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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 1902)
THE LAST EQUALITY The rich man breathes the atmosphere the same as yon or I; He cannot see a deeper blue than we do in the sky; He hears the piping of the birds a masie sweet and clear But maybe money-clinking dulls the mu- - sic to his ear; And yet he has some pleasures that pos sess a tempting guise But he can't die any deader than the poor man dies. The rich man cannot eat more than one meal at a time. Nor more than his ten pennies will ex ceed the poor man's dime; One suit of clothes is all that may at once his form adorn. And he's just as homely as the poor man, when he's born: His truth is just as honest, and his false hoods are plain lies And he can't die any deader than the poor man dies. There may be some philosophy in lifting up a moan Because the rich man rides the while the poor man walks alone; Because the rich man has his gold to buy his goodly cheer And yet there'll come a time when he will have to leave it here. Old Death's a spirit level that will brook no compromise, And no one dies any deader than the next man dies. Baltimore American. l-1 1 I 1 I -IVi 1 M '!! 1111 1 1 1 t THE PROFESSOR'S DAUGHTER t...l.fr.frt-M"l"M"l""M- III! Mm MONO the sixty-three professors with whom I am acquainted. It is natural to suppose a variety of religious beliefs are to be found, and It will not, therefore, appear surpris ing If he should be a Buddist, or, as his Irish servant expressed It, "a blooming hood 1st, begorra." of the bluest creed. This was Professor Markman, profes sor of Japanese literature, with whom circumstances threw me into closest Intimacy. He was not a man to thrust his con victions on any one, but being satur ated with the theories of Oriental speculation It came to the surface In Innumerable expressions In every top ic of conversation. I see, now, the professor expressing his views, standing In his beautifully yet Inexpensively adorned parlor, his daughter busy with some tasteful work by the shaded light, and I comfortably lounging In a chair in the shadow. "The mind, the thought, and all the senses are subject to the law of life and death. With knowledge of self and the laws of birth and death there "I AM TIRED OF THAT FAIRY TALE." Is no grasping and no sense perception, Knowing one's self and knowing how the senses act, there is no room for the Idea of 'I,' or the ground for framing It. The thought of 'self gives rise to all sorrows, binding the world as with fetters; but having found there Is no l' that can be bound, then all these bonds are severed." "What do you say to this, Fusa?" The professor stamped his foot Im patiently. "Fusa, how often must I warn you against the danger of such medita tions?" The girl rose abruptly and left the room. I suspected there were tears In her eyes, and half guessed the painful subject In dispute. The professor pres ently enlightened me. Throwing him self Into a chair, he said, with a sigh: "We are in a condition of antagon ism, my daughter and I. I do not know how It will end or, rather, I know too well. One life will be cut short hers. The relation of parent and child is one for life; that of wife and husband, for two Uvea; that of master aud servant, for three lives. If I lose her I shall save her from a worse fate. What has happened? There is a young man here, a master mechanic he calls himself, a metal worker, but a mechanic just the same, who wishes to marry her, and Fusa Is willing to yield herself to him." "Who is he?" "Jarbraw. You know him?" "Yes, 1 remember seeing him at the laboratory. A steady, industrious fel low enough." "That may be. It is likely he is, for he is making his way. But what is his way to the way I would have a child of tnlue follow? Why couldn't lie have found one of his class to ask for In marriage?" "He Is not bad-looking," I returned. "Not according to Western Ideas of beauty," replied Markman. "But that quality you admire, that evidence of force, power, is most detestable to me." "Do you wish Fusa to marry at all?" "Certainly, but not with such a brute as Jarbraw will grow to be as any man absorbed in mechanical pursuits Is sure to become. I will save her at any cost from the degradation she meditates. Why could she not have attracted a man of whom I could ap prove?" I thought he looked at me meaning ly, but took no notice of It. "I Intend to take away her life. Do not shrink. She will live again. I shall merely what you call hypnotize her for awhile." He rose to his feet, moving toward the door. "Come. 1 wish yon to witness my act. You understand my motives, whether you admit their just ness or not." We passed to his daughter's chamber. Fusa was reclining upon the bed. Her father poured some liquid into a cup and handed it to hec- "Drink. sleep, and wake after a year, when I or our friend here shall give" the word." Fusa took the draft without other resistance than an appealing glance at me. Then her head fell back upon the pillow .and she lay rigid, motionless, with closed eyes, as one dead. Her