THE COLUMBIAN, BLoOMstfURa PA. Ahtsmulki Attended The U. S. Naval Ac.uLniy. POPULAR WIT! I CADETS At One Time He ?nd Hi3 Friend Wirj Hazed to a "United Statci Smoker." Hazers Found Latir They Had Struck a Pair of Tar tars. His Reply to Dewey. "I was at tli - Naval Acad my wiih 'ommodoro .lu!.-ii;u!la of the ,la; .n st; Navy, who was recently wo ir.iied .1 the bridge of his .ship," s..id an American naval officer. "A plucky fellow, a more level', eadol chap yU have never met . i - was graduateJ in 1871!. Tart of l. e time his friend Sataro Ise was in t:io academy wilb him. "At the Academy Mats, as lie vm rail ! . was very popular ami ho was a midshipman whon It tried men's i- mis at tho height of the hazing period. At that time the plebes Ii veil d:wn in the old quarters, herded. ti3 it worn, to themst Ives, and thoro Mitsmull.i and Sataio began their cxperienca. They had never hoard tho word ha.e, hail no funei pi ion of its moaninr;. "Onu night, hearing a lotid voice i"i tin if room, I wont over; and when I opt nod the door, all 1 could sco wan a dense Mi.oko out of which rune several ann. I was .-rK .1 hond'osig into the room and iho !o;ir slammed to. "Tho daps wore being treated to ;i I'riited States smoker. The windows won; all dosed and oven t!io keyhole; and crack under tho door wcr.! stuffed. "On the narrow mantelpiece stoid the future Japanese hero. Mal.-iiirila. looking like one of his old-fash io-O'd Idols, hut as smiling as n basket ct chips. He was ordered by iho hvvra to sing a song in Crook. Of tho lan guage he knew hut two words Alpha and Omega anil those h.) worked on so cleverly and with such good nuMiro that ho was lifted down.. "Sataro had a sickly c;.sr in thnt'shi he was green aliout the gills, as one of the bovs expressed : h:it neither pnlit a word. They tool; the medicine with a pluck which wi.' their snlvi tion, as tho man who rosvied or took exception to the horseplay bad a hard tlnio. "In half an hour the air In the room was unbearable. You could cut the tobacco smoke with a knife, U -.-as go thick, and oven the hazers i to beginning to weaken. Two of Y.m twenty hazers soon found It eon ."nlont to get out. Then Mats spoke tp. "We sorry you third class men have engagement," he said. "Wo like you Stay and srroke P.no'ber pipe." "A few of the third class gentle men Iau?h"d, but nearly all evidently realized that they were up against the nil thing. Another now rptreated while the rest loaded up their pipes and puffed furiously, trying to make a spurt which would run tin .laps out of the room. I had to join, and being ft hardened smoker I filled a big pipe and made up my mind that as I was an ally of Mats and Sarato perhaps we could turn the tables. "I puffed great volumes of Rmoke and never said a word. You have seen the smokestack of a torpedo destroy er getting up steam with soft coal? Well, I looked something like that. "Not a word was spoken. Most of the third class men were at that stage at which they did not dare to open their mouths. Tho light became dim mer and dimmer. "I sat on the bed next to Mats and he gave me a nudge in tho side and fairly erupted with smoke. He not only pumped up great clouds, but he quietly blew It across tho room where the hunch of third claRs men sat gasp ing and perspiring. One of them told mo later that he would have given $100 to have got out with honor. "The minutes dragged along and I was filling my fourth pipe when I saw that Mats was smoking two. He had got his second wind and was settling down to real enjoyment, while all I could see of Sats was a bluck spot, his hair In a purple cloud. "I don't know how long we could have stood it. I confess that I did not feel altogether happy myself when i Mats said: '"Any third class gentleman like1 I There are plenty. "The mere suggestion drove one of the hazers out. Then the others put up a mean Job. One of them cried out suddenly that tho officer of the day was coming around. Thereupon the crowed tossed their pipes Into the chimney place and ran "It was merely a (subterfuge to en able tho men to get out. MatsmuUa Toad smoked them out, and when all were gone he turned to me with the remark: "Third class men don't smoke much,' at which we laughed heartily; then we opener the win dows and door. "What clinched