y Heppner Weekly Gazette: Published Ever? Thursday. HEPPNER .OREGON. A circular saw trust Is the latest. That's an ugly article to monkey with. Many seem to think that if the nation by Itself digs out the Nicaragua Canal it will be a big scoop. Out in a Western city there is a preacher named Bowerflnd. lie ought to be a good partner In a stiff game of euchre. sense of proportion, and also, as the bishop says, to dull that "mental aler ness" the attainment of which is one of the highest acquirements of a true edu- cation. No one Is more helpless tha an average expert or specialist when circumstances Interfere with his fol lowing his chosen pursuit. His train log has given him a special, not a gen eral, aptitude, which, while at times of the highest value, is also at other times of practically no value. There is too much reliance upon specialism and not enough upon individualism as a factor in success In the great school of life a fact which not a few clear-headed thinkers of the day are beginning to appreciate. THE MAKING OFJ . The broom corner Is expected to clean out the small manufacturers, and per haps the assertion that it will do so Is not too sweeping. Getting acquitted of lese majeste on the ground of Intoxication is not likely to prove a striking temperance argu ment in the land of the Kaiser. Every robber who holds a man up is J II-. . uescnoeu aiierwara as being a "very tull man." And the man held up usu ally finds himself very short A Yale divinity student is said to have stolen 5,000 books. Frobably they are of h theological character, and it was Just his way of getting religion. A Western Judgo has decided that poker is not a game of chance. Prob ably that Judge never gives a man a chunce when engaged in a little game, A Brazilian merchant has recently called upon an American Jobbing house for a peculiar article of export. He wanted to buy a supply of diplomas or degrees from American schools medicine, law, dentistry and civil en glnoering. It appears that the practice of these professions in Brazil requires a diploma or a degree, and as the for eign article is very acceptable, some Brazilians prefer to buy the "sheep skin" rather than spend the time and study In acquiring the knowledgo which It represents. Doctor Johnson In commenting once upon an Institu tion that was selling its honors, re marked that it was "getting rich by degrees." This is the opportunity that the Brazilian Importer offers, but It is probable that the authorities there will be alert enough promptly to suppress such a fraud. A female burglar was found under a bed In New York. In the coming equal ity of the sexes must man acquire the female habit of looking under the bed? It appears that the trl-colorcd ribbon with which the seals are attached to the great treaty of peace signed at Par is was torn off a bonbon box. How sweet I Keeiy's motor has been an egregious failure as a motor, but proceedings at the latest meeting of the Keely com pany prove that it Is still unrivaled as a spellbinder. It doesn't say Germany is not In tensely Interested in prohibiting Ameri can sausage that no newspaper there lias so far referred to it as an Instance of the government's links-eyed watch fulness. Miss Helen Gould's role In life Is that of a beneficent fairy princess. Probably It has Its compensations, but one shud ders to think of the anxious Inquirers with their multitudinous eyes fixed upon the wand. In all his bitter complaints against this country Senor Itlos has not uttered a word which could be construed as a reproach to Miss Jesslo Schley for tho failure to carry out her sldo of tho peace agreement. This Is genuine gal lantry. isot satisfied with trying to knock Santa Cluus off his pedestal, some verv -luttvtuHl imrsons want to banish Mother Goose s stories, claiming they are fulso- hoods. After liuvlng accompllNhod this highly commendable Job it would not be a bad Idea If they tackle tho mall clous rumor that the moou Is mudo of green cheese. "New occasions teach new duties." and It may well be that tho new duties of peace will prove harder to learn and more dllllcult to fulfil than those of war. In time of war it is comparative ly easy to rally all men to the supiMrt of the futherland, and the one thing to ao is to win tho victory. But in peace counsels arc divided, and there Is a call, not for tho heroic virtues of tho warrior, but for tho tact and wisdom, and alwve all, the Justice and truth, of tho statesman. Our country 1ms not leeu lacking In either, and It will not do for It to be lacking In either now. Nothing can stop this country but our own folly. Wiuiin ten monins me Baldwin Locomotive Works has re ceived two orders from China, the sec ond being for sixteen engines. When we think how vast are the possibilities of railroad building in China and how difficult It has been to make a start there these evidences of present actlv lty are most gratifying. The first road constructed In the empire ran from Shanghai to Woosung, a distance of only twelve miles. It was built without tho sanction of the government, and was purchased by