death was announced in the nsnal form and the funeral took place in the regular way. A few months later Professor Mark man gave od his position and' went away, I understood, to Japan, though after this episode our intimacy was In terrupted. Jarbraw found anotbe; lady love, one of the class to which he belonged one who, it seemed to nie. was better fitted to be the wife of an artisan than Fusa would have been. The months flowed on. At last, one night the professor rapped at my win dow. "A year has passed. Shall we awak en Fusa?" "What answer shall I give him?" asked myself on rising. - In telling this story I was accus tomed to pause here and look around the absorbed listening circle with an expression which I hoped would im ply my belief in some profound mys tery. Sometimes one of the audience would say to my wife: "And so you. were In a hypnotic sleep for a year?" To which the lady would reply de murely, with a glance from half-closed lids in my direction: "It appears so from the narrative.' "And you did not know what trans pired during all that time?" O, I had full possession or my senses, I heard all that was said in my presence " The professor would give a warning cough and turn the conversation. One day, when we were alone, Fusa said: "I am tired of that fairy tale. It seems to amuse you you always did love a Jest and to carry it to an ex treme but I do not. and I am going to put an end of it if you bring it up again." "Why, you do not mean to deny that you vanished from human sight for a year?" "Fiddlesticks!" ; "That you died and were Inclosed in a tomb?" 'How do you escape the imputation of conniving at a crime? Wrhy did you not inform against my father? What I shall say Is this: 'I was a foolish young girl. Infatuated with a- man whom it would have brought me uu- happiness to marry. I would not be convinced by words, but agreed to test his faithfulness by going away for a year. He did not stand the test.' should think you would be ashamed of yourself both of you! And I shall ex pose you if you do not stop it." We stopped it. But this only shows that Fusa Is quite unaware that she did He for a year in a hypnotic sleep. Waverly. THE MODERNIZED MIKADO. He Has Abandoned the Ultra Exclu aiveness of II is Ancestors. The Mikado is the first Japanese sov ereign to emerge from the dignified re tirement in which his predecessors lived. This step has only increased the passionate loyalty of his subjects to ward him, and people are already com paring him with the Kaiser as regards the prominent public role he seems dis posed to play. During the army maneuvers his Ma j esty, who followed events with the greatest interest and enthusiasm, or dered two privates to be brought before him, and questioned them through the medium of his chief aide-de-camp. His questions were of the paternal kind, such as the following: How did they get on with the hard ships of barracks life? Did they long to go home whenever they thought of their nearest relatives? Did they not thing their lot a hard one each time their thoughts wandered back to the ease and joys of their home? Were they not feeling the effects of their daily exertions in the maneuvers? Did not the exactions of the military service sometimes make them cry In secret? The young soldiers answered that they were quite happy in the army. and that their only desire was to do their duty toward their beloved sover eign. A few days before the Mikado, while traveling by rail, was cheered by a number of very old people at Shiraishi station. He sent them all presents through the local government, an act of kindness which moved the old peo ple to tears of gratitude. Yokohama Correspondence London Mail. THE ELEPHANT "TREE. Worcester, Mass., has a strange freak of nature in its "elephant tree," a mammoth elm, with a peculiar growth upon the side, resembling perfectly the trunk of an elephant. The tree stands in the heart of the city, beside the common and at the rear of the City Hall. Its age Is be yond the recollection of the oldest in habitant, and it has been an object of curiosity for a hundred years or more. The strange growth was undoubtedly caused by some accident to the tree when it was small, but it has in no way affected the health or beauty of the elm, for it is one of the most ma jestic n the city. The General Was Colonel Bragg cool when the bullets began to fly? The Major Cool? He was so blamed cold he shivered like a leaf. Judge. il fit A aa MiWillUltlillM H1I1IH llMl'HtlHllI'H'Mm I l 1 ',UB"" M"M' M-I t M-'M-M- M M - Cr3 HERE is said to be In certain Y parts of Southern Indiana an oath-bound mutual benefit so ciety which has grown out of that fa mous and infamous organization which in days gone by struck terror into the hearts of all who came under its ban the dreaded Whitecaps. The society has its secret meeting pla-.