Heppner Weekly Gazette Published Every Thursday. HEPPNER.. ...OREGON. Israel Zacgwlll s.iy he doesn't ap prove republics. Now what Is to be done? period of 1S91-93 the Increase was onlj 1,000,000 tons; and In the calendar year of 1807 the production was more than five million tons less than that of lS'Xi. The extent of the hay Industry Indi cates the seriousness of electricity's In Jury. Last year the production from 42,420,770 acres was G0,GC4,S7G tons, valued at $401,390,728. THE CIGARS OF MANILA. Now Mncb Better than Those Ameri cans I'scd to Mnnke. Cigars and cigarettes are remarkably ;hcap, even In the face of the economic conditions that exist in the East. The cheapest cigars are sold for $10 per HE LIKED THEM. A Mountaineer's Admiration for Women Wan Kver Increasing. j I wag riding along the road leading across Hurricane Gap, In the Tine mountain range, thinking of the pecu liar people who lived In these fastness- j m mmmmmmmmmmE UNDERGROUND RAIL ROAD PASSENGER.. It will be remembered, however, that the Maria Teresa always was subject to those severe sinking spells. anil 1'nil - r 1 1 rJ i) t W ntl ! Tl (T A U7 SI , ,.m 11.. ! .. 1 t .. I .. . 1 il ' J UMV. JVU1DV14 B ueiu oree.jr u u.e .Bu. Hv,,e, .u mde f his annual report announces what may , e! rette8 are even ch xhe cheap, practically be called a new system of . fo and 2 cenU telegraphy Whose commercial utility of twent four 1,000, and the most expensive for $100 1 es, when I was startled by a voice up! per 1,000. Reduce that to a gold basis, I the hillside calling to me to come up 1 and give somebody a lift. I had no Idea who owned the voice, but who ever It was was in trouble, and I re sponded and found a man of CO or more mmwmmMEmmmmmm m It used to be said the longest pole got the most persimmons, but It also holds good that the biggest poll gets the most plums. This case of the Maria Teresa again emphasizes the remark of the Ameri can enptalu who said: "Don't give up the ship." One good way to double up one's money when about to bet on the result of an election Is to fold It In two and put It In the pocket. "Dewey's cotollon" Is the latest fash ionable dance In New York. If It isn't misnamed it probably Is too lively to bo danced with comfort. The owner of the $1,700 found In a sleeping car recently has not appeared to claim his property. He probably Imagines that he tipped the porter. Spain has issued a mourning stamp. It must be affixed to all mail matter in addition to the regular postage. This regulation is what causes the mourning. new and scientific method of tele graphy was discussed in last year's report under the title of "Synchrono graph" and was the subject of experi ments at Fort Monroe, Va. Since then Prof. Allcrt C. Crehore and Lleut. Col. George O. Sq tiler have pursued their investigations, under the direc tion of the chief signal officer of the army, with gratifying results. The officers named visited England for the purpose of testing the hew method of sign-wave telegraphy by the use of the alternate current. In England they were given every facility for experi ment work over the government tele graph lines, and demonstrated that by the new method words can be sent at the rate of over 3,000 a minute over a line 1,100 miles long. By constructing transmitters for commercial purposes it is expected that much greater speed can be secured In cable service, a mat ter of great value to the commercial world. I Tesla has Invented a boat which re quires no crew. The turning of a crank on the shore directs the boat. Tesla will probably act in the capacity of the crank. The fact that the sale of tandem bi cycles fell off 50 per cent last year Is another Indication of the tendency to go It alone which is characteristic of our people. Mrs. Leslie Carter, who has failed for $04,000, with $200 assets, may or may not be elevating the stage, but she cer tainly has elevated finance to the level of the One arts. Supposing It's true this country drinks 1,000,000,000 gallons of beer an nually, It seems to support the argu ment that excessive use of this bever age tends to produce large figures. A rule has been adopted in New York for bidding the employment of married women as teachers In tho public schools. The married women may be able to stand such a discrimination, but the blow will fall heavily upon somo of the married men. All the girls In Edwin Gould's New Jersey match factory struck for higher wages. "We don't propose to mako matches for nothing," explained their leader. And she whs right, too. If the girls want to make matches the boys should do the proposing. The postoffice department Is arrang ing for a considerable extension of rural free delivery. The enlarged appropriation for this purpose voted at the last session of Congress enables It to do so. Many com munities which are anxious to share the benefits of this service have made known their wish to the depart ment. The selection among them Is made with a view to benefiting the largest number possible with the