************************** | SOD USED FUEL | ■¥ The Picturesque Turf Cutting Customs *• of Old England. J Threatened by the scarcity of coal, It is entirely probable that the English people will turn to their fields of peat as a resort. Besides the extensive fields to be found in Scotland and Ire land, there is considerable of it in Eng land as well. In Yorkshire, Devon shire, Cornwall and Somerset, says a writer in the Golden Penny, peat is to be found. I believe it is only in the latter county that it is made use of for fuel. Peat or turf cutting, as the Somerset folk call it, is a matter of supreme interest to a number of peo ple, who, in that remote part of ling land, look to it as their chief means of warmth in winter, coal being con sidered a luxury for the better or well to-do classes, the masses preferring to burn turf. There seems to be no exact time for commencing operations. It depends a good deal on the spring. A good cutter prides himself on be ing able to cut each turf to an almost exact square. These squares are gen erally cut out in one great "chunk," nnd then divided iuto two or more "peats," according to the desired size. As a rule they are about eight or ten Inches across, and are live inches deep. When first cut they are stood on end, one on top of the other, something after the fashion that a child builds IE CART USED IN HAULING PEAT. a card house. The next process after the cutting is finished is the turning. This is usually done by women, and very picturesque they look in their great sun bonnets to preserve their complexions, though most are tanned already with exposure to the keen air and hot sun of the moors. They busily and carefully turn each turf, and, coming to the end, begin all over again, as the peats have to be turned so many times before they are in proper order for use. After they have been turned well they are put up in what Is locally termed "hoyles," that is to say, about six peats under neath, and say five on top. They are left like this for a few days, and are then piled up in "ruckles," which are TURNING THE PEAT, shaped something like attenuated hay ricks. Peat, like everything else, varies in price according to a good or bad sea son, and is also appreciably cheaper in summer than in winter. There are various ways of buying and selling. The richer mi.n buys his turf by the load; the poor man by the piece, very much like one man purchases u ton of coal while his poorer neighbor buys a sack or a "hundred." A wagon-load of turf costs about sixteen shillings on tiie moor, and is hauled or carted at the purchaser's expense. A cart such as In the accompanying illustra tion, Is called a turf cart proper, and would hold about five or possibly six hundredweight. Turf burns a great deal faster than coal, and In new-fashioned grates Is hardly suitable; but a good big fire of peat on an open hearth, Is, to my mind, Mi* --mm J'CATi'fTTINO TIME IN YOKKHItIIIE, it picture, and tempt* to do .••way Willi fireplace*. build chimney corners and Import pent, A |wai lire haw one drawback; when once Hi li should never be allowed to K" quite out. A billow* l k it ncce**lty. IIN Willi thill old* 112 toll lulled Implement the glowing indie* lire coaxed lllto Hume, nnd with the addition of fre*h pent Hie lire l» nittde up for Hie day ngaili. There lire many old fa*hlolied IIIMItor llounen 111 Holllerset Hull Mill l.oaxt of an open hearth uml n chimney Corner ill Hie gtMid old style, mill in Ihe«e Hie "Hqtlirv" iilwny* bus a title pent ttl'c UmIUK, The great fear of IIUMII owner* I* thill Hie llirf Will collie to «u end. In many part* It ha* nil km taken out, but vfldeure remain* uf lt» cii*t«ucv by the extreme blackness of the soil Many things flourish in old pea< grounds; potatoes like it, nnd rhodod endrous delight in a peaty district. QUICK BOILING KETTLE. The Active Heating Surface Increased t>3 Novel Design. The gas stove, by means of its in stantaneous fire, has already saved many hours in the kitchen, and the quick-boiling kettle illustrated here- HOT WATER KETTLE WITH HOT AIE TUBES ' which is designed to further expedite cooking operations dependent on a quick supply of hot water.. The ordin ary kettle heats water most rapidly when It Is made of copper and has a large fire surface. In the kettle hers shown this heath ? surface further Increased by four taper tube's, large at the bottom and small at the top, which pass through