WAYS OF POCKET SHUGGLERS. ELUDE UNCLE SAM, i This aons, it wna for the Covernment Service. ; are the methods transatiantic tourists often resort to in their endeavors to cheat Uncle Sam by the paying of duties arti subject to duty. In smug- gling goods through the port innumer- able clever schemes are devised, call- ing for continued alertness and the display Gove the Ix Strange evading ies rnment detectives connected with mriment, Although systematie smuggling, for years existed to an alarming has been effectually broken up, Government to-day is still losing usands of dollars. fany ocean travellers thinks it a l joke to beat Uncle Sam. Ofttimes glory in it, telling their friends how they got through little knick- knscks without paying the lawful duty It is this class of smugglers with which the Covernment has the most trouble It od difficult to detect them, and when distovered they usually have ready a ei excuse. The Government rien call this practi pocket ir~, which means that goods tht in concealed upon the person Iry is fly ggled One ean easily conceal about hi worth f of sf being hi Mey smug- oe are YW chie smu this sands of 1s with hopes ‘h smuggling two oe detailed. Known they isit the y on the prevent ial detectives ar few ocean ilers, 3 of the ste rival of After Jegulars trave imship compan a pass assured at old time the mingling customs {ir the detectives steam of smugglers are nger being th none as the aboard ship, they stroll the pier vrowds. As the vxamine the baggage lteep a sharp A familiar vives is to ally against a man. nay b iscovered If a wearing a belt or he pocket his is uround with the 1spectors lookout these detec- brush accident. In this it passenger Is has any small method of apparantly way up ir packag in Sometimes it is gre I will betray himself ma; dotected by wh answery exami ir e be to part |SCOvVer a He He rm easy to di smu from his actions in many the inspec aration ways tor his the lec by he makes his « eadge he detect heel in his monds, and dock his bag the catehir man w shoe MO to stow he glancing at gage is examining verness of AWAY arrives his 1h when Keeps marvels th oe detectives catch the old timers Their An now seldom used. ds in plaster brazennesrs id method Oi at these carries them throu of smuggling, conceal amon and patent he gh. was oo di chest protectors porous body. smugglers ars of thair other syi- Perhaps more pockét gh the waggin n tong than by any 7m. A man or woman with brilliant 8 is tempted to display and talk ut them. This they often on ship while crossing over. On arri- the inspectors receive a tip, and if the jewelry not included in the d ation, nan or an, as- tonished, that United Gover mt employ mind readers in Tips often come from different parts Europe large purchases of ry and diamonds have been made by velleras. There ia an incentive in this tipping business, because the in- former receives as a reward a certain percentage of the value of the goods geoized. The American consuls, of course, keep a sharp outlook, and their tected throu ues do thy ia orla rn iar the wom believes the nment tat ( nl is nt States n the customs se ATVYiCe of jewel where tra catching smugglers, A surprising number of anonymous tips come to the Treasury Department, Usually they are incorrect, and it is surmised that the informant is simply in search of revenge. A peculiar case of this sort Is recalled. For a lonz period the Customs Department had its suspicions directed against a man who made frequent trips across tho ocean. It was known that he made large purchases of diamonds in Europe But the department could not find them when the man arrived here. Finally agents were sent over to watch his movements, men that the man specified vessel with £100,000 worth of gems, When the steamship arrived i The accused whole Government, sue everybody con- It was not until a year later that the truas story of the well devised scheme leaked the to denounced The letter which the Government ro- case was written by the He had learned that he 80 he made up his mind He pur din- The man himself, was watched, the $u A 000 worth of real monds and then the paste ones, genuine brilliants he concealed in a mattress nan his stateroom, where « confederate aboard the ship afterward them. The Government de- tectives were happy when they learned that he had finally retired from the smuggling trade, He was altogether too much for them.