the authorities and taken up after it had been in operation about a year. This was as late as 1870-77, or only about twenty years ago. The experiment was not encour aging to the glorious fellowship of pro moters. But out of a small railway, whose first section was a short coul car rier, a line of considerable length has been developed, which now runs from Tlen-Tsin, a short distance south of Peking, down to and along the coast of the Gulf of Pechlli. It was In 1880 that the Emperor ordered the construction of a lino from tho capital to Hankow, on the Y'nng-Tzo River, and confided the task In part to LI Hung Chaug, Since then tho country has been alive with would-be concessionaires, but their major work has been In the way of wire-pulling rather than In that of rall-Iaylng, and LI Hung Chang's Im perial road has been one of the best ex amples Imaginable of compliance with the mnxlm "Make haste Blowly." But It Is the beginnings that are most try ing In combating oriental methods and oriental prejudice, and those sixteen Baldwin locomotives may bo regarded as effective pioneers of civilization. It will not bo long before railways are considered to bo Indispensable in Chi na, as they are elsewhere, and the great empire should become the paradise of builders and of manufacturers of rail and rolling stock. The United States must get the chief benefits from this progression, ns we can now successful ly comiete against the world. In every avenue of human activity Undo Sam leads the procession. "Nothing can stoy us." . Mr. Stead reports In tho London T..n.. ... I'uuj iiuuiiiiiu mm wucrever no goes In Europe he finds tho governing classes understanding, and to some ex tent using, the English language. At the court of St. Petersburg It Is tho household tongue; tho Czar, the Czar ina and their children habitually use it in conversation with each other. There Is an old saying that the tongues of earth are many, but of heaven only one. Then the growth of one language toward universal use and the English language is making It may well bo reckoned a growth towurd tho divine Ideal. ' t V. ...U . - i iiik i-ii-ium imvy nas really so cured a practicable submarine torpodo- iKui tne crurt will give Prance n dis tinct advantage over other naval pow ers, uut it will require tuoro than harlior experiments to demonstrate the value of the destroyer. Inventors havo Ix'ii working on submarine bouts for fifty years, and while some of them notably Holland have apparently solved the problem theoretically, the fact remains that no navy yet possesses a vessel or the submarine type which has proved lis adaptability to tho con ditions of actual warfare. It Is oue thing to make trial trips In landlocked uarimrs, unner favorable conditions. It Is quite another to faco the perils of the ojwn sea and a vlglluut foe. If the French have a boat capable of facing those conditions they havo the whip uuuu even or ureal lirltaln. It will, uowevor, take actual war to demon strate the fact. OKI Did you ever realize that planting ad vertising was like plautlug fruit trees? You couldn't expect a whole wagon load of apples the first year. Neither would you tear tho tree up by the roots, at the end of the season, If that wagon load of fruit were not forthcoming. Yet you run a big Christmas ad., and ex pect a carload of sales, and Just be cause you didn't do as much as your neighbor over in tho other orchard, who has been tending his tree for years, you yank your advertisement out of the paper, and say, "Advertising doesn't pay." We wouldn't expect you to get married to advertising the first time you made Its acquaintance, any more than wo would expect you to marry tho mat gin who winked at you on the 1 1 ree t. N e w spa perd o m. TED STATES IN THE FAR EAST. Inventive Genius Has Improvements In th It is a far cry from fifty years ago, sitting bench pegging away at tl for his neighbor, which on the morrow, to the mode ana machines ror shoe ma Notwithstanding the fact tha has made tremendous advancJ Invention has done mighty things I most every branch of industrial 1 somehow or other, most people still keep in their minds the vision of the shoemaker of old, bending over his task and patiently boring and stitching, now and then stopping to wax over his thread. But far different is it now. Machines, with the most astonishing ac complishments, pound and hammer and stitch in place of the human bands which lent themselves to this work In the former time. And yet It seems to one watching the processes, as If hu man hands were somewhere concealed in these cases of iron, so deft and won derful are the parts. Fancy a machine which can cut and sew 3,500 button holes a day and then revolve In your mind the long and weary toiling of the tired fingers which might have the same amount of work to do. In some cases a pair of shoes goes through 139 distinct processes in the course of its manufacture. A pair of shoes has been turned out In twenty-eight min utes, but that Is exceptional, and the manufacturers like better to take time for" the goods to rest a bit after some of the