WALLOWA CHIEFTAIN. l:m SE KOE, Publisher. ENTERPRISE OREGON. "Ilriw i r.n snoring I- cured?" nk cniuemjMirary. Laudanum. A mar. s ingi-ijui:y . con of half tin- tr.iitilr- i; -n't get him L-nfs bill. itl'O. If we would see ourselves n others rv u all oculist would have to wn-k overtime. 1: i said that the czar is afflicted with the b)ti.s. perhaps through fear if the IiP!. The hank at Monte Carlo serves to show tiiHt a fool continues to he lom (very minute Even In the international perspective the sioinh hat has become great or than the crowned h ail. The success of a hi.uk agent proves that the truth isn't so mighty and doesn't always prevail. All the foreign nations are cuddling up to us. That is all right. We are friendly with all hut not too thick with BIlT. The average woman's husband sel dom comes ui) to her ideal; the ideal In most cases has to come down to the husband. Inn-tor Nichols list shows In several places that if one can't buy his way Into the 'real smart set" he may still marry into It. Now we know why the Sultan of Turkey Is behind in his running ex pns."T. He has been investing in a diauioud-stu.Ided automobile Cuba starts into self-government with the comforting knowledge that there is a soft place to fall if the ex periment proves unsatisfactory. Mrs. Astor is generally looked upon as the supreme leader In American so ciety. Hut she isn't happy. She''s a grandmother, and all the world knows It, Bachelors need not point with pride to one of th-ir number who died at the age of lo-j. He might have lived i year longer had he been a married man. It is announced now that the Kaiser would like to come to the United States, and that he can't come now, and that he may come later. Welcome, anv time, Willie: Great men often boast of the time when they worked for 'A cents a day and their hoard, but no woman who is up ever refers to the time when she was somebody'B hired girl. The Chicago Iiaily News says there are 13".ii people on the earth who do not know what soap is. There are hundreds of small boys on whom the knowledge has to be forced. The younc man s life was saved by a package of love letters which he car ried in his pocket. The bullet which was Intended for him struck the letters, melted, and dropped harmlessly into his left shoe. A French nventor has produced a new voting machine which is said to ecure secrecy and accuracy. It may be that In time enough safeguards can be thrown around the ballot to keep human nature absolutely honest. But It is doubtful. The gifts made during loi to about one hundred and fifty institutions of learning in this country aggregated more than eighty-one million dollars. It is a vast, impressive sum less, to be sure, than the value of our corn or wheat or cotton production, but likely to raise an even more valuable crop. ' Although the neck of land which con nects North and South America is far from being a desirable place of resi dence, politically it is one of the most Important morsels of territory on the globe. Next to being the first'to climb the North Pole. Uncle Samuel craves no greater boon than to build and manage an isthmian canal, be It called Panama or Nicaragua. Judge Taft's reient report will go a long wav toward settling the question as to whether or not the climate of the Philippines is healthy. He says that for a tropical climate It is. The pres ence of lepers, the apiearance of bu bonic plague in .Manila and some other places, and the fact that siimllpox pre vails in some of the provinces he ad mits; but careful medical Inspection and stringent sanitary measures are re ducing all these (lungers. The large number of cases of insanity among American soldiers, which has been re ported in the paiers. Judge Taft says frankly Is in no way the fault of the climate, but is due solely to the drink ing of vino, a native liquor which often contains as much as seventeen per cent of fusil oil. The use of this drink has no been prohibited. Municipal mismanagement seems to reach a climax when jiolitieul consider ations dictate appointment to oBices requiring ter.-bnir.-al skill, those of city engineers and el.-ctricians. for instance. A change in political control in a cer ta'f1 v Vi pit-v recently brought about tV n- f an exl",rt fr0IU the pusi 1 ' long and efficiently held. to snoilsmen hud their will; accounts the new boss had ! rot hn sbl to find In h! own faction ! n m.'in who dared to take the plane. If 1 mi. I. incident ended by leaving on in i o-r.!!ii bureau without a IipshI. the i i:tiiiri..t; would be j,:li enough; but t!ire j. :,!;, the greater danger that aii ii,. oi:iri-tt'iit peron will be aptx:nt ed j'.::.! t;.:it The te. htiir-.il nervine of the city will l-ei-orup merely one of the eocn , il tin- political machine. Yet surely It ought to dear to the most hardened partisan that tliere is -no polities in science." j,i,d that aliillty should he the only test fur appointment to and con tinuance in positions that call for spe cial training. Wh.it the "rules of the game" are to sports ami pastimes, the "rules of pro cedure." or of parliamentary practice, are j.. the deliberation of a legislative 1h!v. In any kind of contest strength and zeal may go down in defeat lefore sui.er.or skill In taking advantage of the niies. It often happens in the fierce political encounters In Congress. A deliberative body must have rules, even though in oi-ration they some times seem to defeat the ends of legis lation. The study always is to formu late su.