avail able money. A law which went Into effect on the first of July last permits the use of private mailing cards. Here tofore the postal card by the Govern ment was the only one allowed. Now any one may put the address and a one-cent stamp on any card of about the same size, form and weight as the postal card, and write a message on the other side of the card. The Govern ment will profit by the use of these cards, for It will save the cost of their manufacture, while the senders will be permitted to print on the message side any business devices, or views of scen ery, such as travelers abroad like to mall to their friends. A reform which Is to be hoped for Is the Introduction of stout, llneu-llned stamped envelopes In which to send registered mail. Such envelopes are In common use in Eu rope, and are found to be a great con venience and much safer than our sys tern of putting the stamp of registra tlon on an ordinary envelope. A "gory toddy" drawn from tho veins of a horse which has been kept In a slate of beastly Intoxication for a month and hypodennlcally Injected Into the anatomy of the victim of alco holism Is the latest cure announced for the drink appetite. If this new serum works as well as described, we shall soon see rum routed. The recent fire at the capltol In Wash ington may ultimately be found to have wrought more benefit than damage If the object lessons which It has taught will be learned by Congress. Tho most Important of these Is that the Govern ment should erect without further delay a tin 11 of records for the safe keeping of the great volume of precious documents Mich as those stored In the basement of the Supreme Court quarters and seri ously menaced by the tlames and water. Men now living can remember when Itowhiml Hill effiftcd the adoption of the "penny mpsI" in England, and the vast progress It marked In human In tercourse and Information. Today we stand upon the threshold of a penny post era, not only throughout the Brlt Ish empire, but In all the English speak ing world. It will he a time of mighty forward movement toward that Inti mate Intercourse ami sympathetic mu tual knowledge that are the essential prelude to the brotherhood of man. The political boss may well say, with Lord ('live, "Considering my opportu nity, 1 am nmxed at my own modera tion." ('live himself, walking through the treasury of the nabob of lletigal, with gold and silver and rubles and pearls plied on each side of him; with no power on earth to limit or question lllm, never enjoyed opportunities equal to those of a boss In a great city. That his Very lind Is Olympian Is Well ex pressed by u recent speaker: "if any body refuses to give Mill the position to Which he thinks he Is entitled, that per ton Is likely to find nn engine house reeled In his back yard." Tho language of diplomacy is always restrained, but wtitle tlio words are carefully chosen so as to avoid unneces sary offense, every phrase has a definite meaning. When Lord Uosebery was prime minister In England there were signs that France had set her eyes upon the equatorial provinces In Africa from which the Egyptian garrisons had been withdrawn during the Soudan rebellion. He authorized Sir Edward Grey to de clare, in 1H05, that a French advance to the waters of the Nile would bo regard ed by the Itrltlsh Government as "an unfriendly act." In ordinary conver sation these three words would not be emphasized by any stress of voice, nor would they ordinarily bo accepted as a warning. The man who protests In ad vance against an Invasion of his rights generally uses a stronger word than "unfriendly." He refers to It as a "wan ton outrage," or as a "high-handed act of hostility." What diplomacy means by "an unfriendly act" Is an offense committed by one Government against another, which Involves Immediate rinks of war. When Hit Edward Grey's warning was unheeded, and the French flag was raised on the I'pper Nile at Fashodu three years afterward, there was a grave situation. France had com milted an offense against England, ami was confronted by tt demand that Mar chand should retire from Fashoda. The terms of the demand Implied forcible action ir it was not complied witn. rres- Ident Monroe, who was a diplomatist like his Secretary of State, Johu Qulncy Adams, used the same word "unfriend ly" In proclaiming tho famous doctrine which bears his name. He declared that any attempt on the part of European powers to Interfere with or oppress the Independent republics of the American continent, or to control their destiny, could not lo viewed "In any other light than as a manifestation of an unfriend ly disposition toward the I'nlted States." The phrase seems mild nnd lacking In emphasis. As diplomatists have under stood the words, It has been strong nnd definite. The Monroe doctrine, with the warning Implied by tho single word "unfriendly," has sufficed for seventy five years to protect tho Western Heiul sphere against European Intrigue. and thirty cigarettes, and the grades in most common