processes. A trip by a Free Press was made through one of De troit's big factories the other day, and some interesting things were noted. the factory has a capacity of 4,000 pairs a day, although tills limit has never been reached, and 3,000 a day, or six pairs a minute, Is keeping the hands pretty busy. The hides and skins come In with ragged edges, some with holes here and there, others with unbroken surfaces. It is necessary In some way to get at the quantity of leather In these pieces, a puzzling Job. But brains have solved the pioblem, and there stands a ma chine for doing the entire work. The skin Is put Into the machine ns into a planer and the numlor of square feet and Indies In its surface Is indicated on a dial. The amount of labor saved on account of the Irregular edges of the leather can be Imagined. Making the Patterns. It seems as If tho theoretical side of the manufacture of a pair of shoes should begin with the making of the patterns, at which one to five men are kept constantly working. These are cut out of stiff pasteboard, and are smoothly edged with tin. Each part of the shoe must have Its pattern. Some of these seem to have very little resemblance to anything an ordinary observer might see in a pair of shoes. For Instance, tho pattern for the upper looks like a large horse-shoo magnet In shape. Wlt'a these patterns in hand, the real manufacturer of the shoe Is FAGO-PAGO HARBOR, SAMOA, WHERE THE GOVERNMENT BUILD A COALING STATION. WILL the sole between the heel and the ball of the foot. Wonderful Machines. In the next department most of the lighter sewing Is done, as well as the pasting together of the linings and the uppers. Scores of girls are busy at the sewing machines, fastening the differ ent parts of the upper together. Here, too, are the button-hole machines which do their work with lightning rapidity. Another sort of machine, with a din and hubbub, cuts the holes for the eyelets and the hooks of laced shoes, and stamps them In securely with marvelous quickness, and the sound of a Gatllng gun. Still another sort sews on the buttons, fastening the buttons on ns many as 1,000 pairs a day. Beside these is the newest in vention, a machine for riveting the buttons on. Seventy-five pairs an hour can be finished on this machine. Thus, far, the uppers and the heels and soles have been making their way separately through the processes, but they are soon to come together. And now the "last" is to come Into play. This is put inside the upper, with the In-sole; the edges of the upper are turn ed over the edges and tacked down on the sole. Then the out-sole Is tacked on by machinery with a few nails, the noise resembling the report of mus ketry In the distance. Each of the nails In this machine as well as In all the others Is made from wire as It Is need ed, the nails being mnde and driven at the same instant. But there are still more wonderful machines to be seen. Here, for Instance, Is one which sews the in-sole onto the upper. This Is the welt machine and does 400 pairs a day, whereas a man's work was formerly twelve pairs. Not less wonderful Is the stitching machine which punctures the heavy out-soles and sews them at the same time to the upper and In-sole. tying a knot in the most human fash- Ion at every stitch. The awl which makes the punctures, and the needle which does the sewing are curved, and together form almost a serai-circle, the hole being made with one stroke and the thread inserted with the next The heel Is still to be fastened to the sole, and this Is done by a ponderous look- SENOR MATIAS ROMERO. A Gifted Mexican and Diplomat Who Kecently Passed Away. Don Matlas Romero, who died In Washington not long since, was one of the best known foreign diplomats In this country, not only on account of his long occupancy of the Mexican lega tion, but also through his numerous contributions to American periodical literature, which rendered his name fa miliar to the reading public. He was very popular In Washington, and earn ed the regard of many prominent Americans, notably of Grant and Lin coln. He was a man of large heart and generous Impulses, as was demon strated at the time of the failure In 1884 of the banking firm of Grant & Ward, of which Gen. Grant was a part ner, when Senor Romero went on from Washington and offered his entire for- MATIAS KOMBRO. "VSv. f mm hZrr i 7 1 iv ii, . . Tho Pall Mall Gazette remarks: "It takes a bold man to get up and say that It Is possible to havo too much techni cal education, but Dr. Crelghtou goes nigh s.tjing It." The remarks to which the Gazette refers were made by the bishop of London in his recent address to the college of that city, in which ho remarked upon his bewilderment at finding how many subjects of knowl edge there are In the world. Special ism In knowledge has come to take tho place of an all round education of for mer days, when, as the bishop says, he studied "things In general." That there re certain benefits In this speclallaa. tlon of knowledge Dr. Crelghton read ily admits, but he reminded his hearers that tho training in these special