-—New York Sun. secured A TERRIBLE DRUG. The Cocaine Habit Superseding the Use of Opium. smoking, “hitting practi Opium it the pipe,” a thing of f there is Orleans as is called, Is ally past. It is a tion | within the boundaries of New a room where indulgence {: course, as | in the eity money enoug! the que stranger can go vice there thes: are fiends a room opium the hava and buy smoking, rent be no nes cocaine i the p hypodermically methods in recklessness maddening ens hearta« cents’ fetims ¥ It white ywider Sures hes worth of the 8 extreme oy COA habit cheapness the reach of the most . police caine habit sry effort making a day attae 3 realize is d to hat ing and passe Inveterate ge ft ROOT no.’ arrested flend creating a stur when we him § and locked bance cocaine an lane his ay: the effect AWAY u When drug already In his system off he gave way to hysterical Tough as he was, he and begzred and prayed for kis accustomed instr ment and its deadly load. We refused to give him his belongings. He hysterical, at thought :t safer to telephone arity hospi al for ri We fold 1 be dangerous to keep him dru us the gris’ Ww apt grew last w the Ch and oe ins ictiones wor. iat it woul without the “I carried the fellow his syringe and ed and shouted tor jov. Dissolving grain of 1 spoonful of water, The m ware some cocaine. He dane about a the drug ne arks lef by previous thick that it was impossible for him to find a spot big enough to allow the inser- tion of the needles. The other sleayva was rolled up There was the result, At last it was necessary to in. gert the needle’ point on the man's thigh, where there was an un- punctured spot the size of a dime. The man’s skin looked as if he was suffer. jing from small-pox. It was a horribls gight. 1 believe he has since died. 1 never knew until then how awful th» nse of the drug was “In my opinion the worst result of the cocaine habit is that it absolutely kills all sense of self-respect. Ite users have no morals, no conscience, There ig no depth too low for them to dive into to procure the money for 11 ’ rolled up h sieeve injections 80 London City Regalia. The most interesting features gangriay, wearing a long eape coat, under which was a satchel in which they found hundreds of bril- | liant gems. : It is cut | | prystal and was fashicaed in the days | of Edward the Confessor. The peart | city mace from ¢ { VANDERBILT'S WOODLANDS. FIRST EXPERIMENT IN FORESTRY MANACEMENT IN THIS COUNTRY, A Hundred Thousand Acres in North Caro- Cood Results from the Care Given, It Is an interesting first attempt at systematic forest man. more, in North Carolina Mr. G. W Vanderbilt owns two forests in the mountains of this state which are un- der the same mapagement: One, Biltmore forest, ving a few miles the southeast of Asheville and em bracing about 8,000 acres: the other the Pisgah forest of 95,000 acres, cov- ering the eastern and southern slopes of the Pisgah ridge, with its spurs, and the valleys of some of the western tributaries of the French Broad The Biltmore forest {sontherounded river hills of the Asheville basin, the river dividing it. Its most distant portion abowd ten miles from Ashe ville. Although it has been under for est manamement about six years the iMind shows great improve ment over the surrounding which has none of the protection The timber on the river hills of the French Broad was never of tl best but at the time of its acquial- tion several decades of « Hiting for ant pa 10 river is only WOO forest, 1€ ium with cons ture in many f grow permis it to guard aon ¥ ution Altho { prees against fires three h igh there are who among other duties act as fire guards for the few fires of any extent men ive to UK) have oc Ago vere ot excor” "gr fuel, 1 3 the hic : cut The Manas ment re oval Fer hag tinue the of here |t these pleastire drives are day to form a 1 f rather an ther je trees whi some art of at arboretum of the hh A 1 Tan or planted side That is all t! on = ten to grow in the climate o } 1 wd nt be planted I'rees ar ¢ along the are to aAOuE 3 everyvwhe! fare from both native snd tphere nursery is of #7 slong the arboretum Aas ked wolmens ready roads however, has nothing as It beau a matter of experimen in the deportment of the various trees at while the forest and fts entire management, far as com patible with its utilization as