THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBOW3L iMiiNMinRnfliinMiiiiMi Ring the Curtain Down By M. CARUTHERS nn -.nn mi mi i Ring up the curtain! A little room on the top floor of a bonne h tall, llrt-begrlmed, many windowed house In a dingy street ly ing between Holborn and the Strand. A bed, a table, two chairs, a fire place and a battered-looking ward robe. On the mantelpiece a second hand revolver. My the bed, divesting himself of bis overcoat, a young man of perhaps 30 yeara of age. So much for the scene. The actor? the young man by tho bed. Tempest Klchard Tempest jne time "Dicky," thong'.: he had long since forgotten the fact. "I think I'll clear up everything first," ho inuttorr-d. standing Irreso lute In the middle of the room. "I wouldn't bring this final dis grace on my highly respectable rela tions," he laughed bitterly, "for the world! If I burn all my papers and things no one will know who I am ir was; and no one will be 'downed' Tor my funeral 'X's.' Heaven knows I shall be uncommon glad to be quit of this!" He lit the fire, watched it achieve 1 vigorous blaze, and then deliberate 'y, methodically and with no Bort of ?ompunctlon commenced throwing nto It letters photographs, the title oages of one or two books every thing, in fact, that might In any way ead to his Identification after death or to the fool who Is not only a fool iut a wer-k fool there Is but one es cape from the fierce-biting trouble, md Richard Tempest had elected for t "That's done," said Richard, as ho emptied the last drawer, "and I con sider It uncommon thoughtful of me. Nothing more, 1 think." He looked around. . "May be something on top of that cupboard," he thought He brought forward a chair, and, mounting It, pushed hla arm forward nto a pile of dusty newspapers. "There Is something," he said, and rtepped down with a small tin case n hla hands. "Mother's dispatch box." he said lioarsely. "It's mother's letter case!" There was a reverence, a softness n hla tones, which had been foreign o them for years since he had been Timed out from hla mother's home y a stepfather, aggravated to des eratlon by his continual shortcom ig and failures since he had brok n her heart since she had died. Practically he had stolen the box. Vhen he was packing his few posses ions on the night of the last wild . eene with his stepfather he had no Iced the box in his mother's room; It 'aa full, he knew, of her children's Jtters, collected w ith all a mother's ; stored up and treasured with II a mother's devotion to that time hen her little ones were her little -nes not yet grown to self-govern-. ent, and self-will, and distaste for ' Dme. It came to him, as he recalled ese things, that he would take her "ox with him. Ten years had elapsed, and he had nocked about an over the world, and Md Idled, and failed, and gambled; - t. In some Inexplicable way, the lit '9 case had accompanied him, and '. Te It was. It fastened, he remembered, with a 'ring lock, a wonderful patent catch, e "sesame" of which mother always Tgot or said she forgot, and so had ways to call the assistance of her iur little boys and girls when she -Ished to open It. Richard saw the picture again. Something fell with a little thud on ie tin lid. "A tear! '.Vuat on earth am I d g?" said Richard, and fumbled Bav ;ely with the lock. "There! That is it! You put your little finger ere and your thumb here how dim ilt It was to stretch the distance In ose days! Then you pressed sharp- there!" It was open. He had not rgotten. The box was full of old letters, yel w, torn, barely legible. Some tied bundles with faded blue ribbjii, - hers scattered loose; he must burn ' em all. He ran his fingers through the heap, hat was this? Something soft, 'rapped in tissue paper. Curiosity - ompted him to open It.- A lock of !den hair, soft as down. He fin- red It wonderingly. Some writing? hat was It? Mother's hand, he uld s3. He tok it to the lamp and ered closely. "Dicky's. Five years old." The tears came with a blinding ah. He pullet himself together with i effort, and hurled the little flaxen ndle to the flames. This was terrible, be thought. He ' 4 never suffered like this before. , must not read;' if be valued hla f-control, if be had any desire to ire himself, be must not read ist not must not. . . Vverting his eyes,-therefore, he oped and felt for a tfundle, found ana tossed it across to the Are, e rough usage caused the ribbon break. The majority of the letters lened the greedy flames, a few flut ed to the floor. Witt, an Impatient exclamation ;ha4 stoopeu tu gather them. His es tell, on, a tittle piece; ot pink fan. tic paper, such as chlldjn Jove to s. "Your Utile son, Dicky." be saw nuge, sprawling letters, He felt he must read it throurh ire was a paucity of capital let- ?a and An disregard for steps. "Dear Mother (the letter ran) we do you so coma back rery soon pie kls jonn wltn your hilling I boiif.