sub jects was, after all, only a part of and subordinate to the training of life. Too juuch specialization U ant to obtenra a A Useful Dog. Intelligent dogs are many, but not every dog, even though Intelligent, can be taught to gather dowers for its mas ter as a certain Gordon setter, named Norah, Is said to do. Her master. Mon sieur Barbnt, writes of her lu the Chasseur Pratique. In June, 18i5, in a walk beside the ponds of Alton, Savoy, a friend and I tried to reach some water-lilies with our canes, but without success. Seeing still finer blossoms out In the water, I called Norah, and threw stones toward them lu order to Induce her to go for them. She seemed to understand at once. plunged In, and coming and going brought tlowers enough to fill tho bas ket. The guards present could hardly lu'lleve their eyes. The dog lowered her head beneath tho water so as to cut the steins at a certain distance from tho tlowers. This samo dog was useful to her mas ter In another way. One winter morn ing she eutered his study with a stick of wood held between her Jaws. She dooslted the wood In the fireplace. went down, tho steps and brought an other, and continued her ocvupatlou un til the supply of wood seemed to her sutllcleut, when she returned to her place by the fire to enjoy the results of her labor. She certainly seems to be a dog of a practical turn of mlud. A boy learns Just so much In skating, and then stops. Boys do nothing on the lee now 'hat boys did not do thirty years g BUSY SCENES IN A MODERN SHOE MANUFACTORY. about to begin. From skins of the proper kind and patterns of the proper shape the cutters start the work. Lay ing the patterns down on the skins they quickly cut the skins the shape of the outlines of the patterns, their knives being razor-edged. The cutters, as well os all the other workers throughout the factory, are guided In their lalwrs by a system of cards Issued from the otlice. When an order comes Into the house one of these cards Is made out for each ..kind of shoe wanted, showing the num ber, kind, the size, the last, the finish, and so on, giving every detail about tho shoo which Is to Iks turned out. This cord follows that lot of shoes wherever It goes In its wanderings through the factory. So that the cutter knows Just what patterns they are to use. When all the necessary parts of the upper portion of the shoe havo been cut, in cluding the linings and the fancy tips and tidbits, the lot Is sent on to the bot toming department. Here are cut the heels, In-soles and out-sole aud various other strango operations are gone through with. The heels and soles are cut by hand with dies. Before each worker Is an Ihimense section of a tree trunk, on the top of which the hide Is laid. The sharp edged die Is placed on the hide and the worker with a fell swoop of his hammer throws out what Is to Ihi ere long the sole or the heel of a shoe. The process Is exactly like that which mother used In making cookies, with the addition of the extra strength necessary. la on ordinary heel there are six pieces Instead of the one which Is apparent to the person who examines a flulshod pair of shot's. These pieces are put together lu a machine, nail holes are liored and enough nails are put In to hold the heel together, all with a slugle motion of the machine. An other machines cut the rough piece which has been hewn out of the sole Into the exact shape and also needed for the shoe desired. This Is done by a pattern of the sole In question gov erning the cutter of the machine. An other machine cuts what Is known as a "ehannel" lu the top of the In-sole aud around the edge and It Is this chan nel to which the upper Is to be sewed. Unhe-r machines cut out the pieces of I Ing machine which drives all the nails In at one time. Other Processes. There are still dozens of processes to be gone through the trimming down of the heels, which Is done by a machine driving a curved cutter, trimming the edges of the sole, sand-papering the heels and soles, burnishing and coloring the edges, and so on. No detailed de scription of tho processes could be at tempted. Suffice It to say that the workings of iron and steel In a shoe factory would astonish the wisest man who has not seen thorn every day. Im provements are constantly being made and machines which last week were considered marvels are next week thrown out for old iron, as useless In comparison with the new Invention. A Detroit man has Just Invented a Joint ed last which Is said to excel anything else for the ease with which It can be Inserted and taken out of a shoe. When once lusldo tho shoe, It can be straight ened out and thus made much larger than before. Throughout the many processes, men's and women's shoes are kept separute and different work ers make their,, so that In one respect shoemakers are not unlike the Quakers, Of course there Is an Inspector who looks over the finished product thor oughly and throws out any that may lie Imperfect Then there Is a complete Ikix factory where paste-board shoe boxes are turned out In large quantities. Great Japanese Bridge. Japanese