————— BURGLAR PROOF. HOW A JEWELLER GUARDS HIS MANY TREASURES. Safes Within Safes—All Enclosed in Frail but Sensitive Cabinets Alarm Bells and a Watchman. Here are 200 feet of show cases, half of them on each side of a long room. and back of them are as many feet of up- right cases stood agninst the wall k the rear of the room are more cases, and wherever there is room for them are costly music* boxes, bronze statuottes, and ether valuable articles of European and American make. All the show cases are full of jewelry and other articles made of gold and silver. For twenty feet near the front the cases hold nothing but real diamonds and other precious stones, for the place is a big jeweller's sales- reom up town, where no imitation articles are sold—nothing but real gold and sil- ver and real stones. “What do you do with your goods at night?’ the reporter asked the propri- etor. “You'll find it easier to got them in sponded. “Bat you have some system of scour. ing them. Tell me what it is, for tho information of the publio—if it is no secret.” “There is no secret about it,” tho jew. eller replied. “Do you see those three cabinets, those black walnut cabinets. against the east wall? We put every- thing in those at night.” “You trust to a black walnut cn board all these cases of gold and monds, do you, valued at much?” “If you take the entire lot,” Mr. Jowel- ler laughed, “you can have it for $350. 000. But come behind the counter with me and let me show von the cabinets.” The jeweller | of the cast side of the room, between cases full of diamonds and costly stones en the one hand and upright cases full of silver teapots and trays and sugar bowls n the other hand. he said, Pp dia- at about how “Here,” when the cabinets were reached, “is where we keep every. thing at night, except such large articles as would not go in. In our business it is not the big things, but the little ones that » valuable,” hey were ordinary looking walnut cabinets, each perhaps seven teet high and five feet wide, and each with fol ling doors, an upper and a lower panel in each door. A boy might break them all open with a hammer in one minute. “But Mr. Jeweller threw open one of the pairs of folding doors and disclosed side an immense safe, that seemed to say. **Come on, now, if you're a burglar: let's see what vou can do!” polished steel sort, with tremendous re. sistance written all over it “Theso arecalled bur said the jeweler; ‘But that no safe is burglar proof. Nothing has been or can be made that cannot be broken, and an expert burglar can any safe in the world. It was one of the glar-proof safes,” I need not tell vou opon However, I think safe in New York. It is merely a ques tion of time with a burglar, and these safes are warranted to resist any attack, except with explosives, for twelve hours. There is not mach danger irom gunpow. der ordynamite in such an exposed and to operate with tools successfu quires twelve honrs As he spoke he opened the an fo doors Three-fourths of the interior as divided into shelves, all of the same heighth and breadth. The other fourth was taken up by another safe, ap; arently complete in sell. “There is where we keep our most val unable goods, the diamonds and other very costly the tap the small iuner safe. “There i# one of these inside of each of the large safes, and each small safe is separate and complete in itself, with its own sep- arate combination. If a burglar man. ages to roach the inside of one of the Inrge safes he still has another safe to open before he can get the most valuable goods.” *But what an immense labor it must be to put all these goods in the safes every night and take them out again every morning,’ i “Not so much as vou might think,” Mr. Jeweller replied sof will show You how it is done. Look at this showease. You see the articles do not lie on the bottom of the case, but on little shallow velvei-lined trays. Those trays are made to fit the showcase, three of them being just the width of the case. The compart. ments in the safes are made to socom. moda‘e the trays, each compartment holding two tiers of six trays each. So before closing we have only to slide the trays into the safes, and everything is socured,”’ “Tha t is very convenient,’ acknowledged, secure.’ **Ah, but that is only the first step to. ward docurity?’ the jeweller exclaimed. “You have seen that the safes are as strong as they can bo made, That is all that steel can do for us. Now we call in electricity to stand guard. Each safe is connected by separafe wires with the Burglar Alarm Company. If an explo. sion or any other jar should move one of them a sixteenth of an inch out of its place, a boll would ring in the headquar. ters of that company, and within ninet seconds two policemen would be here, anybody should turn the combination knob a hair's breadth that would have the same effect. I used to have the wires ‘run into my sleeping room, but I found that two or three times a vear there would be some trouble with orossing wires, and 1 wonld be called out in a hurry in the widdle of the night, and it gave me too much worry, wires connected with the Burglar Alarm Company, aud now when I go home 1 do ‘mot give the goods another thought.” Mr. Jowollor here closed the safe and turned the little knob that locks them. We can lock or unlock them a hun- times a day,” he continued, “bat when we once lock them for the night, ey are not opened again {ill next mom- ig. When I sot the combination for the night justbefore going home, I give an eloetric signal to the burglar alaem people, id that rnd the alarm is set, ft 1 articles,” jeweler continnod, Tins Pag "the reporter “and it secmns to be very f the safe myself after giving the signal, there would be two policemen here in a minute and a half, exactly the same as though a burglar were at work. Now do you think I can go home with an casy mind?” “Porfectly,” the reporter assented: “your goods are certainly safe.” “But that is only the second step to- wards security,” Mr. Jeweller ‘*Let mo show you the third.” nut cabinet. ¢ | “Tap one of those panels with your | fingera. please,” ho said. {| The sound that followed was muffled | and heavy, entirely unlike the sound | made by tapping a thin wooden panel, | “These slight cabinets are not as do. | fenceless as they look, the jeweller con- tinued “Those panels aro mado of | pasteboard, and other parts of the cab- worth 810 each. I'he tecth are of an excellent quality of ivory, from which | trinkets are carved. Of late there has | arrived a fashion of making the skin of | the feet with the claws nttached, into | jocket books and hand satchels. The | eather has the great advantage of be. It is not of very good quality, but it serves as Oil obs tained from the fat, is supposed to have Hundreds of thou- sands of years ago thore were crocodiles | have pasteboard within,” i vAnd asked. ‘Because pastoboard is a better non- | conductor than wood. That panel you in these days. In the Yale of Cashmere, No longer does the Vale of Cashmere haunt the imagination of poetical read- ers, for ‘Lalla Rookh” and Tom Moore have little attraction for the present gene Some visions, however, of the marble palaces, the roses, and the float | of pasteboard and two thicknesses of tin | foil. First there is the outer pasteboard | panel, which is stained and grained to mitate walnut; then a layer of tin foil; i i i i i | u second layer of tin foil; and finally a third sheet of pasteboard, which forms | the back of the panel. The first sheet of | tin foil is connected with the positive pole of an electrie battery; the second sheet of tin foil is connected with the negative pole of a battery. With the sheet of pastobourd between them, the metallic sheets do not touch, nud there is no circuit, operate upon the cabinet, and run a knife blade or a gimlet or anything alse | through the panel, and the metallic tool, touching both sheets of tin foil, instantly completes the circuit, a bell rings in the burglar alarm office, anl two policemen Come, ns before." “Is that all?” the reporter asked. “No. not quite,” Mr. Jeweler smiling ly replied. “Besides these little appli- ances we have a faithful watchman in the store all night. Part of his work is to press a little electric batton eve ry half hour from the time we lock the front door at night till we open it in the morning. Thereby he tells the burzlar alarm people | that he is awake and on duty. If he I sixty seconds beyond the half hour pass | without pressing the button. the two po- licemen come to soe w hat is the ors | | NALIer just as if 1 somebody had tampered with the safes.’ : : There were no more precautions, and and the inner regions of gold and New York San. the jeweler from the cious stones reporter emerged pre- BIG SAURIANS. Some Truths About Alligators Which Grow in the United States. “Did you ever see an alligator eateh fli« asked a wr , of naturalist a “1 bave watched the perform. wee by the hour. & Star ter. ar I The saurian lies oa a muddy bank in the sun, with his mouth wide open. Winged insects, attracted | the of the gather in swarms upon its tongue, just as thoush wore a sheet of fly paper. When a sufficient number has collected jt its jaws saddeniv. by saliva beast, 14 is closes and with a gulp the little torments have disappeared, afford- } at once hie Yoa ¢ : £ the rove and an heard, | hat ng Agreen dare srs the ear, in para re wt, althoueh ave olten little bird mouth of the cro ile order to pluck t} srtain sites which the reptiles could that is a if ad en without f wrefrom eo not othe wise get rid of. it failed to science for be ognized as such by a long time, “Un many occasions | hare had oppor. tunities of OLROrs , ing I'hey will eat meat in iron wat alligators in any Mar suit of shape, times they mon § fowl to hshes, Some. r th with wmselves by their tails | to the shore, mouths agape, and | silently absorb shoals of mullet and other comparatively small fry which pass aloog through the jut a favorite of theirs is to lie upon the surface of the water and quietly gobble any ducks or other animals that come within reach. Their heads are so constructed that when they are thus floating only their eves and and the tip end of the nose are above the shallows way and to see at the same posing themselves to any extent. and all is over with tho victim. “Perhaps | have seemed to confuse the alligator and the erocodile In fact, there are two Kinds of erseodilos in the United States the true ero odile and the allicator. The former is very rare in- dead, and it only ean be distinguished from the latter by a differance in the shape of the head. Alligators have been | found in the rivers and estuaries as far north as North Carolina, though not within recent years, \ past hunters have sought them so per. sistently and have slain them so reck. | lessly jextinet. At present their numbers in | Florida and on the Gulf const are fow, { In the unexplored Everglades an! other groat swamps of those regions they still | survive in numbers, awaiting the crack | of the sportsman’s rifle to anounce their demise, Jrofiminarity to sending their | hides nnd teeth to northern markets. | ‘In times past and to this day, accord. ing to current tradition, alligators have | been credited wit 1being very ferocious; | but the fact seems to be that thoy are sluggish and timid. In South America | the natives ofton wade into the water | where they aro and pull them out | by the tails. So it issaid, at all events, | When winter approaches, they embed thomseelves inthe mud of the shallows, | where they bibemnate and lie dormant | until spring. They breed in April and May, when the fomale seoks a lier] spot on a bank and constrvcts a small mound of mud and other material, in which she deposits her eggs, to the num- ber of 100 or 200. First she lays upon the ground astratum of mad and grass, on which she deposits a layer of eggs; on this she places another srratum of grass and mud, then more eggs, and se on. The eggs are hatched by the san, assisted by the heat which the decom. posing vegetable material generates, As soon us hey nro hatched the infant alli- gators scramble for the water. “Alligator leather is ming dearer nowidays on account of increasing rarity of tho animals. Goud hides are i us on reading the accounts sent home of the state visit of Lord and Lady Lans- downe to that city and their reception by the maharajah in his state barge, accom- panied by all his ministers. It was about two hours after noon that the scarlet-clad rowers of the barge bearing the vice- regal party were deseried rounding a wide swoep of the river, and slowly the long procession of state houseboats ture in the bright sunshine, with a set- : i i of snow-capped mountains. After the officials had been presented to the vice. roy the procession went on its way amidst the firing of salutes, the sounds of military music and ihe quaintly pie- turesque houses lining the banks, which presented an “unbroken sea of torbaned bends,” The whole population seemed to have turned out, and the broad river, u Me wea are the lofty hills beyond the Lake-i-Suliman, lit up by the glow of the evening sun. The procession reached the residency at 5.15, the landing of the ¥ the signal for the firing of another royal London News. icoroy being Bog Butter, wimens of in Irish discovered during Numer JS are to be which w 1 contury | bog butter “i soon the Museums re the past y peasants 3 engaged Some of them from depths of ten, fifteen and even cightoen the f the ground, rubble antiquity must be allot. angina peat wore or feet below surface o od to the finds, although no abselute exists by which the averagoe oe aol increase Examp] Hs of this butter woigh as much as thi and forty pounds and upwards, and are identified, by the numerous hairs of red- may be cilealated dish color, as being the product of the The found packed in lowed