Matsmulla's popu larity was the fact that the officer of the day Dewey, I think did come along before all tho smoke had dis appeared and that Matsmulla took -II tho blame for the violation of ihe rule against smoking and that ho uld not give away any of his hazors." Sheila of Duck Eggs Jet Black. James Ela of Ripley, Ind., owns a larfro flock of ducks that lay eggs vf which the shells are Jet black. Bleaching fluids will not remove tho color. Ducks are hatched from the's black shelled eggs as covered with thick, black hulr, Poultry exports cannot explain tho causa of this freak of nature. URIU AT ANNAPOLIS. A Classmate of Daring Japanese Ad miral Tells of Cadet Da3. In the April "World's Work" Charles W. Stewart, a classmate of Vra at Annapolis tolls some Interest ing stories of tho dnrlri; Japanese miral who sank tho Wiring n :i 1 t' Korletz at Chemulpo. Among oiler things Mr. Stewart say.-.; "I'riit and Serata (who al"o became a rear ad miral In tho .T.ip:itir:!: navy) wora roommates and churns before end dur ing their cadothip. They were com municants In tho Presbyterian church at Annapolis. They occupied room No. 8. ntnl our oh'ss pun was 'Why nro the .laps like cows?' and the an swer was 'Because they ruminate.' This did not visibly please 1'rla, but Serata was immensely delighted. "t'rin was quiet, cool, reserved deep, studious. When he spoke It was evident that he bad been think ing hard. In the first throe years Serata stood higher In studios, grad uating fourteenth In the class. 1'rlu developed steadily, nnd In tho last year led Serata In marine engineer ing, shipbuilding, public law, French and Spanish. Serai a excelled In oie triolty, ordnance and navigation. I"riu has advanced stop by step, prov ing his ability In diplomacy and tlio construction, development and equip ment of Japan's effective navy. "At graduation I'ri was twenty, sixth In his cla:'s. His best work was In English history and law, seaman ship, language and tactics. His knowledge of literature was excep tional. He was fond of reading the Bible, Shakespeare, Aesop, Bacon, I'oo and Franklin. "Like all Japanese. I'riu give 'ih' the sotind of 's.' Thirty-throe was pronounced 'sirt y-sroe.' "I'riu married a Japanese woman, a graduate of Vassar college whose sister married Kurlul, the Japaneso minister of foreign affairs. Ho Is the father of throe sons and three daugh ters. At the age of 44 he Is a roar ad miral. His classmates at Annapolis will not, be rear admirals, In the or dinary course of naval promotion un til 191C. Manchuria's Agricultural Centers. Liao-Yang. Hal-Cheng, and Chikiau are growing communities where Rus sia and China are planting agricul tural colonies. The treaty port. Niu Chwang. or Ylngtze as the natives call It, has been built up by the bean cake trade. Lying about thirteen miles from the mixith of the Llao. It Is the station for the exporting of skins, furs, cereals, and timber. It was formerly a military station, but In 1861, after a foreign settlement was made, It became of commercial im portance. Tho town proper Is thirty miles from the station and the land between Is laid out In bean farms. The climate is healthy and bracing; the port Is closed by Ice sometimes four months of the year. The popula tion Is now about 70.000. Tho Char tered Hank of India, Japan Mail Steamship Company, China Shipown ers' Association, Deutseher Lloyd, New York Life Insurance Company, Mikul Bussan Kaishla, Indo-Chlna Steam Navigation Company, and other important Interests are established here. Grain of Wheat as Standard of Weight By an English law enacted in 1206, it was provided that a silver penny, called a sterling, should equal In weight thirty-two wheat grains, well dried and taken from the center of the ear. From this It seems evident that the grain of wheat was the pro totype of the standard grain. The weight now known as the grain is, of course, copied from governmental standards. In 1826 certain weights and measures were legalized in Eng land, and in 1827 copies of these were furnished our government, among them being the trop pound, equivalent to 5,760 grains. The origin of the signs commonly used for tho scruple, dram and ounce does not seen to be known. It Is not unlikely that they are entirely arbitrary. St. Louis Re