Heppner Weekly Gazette Published Every Thursday. HEPPNER OREGON. Fashion note The favorite colors for 1899 are red, white and blue. Torto Rico appears to be distinctly the good little girl among the Spanish orphans. If Spain keeps up her present pace and direction she will soon be down to a size suitable to a boy king. When a young man demonstrates that he has money to burn, some young .woman always stands ready to furnish the match. i Adam Zad, of whom Rudyard Kip ling wrote, must not be confounded with the notorious Adam Zapple of an earlier period. ; If the men are not paying much at tention to the corset trust it may bo because it presses the other sex more closely than themselves. Bernhardt, It appears, has witnessed an eruption of Vesuvius. She Is suffi ciently free from professional Jealousy to admit it was a red-hot show. ! The Minister of War in Belgium has ordered 25,000 patriotic song books dis tributed in the army. He proposes to m.ke Belgium's foes sing small. i As soon as tho dismemberment of China can be accomplished without a war It may be said that the prospects for universal peace are really pretty fair. I There can le no doubt of the sin cerity of the tribute to Col. Waring of the New York overshoe dealer who said the Colonel's street cleaning cut his sales In half. i It Is presumed that England has placed that order with the shipbuild ers on the Clyde merely to help enforce the Czar's proposal for disarmament if the nations assent to it. I What those raclflc Islands need Is a dash of American speed and euergy. Think of a people who could waste the time of four syllables In pronouncing a six-lettered word like Hollo. 1 It was a modest Philadelphia maiden lady who In relating the story of a re cent shipwreck told her friends that seven sailors were brought ashore by the life-savers In the pantaloons buoy. It's proposed In Greece that no bache lors shall be allowed seats In the lower branch of the national congress. This may bo becauso by their tralnlug they have less regard for the speaker of the house. Spanish books will be admitted to Cuba free of duty for the next ten years. Let us hope that by that time the Cubans will be writing nnd print ing books of their own that will repre sent the beginnings of a new literature. Little Queen Wilhelmlna of Holland lias again informed her ministers that she proposes to have a voice In govern ing her dominions, nnd those staid Dutchmen are learning that a woman's voice Is one of the hardest things In the world to Ignore. ' With ndeqimto compensation and as sured permanency in the service men of talent would be Induced to specially train themselves for consular work and devote their lives to It. Where we now have consuls who regard their places as mere sinecures given them as re ward for political service or through the mediation of somebody with a "pull' at Washington, we should have men giving nil their energies to the work with as much enthusiasm as If It were their chosen profession as, In deed, it would bo under a proper sys tem. ' The powers, Russia Included, impel led to further nrmnment by the achievements of some one or two of them, are pursuing a circle from which they cannot safely step. Some day they will turn upon each other nnd col lide, and after exhaustion and ruin have made it Imperative for them to put every sound man at work they may consider a long truce or eveu an agreement to turn their wasted armies Into police. But to think they will do bo while In the flush and vigor of their quarrelsome military Btrength is to In dulge In a millennial dream. One of the model hotels for single men, built in New York City by D. O. Mills, and so managed that it promises to be self-supiMrtlng, Is nlno stories high and holds fifteen hundred and sixty sleeping rooms, all of which front the street or one of the open courts. It Is elcgautly finished and furnished, with every desirable Improvement and comfort; and Its patrons get bed and board, with the free use of library, rending rooms nnd baths, for fifty to seventy-five cents a day. There Is no bar, and a visitor gets the Impression that tho men nre clean, orderly and self-respecting. The Bchenio of Mr, Mills Includes three of these hotels, with the possibility of another for women. Here Is a story given In the New York Sun. Its pathos and Its exhibi tion of a soldier father's patriotic pride will appeal to feeling and to sympathy. .When, on the battle line, tidings came to Captain Capron of the regulars, an nouncing the death of his sou, killed at Las Cuaslmns, he went, when duty permitted, to where the body lay. The dead soldier's hut was placed over his face. Ills poncho covered his body. Only the feet, clad In mud-clotted shoes, were visible. White-faced, but sternly erect, the father stood, gazing upon the last of three brave sons. Then, gently lifting the hat from the face of the dead, and looking at It with tearful eyes, he said, with proud tenderness, "Well