-cs, its signs, grips, passwords, etc.. and Is a direct descendant of the or ganization which for years killed men and whipped women in Southern In diana and Ohio. It is claimed that its members elect men. of their own stripe to all the important offices,, so great is fhe society's strength: that when a trial is on in which any member is interested, his fellows are always placed on the jury; that it is a society formed for mutual protection in any SHOT SIX HEN FROM THE CORNFIELD. way which may be imagined, but es pecially when its members are in trouble. Where the meeting places of the so ciety are, not one Of them will tell. The organization's members are found in the political conventions of city, township, county, district and State. though holding the interests of its members above the Interests of any politician. It never sells its votes, but it has developed, has been many a time a power which has turned the political scale one way or the other, greatly to the mystification of the bosses. As a rule, though coming of an or ganization which was nothing unless a violator of the law, the present so ciety is not composed of lawbreakers. at least in the ordinary sense. How- ever, when one of ts members is in trouble, his fellows stand by him until the last, a fact which has often been demonstrated in law courts. Frequent ly, in trials, it has been noticed that there was some mysterious influence at work on the jury, but what it was could not be discovered. Origin of the White Cap. The beginning of the institution dates back many years to the early settle ment of Indiana, at a time when the State was overrun with desperate characters who had fled from Ohio and Kentucky, the southern part, from its contiguity to the Ohio, being especial ly the hauat of horse thieves, robbers and counterfeiters. In the river coun ties of Indiana there was for years a continuous reign of terror. When the residents of these counties finally band ed together for protection, the crim inals fled further to the north, where tneir advent was met with the organ ization of a band of regulators, of which every decent citizen was a mem ber. There was little law in those days. Might made right and there was no one to gainsay the right of the reg ulators to take the law into their own hands. There are those yet living who have often seen men ride by at night with white sacks, in which were eye holes, over their heads. It was never known in one locality from what oth er locality these men came. It was only known that they were "on the march." but the next day a ghastly body hanging from a limb, or a shady character with his back slashed up with hickory gads, or the tale of some person missing would solve the mys tery. People who had no business out of doors stayed inside when the regu lators were out. No questions were asked and no comments were made. This was the original Whitecap or ganization. It served its purpose well and when the thieves and thugs were all driven out of Indiana it ostensibly disbanded. It was in 1857 that the Whitecaps again became prominent, but their character was decidedly changed. EdJ ward Bingham, a constable who had in some way incurred the ill-will of the gang, was the first victim. He was called out of his home at flight, tied to a horse and carried into the woods, where he was stripped. He was then bound to a tree and each member of the gang look turns in ap plying hickory switches until he be came unconscious. Then the man was carried back to his home and thrown brutally' over the fence into the yard. Bingham died next day and the com munity arose in rage against his mur derers. Indictments were brought against several men who were known to be in the gang and three of them were sentenced to imprisonment. The Whitecaps had such powerful influ ence that the convicted iuen served but a small part of their sentences. From 1S58 to 1874, there were occa sional whippings of both men and women, but nothing of a nature as to call for special action, but in the lat ter year a lynching by Whitecaps once more drew attention to the organiza tion. Fear of the gang was so great, however, that nothing was done. In THE WHITE CAPS. mV Old Organiza- 1 1' '-I'll tionef Lynch crs Has Given Place to a Mu- tual Benefit Society. 'M"t"M - frM' - M' M- M"M"M-M- 1876. the Whitecaps broke Into .a jail and lynched a man awaiting trial on charge of murder, of which his inno cence was later proven. In 1883 a prominent farmer was whipped. He had the gang arrested, but the jury disagreed and the men escaped. From that time on for many years Whitecap outrages were fre quent. They became so common that at last the people of both Indiana and Ohio were aroused and an attempt was made to root out the organization. Whipping and tarring parties were of almost nightly occurrence, and the peo- pie were worked In a perfect frenzy of terror. Members of the original gang of Whitecaps were rarely arrested and more rarely convicted. If a White- capper fell into the hands of the law, it was almost invariably because of doing business independent of the or iginal organization. It was in Harrison County, Ind., that Whitecapism, as such, sustained its death blow. In the hills near Corydon lived a family of poor whites from Kentucky father, mother, two sons and a daughter. One day the father was