public. Origin of "Abide With Me." How the beautiful hymn "Abide with Me" came into being is recalled by the efforts which are being made to complete the rebuilding of the Lower Brixham church, England, which was begun thirty years ago Id ' m .1 ii r v x. . memory or me aumor oi wie nyim, the Rev. Henry Francis Lyte. At the age of 51 he found himself doomed to die of consumption. In sorrow at having to leave his work unfinished he prayed that it might be granted to him to write something which would live to the glory of God when he was dead. Hi3 prayer was grant ed and he wrote "Abldo with Me" ou the last evening that ho ever spent at Brixham, after preaching to his congregation for the last time. First Use of the Torpedo. Torpedoes for the destruction of vessels were first used In the spring of 1861 by the confederates In the James River. In 1865 the secretary of the navy reported that more ships had been lost by torpedoing than from all, other causes. Gen. Rains, chief of tho confederate torpedo ser vice, put the number at 58, a greater number than has ben destroyod is all the wars since. The Churches of Moscow. There are 1800 churches in Moscow, They are the wealthiest churches Id the world. One, St. Saviour's cost nearly $14,000,000 to build. Tho Rus sian church is the natlou's great wealth storehouse tha nestegg which will be hatched out when the great crisis comes. Ilffl Of BB Are Ready to Make Any Sac riiice for "White Czar" DO THINGS BY LUI'ULSE They are Sociable and Very Charit able, Never Turning Any One Away Also believers in Fatal Ism, Whatever Comes Is Gener ally Accepted as "God's Will." Without considering furtlier the di verse and varied elements that are represented In the peoples of Rus sia for a book on each would scarce gi o one a complete understanding of thorn all we may turn to the real Russian for tin soul of Itns:,ia of to day. "Scratch a Rusrinn nnd you will find a Tartar," say the French. This Is otily half true. There is Tartar blood In the veins of many of the Cx.ar'a subjects, but In tho Huskmii of olj Russia, found In the center of the Imperial domain, there is none. Groat Russia, as Russia proper Is known, contains the heart of Rus sian civilization. Hence, If nt all, one may see something of tho real Russian character. "r.ut," says a European authority on Russia, "only that me.n who can sympathize with Russian charncter can hope to understand and define it. The basis of the character ami tho prime move of all iho actions of the Russian. Is the heart, with its li;;hts and shades. Its noble sensations and Its erroneous Impulses." This writer, who Is by no moans unsympathetic, etiumcraio;; the chief traits of the Russian character undor these heads: Devotion to country nnd religion. The Russian Is ready to make ony sacrifices for tho "white Czar." wtio to h!ni Is the por.-o;ii!':cn ion of both religion and country. Fidelity Is thus a prime element In the Russian char acter. A love of tho paternal authority and a veneration for fatherhood aro strong elements In Ihe Russian char acter. A Russian cr.lls the Czar, the priest, his own father, and the aged "father;" he cills all men "brother." Between different ranks there may be an implied modification of the brotherhood, but the form of address Is always "brother." The colonel of a regiment addresses his men as "my sons," and the men address a parent, calling him "my colonel." Open-handed hospitality. Whoever knocks at a Russian door Is received with kindness. Though the house holder may love money, he will make no charge for the best his larder holds, and will give up his bed to a stranger. The aged beggar is not sent empty handed from his door, and In the earlier days of the exile sys tem It was a custom in Siberian vil lages to put outside the window at night, on a high shelf built for the purpose, where dogs could not reach It, food left from the table for the homeless prisoner who might wander that way on a night Journey toward supposed liberty. Fatalism. Whatever comes, It Is accepted as "God's will." In the case of a child sick with rroup, a Russian nurse refused to do anything for It, on the plea that "God had sent for the little one." When called to arms tho Russian would not think of doing aught but obey the call. It Is tho voice