g MAKING- BIG GUNS, 1 |«| How the Government Hurry-Orders For Great War |»| Weapons Are Being Executed. Down on the meadows of tho Passaic, on the shore of Newark Bay, and within the bounds of the city of Newark itself, says the New York Herald, men are working day and night on guns for the Government. The complex and exquisitely adjusted machines that turn and bore "jackets" and "tubes" never stop, except for a "rest" of an hour or so or the replac-, ing of a cutter dulled by honrs of slow, steady ploughing through the hardest and finest steel. Steel is everywhere, in almost shape less, oblong ingots, fresh from the casting room; in forged lengths, in cylinders, now bearing some resem blance to a "rapid fire," and in chips and shavings. There are strange and interesting scenes in these gun shops and the pictures presented each hour are dramatic in the extreme. Here in these processes is to be seen the acme of American manufacturing, the great essential fact being the machinery, that is almost automatic in its work, and the few men needed to control and guide it. Except in the forging room scarcely a blow of a hammer is heard. The shops are almost as silent as the grave. Wheels revolve, cutters turn, men stand placidly by the side of machines, moving softly here and there. All this time, each second, the gun that some day will belch forth fire and steel of its own is coming nearer com pletion. Chips fall as the bars re volve, but the cutters are not heard. The guns, it would appear to the oulookers, are almost making them selves. Of the sturdiest type of American mechanics nre the men employed. They are workmen who think and who know, men who can judge when a cer tain instant has arrived, knowing its approach by intuition, rather than BORING MACHINE. men of bra\ ik ud muscle. The latter qualities so much needed in a gun shop of tVlay. Should a partially finished tubevor jacket have to be moved there is) the electric traveling crane overheat!, that, at the jerk of a cord, swings Aver its grappling irons, and these neell only to bo attached. The gun man of to-day needs ouly to guide and to kriow. These works' are of the Benjamin Atha & Illingworth Company, one of the three concerns in this country that have the Jlant and the skill to turn out guns 7of size. Their main shops are at Hairison, the next station to Newark, anji their casting shops across the Pa>saic, on the "Island." Dozens of pieces for the navy and for coast defence \re being made here. )Worl. of Greiit Care. Six weeks is practically the minimum of time for the making of a modern gun, and to finish one within that space everything would have togo marvellously well. The "treatment" of the steel would have to be a success at the very first attempt—something that does not often happen—and the hat the been these .ugh long since relegate J to the scrap yards. Here is the first stage of tlie modern gun—ragged arid rusty metal that is carted in wheelbarrows up to the fur nace doors. The maws of blazing heat, several thousands of degrees in intensity, stand open to receive it. So overwhelming is this beat that even the master meltev has to put on blue glasses to peer into the flames rising ROUGH CASTS. over the bubbling sea of metal when the doors are open. When the doors are dropped down—that is, shut tliere is only revealed a single spot of brightness, an eye that looks into the furnace's flame, and even this cannot be approached too closely with the naked eye. Beginning; tho Gun. The gun is under way. Teu tons of metal are already in the furnace—a lake of molten, seething metal held in by banks of sand. Other things of steel are to be made of this mass, the gun works being only a portion of the Atha A- Illingworth plant. Whetliei used for peace or war, steel is steel, differing only in quality. It is all "boiled down" in the same way. Iu shadow is the casting shop, ex cept when the doors are raised, when a Hood of light, a wave of extreme heat, is thrown out. In the dusk of the shadows grimy men raise the sea of metal with long bars. The master melter, never still, steps now and then to his wheels, set at one side of the furnace and looking like the brake wheels on a freight car, and gives one or the other a sharp twist. By this lie regulates his tire—five hundred de grees at a twist. The silica "bricks with which the furnace [is lined can stand four thousand degrees of heat and more before they commence to melt. The master melter runs up the heat to the extreme point and then lets it down. There are three "heats" a day in the casting shop. Three times metal is heated, three times it is let go with a mighty rush into the casting pot. The last few moments of each heat are the dramatic instants. It is then, at the judgment of the master melter, that the furnace is fed with "medicine," shovelfuls and blocks of metal being tossed in. On this depends the qual ity, the strength, the elasticity of the steol, essentials of the most vast im portance of the gun of to-day. Into tlie Casting Pot. Two hours is usually sufficient for the boiling of this steel in its cradle of sand. At last