00 bushels in the crop of that state for this year. But, fortunately, the commercial club of Omaha discovered the poor germinating quality of the 1909 crop. Tests showed that only 57 cars out of an average of 100 would furnish seed which It would be cer tainly safe to plant. The alarm snread and vigorous measures were taken to secure the planting of only tested seed In every part of the state. As a re sult, Instead of a threatened deficiency of 25,000,000 bushels, the Nebraska crop Is estimated at 10,000,000 more than that of the year before. With such a showing what farmer will venture. hereafter, to plant untested seed? ' Pigs and Dairy Cows. Where dairies or butter factories are, or where the milch cow Is a fac tor for other purposes than the sale of milk as such, the pig is a most use ful and profitable adjunct. Upon the Rklm milk, Judiciously used with other and more substantial foods, he thrives, grows and fattens, ultillztng a by-product of tremendous volume which without the pig would repre sent little of available value. It is said that the skim milk from the but ter factories of New York alone amounts to nearly a billion pounds In a single year. The use of this skim milk does much to give relief from monotony so common to the returns from the other or main foods with which it is given, and every hog-raiser is glad to have it Pruning. . On mild days it Is a good plan to go Into the orchard and do some pruning. This Is work that requires carefulness The first thing to do 1b to cut out ail dead wood, thne, where limbs rub against each other, the least desira ble one should be removed; then look the tree over by standing on the ground and see if the top la too thick, but do not prune too severely. finds Bones of Adult and Two Chil dren In a Farm Sandhill Mys tery Has Aroused Neigh boring Farmers. Offerle, Kan. Guided by Jacob Min gle, a hermit, who claims the power of a seer, in a search for Paul Reich, a bachelor fanner who has been miss ing, farmers unearthed from a sand hill on the Reich farm, near here, the skeletons of three unidentified per sons. One skeleton is that of an adult and the other two of children. Reich ha not been found. The discoveries of the skeletons Intensified the search for Reich. Search for him had been going on for some time, and prior to the finding of the human bones, many searchers had given up the quest, con vinced that his body was not on the farm. But when it became known that parts of throe bodies had been found a band of searchers far larger than the original one gathered. Every inch of the farm will now be investi gated before the quest is abandoned. To Mingle the discovery of the skele tons was as much of a surprise as It was to the men who unearthed the bones. In the communications to the searchers, Issued from his home after he had retired alone and studied for the. Reich disappearance, hn snake only of finding the body of the farmer. ivnugie arew rude charts for the guid ance of the searchers. It was one of these that led to the sandhill "where the bones were found. Nple-hhnrq nt Reich believe he has been murdered. The night before his disappearance he telephoned a physician he was 111. l ne following morning his house waa found In disorder and he was gone. lilood was spattered on the telephone. Reich was not known to have anv pne- mies. Officials are checking over the 1st of people who have disappeared in the last few years, in an effort to identify the remains. M Be The Patriotism of au By HEBE. TEACHER SEARCHES PUPILS Each of Fifty Scholars in Room Sub jected to Ordeal After $1.60 Is Missing. Wichita, Kan. Miss Katherlne Mur phy, a teacher at the Lincoln street school, Is in trouble with the parents of her pupils because she had all the children In the room searched after she had missed $1.60 from her purse. Miss Murphy searched the girls, while the Janitor searched the boys. Then the pupils went home and toW their mothers and fathers. Immedi ately there arose a protest that was heard all over Wichita. Fifty fathers Immediately placed the case before the school board, which Is now con ducting an Investigation. Miss Murphy Is the teacher of the sixth grade, and the money was con tributed by the pupils to buy drawing paper. During a recess the money dis appeared from Miss Murphy's desk. She called In Miss J. R. Daugherty. Four pairs of eyes cast searching glances toward the desks where the 50 pupils sat, all innocent of the sus picions. In sharp, short and decisive words Miss Daugherty announced the disap pearance of the money and demanded that the guilty pupil step forward. Eyes opened wide, heads shook nega tively as If to say: "You can