-h codes of parliamentary law as v, ill be most nearly perfect in their application. Tile House of Ilepresenta tives at the beginning of a new Con gress frequently has a vigorous discus sion of the rules. This year there was an attempt in the caucus of Republican menders to secure certain modifica tions of the old code, which was de feated. Then the Democrats tried on the floor to accomplish the same result, but without success. The old code stands. Upon the rules of any delibera tive ImmIv depends the power of the minority party, and especially the op portunity of the individual member of either majority or minority. In the House the inemtrshlp iB so large that little power of initiative Is left to the individual member; the leaders of the majority party, whichever it happens, to be. hold the conduct of affairs in a tirm grasp. The Senate, being a smaller body, allows unlimited debate; minori ty menitwrs art thus able sometimes to accomplish by indirection what they could not do on a square vote. Both elements are needed In lawmaking the firm hand of the majority, and de ference to Individual rights. Inas much as every measure must pass both houses of Congress, a fair balance usu ally, results. When Americans are studying trade fronts this country. Suicide is increas - lug. A total of T.240 persons killed themselves In the year recently closed. The tieures are as near official as it is possible to make them. Of this total .N were males and l,3lr females, The causes are well worth studying I lespondeiicy leads the list with ..!M victims. Iiespotideney. in many cases, is the penalty of ambition, and is a , species of insanity. It is closely asso ciated with the growing business of a : commercial nation. It touches the lives of the men who would be rich and pow-', erful and live at a rate of a mile a ; minute. They neither eat. work nor j sleep properly. They burn the candle at both ends. Every year they want to do more than they did last year. Many can stand the pace for a considerable length of time. Others can't. They worry, they brood, and then they join the "desixjiidency list." Because of do mestic Infelicity there were 541 sui cides. Liquor drove 439 to self-inflicted deaths; business losses. 07; disappoint ed love. 23; III health. 618; insanity, 074; unknown. 1,043. Mob law is al ways bad law, and mob law Is increas ing. In 1901 there were 118 legal exe cutions, 13.") lynchings and 7.652 mur ders lu the United States. Those are bad figures. They show how much of barbarism there Is in mankind. The excuse of the average mob for murder ing a murderer is that it desires to ui.me justice sjieeuy ana sure. It re- fuses to trust to the courts, with their I technicalities and delays. It acts while ! passion is hot and tumultuous while ! (,.,. to, .....1 ,.111-1,,.. .1... ll..ln. the neotde of this great tntion it is 'a' ',T "V"". of any other malady. The infectious priu tin people oi mis treat u.mou, it is , anij women entered them, and U has MnU. ri.i i A: i . J , A well to look at other statistics and re- j been discovered that the intelligent worn- j pocks Vnd in : the crusts reVultm from siu&c- until o uiwuiriiiuuB uiuuirui viur an uianvs a wiser lliuintrT. a ueiier (WQ)r i the desire for revenge still fills human 1 ' a i"U)kee allor" tells in his reminis hearts. The remedies are education and i cence8- entitled "On Many Seas," the courts that, bv their conduct are ! etor of h'8 Introduction to marine dis- guarantee of Integrity. When the peo- i pie know that Justice is sure and cer tain, surely the infliction of the death penalty will be left to the law. Self restraint and slowness to anger should be taught in every school In the laud. It is a doctrine that should be instilled in childish minds. If the feeling that makes men stain their hands with blood is to be educated out of human beings. It will have tu start with the children, and be so thoroughly im pressed uikiii them that It will become a part of their lives. A lest. "Yes," said the grizzled bachelor, "he Is married. I don't remember her name, and it doesn't matter much, but she's got such a temper that when he comes home a littli later than common he softly opens the diwr and flings his hat Insid. If it doesn't come flyinc i out in three minutes he goes In; If it iiig the splash, looked to see what had does, he slips off downtown and sta. j caused it. iJown he came on the