of fate. Lack of Individual perseverance. The Russian does things by Impulse, being guided by his temperamental dictates, and not by the head. If he fall In an undertaking he will abandon it and begin another. Individual per sistence Is not a virtue in his eyes. System and order do not appeal to him. He loves change and lacks fore sight. He works with precipitate energy, but unsteadily. He has no idea of thrifty management. He looks lightly on discomfort, and submits gracefully to circumstances. He is sociable at all times, charit able, and never says 111 of a fallen enemy. Such are the main characteristics of tho "great" Russians, that Is, the Russians of central Russia, whether found at home, as settlers In Siberia, or with tho czar's armies. Of their faults so much has been heard, through unsympathetic chan nels, from which none hnvo escaped, that we may well leave them to those who do not care to dwell on the better side. The Japanese and Ship's Captains "The Japaneso war reminds me," said an old-time Bath, Me., sea cap tain one day this week "of the earlier times before Japan was so free with other nations as she Is to-day. In those dayB, when a foreign ship enter ed the Japanese ports, the captains were obliged to place his Bible and rudder In charge of the chief officer of the port and leave It there until he was ready to sail. Of course, he wouldn't sail without either, and the Japs could easily keep tabs on the movements of all ships In their har bors." Facts About Corea. The area Is 82,000 square miles. There are nine treaty ports. Gold the great mineral wealth nearly J3.000.000 worth exported an nually. Tho population is 17,000,000, Includ ing 25,000 Japaneso, who control the country's activities. Education costs $165,000 and relig ious sacrifices $186,000. Tho navy consists of twenty-five admirals and one iron built coal barso. Tba World's Work. TRAFFIC IN TWO CITIES. More Travellers In fJtw Ycrk Than In Lonoon. There Is more (ratHc, decidedly, In London than there is in New York, but tlio flr.ures ivo -.itly published In tho English capital to prove tho great er amount of travel tin ro In a day, compared with New York, fall to take into account nil of New York's transportation f'eilil ios. Thoro nro coo miles of railway of All kinds within the boundaries of London. The railroads of New Yorlc city (with .l.onii.iHio l.y.s population than London) have more than 800 miles, of whli h the Metropolitan has, approximately, 2'0; the Manhattan Elevated. 115: the Vnion (Huckle berry), and the Mrooklyn lineB f!(0. This Is exclusive of the mile ace of the New York Central and Hudson River, the New York and Now Haven, tho Long Island nnd the New York and Futnani within the city boundaries. The number of passengers carried by the Now York lines exceeds a bil lion In a year, which Is iioO.oiio.OOO more than are carried by the lines within the boundaries of London In the like period. There Is a much larger number of vehicles In the streets of London than In the streets of Now York. The number of cabs In the English capi tal Is much larger than tho number In us In New York nnd thj London omnibus system Is very extensive. It has been pointed out that. Picca dilly, between the hours of 1 and 2 p. m., Is the most crowded point In London. There Is a record in twelve hours of more than 1.1.000 vehicles passing a given point. These figures appear large, or would appear large, until compared with the Manhattan entrance of the Brook lyn Bridge. More people travel In New York In a day than in London, a larger city, but in New York fewer people walk than in London. More ride. The White Man In Hvtl. Hedged about as fie is with the barrier of caste, the white mnn in Haytl generally feels his Impotence for good or 111, and Is looked down upon accordingly. It requires a most powerful Incentive for one to reside there continually; nnd. as if to miti gate the asperity of this outlook, the native does not Incline to favor a leng'hy residence there for the for eigner, of wuatever nationality. Although prevented from making haste to bo rich by being debarred from the customs (which Is tho source of all emoluments in Haytl), and pre vented from sacrificing his life on the altars of his adopted country by 'in imitable laws, the white