found dead in the woods and the sons were arrested on the charge of killing him. An examination showed their innocence and they returned home. Soon came a warning tellin the family that unless they left the county within ten days the Whitecaps would visit them. - The warning was ignored and word was received that on a certain night the Whitecaps would make their appearance. The boys got several shotguns, loaded them heavily with slugs and hid in a corn patch near the house. The Whitecaps came, and while nine of them stood on the porch, two others went into. the house after the mother and daugh ter. Hopes were tied around their necks and when their screams told the boys what was going on they opened fire at the gang on the porch. Six of the nine were killed and two others were terribly wounded. The few re maining fled in terror. The boys fled to Kentueky and have never been mo lested. This lesson was a salutary one. Since that time the Whitecaps have done nothing but occasionally administer the gad to shady characters. Several damage suits have resulted, but in no instance has a plaintiff obtained judg ment The last suit, which, like the others, showed the mysterious hand of the gang, was tried in Brown Coun ty. The brotherhood now in existence does not whip nor murder people. Some of its members may violate the law, but the organization does not, as an entirely. The knowledge of the ex istence of such an organization, how ever, has much effect on the morals of several communities for there is really no telling when it might call a special session of the court of Judge Lynch. Recognized Their Old. Friend. The love which English people, espe cially British soldiers, feel for Florence Nightingale has been shown at many times and in many places. A new and striking instance of it was recently given by the Sunday Magazine. The late Sir John Steell, sculptor to Queen Victoria, was modeling a bust of Miss Nightingale, when an officer of one of the Highland regiments which had suffered so cruelly in the Crimea heard that the bust had just been com pleted, and was in Sir John's studio. Many of the men In his company had passed through the hospital at Scutari, and he obtained permission from the sculptor to bring some of them to see it. Accordingly, a squad of men one day marched into the big studio and stood in line. They had no idea why they had been mustered in so strange a place. With out a word of warning the bust was un covered, and then, as by one Impulse, the men broke, rank, and with cries of "Miss Nightingale! Miss Nightingale!" surrounded the model, and with hats off cheered the figure of their devoted nurse until the roof rang. So spontaneous and hearty and so in spiring was the whole scene that in after days Sir John Steell declared it to be the greatest compliment of his life. Volcano Dwellers. There is no more interesting or curi ous sight than that of the crater Aso San about 30 miles from the city of Kumamoto, in Japan. The crater has long since ceased to belch forth cin ders and lava, and is now inhabited by 20,000 people, who live and prosper within Its vertical walls, 800 feet high. The inhabitants rarely make a journey Into the outer world, but form, as it were, a little nation by themselves. "Dr." is an abbreviation frequently used to express the relations of a pa tient to his physician. the whipping: of bixqham. NOVEL TOUTERS PAY EASY TO PROVE THAT IT IS NOT GROWiNG. A Few of the Most Popular Novel ists Are Hakinc Fortunes, bat the Work Hardly Pays the Rank and File Some An then tic Figures. rtovel writing as a trade has net shown any material flnnii improve ment in the last fifty years, says the London Mail. The enormous increase in the number of readers has been counterbalanced by the extraordinary increase in the number of publications, and also In the number of writers. Thackeray, for example, received 60 guineas a part for the periodical Issue of "Vanity Fair." It appeared in nine teen numbers, one of them being double part, so that altogether this Is sue brought his 1,000 guineas. Nowa days, though Mr. ipliKng received 5, 000 pounds for the serial rights of "Kim," few "writers receive as much as Thackeray, although it must be re membered that his publisher held the entire copyright for a certain short number of years. ,' For "Esmond" Thackeray had 1,200 guineas, and "The Newcomes" yielded about 4,000, while his editorial con nection with the Cornhill is said to have been worth 4,000 a year an in come that will certainly compare with that of the editors of any twentieth century monthly publication. "Pickwick" brought Charles Dickens 2,500 and a share in the copyright after five years "Nicholas Nlckleby' was worth 4.o00, and "BarnaDy Ridge" 3,000 for the copyright till six months after publication. It is inter esting In view of the 300,000 copies sold of "The Master Christian," the 100,000 of "The Eternal City," the 500, 000 of "Richard Carvel," and the 80, 000 of ,"The History of Sir Richard Calmady," to note that the original sale of "Great Expectations" was 30,- 000 copie-.! In four