-hicl a gun ana 3 buns and a : .p and 4 buns for J:iekey and marjorie I have broken the gun good-by mother your little son Dlcl.r these crosses are klBses for you p. s. I have been a good boy to-day ellza says. Ho remembered the occasions now. His mother had taken Joan to Scot land, leaving him and Jack and Mar jorie In charge o.' Eliza, their old nurse. His father his own father was In India tnen. Richard Tempest reached out for another letter and read It, and an other, and yet another. Something impelled him thereto. Some were from himself, some fro.n his brothers and sisters, and tbese often contained references to hlin. For the moment Richard was Dicky once more living In that Joyous past when he was a child. Every little sentence recalled some memory which wa3 at once sweet and bitter which soothed him, and which burned him like hot irons. "Dicky choose! plum Jam this week, we wish he wouldn't, we don't like it. Please may we have another pot, mother?" He remembered that choice quite well. That was one of his mother's rules. Each child in turn might choose the Jam for the coming week. Something semen to grip him by the throat. He felt suffocated, chok ed; he must stop the perusal of thoBe letters. They were torturing blm, burning him. He must stop one. One more one. "I have spent all my money, moth er, but don't think me xtravagant cause I pade the man whot took your box this was a kindness from me mother so don't send me bak It" Another savage fit of passion swept over him. "Hateful bog!" be cried wildly, and, leaping to his feet he snatched the contents haphazard with both hands and thruBt them on the fire. There was nothing iclt now; the box was empty. f But, yes! There was one letter in a huge round fist from Joan to him. Joan's sprawling hand occupied three sides of the sheet; on the fourth were some lines In another hand his mother's. He read the words half aloud, -oarsely, tremulously, with every nerve and emotion in his frame tense to breaking point A kind of laugh escaped him tender, broken laughter, at his mother's little idiosyncrasies then he sobbed aloud. "I am vexed, Dicky, dear," the note ran. "to see that you are not writing on lines. I left a lot of paper, ready ruled for you, you know, and you must use it for you are ruining your hand. Also, dear Dicky, you tell me you have been bathing a lot with the Vanes. You must never go Into the water until two hours after a meal, at least, becauso it Is very dangerous. Thank you so very much for the rose. You mustn't spend your pennies on met It Is such a pretty one. Mother will always keep it Don't forget to wrte on my lines." Richard Tempest leaned over the box, the letter pressed to his Hps and his face burled in his bands. "Mother! Mother! If I bad only always kept on your lines," he groan ed. "Mother, I would to Heaven I had died when I was your little Dicky." He rose to his feet and staggered to where the revolver lay on the mantelshelf. But the man who stretch ed out his hand for the weapon was a different being to the man who had laid it there an hour before. "I must," Richard cried. "I must. I can't go on. I can't go on any long er." "And is this your sorrow?" whis pered Dicky. "Is this your love? This your repentance? There was that of fer from your uncle to assist you to emigrate and to start fresh in a new land. Jan you say there Is no other course open to you?" The voice stayed him. It would be hard, cruelly hard, to start afresh, burdened as he was by the past, but at that moment It was as If his moth er stood in tho room by his side; could he do this thing in her pres ence? He drew his hand slowly from the weapon. Again he presed the letter to his lips then he slipped it tenderly into his breast pocket "With this te help me," he said Bimply. A fitting moment surely to ring the curtain down. The Mysterious School. "You describe your hero." comment- ed the editor, "as being porphyro gene." "Well," demanded the poet "what's the matter with that?" "I must confess that I don't know what porphyrogeno means." "Nor will any one else." retorted tha bard