a portion af landscape gardening 8e- a conti income from wood- fs for Biltmore 80 the is to Cure land For a great many years the products of the Biltmore forest must be of a low gra fuel, en ft of a poor quality the man agement being inuous fe d of 10] chief efforts of directed toward starting a young wood of desirable of trees, cord wood, At present the cut ting amounts to oniy a few thousand cords a year. This is hanled to the riv. er from the hills on either side, and from there is floated to Asheville, where it is caught in a boom. This method of transportation is cheaper than haul ing with wagons. The roads from the forest to the river are constructed so as to be down grade all the way. Though the roads are only of earth, they are carefully graded and have no steep places, of cord wood to be carried. The cutting of the wood is to be so and oft the kinds ceed what will have grown during that time. At present the annual cutting is leas than what is being yearly added by growth, so as to permit the woods, which are too thin, to thicken up, and much of the cutting being done ls with the object in view of removing old trees or defective ones, which by their ~hade are interfering with the growth of young trees beraath them. Does iL pay? So far the Biltmore for. ent har boen paying fod the improve. ment cattines which have Leena made, as well as for operating expenses, and the porelbility of increased returns is greater cach year. The conditions surrounding the Pis- gah forest are go different from those existing in the Biltmore forest, and it has been under forest management such a short time that but fow impor tant results have as yet been obtaineg from it. Raleigh (N. C.) Observer. HER PET BUTTERFLIES. Mrs. Meyer Feeds and Caresses Them Till They Are Tame. Mes, Julla Meyer, a prominent mem- bet of the Woman's suffrage League at | the Ladies’ Health Protective As- ation, and who 18 also well known her philanthropic doings, has suc- in taming a number of bright, winged butterflies In Mrs, Meyer's home her pets flutter her, alighting on her shoulders with the utmost confidence their fair mistress my ability attract summer, while at my Mrs. belong my couldn't leave transported Wr wr “1 discovered to this home “They house, there to them to my city “They will ed, regretfully sald to country at Sea Gate,” really but 1 die, home, live country go 1 ada- ‘They last three and these | have now The « on 'y fly fleld, and two dozen from nuim- not long she only ks at the bes ten a Gate is a wee 3 are about days old about Se butter I had constantly as on hand, As old age 1 ber of my “How « them one us HWway the many they passed renewed constantly pels, lid 1 ? One time, that I could two alighted discover tame day on me Rome one thous was at ns th LOOK special attractive them feed them,” she sald Her musiio n up gently top Ye then eo ather mn id began yw Winas ther A Dog With False Teeth, The greatest curiosity of how at th oases inci: in the Ww sot teeth spread among the always the rowd and the in At the attempts of yuth on i arid rid with His Oo only dog false was $ic 114 we i ou md in grinders, the yr who pract I'he teeth were fitted up by vertisement, as his master a canine dental office poor old doggy's of an intends way io open An Engraver's Feat. Unless a person saw with his own powerful magnifying glass the words of the lord's prayer engraved on the head of an ordinary pin, he might be inclined to regard with skepticism any statement that Yet it has en. Three years himself by graver, Joseph D. Young. ago Mr. Young amused easily covered by the circumference of a lead pencil. Two weeks ago he be- gan to engrave the words of the prayer on a pin head, and found it easy work. The Jjettering starts on the edge rim of the pin head and cir cles around in a spiral until it finishes in the centre. Every word is distinct, and the letters show surprising deli cacy of touch. With the naked eve the characters are merely scratches, Trenton (N. J.) American. A Cork Rope. A cork rope is the latest invention it is made of small corks placed end to end, and the whole covered with a braiding of cotton twine; over this is a coarser braiding in heavy strands. The rope will stand a strain of 1,000 pounds. NOTES AND COMMENTS. | Our fisheries are worth about forty. five mililon dollars a year. The fish refuse 18 so economically and