use sell at the factory for $20 Mexican, or $9.50 gold, per 1,000 packages of twenty-four and thirty cigarettes each. The best cigars can be bought at retail at the cigar stands for 5 and 10 cents Mexican, and It Is recorded that In the days of the mouop sly a very fair cigar, as Manila cigars go, could be bought for 1 and 2 cents Mexican. The genuine Manila cigar of to-day Is not known In the United States, and If ever It finds its way there It will at once spring Into Immense pop ularity. The old Manila cigar, short nnd stubby, or cone-shaped, Is rapidly passing, and In Its place modern cigars are being made. All of the modern shapes in vogue In Europe and America have been Introduced since the monop oly ceased to exist, and anything that pleases the fancy may be had at the kiosks of Manila. The modern cigar, made of the best Cagayan or Isabel to bacco, Is not as good as the Cuban pro duct, but it will bear fair comparison with It, and is certainly the superior of scores of the domestic brands sold in the United States. The tobacco is mild er, and there Is no flavoring introduced Into it nor any chemical process resort ed to In treating It. There are 15,000 Americans in Manila now, and they take very kindly to the better grades of Manila cigars. The cigarettes are also made of pure to bacco. The entire Industry has suf fered on account of the Inferior grades that are shipped from here, and Manila cigars have been unfairly condemned, The average small native planter grows no more tobacco and does no more work than is absolutely necessary to earn a living. He plants in Novem ber and garners in March, and in the Interim raises what maize he needs for his house and farm. He has no other cares, and borrows none. He pockets the market price when the buyer ar rives, and It keeps him until he comes again. He has to sort his leaves Into five sizes and bundle them into manos, each of which contains 100 leaves, and there end his troubles. There are eight large and between fifty and one hun dred small factories in Manila, and the former employ from 400 to 2,000 opera tives each. In the manufacture of the better grades of cigars men and boys are employed almost exclusively, while on the cheaper cigars and cigarettes women are more generally employed. The former are, as a rule, paid on the piece system, while the latter are often contracted for in gangs, and answer to their employers only through the sub contractor. Wages vary, not only as to tho grade of the cigars made, but as to the skill of the operatives, and there Is a wide range in pay. Expert cigar- makers in the large factories can earn $1 Mexican, or 45 cents on the gold basis, but the average is nearer to 75 cents Mexican, nnd among the children and less expert operatives wages range down to 20 and 80 cents Mexican per day. Manila Correspondence Chicago Inter Ocean. caught by the foot under a fallen tree and unable to get away. He wasn't hurt, and I soon had him on his feet, and he Insisted on my stopping further down the mountain and taking dinner with him. He lived In a well-kept cabin ; with his daughter, and after dinner we I sat in the shade of a tree in the yard and he told me about himself. "Air you married?" he asked, after he told me he was a widower. "No, but I hope to be some day," I an swered, quite sincerely. "You ought to be; every man ought to be; a man that ain't showin' a right feelin' to'rds what the Lord's done fer him; thar ain't nothin' on the face uv God's green earth that is a patchin' to a woman, I don't keer what kind she Is." "You're hale and hearty yet," I said, "and I don't see why you don't take some of your own advice." "Don't crowd the mourners, mister," he said, waving his hand as If warding off my attack. "Don't you crowd the mourners. I'm flggerln'.on sever'l this very minute, and I ain't quite shore ylt which one to pick. I've been married four times, and every time my notions uv women has got so much higher that I'll be derned eff I don't kinder look forrerd to losln' a wife just fer the sat isfaction uv gettin' another one." The idea was so entirely new that I was overcome by it. Washington Star REMEMBER that multitudes of birds were singing, buttercups and daisies were In bloom, and the misty globes of dandelions had gone to seed for I picked some to blow away at one breath for luck. So It must have been on a June morning, In the year 185, that I went over to play with the Sherman boys, and thereby met with a memorable adventure. Finding the boys at le'sure. a gam? of "I-spy" or as we had it, perhaps by inheritance from our English ances tors, "hl-spy" was presently arranged. We were "counted out" by our favorite formula, "Wire, brier. Umber lock, six geese in a flock," and it fell to Tom's lot to blind. Before bisloud announcement of the first ten of the hundred which he was so rapidly counting that there was but a continuous mumble between the tens -Jim, Billy and 1 scattered in search of hiding-places. I was at no loss to find one, for I knew