the one moment ar rives. The bar at the furnace's back is worked through the sand to make an opening. An instant, and into the casting pot below the mass runs, scat tering millions of sparks, a glowing, golden torrent that foams and hisses as it plunges down. The picture of the gun's second stage is superb. On every hand fly these sparks, and the mass bubbles and seethes in the casting pot. On its top, through the glow, can bo seen a dirty mass—the sfcg or the scum that is of no use or value. But the pictnresqueuess of the scene has not ended. The casting process is only half through. The liquid metal must get into its moulds, aud that in short order. On a track the casting pot rests. It is pushed along this track until a gi gantic eraue overhead seizes it, swing ing it aloft. Over mounds of sands it is swung, and the metal, by the move ment of a bar,is allowed to drop down in a thin stream. Again shower upon shower of sparks, surrounding the men •ho, with chains and staves, control e clumsy pot aud pull along the me. The grim old shop, with its floor of sand, its unrelenting dust and and its dreariness, is made into 40 brilliant cavern for the the toiling men are supernatural in tho light. In the Ronglt. A prosaic time follows, when the metal in the moulds must cool. When the sand is finally knocked away the gun that is to be is only a rough mass of cast steel, indicating only to the ex pert its fine quality, and not even to him in any degree, for the tests must come to prove that. In the forging shop this mass is hammered and worked until it becomes an octagonal ingot of just twice the weight it will possess when it is finally turned and bored in to a "jacket" or a "tube." The hoops, the third part of a gun, are cast and forged hollow, not in solid cylinders, as the jacket and tube are. With the carrying away of the rough ingot of steel from the forging shop the special work of gun-making com mences. The boring and turning factory is the scene of the first step in this process. Completed guns, ready for mount ing and for fire, are not turned out in these gun shops. The finishing touches, the actual puHing together of the parts of the gun, the rifling it self, are done at the ordnance works in Washington. It is the business alone of a gun shop to make the steel and to hand over to the army and the navy the three parts of a great gun— the "tube," the "jacket" (which is slipped on over the tube and then "shrunk on" by contraction) and the "hoops," two in number, which, for the purpose of strengthening, are fit ted on tightly over the muzzle end of tho tubes. Once these three parts are together the metal becomes, practical ly, one piece and it would be very nearly impossible, by any art or sci ence known to experts, to get the jacket oft'. Finlnliotl I>y tho Government. Only the "rough machining," in tech nical phrase, is done on these guns, this meaning that the final finish anil the rilling is put on by tho Govern ment itself. "Rough machining" seems, however, a strange term, for if delicate work requiring the utmost ac curacy and preciseness is not done hove it never was anywhere. A Checkerboard Fiwli. Joseph Evans, of Thirteenth street and Snyder avenue, is the owner of a very queer looking fish. It is four feet long and has a tail two feet in length, which is spotted and striped, like a snake. Evans caught the fish in an oyster dredger while at work on the oyster boat Mary Colmau. It lived nearly a day out of water and caused 110 end of trouble before it fin ally collapsed. The skin of the strange inhabitant of the deep resembles a checkerboard, being uuiformly colored with black and blue squares. Mr. Evans intends having a glass case made for the pretty creature and will exhibit it in his parlor. Several scien tific men, who have seen the fish, are at loss as to how to classify it, and all of them agree that a "what-is-it" iish would be the proper name for it.— Philadelphia Record. Water » Cure For InillgeMlon. "We must give special attention to the outside of Ihe body as well as the inside," writes Mrs. S. T. Rorer on "What to liat When You Have gestion," in the Ladies' Home Jour nal. "The skin must be bathed every morning with tepid water, followed by a brisk rub. This is equally as im portant as correct diet. A good rule is to use water freely inside and out. At least two quarts of water daily should be taken: half a pint the first thing in the morning and the last at night, a cupful of warm water before each meal, and the remaining quan tity divided and taken before meals." Centennial Celebration*. This year's crop of centennial cele brations includes observations of the four hundredth anniversaries of Vasco de Gama's discovery of the way to India by way of the Cape of Good Hope, at Lisbon, in May: of the burn ing of Savonarola at Florence, also in May, and of the birth of Holbein at Basil, in Switzerland. Montpellier will celebrate the hundredth anniver sary of the philosopher, Augnste Comte; Ancona that of the poet Leo pardi, who was born atßecanati, close by, and Paris that of Michelet, the historian. 