search us." That was Just what the teacher and the principal decided to do. The two teachers marched the girls Into a hall way and searched e'ach of them, de Bplte tearful protests of Innocence. The Janitor took the boys into an other hallway and put them through the third degree. When the search was over the $1.60 was still missing. IT'S COSTLY TO BE SINGLE Pennsylvania Town Now Proposes to Tax All of Its Unwedded People. Ebensburg, Pa. An ordinance was Introduced In the council here to place a tax of $26 on every unmarried man and woman In the city over twenty-seven years old. The city clerk is to take a census of unmarried persons and the tax list will be made up from this report. The ordinance provides that men who shall swear that they have pro posed to three unmarried and unbe trothed women and shall give their names shall be exempt from the tax, and women who have never received a proposal shall also be exempt, while those that have refused a proposal shall be taxed an additional $10. The only opposition to the ordi nance was from Second Ward Coun cilman J. C. Bench, who argued that a woman who has never received a proposal should be taxed double in stead of having her tax remitted. He argued that a woman who has never received a proposal Is to blame, on the ground that she has never taken ear of her feminine charms THE woman who believes thorough ly In good grooming and puts her belief into practice, doeB not con sider that she Is being in any way particularly patriotic. She simply con siders it a duty she owes herself and others to look as pleasing to the eyes as 6he can, and she does all within her power to make her person charming. She takes the best care possible of her hair, her complexion, her figure, and she dresses to bring out her best points. As a result, she Is usually a very pleasing picture for the eye to rem upon, out she probably never thinks that the influence of this will reach beyond her own little circle. ( Did you ever stop to think how much the Frenchwoman, particularly the Parlsienne, has done for her country by her attention to her toilette? Paris leads the world today In the matter of fashions, and the manufac ture and sale of articles of dress and the toilette. And France does this largely because the Frenchwoman by her art In dress, and her care of her person lias shown to the world how much these things, mean In making woman beautiful. She is an object les Bon of the worth of taklne care nf hr. self and of dressing artistically. And tnus sne has brought to her country fame and business. In the care of the complexion, the hair, the hands, In fact. In all the lit tle niceties of the toilet, the FVenrh. woman Ib the despair of her sisters the world over, who studv hir mthnri and try to discover her toilet secrets. tne Has proven the worth of this care of herself by her alwavs dalntv rh.rm ing appearance, and she has brought to f ranee, through this, as has been said, a trade that means much to the prosperity of the country. But the American woman Is always her close rival, and It will not he inn many predict, before the American womon will outstrip her French sister In the matter of dress and toilette. The American woman. It is averred, will not run to the extremes of the French, she will be guided and controlled more by calm, sober sense and reason, she will, In a way, be more scientific in her methods. She Insists upon a foundation of sure knowledge upon which to build. Thus the American woman, who is tak ing care of herself In a sensible, scien tific way, is after all, working patriot ically, though seemingly far-off and In a way little considered in this con nection, for the good of the country. When American women In the mass are as famous as are Frenchwomen for daintiness and artistic dress the pres tige of this country In such matters will be at a much higher level than It now Is, and trade follows In the wake of reputation. Who does not know the vision called up by the phrase, "a colonial belle?" And who does not know the long list of American women famous for their beauty, both In the early days of our country's life, and in later times the "dazzling Mrs. Bingham," as chroni clers speak of her, Mrs. Knox, the "ob served of all observers," Mrs. Otis the lovely Miss Walcott, the Misses Chew Rebecca Franks, the Rebecca of Ivan hos, Miss Allen, Margaret Shlppen Mrs. Hazzard, and in later times Kate Sprague, Emily Schaumberg, Madam Le Vert and literally hundreds of oth ers? But lovely as tliese women were the thought of them, especially of those of Colonial times, calls up vis Ions of powdered hair, of beauty patch es, of a loveliness that In many cases