every nook and corner of the premises; and as neither of the others went that way, I tiptoed up the stairs that led to the hayloft over the stable. This place afforded a good outlook to the "gool," as well as a good hiding-place. As I waded through the hay to the . darkest corner, the figure of a man started up before me, nearly taking the breath out of me, so sudden and unex pected was the apparition. He seemed no less startled than I, and when, in the dim light, I made him out to be a negro, I guessed that he was a fugitive slave before his dialect made it appar ent, as he whispered, anxiously, "Say, chile, is dis yere Mars' Abum Thome's place?" That was tho name of my father, who was a zealous abolitionist, and whose house was well known by friends of the "cause," and suspected by enemies, to be a station of the Un derground Railroad, concerning whose dusky passengers, often seen by us be tween their mysterious coming and go- inz. mv sister and I early learned to keep our own counsel. It struck me at once that this fugitive could scarcely have made a greater mis take than In coming to the Sherman barn. Only a little while before I had heard neighbor Sherman declare to my father that it was as clearly his duty to give up a runaway slave as to deliver a stray horse to Its owner. So I answered my Interlocutor In a tone as cautious and more alarmed than his own, "No, nol It's the next But thee can't go there now! being once He Laughed Last. A story Illustrating red tape was told me the other day by an engineer officer, writes Arnold White In Harper's Week ly. In the course of his duties, which Involved traveling over the country, he sent in a bill which contained a charge, "porter, Od." The word porter Is one of those dubious terms In the English lan guage which are capable of two Inter pretations. One signifies the man who carries one's baggage at a railway sta tion; the other Is the form of black beer which Is known under the name of "porter." When my informant, there fore, claimed a return of the sixpence be had expended he was told by the War Office authorities that alcoholic drinks were not to be included in the traveling allowance of officers. He re joined that he was not claiming for al coholic drink, but for the hire of a man to transport his baggage at a station. Upon which the sapient official repoln-, house, ed that In future he should not claim Sherman's folks'll see thee! Thee must for porter, but porterage. On the next lie down an' let me cover thee up with occasion on which this officer, who was hay, an' don't stir till I come for thee a wag, was traveling on behalf of his 1 after dark. I'm Abraham Thome's country he sent In a bill which inciud- boy," I said, seeing that he Hesitated a ed the item, "cabbage 2s." The bill was , little. to neighbor Sherman's, and all nulet about the premises. I at made my way to the loft, where I fouud my man Just on the point of setting forth alone, so Impatient was he of a longer stay in the dangerous precincts. We had crept cautiously downstairs and around the barn, not drawing a free breath till we got it between us and the house, when we heard a team driven rapidly to the door, and voices in low, earnest conversation. Then some one ran rapidly up the stairs to the loft, and presently returned; where upon the team was driven away In greater haste than It had come. 1 did not understand It at all, and only felt sure that we had started none too soon. It was bright starlight, so we skulked along fences, which led us roundabout way, till we came near our house, waiting among me pear trees of the garden. The kitchen door was o;:en, my father standiug In It, In silhouette against the candle-light, speaking In an earnest tone to two men who stood a little out side the threshold. Other figures stood at intervals around the house, very steadfast and alert, except one who seemed to be looking In our direction. "I tell you there's no one but my own family in my house," I heard my father say. One of the men replied, "That's all very well. Mr. Thorne, but I can't take your word for It, when there's a nigger In the case. We shall have to search the house." Then, with a terror that seemed to melt my leg-bones and take my heart ofmy body, I realized that our house was beleaguered by slave-hunters. The two men at the door pushed in past my father, while the others stood more lint heard that he reaction Canada with out further adventure. A few days later I happened to hear my father thanking neighbor Sherman very warmly for what he had done. and the response of the latter was: Sho! Abr'am, don't never say a word about It. I wouldn t for all the world have It get out at I harbored a runaway nigger. Why, they wouldn't never call on me agin to help ketch em." Youth's Companion. GUN COTTON. Details of the Manufacture of a Vio lent Explosive. The use of gun cotton In the charging of torpedoes and for other purposes has become so enormous that some account of Its modern manufacture Is of Inter est. Pure raw