main all night. It costs him something en. ! deck, and nsked me wh hail thrn-n tra for Hats, but saves considerable wear and tear of his feelings. Oh. yes,' he is married:" Philadelphia North American. Turkish Language. The Turkish language is said by scholars to be the softest and most musical language of modem times, be ing better adapted to the purpose of musical notation and recitative than even the Italian. In a town of less than 5.CXrf people. It will still be found that the proper thing for dessert for a company tea ! Floating Island. fads in Schools a Necessity. Acquisition o f i knnwi-.ife t the j popular definition j of education. The j new education doe ; Dot ignore the value of knowledge i by any means, but I it doe shift the i empha:. Our at- j titude toward choo! fads will be determined by our i definition of ednca- 1 tion. If the "three ' 1. j arr tiiv iiiiet end of education, the fa.ls are a waste of time. If education j mental and spiritual power, as the bet educator ar now saying, the fads are J indispensable. A child reared on arithmetic, old-fash-! ioned geography and the ABC method ; of education is apt to be mentally starv- ' ed and lean. I 'rawing, color work, "mud i pies," music, manual training and cou- structive work, however simple, seize the innermost interest of the child. That there are educational dangers Trom fads is not denied. First, because in the hands cf impulsive educational re- ! would le highly advantageous. I pre formers the fad is likely to be overdone. ! 8Um" ,he employe at the penitentiary tor an ideal system it requires ideal! leacning. iiur normal school course ought to be three or even four years, stead of two. j Children who must be at work at 12 years old have no time for fads. I-evel the conditions up to the ideal standards I or education. Any fight against fads should be a fight, not for their abolition, but for their proper modification and for their increased effectiveness in public education. p.. A. WHITE. D. D. Progress of Women. W e do not assume that all women desire the ballot. All women do not desire any one good thing. There are some who desire Ho good thing at all. There are others who are not seeking the very best in any re ' life. If we had waited for a lutiou majority of the women of our nation to demand higher education, when do you suppose the doors of our colleges would have been opened to them? Lore results have been predicted at ev- V , L V ; n rst enjoyed higher education the cry : went out that the home would be de , maker and a much more desirable com- ! Pamoa. friend and wife than a woman ! I ;hose n';u"l horizon is narrowed by ; ' clrouu of emb'd and the min- j i whpn eoeducatinn wa. .--t m.J i thnnr h, w.i.i 11 honors, hut soon they learned their mis " - v . u...... .i . . , lire take. That experience gave to men a better opinion of woman's intellectual ability. The larger intellectual powers of women and the greater financial inde pendence of women have tended to ele vate the home. There is nothing in lib erty which can harm either man or wom an; there is nothing in justice which can work against the best gwd of humanity. ANNA HOWAIU) SHAW. Wo-k that Convicts Might Do. The roads of the State need j ushered in with a chill, this "being follow improving. I nder proper con- ! ed by high fever, great weakness, voniit- uu.j un.rv.uun me convicts cuuiu uo me worn, is there any reason why they should not be so employed .' The men must be housed, fed and clothed, all of W. k "I" In0ney ,Ch mU8t 66 supplied by the taxpayers. Is there any more effective way of making returns to the taxpayers than in the permanent im provement of the public roads? FIRST LESSONS. Tonng Bailor Forcibly Taught Econo my and Hespect for Superior. The first two lessons on board ship are, perhaps, obedience and the learn- ' lag to keep things "shipshape." In ac- con,l)U8t"nS latter task, there must be no wu8te- Economy is as requisite as order' A 'Titer wuo cailg himself ciP1Ine- He sa's My first Job was to scrub the brass work about the wheel and screw-steering. The steamer being new, there was a deal of work to do about the rigging, which had stretched all out of shape on the passage from Fairhaven to New York. On this, my first day. they had been setting up the lower rigging, and the decks were very much littered, when the mate ordered me to "sweep up." First. I went round and gathered up a handful of shakings," that is. odds and ends of rope yarns, and with them a brand-new piece of inch-and-a-half nianllla roiie. about six or seven feet long, which had been cut off for some purpose. Supposing this to be of no vulue where there was such an abund ance of rope of all sorts, I carelessly threw it overboard The mate was on the nam and hear. the piece of rojie overboard. "1 did," said I; and then I got a lec ture on economy so emphatic, and so punctuated with abusive epithets, that I have never forgotten It. He told me I was