ambition contemplates the erection across the straits of Shlmon oseklof a bridge to councet the Klngsul railway with that of the Samyo rail way, from Shlmonosekl to Hiogo, thus enabling passengers to proceed unin terrupted from the southern extremity of Klnsul to the extreme north of the mainland. As the straits are a mile wide, with a current often runnlug eight miles an hour, aud. as the bridge must allow the passage of the largest steamships beueath It the colossal structure will. If successfully com pleted, enable the Japanese to boast of an engineering feat so far uneqmiled la the world Pulldulohla LeJr. tune to the general In order to enable him to tide over his personal pecuniary difficulties an offer that was grateful ly declined, and was said to have moved the general to tears. Senor Romero was 02 years old. He was born in the City of Oaxaca, Mexi co, and was given such education as the competent colleges of the City of Mexico had to offer the youth of the nation at that time. He was graduated as a lawyer and began his political and diplomatic career In 1855, when he was entered In the foreign office. In 1859 he came first to Washington as secretary of legation, and for a time was charge d'affaires. He returned to Mexico In 1SG3 to fight for his country against the French Invaders. After the President had given him a colonel's commission he was selected by Gen. Porflrlo Diaz as his chief of staff. Pres ident Juarez, after the war, made hlra minister to the United States, and he remained In that capacity for five years. From 1808 to 1872 Senor Romero was secretary of the Mxlcan treasury. Ills health falling In the latter year he gave up his public life to retire into the country and devote himself to agrl culture. He returned to the capital In 1877 and served again as secretary of the treasury and later as postmaster general. In 1882 he returned to the friendships he hnd made In America, envoy extraordinary from his govern ment. This post he held without a break, and even without absence, save for a short time, until bis death. Senor Romero was a prolific writer and published upward of fifty volumes. A short time before his death Senor Romero was promoted to be ambassa dor and would soon have presented his credentials as such. CHINESE BEGGAR CHIEFS. One of the Peculiar Features of So cial Life In China. One of the most peculiar and Inter esting figures in Chinese social life is the beggar chief; and no less peculiar and interesting, both as to methods and personal appearance, are the mem bers of the motley organization of men dicants over which he reigns abso lutely. He is required to pay a sum equiva lent to about $100 to every newly-ap pointed tung hwan prefect, as a hum ble testimonial of his allegiance to the high authority from whom his badge of office emanates, and when this require ment has been duly fulfilled he Is al lowed to exercise the prerogatives of his position without fear of Interfer ence on the part of the government offl cials In the district assigned to him Ills authority over the beggars is ab solutely unlimited, and they obey his orders without hesitation or sign of protest. The office Is hereditary, so long as the tribute Is paid; but the Immediate progeny of the Incumbent are debarred from the enjoyment of any literary degree. Why this condition Is exact ed Is not quite clear, but It Is certain that no descendant of a beggar chief has ever held a literary degree. How ever, the other privileges enjoyed by him are so attractive and the Income is so substantial that he probably does not worry much over this one priva tion. How does he secure his Income? from the merchants and tradespeople who know that unless they procure from the beeear chief on or . before New Year's day a "nolo twa," or "pass port of safety," their shops or "hongs" will be infested almost constantly by a horde of boisterous, Impudent, Impor tunate vagabonds, who will drive away customers and damage the stocks of goods without hindrance from the rag ular authorities of the district. Once a month, on a day suited to the convenience of the chief, he assembles all the beggars of hl district at the "Khichia Jan," or rendezvous, and dis tributes alms among them, each re celvlng a sum commensurate with his personal merits and obedience to or ders. Philadelphia Press. The harbor is on the southwest side. The island itself Is only a large bank of sand, with a lagoon In the center. This is some three miles in circumfer ence. There are ten buildings upon it, Including a lighthouse. There is also a railroad a mile and a quarter long, which is used for carrying guano to the warehouse. Among the many things of Interest which may be mentioned are, first, the birds, of which there are millions. Among the sea birds found there are thegoonle (white and black), the booby. the man-of-war hawk, the tropic bird, .the petrel, five or six species of tha ' mutton bird, the coyllo and other varieties. Among the strange things that may be told of on this little spot are tho land birds, found In no place on earth except on Lnysan Island. They nre tho wingless or walking birds, such as tho Laysnn canary, miller bird, love bird, and the Laysnn duck. Pacific Com. inerclal Advertiser. 