and in maossos Ww butter is ool of irregular form. The latter are ly surrounded with a laver of moss, and 3 YORsria 0 i } i isunl at times have an additional covering linen cloth, butter in water would of he obicot of this hi ga fe object of thus burving immersing it ia bog appear to be its prescrva- reamstances and in districts where salt could not be procared. Chem demonstrates the poat or tion under ¢ ical examination still $ O35 presence from o common salt those oily acids obtainable rdinary butter, and the absence of This is characteristic, for in the County Cork, ba without the sabsequent he prac tice [ass « into oblis tion the emploved it as an ¥ » er is still mado addition of salt. ! urving it even the tradi. descendants of has long 1) is forgotten by the former vears have ordinary and familiar Boston Transcript. race who mast in procecding. Pretty Winter Ornaments, A pretty mants pie ce ornament may be obtained by suspending an acorn, by a piece of thread tied around it. within half an inch of the surface some walter contained in i tumbler, or r. and allowing to remain undisturbed for several weeks. It burst open, and small roots will seek the water: a straight of vase, it |nuoe will soon | glossy green leaves, will shoot upward and pre. sent a very pleasing appearance, Chest. nut trees may be grown in the same manner, but their leaves are pot so boau- tiful as those of the oak. The water should be changed once a month, taking care to supply water of the same warmth; bits of charcoal adled to it will prevent the water from souring. 1f the little loaves turn yellow, ald one drop of ammonia int» the atensil which holds the water, and they will renew Another pretty ornament is made by wotting a sponge and sprinkling it with The sponge should be rofreshed with | water daily, so as to be kept moist. In no few days the seeds will germinate, and the sponge will soon be covered with | masses of green foliage. {Detroit Free Press. A Hospital for Dogs. To complete its list of varied attrac. tions Chicagy now has a hospital and boarding house for dogs—not the moungrels and curs that haunt the alleys, but the high-bred aristooratie St. Ber. nards, simpering and fuzzy poodles, bright, intelligent Manchester spaniels and fox-terriors, L. F. Whitman is wardon of the insti. tution and his wife is nesistant, Mr, Whitman is a veteran writer for the sportsman journal and has given the greater part of Lis life to a study of the different breeds of dog, and tho peouliari- ties of onch. A few years ago he opened a store on Wabash avenue for the supply of foods and medicines to kennels, but his business increased so rapidly that the hospital was a result. Only a fow days ngo he took possession of the six-room house on Fifty sixth stroet, } The first floor is divided into stalls for ‘the use of the dogs. The warden and his wife occupy the second floor, At t there are forty animals being foarded and doctored. The animals are 7aluod all the way from $800. ~(Ch cagn News, ; ; ; AN INDIAN SCHOOL. CARLISLE, PENN. How the Work of School and Shop Is Arranged Boys and Girls Who Find Employment on Farms. Twelve years ago Captain R. R. Pratt, tenth cavalry, was detailed to take about eighty Indinn children from the west to the old post at Carlisle, Penn., and or. ganize a school, That was the start. ‘The institution has grown steadily and is still under the care of Captain Pratt, ans superintendent, who is under the direc. tion of the commissioner of Indian af. fairs. Ho is the only army officer on duty there und is aided by a large staff of teachers und matrons. There is a diseiplinarian, Mr. Campbell, who has charge of the boys, nnd an assistant dis- ciplinarian, Mr. Wolf, a young Carlisle man, who recently graduated from a military institute in New York. Mr. Standing is assistant There is au office force, a physician, n matron in charge of the little boys, an- other, with two assistants, in charge of the girls’ quarters, and a corps of teach- crs, headol by Miss Fisher, the princi- pal. Nearly all of them live bn the grounds, forming a pleasant community, A large campus is inclosed by the girls’ quarters on the north, the houses of the superintendent and his assistant and the office on the cast, the school building and the teachers’ quarters on the south and the school dining hall on the west. Trees of great age g half, and at the edge of grove stands a neat band pavilion for summer evening concerts. Between and the walk is a fin roe drilling purposes. The 340 boys are orzanized into a bat talion of five companies«, with Indians for Dennison Wheelock, a f blooded Oneida, is