the moat useless fool he had ever come across, in a long and varied career, and threatened to throw me overboard after the rope. When the squall was at Its height, the captain came over the gangway. "What's the matter, Mr. Johnson ?" he asked. "Oh. this hoy's made a good begin ning!" was the scornful reply. "Why, what has he doner From the standpoint of the convict, would it not be better morally and phy sically to employ them out of doors than within penitentiary walls, and in hardy occupations rather than thou mora or less sedentary? By dividing them into squads of from ten to twenty men each the danger of conspiracies and the evils incident to wholesale and miscellaneous herdins would be lessened. In the absence of a legislative appro priation providing for a system of State roads, details of convicts might lie made to counties under a lease system, the counties bidding for the labor, as private parties do now. It seems to me the plan could be worked out in all details and " opposed to this plan because it would mean more hard work for them ami increased responsibility, but if our legislators and executive want to distin guish themselves it seems to me that here is a magnificent opportunitv. F. BENJAMIN. Prevalence of Smallpox. That smallpox is alarmingly preva- j lent iu many States must be evident to all who read the newspapers. Sta tistics show that during the year 1H01 the number of cases in the mid dle West increased over '.h.i per cent, the plague becom ing more widely spread than at any time since the great ; seven years' pandemic of 1STJ to Little is known of the first cause of j this malignant disease, but nowadays it occurs only by the infection being con- j veyed from one person to another. Small- pox contagion exceeds in virulence that thsIP (imirvoflttnn an.l i.e-An 1.1.. tainej in aI1 the nmd of tu dv ' over, it pervades the emanations from the person, so it may be contracted without ,Ptual C0Dtact witn tUe 0Qp iufecte,, T.h.e,Tla,.i.le "ntaglnrp may extend to a : US"K""! "ance. it having been I known to cross a stream of water, nearly half a mile wide, and when attached to articles of clothing, merchandise, paper money, etc.. it is very energetic and per sistent. The disease is probably more in tensely contagious during the' vesicular stage of eruption, but it is communicable at all periods of its course. It may also be carried from one person to another without the person who carries it himself suffering from an attack. The period of incubation is usually thir teen days, although in rare cases the time ni.iv lie shorter Tlla , ing. severe headache and pain in the . back Then the little ruH ur, . ; pears, first upon the face and head and j a few hours later upon the body Much ..wall,! mn.. u at and doubtless many persons sho ing various similar symptoms have been needlessly exposed to contagion by being hurried away to isolation hospitals by Ignorant health authorities. Smallpox is "Only thrown half a coll of new rope overboard so far. I don't know what he'll do before he gets the decks cleared up." "I did not," said I, coming forward. "I only threw over a little piece. I didn't suppose It was good for any thing, or I wouldn't have done It." The mate looked daggers at me. and the captain said, so sternly that I never forgot It: "Let me tell you something, boy. Never contradict an officer; never speak uuless you are spoken to. and always say 'sir' to your superiors or you'll get Into trouble." Those were my lessons two In one day. THE OLDEST IRONMASTER. Christopher Zur, One of Pittsburg's Kemarkable Citizens. Had Christ ipher Zug. the oldest Iron manufacturer in the United States, not been stricken with blindness four years ago. It is believed that h e would have rounded the century mark. As it was, he died re cently, at the age of 95. His son, now 70. continues their business, which is one of the niost prosperous in the vlcluity of Pittsburg. Zug was an eccen CllliJSTOl'HKB ZUG. tric individual. Born on a farm, he located In Pittsburg in early youth and drove an expressman's cart on the national pike. In 1840 he formed a partnership with some other Pittsburg er and engaged In the iron business the pioneer of that Industry which has given the Smoky City Its great wealth and population. The plant Is still in operation, having earned a fortune for several persons beside Zug. The lat ter was proud of the fact that his com pany never Joined a combine. Though he hnd for twenty years been out of active business, not a move was made by his concern without his advice and 'MM- - a MTivn-.i-rpit rare disease, ani in tin ordinary ciur of hi. medical practice - ..i....: ; v..,u.t.l er. urn our ii.s.ciau iu a " come in contact with a genuine case. Thi, bem, true, whatever the arera name b-t doctor maT know regardinc this dread . ' nialadT has been learned from book. orT mother! New Testament as a me imparted by some medical college instrue-1 uiorlal of the