done, my boy!" Soon replacing the hat, he strode off, with soldierly erectness, to where his duty lay, to die, a few months later, of disease contract ed at Santiago. Professor Charles E. Tripler, of Brooklyn, continues to have unbounded Imlth iu the practical uses of liquefied Itlr as a substitute for steam and for high explosives, nis recent announce ment of his ability to manufacture liquid air cheaply and in large quantl ties is now further supplemented with the statement that he has Invented a practical motor, by means of which the new force can be applied to all kinds of machinery. In its revolution izing effects Professor Tripler's dis coveries with liquid air stand in close rivalry with Tesla's claims In regard to his electric oscillator. Both men have still to give practical proof of their amazing claims, but their experiments are profoundly Interesting for all that. Professor Tripler say3 his motor "re quires only the perfection of a few mechanical details" In order to make It run railway trains, steamships, and factories. As liquid air has been dem onstrated to possess from twenty to one hundred times the power of steam there can be no doubt as to its ability to supplant steam if once applied in a practical way. The few details which Mr. Tripler admits remalu to be solved may prove to be larger obstacles than he Imagines, but the enormous possi bilities so nearly within his reach cer tainly ought to spur him on to success if anything ban. If he can complete his motor It will assure a place for liquid air second In Importance only to electricity itself. The use of liquid air as a refrigerating agency and as an explosive, as well as Its application as a motive power for all sorts of machin ery, presents such a multitude of Im portant possibilities that the public will not fall to watch with keen Interest the Inventor's future progress. There are those who would have us believe that men have degenerated in heroism since the old days of chivalry. Not so. There are not only more men of heroic courage to-day than ever be fore in the history of the world, but the number Is greater In proportion to the population. Excluding our Deweys, Hobsons and other giants in warlike courage, there remain untold thou sands In the humble walks of life who require only the opportunity to demon strate the God-like heroism which Is In them. Every dally newspaper brings to its readers stories of heroism as grent, If not so momentous In their ef fects on history, as were ever Immor talized in song or story. Two incidents of recent occurrence will serve as ex amples. Only a few days ago a locomo tive fireman, sticking to his perilous post to the fatal climax, was pinned under his derailed locomotive In a rail way wreck In Pennsylvania. His lower limbs were securely held by the great weight above them and he was power less to free himself. The flames which enveloped the wreck drew gradually nearer him. Coolly he directed the ef forts of those who were frantically working to rescue him until It became evident that all effort was fruitless. Then, instead of breaking out In lam entations and bemoaning his fate, he calmly shook hands with those nearest him, bade them good-by, drew his coat over his face nnd waited the coming of death In Its most frightful manner. As tho flames reached him there was an Involuntary shudder of the helpless form, a calm "Good-by, boys!" and a hero had gone uncomplainingly to his reward. More recent nnd perhaps eve n more heroic Is the case of William Car ney, of Richmond, Ind. He was an engineer In the Richmond Rolling Mills. He was alone In the engine room, when he fell against a large gear wheel. One leg was torn completely from his body. Realizing that no one would come for hours and thnt disaster would certain ly result If the fires under the boilers were left burning, this huniblo hero dragged himself fully fifty feet to the boiler room, turned off the natural gas, and died. When the machinery stop ped other employes rushed to the en gine room to ascertain the trouble and found the dead hero with a smile of exultation on his pallid face. Death had been sweetened by the thought of duty well performed and perhaps other lives saved. Talk of the heroes of old! We have their superiors with us to-doy In every walk of life. MARKED WITH BRAND OF CAIN. Michigan Pulmlst Fays Hands of Mur derers Contain I'roof of Guilt. Does the murderer bear the mark of crime In his hand? A palmist of De troit, Mich., says yes, without equivo cation. It Is a peculiar, almost triangu lar mark lu the middle of the palm, con nected with what palmists coll the heart line. He took casts of the hands of Adolph Luetgert, convicted of mur dering his wife In Chicago, and of The odore Durrant, who was executed for the murder of two young women in San Francisco. In both of these he found the murderer's mark distinctly traced, and he has found It In other hands. He said: "Let the police