major. Four of the exmpanics are composed of the boys and the other one of row | western v rir 1 : Tr tf ‘wtreteh of east i for sward § officers. ull- oO large hundred little follows. who are quartered together They have i very woil in the one under the eare of a matron dri po arms, but thoy foot movements All the pupils of the school are uni. i ght and formed, the bovs ina} gravish blu and blue with red trimmings. the girls in navy felt hats at this « loanks Fhe mai ourse, is done in the are effectively | that fors the it sfnad arracks th inal nent caps; fimt aug long blige blue dresses fox s00 the institution, # 1 Worg of rooms, whit m0] “ part of fnry Hrs ago iat sign wavs both inside and It is a well-de vith stair. he walls, he re are twelve lar nished Washington: a. far. ge ¢l i ns well ns any wn in an office for » principal 1a larg chapel or assembly ro m in the centre of Miss Fishe Fi. 8 music rr an * the second floor that will seat fully six hundred pron) ie I'he are twelve o 1 HOTEe are twelve «¢ all r Assen ony time, th in ree of a teach Acations of the pupils 3 » COaUsed DY the varioty onditions in the West, render it imoracti i cording to their ages * fod the pu it of ton oocur next to a great, Aoie to grade DLs fic. ana that a Littl of ten sits | There is a cholr of about thirty or | thirty-five voioes, led by one of the ma~ | trons and accompan ed by a teacher on the piano snd Dennison Wheelock on | the cornet, The leading soprano is alittle Pueblo girl, who wears glosses, whoss voice hus an excellent rauge though somewhat sinall power. The foot ball and base ball teams compete with thoso of the town at fre- {quent intervals, and there is always a { great deal of uncertainty as to the re- salts. A few years ngo some of the boys played Incrosse, the native Indian game of ball, but it did not grow in favor in competition with base ball and so it died out. This presents an odd spectu- cle of evolution. Capt. Pratt's appropriations and ae- comodations are sufficient to provide for only about 550 pupils, but he has man- aged to take nearly BOO in altogether by building up his system of farm employ. ment. It was started several years ago, and has become so successful and so widely known that he ix constantly in re- ceipt of letters from well-to-do people all over Pennsylvania ing states usking for a reliable Indian boy or girl. When such a letter comes he first makes inquiries by correspond. elce as to the character of the applicant and then he picks out a worthy pupil whom he thinks would be satisfactory and offers him the place, he receive a refusal. The are not very large, but as the bovs and girls have earned money at all, they are eager for the op portunity. Seldom does WHRZes offered seldom before any in paid, but the pupil is assured of a com fortable home, his board and a chance to attend = as twelve dollars a mouth paid to an Indian girl. ire taken direetly into In some cases nothing clothes As hi sometim and ’ hoo] rh is ©“ hese Pp pile the farmers’ families and work and asso. ciate with theirchildren. It is estimat i that the ei i i Zing a flue spread y Vaiue hy the and the Ac i for the dare among iw Indians is There is a form of contract whe: pupil agrees to go # the farm + { armer makes known er. tain period is usually i the mouths, but in many cases | tion of agreomen ont grow so fond to or many return farms great into white soci At; tth i 4 a girs off on farms ITORenN iri a total « are going and co the the ning greatest care | records to Keg INCrensd : 4 Werk farmers to ( Ve are made by the ing not oniv a ct, but al coount ke Bd . summary of tl cond a statemen Nis moneys but very fow cases the oo he § Hine, 11 * m excelent i ariner Ol Rohe ra; her nr the institution: one quite near where m a ft the ¢ other about " ! where the general ® two farms ! atl hand, he cows are ki pt, and three miles for the school does not depend the ! » a fund rations aging distant, are raised, wholly g ent for of the school. as ho has spon, built up b SUD. table individunis ton same progress. This is especially true 1: 43 in th which the far Phere is an instance of Mis Bre more ready the a iad the lower grades and his father in 8 rovnn two we nd The , after he had been at Carlisle a ear, sent for the boy The English means of objects and lip motions years are usually allowed a pupil to get hold of the English that is supposed to be required of a citizen. and in the menn. time every effort is made to break up the habit of The means employed is a regulation that forms half of Carlisle's dialogue. aan mm Og years anced Im m hy Two language is taught the aboriginal