the body of the kettle. These act as flues for the hot gases, and, as tlie water in the kettle is in contact with their sides, they act as so much heating surface. It is as serted that a kettle of this design, even when made of iron, under the same conditions of lire, will bring a given quantity of water to the boiling point in one-lialf the time that an ordinary copper kettle requires. The Medicinal Value of Spiders* In some out-of-the-way districts in the south of Ireland spiders are high ly esteemed in the treatment of croup. The peasants get from an old wall the webs of seven black spiders—two of which must have been the owners sit ting in the middle. The insects are killed, and are sprinkled with a little powdered alum. The resulting mixture must then lie boiled, and when cool the liquid is poured down the throat of the patient. Black spiders are evidently supposed to be full of medicinal virtue, for they are largely employed in the treatment of ague as well. In Somersetshire, if one is afflicted with tills unpleasant ailment, the way to get well Is to shut up a large black spider in a box and leave It there until it dies. At the moment of its decease the ague sliduld disappear. In Cornwall the treatment is more heroic. The patient must swallow the spider, which is generally taken In thick gruel. In the extreme north of Scotland spiders' webs are believed to be a cure for neuralgia and toothache. The wabs are collected and made Into a small poultice, which is applied to the spot where the pain is felt.—Answers. Ancestor of the Tomato. In the Botanic Garden of the Bio logical Department of the University , I- ''l'fi I WILD TOMATO. of Pennsylvania are some tine speci mens of the plant from which the cul tivated tomato lias been evolved. The blossom Is of tlio dainty whitish blue so familiar in vegetable gardens. The plant Is thorny. The little tomatoes are of the same green and red a* the cultivated tomato.—Philadelphia Rec ord. In lluultt. "How Is my sou getting on?" In quired the boy'* father. "I can't fpeak as approvingly as I'd like to," answered the instructor. "Whenever I ask him a question lie wants at least a day to look up the an swer, and when lie get* it it is usu ally utuntisfaetory." j "Well," answered the parent, with u I High, "HUM alone can tell, I suppose lie will turn out lo he either a great diplomat or no good ou earth."—Wash ington Suir. Sunk. ■ •> llouiollt AMI omit. There are pi rluips in no oilier coup try of the world so ninny rats as in ' Japan. The wooden buildlngi. with their *traw roof* offer the he»i lurking | places for them. Whilst we use dog* and cat * lo net rid of Hie rain, toe Japanese employ for Hie same purpose ; a certain Wind of snake, Hie 'Modal*. 1 .MI," a blu> green tiller They are j •oinetluie* u» long a* seven feel, and | uru said to the best ritulwfi In UM OI id. JCIfcNCE AND INDUSTRY. Experiments carried on at the Uni versity of Illinois show that coal washing removes a considerable per centage of the slate and ash iugn di ents and 50 per cent, of the sulphur, rendering the coal more tit for gas making and coking. An immense dockyard Is to ba con structed at Antwerp to cope with the exigencies of the rapidly Increasing shipping trade of that port. When completed it will cover no less than 67 acres. The scheme has received the financial sup port of the most prominent shipping owners in Germany. It has long been known that there were iron ore C posits east of Blwa bik, in the Mesaba Range, in Minne sota, but owing to thc'r apparent small size and the large deposits dis covered to the west, they have been neglected, and little prospecting has been done in this region of late years. Ten or 15 years ago. however, the re plon was carefully examined by a number of experts and passed by for apparently more pro- .ng mines. The Minnesota correspondent of tli.? Engineering and Mining Journal now reports the discovery in this region of an ore body a mile long and a half mile wide under but 50 feet of sur face, and that a large mining com pany has already secured an option on the property. Workmen in steel works are occa sionally poisoned by water-gas, of which trbon monoxide is a large eonstiti t. A treatment for such eases has been the transfusion of blood, and now in its place M. A. Mos so, in the Comptes Rendu of the Paris Academy of Science, lias suggested that the victim be placed in an at mosphere