authorities provide half a dozen criminals, one of whom shall be a convicted murderer only he must be guilty beyond all question and submit the hands for my scrutiny. I do not ask to see the faces and figures of these criminals; only their hands. I will pick out the murderer's haud from the lot" A ileal Knoeess. "That motor you are Interested In never worked, did It?" "Of course It worked," was the Indlg uant reply. "It never pulled any cars or moved any machinery. But It made money for Its owners, and that's more than most inventions do." It's a pity that death doesn't transfer Its affections from a shlulng mark to the mlulug shark. Sometimes marriage Is a failure, and j sometimes It Is only a ruu ou the bank. MARK IN MITRnKRKR'S HASH. HUNTING RABBITS. Sport Abounds When Snow I Light and Air Is Keen, A rabbit hunt Is a thing of yells and shouts and baying of hounds and wild excitement. About five hounds and a cur dog, four boys and a man and a light snow on the ground are the usual outfit. On the "crick" there are a lot of brush piles scattered about and Is any amount of cover and brush and hiding places for the game. The bounds are put In and In about five minutes there is a grand hullabaloo and a deep bay from one of the old hounds, fol lowed by the excited "yap" of the cur dog, and the game Is afoot. Very much afoot, for he Is covering the ground with long leaps and endeavoring to put as much space as possible between him and his pursuers. It Is not a very long chase. The rabbit turns, dodges and .finally nears where the man with the shotgun Is standing. There Is a sharp "bang" as the right-hand barrel Is dis charged and the rabbit keels over and Is grabbed by one of the boys just be fore the foremost hound reaches the spot. The forces now begin offensive opera tions. The cur dog is sent into the brush heaps and the boys climb up on top of the brush and thrash around, stamping on the limbs and making as much noise as possible. The cur squeezes around in the maze of brush and pretty soon the rabbits begin to move. The first gun Is fired by the boy with the musket, who hns stayed with the dogs. It is an awful roar and it misses the rabbit. But an ofliclous hound who happens to be close by grabs the rabbit and the boy slides to the ground and snatches It from the hound. Then he "hollers" triumphant ly, "I got him!" Then he gets on another pile of brush and starts to tramp around again. Meantime the hounds are nervously trying to make themselves small enough to get under the brush piles, but with poor success. It Is the cur idog's Inning and he Is making the most of It. Ills eyes are snapping with ex citement and he Is full of nervous ener gy. Every hair on his back bristles with eagerness and his chief ambition Is to catch just one rabbit all by him self. There are hurried slides under the brush, quick plunges and muffled barks, and the rabbits dodge the cur dog and dart out from under the brush heaps, only to be met by the accommo dating hounds or a blast from a mus ket, and If they escape all these there Is still the gantlet of the outer guard to pass. The hounds are Jumping around among the brush piles, and whenever they nip a rabbit as it Is driven out by the cur there Is a squeal and a muffled growl from the hound and then a yell from the nearest boy. But the hounds do not worry the rabbit after he Is dead; they drop him and wait until he Is transferred to somebody's pocket. After the clearing has been thorough ly overhauled there Is a counting up to see the result, and late In the after noon the party will be seen traveling slowly home, all of them, dogs, boys and man, thoroughly tired out. But over their shoulders and In their pock ets are rabbits, as many as they can carry, and they are nil serenely satis fied with the hunt. The boy whose musket went off accidentally does not say anything about It, for fear It m'ght be urged against his carrying a gun at future hunts. Rabbits adapt their habits to the lo cality In which they are raised, and this action on their part makes hunting them a question of geography, to a cer tain extent In some portions of tho country, where the ground is hilly, high and comparatively free from under brush, rabbits can only be successfully HUNTING hunted with ferrets. They feed mo-tly at night and lie In holes In the daytime, and the bnnter who traverses such a country with the best of rabbit dogs will have his labor for his pains. Neither with beagle nor greyhound will he be able to get a sight of a rabbit, unless be accidentally runs across a stray one, and that particular "bunny" will "hole up" as soon as the dogs get on his trail. The only way to get rabbits lu that kind of a couulry Is to go after them with a ferret. The ferret Is kept in a box until the grounds are reached and the hunters begin operations. It takes at least two persons to hunt rabbits with a ferret, if the thing Is done prop erly. One man to handle ami "groom" the