tongue, milf There are but two commandments that are in. sisted upon. One Thou shalt not speak Indian; and the other Thou shalt not use tobacco, These offenses are re. garded as equally enormous, Most of the sh pe that form the in. dustrial part of the plant are located in a large one-storied building built threo sides of a square in the rear of the boys’ quarters, forming the extreme northern boundary of the establishment. There are five of them here, where the boys are trained to be tailors, tinners, cobblers, carpenters and harness makers. The industrial classes of tho girls are placed in the dining hall building and are in, aon goods for home consumption. establishment are on the second floor; the school kitchen is used for the classes in cooking, while the girls are given courses in the laundry and ironing room. bakery. with two student apprentices as ussistants, Journeymen printers are turned ont from the school printing office, which is located in a large and well-lighted room over the boiler plant. Here n couple of dozen boys set type und manage the the school as well as a little weekly news shoet called The Helper, and a monthly review entitled The Redman, Small wages are paid in the shops, so ns fo remove cause for complaint that the pupiis are forced to do the labor of the stitution, as well as to afford some incentive for varnest work. The com. pensations range from six to twelve oents for each half-day’s attendance in the shops. The money is put to the eredit of the pupils in the school bank. The girls get no wages oxeept as wait. resses in the dining rooms. A vory creditable band of about twenty plecss furnishes music for the school on all occasions. It is at present lod by a bright young Oneida named Dennison Wheelock, who has finished his course at Carlisle and is now attend. ing law lectures at the Dickinson College. He has recently securod a full set of new silver instruments, and by and pa. Saat work fine wan to all his com. nto the production of some very Droeliont music, ae {mn the last the region abo frig into it San Francisguito Bay, on the Gulf coast, he saw ia i lvnxes i wildoats « nough fo stoc In one Canon . the started nenagerie, Ww hie 4 | Dirros 1 tor half a wile from them come tearing down ahead of him as ifthe Old N was after them, and they dashed on own toward camp, He kn w that some f ed them, and althon went in the hoy CX himsold wad o £ wii asl na Eells AE 3 av gh unbarme l on f getting a glims we Wien he had farther had table rock Was full-grown mountain lions not more than sixty feet abead of him, and they seemod to have seen him first and wore looking {straight at him. Mr. Gaskill remembers gone a hundred yards climbed onto a large astonished to see four and i 13 NOTES AND COMMENTS. Ix an address delivered at the Chicago Auditorium under the auspices ef the Chicago Press Club, Dr. Leslie E. sleohol habit, made clear why he so stead- wublic property, wit it would soon srocess instead of o eure; that it vols be used by lquor dealers themselves to brace their patrons up after a protracted spree, only to get into condition for another debaoch Under such elrcumstances, the doctor said, to give his cure to the public would 4 Everyrmisa curious found nowadays is, of course, destined 10 be exhibited at the World's Fair, and this is the case with the medal that was recently dug up on an island in the Columbia River by Dr. N. G. Blalock of Walla Walla. He and Clark expedition which wus present. Walla Walla Indians by the explorers. On one side is a facsimile of the head of Thomas Jefferson, around which, in a cir- 1.8. A. D. 1801.” On i the other is a tomahawk crossed a pipe, and below are a pair of clasped hands with the inscription, President of the | side ever a man's did, but he doesn't remem- ber all the minute details of his return to the camp —only he got there muy pronto, { He and his partner took riflos and went after the lions, but they bad gone. That night the barros were tied unusually se. cure, but their occasional snorts and wild animals were after meat. A blaze. Ling fire kept them at a distance. Mr Gaskill states that the Mexicans and Indians living on that part of the peninsala are in mortal dread of meeting n lion, as the beasts are in a constantly famished condition, and have been known to follow men for hours, awaiting a favor. able opportunity to pounce upon them. {Lower California. Seale Jewelry in Florida. The fish-scale jewelry which appears to be peculiar to Florida, and especially to Jacksonville and St. Augustine, is ox- tremely pretty. It is made of the sone of the base, which are scraped and cleaned until