triumphantly, "without digging up a dictionary. I didn't expect this from you. I thought you understood me requirements of modern magazine verse." Not a Snake. A letter carrier in Washington, D. C, bad Just opened a letter-box, when be started back la affright, scream ing, "A snake! a snake!" A police man cams to bis aid, and after re peatedly prodding bis club in the box, lifted out a string of sausages which had been reposing on the top of a collection of letters. Good Cigars In Manila. Most of .the clgarmakers la Manila are females. One factory there em ploys three thousand hands. Knr.. body smokes in the. Pbllpplnes. The youngsters learn to puff cigarettes Je fore they can walk. A , good cigar there sells as low as a cent, and the best for five cents each. I WAR'S HORRORS PICTURED BY ill "With Flying Machines No Home Will Be Secure, Wom en Nowhere Safe" MANY AIR FLEETS NECESSARY In Future God Will Fight or the Side of the Strongest Aerial Artillery Will Obliterate Frontiers Invalid and Cripples May Be fenllsted. New York City. "Napoleon's dic tum that God fight on the side or the strongest artillery vlll no longer hold true. In the very next war between civilized countries the world will fci that God fights on the side that has the strongest flying machines and the most of them." This was part of a striking word picture of what the next war will bo like which Hudson Maxim, Inventor and scientist, painted for his hearers at the Automobile Club of America' "Aeronautic Evening." He predicted among other things, that every village after awhile will have to have its brigade of batteries of field guns for the destruction of air ships, Just as It now has Its volunteer lire department War. he said, will become once again as horrible as It was in the days of hand-to-hand light ing. "In war. the frontier Is the line of battle." Mr. Maxim said. "An Invad ing army carries Its frontiers with It The flying machine will obliterate all frontiers, and there will be no city or village that may not be a possible battlefield. "Future wars will not be decided as heretofore by artillery thundering from hill to hill. Artillery, however, will not by any means be done away with. The field gun will still eat up shrapnel, and the big navy cannon will still shake the shores. But every thing will no longer depend upon the conquering of positions with artillery fire. "Although flying machines will not be able to carry any artillery, yet an army of raiders with the raiders' out fit will be able to reconnoitre and alight In defenseless places, destroy bridges, rip up railroads, cut com munications, burn towns, blow up magazines, stores and powder mills. "As in future wars these visitations may come any night to any inland town, no home will be safe. The flare of the torch and the glint of the sword may be the first visions of an awak ening. Death and rapine may any moment come thundering at the door "No longer will war be confined to restricted areas whence women and children may be removed to places of safety. There will be no refuge whither they can fly from the Huns and Vandals of war. Gunpowder can no longer effectually bar the invader. "The aeronaut can laugh at forts, coast fortifications and battleships The flying machine opens human hU tory again to the page when there were no forts along the frontiers nid no quick-firing guns; when blood and brawn alone stood between honi'j, loved ones and the fierce barbarian; when wolves of rapine, murder ai.ri slavery howled beyond the wall, when love and life were victory's re ward and death, or worse, tvie forfeit for defeat. "We must have our air fleets num erous enough and strong enough to meet and repel any invasion of our sky; and in time of war, around our entire national horizon aerial scouts and aeroplane destroyers by night and day must stand ready perched to tly to the attack. "It may come that every country town must have Its battery of field guns supplied with shrapnel and can ister, as it now has Its fire brigade, while possibly every able-bodied man. invalid and cripple, will be provided with side arms and rifle, as In the old pioneer days they were armed to meet the menace of the red Indian devils. "A bill calling for an appropriation of J500.000 for aeronautical work has Just failed to pass Congress. The bill ought to have been for $5,000,000. and should have been passed by a unanimous vote. Five million dollar is less than half the cost of the larg est battleship." Mr. Maxim did not mention the new noiseless