01<1 Bank in'Mebraska. The building in which tho oldest bank in Omaha is located is in a very dilapidated condition. Tho porches • o°° NEBRASKA'S OLDEST BANK. are tumbling and its windows and tops of the doorways have been taken posession of by the sparrows. Not only was this the first bank of the town, but the first financial institution under the charter of the Territory of Nebraska. Its president was Thomas H. Benton, son of the Senator. Leroy Tuttle was cashier, and A. N. Wyman teller. In the panic of '57 the doors were closed. The ancient structure is decidedly picturesque in its dilapidation and has frequently been put into pictures by local artists. piE. Protecting: Tree» From Mice. Mice are liable to do much damage unless pretty close watch is kept. Wherever a mouse has been working set a trap and catch him when he comes again. A bit of toasted cheese will tempt him from apple bark every time. If the tree is badly girdled cut grafts from the limbs of the same trees and insert them in both the upper and lower portions of bark around the cut so that a union may be effected. Both will grow together next season.—American Cultivator. Mineral Manure# for Grape Vines. Grape vines usually need very little manure other than mineral, and that chiefly potash. In European countries it is the habit of vineyardists to burn the pruniugs each year and apply the ashes. No other fertilizer is used. In fact, stable manures are objected to, as they make the vines grow rank,and the fruit will lack the flavor that be longs to fruits whose vines are only manured with the ashes. Much of the excellence of French wines is pos sibly due to this sparing use of man urn.—Boston Cultivator. New Varieties* of Potatoes, In choosing varieties of potatoes for spring planting it is advisable to se lect those that have been recently pro duced from see l, provided, of course, that their quality and productiveness have been tested and are generally known. The variety that is newly produced from seed is generally more vigorous then than it is likely to be after a few years contest with the po tato bugs, and the blight and rots which all help to decrease potato vigor and productiveness. But it is not advisable to plant potatoes, however good, which are very unlike standard sorts, and whose good qualities arc not generally known. There is so much difference in potatoes that the mere fact that a potato is apn ati is not enough with most consun ers to secure a market for it until after they have given it a trial. Potato Planting, It is said that two ounces corrosive sublimate dissolved iu one gallon of water in an earthen vessel of some kind and this turned into a tight bar rel with fifteen gallons of water will make a preparation that will destroy tho germs that produce the scab 011 tho potato. Jf the seed potatoes are put in sacks and one sack full at a time be dipped iu this diluted solution un til the potatoes are entirely covered and allowed to remain one and one half hours, the germs will be destroyed. T.ie potatoes should be then removed, drained and spread out to dry, and when thoroughly dried they will be ready to cut and plant at any time. As the solution is very poisonous it should be kept in earthen or wooden vessels,as it will quickly corrode iron, steel or tin. The amount named will be sufficient to treat from five to eight barrels. Growing Caulillower. Considerable effort has been put forward by some writers to make it appear that the successful growing of cauliflower was a difficult operation, but as a matter of fact any soil that will grow good cabbages will grow good cauliflower. If early crops are wanted the seed must be sown in Feb ruary and transplanted into shallow flats as soon as the second leaf shows-, the soil in the flat should be rich. Air, water and keep at the same tempera ture as for young cabbages. Plant in the open ground as early as possible, not later than the middle of April, if it can be avoido i. The soil should be rich and deep, using a handful of fine boueineal mixed with the soil about each plant as it is set. Cultivate care fully each week. Hot weather injures the crop greatly, so to be successful with it one should grow only for an early and a late crop, avoiding the mid-season crop. For the late crop the treatment is about the same as for late cabbages. The main points to bo observed in the culture of cauliflower is to have the soil rich and to keep it well cultivated during the season of growth. Bow to Prune Fruit Tree», It is a lamentable fact that not one man in a hundred, fruitgrowers in cluded, knows how to prune a fruit tree properly. In the first place, fruit trees re pure a very little prun ing, aud the old idea that large quan tities of the inside branches should bo cut out "to let in the air and sun shine" is nonsense. Tho pruning of trees should be done oa a scientific plan in so far that there should be a good reason for every cut that is made. Every lioeral bearing fruit tree sends out little branches or spurs on the sides of all limbs and small branches, and these should never be cut off, uor should they be injured when tho fruit