rescue. X'-'-as all. The' tor who himself, perhaps, has no kno.vl- j circumstances werj"' -..unry. A tnou edge gained from actual experience inland such may occur every year. Psy. its treatment. Under such circumstances j tuologically. however, there are points it is not surprising that mistakes in diag- , pf interest which arise principally from Dosis are frequent. Even health officials : act tnat J rtnjember all that Q in lare cities who see cases of the d.s- ! of ease frequently, ire at times unable m . , ' . , It. incipiencv or earlv stages to distin- i may have been four or five minutes, guish it from measles' or from the erup- j but which appeared to be as many tion that often occurs as a result of large : hours. and repeated doses of medicines that are j Almost Immediately I entered the sometimes taken by persons without the knowledge of the physician. That smallpox is a loathsome disease all admit, aud that vaccination is almost 1, .1 a certain preventive is verv generally ad- mined by medical men and medical an- thorities. To be sure, not every one who has been vaccinated is immune, neither is every one who has had an attack of the disease. Tb writer personally knew a gentleman who died from smallpox who had been twice severely atHieted with the disease, and who was very badly scarred from the previous attacks. The fact remains, however, that vacci nation will prevent contagion in nearly every case, and when smallpox occurs after successful vaccination it is much less severe and the death rate is propor- tionately diminished. From proper vac- I n.nar i-lh 1 iKl- ri.... nKln r danger is likely to arise: then it would seem to be the duty of every oiie to be successfully vaccinated. E. C. SWEET. M. D. u . . .. . "hat Makes a C,ty eat The truly great city is the city of great men, for that means great capac ity in all directions. That city must be the truly greater city greater in the sense of better which possesses the ! best men. Where men are of the highest type of manhood, morally, intellectually and phy- sically, the institutions which they make and manage come most naturally to be the greatest of their kind, and the city of which they are a part is great because of them. Next to men I should place means. All the men in the world could build neither a good nor a great city without money. It is the power for good or bad. In the hands of truly great men, of honest men, the results that may be obtained to the goodness and greatness of a modern city are almost beyond conception. Because of the influence of money, the status of a city's financial institutions is of grave importance in estimating its claim to true greatness. The high stand ing of its banks, and the integrity of its trust companies, are not only important, they are absolutely necessary. The great est financial institutions of a country center in the cities where money circu lates most freely, and estublish there the money markets of the world. Perhaps the first feature that makes a city really great iu the eyes of the world is iu population. But numbers, however large, can never make a city truly great. The manner in which the people are gov erned is much more important; and great men are the true foundation stones of all great cities. Through them come high religious ideals, and institutions of true learning and broad charity; and through them is good government obtain ed. The greater and better the men th greater and better the city r- . , , THOMAS C.'PLATT. Lnlted States Senator from New York cooperation and in his last years be was frequently driven to his office to confer with hi. partners. To the last bis health was remarkable. At 88 be could mount the most spirited horse In Pittsburg and ride four miles It was said that Mr. Zug was the bug bear 0f some ot lne Pittsburg. He hadn't a spark of mal ice in his composition, but he did have a habit of chuckling when the social doings of ,eopIe were referred to in Ins hearing, and an account in his presence of the pretensions of this famllv or that was as likely as not to be com mented on by blm with a reference the time when the head of the faml y drove a wagon on the national pTke or Shipped up a mule on the can? to" path or worked in ,m. .,,. ?' t0W eanaeirv "umuie 7 Caustic Politeness, certain society woman who hnd luheu onense at H arrv I oK - t rivial ground un,l,.r , , 8.ome ..ortunity. . tQen anxious to help you along, yoU know " ca.m.r 88 laSt?" WW Xr. "If you please." The Squire of Haines turned t . i -dollar nlnerT.fi-o 'c "wen "my Times. York Tongue and Ta The tongue is divide i... ' ste. gions of taste. ,. a"""" lnree re- tastes, the middle portloD 0 T f8C"1 bitters, while the i.,.t- . 