ferret, and the other to shoot the rabbits. A dog Is sometimes taken along, but a dog Is a nuisance under such clrcumstauces. When a hole Is found, the box or bag Is opened and the ferret is coaxed out. lie comes creeping from his biding place, and apparently very reluctantly. When he Is urged to go down and Inter view the lodgers he goes most, unwill ingly. After a wait of perhaps three or four minutes the tip of his nose ap pears at the other entrance to the bur row, and thin a diplomatic dalliance commences with a view to getting the brute back Into the box again. Some times he can be Induced to get b u-k to his quarters without much trouble, but at other times he gets crafty, and the hunters will sit around for half an h ur or so trying to coax him to leave the hole. There are ferrets that will some times go down In a hole, grab a rabbit, gorge themselves with the prey, and then deliberately lie down and go to sleep, some six or eight feet below the surface. If there la a rabbit In the bole when HON. NELSON DING LEY. The death of Nelson Dingley, Jr., father of the present tariff law, ex-Governor of Maine and Congressman since 1881, removes a prominent man from the political life of the nation. Nelson Dingley, Jr., was born in Durham, Me., in 1832. At an early age he began school teaching, meantime preparing himself for college. In 1851 he entered Watcrville College, subsequently becoming a student at Dart mouth, from which he graduated in 1855. He then studied law, but instead' of taking up the active practice of his profession he entered journalism, becoming the owner and editor of the Lewiston Journal. In 181, 'G2, '63 he represented Auburn in the State Legislature, being Speaker in 18(!3. In that year he removed to Lewiston and was again sent to the Legislature. In 1804 he was again Speaker of that body and declined the honor in two subsequent years. In 1873 Mr. Ding ley was elected Governor and was re-elected the following year. In 1881 he wot sent to Congress to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of William P. Frye and he had been continuously In that body since that time. He was a most influential member in the lower house, being latterly chairman of the Ways and Means Committee and floor leader of the Republicans. His tariff bill, to which as chairman of the Ways and Means Committee' he gave his name, lent him addi tional fame. a ferret Is put In, the rabbit bolts out of the place In a hurry. He Is In deadly fear of this creeping, rat-like little beast, nnd he conies out with a bound, and then the man with the gun usually bowls him over. Sometimes there are two or three rabbits in one hole, and the hunter may got rattled, and score clean misses. But the rabbits only scurry off to some other burrow, there to be routed out again and shot at. The rabbit gets out of the hole so quickly that It Is almost impossible to see him come. He is In the air the first you see of him, and ho Is away in an Instant. Some stretches of country are rid dled with these holes, and fifteen or twenty rabbits may be gotten In a day. Tie rabbits In this kind of ground are swift of foot, and usually In the fall and w'nter very fat. There is a great deal of uncertainty about this kind of hunting, for sometimes there have been other hunters there before, and every hole drawn is a blank. It is splendid e::erclse, though; the climbing up and down the steep hillsides and walking through the woods In crisp weather brings many sets of muscles Into play, am1 the air is chuck full of ozone. Advantages of the Nicaragua Canal. Capt. Crowiiisbiekl, writing In the Century of the "Advantages of the Ni caragua Canal," summarizes some of RABBITS. them In this wise: When the divide be tween the Atlantic and the Pacific Is cut through part of the waters of the lake, which for untold ages have flow ed enst to the Cnrlbbeuu Sea, will flow west to the Pacific. Lake Nicaragua, covering as it docs nearly three thou sand square miles, becomes not only a part of the water route Itself, but a grand reservoir located exactly where it Is most needed at the summit level. Thus It will be seen that while nature has not quite opened through Nicar agua a complete water route to the Tn citlc, she has come very near to It. In fact, of all the routes for an lutcr oceaulc canal that Lave received con sideration, It must be admitted that so much has already been accomplished by nature toward this end that the work which remains for man to do will be far less than by any other route. Queer Name for Women. The wives of some of the Indian braves have names as odd and often as droll as their husbands. They seem to have cognomens of their own, too, and not to take those of their spouses only. Some of the actual names given In a census of the family of the scouts at one place Include Mrs, Short Nose, who was before her marriage Miss Piping Woman; Mrs. Big.Uead, formerly Miss Short Face; Mrs. Nlbbs, formerly