they assume a fine opaque white. The scales are then folded into the shape of flower petals and are put together and mounted with silver wire, Flowers aro the favorite devioe, al and placed against the plush bac of a panel. The prettiest of all are the sprays of flowers in the purest and daintiest of white, the veining of leaves and petais formad by silver wire, and with pearls for the heart of the flower, These are used for co ornaments and for the hair. Single Howors, goner. ally pansies, in their natural colors, are nsed for lace pins, and several ones together often form the top of a high tortoise shell comb. Sweet pea, single and double, white and Pirie and ti English daisy fa = and nal are carried violets, and even the delicate, a rt away by touriste as 3 a tip 10 Florida — ie "Circular. Axuricax doctors should know, lest they should get to trouble, that an American diploma in medicine doers not entitle to call himself a doctor in England. An American doctor tried it recently, and was prosecuted for the of. nvicted. On an appeal be. the Lord Chief Justice of England expressed the opinion that with- in the meaning of the law of England our in had falsely represented him- M. D., had falsely pretended - medicine. having “only Lord Cole. His appeal was disinissed and he the pleasure of paying in- he treasury of the ( the sun of ins for aus fonse and co ing taken, Contry Beil as an oct ad or of an American ridge, wiil now have fot ¥ which in America he has a legal ri to be uegree, said Jueen using in England a title to ork ma. is a humorous pl ase fo the war i arrow in Illinois. lis f course, the small boy, i He has adopted ation every known a shotgun to a ling to a brickbat: if 8 nuis. Bird Rr i destruct le The citizens of n that their business is pursuing, ning ton compin interrupted and their domestic oi ked by the « nstant fuss; ris. Moreover they say it to walk the streets many j bird .shot fnemy. peace is POEIRONS in- The been wounded by for the common of conservatories aud j ate houses 1 suffered. Unpopular as the opinion in general that Bounty passe] in a f misguided zeal. Meanwhile, the ibiquitous as ran the is, { Jill was row seems to be as mand Puget 8 steamboat racing States, and great the boats that ply Facoma. The Hud- of Ringston, which her and is now vand fleet, bas been easily by the now racing best of them at present are Victorian snd the Fiver, both of pellers with power- gin Now and then the word ind that there is to be a rare, and the demand for tickets forthwith becomes tremendou All k= with people of the rival ¢ Tux Columbia River and have walers the f the Unite 5 v x nl FS Ped ow #& the rival fmnong become 0 tween attle and son steamer, Uity was nn fast craft in Gay s of the S« anced i he h are screw pro ® Zoos TO crowded the boats out from their wharves, and the There are no snags to be water is smooth and deep, and I'mo years » de are ties byoet in begins ared the t Lime is always made. age the between the cities took many hours; the time has now been re- duced toone hour and fifteen minutes ¢ as ivy ii : Mosr experienced railroad men feel that the possibilities of steam practice are nearly reached, und that much great- er speed is not practicable. A maximum of 90 miles an bour, with a running speed of 60 to 70, is all that can be hoped for under the very best conditions. The limitations are numerous. and are well-known to all engineers. The Scien. tific American says that tho maximum speed of which a locomotive is capable has not been materially increased in a number yoars. The schedule time has been shortened, principally by re- ducing gradients, straightening curves, filling up ravines, and replacing wooden structures by permanent ones of iron or of switches, improved methods of signaling, Fire switch aud signal sys- tem, the abolition of level crossings; in fact, by improvements in detail and management, which permit a higher speed on a more extended section of road, because of greater safoty and the greater degree of confidence inspired in the engine-driver. Tax causes of the breaking down of the governmental machinery for tho dis- tribution of the relief fund in Russia are doubtless to be found in the curraption of some officials and the ineficiency of many more. ‘There is a popular im. pression that the administrative systems of despotisms are more simple, more di- rect and more effective than those of free The trath is, that despotisms breed administrative systems so full of Jobbery and corruption and inefficiency This was the case with the old Bourbon monarchy in France, and is the Sin with the Russian Government 0 bi \