gun Invented by his relative, Hiram Percy Maxim, which will also add to the terrors of modern warfare DAYSE MAYME'S MAN. Family Boosted Him Mlghtilv at First but Now Admit He Is Human. Atchison. Kan. Miss Davsu Mavm Apple ton will be married to-morrow to an out-of-town man. When the en gagement was announced a year ago the Appletons said Davse Mivmn', man was a member of one of the most prominent Philadelphia families. He was Immensely rich, and traveled, and handsome, and talented, We all be came tired of hearing of rvn Mav me'a man from the Appletons. Buf as mo uay approacnea tor the man arrive, and thus give us all a chance to look at him and make comments the Appletons backed John, the father, went so tar as to say tO-day that the. Phlladelnhla man I. "Just human, like the rast ot us." Still, ii M sare to say Atchlsoi people w pick that Philadelphia, mao to plec tood and roper. ' H3 FLEMTiFEEDGY SAUSAGE Lawyer Puts Pieces Together and Proves Porker Was Stolen and Butchered By Bunglers. Paterson, N. J. Jersey Justice has been confronted with many difficult legal problems, and it has solved them In Its own peculiar way. Never be fore perhaps has It been called upon to decide whether n pig that has been killed, dressed, cut tip and distributed Is the Identical pig that was stolen. That was the puzzle, however, be fore Judge Kcott In the Passaic Coun ty Court In the trial o' Matthias Adanskl, who was accused of having stolen a pig from a Mrs. Fredericks of Passaic, and other miscellaneous knlcknnrks, such . ..s several ducks and pieces of Jewelry from different persons who live In that city. The defense admits that parts of a dis membered pig were found In tho home of Adanskl. Some of them were In the form of sausage. It denied, how ever, that the pork four. J there w.n from the pig that was itolen from the Fredericks pen. The lawyers for Adanskl felt so sure of their ground that they challenged the prosecution to prove that the pork found In the home of their client ever formed part of tho Fredericks pig. They also de nied the allegation oi th prosecution that the pieces of pork show that the pig was no' killed by a regular butch er, but slaughtered, dressed and cut up by bunglers at such work. "The police traced half of the stolen pig to the home of this man and found It cut up In a pan," she said. "Madam, do you positively Identify those pieces of pork as having been cut from your pig?" tho lawyer for the defense Inquired. "Remember, now, you are under oath." "I can't say positively, they are part of my p!g." she admitted, "but. In a general way, they look like them." The court was informed by the prosecution that the police are after a man thought to have been Implicat ed In stealing te pig and that it will be shown that he got, the other half of the Fredericks pork. After several hours' deliberation the Jury decided Adanskl stole half the pig. 00000000000000000000000000 WINNER OF SUFFRJr H 8 GETTE'S CONTEST A MALE g V- a r I . . nn . i . . . . . writes oi "i-oiem wisoorn ut tered In the Ear of Strug gling Man" and Wine $100 Prize. Chicago. After considering more than 1,000 poems, sent from all parts of the United States, the judges selected to award the $100 prize offered by Mrs. L. B. Bishop, of Chicago, for the best verses supporting woman suffrage awarded the prize to Louis J. Block, princi pal of a Chicago high school. The verses are entitled "Tho Marching Song," and are to be sung to the tune of "John Brown's Body." The first ref erence to woman Is In the third stanza, which follows: 8 Mother, prophetess, and holy, through the ages of the clan. Uttering words of potent wis dom in the ear of struggling man, 8 Woman rose and strode beside r him, mll the dangers of Q the van, H Kindling hope that led hlra on. O O O This Is the last stanza: Forth they step and march to gether, forth the man and woman go, To the plains of vast achieve ment where unfettered riv ers flow. And their work shall stand ex alted and their eyes shall shine and glow With tue hope that led them on. GREAT JANICULUM FINDS. Image of the God Kronos In a Well Under an Altar. Rome, Italy. Signor Rava, Minister of Public Instruction, communicates the particulars of an archaeological discovery of the Janlculum, where ex cavations have been going on since last June.. Several statutes, frag ments of columns and bronze objects have been unearthed, and now a cell, evidently belonging to a temple, and a large altar ot triangular shape have been discovered. The apex