Miss Voting Bear; Mrs. White Crow, form erly Miss Crook ripe; Mrs. Howling Water, formerly Miss Crow Woman; also Mrs.. Sweet Water, Miss Walk High, daughter of Mr. White Clf, and Miss Osage, daughter of MrN Hard Case. An hour-glass Is the kind some men prefer. Cold weather contracts Ice bill and expands coal bills. WORLD'S STRANGEST BRIDGE It Is Buitt of Vine Over the Omo Kiver in Abyssinia. Many and strange were the things seen by the French expedition of Bon valot de Bonchamps In Africa, but nothing stranger than the bridge of vines over the Omo River, In Abyssinia, which is pictured In "L'lllustration" A MARVELOUS BItlDOE. from a photograph taken by a member of the party. In most parts of Africa bridges are undreamed of; big rivers nre crossed by rafts and little ones forded. But In the mountains of Abys sinia the torrents that pour down to Join the Nile are not so lightly stem med. Over one of these the Abysslnl aus, who have something like a settled country and stable government, have thrown the bridge. Unlike the Brooklyn brldje or the suspension bridge at Nl agara, these Abyssinian engineers had no cables, no scientific bands of steel. Instead they had only nature's force. It Is built upon the suspension plan, hung from big cables made of twisted creepers; from these depend the up rights bearing the floor supports. The roadway is very narrow, for no one ever travels across the hills except with caravans of porters bearing trade gods. The skill with which tho bridge Is built Is something marvelous. The Bonvalot de Bonchamps party set out from Djibouti, on the Red Sea, and traveled across the Somali desert and the Abyssinian hills to Join Marchand at Fashoda, which he reached from the west coast. Thus they planned to throw a strip of French soil right across the dark continent It reached the head waters of the Sobat and went boating merrily down the river; but meanwhile the British gunboats reach ed the junction of the Sobnt with tho White Nile and the expedition Is now tolling back to Djibouti. The road go ing out Is a good deal longer than It was going In. Mortuary ilellc. Mrs. Helen Struthers Dunn, of No. 723 Tine street, Philadelphia, is the owner of a curious relic, which Is noth ing less than a locket made from the cottin of George Washington. It came to Mrs. Dunn through her father, John Struthers, who gave to the United States the sarcophagus In which Wash ington's body now rests. When the coffin containing the body of the great American was being removed to Mount Vernon a little piece of It was chipped off, polished, then set in gold and fash ioned Into the strange ornament, which is Itself coffin shaped. Instead of a name-plate there Is a little piece of glass, and beneath this rests a lock of hair said to be taken from the head of the famous revolutionary leader. This relic and tho trowel that was nsed to cement the sarcophagus lie side by tide In Mrs. Dunn'o treasure drawer. After looking at her troubles up one way and down the other, a woman de cides there Is no other thing to do but put them on her shoulders, and trudge along. A man, however, will put them In a bucket and kick them over. Which ta the better way I OUEL WITH SNAKES IN INDIA. Kival Hindoo Serpent Charmers in a Blooil-Curdl nil r'ceue. , On the morrow (which was the third day) there was a long delay; the pro logue was spun out and out. Each of the masters was in a very keen anxiety as to the snake the other had been re serving for the great effort. At last Souter came to the end of his patience, and bade them peremptorily play or pay. Thereupon Anant Ram set a small cloth on the ground very geutly, and called loudly to have the first go. The "Lord of Devils" did not stand upon the order of his going, agreed on the instant; and his two pupils turned up a large basket in the middle of the ring, and shook out of It about nlue feet of that poisonous constrictor, the great hamadryad, or king cobra. It is the only snake In India that attacks of It self at all times. Its fierceness nnd courage are only equaled by the bright ness of its colorings and the strength of Its colls. It can poison as mortally and strangle as surely as any snake in the world. The Egyptian cerastes at tacks and bites; the fer-de-Iance of St. Lucia drops from the tree, vicious nnd fatal, on the horseman. But they are not constrictors. The great hamadryad rears Its green length of active, two fold, ferocious death In unparalleled dreadfulness. Anant Ram threw up his arms over his head as tho double horror rushed hissing at him; In a breath Its coils were around him, its fangs tearing his arms. He flung himself down at the pain; and, put about by this sudden act, the snnke stopped biting a moment to tighten Its colls. Then It reared a quarter of Its body above his head, and as quickly as it could bend and strike bit him horribly in the neck under the left ear. On the instant it Jerked out Its fangs with a shrill whistle, and