which contains oxygen at considerable pressure. In experiments on two monkeys, poisoned with car bon monoxide, it was found that the one subjected to this treatment, which involved being placed in an atmos phere containing oxygen at a pressure of 30 pounds to the square inch, com pletely recovered in half an hour, while tlie other animal, which hud been left to its own resources, died. A sawmill run by electricity began operations recently in Oregon and seems to have been successful. The electricity is generated by water power, the water being flumed from a small stream which runs a 50-horse power water-wheel, in connection with Which is a dynamo to generate the current to run the mill. Wires are strung from the power-house to the sawmill and are attached to the saws and other machinery of the mill. A feature of the electric sawmill is that the carriage is above the log and car ries two saws, which are so fixed as to cut both ways, making two cuts at the same time. This arrangement al lows the saws to cut going both ways, and obviates the necessity of having to bring the carriage back and begin cutting at the same end of the log each time. It is claimed that the mill will cut any lumber or logs at one half the cost of other mills. Up to the present there have been two general methods for operating railroad switches from a central tower. The most common and old est of these is by means of manual levers In the tower, mechanically con nected to the track switch by a sys tem of roils, chains, or wires. The second' system, known as the electro pneumatic, consists of elect ro-niag nets, controlled from the central tower operating valves which in their turn control the compressed air used to change the switches and signals. Now there conies a new system, the ''all electric" as It has been named, which consists simply of a small electro mo tor at each switch whose action Is governed from the central tower. The only connection necessary Is the two wires of the motor circuit. This sys tem has recently been Installed in several raidroad yards in Chicago, and Is giving satisfaction. The practical perfection of the whole apparatus, which in theory Is so simple, and es pecially of the electric Interlocking machine in the tower, is the result of several years' experimental work. Honvnty l)pvrlo|ie,l by Mull llom'n. "That naive trust in human honesty that one sees here is distinctively American." said an Englishman, glint ing to a letter box. "I would like to see a Continental business man lay packages mn| large envelopes on tin top of the post boxes. They Would in' taken before the glue of tile stamp* was dry. There Is another rea>on why we can't do that at home. Our dear old l.ondon f>'gs would wipe out tin addrcs-t In abort order and unless the collections were frequent the paper would In- reduced to a pulp. A d*y vllnwte make* you Americans talk .villi a dreadful nasal accent, but It ■hows up your honesty." Jim Newcouib of Caldwell, Texas, |» In p4 «Me»*lou of a mouse siiiik" about I t Inchon long that Is out uf th - u-i. | order. On 111'- back of |iic head anil neck Is a complete photograph of a woiusn, showing bust ami fa. e ||er hair Is done up In it top knot and she has on a shirtwaist. The Miakc was killed near Milano Junction uinl ia pre. served lii alcuhul as a rurliait) TH* Image la formed on the »kin b> the ar rangement of tile two coli#'* of ths snake black and dlugjr *l»IU. tit) Vet too bull)' .Vewr LATEST TRIUMPH IN THE INDUSTRIAL WORLD. Look at this Immense block of granite shown at the top of the picture and think of the amount of work that must be put upon It to convert It Into a perfectly round, high-polished column. Then look at the companion picture taken only a few days later with the granite already reduced to cylindrical form ready for the polishing process. The machine which works this rapid transformation is the latest triumph in the Industrial world. It is called a stone lathe, and the work that It has been doing since it was installed lias demonstrated that it Is a success. Tills lathe was built in Philadelphia, and lias been installed in the granite quarries at Vinalhaven, Me., where columns of many sizes arc being turned out for the Cathedral of St. Jolin the P 1 ' 1 "", Now York City. This great new cathedral is to have uo less than thirty-two granite columns fifty-four feet long by six feet in diameter, which will weigh when completed 1(50 tons each. In addition to this it will have innumerable columns of smaller dimensions. In length the lathe that will perform tills work is eighty-six feet, a 135 tons. It has swings six feet six in eight cutlers. Each tool takes out a cutters reducing the column twenty over the stone. The block of granite is sixty-seven feet long, eight and a ha W,VmV .W.VAV.V.V.V.V.VV. With a J: •: Remarkable Range-: ■■ •! ■ e Tlie 10-liuTi UtH» iiti.l tlio 30-Inch »JJ Jj« Sinooth-Itore Compared. V.'