is being gathered or in any other way, for these spores produce the fruit budß for the coming season's crop. Every tree which needs pruning should be pruned when the superfluous branches are small and the cut should be made at the junction of the limb 3 with the main stock. At this point in the growth of the tree the intelligent ob server will note a decided seam or erease running around the base of each branch, and if the cut is made at that point it will heal more quickly than if made at any other place. When pruning have at hand a quan tity of grafting wax to brush over the raw cut as soon as it is made. Graft ing wax is readily made at home by melting a pound of rosin with a pound of tallow, adding a small quantity of linfised oil if the wax is too brittle or more rosia if too soft.—Atlanta Jour nal. Improved Strawberry Culture. As cnlturists become more familial with the requirements of the straw berry plant, and especially where it is properly grown 011 small areas, they learn that while moisture is essential it does not of necessity mean the em ployment of elaborate systems of irri gation in order to make it successful. The necessary moisture is most easily secured and especially during the first season, by attention to the proper details in the preparation of the soil and in cultivation. Early spring planting for new beds and early spring cultivation for beds already set are important, for to allow the soil to be come dry in the spring beyond the point necessary to get it into good workable condition is to take great risks in strawberry culture. Early and continuous cultivation saves the moisture to a:i extent not appreciated, for it has been in excess of that from cultivated ground to an amount equal to an inch and three quarters of rain fall in one week. As a well-known strawberry grower remarks: "A man with a team and sprinkling cart would not replace the water on an acre of land as fast as it escapes by evapora tion from the soil when it goes oft at that rate, if he had to haul the water one-fourth of a mile." Low prices are likely to rule for the next season ot two and yet there will be money in strawberries if they are grown on the intensive plan and the market sup plied with the high grades of fruit in fair quantities, rather than the in ferior fruit in larger quantities. Cure Found for Tick#. The bureau of animal industry has just made its annual report to the House of Representatives. Some of the points discussed are of particular interest to stockmen. Part of the re port reads as follows: "Probably the most important work of this bureau during the year has been the experimental study of the effect of different substances in de stroying the ticks which spread the infection of Texas fever. For a long time it appeared as though 110 mixture could be obtained which would kill these parasites without severely injur ing the cattle which were treated. Recently it has been found that a petroleum product known as pnraline oil will destroy the ticks without greatly irritating the skin of the ani mal to which it is applied. It is thought that by dipping the cattle twice in this oil, with an interval of a few days,all the ticks will be destroyed and the animals, even from in fected district, may thereafter be shipped with safety to any part of the country. If this hope is fill til led, the dipping of cattle from the infected districts soon must become general, and will save millions of dollars to the southern states. At present such cat tle must be kept separate and in quar antine pens, a'.id sold as quarantined animals at a less price than they would bring if they were free from such re striction. • The general dipping of iu fected cattle would prevent the infec tion of cars and stockyards, and en able this bureau to prevent the dis semination of Texas fever with less hardship to tho owners of cattle, and with greater safety to the stock inter est. "An effort also is being made to prevent the losses from disease as 'blackleg,' by distributing to"the owners of herds where such losses occur a vaccine that will produce im munity. The ravages of (he disease in some of our slates have become discouraging to the owners of cattle, particularly to those who have en deavored to grade up thoir herds and breed the best beef-producing va rieties. Many owners of large herds have reported annual losses ranging from eight to fourteen per cent. This disease appears to be quite easily prevented by vaccination. Hereto fore, however, the methods used iu this country have required two vac cinations, with au interval of ten days or more, and the trouble and iixpense of double vaccination, added to the cost of vaccine, have deterred many sto-.ik owners from adopting this method of prevention. This bureau has experimented with a vaccine pre pared by a special method, which pro duces sufficient immunity to resist the diseitso with one vaccination. This bureau has prepared a large quantity of this vaccine, and has distributed it for experimental purposes. By se curing this material free of charge and obtaining immunity with a single operation, the method has been so simplified and cheapened that cattle owners who have suffered loss from the disease iu the past are anxious to adopt it." HOW DO THE FLOWERS CROW? "Oil. Bage, in wondrous wi.