years George Eliot received 1,000 from "Adam Bede," but "Romo- la" brought her 7,000, from the Corn hill, and "Middlemarch" was, .on the whole, even more profitable, the Amer ican edition alone being worth 1,200 to the authoress. Charles Reade re ceived 30 for "Peg Woffington," but that was at the beginning of his ca reer, and "Griftith Gaunt, or Jealousy' attained to 1,500. Anthony Trollope, a steady and persistent writer, made from his books a gross sum of 70,000, or some 2,000 a year. "The Claver ings" brought 2,800, "The Small House at Allington" 3,000, and "Can You Forgive Her?" 3,525. Charles Kingsley sold "Alton Locke" for 150 to Messrs. Chapman and Hall, a sum certainly less than a twentieth of the financial return his daughter, Mrs. St. Leger Harrison (Lucas Malet) will receive for her latest novel. In 1855 Messrs., Routiedge gave Bulwer Lytton 20,000 for a ten years' copy right of the cheap edition of his nov els, and at the end of that period they paid 5,000 for another period of five years, and made a contract on the same terms at the end of the second period. Going back to the beginning of last century it is interesting to remember that while Scott received large sums for the Waverley Novels, Jane Austen earned during her lifetime less than 700 in all for the work of her pen. Macauley was one of the first au thors to receive payment on the royal ty system, that being his arrangement with Messrs. Longmans for his his tory, and George Eliot also had a simi lar arrangement with Blackwoods for some at least of her novels. An author now receives as a rule from 10 per cent in the case of an.un known writer to 25 per cent in the case of an established favorite on the gross retail price of his book. He also, of course, receives large sums for the serial rights. As a matter of fact, in the case of many writers the receipts from the serial rights often exceed the royalties on the complete book. Ap proximately it may, therefore, be con cluded that in the case of a novelist ke Miss Marie Corelli, with an enor mous and constant public, one book, ilthough she never serializes it, will ring at least 20,000 in all, a figure which is also probably reached by nany of the books of Mr. Kipling and Hall Caine. When one reads the statement that a successful book is selling at the rate of between 1,000 and 2,000 a week, it safe to assume that the author is eceivmg between 100 and lo0 a iveeu ror it, auu so on. Of course these figures only apply to at the most half a dozen novelists. Another twen ty, however, will receive from 400 to 500 for the serial rights of their books, and make on an average half as much more by their royalties. It may also be safely reckoned that out side the ranks of the first thirty writ ers novel-writing nowadays hardly pays. Chicago Record-Herald. OVERLAND TO CALIFORNIA. Stripping; for the Conflict with Forces of Nature. Our last glimpse of civilization was Grand Island City," a village of six or eight houses, on the Platte, in what is now Hall County, Nebraska. This was on the 6th of June, and a few days before we had passed through Co lumbus, another paper city. Columbus boasted an inn, a blacksmith shop and trading post. The passage of the Loup at that place was accomplished by means of a rope ferry, for which service the ferryman, before landing us on a sand-bar near the farther bank of the stream, exacted a fee of & dol lar and a half for each team; the cat tle were swum across. The tide of travel was. so great that we were obliged to wait all day for our turn to cross. I asked the proprietor of the ferry If he had had any touch of .the California fever. With a twinkle of his eye he surveyed his ferry and his smithy, and said: "Wal, I allow this yere is Callforny enough for me." Our trail, after leaving the last set tlements, was strewn with lame and abandoned cattle and the discarded material of those who had preceded us. As large companies passed on, they found their burdens lightened by the needful consumption of food supplies: wagons were left along the trail, and the next comers helped themselves to such parts as they needed, or fancied they needed. I knew of more than one such thrifty party who picked up and mended a broken wagon, only to find, later on, that they had encum bered themselves with something that they did not want. Queer-looking con trivances for mining, worn-out cloth tog. ana even valuable tools, were plentifully scattered' along the trail. Everybody seemed to be stripping for the conflict with the rude forces of na ture that was to come when we reach ed the heart of the continent. It was our habit to to gather fuel from the floatsam and jetsam of the plains; but it often happened, in spite of this fore thought, that the only fuel to be found in an otherwise excellent camping- place would be a few handfuls of dry grass, a cluster of dead weeds, or clump of the ill-smejllng grease-wood, Century. What Wallack: Thought. Aristocratic applause, to say nothing of the demonstration of royalty, would not be likely to be so uproarious as to drown the performers, nevertheless