.V.V.VAV.V.V.V.V.V.V.V' In our recent article of the new army sixteen-inch gun, we described the construction of this powerful weapon and gave some particulars of its re markable ballistic powers. It was shown that if the gun wer*» set up at the Battery, New York, with an angle of elevation of forty degrees, and fired with a full charge of smokeless pow der, tlio shell would reach a maximum height of live and three-quarter miles, and raqgc to a distance of just under twenty-one miles. With a view to showing what a vast area would be dominated by such a gun, we present the accompanying map of New York City and vicinity, from which our cos mopolitan readers may readily deter mine whether their nightly ride of one hour, more or less, into the suburbs would be sufficient to place them be yond its zone of fire. By the courtesy of the War Depart ment. we are enabled to present the MAT OF NEW YOItK AMI) VICINITY SHOW ISO AltF A DOMINATED BY KIKE OF SIXTEEN-INCH SIXTEEN-INCH UUS, accompanying photograph showing a full-sizetl model of the new sixteen lueh army gthi, suspended above two of the largest coast-defense guns of the Civil War period. The one to tie left is a twenty-Inch smooth-bore Hod man, the largest smooth bore it: the world. The gun to the right of it. be low the chase of the sixteen 'nc'i gun. Is a Hon pounder l'arrott rille, which also is tlie only one of Its size ever con structed. all the other I'arrotts being of elgbt-lui'h. six-Inch and smaller bores. The twenty-Inch Itodman close ly resembles in outline and relative proportions the celebrated fifteen Inch smooth I Mires, of which so many were used la the Civil War. The length of this sun Is twenty feet three and a half laches, the maximum diameter five feet four Inches, the diameter of the muzzle is two feet ten Inches, and the tutal weight tI.V-'iM pounds. For the sake of comparison we mcnpltu TUfc SfcW AU*l\ UlMil Mit.fct I. , OAtlMt lun.t; tiitll'Allll* hihi a «• INCH HODMAN alloo I'll liollfc. AMU A I'AIIHOII Wu l'ol MUCK Ittl l.h. Istli' *)iu«* lljjurt * oft IM* lieu- •Ult't'ii LUCLI nruiy rliU* A* futluwai Tin* I«>IIM> minimum iltliuvlvr nl lirtwl) .!*«• tovU nuU at iuu»«lu i*»o h¥i isiut nd when in working order it weighs ches by sixty feet long, and it has cut three inches deep, the entire eight four inches in diameter at one pass in the illustration weighs 310 tons; it If feet high by seven feet wide. inches, and the weight of the finished gun 300.000 pounds. The weight of the shot for the twenty-inch smooth-bore was about 1000 pounds, whereas llie shell for the slxteen-incli gun will weigh 2370 pounds.—Scientific Ameri can. A Picturesque Chinese Residence. This cut. from the Illustrirte Zeitung, shows a peculiar and picturesque sum mer residence oil a cone rock at Chin Klang. This rock can be scaled by u AN EXAMPLE or CHINESE PERSEVERANCE wide stairway constructed out of the rock itself. The stairway, the attrac tive houses on the slope of the rock, and the temple on the summit are evi dence of the remarkable perseverance and Industry of the Chinese. Facts About Sirltzorlauil* Switzerland enjoys the unenviable distinction of having a larger percent age of luuactlcs than any other coun try. Iu Switzerland a favorite dish is boiled chestnuts mashed fine and served with whipped cream. In proportion to Its size, Switzerland lias more Inns than any other country In the world. The entertainment of tourists lias become the chief industry of the land, and has been officially computed to bring In $23,000,000 a year. Little Switzerland comes up with 125,000 men, of whom 102,507 are In fantry, 375.S cavalry and 21.032 artil lery. The cost of her army annually is about $1,750,000. The waterfalls of Switzerland are being rapidly utilized for the driving of electric dynamos, and it is rare to find a place of any size which is not well lighted by the power of some mountain stream. The longest tunnel in th« world Is that of St. (>othard. on the line of the railroad between Milan and Lucerne. It Is nine and a quarter miles in length ami cost over $15,000, ooo.—Stray Stories. The UauM at Uvriuin Afrit-*. The Coventor of tierninn Last AfrV> ea reports to the Foreign Office lii Berlin that whilst elephants have al moiti disappeared from the district* under his control, hipiiopotaiul, lions, and l«H>iwtr<|a ml rvrrjr miff Wit itbmnul. lit* nay* iluii ih«* |>liiuiuil»u i-ui|ili>y«-« IIHVW IU UKI* ilif trriiii'*i CART) In |ir«' Ift'lltltf IbI'IIIMIVVI iliiUlUal Ultftlt Ml utk» 'A liii-m* auluiaU. A MAID TO PLEASE A MAN. I iluly appreciate maidenly toil. Embroidery, tut t intr and simple crochet, A painting on china, a study in oil— Some (,'irls thus employ themselves day after day. But they're hard to make love to when thus they're employed, And so for my own fiancee I insist On a girl that's less busy. I'd be over joyed With one who had nothing to do but be kissed. —ltoy Farrell Greene, in Life. HUMOROUS. "Did your pastor's ocean trip benefit lilm much?" "No; he seems to bt> more at sea in his sermons than ever." "Nothing is impossible," said the lawyer, grandly. "No,"* remarked his client; "I suppose anything is feasible where there's a fee." Wigg—That young lawyer friend of yours seems wedded to his profession. Wagg—l don't know about that; he's going to marry a girl named Sue. "Why didn't you come to work yes terday?" asked the boss. "By Jove!" exclaimed the absent-minded clerk. "I really believe I forgot all about it." "Clear out now," commanded the housewife, "or I'll set the dog on you." "He wouldn't hatch nothin', lady," shouted back the tramp. "I'm er bad egg." Tommy—Pop, what does it mean to fritter your time away? Tommy s Pop —Oh, that's just another way of ex pressing the futility of arguing with a woman. "Life with you," he wooed fervently, "would be one grand, sweet song." "Not much." replied the practical girl, "if it's to be anything of that sort it will be a duet." "They say obesity is dangerous," re marked the Wise Guy. "Ila," chuckled the Simple Mug, "that explains why the Pullman porter always gives the fat man a wide berth." Nell—How docs Maude get along with her husband? Hi; is so fond of pie, and she can't bake one to save her life. Belle—Oh, she convinced him that pie didn't agree with him. Mrs. Smith—Old Mrs. Tunnibone's gift to the insane asylum wasn't very large this Donation day,l hear. Mrs. Jones—No; but itwus very appropriate. "What was it?" "A crazy quilt." "So you wish to take my daughter nway from me," remarked her doting father. "Well-all—that wasn't just exactly my thought" stammered the nervous young suitor; "my folks could, perhaps, spare me with fewer pangs." CONJURER MARCO DEAD. He Wn* Regnrttml by Muny n* the l!«»t o >e«r<>m»iicera. One of the best-known and at the same time most romantic figures on j Paris boulevards has just disappeared. ! Marco, the marvelous conjurer is dead. For the lust 30 years this extraordin ary little Greek, with a smiling face, twinkling gray eyes and well-trimmed mustache, wearing an Inverness cape and red Turkish fez was a most fa j miliar feature of the night life on the boulevards and elsewhere where Paris has its amusements. Marco could do anything hi- liked with a pack of cards. He could sit at a cafe table, .">. r«i>lh:ilt In Olilfti The commencement of the fo tball j season recalls many curious deserip ; 11 ons of the game glvi n by old writers. In early days It was nothing but a favorite way for an excite I mob to let 1 off their superfluous spirits. They contented themselves by kicking a blown bladder up one street and down ! a pot her. The play became so rough j 1 but in ia»tt Edward 111 ultimately was | forced to prohibit it.and lie 1 iMcted | that all its players were to be Im prisoned during his Majesty's pleas ure lilt hard 11. Henry IV and James 1, Were ul»o enelllli » of football. th«* latter e\t>iv»sing bis utter tliliurri'tu* for "nil rough and violent e\eri Is • as fttwill," and at the end of hi* illatrllie describing the game as "iiu'et j <*' for the latticing than making a He the usiis thereof "It U h,t> resting to note that the ltr»t bather bad was made at t'hi »ter. where of lit* va I lie of Ha, 4(1. «;t* .ntnu.tllv pie-ent ed I * tilt* llloeniaker* to till* dr» >er* Oil Mhi-OVe Tuesday up to the year J.M«i. H lint the game wa» ss't atiullshid I.ouduu ti^ilm