is turned towards the east and it Is built of bricks covered with some kind of concrete. In the middle of the altar a well is sunk. It was covered with tiles and It was opened in the presence of Signor Rava and Prof. Bernabel and It was found to contain a bronze statute of the god Kronos, with a serpent wound around the body, while around it were eggs In an excellent state, of preservation. The discovery shows particularly that the site was a place ot sacrifice. It Is of extraordinary importance, being unparalleled In archaeological finds. University Aeronautic Course. Etuttgart, Gerniany.Tbe Technical University has announced its inten tion of establishing a chair of aeroosm tit a. Count von, Zeppelin jaa mani fested, a lively Interest in the mattei and be probably will deliver ocoaalnn. al lectures. ' I T. HE SURVi Colli of Lanz's Lungs Transfixed and One Arm Pinioned to Body by "Edging" PHYSICIANS CREW IT ALL CUT Victim was Well In Ten Weeks After Operation Amazing Recovery from Terrible Injury Described by Dr. Highland. t'ticn. N. Y. If you nk George Lanz, "How are you?" ha answers flieerlly, "Never felt better In my life." And ho speaks the truth. Ilud ily. muscular and perfectly healtl-y, 1 iniz, thirty-six years old. Is doing ireu'endously hard work as a logg'-r I 'j the Adlrondaeks. He has survived an extraordinary accident A shaft of wood twenty-three Inches lor 5. transfixed his chest, piercing hi: thorax through and through. The stake on which Lnnz was Im paled was the edging from a rough board. 1x3-4 of an inch at the small end tho end which entered his body on the left side and lxl 1-4 Inch ;it the larger end, which was broken off nt tho point of entrance. Tho Btake entered Lanz's chest at hla left nipple, breaking a rib. It pene trated his left lung then his right' lurg, and. finally, .passed through his right upper arm behind the bone, pin ning the arm to his body. Ir. K. M. Hyland, a distinguished surgeon of this city, reported thl3 ex traordinary case at the annual meet ing of the New York State Medical Society held In Albany the other day. In the paper which Dr. Hyland read, describing the accldont and recovery, he said: "I present to you the report of n case of thorax transfixion, which, I believe, to bo unique In surgical re cords." Dr. Hyland introduced Lanz to the assembled physicians. Lanz, "a strong man rejoicing in bis strength," dis played the scars on his chest, but did not seem to understand why be was the object of such curiosity. In his paper Dr. Hyland wrote: "The case is that of George Lanz. of Forestport, N. Y. On June 14. 1906. he was operating an edging machine In the lumber mills of Pullman Bros., at Fulton Chain. N. Y. The machin ery became stuck or blocked in some way, and upon being released, In some manner unknown to Lanz, an edging was broken off and driven through his chest and arm. He was thrown to the floor unconscious, but quickly re gained consciousness. When fellow workmen reached him the board was protruding from both sides of the body. , . "The accident occurred at 6.30 In the morning. Dr. Nelson and Llnd sey. of Old Forge, were called and rendered all possible assistance, plac ing him on a train and accompanying him to Utlca, a distance of fifty miles. In the mean time I bad been summon ed to meet the train, which I did, and by request of Mr. Pullman, who ac companied him, Lanz was conveyed to St Elizabeth's Hospital, where I pro ceeded at once, with the assistance ot Prs. Wetmore and Groraan, to remove the pieces of edging. I might add that up to the time of administering the anaeshetic Lanz was perfectly conscious. "On two sides of the edging the grain of the wood ran In opposte di rections, and believing that the loose tllvers were already detached from the edging, and probably Imbedded In the lungs, I deemed It advisable to romove the edging by carrying It through the direction in which It had started. I enlarged the openings and with a great deal of force drew It slowly through the body. "The hemorrhage resulting was In significant The right lung collapsed below the seat of the injury. Upon inhalation, and exhalation the air passed freely through both openings." I'. Hyland further described the treatment to the physicians. Enough for laymen to know that, although l anz's recovery was retarded by at acks of pleurals and empyema, he returned to his home on Aug. 27, ten weeks after the accident, his wounds having nearly healed. TOOK WHITE MAN'S "BOOZE" CURE. Twenty Sisseton Indians