man of ex ceptional talent can both acquire wealth and achieve Immortality by dying early in his career, without causing sorrow to the native resi dents. It may be true, as the Hay tlans cssert, that their frequent rev olutions are strictly family affairs, and that the foreigner Is perfectly safe provided he goes Into hid'ng while the lighting continues but the fact remains that very few foreigners in Ilaytl ever die of old ago. In a land where somebody or other is nearly always out gunning for some body else, there Is the danger, an ever-present danger, of being shot. It may not be with Intention; but therein the real danger lies; for no Haytlan was ever known to hit what he fired at though he Is sure to hit somebody, and that somebody Is usu ally the highly respected foreigner. Even an execution Is no exception to the rule, for It requires whole volleys of musketry to slay one solitary vic tim, and It rarely happens that he does not have several Innocent attend ants to the spirit land, slain by bul lets that went astray. From the New York Evening Post. Silkworms Produce Colored Cocoons. French sa'entlsts have discovered by experiments that silkworms may be made to produce cocoons of almost any desired colors, as the ordinary white, yellow or green was known to vary with the fooir, this was col ored artificially and worms eating dyed privet leaves yielded cocoons of corespondlng red, blue or othef color. Plants have been similarly colored by food, some blue French beans exhibited In London a few years ago seeming to have resulted from a chemical peculiarity of the soil. "To Insure Promptness." An odd little word of threo let ters, which greatly influences the treatment a man gets In public din ing places, goes back a couple of cen turies to the coffee houses of Eng land for its origin. At the doors of eating rooms thoro hung brass bound boxes, engraved with the phrase "To Irtsure Promptness," and Into the slit in tho top customers were expected to drop coins for tho waiter The Initial letters of that phrase have ever since been used to express the fee given to waiters nnd serv ants as an extra Inducement to them to do their work well, or as a requit al for service promptly rendered. A St. Petersburg experience. An American wished to move from tho Hotel Europe, the principal hotel In St. Petersburg, to a smaller hotel around tho corner. Ho came down with hla bag packed ready to go. "Sorry," said the manager, "but; you cannot leave this hotel or reglslor at another hotel until we get your pass port from the police, and that will take a day and a night. You must go through exactly the sumo proced ure as if you wra leaving the coun try." The World's Work. United States Plans fcr the Building of Them. SIR W. VAN I10RNES VHAV The Government Has Three Alterna tives! Coold Eiihcr Euild With Its Own Forces, Let Ccnt.-acts or En dow With Power a Con-.pany With Same lotcre-iU as Ita Own. Pir Wiilia n Win Home has given Borne very good advice touching pro jected railroads in tio Philippines, drawn from his experience Pi Cuba. Sir William declares that the suc cess which has attended his efforts In Cuba Is largely due to the methods employed in dealing with the natlvo inhabitants. Had he and his col leagues boon guided by a short-sighted policy of chipping off Sir William's opinion he wouid have boon doomed to failure. Seeds would have boon l i.'.iited which would have borne bit ti r fruit for generations. Ho endeav ored not only to otitnln, but even iii'!. to deserve the confidence of tho natives from tho very outset, as tho basis of operations. Ho employed only native labor In constructing the four hundred miles of tho Cuban rail road, nnd awarded no building con tracts. To have done so would, In Sir William's view, have been suici dal. Kis fiiceess in Culm convinces 1,1m that the to'ine policy should bo followed in the Philippines If the dual objec t of the American govt rnmont io educate the Filipinos In respect for the Americans, and confidence In t';e;n, and, at the same time, to bring about the Industrial development of the I ilands Is to be secured. The government has throe alterna tives in constructing the projected Philippine railroad; It could either build the line with Its own forces, or It o.iuld let contracts