3 - C,. o t i jirrr- A soft answer turneth away divorce. A woman's logic is far above a man's morals. With most women belief Is better than proof. The longest way home Is the shortest way to trouble. A husband doesn't know a good thing when he hasn't got It Husbands are necessary only once a month when the bills come In. It makes a woman shudder to think how happy she could have made you. The devil shows you the worst side first The rest makes it seem better. If women's good intentions were Jew els they wouldn't wear anything else. Love Is divided Into quarters one- quarter vanity, three-quarters Jealousy. Eve wanted to put on clothes merely to be able to have a hat to go with them. When a woman Is convicted she ac quits herself by saying she has been misjudged. Goodness wouldn't seem half so un interesting to women If it didn't wear such plain clothes. When a woman likes a man her Idea of having him happy Is not having him Delong to some other woman. Every married woman would like to see you happy with some other woman, and they'd scratch out her eyes If you were. Any woman who thinks about It will admit that Adam deserved to fall be cause fcc did not lucrease Eve's allow ance for pin money. roets often affect carelessness In their garments for the same reason that I I tramps travel la freight cars. . ' Why Ho Was Happy. Whistling In a public conveyance Is an offense against good manners, but the Chicago Journal reports an instance which really seems to have been excus able, as It was excused. The rest of the passengers were read lng the morning news, but one man gazed with unseeing eyes out of the window and whistled softly, the tune being broken now and then by a smile that crossed his bearded Hps. The young girl directly opposite thought him handsome, and ascribed bis preoccupied air to romantic rea sons. And the older woman who sat with her glanced sharply across from time to time, to see what the young man meant by rudely whistling in a public conveyance. But the looks of youth and age were alike lost on him, and after a while he turucd his face toward the light, and sang with such hearty untunefulness that his. specta cled neighbor felt bound to remon strute. "i.oung man," she said, "have you hired this car for your own use?" He started at her blankly a minute, and then flushed to tho roots of his hair. "Was was I singing?" he asked. "You were making a horrible noise," she replied. then he laughed a wholesome, hon est guffaw, and leaned forward confidentially. "The Joke's on me," he said. "To tell the truth, my baby has Just cut a tooth, and and I was thinking how cunning the little chap looked when he grinned." The war light faded In the woman's eyes, and a smile touched the corners of her mouth as she beamed on the young father and said with deep inter est: "Upper or under?" The Water Clock. The water clock, otherwise the clep sydra, seems, unless the Egyptologists find something fresh In that land of incessant discoveries from the most far mists of time, to have been the first scientific effort at noting the hours. A good many people talk glibly about the clepsydra who neither know Its precise construction nor the nation who have the credit of constructing It. That be longs to the Assyrian, and as far back as at least over 2,000 years ago the clepsydra was used In Nineveh under the sway of the second Sardanapalus. It was a brass vessel of cylindrical shape, holding several gallons of water, which could only emerge through one tiny hole In the side. Thus the trickling of the fluid marked a certain amount of time, and the water was emptied about half a dozen times per diem. In Nineveh there was one at the palace These were all filled by signal from a watchman on a' tower at the moment of sunrise, and each had an attendant. whose business It was to refill the clep sydra as soon as it was emptied, the fact being announced by criers, much as In the last century the watchmen drowsily shouted the hours at night throughout the streets of London. Some five centuries later aa anonymous genius made a great Improvement by Inserting toothed wheels, which, re volving, turned two hands on a dial In clock fashion, thus showing the prog ress of the time, which from one filling to emptying averaged two hours and a half. In this shape the clepsydra. which was then chiefly procurable In Egypt, became Introduced to various other nations, Including Rome, where It flourished with various splendid em bellishments until the end of the em pire. London Standard. In Queen Elizabeth's reign the ex penses of the British navy were about $30,000 a year, a contrast to the present huge sum of $125,000,000 spent annual ly on the fleet German university students have In creased In number from about 10,000 twenty-five years ago to 32,241 last year. The Increase Is out of proportion to the population. A model farm on the American plan and run with American machinery, stock and methods Is about to be es