the San Francisco Argonaut's account of the approval manifested at a play given at Windsor Castle In the earlier days of the reign of Queen Victoria may seem to some persons a trifle ex aggerated. There had been a series of perform ances at Windsor under the manage ment of Charles Kean, and it is to be presumed that the comedians felt the absence of the hearty approval shown in the regular theater, for one even ing, when the queen sent an equerry to Mr. Kean to know If the actors would like anything, meaning refresh ments, the actor replied: "Say to her majesty that we should be grateful for a little applause when the spectators are pleased." Back went the equerry and conveyed the message. At the end of the act there was a slight suggestion of hand- clapping and exceedingly gentle foot tapping. James Wallack, who knew nothing of the message sent to the qneen, hearing the mild demonstration, pricked up his ears and inquired: "What Is that?" "That, my dear Wallack," Kean re plied, "is applause." "Bless me!" exclaimed Wallack. "1 thought it was somebody 6helllng peas." No Breach of Discipline. The Colonel was entertaining some of his friends with stories of army life, and the talk turned to the Inflexibility of orders. That reminded the Colonel of Tim Murphy's case. Murphy had enlisted in the cavalry service, although he had never been on a horse in his life. He was taken out for drill with other raw recruits under command of a sergeant, and, as luck would have it, secured one of the worst buckers in the whole troop. "Now, my men," said the sergeant in addressing them, "no one Is allowed to dismount without orders from a su perior officer. Remember that." Tim was no sooner in the saddle than he was hurled head over heels through the air, and came down so hard that the breath was almost knocked out of him, "Murphy!" shouted the sergeant, when he discovered the man spread out on the ground, "you dismounted!" 'I did." 'Did you have orders?" T did." 'From headquarters, I suppose?" with a sneer. "No, from hindquarters." "Take him to the guardhouse!" order ed the sergeant. Silenced. Those who make light of religion and morality seem sometimes, by the very energy of their attack, to be getting the best of it, but now and again they find themselves worsted by the ready wit of some quiet listener, who turns the tables upon them. Such was the case with the French students of whom Pe ter Lombard tells an amusing story in the Church Times. An omnibus full of Parisian students was making its way along the Rue de Rivoll when a priest in his robes of office joined the party. The students hailed the newcomer with delight, and began at once to tell all the objection able stories they could recall. The priest spoke not a word till he rose to get out. Then he said, politely: "An revolr, messieurs." The French "au revoir" means liter ally, "till we see each again." One of the students evidently had this in mind when he replied. "Urn," he said, "we don't want to meet you again, old dismal!" 'But, au revoir," repeated the cure; 'we are sure to meet again. I am the chaplain of the Mazas prison." A Scotch Sahara. The fact is not generally known that there is in the north of Scotland, a miniature Sahara, some 20 square miles In extent. From Nairn to the River Findhorn there Is a great ex panse of shifting sandhills, known as the Culbln Sands, which show all the great peculiarities of a great desert. and which successfully resist all at tempts at cultivation. Three centuries ago the - place was a smiling garden with several farms and a village, all of which were overwhelmed in a sin gle night by a great storm of sand. The remains of the buildings can still occasionally be seen when the sand shifts, and many old domestic articles have been picked up. Some tragic stories are -till current in the locality of the wonderful escape of'the inhab itants from the blinding sand-drift on that terrible night. Six Historical Ages. Ecclesiastical authorities divide the history of man Into six ages: (1) From Adam to Noah; (2) from Noah to Abra ham; (3) from Abraham to David; (4) from David to the Baylonish captivity; (5) from the captivity of Judah to the birth of Christ; (6) from the birth of Christ to the end of the world. Weight of the Water, Water sufficient to cover one acre one Inch deep will weigh 101 tons. The question of sex never appears so gigantic to a man as when he starts. out in search of a servant girl.. A man never poses as a hypocrite when he is alone. - REAL THING IN BLIZZARDS. The Montana Man Was Acquainted with the Genuine Article. "I've been stewing in your semi trop ical climate all winter," said the man from the wool-growing West to the dyed-in-the-wool New-Yorker, "and ev ery now and then, when the thermome ter drops a little below freezing' poi at I hear strange talk about blizzards. "It's a nice-sounding name, I admit, and it looks well in the newspaper headlines. But, bless your benighted souls, you're just as likely to have a Kansas twister on 5th avenue or a South sea simoon off the battery, as a blizzard