cotton or ordinary cotton waste, which Is commonly seen In all places where machinery Is used, is steeped In a solution of one part of nitric and three parts of sulphuric add. It Is the former that renders the sub stance explosive, the latter being used only to absorb the water, thus permit ting the nitric acid to combine more readily with the cellulose of the cotton. After being soaked several hours In the acids the cotton Is removed and passed between rollers to expel from It the non-absorbed acid. The cotton Is then thoroughly washed to remove any acid still remaining which would de compose the cotton If permitted to re main In It. This washing process Is a long one, requiring machinery which reduces the cotton to much the same condition to which rags are reduced In a paper mill a sort of pulp. If it Is to be used In the manufacture of powder the cotton Is still further pul verized and is then thoroughly dried. If it Is for use In torpedoes It Is com pressed Into shapes that make it easy to pack into torpedo heads. The form varies greatly, sometimes being disk-. shaped, sometimes cylindrical; again it Is In flat Squares and again in cubes. The gun cotton when not compressed Is light, about the weight of an equal bulk of common batting. Terrible as it Is as an explosive, a brick of It when wet may be placed upon hot coals, and as the moisture dries off the cotton flakes and burns quietly. When dry, however, it will explode with great vio lence If exposed to a temperature of about 320 degrees. It Is usually fired by detonation, or an Intense shock, which produces a more powerful effect than heat. In the tor pedo the wet cotton is detonated by the explosion of dry cotton In a . tube, which Is fired by a cap of fulminate of mer cury, which is, in turn, fired by the Im pact of the torpedo against the hull of the vessel toward which It Is discharg ed. Chicago Record. promptly returned by the War Oflico authorities, with the statement that green vegetables were not. to be Inciud- j ed in the traveling allowance of offi cers. The officer replied that be did not mean to imply that he bad bought Thereupon he lay down, saying as he did so, "I'se wlllin' 'hough to rest, but I'se powerful hougry, chile." I carefully covered him with hay, hoping there was a good chance of h's being safe from further discovery, for green vegetables, but that he had taken the horses were turned out to grass, a cab, and that, as when he had asked and no one was likely to visit the loft for the hire of a porter he was Instruct- for hay. ed to call It porterage, he could only j i had barely time to smooth off the presume that he was carrying out their covering before Tom Sherman sang lordships' wishes In claiming for tho 0ut, "One hun-derd!" and the warning. return of the sum he had laid down on "One, two, three, look out for me!" One of the results of the late war bo- (ween the l ulled Slates and Spain will must likely be the abolition of that form of naval piracy which finds lt jiisililcntloii In prize courts. In the military service of the civilized world Hie principle of looting conquered terri tory has Ions since bt en abandoned. Yet, through that strange contradiction which has not reformed the navy In the same riill.i In which the army tins been lu-might under civilizing Influ- cures, not only did the merchant Vo el carrying contraband goods fall it prey, but valuation on the warships destroyed Is bmiiid to go to officers nnd sailors of I lie ships engaged In Hie fight. Saturday Evening Post: Tho Intro duction of electricity In the street railroad service bin seriously In jured two great American Industrie. Isitli closely related - the bristling of draft horses ami the growing of liny. It la computed that the trolley nnd on Me cars have displaced '.".hi.ismi horse lu the cities of Philadelphia, I'hli'iiiio, Now York, Baltimore, St. !,ou!, Cln cl n tint I, Richmond and Toledo alone. Thl mean dii'trnsi In the consump tion of buy of more than thirteen hun dred Ion per da. Other cities would lienrly treble these figures. In tho de cade of 1HH.I IMKi the hay crop of tho lulled Blulcs nearly doubled; la tho Charley Noble, Mythical personage are quite com moil ut sea, from Davy Jones to Mother Carey, Perhaps they are necessary to vary the inontotiy of an ocean life. The Sun say that Charley Noble I the gen tleman on board a mail of war who I supposed to commit suicide whenever nuy one fires a pistol shot Into a gulley stovepipe to clean It from soot. Thl Imaginary Individual ha been for year a stumbling block to Inexperienc ed paymaster' clerk, ami sometime ho comes near to being a source of ex pell so. "We took a new clerk down lo the West In. He with us several mouth ago," said a paymaster, "and otio day a shot was fired up tho galley stove pipe. 1 rushed Into my office lu great excitement, nnd my clerk asked what was tho matter. " 'Charley Noble hn Cotntiiltteed sul cldo, poor fellow!' suld I, 'ntld you luust tuitke up hi account at once.' "Thru 1 went on deek. and