tablished by a Chinese mandarin who lives near Shanghai. The most costly piece of railway line In the world Is that between the Mon- slon House and Aldgate stations, In London, which required the expendi ture of close upon $10,000,000 a mile. After a litigation lasting fourteen years the will disposing of a San Fran cisco estate once worth $75,000 has Just been sustained and litigation sus pended, because the estate has been ex hausted In paying legal fees. An Ohio woman has patented a match box for pocket use, which Is opened at the bottom to load, the matches being pushed out one at a time by a button on the side of the safe, the head coming last and passing over a roughened surface to Ignite it. Mr. Godin, French minister of public works, In a circular addressed to rail way boards, urges the construction of a larger number of corridor carriages, especially third-class, so that by 1900 all fast trains going long distances may be exclusively composed of such carriages. The violin used by Mme. Camilla Ur- so, who Is giving concerts throughout the country, was made In Italy In 1727 by Joseph Guarnerlus Del Jesu. Mme. Urso purchased the Instrument In Lon don several years ago and has on sev eral occasions been offered $0,000 for It. She would not part with It for any price. According to a note In the Courrier de Paris, the Athenians and Greeks collectively Intend to exclude all bach elors from their parliament. The Idea seems to be that the bachelor has no stake In the commonwealth; If he is represented, thnt Is as much as he can ask; a representative he ought never to be, for whom does he represent ex cept himself? One of the most novel and radical de partures from ordinary methods of in troducing new Improvements In rail way management Is the formal an nouncement by an electric headlight company that It Is ready to "guarantee railroad companies from any loss from head-on collisions occurring at night where the locomotives are equipped with our headlights." The Ingenuity K the counterfeiters now appears to be chiefly devoted to the turning out of bogus copper and nickel coins, rather than those of larger denomination. According to the report of the United States treasurer for the last fiscal year, no less than 09,205 pieces of this character were detected last year, and they circulated chiefly In Boston, New York and Philadelphia. . Faneull Hall Is being made fireproof, but the process seems to the reverent people of Boston more like destruction. Havoc has apparently been worked In the Interior. Stairways have been torn down, floors ripped up and balconlus demolished, it seems, ruthlessly. But It has all been done with care and rev erence. Eacn piece of timber and each strip and board that Is to be used In the reconstruction has been tagged and stored in fireproof vaults. The founda tions have been strengthened and put In condition to withstand the ravages of time for ages, it Is hoped. An old Pennsylvania law has been singularly revived In Pittsburg. Fif teen years ago Frank Leslie Gould had a leg cut off by a car of the South Side Passenger Railway Company. He was then only S years old, but attain ed his majority recently, and now brings suit under an act of assembly approved March 17, 1713, which per mits a minor to bring an action for damages within six years after he Ins- comes 21 years old, in his own right and without reference to the time when the cause for action may have oc curred. As late as 1S81 the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania decided a case in which the act was declared to be good law. Young Gould claims $25,00C damages for the loss of his leg. Birds that Have No Wings. When one is a child and sees a bird the usual thing told hi in Is: "Get a lit tle salt and put It on the tall of the bird and you can catch him." Of course, the child and the others look at each other and think it a huge Joke. Although this may be the case In most parts of the earth, it Is not a Joke at Laysan Island. Laysan Island, situated, as It la logltude 171 degrees west latitude 25 degrees and 47 minutes north Is a low. long island, two miles by two and a half in width, with the highest altitude 20 feet above the sea. On first approach one sees large flocks of birds, which make a black streak In the air, above I taa island. This is surrounded by refj. J Nerves Live After Death. With an apparatus called the myo- phone Mr. D'Arsonval has proved that the nerves may, contrary to the old be lief, live many hours after the death of the body. This cannot long be made perceptible through the excitability of the muscles, but the sound In the In strument shows that a nerve may act on a muscle, In a state of electric ex citability, without producing more than simple molecular vibration. Old Mathematical Work. The Rhlnd manuscript deciphered some thirty years ago, a hieratic papy rus now in the British Museum, writ ten by an Egyptian priest Ahines. about 1700 B. C.. is the oldest intelligi ble mathematical work extant Anoth er and older roll on a mathematical sub ject exists, but has not jvt been ds chered, , t ,