in Manhattan. "I'll admit you had a good Imitation of it a good many years ago in the storm that cost Senator Conkling his life, and once again about three years back. The New-Yorker who's never been much farther west than the Har lem river might be excused for calling those two little blows "blizzards." We've a big country out there, and, of course, a busy man in New York will naturally get the Yellowstone park tangled up with the Yosemite, as an evening newspaper here did some time ago, and we don't mind your dramatic critics referring to Missouri as the Oc cident Yes, that has been done, too. "What Is a real blizzard like? My dear sir. to talk is not my trade. I never went In real heavily for words, and maybe you'd better put a stamp on your Inquiry and send it to the pa per published by the great plebeian in Nebraska. He knows all about frosts and such things, and likely as not he could spare you two or three columns telling you what a blizzard is like. "A blizzard, did you say? Why, the very word sends cold chills creeping up my spine. Why, the last time I was in a blizzard in Montana, I was in the act of drinking. I was just lifting the glass of milk to my lips what's that? I say I was just lifting the glass of milk to my lips when the air grew suddenly dark and the thermometer fell 00 degrees qulcker'n I could count em. I never did drink that milk. "No, of course, it wasn't too dark to drink it. That's foolish. Any child can feel his way to his mouth with a drink at least, any Western child can. But the milk just naturally froze hard on top and the wind I'd forgotten the wind. Well, maybe, it's enough to say it was the wind that blew the snow about and made it so dark. Now, in the Dakotas there isn't much snow, be cause the wind doesn't, give it a chance to light. "But it's got to light somewhere. hasn't It? So when the snow that's really comin' to Montana gets a chance to settle down, it start in again and snows in great chunks, till the Dakota product is all piled up. But that's noth ing. A chinook wind comes along and In twenty minutes the ground Is ready for spring plowin'." 'Well," said the New-Yorker, admir ingly, according to the New York Mail and Express, "I'll try to be careful and never exaggerate any more. It's a bad habit. I remember that some time ago an adventurous New-Yorker penetrated beyond the Bronx, even to the wilds of the northwest, and when his friends asked him for a description of the scenery, he said, 'found every hill a mountain peak, every frog pond a lake. every dry run a river, every Irrigating ditch a canyon and every man a liar.' So I suppose you're right." Iron can be drawn into thinner wire than any other metal except gold. Thirty-two million tons of water roll over the cliff at Niagara every hour. A snow wall four feet thick is a per fect protection against a rifle bullet at fifty yards distance. A smali grass seed which had ger minated while in a patient's eye, has just been removed by a Japanese ocu list. The first steamer on the Rhine a Dutch one was in 1822, fifteen years after Fulton had started a steamship service on the Hudson. The greatest bay in the world Is that of Bengal. Measured in a straight line from the two enclosing peninsulas its extent is about 420,000 square miles. Switzerland has, at Bex, salt mines which have been worked for 348 years. The galleries are twenty-five miles in length, and the profit $75,000 a year. The peat beds of the German entire are estimated to cover 4,942,000 acres. To make use of this fuel in a profitable way is a problem for science to solve. A wine cask which holds ninety-seven thousand gallons, and is the largest ever built, may be seen at Maltermora, Cal. The steel hoops around it weigh 40,000 pounds. The Sacred Land, long given over to barren desolation, may yet blossom as the rose. Rich deposits of phosphates have been found In the regions of the Jordan and the Dead Sea. One of the English astronomers, J. J. Atkinson, who visited Sumatra to ob serve the total solar eclipse last May, made the acquaintance of an old Ma lay, living on a little Island near the Sumatra coast, who owned a large monkey which he had trained to work for him in gathering cocoanuts. The monkey's business was to climb the gigantic cocoanut palms and throw down the nuts, "which he did," savs Mr. Atkinson, "in the most artistic manner, by screwing the nuts off with his powerful arms while he hung by his legs seventy to one hundred feet from the ground." Painted on a Grain of Corn. A Flemish artist has produced what is said to be the smallest painting in the world. It is the picture of a miller, mounting the stairs of his mill, and carrying a sack of grain on his back. The mill is depicted as standing near a terrace. Close at hand are a horse and cart, with a few groups of peas ants idling in the road near by. All this Is painted on the smooth side of a grain of ordinary white corn. It is necessary to examine It uuder a micro scope, and It is drawn with perfect ac curacy. When we have a great deal to do we usually compromise by doing nothing.