was largely the result of artifice, and much of it could be laid off at will This Is not only true of American women, but It is true of the beauties of England and France. Portraits of the court beauties of the Georgian era the famous Countess of Coventry, one of the lovely Gunning sistern nf m... Bellenden, of Mrs. Howard, afterward" uuuuwjob ui nun-oiK, of Elizabeth duchess of Kingston, whom Thackeray took for his model of Beatrix In Henry Esmond these and many more, all show the reign of the artificial in the toilette. The same Is true of Marie Antoinette and her court of lovely French women. But this resort to artificiality, to powdered wigs, to complexions oth er than nature's and to other assist- of the make-up box, that would give the charms nature had denied them was but the result of a lack ol knowledge. Blemishes were not removed In those days because they did not know how to remove them; they were cover ed up. Powder and paint simulates a good complexion that would pass mus ter at night Any artifice that would conceal wrinkles was adopted. Pim ples, backheads, and dull, slugglsb skins flourished far more in those days than now, because there was less knowledge of right living, and the only corrective known was concealed. This was done, of course, because there was no scientific knowledge ol how to remove these defects. We read of many high-born dames who were pitted from smallpox whe doubtless would have given freely ol their wealth to be rid of such beauty destroying blemishes. Science had not yet learned the secret of removing scar tissue, so they had to bear their cross with all the grace they could muster. What difference today. Massage and scientifically prepared face creams eliminate wrinkles and sallowness. They Invigorate the skin, bring the blood to the surface and give the clear, beautiful complexion that means beauty. Pimples are corrected by diet and treatment, blackheads are scientifically removed. Pittlngs and scars are re moved perfectly. Each skin Is made a study by a sci entist, and every person can secure nowadays the treatment especially adapted to her needs. Many skin blemishes can be entire ly removed, never to return. Freck les, moles, warts, superfluous hair all these and many others have retreated before science, so that the beauty ol the skin that Is woman's today Is a natural duty, not an Imitation beauty produced by artifice as was so frequent ly necessary in the past. The same skill Is applied to the hair. Scalp massage, electricity, tonics, all came to the aid of hair that Is growing thin or Is not In healthful condition, and these helps are not matters of guesswork or quackery. They are the result of a thorough, scientific study. The figure can be improved in the same way. Proper exercise, founded upon a knowledge of anatomy, correct faults of the figure, and develop it symmetrically and gracefully. Thus bclence has come to the aid of the American girl In helping her carry forward the reputation for beauty won by her ancestors, and that she Is thus carrying forward this reputation Is shown by the fact '.hat her praises are sung in the four corners of the globe. She Is thus doing what the French woman has already done, giving her country prestige as a land of beautiful and well-gowned women, and she Is carrying forward the American wom an's reputation for beauty In a better way than lias ever yet been done. Whereas the girls of 1776 were often thrown back upon artificial aids, the girls of today simply go to a scientific dermatologist and build up a good com plexion, and to a physical culture teacher and acquire a graceful fig ure. They secure the beauty that is nature's and by nature's own process, that is by putting beauty into the tis sues in the way of proper food, mas sage and exerclBe. The maids and matrons of 1776 were charming even with their wigs anil beauty patches and rouge, but the maids and matrons of today far love lier with their lustrous hair and smooth, unlined, fresh, clear skins and vigorous, graceful figures, that are en tirely of nature's making, aided by sci ence when necessary. The American woman of today has a truer beauty, and she can by maintain ing it and making it natural bring to her country a prestige that means prosperity, is that not patriotism? The Dark Hem. Light unwashable gowns first show soil around the hem, and as a bedrag gled appearance detracts from the beauty of a gown, they can be worn only a few times before being con signed to the cleaners. A dark band at the skirt'. w however, Is extremely practical, and ai- tnougn tne idea is not new, women will be glad to see it carried out la many of the smartest llaht