for construc tion, or, thirdly, endow with fuffl e;ent power some company wlu.se In terests would be the same as the gov ernment's Interests. The annual cost to tlio American government of pro viding for eight hundred miles rf Philippine railroad would be no moro than the annual cost of maintaining a single regiment. If by the construct ing of railroads the necessity of a standing nrmy should bo removed, nnd a native constabulary established, the Inestimable benefit Is apparent. Harper's Weekly. The Russian Peasant. The truth Is that the Russian peas ant, 100,000,000 of him, is under pres ent conditions slowly starving to death. His average earnings In tho central provinces are 17 and 18 co pecks (8 or 9 cents) per day through out the year; during the busiest har vest time they rise to an average of 27 to .18 copecks (13 to 16 cents a day) ; during the wholo winter ho and hl3 family earn nothing. His diet 1 consists of meal, flour and grits, cab- ' bage and potatoes; no meat, except- I Ing three times a year. His diet is 1 insufficient, and less than In any civ ilized country. The hovel he lives In Is two and a half yards long and one and one-half yards high, harbor ing the whole family and whatever cattle he possesses. These data are taken from official sources. Is It a wonder that tho Russian peasant has morally and physically degenerated? That the women are Immoral, dreading maternity, and given to a frightful extent to infanti cide? That the men aro nomads, leaving wives and children for months often years, trying to earn something In 'own or In far-away districts? That the recruiting In these central prov ides shows progressively physical unfitness for the army? That the health of the women Is bad, and that the rate of increase in the population In this "black-earth belt" has dropped to 0.26 against 1H In the whole Em pire? Harper's Weekly. An Absent Minded Man. "I suppose," said John Sharp Wil liams, the Democratic loader In tho House, "that the most absent-minded man In the South lives In my town In Mississippi. He Is a lawyer, and he forgets his name half the time. One day last summer he had to go til) to tho Court House on some busi ness. He took a piece of paper and wrote on It. 'Back at three o'clock,' and stuck tho paper on the door of his office. "He finished sooner than ho ex pected nnd came down the street thinking out some weighty problem. When ho climbed up the stairs to his off'ce ho found the sign, 'Hack at three o'clock,' staring him In the face. He took out his watch, found It was but a quarter past two and sat down to wait until three" In the Japanese Navy. The average age of the Japanese Navy Is lower than that of any other navy In tho world. No one over twenty years old Is accepted for en listment. The average height Is five feet four Inches less than tho aver ago height of any inner navy In the world. The World's Work. The Names of Denmark's Kings. Denmark's kings for ll.SS yi :mn have nil been named Christian or Freder ick. This is not the result of acci dent. It Is the law of Denmark that Christian must be suoee. ,V .-r,.,j. crick, and Frederick by Cliri . liiii. To nttaln this, and without (lie changing of names, In case or death or other mason, every Danish prince, no mat tor "what oilier names ho may receive always Includes Christian and Fred crick among them. HALLETT GLACIER. It Is the Only Known Glacier in the Interior of Our Country. The history of the discovery of this glacier is an Interesting one. An old boar hunter chanced upon tho field on Mummy mount, which he called "tho largest snow-field In the Hookies." Before his death, which occurred shortly alter, ho inentionoil this discovery to a gentleman then living in Denver, who devoted mtieh lime to tho exploration of now moun tains and strange loca'itios In and about this neighborhood. In 1SS2 this gentleman, a Mr. Hal lett. vlrited the spot entirely alone. In trying to ascend the nor'h side of the icolli id he sudd-'iily broke through the bridge of a hidden crevasse, but by extending his elbows be managed to extricaie himself from his perilous position and relumed In safety to his camp. This Incident finally led him to wonder whether this might not bo a glacier. In ISSfi and 1SS7 Mr. Hal Ictt, In company with an experienced