Leave Insti tute for Reesrvatlon. Minneapolis, Minn. Twenty Sisse ton Indians left the "booze cure" In stitute here recently to return to their reservation in South Dakota. The white man taught these Indians to drink whiskey, so they came to the white man to cure them of the whis key habit The Indians are the sons and grand sons of chiefs who used to fight the white man instead of fighting his fire water. All who are left of the Sisse ton tribe seem to have taken the bot tle as their totem. For, lo, these many moons they have been coming, by twos or threes or fours,; to Minneapo II. seeking the "medicine needle," en tirely willing to be "Jabbed" jn the arm. , These twenty were the only ones of the tribe's aristocracy who had not taken the treatment end, they say they hope they are cured. "Slcht : (bad) Indian once; hope wahtl (good) Indian now," said Bit ting Bear earnestly. HUGH ES CACTUS LEATHER NEW PRODUCT Giant Saguaro trom Mexico Adapted to New Use. Tho recent discovery of a new pro duct, tailed cactus leather, was an ac cident, like a great many other usuful discoveries. TIhtj nro almost a thousand specie of nictl. n large number of which for cut the deports of Arizona and some of the Ktntcs, nnd extend far Into Mex ico. The suguaro cactus, or Cere us gl g.inteus, the largest growth of nil, which towers sometimes to a height of 45 feet or more, heretofore has never been utilized for any purpose, except that tho fruit is sometimes eaten by tho Indians. In Mexico the mnguey plant is largely used In tho manufacture of pulque, mescal, tequila and agua miel, niul tl.t; Tiber for rope and matting. From tho pulp ot the leaves paper is ninde. Tuna, the fruit of the opuntla, Is rclU.icd by many. The ocotlllo hn served usefully in tho construction of houses, or shackH, and fences for the Mexicans and In dians. From the nlggerhead cactus ecliinocactus wlslizenll cactus candy is made by soft.ning the fiber by boil ing and filling the pores with sugar. Other species of cacti have limit-d uses. In Tucson one day, while handling n piece of the ecliinocactus wlslizenll, th- writer noticed, after the moisturu was pressed from the fiber, the grout strength nnd pliability !t possessed. When dry, however. It became brittle and chalklike. Experiments, In an tf fort to obtain strength and pliability 'VM I raw The Giant Saguaro. In the fiber when dry, led to a success after about a year of careful work. It was discovered that the giant rx gunro was particularly adapted to tho uianufacture of cactus leather prod ucts. The heart of the saguaro la pecu liarly formed, being a series of rods or poles set in a circle, extending from top to bottom of the cactus, and tn to the earth in the form of roots. This heart of the cactus also proved of great value In the manufacture of many fancy articles, such as baskets, caneholders, boxes, picture frames, veneers and for numerous other pur poses too varied to mention. When used In this way sufficient of the fiber is left adhering to the rod to bind them together in the form de sired. After tanning and drying this liher makes a tough, leathery Joint, which binds the sticks together In the most secure manner. The Language of the Umbrella. There Is a language of umbrellas as of flowers. For instance, place your umbrella in a rack, 'and it will often indicate that It will change owners. To open it quickly In the street means that somebody's eye Is going to be In danger. To shut It quickly signifies that a hat or two will probably be knocked off. An umbrella carried over a woman, the man getting nothing but the drip pings of the rain, signifies courtship. When a man nas the umbrella, and the woman the drippings. It indicates marriage. To swing your umbrella over your shoulder signifies "I am making; a nuisance of myself." To put an alpaca umbrella by tha side of a Bilk one signlf es "Exchange is no robbery." To lend an umbrella Indicates "I am a fool." To return an umbrella means wU. never mind what it means; nobody ever done that The Kitchen God. The kitchen god of China is perhaps not rightly ao called. He has place over the cooking .ange. but he la the "recording angel" . qf the Chinese house, and It la hla duty to note the actlona of each member of the fam ily and report them to tbe gods at the end of every month. Once a year tow he goes , to heaven in , person an makei hie annual report So one t year the family prostrate themselves, before him, oarry him in prooessioa. and finally burn him, while crack are Bred.