look rare lo stand nenr several other officer. Ill a few iiiluutet up came my clerk. IU was very much agitated, and hi roles could be heard all over tho deck. " 'There lis boon a mistake lu my ac count. alrT ho cried. '1 have looked all through the list, and 1 csii't find Char ley Noble's mime anywhere! "Everybody roared, nnd the clerk topped to think the matter or or." Blight Skirmish. The war with Spain has served to popularize In common language many terms usually employed only lu a mili tary sense, and has frequently furnish ed tho smart men of the press with a new figure of speech. I shall have to ask you, Mr. Fad- dem," said a city editor, looking over a largo bundle of manuscript which a new reporter had turned In as a de scription of a trivial occurrence, "to de ploy that stuff." To deploy It?" said the new reporter. "I don't understand." "Turn that column Into a line, re joined the editor. rittful rovcrly In Ilueala. Statistics Just published show that In Russia only 847.20N families out of a population of about 130,ooo,ooo souls have an Income of over $500 a year, or that practically more than 01) per cent. of the whole population are constantly lu a state of abject poverty and pauper ism lu their various degrees. The fig ures become appalling when one con siders the case of the peasantry, which forms tho overwhelming mnjorlty of the population. The average yearly In come of a peasant family consisting of six members range from $iK) to $75 a year, out of which between $25 and $.13 ha to 1 paid to the government In di rect taxes. W hat Hhe Was. In a New England graveyard there hn lately been discovered an epltnph which leave a wider scope for the Imagination of the render than almost any other w hich could be composed, A person traylng through the little graveyard stopped to rend the word on an old slate stone slab; two winged head were carved above the epitaph: "Here He tho remain of Mary Ann Pratt; Word are wanting to say what. Think what a good woman should be She-wn that." the transport of his person and goods from the station under the head of "cabbage." j I stowed myself where he would be sure to find me before he could stumble on the hiding-place of the negro. Tom spied the other boys,, and 1 got a safe run to the "gool," so that he had no oc- A Tiny Elcctrlo Motor, A Western watchmaker has built the smallest electric motor In the world. It Is so small that It does not cover a sli ver dime. The armature Is about the for means t0 relieve his hunger, and size of a small slate pencil. The front grew g0 abstracted over the problem of tho motor is or goiu, uigmy ponsneu, tbat j attracted the attention of my and the commutator segments are also companiong. of the same metal, so that viewed from . . . d . . DON TOU TEI.L ME NUFFIN . alert. The man who was looking our way moved toward us as directly as if he saw us, though the negro and I, by a common Impulse, crawled quickly be hind the trunks of two pear-trees a few feet apart, On he came unerringly, until he was right between us, and I made out dis tinctly the tall, muscular form and red bearded face of our neighbor Sherman. I expected to see him pounce upon the crouching figure of my companion like a tiger on bis prey, and wondered If a sudden attack In the rear by a 12-year- old boy could be of anyavail. lie turned neither to the right nor to the left as he passed between us, nor paused as he whispered with sharp dis tinctness, "Go back to my barn and lay low till I tell ye!" A few paces beyond us he turned about and passed between us again, re peating the whispered Injunction, and caslon to search the loft. Hence I felt ging b.ick to the house.-iook post there, easy concerning the man for the pies- loudly enjoining vigilance upon the ent. except that I was at my wit's end others. Net r Hattkfleil. Resident of Pouce are changing the pronunciation of the tin mo of tho town to one syllable, "Ponce," because that's United States, and they want to be like n. At tho same time people of tho United State are changing their pro nunclatlon to "Poll tha," because that' Spanish, and they want to appear well educated. little distance the scarf pin has tho appearance of a very valuable and rather curiously designed pin. The first thing to attract the attention is tho buzzing of the machine, which, by means of a current obtained from a small chloride of silver battery carried lu the vest pocket, Is kept lu operation at a high rate of speed, and with a noise like a small nest of horuets. The field magnets of the little motor are made of two thicknesses of No. 22 sheet Iron scraped dowu nnd polished. These are held together with gold screws nnd wound with No. 20 silk covered wire. The armature Is of the four pole type and Is wound with No. 80 wire. The little brushes are or mnr- velous thinness, having been construct ed of copper, hammered down with much patience and care. There Is a; small gold switch on a black rubber base, made with a pin. to lie worn on the In nol of the vest. The owner