mountaineer, who was as familiar with the Alps ns with the Rockies, twice revisited the spot. I'pon tho flr.it of those expeditions, after a care ful examination, the true nature or this vast expanse of snow and ice was for the first time positively deter mined. Here in tho heart of Colorado existed a true glacier showing cre vns;os. moraines In short, all tho characteristics or the well-known Alpine t'laeiors of Switzerland. To this was given the name It now boars, "llailett Glacier," in honor of the man who. In such a startling way, made the lirst real discovery. St. Nicholas. Free Libraries In Siberia. Ail the chief Siberian towns have free public libraries, but naturally all are on a small scale. It surprises one, even, on going into the National Library at St. Petersburg, the capital city, to find so compnrativoly restrict ed In its limits a public reading sa lon for the biggest city of northern Europe. B is twt much bigger than jono or the side rooms in nosion j beautiful biblloteka. Perhaps the chief Siberian library is that of Ir kutsk, In the heart of Siberia. It Is a substantial brick edifice and Is lo-jcv-rd on the second floor of the mu is?'i;.i, so that the library building serves a double purpose. It has soma 15.01) volumes, very many of which jn?3 In tho different languages of lEur .pe, and have come Into the II ,hr. ' from different sources; a few frti. government sources, but mainly irev iting from the clearing up of dead cilo'.i effects, when the books they lhavo brought with them were tura led over to the biblloteka. This Inucleiu has made the library n fairly 'select one, and all brainy standard authors will be found represented i there, both Russian nnd foreign. But jthe real literary and educational town of Siberia Is Tomsk, about midway :between Irkutsk and the Cral range. Here there are three universities, and lit U the book and miblish ne depot of Siberia. The public library at Tomsk Is a tree log and brick faced, , double windowed, coldproof building, .located near the governor's house and jthe theatre. It Is more Russian in ; Its contents than tho Irkutsk library. iThe volumnge Is about 4.000. Th9 chief Russian periodicals are re ceived so that the institution is both a library and a current literature) readlug room. Boston Transcript. Rickshaw Men and Spanish. Tourists In NagasaM, Japan, ars often surprised to hear tho sampan men and the rickshaw meu In th street shoat Spanish words to white passersby, as, "hey. am'go"- (hey. friend), or "hombre," a common ex clamation of attention meaning man. In the stores me salesmen also use similar terms, as "no sabe," meaning "don't Know," etc. The explanation is simple. Th Japs themselves do not know that they are using Spanish words; they believe them English slang. They have learned them from American soldiers homeward bound from tha Philippines. The Yankee boys, used to employing Spanish phrases In speaking to Filipinos, inEtlnctlvely do tho same with the Japs, forgetting that their language is different. Effect of Heat Upon Isinglass. A curious result of the fire in the Bibb warehouse was the effect of tha heat upon several hundred dollars worth of Isinglass. After the valu able papers of the firm had been re moved from the safo on the night of tho fire to a place of safety some one suggested that the pile of Isinglass, which stood near by, be locked within the safe upon the chance of its being thus preserved. It was preserved, hut io curiously did tho heat affect It that while retaining Its form and sub stance, the sheets appeared to ho transformed Into silver foil and were quite as opaque as that article. Rooster Saved Row of Houses. Early one morning a barn belong ing to Ceorge II. Potteo at Baltimore caught fire. The flames gained rapid headway and were nearlng a row of two-story houses, whon a rooster, evi ('ently mistaking the red glow of the (lames for the dawn, began such a lusty crowing that the tenants were awakened. Tho row of houses was saved, although the barn was destroy ed. Prince's Smallest Conscript. Tne sMiullost conscr'pt ut the latest drawl!,;; for service in tho French Army was Joannes Cbabaud, of Ver piMkro. His height is 2 foot U Inehis, and ho weighs 67V4 pounds. Hla ago Is twenty-one, JjidlanapolU News. . , , ,