imgeni- ously utilized in the preparation of oils glues and fertilizers, et cetera, one-geventh, or fourteen the total Income from the per cent, fisheries, 1 like pounds when now being dri Beven Vegetables are apples and other fruit, of potatoes weigh one pound dried, and other vegetables shrink weight correspondingly. Onlous, rots and potatoes are the used most now, but the industry it 1s expected, develop greatly. in car vegetables will, At when ment ing gold lon is be dreds the very relief for moment the freezing and starv -geekers in the urgently demanded, infatuated adventurers make their ion 13 govern- Klondike reg- ng hun more are trying land of Epectac ie if it of 10 and irresist " rim] fn BO ETimy tra y Not desola would al Were gi not 7 h € recent vyoars outdoor life of giris and women beginning to show Lid CH Coneum; New Ei Americar Ben novel “X De moving graphical old remedies ioned the mode of be too dearly bo ght. It is most editor of the our outer shell timeworn while the ever young. in order to escape unkind remark we must act in accordance with our appearance, and are actually made old by public opinion. One of the first surprises people have as they begin to realize that they are leaving the record of a goodly number of years behind them, is that others think they are old. Casual remarks {vo that effect made before them come #8 a distinet shock. Presently they give up youth- ful practices because f(t is “proper” they should do so, and much against their inclination, "settie down.” Al most any one can remember, as a chiid, wondering how it would seem 0 be very old--thirty, forty, even fifty yaars. Then, when the thirty, forty, even filty | years have passed, the man or woman | looks back, feeling little older, and | surprisingly little wiser, than that child. No, we are never really oid, we | appear 80, because we are hampered Hy | the that unfortunate, observes Waverley Magazine, should grow old and gpirit within is { i physical infirmities and public pinion. | A. Y | cotton oll mill, the problem —_—. —————— “Conley, matager of a believes he golved He had gathered £ ton of mesquite beans and treated them in the same manner as cottonseed, From the ton of beans he secured six- teen and a half gallons of clear, am- ber-colored oll, very rich, and with a very pleasant, aromatic smell, The cake is dark brown, quite oflly, and is eaten greedily by stock. It is a well. known fact that stock fatten rapidly on the beans and that year when the crop is A heavy one always 8 prosperous for stockmen This year the beans are very plentiful, thou. sands of tons of them falling from the d rotting. If coud the shape of « cake, there al most Snough to carry stock winte hie the in one trees ar they be faved In would be through the better knew when it the introduc appropriated tion of reindeer the estal hment of a of Dative been ith Ka and the benefit Approp been Lh into Alas the ations have usbanded w expenced with the consequence is { reindeer NOAIETH sort of an formed to starvation Northern bie HNAarxani A Poison and its Antidote. SWANS janis her g nner tabl t % n Vhen the mit of season recs plion She Runs the Elevator, The Custom House elevator in San Francisco is run by a woman, Mrs Caroline Morse. She is the widow of a sailor, and by means of her work sup- ports her family. Appointed under ex-President Harrison's administra. tion, she was deposed during Cleve- land's second term, but S8an Francisco demanded her reinstatement at once, Preserved Pumpkins. Pumpkins are preserved for making pies by a newly patented process, which consists of cooking or steaming them and mixing with starch, and re- ducing to a powder, which quickly dis. when mixed with milk, and is then ready for use. “The Morse of the Century.” monde, “the horse of the century,” who was unbeaten on the English turf, is now the property of W. O'B. Mac- The problem of how to ulilize the! vast quantities of mesquite boaus that | grow on the prairies of Western Texas has. it is believed, been solved. Num- erous experiment: at couverting ihe Lear, into a marketable commodity bave been made 'n recent years, but have beep vroduct.ve of no permanent | ever paid for a thoroughbred. ak An Oroville (Cal) dog which fell into a well kept himself afloat until a basket wae lowered to him. He thea jumped coolly inside and was Mulag tec the top, thirty feet away. ;