fell all slack about hi in; he had bitten clean through Its back, and was tearing its body asunder with frenzied hnnds. He rose bleeding, dusty, wild-eyed, and ghastly; staggered to the cloth that hid his snake and yelled: "Quick! to the trial! All three of you! Quick!" The "Lord of Devils" and bis pupils hustled round him; he whipped away the cloth, and bared to their eyes a lit tle, crooked, gray-brown stick. They stared at It, they stared at one another, and slowly knowledge came to them. They knew how Anant Ram had con quered the hamadryad; that he had won the devils to fight for him. They moved around the little stick, with out stretched, twitching hands, their star tling eyes glued to it, striving to beat down their dread, to force themselves to touch It, to awake It to malignant life. Slowly their dread mastered them; their faces grew gray and then green; one man gave back a step, then anoth er; one by one they tore away their I eyes from the dormant horror; glared at one nuother In the agony of utter fear; turned with one accord,, and fled fled as men flee with the fear of death at their backs, and the devils of the lone night and the waste on their heels. But Anant Bam lay, heedless of the screaming Joy of the victorious Panjab, sucking the blood of the dead hamadryad for dear life, while his pu pils, In fevered haste, plied him with remedy on remedy. In the confusion Souter secured yet more material to make surer his discoveries, and to ren der this mystery of the East a working medicine against the terror of the ser pent. Anant Ram came out of It alive, nnd rich; but he swears that in win ning his great flght he lost the secret of ages. He dreads Souter as he dreads nothing else; and to him alone will he reveal the uiysterles of his craft Pall Mall Magazine. NIGHT IN THE STORM. Perilous Experience Upon the Open I rairle in the West. George F. Ryxton gives, In "Adven tures lu the Rocky Mountains," a thrill ing description of n night spent on the open prairie in a blizzard. The advent of the storm was sudden and terrible. Black, threatening clouds descended until they touched the earth; a hollow murmur swept through the bottom, but not a branch stirred lu the wind; the. naked cottonwoods stood like ghosts. I knew what was coming, and turned roy horse toward the timber two miles distant. Before we had covered half the distance the tempest broke upon us. The clouds opened and drove In our faces a storm of freezing sleet, which froze upon us as It fell. The first squall of wind carried away my cap, and the enormous hailstones, beating on my head and face, almost stunned uie. My hunting shirt was soaked in an Instant and as quickly frozen hard, and my horse was a mass of Icicles. To ride was Impossible, and I Jumped off and covered my head with the saddle blanket. The horse and the following mules turned their sterns to the wind, and made for the open prairie. I was un able to drive them to the shelter of the timber. Ferfeet darkness soou set In. Still the animals kept on, and I followed or rather was blown after them. My blan ket, frozen stiff, required all the strength of my numbed fingers to prevent Its be ing blown away. In an incredibly short time two feet of snow covered the bare prairie, and through this wo floun dered on til we could go no farther. The animals stopped, huddled togeth er, nnd would not move. Exhausted, I sank down, and covering my head with the blanket crouched like a ball In the snow, expecting certain death. The wind roared over the prairie, driving the snow before It, burying me nnd the animals. For hours I reinalued with my head on my knees, with the snow pressing like a weight of lead upon it At short Intervals the mules would groan aloud nnd fall upon the snow, and then again struggle on their legs. All night long the piercing howl of the wolves was borne upon the wind. I was just sinking Into a stupor when i the mules began to snort and shake themselves. I roused up, but was In total darkness, buried under the snow. I thrust out my arm, and through the opening saw the stars shlnlug la the sky. ' The storm had ceased. I tried to stand, but fell forward In the snow. Finally I freed myself, man aged to mount my horse, and reached the camp on the Arkansas that even ing, half dead with cold and hunger. Egyptian Dislike of the French, The Frenchman In Egypt Is an nn ple&Mnt person from the native point of view. French artists, wandering from place to place In search of sub jects for their paintings, carry with tbem, in addition to their artistic para phernalia, their own peculiar notions of civilization. The Arab Shlekh, who with dignified kindness offers to the perfect stranger the most frank and generous hospitality, Is treated us dirt of stvlliznliou. The Arab sheik, who passtng along the village street, with only her lustrous eyes visible above her flowing veil, is favored with a stare the like of which cannot be conceived by an