OL' JOSHWAY AN DE SUN. (Of Joshway atood In front er his tent, Afif aicc'd hia aoltliat-a on, Bat when h turned fer to look Broun', De day wus nearly gone. Se i n i 1 - I hia beard, be scratched hi head, An' kicked his heel in de groun'; Xaze he tranter finish de battle-jo' Befo' de Sun went down. He look ter de East an' he look ter de Wat, , . An' he ware hia han' on high, "King Sun," seree, "I want jrou ter aca Me amite uni hip an' thigh! Come down ter camp an' real yu'ss A little while wid me, 111 git you a fan an' big wide chei An' aet it whar you kin see " Dry wus lota mo' talk, but de Sun come down An tuck a little eaae, 'An' when he got too awful hot. He called up Sr Brer Breeae! "Mi time ia snort," aez de Sun, seze, "An' you better do yo' do, Kaie I'm feelin' like I wanter aee His mortual scuffle throo! 4 CTCM RRMDl IIHlMi Well, dey fit an' fit, an' fowt an" Fowl, Kit-Ill dar in de linht or de Sun. But Joshway trailed um out an' aoon He had um oil de run. King Sun, he say, "I'm over due 'Croaa dar whar de night's still black; De folka will wake 'fo' de chickens crow, An' put der big clocks back." 01' Joshway thanked him mighty polite, An' ax him fer ter come "ft in, King Sun, he Bay, "1 speck dat I will be whar Tve aflers been." Den he moaied off, kaaa he ain't got time Ker ter set an' talk an' atay; He hatter go off whar de night still dark An' start ter break in day. Well, time run on an' people 'aps 'Rout Joahway an' de Sun, Some say dia an' some aay dat, An' splain why Joshway won: Sometimes when he wuz aettin' 'rour. What he couldn't he'p but hear. H say, Uo in de aettin'-room an' scorched my big arm-cheer! " Home Magazine. see How h from Uncle Remus's The w-wavw"-er'e-(Si-sS'.:S22 weav-.5-,-y()-b.g?22 "S 2"w --w -w -ww -w -w-w WOMJ-SU,SB'wBSig w -ww "WV fa.-w t-s I. ft- W A- Ctw "l-v ww--w-wwe-ww"wwrawft22 By BEN BLOW. gS8ggg2g HOW LOCO JONES SAW LIGHT. "I've rude night-herd, " the fore man of the Jack Hall outfit Bald, "un til I slep' astraddle of my horse; I've rode night rung when I'd 'a' sold my chance o' comln' through for a wore out rope an' throwed a bridle In; I've rode the trail an' seen tho cattle piled up dead at poison springs, which ain't no joyful vision by no means, but when I think of the time tho Jack Hall outfit night-herded Loco Jones till he seen light, I pass; that Buro was terrible." He blew a ring of fragrant smoke and peered out through It as If his eyes reached out to his beloved mountains and their canopy of turquoise sky. "Jones," he said, "wuz a poor devil that'd gone loco tendin' sheep, which ain't no ways uncommonly the end o' sich a life. Bein' alone does it, under the (tars that wink an' wink at you with out no sound. An' days an' weeks an' months without no human face; the rustle of the sheep when they lays down an' smell o' wool, by the Tarnal, It must be awful to live that-a-way. "Jones must 'a' came from Arizona or New Mexico becuz he sure kin spit the Spanish like a native-born, but no one never heard him tell just where his trail had led. Hla brain wuz kind o' llko a crazy quilt, all full o' patches, no two alike. I kind o' think sometimes, he'd made a mis cue back In the past an' drifted oft to hide, but if he did we never knowed. He stood plum six foot three, straight la his socks an' must 'a' been a won der of a man before the loco et him down to skin an' bone. His face wuz tan, but kind o' ashy underneath, an' crow feathers ain't no blacker than his hair, only his hair wuz dull an' hung in strings as if the roots wuz dead. He first come to the Jack Hall outfit when Cook wuz holdin' fort alone, the boys bein' off roundin' up Poncha pasture, an' when I rode In at night he d settled down to bein' plum at home. " 'Bill,' Cook says, lntroducln' of him, 'I has a new-found neighbor, an' I hopes a friend, which lives some place on Poncha, close to Cottonwood. I'd wish to have you meet him, as near as I kin make it out his name Is Jones.' " 'My name,' the stranger says, 'is reely Norval, becuz I tends my fa ther's flocks, but Jones'U do. A rose by any other name'd smell as sweet, as Shakespeare aays, so Jones'U do. The world is runnln' over with the nanio of Smith, an' so I takes tho name o' Jones to help the Joneses out.' I looks at Cook, which points his Hnger at his head an' winks, which gets me straight, an' then old Bull whlch'd been snoozln' some place iu the sun comes up. 'Odds boddl ln,' says Jones, 'a very devil of a dog. Hero, knave, come here," an' dern my pictures if Bull don't walk straight up to him an' lick his hand, which sure wuz plub unnatural, him oeln' a backward dog by nature an' slow in hookln' up with strangers. " 'Plum locoed,' says Cook, speakln' mu o absent-minded, but mlsstatln' of tho truth. That's right,' says Jones. 'The "hole world locoed, all but me.' 'That ajn't noways a lie." says Cook, to square the bread he'd mads. " 'it's the eternal truth,' says Jones, 'as this here doggie knows, which he tells me with his eyes. I ees tho real heart o' thing, the good ' true an' beautiful, only my head 18 full o prickly little aches that sever dies.' "I seen hia i :t urn t . , . i t i , . I . , ',..,,. tho start, shni-n Witn D "en that-a-way sometimes, but he turned out to be a handy man to have around an' buckled- up to Cook an' "Ull like they wuz long-lost brothers n helped around tho shack an' did "dd chores an' acted as If he wuz "Jin to show that ho wuz white 118 d bllllt IlisSelf n Shnplf hut mnxtlt noways whlch-a-way about his face, trampln' alone, shakln' his fist an' cussln' an' cryln' out awful in the night, but no one could 'a' helped It an' we never tried, the loco had too fast a hold on him an' wuz corrodln' of him, lock, stock an' barrel, slow but deadly sure. Sometimes we let him ride a bit, more to keep him contented than for any good he done, an' Cook bein' plum sympathetic for hlm'd let him have his saddle any time he'd wish. Things gradual settled down till no one hard ly noticed Jones, but Cook an' Short Leg Dwyer, which he'd kind o' picked out from the rest, watched over him plum concerned to see he didn't get no harm, them two sure bein' as white little men at heart as ever wore bow legged pants to fit a bronch. "We all knowed Jones couldn't last no length of time. How flesh an' blood c'd stand the demon fires as long as he did marvels me, but w: knowed well that soon or late the loco'd reach his heart. One time when he'd took out a horse to kind o' look up strays In Poncha pasture a storm come up most from a clear blue sky. The clouds puffed up like steam, an' every thing seemed kind o' prickly with electricity till I sure see we had one tarts off to see how things Is drlftln on with Loco Jones. "Cook comes n-rldln' back alone, an' I kin see that somethln's hap pened by the way he sets. 'BUI,' he ays, 'poor Loco's glttln' close up to the crossln', he's awful sick. Short Leg, maybe, 's lied some, but then, he's Irish an' thinks he sees things when he don't, but they's n mystery some place the which I ain't a-goln' to make no efforts to explain, for Loco Jones wuz In the nhack, laid out plum stiff, his lamp all fired low, aa wet as If he'd swum the Cottonwood. We couldn't shake him up so we un dresses him an' fixes him the best we kin. He's plum sure goln' to die, but If I ain't mistook It's goln' to take a spell before he does, an' this here outfit's got some nlght-herdln' on its hands,' which prove to be tho tin 8klmmPd truth, for Jones Is surety sllppln' off his hobble, the which I sees when I rides over, but lettln" go all-fired hard. Most o' the time he lays there like a log, but now an' then he kind o' stretches hlsself out an' groans like life was rooted deep In him an' hated bad to leave. "Cook wrasBles up a nightshirt for him, which Is a wonder, nightshirts not bein" none esteemed In the Little Gorell them days, but one o' my boys has one the which his mnw'd made for htm partlcular.an' which he'e kep' as a kind of sooventr an' never men tioned none for fear o' bein' called sissy. He loans the shirt to Cook, which says that when Jones dies he'i goln' to die dressed up like the gentlo man an' scholar that he Is. "When Short Leg Dwyer sees thai JoneB Is bound to die, he asks me kin he ride over to Canon City an' gll some holy water to baptize him If h gets his senses back, an' when he's gone we finds the pinto bronch right close to where he seen him at the bottom of a twenty-five-foot drop, saddled and bridled, neck doubled up under him an' broke, dead as the mummy of a old Egyptian king. We looked around lor signs of Loco, but nary sign showed up an' no one never knowed If he'd went over with the horse or how he come to be there at the shack only Short Leg kept a-sayln' that he sure nad seen him streakln' it along the side o' Poncha drove by the devil to the place the bronch lay dead. " 'It's mighty close,' says Cook, one day, 'last night Bull howled, an' mighty soon now Jones Is goln' to that land from which no traveler re turns, an' If I ain't mistook he's goln' to get his brains back before he goes, for mostly these here kind o' cases happens that-a-way, aa I hag heard.' What Cook says turns out true. One night when him an' me It aettin' up, Jones kind o' shivers an' X Keep the Boys on the Farm. Fathers and mothers on the farm, before your boys have hearkened to the call of the city, ebow them the opportunities that await them at home. Begin a course of education that will enable them to Improve these opportunities, sending them to agricultural schools whenever possible. Then, the char.oes are, when the siren promises of the city do catch their ears, they will bo so deeply con cerned in becoming successful farmers that they will not be lured from the soil. 1ihe desertlon ' the farm and overcrowding of the city - un skilled workers from the country are two big factors In raising the WlCe u ,rods,tuff8 nl lowering wages In the cities, where comne t tion holds the knife at every second man's throat. These asser tion, have verily become a national menace. Educationally. Industrial training Is what the country mov needs, and we will not get this sufficiently until there is waged a vigorous campaign of enlightenment by the State normal scnoote, the agricultural colleges and the Department of Agriculture accord ing to Secretary Wilson, of that department, to show the American people Just how much national greatness with us lies In the hand3 of the farmer. Agreeing with the Secretary, we would emphasize the fact that even this educational work cannot bring about ths desired results without the help of the mothers and fathers on tha farm, who must instill the idea in the minds of the boys and girls on the old home place. The wise mother there puts by the ambltio i which spurred the mother of the last generation to disregard tha dictates of her heart and urge her boy cityward in search of a lire work. She knows that success may be found at home even If it be the unblazoned kind that will nevjr be coupled with the word "career." fearful night to spend. 'Get out your "Fishes," boys,' I tells the outfit, 'death an' high waters is goln' to roar around us before we see the sun rlsa any more,' which sure was true an' no mistake, an' Cottonwood choked up an' roared all night; the wind blowed splinters off the hills an' llght nin' filled tho valley till It smelted like brimstone on u sulphur match. It sure wuz hard to hold the jumpy cattle till close to sunup when the storm had gone on south, an' then we got them rounded up an' quieted an' left them feedln', knowln' plenty well they'd have enough to keep them quiet for a while, an' we rode back where Cook wuz waltln' for us with a kettle full o' coffee hot an' black, an' most like pancakes, which wuz his custom when the boys is bein' pushed hard. "W all wuz kind o' quiet, bein' soppln' wet an mostly dead for sleep, but Short Leg Dwyer wuz worst of all an' looks like he'd seen a ghost, which I remarks. 'Mather of Uod, I did,' says Short Leg, crossln' hlsself, tho devil rode with Loco Jones last night, an' 1 seen it, Bill, It wuz aw ful,' he says, kind c' chokin' off a groau lifts his head an' looks at us like he ain't never seen no cow-men .111 just then, an' kind o' brushes one pore bony hand .across his eyes an' says Light! Light at last!' "Cook kind o' turns away an" 1 kin see his shoulders shake, an' as fur me I knows plum well I weeps. 'I must 'a' traveled awful fur,' says Jones, 'all in the dark, becuz I don't know where I am. I'm awful tired, an' my head feels awful queer, but God has showed me light at last.' He set up as he spoke, drawln' In hard on his breath an' looked out through the open door, an' as I looked I seen the tip o' Poncha Mountin hangln' up In the sky, lit up by the first peep o' sunshine o' the day, ar' then I hears a rustle an' I turns an' sees the pore broke wreck of what wuz once a man reach out his arms an smile, an' hardly fiickerin' his lips he whispers: 'Where the wicked ceass from troublln' an' the weary are at rest,' an' drops back dead." Tho foreman pauBed. Thero was a trace of mist behind bis eyes. "We burled Jones," he said, "on Poncha Mount'ln an' Short Leg Dwyer made a slab to set up at Ins b phH 'i.r.n jjones, it says, that boin' the only II. -i-I I n aVluolr . ... I.. . "hi- i., um ii.uM i r uu nung around with Cook an' "uii, an' no time nln't passed till he uz pretty near as muoh a fixture of we Jack Hall outfit as Bull hlsself. htch sure Is .Byin- loti. sometimes e a middlln' sensible, which times Is mostly when the weather's drv, but we it's muggy an' the air Is thl.:k hl.A ,he IJaln sets awful ; '. s "wd an' his n i... .v.. look you see a locoed steer ha -" 'ys uown to die. Theiu . TRlkg by hlef. an' IMUM " hh . l0Be nl y"bt an' steps stT; ir a" tha worl11 llk- 'coed " that Jumps over piece o' straw nn.,., T Ut thln8S that "-'' -ww-yi . "? !, a"' he "Pouts out poetry an' , 8 arn" "n ues word, that bein- us kln 8t!t no en8 foni, or iL0mV 0,618,1 lan--e, Greek moil w 1 aln,t a-s-yln' bl L S ?uly --"-Bless as If hi. hi, 1,lttln " simple outs-rowed '"dnKet yMW8ath8r' when "t- "-To" set 1 ' ? thnm' once ,n 8 wblie 64 . ' f 8lgnt ' Jone- barehoad ' strings hangln' every him, thlnkin' mabe he'd got over excited in the dark. " 'It ain't all right,' he says, 'I seen the devil rid with Loco Jones last night. Mothor of God, Bill, I seen him, I seen him with my own eyes. You know that pinto bronch which we has noticed gettlu' loco, Jones wuz a-rldln' htm. I never seeu him come nor go, I never heard no noise. The wind blowed every sound away, but,' he says, a-crossln' hlsself again, 'a Hash of llghtnln' that blazed the lie lc of Poncha Mountain showed ue a locoed man astraddle of a locoed a.ise hot foottn' It to hades.' "We kind 0' give Short Leg the laugh an' asked him what kind o' llckor acted that-a-way on the Irish, an' he shut up, but kep' a-mumblln' to hlsself an' shakln' his head till we'd rode In. an' then after he'd got a couple o' bowls - coffee In him he cheered up some, but still stuck to It that he'd seen Loco Jones a-racln' the pinto where no horse could hardly pick a trail by day, lot alone travel there at all when things wuz dark. He says he's goln' to help Cook clean the ill.de s up an' go over to Loco's shack on Poncha to prove he ain't a-lylu' none, aa even If he Is the best of us gits excited now an' then, so Cook an' Short Leg hustles things an' seen the light.' azine. Boats of Concrete. It la predicted that the use of con crete In boat-bulldlng will largely take the place of Iron and steel. Largw boats of reinforced concrete have been built already In Italy, and five of these, of 120 tonB and more, are in commission In the Italian navy. The first of these boats, a 120-ton barge, was built in 1906, on the plana of Mr. Gabelllnl, an Italian, who has given his whole attention to reinforced con crete, and for many years has been conducting experiments with this class of material. This boat, which was built with double bottom ind of the cellular type, was submitted to severe tests in the 8pezii Arsenal, where a much larger boat built of Iron and with on Iron ram was di rected against It without producing any considerable damage. After some time, and In consequence of the satis factory results given by his first boat, four more of these barges were or dered on account of the Itailun navy. Experiments and trials on a much larger and more Important scale will shortly be conducted. Harper's Weekly. Boils Not Suitable For Alfalfa. Any field likely to be under water or the soil saturated with water at ny time for more than thlrty-slx hours at a time Is quite unsuitable for alfalfa. Any field with a hard pan subsoil within two feet of the surface will prove unsatisfactory for alfalfa. Weekly Witness. Wnrts on Horses. To cure warts on horses rub the wart well with soft soap, and In a few days a scab will appear. Pick the scab off when It gets loose and rub again with soft soap, repeating the operation until the wart is gone. It will not leave a scar and will not return. Weekly Witness. Itnlsc Corn For SUngr. All dairymen recognize the value of corn ensilage as a cheap food for milk production. It Is but seldom on looking over the roughage of any large dairy barn, that corn stover is seen. The silo has taken the place of the corn stnlk loft. An experiment conducted recently at the Pennsylvania experiment sta tion showed that in meat production steers fed corn silage as part of their ration made better gnlns than those fed corn stover. The stover fed steers ate more grain than those fed silage, but tho cost of the feed, how ever, was less, to the credit of a sto ver ration. But whether corn is In a silo or on the loft it ia a mighty good food, when rightly used, and none too much is raised by New Eng land farmers. F. P. H., In the American Cultivator. Setting anil Hutching. When the turkey hen gets broody, bring her to the house and confine her in a pen or house where noth ing can bother her, dusting her with Insect powder when set and again when taken off with the little tur keys. I make my Insect powder from ashes, sulphur, snuff and cam phor balls. When the hen hatches do not dis turb her, except to take the empty hells from the nest so they will not get stuck on the eggs that have not batched. When she Is through hatch ing, let the little ones stay In the place she hatched them until they are several days old. They will be gin to bunt for something to eat as soon as they need anything. Then take them away from tho house where the chickens cannot run over them, and put them down and feed a little. Progressive Farmer. Seeding In Corn. After carefully noting ten years' experience with one acre of ground , of seeding grass in corn, as com ; pared with ten years of a rotation of corn, oats and then seeding with rye, the facts show that we can save In labor S28, and will be ahead $84 I more on crops. We seed in corn Im- mediately after the last cultivating, and by using level cultivation, and by cutting the corn stubble low we overcome the objection of mowing over rough ground. Any farmer of ten to twenty-five I acres of land, who does not need to raise much grain for his own use, ' will find It pays to seed In corn. If ; Ihe land needs more stirring up one can follow the corn with a crop of potatoes very successfully, by a little I more work, but with a good finan cial gain, and then seeding tho fol lowing spring with clover and timo thy. Syivanus Van Aken, in the j ' -lean Cultivator. " 'All right. Short Leg,' I soys to . name we ever knowed him bv. -He H.I..1. 1.. 1 ... I . - . A . ' .U. ILL, ... -f rom outing Mug- Haudling Hard Land. There might be several classes of land which we could find In this sec tion. The first would be land which Is adaptable to hoed crops; which Is free enough from stones or sur plus moisture so that it can be used In a regular rotation of three or four ?-.irs. land suituble for growing po tatoes or corn. Then there Is a lot of New England land that is too damp and has too many stones just below the surface to allow it to be plowed conveniently. That land we must handle in a somewhat different way. Probably as good a method of handling this land as any Is one that I have seen followed in New York, topdresstng with a light coat of barnyard manure, about eight or ten spreader loads per acre, every year, and at the same time using a small quantity of clover seed and working it In with a light harrow ing of some kind, either with a epec lal brush harrow or the ordinary smoothing harrow. I have seen this dono In several instances with marked success. There is another kind of land which is too rough to be handled in cither of these ways, or perhaps too steep, but land which Is odmlrubly suited to the growiug of apples. W. B. Dodge, U. S. De partment of Agriculture. Kvpi-rimi-nts With Stuble Manure. At the Maiylund agricultural sta tion two sets of experiments with stable manure one covering three years and the other seven years have been conducted. The results as a rule favored the use of fresh manure applied directly from the stable as against rotted fa ilure. The best results were ob tained by applying the manure as long in advance of the time the crop was to use It as possible. As between up! lying fresh and rotted manure before and after plowing, The results favored applying fresh manure as u tup-dressing after plow lug. In a comparison of plowing under manure In tho fall and spring, the differences were slight but uni formly lu fuvor of Hllowlng the mu iiiire to remain ou the land during thi! winter and plowing It dnwu In the spring. 8ubsullin lu addition to deep plowing did not show suffi cient advantage to warrant the ex tra expense Involved. "Tho use of kalnlt with the mnnure seemed to exert a beneficial Influence every year, and It was more marked In dry than wet seasons." The growth of crimson clover was better on soils receiving fresh manure than on those treated with rotted manure. Farm Higlm-ny Fences. In the early settlement of the American colonies the settlers need ed every foot of their cleared land to raise corn, potatoes and pump kins, and could not possibly spare any of their small clearings for pas turage. Consequently everybody'! cattle and horses (and frequently hogs) were pastured In the woodi and along the roadside, and of course good, high, strong fences became an absolute necessity for the protection of the crops (which nobody disputed and the law imperatively required) or no damages could be collected fot Injury to crops by a neighbor's cattle The woods and roadsides were con sidered as public commons upon which everybody's farm stock bad a right to run. In the colony of Mas sachusetts there was one exception ungelded horses "unless of comets proportions and of good size, not leaf than fourteen hands hlgt ," were not slowed to run In the commons oi woods. The necessity which once existed for .pasturing the woods and road sides has long since passed In the old, settled States, but tho fence laws enacted under the old condition? have been allowed to remain on the statute books of most of thom to this day because so many voters without farms wanted to keep their cows In the streets and not hire pasturage, and the lawmakers dared not touch the old laws for fear of losing votes. With only the scanty pickings ol the street cattle" soon get desperate with hunger and become breachy. Not many years ago seven cows were pastured In our street; sometimes the whole seven could be seen together. A farm gate could not be left open when drawing In hay and grain, or five or Bit of the neighbors' cows would rush In. A neighbor's breachy cow broke into our garden in the daytime. Another man's cow got In to the dooryard In the night, the gate being accidentally left open. At length our lawmakers at Harrisburg ventured to let the people of the State vote on the question of fence or no fence, and a large majority was for no fence. As the law stands now, everybody must take care of his own stock. They are not required to fence other people's cattle out, but only find It necessary to fence their pasture fields to keep their own cattle in, and no stock Is allowed In the public highways, except when being driven to market or from place to place. It appears to be a just and beneficial law, producing excellent results, and It should have been enacted long ago. The wages of labor are so high that men without land can afford to huy milk or hire pasturage for o cow. I know several laborers who have bought houses and lots and paid for them from their earnings. The saving In expenso to the peo ple of the State In having fewer fences to build and keep in repair is Immense, and the saving In unnoy ance and vexation has been still greater. J. W. Ingham, Sugar Run, Pa. Farui Cullings. Too heavy loads make balky horses. With all stock discomfort always costs In extra feed. Milking should always be done in a clean, airy place, free from all bad odors, Plowing for wheat should begin just as soon as possible after the harvest work Is finished up. Dairy stock can not be improved if a promiscuous trying of all breeds is permitted to go on. Cream should have a uniform con sistency as well as being of uniform ripeness before churning. The cow, to do her best and con tinue It for the longest period, must have at least one-fifth her food of some kind of nitrogen. tl takes longer and costs more to make up a pound of loss than it docs to add five pounds of gain under fa vorable conditions. In feeding fattening hogs, the food should alwuys be given in a clean, wholesome condition and never al lowed to become sour. The walk Is the foundation of all the other gaits, und without begin ning at the foundation alt future de velopments will be unsatisfactory. Ab Boon as the tops of the onions are dead they should be putted, thrown in rows, allowed to cure a few days aud thou be stored away. Good hickory ashes are said to be excellent for expelling worms from the bowels of young horses. (Jive a couple of tablespoonfuls twice u week lu their feed. The great secret lu making under draining a permanent improvmeut Is Iq securing uniform form in laying tho tile, and maintaining a good out let. As a rule, the safest plan Is to look tho ground over carefully and then plan out the ditches to the best advantage. STILL PICKING, Week's cleverest cartoon, by Ketten, in the New York World. PREDICTS AN AIRSHIP TRIP ACROSS THE ATLANTIC Mr. Walter Wellman Says Count Zeppelin's Achievement Gives Promise of Great Things in Aerial Navigation and Warfare. New York City. Mr. Walter Well mnn writes as follows regarding the achievement of Count Zeppelin lu bis airship: Count Zeppelin's rqcord breaking voyage with his great an -Hip sur prises no one familiar with the pres ent state of the science of aerial navi gation. That n modern motor balloon can bo depended upon to make voy ages of from ono to two thousand miles, under fairly favorable condi tions, has long been known to men who are familiar with aeronautics. Count Zeppelin's success is epoch making In that It convinces a scep tical world of the practicability of air ships and of their utility as engines of war and as Instruments of ex ploration of the upper air as well as parts of the earth otherwise Inacces sible, like the great unknown area surrounding the North Pole. His latest demonstration without doubt will assure the rapid building of aerial navies by the chief military Powers. In fact, Germany, France, Great Britain and the United States are already moving in that direction. France has the Lebandy and La Re publlqne already in commission, and Count Zeppelin's ship, It Is under stood, is to be taken over for the German army. The modern airship or motor bal loon will prove to be an effective en gine of war. She can make recon nolsances of an enemy's position, fly ing at an altitude giving her Im munity from the enemy'B guns. 8ho cannot only gain Invaluable informa tion, but she can make attacks upon strategic points, such as cities, bridges and forts and tho camps of hostile armies by dropping explosives down upon them. Can Drop Explosives on Enemy. "This phase of the aerial warfare of the future has been declared Imprac ticable by some critics because the dropping of a thousand pounds of ex plosive from a ship of the air would instantly cause her to Bhoot up to a great altitude. The critics who think this Is a fatal objection are not famil iar with the art of airship construc tion and operation. Dropping one thousand pounds of ballast or weight of any sort from a small balloon dlrlglble like the one Captain Bald win has built for the United States Government would, of course, be either Impracticable (because the ship could not carry so much) or danger ous It she could carry it. But that weight suddenly released Is a baga telle compared to the total lifting ca pacity of such a ship as the Zeppelin or my polar alrBhlp, the America. The Zeppelin has a total lifting power of between 25,000 and 30,000 pounds, while the America lifts 19,500 pounds. The altitude gained by such a ship through dropping one thousand pounds In : lump presents no prac tical difficulties whatever. In the airship of the future, wheth er used for military or scientific pur poses, size Is sure to be a factor of prime Importance. Interesting ex periments may bo mado with small ships. But real and Important work requires large ships, built by en gineers on a scalo great enough to admit of the employment of steel and other metals, instead of flimsy struc tures of bamboo or such materials. Breaks AH Records. Count Zeppelin has broken all rec ords for length of run. But there Is no reason why the mlllta.y cruiser of the future should not have a radius of movement of three or four thou sand miles. Of course the greater the speed aimed at the greater the quantity of fuel that must be carried for a given distance. A ship like the America carries three tons of gaso lene in her steel tank, and If the In fluence of the winds be regarded as neutral she can motor 130 miles at about twenty English miles an hour. Count Zeppelin's remarkable cruise Is only a foretaste of what is to be done with motor balloons In the near future. Within a few years I expect to see the Atlantic Ocean crossed by an airship of the Republlque or Amer ica type. In fact, the America could cross the Atlantic without much risk of accident with a little help from the winds. A voyage from New York to Chicago, or vice versa, Is within her Bcope, and I am strongly tempted to bring her over from Paris this fall and give Americans a demonstration of what a first class engineering con struction can do In the way of a long voyage through the air. In view of the success of the Zep pelin, of the Lebandy, of the Re publlque, and the undoubted ability of the America to make a longer voy age than Count Zeppelin has just made, many experts regret that the first venture of the United States Government In military motor bal looning should be with such a small affair aB that of Captain Baldwin. It has no class. It is too small. It has no endurance. Captain Baldwin is a skillful man, but his machine Is not large and powerful enough to give him a chance against a great cruiser like the Zeppelin. When the United States Government enters tho aeronautic field It should not be con tent to begin where foreign experi menters ended years ago, but should be up to date in size and engineering. CONSUMPTIVES' LUNG CAPACITY. French Doctor rim;.-. In Chest of ni.i Paris. While awaiting the discov ery of some means to cure tubercu- ' losls scientists are searching for some means of early diagnosis, which hith erto has been must difficult. Dr. Bourellle now describes a series of experiments whereby an easy method can be established. He examined every year 1200 women and girls. He measured the thorax at the moments of extreme inspiration and expiration and noted nt oHureinents the m hi Source KtlOHlH. the difference. For normal females he found that the difference always exceeded two and one-third Inches, while for tuberculous women it never reached one and one-sixth. He then measured a thousand sol diers and found a differences of from three and one-half to four and one half Inches. The tests on tuberculosis patients Bhow that in ninety-eight per cent, of the cases the difference never exceeded one and one-sixth. BIRDS SLOWLY INCREASING. Duaty's Kick. "Dose automobiles are a nuis ance," growled Dusty Dennis, as bo frowned at a passing tourlug car. "What's de matter, pard?" aakr-d Gritty George. "One of rtem run you down?" "No, but last night dny put tnu tn t cell wld a chauffeur, and 1 couldn't sleep for de smell of gasollua." Chicago News. Audubon Society's Efforts Saving New Orleans. The census of the bird Islands on the Louisiana coast has been completed and shows a con siderable Increase in the number of the birds in spite of Leavy losses through recent storms. The islands are nineteen In number nnd were given by the Federal and State governments to the Audubon Society as a bird reservation. At the time of the gift the sea birds on the Gulf coast were nearly extinct. The census shows that 62,000 more birds havu been added to the popula- Many Species Now Nearly Extinc tion of the islands this summer. They are mainly laughing gulls. Next In number are the Louisiana herons, the royal cabots and Forster's turns and black swimmers. Some of the varie ties are nearly extinct. There are only twenty-five snowy herons left, twenty-two black crowned night herons and thirty-Ova Caspian terns, all once abundant on the Gulf coast, but killed off for their plumage. A number of eggs have been destroyed and young birds killed by recent ! storms. Cliiuu Burs .Morphine, Asks Jupan'n Aid. Pekln. China has asked Japan to consent to the restriction of the im portation Into China of morphine, as well as the instruments used for the injection of the drug. All the other Powers long since agreed to this re striction. It is highly desirable that Japan consent to this proposal, particularly In view of the opium congresi to be held In Shanghai in January, when measures for tbecontrol of the opium traffic are to be devised. German Machine Guuh' First Vol ley Brought Bonn Balloon. Berlin. During a session "ol night practice by a machine gun corps of the army near Augsburg the gunners were ordered to train on a target bal loon which had been sent up during the day and was floating far above and to the left of their point of en campment. The balloon was brought down at the first volley. The test wus made for the purpose of ascertaining whut chance an army would have of opposing a hostile bal loon corps. France to Use Posters to Gain lie. 1 1. ' -.. Paris. The vote on two years of mllltnry service releases a number of men In the French regiments. Thero is also a scarcity of re-enllstraents. The Colonel of the Twelfth Dra goons, station at Pont a Mous.ion, has decided to adopt the American sys tem of recruiting throtmh brilliant and artistic posters depicting the ad vantages of service, including fnnry cloth uniforms, the regulsr llff In th service and at 10 p. in. bed for tho petty officers. Newsy Gleanings. The Sultan of Turkey granted a constitution and wilp -cull a Parlia ment. The first steps toward the organiza tion of a national aerial society xu taken lu Washington, D. C. Governor Hughes announced he would accept a rsnomlsutlou it It were the freely expressed wish of ths party. A bill has been Introduced In the Portuguese Chamber of Deputies (a expel the religious orders from the kingdom.