66,8 or the flavors of 08 nl ' T1" ,0 and rich .,., D,ea,s- butter, oils and rich and fatty substa'n ces. Men Iye More than ' umen. lork druggist ani.t that .r,i... ,l8t 81,1(1 recentlv Udy.Va Zchatr than wojrln. fcreater nxUut HOW IT FEELS TO DROWN. anvtbinif but "Pleasant," tv Says Oat Who Came Near It. Drowning is a pleasant death" is a remark constantly made by those who aever gulled down salt water Into the jelicate tissues of their luugs. I was i i.athiug in rough awr on the beach of !, waierim: nlace in Northern France jiwf pt out to sea. I struggled, sank, be-' , . ... . i .. -3 me lUSCUSl Ule. BUU WIM SUYCU l' lui , f oiiQn. i.vi,..i , WHter, the much resounding roar of the w.aves 8truck me as desolatlug and sor- j ri,.fll,fllll nf for,,hodimrs and terror i , , ... . , ,,,.,.. . Ashamed of this fancy, I lustlnctivelv ! " . lut foolishly, fought my way seaward j aud was promptly out of my depth; not j because I Intended to run any risk, for 1 could not swim, but because ji couiu uoi bHiiu, uut uwaum; ine strong current nau scoopea out a hoi low In the sandy bottom, which bad six feet of water ou the top of It Tumbled over by the waves, the concentrated agony of the moment when the water closed over my bend for the first time cannot be described. It was the bitterest point of the strug. gle. Cruel and omnipotent force, witli- I out warDjne or reason, surrounded m. and my frantic and determined efforts to escape only incensed the pent-up passion to cease holding my breath and to Inhale once more. I felt Instinctively, as I writhed in the cold, black water, that if once I succumbed to the tempta tion to expel my breuth, which almost burst the ribs in my angry efTorts to retain it, the end would come; that I should be compelled to breathe inward while covered wlih the pressing salt water. At this time I must have given way and the dreaded stream of air bubbles rose to the surface. A few weeks before I had watched ! ,lle drowning of a cat in the clear water of a runulng stream. The animal was tethered to a stone, and had fought j with upturned face for liberty. When the bubbles rose in hIIvm- fountain j ,he wrnerg of ,u h ,t j Ht ..,, .. . ' VT ""'"'"J o r Ui LUC gtrilllB current, turned over, aud after one final struggle gave up the ghost. This scene came vividly before me. I thought of this wretched cat, and wag half amused to think that my case was the case of the cat. There was no fear. The actual circumstance filled my attention, and i the piteous louginp to escape became subordinated to the feeling of intoler able pain. Eyes, chest, limbs were all one solid pain. Just then I touched the sandy bottom with my lingers and knees, and hastily snatched a handful of sand and water to thrust in my mouth to end this strug gle for air. All I wanted was to end the pain. No thought of death, except as an Interesting and immaterial factor In the situation, came over me. It is true that I remembered that I should be missed when dinner time came, and I was found missing aud thinking of the home people. I thought of a blue tie I had left on a chest of drawers in my bedroom, which I had Intended to put on. Then, suddenly, I found my eye above water for a second, and I saw two blurred fingers near. On this I sank again, and was conscious -f relax ing effort and sinking out of a con scious state to one In which one dream ed without knowledge what the dreams were. From this I awoke in great pain lu the center of a crowd on the beach, whither my rescuer had borne me. My first thought was one of Infinite anr unreasoning shame, hut the nausa caused by swallowing so much sat water gulckly brought me back to earth again. A Very Big Boy. A lady from the country, who recent ly had occasion to send to town or a suit of hoy s clothes, took the meisure ments herself. She received tie fol lowing reply: "Dear Madam: Your favor received, but we regret to say that we have no clothes such as you want, and we doubt if they can be found outside a museum with a fat hoy. Fifty-four inches round the chest, twenty-four round the neck, and sixty round the waist u wttu nut of our line. Possibly you might squeeze the boy don a little, but this would hardly be advisable, for. as you say, he Is only rj, and the chanrjes are that he would grow with all yog might do. e should advise you to tnk the youth to some wholesale tailoting establish ment. A boy with arris sixty-three inches long and legs June six feet to an Inch is a little beyond :he capabilities of this establishment though we study to please." The lady has since learned that she used the wrong side of the tape ineas ure Pearson's Weekly. Modern TtiinRs In Old Manila. There is a central electric lighting station In Manila which supplies cur rent for l.ooo incandescent and 200 arc lamps. There are about 720 miles of tel egraph tu the island and 70 miles of steam railways. Maulla has also a tele Phone system. The conductors are all overhead lines carried on poles with porcelain Insulators Cause for Congratulation. rirniumer-Any mall for me-Jobn H. Klawback? Ittyville Postmaster None! s ummer-Good! The firm hnsn'l reu me yet '-Puck. rtv . ' ' J-ue almighty dollar covers a mulU- ue or queer transactions.