American man who has never left his own chivalrous country. The little children of five or six years, who come and stare at the wonderful stranger, and who get In bis way, are whacked with the Frenchman's stick. The dogs of the native villages, which for protection are trained to sleep In the Anytime nnd keep awake In the night, know them, and hate them. At intervals through the night these dogs bark and howl in a desultory fashion, calling to their canine friends and rela tives in other little villages a mile or two away. If the dogs fall asleep the Arabs stir and awaken In the unaccus tomed silence. Then they think their dogs cannot be keeping a proper look out, and, getting up, they arouse them, and the monotonous ynp-yap-yapplng Is resumed. The turning back of the waters of the Red Sea by a strong wind, as told In Exodus, was repeated last, spring In presence of Major Tullock, who has re ported the facts to the British Govern ment. A wind arose so violent that it drove all the waters buck, leaving all the sailing vessels stranded on the sandy bed of the sea. Electric power derived from tho wa terfalls of Tivoll, which constitute one of the most famous gems of Italian scenery, Is now transmitted about Of ten miles across the Campagna to Illu minate Rome and to drive the tram cars, whose presence in the streets of the Eternal City Is so striking a re minder of the universality of modern practical science. Some plants stow away starchy ma terial In their leaves, seeds or roots foi future use. The slow chemical com bination of this Substance with oxygen Is a form of combustion, and produces warmth. It is by this means that the tiny Alpine flower is able to melt a passage for itself up through the Ice, and find Its way to liberty and sun shine. In Bavaria an effort has been made to introduce into commerce what may be termed solidified petroleum. Soda lye, fat and petroleum are heated to gether for an hour, and give a soap like product, which solidifies on cool ing. Sawdust or other combustible may be mixed with the material, and it can be made into bricks for fuel. It would give a very smoky flame. Among the most wondertul monsters of the Age of Reptiles was tho ichthyo saurus, or "fish-lizard." Last summer a very perfect specimen was uncovered in a quarry at Stockton, in Warwick shire, England. The creature is twenty feet in length, Its head alone being almost four feet long. The Ichthyo saurus possessed gigantic eyes, whose lenses could be focused at will for dif ferent distances. It hunted Its prey la the sea. An Instrument has been made In Eng land to be sent to Japan. Its use Is to measure the blow of a wave. A similar apparatus was used to measure the wave-blow off the Skerryvore Rock, Scotland. There the waves sweep in from the wide Atlantic. In summer a force of over COO pounds to the square foot was recorded. In winter as high as a ton to the square foot was attained. This gives an Idea with what ships, lighthouses and other similar struc tures have to contend. On the Oth of last September an im mense sunspot which, with its attend ant smaller spots, had unexpectedly made its appearance more than a week before, crossed the central meridian of the sun's disk, and that same night magnificent displays of the aurora bo realis were seen. At the same time magnetic needles were disturbed. This is one of the most striking instances In recent years of the connection between spots on the sun and magnetic disturb ances on the earth. While the great spot was crossing tho sun, uncommon ly warm weather for the season was experienced on both sides of the Atlan tic, and some have suggested that this, too, was a phenomenon connected di rectly with the solar disturbance. One on the Rector. The little daughter of a local clergy man has reached the ago where big words are apt to floor her, and where she Is very sensitive to the remarks of an older brother. Not long ago she came running In to her father. "Papa, papa, George called me names." "Why, what did Georgle say?" "Oh," said the little girl with a strong expression of disgust, "he said I practiced what I preached. I don't do IV" "Well, my child, I " "But 1 don't, do I, papa? I don't any more than you do, do IV" And then the rector choked up. But he took a half hour from his sermon and explained the meaning of the ob noxious expression to the best of bis ability.-Cleveland Plain Dealer. Unaccountable. Amorg the several unaccountable things which one sees in Russia, one Is struck forcibly with the differences In shop signs In the large cities. It ap pears that the Jews are made to write their names out in full, giving the Jew ish form of their given names Instead of those actually in use by them, while the signs of the Gentiles bear only the Initials. There Is one thing about a boiling piece of meat there Is always enough of It There Is never enough steak. Marriage will change a woman'a name, but It seldom alters her nature, m - i