of mouth, Tommy?" Bill Shermnn asked. "Oh, nothin'," I answered, evasively; and then a happy thought struck me. "Only I'm so hungry, I b'lieve I've got to go home and get something to eat. I guess I didn't eat' as much breakfast as I'd ought to this morning." The explanation might pass with those who had not witnessed my per formance, but It was not needed by my playmates, for at the suggestion of hunger, each became aware of his own pangs It being now near 10 o'clock. "Hurrah for something feat!" cried, Tom. "Come on!" and he led the way i to the kitchen door, where an appeal for relief was promptly responded to by good, motherly Mrs. Sherman, with a double slice of bread and butter and a doughnut for each of us. I made a pretense of eating, not with-. out an effort refraining from the ieal- Ity, till Jim Sherman began to count and the rest of us to scatter to cover. this novel scarf pin has been asked to Then I crept noiselessly up the stairs exhibit It in puuue, out is cuuivui nu the homage paid to his talents lu bli native town, and refuses to show It publicly elsewhere. Work of Hi ts. Hats are playing havoc with the un derground telephone and telegraph ca bles lu St. Louis. They have discover ed that the w Ire are covered with par affined paper, and they like the taste. To satisfy their appetite they must gnaw through the lead casting around ,..,,.,,.. ..fmm de folu, ,,. .J bad ...I-... It l.tia ItrttilU'tu.il In H mini. - ...... .. i uie wiivb. - - - - wi,ere I wn tnyin yist day, (lis yeie ber of cnos that tho rat. In gnawing .M d(, )lncPi nIgh , , coul(, make oul through the lead cable to get at the n (,0 tm Q. de ula,vta'(ji ,,.re wiU greased paper have bared the cop;K-r de .,nce . tl... l.tti.i! oiiitrt itflinl at till " . .... wires so wmi.urj . we ca n't heln t now. Al the can do I to keep still till night." Then Jim shouted warning, and I beard blm coming cautiously up the and gave all my lunch to the negro. It made me hungry to see hi in eat, and I felt that I was making n great sacrifice for the "cause" In which my father was o earnestly engaged. "I wish thee'd come to our house In stead of here," I whispered to the ne gro, as be snt up under the tent of hay, ravenously bolting the bread and but ter. "Tell ye what, honey," he answered. after a struggle to swallow a large cross lu iuch a manner a to make It Impossible to establish commuulcatloD over them. The negro crawled away in range of his tree, on bis .hands and knees, as stealthily as a cat, and I followed as nearly as I could In like manner, till we gained the cover of a fence, looking back from which we saw the light shin Ing from successive windows as the searching party moved from room to room, while the figures of the besiegers were dissolved and blotted out lu the gloom. We made our way back to the Sher mnn plnce with cautious haste, now startled by a ground nesting bird burst ing up from the grass before us, now making wide detours to avoid some dim object, which proved to be a harmless cow or stump, till at last we reached the left and lay down upon the hay, with a welcome sense of security In the place which 1 bad lately deemed so dangerous. Then as we rested and by degrees re covered natural breathing, my com panion explained In whispers the mys tery of neighbor Sherman's ln-havlor. I "'Long In the artcrnoon 1 wns layln' klvered In de fodder a-wlshin' mighty hard for night an suffln for to eat an' 1 heard somebody come a-trom-pllng up de stairs, an' be begin pokln' de fodder, an' me do nat'aly shakln' I wld fear, outwel fust I knowed he hove ' de fodder clean off'n me. A mon'ou big, ferce-lookln man he was, wld a red balrd same man he was that came to we-un ober yander, an' ha boiler at me. 'What you doln here? You's a runaway nigger, dat's what you Isf "When I try for to speak, he say, 'Don' you tell me nu III u'. 1 don' wan' to hear a word out 'n yo' bead. Yon nythlng to eat since you inn yore? an I lol' blm how you done fotca me a little speck. In de mawnlu", an' he wont an' fotch me a heap o' whittles, an' bo tol' me lo Iny still under de fod der ontwel de dark come on' an' den go to de ncx' bouse an' not come ba yere no mo', 'cause be ain't gwlne for to hare no runaway niggers roun' bl Spanish Wooden Bullet. It Is well known that Spanish soldiers in Cuba were poor marksmen, but great surprise has been expressed, says the Scientific American, at the remark able lack of execution which character ized their fire at Guantanamo and San tiago, and an officer of the United States gunboat Montgomery has been able to throw some light on the matter. He visited the Maria Teresa after tha destruction of Cervera's fleet in search of souvenirs. He found a large num ber of Mauser cartridges In groups of five ready to go Into the magazines of the guns, and If the entire Spanish army and navy were equipped with that kind of ammunition both Cervera and Toral were amply Justified In sur rendering when they did. The car tridges consisted of a metal shell load ed with hair