-dom old, Tell ine how tho flowers do grow— Whence come tho colors, purple, gold, Jn which they rise, and bloom aud glow?" "My child, the flowers ure words of God Mown in seeds of silent good. They draw their strength from 'neath the sod But Heaven sends them daily food. "The sun. the moon, the stars conspire To make them live and hud and blow, The breezes help them to aspire, And dews perfume them as they grow "But 'tis the rainbow from the skies, Broken by the lla in King's blow, That sprinkles them with Heavenly dyes And makes them with such splendor glow." —Rev. S. W. Small,in llow to Grow Flowers. HUMOROUS. The Kindly Man—Why stand ye idle here? The Other Man—lie benches in de park's bein' painted— see? Hojack—Why are you consulting the dictionary, Totudik? I thought you knew how to spell. Tomdik—l do. I am not looking for informa tion, but for corroboration. Teacher—You are painfully slow with figures, Tommy. Come, now, speak up quickly. If your father gave your mother a s">o and a ;S2O bill, •what would she have? Tommy—A fit. "Darling, please answer me," he moaned as he stood in the centre of the parlor. "I am on tho rack." "So is your hat,"shouted the old gen tleman, who had a gallery seat ou the stairway. Foxey—Did you sm- l the Borems a card for your mils'. Mrs. Foxey —Yes; how coub get out of it? Foxey Well, \ 7 Bi/ctell Borem that Smith is going to come. Borem owes him money. Billy Blink (boxing instructor) Great Scott! That was an "outer" you gave me. But what's that in your glove, I say? Amateur (just learning) Oh, that's a horseshoe—l put it there for luck. Judge—The officer says you were drunk and disorderly. What have you to say for yourself? The Culprit —Drunk, perhaps, your honor, but not disorderly. A drunk is always iu order with me. "Do you really mean to stand by what you say about retiring from pub lie life?" inquired the intimate friend just before an election. "How do I know?" responded the politician. "I'm no prophet." Ethel—lsn't it strange that Flossie attracts such intellectual men? Maud —Oh, no; she told me she always planned her gowns when they talk to her, and that gives her face that in terested expression. "I trust," she said, patronizingly, "that you are a true artist—that you contine your efforts to an elevated plane." "Assuredly, I do, madam," was the reply. "I am a frescoer and invariably work with a ladder." Cholly—Maud has to wear glasses; the oculist says she has been using her eyes too much. Charley—l should say so! You ought to have seen her at the dance the other night; she was jast surrounded by men all the time. "Mamma," said the little girl, when the steamer was three days out. "Well, darling?" said the indulgent mother. "Mamma, don't you think we've sat in this place long enough? Let's move round to the front porch." Ethel—Why didn't you attend Pro fessor Dump's lecture on the "Cycles of time?" It was very interesting. Maud—The subject of the lecture was embarrassing to me. You know,dear, I bought my wheel 011 the installment plan. She—Ah, count, you don't know how my love for you distresses my parents! I heard my father say this morning that he would give $50,000 if I could never see you again. The Count—Ees your fazaire in liees offees now, you sink? Mrs. Hussel (of Chicago)— Why, there's another of those signs, "Tai lor to H. K. H.,the Prince of Wales!" Does it take all the tailors iu London to keep him in clothes? Mr. Hussel —Maybe he owes 'em all bills, and has togo from one to another. "My friends," said the minister, earnestly, "let us beware of Satan. We know that he scatters tacks along tho narrow way in order that the just may puncture their tires. And, as the congregation jo.laled homeward,many a member thought of the pastor's words. He—l wonder what the meaning of that picture is? The youth aud the maiden are in a tender attitude. She —Oh, don't you see? He has just asked her to marry him, and she is accepting him. How sweet! What does the artist call the picture? He (looking about)— Oh,l see! It's writ ten 011 a card at the bottom, "Sold." A Kxperinnnl. An interesting stock-raising experi ment was inaugurated Tuesday when C. S. Ouderdonkof Philadelphia took a lease on the Canada de Los Alamos (Xew Mexico) grant of 15,000 acres, near Laray Junction, which he will at once stock with goats. Five thou sand goats will be placed on the land at once and as many more in thespring, and if the experiment j roves a suc cess other grauts are to be leased and stocked. The ob.eot is to produce pelts to supply kid-glove manufac turers. French experts say that north ern New Mexico and southern Col orado, owing to the dryness of the atmosphere anil the constant sunshine, produce tiner-grained and tougher pelts ihau any other part of the world, and for this reason goatskins from this section command a high premium in the Eastern aud foreign markets.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat