GOAL OFTffiUDOOS Students Look to f'/iited States For Practical l.Aucation. WANT TO LEARN OUR ARTS. American Colleges a"'® Universities the Aim of a Growing (> iss of Ambitious Young Men—Wish o Develop Their Country's Resour< eir Dislike of English Rule In 1 ndia. J. C. Gossaln, Mi U. Hashid, Bash Behari Day and Jalmes Marcos, all natives of British India, recently ar rived in New York city at India House, 1142 Park avenue, to take up various courses of study at American univer sities. They form the advance guard of the Hindoo students who are com ing to America under the auspices of the Society For tlicJ Advancement of India. Coal black though ffliey are, every one speaks English with painstaking ac curacy and an accent better than many Anglo-Saxons. All wear west ern clothes. "Not that we do not like our own," explained one, "but our clothes would be strange to American eyes and we should be stared at in the streets, which would be distasteful to us. At home, on the other hand, these clothes we are now wearing would be con spicuous and even, on account of the antiforeign agitation prevailing at present, somewhat dangerous. So when we return to India we discard jackets and trousers and again wear our robes and turbans." A striking peculiarity of the group and one perhaps best illustrative of the advancement of knowledge in India is that the four students belong to three different religions and live and work together happily, says the New York Post. Two are Hindoos in faith, one a Mohammedan and one, Marcos, a baptized Christian, who. while he doesn't call himself so, is really a Uni tarian. Religious antagonism is a thing of the past in India, according to these young men. Another Interesting point in their characters is their dislike of the Eng lish and the English rule in India. "Tuey treat us like dogs," said Gos saln. "An Indian Is never considered. We have been kept down and our in tellects stunted. Instead of giving our people trade schools, where they might learn industrial arts and so in time be come able to build up their own man ufactures, they have taught us to be come clerks and accountants. If India could take care of her own raw prod ucts, you see, that would mean so many pounds out of England's profits and so many more In our pockets. The English know that. "Yes," chimed in Marcos, "that is why we are here. That is what we have come to America for—to learn your arts so that we may be able to tp- ->' i our people. There Is plenty of 1 in India in native hands, to do almost anything. But n it has been idle because it "•<* to provide means for and fact that In every j.'i of railroad in India is owned by natives. 11.11 _ ~rt»ple a knowledge of engineering and kindred sciences they could utilize the idle capital, and then we should have real Indian railroads and street car lines. "We,must inaugurate the policy the Japanese employed at first before they were clever enough to do things by themselves. They secured the best for eign talent to direct their enterprises, but always the head man was a native. He might not have known enough to manage the undertaking alone, but It was he who signed the papers and gave the orders, and the effect of the system was to build up the I.'.tent ex ecutive capacity of the Japanese until they were a ile to do things for them selves. Executive capacity is a tiling we Indians lack as yet. We must build it up." Marcos, by the way, is proud that he is not what he calls a "rice Christian." "Rice Christians," it seeius, are tho.-e who are baptized in times of famine in order that they may receive addi tional assistance from the missionaries. Marcos does not think much of the at tempts of the English missionaries to convert his countrymen. "Yes, I am a Christian, but I am not what you would call orthodox, I think.' he said. Marcos is twenty-two .years old and comes from Madras Presidency, where he received the usual secondary educa tion. lie is not sure yet just what university he will enter. Uashld is the oldest of the four and is twenty-six. He was born in Surat, but has lived most of his life at Chittagong, in As sam. For several years he has served in the office of his father's importing and exporting firm, learning the busi ness. Now he expects to study elec trical engineering, probably at Michi gan. Oossain has had a more advanced education than the others. While but twenty-three, he had studied for a time in Calcutta university and also in Vic toria Jubilee Technical Institute of Bombay. He will take the student's course in the works of the General Electrical company at Schenectady. The fourth mau, Day, has not picked out the school he will attend. In the meantime he Is spending his time at India house, increasing his knowledge on various topics. All four will aim to assimilate Amer ican college atmosphere as much as possible. Of course they will have more work to do than American youths in the same classes, but they will do their best to mix with the spirit of things. Domestic Bliss. Wife —I have about made up my mind, John, that when I married you I married a fool. Husband—That* re minds me of a remark you made just before we were married. Vou remem ber that you uald it would be hard to find two people more alike than you and I. His Glassy Eye. Doctor —I diagnose all sickness from the patient's eyes. Now, your right eye tells me that your kidneys are af fected. Patient—Excuse me, doctor, but my right is a glass eye.—Moody's Magazine. LEGEND OE OLD JAPAN The Story of Chobei, the Leader of the Duelists. A MAN WHO KNEW NOT FEAR. Bather Than Tarnish His Reputation For Bravery He Accepted the Prince's Invitation and Went Voluntarily to Assassination, The following legend of Cbobei has been handed down in Japan as Indica tive of the courage of the "bravis," or duelists, who flourished in Yeddo dur ing the sixteenth century, forming a sort of Japanese St. Ilermlndad. Cho bei, the leader of this clique, was a re doubtable swordsman, whose constant ly recurring duels forced his master to expel him from his retinue. Unwilling to enlist with another of the feudal lords, he assembled all the IVArtagnans of Yeddo about him until liis power in cited even the princes to envy, al though they declined to recognize the outlawed duelist. On this pretense he was excluded from a popular tea house one day at an hour when was expected Julrozaye mon, the leader of the Ilatamotos, then the most influential political party in Japan, who had arrogated the city of Yeddo for the official residence. But Chobei, with n shrug of his shoulders, forced lils way past the attendants intc the apartments reserved for the prince, where he removed his garments and cast himself on a couch in feigned slumber. "Who is that brute?" demanded the prince on his arrival. "The leader of the swordsmen," they answered liim. Julrozayemou seated himself in silence and began to smoke. Having smoked his pipe, he emptied the glowing cin ders into the pretended sleeper's nos trils, repeating this live times, when he paused, astounded by such courageous endurance. Cliobel, noting this, yawn ed, n:l bed his eyes like one awakening from profound slumber and exclaimed: "You, oh, most noble master! And I, having drunk too much, should have slept uncovered before your eyes! How shall 1 excuse my vulgarity?" "I have so long sought your acquaint ance that you ure forgiven. Be seated and accept this cup of wine, I beg you." Politeness forbade Chobei to refuse a drop of the proffered cup, a huge beaker of powerful wine, offered liim In the. hopes of overpowering him. But Chobei drained it easily and, replenish ing It, presented it to his host, who ac complished this feat with the utmost difficulty. "Will your highness permit me to offer you some gift of value?" Chobei asked liumbly. "Surely." "What do you most desire?" Thinking to render the brave ridicu lous before the whole city, the prince said promptly: "A plate of macaroni." "Ah, Chobei," thought he,"the whole town will soon be telling how the grea. duelist was permitted only to offer t> plate of macaroni to the president oi the Ilatamotos." After a whispered colloquy the at | lerulant disappeared, leaviUff -t'.ie t \\ 112 enemies slon sniiTingTbut impassive Itut soon a great noise penetrated the ! npartment, and the prince discovered » j crowd of workmen busily construct ir.:; ' an immense wall of macaroni around j the tea house. All Yeddo was assem- i bled to view this unique and royr.l g!:'i. ! Discomfited that the "bravo" should j have outwitted his ruse, the prince < : e- j parted to plan revenge. The follow!;:-; I day brought with it an i vitatlon fro::i I Juirozayemon to brenkf.s. I), spi; • his comrade's remonstrance Cliobe ] Insisted on accepting It. As h • enter, d ! the prince's dwelling the -auuirals j threw themselves upon hlt.i with j drawn swords. Chobel's immense mus cular strength enabled him to disar i them, when he proceeded unannounced to the rear apartment. "Pardon u;e, your lordship," said he, I "for announcing myself. Your attend- I ants have forgotten to do so." "Surely. Perhaps they have sought j quarrel with you. 'Twas but a joke, for I wagered that nil six could not disarm you. Perhaps you would like a bath to refresh yourself." Who shall say that Chobei \ ;. wise"? Alone In his enemy's house,l. ■ dis carded his weapons, removed his gar ments and crouched in the bath. The water that was at first hot was soon boiling. Chobei dashed from the bath, but ton spears held by Invisible hands forced him back. Suffocated by steam, exhausted by blood. Chobei fell dying to the ground. The samurais were still congratu lating themselves on their success when a loud knocking was heard. In quiry revealed the dueling confeder ates who were come to seek their leader. "lie is drunk and cannot t • you." "Our leader is dead. V.'e have j brought his bier." The samurais were dumb with as tonishment. Chobei had divine 1 t'ie ; t "",. yet, preferring to sustain his iv;>- j n of daring untarnished by any ; tion <>f fear, had voluntarily j g •i i his assassination. Hawaiian Girls. The Hawaiian girls are almost uni- j versally handsome. They are brown in ! color (not black); their eyes and teeth are magnificent; their hair straight, jet black and often falling below their knees. Their heads are handsomely formed and their expression alert. In telligent and amiable; their forms In youth voluptuous, but heavy and over stout after youth; their features full and nose and upper lip slightly tilted; their voices extremely sweet. True to the Adage. "My son, my son!" exclaimed Hie dls mayed mother as she saw all her boy's belongings stacked In a corner of the closet. "Haven't I tried over and over to teach you that you should have a place for everything?" . "Yep," said the son cheerfully, "and this is the place."—Chicago News. Fam*. "Who was James Bos well?" asked the teacher of the class in English lit erature. "He was Dr. Samuel Johnson's press 6gent," answered the young man with ♦he bad eye.—Chicago Tribune. MAXIM'S NEW WEAPON Inventor's Almost Silent Gun Tested In His Home. SLIGHT FLASH OF FIRE SEEN Thirty two Caliber Bullet Made Hole In Three Magazines About Size of Mr.n's Hand—Would Double War'* Terrors, Says General W. F. Duvall. Hiram ivr«y Maxim, inventor of the noiseless gun, recently gave a private exhibition of the powers of this won derful weapon at Ills home in Ilart ford. Conn. The Inventor entered his den and produced the "Maxim humane slaughterer," the name chosen for the gun that he proposes to use in the slaughter of cattle in stockyards. "Very frequently the blow which is dealt to the animals in the stockyards does not kill them," said Mr. Maxim to a New York American reporter, I "but merely stuns. Now, it sometimes happens that the man with the iron maul lilts an ox in the eye and simply maddens the creature, or It is only stunned when it Is dumped bodily into the slaughter room, and the butchers have to run for their lives. This gun Is intended to slaughter them pain lessly and end all this trouble. Oth er guns will not do this because the noise maddens the other animals. "It Is not the type of the noiseless piin that I expect to see used in the! army." The gun which Mr. Maxim held ap pea red like an ordinary army rltle, ex cept that It was sheathed with an out er barrel of aluminium. In this outer sheathing was concealed the silencer. ; The Inventor loaded the gu"i with a ."2 calilier bullet and fired it at a pile of a dozen magazines resting on edge against the wall. The only noise heard was the click of the trigger and a swishing sound as the soft nosed lead en bullet tore its way through three of the magazines and embedded itself In the fourth. The hole made was large enough almost to put one's hand through. A slight flash of fire was seen at the muzzle of the gun at the moment of the firing. This would probably l>e obviated by the use of smokeless powder, though the inventor did not say. "The outside barrel of this gun is in three parts," said Mr. Maxim. "There! are three cells for use in killing sound. I do not know how silent the New York S. P. C. A. wants the gun to be used by it to be, but 1 gave them enough silence to satisfy them. "This gun will not be used or even; receive any public test until my pat ents in Europe have been granted. That will be in about two months, and at that time the T'nited States govern ment test will take place. To describe the Invention or give drawings of it lie fore the time would invalidate my pat ents In the European countries. "The gun that is to bo used in the army, however, will differ very mate rially from this The silencer will be only about three Inches long. It will not encircle the barrel, because that would Interfere with the sighting of ihe gun. It will he underneath the barf") iuul probably near thp.DU-zzle." General William P. Duvall of the Military Staff nud War college at Washington, discussing Mr. Maxim's latest invention, said: "I have read the account of the per formances of the Maxim noiseless gun. Certainly they pre Interesting and a*: tonlshing. The matter has not been brought officially, however, to our at tention yet. '•Assuming the accounts are authen tic, and I bellove they are, it would lie reasonable to suppose this diseoverj would produce just as much of a revo lution in the art of war as did the in vention of smokeless powder. Psycho logically, this new gun would double the terror that would be inspired by the enemy possessing it. When smoke less powder was discovered there was, of course, the absence of smoke—an important means of determining the location of an enemy. Add to that, then, a weapon in the band of your foe which neither emits smoke nor makes a noise, and the fear of the enemy would be at least doubled." Rearrangement of Old Glory's Stars. It may be Interesting •<> know that a Maine man suggested the new arrange ment for the stars In the T'nlted States flag which will become effective on July 4. With the admission of Okla homa It became necessary to place a new star in the blue field of the flag. This necessitated a rearrangement of the stars. Charles A. Tallman, U. S. X., retired, of ltichmond. made a six teen inch tlag iu which he made the arrangement and forwarded it to the state department as a suggestion. The state department referred the matter to the navy department, for that de partment has charge of the tlag. A few days later Mr. Tallman received a letter from the department Inform ing him that his arrangement was the one which the department had had under consideration. Since then it has been officially announced as the ar rangement of the stars. Pearl Farming. E. 1!. Jefferson of l>uluth. Mich., has devised a scheme for treating clams so each may prove a pearl bearer. lie made a study of the pearl question as applied to bivalves and ascertained the scientific theory of the origin of the pearl iu shellfish Then he figured the cultivation of the gems was possibly a practical venture. Mr. Jefferson ac tually has grown some pearls, although they are small. It remains to be seen with lapse of time if large ones cannot be cn'.'lvated. Fresh Z'ater Fish In Germany. German law does not permit of fresh water flsh being sold except when alive. Therefore It Is common to see tanks of such fish in the restaurant windows, and they are hauled in this way con siderable distances over Prussian rail ways, and shipments are made to Ber- j lin from Lyons, In France, and from as • far south as Roumania. The Wrong Word. Mrs. A.—l can remember the day when you begged me to say the word iliat would' make you happy for life. Mr. A.—l know, but you said the i wrong word.—Life. 10 FIGHT DISEASE, School of Preventive Medicine Plan of Columbia University. MANY DYING UNNECESSARILY Dr. Ditman, Urging Establishment of Sanitary Science School, Declares United States Loses $600,000,000 Yearly by Preventable Deaths. Pasteur has said tliat "it is within the power of man to make all infec tious diseases to disappear from the world," and statisticians estimate that 400,000 of every 1,000,000 deaths occur In spite of the fact that they are pre ventable. But every year sees some advance in the science of preventive medicine. One scene of work in that direction is Columbia university, in New York city. Plans for a school of preventive medicine, a school of sani tary science and public health, are printed in the June supplement of the Columbia Quarterly. Dr. Ditman has developed the plans, and there are hopes that the money will be forth coming to establish the school. "One-third of the human beings born alive die before the age of five years has been attained largely from pre ventable causes," says Dr. Ditman. "The death rate of children In some tenement house districts In New York is as high as 204 per 1,000. The num ber of deaths occurring in the world from epidemics of plague, smallpox, yellow fever and cholera Is still enor mous In *nite of the fact that methods for prevention of these diseases are known." Dr. Ditman continues: Each year the world yields up 1,095.000 our own country 100,000— of its inhabitants as a sacrifice to tuberculosis, idthough this loss is not necessary. Pneumonia kills 100.000 people in the United States annually, and the number Is increasing rapidly, yet the cause of this disease is known, and it should be in our power to stamp It out. Twenty-five thousand people in tho United States who are needlessly Mind could have had their vision saved had tho causes of blindness and methods for its prevention been widely enough appreci ated. Five hundred thousand people are killed or crippled every year in this coun try as a result of preventable accidents. While tho annual loss to this country from preventable deaths is $£00,000,000 an nually, England by tho employment of preventive measures during: nin« years (1880-9) saved $1,2.53,20f»,000 as the result of an expenditure of $378,000,000. By a re duction of its death rate during the past twenty-five years the city of New York has saved $150,240,000. New York city's annual loss from tu berculosis Is 123,000,000, that of the United States $300.000,000—a wholly needless loss. The annual cost to the state of New York for the maintenance of public in stitutions for the pauper, the insane, the blind, the epileptic and the tubercular is $11,500,000. From an economic point of view, then, it is seen that rarely can in vestment be made more profitably than through action by which sickness, pover ty, accident and crime are obviated. The lost decade has been marked in this country by two notable efforts conceived for the determination of the cause of physical and social evils, by tho establish ment of the fiasre foundation and the Rockefeller institute. Both institutions ait of fundamental and extreme impor tance- and necessary for the next great advance in the field of prevention—edu cation. In order, then, to complete the tfllelen- SX Q( Jn the accomplish ment of practical ends it is essential that means shall be found to transmit the knowledge thus acquired regarding the causative factors of disease, crime, pov erty, etc., to the ultimate desired swal lndivlduals, homes and administrative de partments having jurisdiction over these fields. The scope of a school of sanitary sci ence and preventive medicine is a bror.d one. The complete attainment of its en la can only be accomplished by enlisting the aid of all associated fields of effort. Fur this reason the benefits to be derived from Influence of teacher on pupil, physi cian on patient, charity worker on de pendent, woman on social conditions and legislator on legal enforcement can best bo attained by amalgamation of the pro posed school with such an Institution as Columbia university, by which means are made available for its use the school of law, (he school of philanthropy. Barnard college, the Teachers' college and th> College of Physicians and Surgeons, with Its numerous cllrrlc and hospital connec tions. The situation of theso department: In the heart of a city of the type- of New York would also operate effectively In providing opportunity for the study oi sjclal and industrial conditions. Anions (lie subjects of study sta ges tort for Hit- school are tenement houses, sweatshops, slaughterhouses dairies, markets and watersheds, of fensive trades and dangerous occupa tions, child labor and factories, ant! toxins, vaccines, filtration and disin fection methods. I>r. I)itman also advises teaching o! the relations between varieties of food and disease, utilization of sewage lor commercial purposes, methods of g:tr bage disposal, modes of transmission of contagious diseases, epidemics and modern conditions of life In general. More Daylight In Canada. Something like a realization of Mr WUlett's "more daylight" scheme has been achieved by the citizens of Fort William and Port Arthur, twin Cana dlan towns on the western shore o! Lake Superior. For purposes of time Canada is divided into five sections, each section having a time one hour In advance of Its western or one hour be hind its eastern neighbor. These t\v> towns have hitherto formed the ex treme eastern limit of the section known as "central," bnt in response to a largely signed petition the city coun cils have agreed to become the extreme western limit of the "eastern" section. This means that the inhabitants will rise—assuming that they continue to rise at the same hour of the clock—one hour nearer dawn. They will also (In isli their tasks one hour further away from the sunset and thus obtain an extra hour of daylight leisure. The change comes Into effect on May 1 and will hold unti! Dec. 5. Civil War Check For 67 Cents A eurioslty in the form of a "war settlement warrant" was issued recent ly to John I. Curtin of Bellefonte, Pa., for the sum of 67 cents, says the Phila delphia llecord. It Is now about forty four years since General Curtin was mustered out of the service, and In all these years he never dreamed that ho had any such claim against the United States government. It appears that In calculating the time of his enlistment an error was made, and this was just recently discovered. The number of the order Is 1C.021, which Indicates that there were a few claims paid before this one. RIFLED OIL PIPE LIME Device to Revolutionize Carriage of Heavy Crude Petroleum. WATER USED AS A LUBRICANT E. H. Harriman Spending Huge Sum to Benefit by the Novel Invention. Transportation Now Rendered Easy. Production of Oil Affected. Without auy "fuss or feathers" and without taking any public credit to himself J. D. Isaacs, consulting en gineer for Harriman railway lines, lias perfected and put into operation an invention that will revolutionize the transportation of heavy crude oil. Tho demonstration which he has made of his new appliance, known as a "rilled pipe line," lias convinced Edward H. Harriman that it is one of the most wonderful inventions of the age. Be lieving this, the "Napoleon" of the railway world is spending between $4,- 000,000 and $5,000,000 in the construc tion of an entirely new and unique pipe line from Oil City, Cal., to I'orta Costa, a distance of 285 miles, says a San Francisco special dispatch to the Chicago Becord-Hernld. When the new line is completed Ilnrrlnuin will be able to supply his locomotives with oil at a transportation cost which will be almost infinitesimal when compared with the old way of carrying It in cars. The proved fact that the heavier oils can now be transported through a pipe line successfully will also have an important bearing upon the production and transportation of crude oils and upon the products which are manufac tured therefrom. Up to the time that Mr. Isaacs made his new discovery the railroads west of the Rocky mountains were facing a threatened oil famine. In fact, many of the engines which had t>een converted into oil burners had been reconverted, owing to the cost of transporting the oil to the points where it would lie available. The oil which is being transported by means of the new device comes from the Kern oil fields, near Bakers tield, Cal., and has a density of 14 de grees Baurne. Owing to the cost of freightage, various attempts were made to send it through pipe lines. It was found that the pumping pres sure demanded was too great Then the company tried various ex periments to get the oil to the points of consumption. The first expedient was heating the oils, which facilitated Its conveyance for short distances. It was found, however, that the degree of heat necessary for the transporta tion of the oil for a long distance was so great as to cause disintegration of the oil, which resulted In a deposit of asphaltine, clogging the pipe line. The Harriman engineers then tried the injection of wetter into the pipe lines, but it was found that the quan tity of water necessary was so great that the expense of ultimately sepa rating the oil and the water was pro hibitive. Loath to abandon the use of the Bakersfield product, the company then tried the mixing of lighter oils with the heavier oil. This was found to make its transportation through pipe lines feasible, but the expense of transporting the lighter oils to tho Bakersfield district and the expense of mixing it again brought the cost up to a prohibitive point. Mr. Ilarrimau was about to order the abandonment of the project when En- 1 gineer Isaacs asked him to wait for a I time and give him an opportunity to study the matter carefully with a view ! to Bee ins if he could not tind some way ! out of the difficulty. Mr. Isaacs is j something of a hunter, and while en joying this sport he chanced to look j through the barrel of his gun. lie ; noted the rilled bore, and the reason i for its being rilled flashed through his j mind. Why not make the rifle bore j do for the pipe line what it does for the gun? The next step was easy, lie knew j intuitively that when the water was j pumped Into such a bore it would pro duce a whirling motion which would i cause the water to be thrown against ! the outside of the pipe line and would j keep it there. This accomplished, the ! effect would lie constantly to maintain | n thin lilni of water between the pipe I and the oil, enveloping the latter. This use of water as a lubricant would make it impossible for the crude oil to stick to the pipe and impede its prog ress. When the plant was shown to Mr. Ilarriman Its simplicity appealed to him, and he ordered an appropriation sufficient to carry on a series of ex periments. A lead pipe was used to determine the amount of friction caused by the passage of the oil. Then the same pipe was twisted by hand, and it was found that the water had a whirling motion when forced into it. This proved the soundness of the prin- i ciple and led to larger experiments. A | standard pipe line one and one-half miles long was then built at < lakland. und the bore was rifled by the inser- ] tlon of helical wires. The first experi ments through this pipe showed that it was possible to transport many times the amount that could be sent through the plain tube. Other experi ments showed that the best results were obtained when 10 per cent of wa ter was Injected. Finally a rifled pipe line was con structed between Delano and Volcano, a distance of thirty-one miles. Tlie pipe is eight inches in diameter, weighs 22.8 pounds to the foot and Is tested for a pressure of 1,200 pounds to the square Inch. With an Initial pressure of 800 pounds to the square Inch the line Is capable of transporting 14,000 barrels of oil net every twenty-four hours. How to Test a Restaurant. The man was enthusiastic about H restaurant he had discovered. "Best place I've eaten at in months," he said. "Everything first class. You'd better try It." "Were yon very hungry when you went In?" asked his friend. "As a boar." said the man. "Go back some time when you art not so ravenous," his friend advised, "and see how you like it then. I make It a point never to experiment with a restaurant recommended by a person who was very hungry when he ate there. To a person who is half starved anything tastes good."—New York Press. EAGER FOR NEXT HUNT President Roosevelt's Plans For His African Trip. NOT TO STOP IN EUROPE. Will Sail For the Mediterranean and Proceed Direct to Cairo Littls Equipment to Be Taken From Ameri ca—Kermit to Accompany Him. President Roosevelt, who will goto Africa next April on a hunt big game, accompanied by his son Kermit. has had this expedition in contempla tlon for some time. The president has hunted all sorts of game, big and lit tie, in the United States, audit has been his nrdent wish that he might at some time hunt the bigger wild ani inals in the African jungles. lie con siders himself entirely out of the presidential race and has determined that he will gratify his ambition next year, starting for the east almost im mediately after his successor has bee installed. President ltoosevelt plans to be gone a year and perhaps a year and a half On his return to the United States tin president will devote six months, a year or such time us may be necessary to writing a book describing his African hunt, says a Washington special dis patch to the Philadelphia Press. The president for the post few weeks has been in active eorresiiondence with men In the United States, Germany and England who have made a spe cialty of hunting big game in Africa. He wants to get suggestions from them as to itinerary, commissary and general equipment. Half a dozen let tors by way of reply have already been received, and others are expected daily. Before he sails from New York the president will have all his plans laid out. He will arrange to have equip ment meet him at various stages of the trip, all the way from Cairo, where he will enter Africa, to the points along the upper Nile and Lakes Albert and Victoria Nyanza, across to Mombaso, a port of entry In British East Africa. It is a part of his plan to make a thorough inspection of the Cape to Cairo railway. Very little of the president's equip ment will be taken from tlie United States. He will have expert guides meet him at Cairo with such equip ment as will be necessary for the ear lier stages of the trip. After this he will be met by other guides, with equipment, at points along the route to be hereafter agreed upon. No photog raphers or newspaper men will lie with the party. —— One or two stenographers will be in attendance to take down notes while the subject matter to which they relate is fresh in the president's mind. There is just a possibility that one or two dis tinguished hunters from the United States or Europe will be iu the party, but this is still an open question. It is announced that the preside:, will not ou this trip make any stops i;. Europe, lie will sail from New York in a vessel for the Mediterranean and proeoou direct to Cairo, who t.he will re-embark for a trip up the Nile. At some convenient point up that river lie will take the Cape to Cairo railway for the Interior, and, leaving that railway at some point to lie agreed upon, he will then plunge into the heart of the continent, it being bis aim to be away from civilization perhaps for months at a time, going north and south, as the season may dictate. This will be the greatest hunting trip ever taken by the president and the longest in duration. He Is very enthu siastic in talking to his friends about it and is planning to bring home with him enough lion skins to make all kinds of rugs for the floors of- Saga more Hill. There will likewise be nu merous elephant tusks among the tro phies—if the president gets the game he is figuring on. No Tears Nor Hills. In the V 3 when Rowley Hill was bishop of ule Isle of Man one of his clergymen bearing the name of Tears came to say adieu to his bishop on getting preferment. The parson said: "Goodby, my lord. I hope we may meet again, but if not here in some better place." The bishop replied. "I fear the latter is unlikely, as there are no Tears in heaveu." "No doubt," wittily answered the par son, "you are right that our chance of meeting is small, as one reads of the plains of paradise, but never of any Hills there."—London Queen. Australian Bushmen. Although the bushmen of Australia are very lowest In the scale of ig norance, they possess a rare instinct that equals that of many animals and Is ill its way as wonderful as man's reason. It is almost impossible for them to be lost Even if they be led away from their home blindfolded for miles, when released they will unerr ingly turn iu the right direction and make their way to their nest homes, and, though these are all very similar, they never make a mistake A Good Point. The critic Is often hard put as he stands between the work he is asked to pass judgment upon aud Its com plaisant creator. He cannot always get off so well us did the critic mentioned in the Baltimore American. "There are some consistent features of nature in this rural landscape," he said as he scrutinized the picture. "What are they?" asked the anxious artist. "The brow of the hill, which, I see, is placed above the mouth of the stream," was the illuminating answer The Actress—ln this new play I'm Bupposed to die from a broken heart. Now, how am I to know how a person with a broken heart behaves? The Manager—l'll tell you what to do. You Just study the author of this play after he sees the first rehearsal.—Lon don Illustrated lilts. Howell—l heard of a case of Greek meeting Greek the other day. Powell —What's the story? Howell—A min ister was married, and when he came to pay the wedding fee he asked If there was auv reduction to clergymen. SNUFFBOXES. Once Hold an Important Part In the Councils of Nations. No longer applicable Is an old dlplo mat's advice to "take snuff often and slowly," yet according to the lion. John \V. Foster, author of"The Prac tice of Diplomacy." the time was when snuffboxes held an important part ID the councils of nations. The present which the Spanish government ten dered to General I'inckney in 1705 and Which congress withheld from him was a gold snuffbox. The British plenipotentiary who at tended the conferences at the close of the Napoleonic wars received as pres ents twenty-four snuffboxes of the value of £I,OOO each. Itichly Jeweled boxes were the diplomatic fashion a century and more ago, but the fashion has changed. As a reminder of the olden time, Sir Charles Russell, afterward lord chief justice of England, the British senior counsel is the Bering sea arbitration at I'arls in 1593, a great collector of historic snuffboxes, carvied a precious one and was constantly offering its contents to his colleagues. After the treaty of 1850 was conclud ed with Persia the American minister to Turkey, who signed it, wrote to the secretary of state: "1 would suggest the following pres ent: A diamond snuffbox of the value of $4,000 for the shah; to Mlrza Agbra Klian, the grand vizier, a diamond snuffbox to the value of $3,000; to Farrukh Khan, with whom the treaty was negotiated, another of the same value; to Mirza Ahmed Khan, the Persian charge at Constantinople, a diamond snuffbox to the value o£ $2,000." YPSILANTI. Nearly Four Hundred Ways of Spell ing the Name. Curious postal officers in Michigan and Washington have been keeping for years past a record of the different ways Ypsllanti has been spelled on. mail matters, and by comparing the notes they have preserved a list of veritable orthographic wonders has. been compiled. This list easily estab lishes the claim that more different ways for spelling Ypsllanti have been devised than for spelling any other geographical name In America. In ail no less than 372 distinct way» of spelling the name have been count ed, and it is probable that the greater number, perhaps all, have been used in good faith by persons who actually believed that the orthographic combi nations reproduced we're the correct combinations for representing Ypsl lanti on the written or printed page. Every letter in the alphabet except "R" has been used as the initial letter of the name, though why so obvious a combination as Rypsllanti Ehould b» neglected when others much less ob vious have been employed is difficult to explain. As a matter of fact the variations in the spelling are chiefly confined to the first syllable, "Y" be ing a letter lacking or having only au indifferent standing in many foreign laugunges. Tipsy Lantl and Zyp Sllantl are met with, and among the spellings farthest away from the accepted and official standard are WliVDSorlnnter and lllp aaalanddor. -Chicago Inter Ocean. SOAP BUBBLES. How Some Pretty and Marvelous Ef-i fects May Be Produced. There are degrees of skill in all pas times, but one would hardly th!nlc that there were specialists in the art of blowing soap bubbles. An article in the Windsor Magazine by Meredith Nu gent, however, shows that some very pretty and marvelous effects may be obtained by the exercise of care and patience with soap and water. The first step is to make a solution by rubbing pure white castile soap Into a bowl partly filled with water until a lather has been formed. Then remove every particle of lather, dip a clay pipe into the cleared solution aud start to blow a bubble If you can blow one six inches in di ameter so that it will hang suspended from the pipe and will allow your fore finger covered with the solution to bet pushed through into the bubble with out breaking, then the mixture is ready for use. Six bubbles may be blown, oue insMe the other. This is performed by dip ping the end of a straw In the soapy water and after resting the wet end upon an inverted plate or sheet oC glass, which should have been previ ously wet with the solution, blow a bubble six inches in diameter. Then dip the straw into the solution again, carefully thrust it through into the center of this first bubble and blow another. Continue in tills manner until all the bubbles are in position. Groat care must be taken that the straw Is thoroughly wet with solution for fully ? jlf its length before each bubble is blown. With practice ten or twelve bubbles may be placed inside of one another. Nothing preaches better than t:ie ant, aud she says nothing.—Franklin. son HEW! A Reliable TD SHOP Tor all kind of Tin Roofing, Spoutlne ind General Job Work. Stoves, Heaters, ftan«es v Furnaces, eto- PRICES TBELOMBST! QIILITY TOR BEST! JOHN HIXSOJV NO- Xl# 6. FEONT BT.