and a sprinkling of pow der. The bullet was of neither brass nor lead, but of wood. Some army con tractor had Imposed on the ordnance bureau of the Spanish navy, but to what extent the wooden Mauser bullets were used will probably never be known. Old Age Pensions In New Zealand. New Zealand, which has prided her self for a good many years on "ad vanced" legislation, and which Is often held up as one of the most progressive countries In the world (though a Brit ish colony), Is about to Inaugurate what may be called an old age pension regime. The Legislature of the far-off colony recently passed an elaborate bill, mak ing provision for pensions to persons In straitened circumstances who are over 05 years old. The pension amounts to but $00 a year, or about $1.75 a week, and no one who has an Income of over $5 a week or property worth more thnn $2,700 will be en titled to It. Twenty years' residence In the colony and ten years' exem plary conduct are requisite In order to secure this state gift, which Is sig nificant, not so much for the amount as for the precedent which It em bodies. Boston Globe. The Largest leaves of Broad. The largest lonves of bread baked In the world are those of France and Italy. The "pipe" bread of Italy Is baked In loaves two or three feet long, while In France the loaves are made In the shape of very long rolls four or five feet In length, and In many casee even six feet The bread of Paris Is distributed almost exclusively by wo men, who go to the various bakehouses at 530 a. m. and spend about an hour polishing up the loaves. After the loave are thoroughly cleaned of dust and grit, the "bread porter" proceeds on the round of her customers. Those who live In apartments or flats find their loaves leaning against the door. I I i llulld Nest. There I a tub found lu Hudson Bay which absolutely builds a nest. Thl It doe by picking up pebble In Its mouth and placing them lu a regular way on selected spot on the bottom of the bay. where the water la not very deep lorborg. The Icoln-rg of the two UomUpherea are outlroly different In shape. The arc tic borg are Irregular lu form, with lofty pinnacle and filtering domes. while tho antarctic lcrg are fiat top- I JhmJ and solid looking. Only Indian Twins Alive. Iu Oklahoma Territory the other day twin wore Itorn to White Dove of lbs Usage. It ha been the custom of lu dlun lo strangle tho weaker of twin shortly after their brlth. White Dora refused lo follow the custom of her people, and now I cut In tho best In dian circles. Sho tied with ber liable to the agent at Ponca and so saved them bothj l lusbrlh's l'i nan. The late Empress Elizabeth left a vast fortune. Sho had a much target civil list than she over spent, and bet surplus Income win Judiciously laid out In purchasing property arouud Vienna, which was bought tory cheap, but li row covered with bulld'ti.-t and rnor tnously valuable. stair before my man waa down and , place. Deon lie kiver me in fle r.HMer, covered up again. But covered be was, an' un ae "' ' w'n h,m ontwll be before Jim found me. and wt rushed emtio on wo-uns oler yander. Oh. be's pell moll for the "gool." When the game waa ended I went homo, hungry enough, but quite un able to enjoy my dinner, for fear of the discovery of the runaway. I told my father of him at the first opportunity, and be was a anxious a I, at b.s a n "igbty curious man, dnt he Is." I quite agreed In bis opinion of neigh bor SI orman, since he wns acting lo ao unexpected a manner. We lay quietly for an bour before we hoard a cautious stop a-ondlng tie stairs, and then neighbor Sherman' countenance showed. guarded voice, "If there a anyboly i wouldn't have neighbor Phertn n hero, lin y can go over to Thome's now And him for anything, but thee did the, Tho coast I clear." best that could be done, my son. anil With thai he wrnt downstairs, an there's nothing for It but lo wait till we presently followed, and wont ovr dark." to our house, whore all was quiet aftv The commendation comforted mo. the futile search and I proved myself erntao at supper, a valuable trench- Oo the following night my father car ried the fugitive lo tha next stat'on After nightfall t stole across tha field . northward, and we saw no more of a m. ipecino for Hraalokneaa. Bright red pecUclet accompanied by Internal doses of calomel form a new German specific Against seasickness. It Is deduced from Eptoln's Investiga tions on the Influence of color on the blood resell In the brain. Seasickness la due to lack of blood In the brain, w hile red send blood lo the brain with a rush. By looking at one point for some time through the red glassee tbt patient ia cured radically. Before expressing your bon.-st con victions these days, yoo must lock yourself lu a room and plug up the key bole. I'p to date, the women members of a certain church have tried every known means lo raise the church debt except by putting air bag under lu Confidence often begets confldonce men. Potters are not the only peopl who uake family Jars.