WEDGE LIKE AIRSHIP. New York Inventor's Arrowplane Resembles Paper Dart. 'CAN SAIL IN HEAVY WIND. "lanes Operated to "Spill" the Wind if It la Too Strong—Has Keel Like a Yacht to Keep Her Right Side Up. Automatic Rudders. Do you remember the paper darts that the boys used to make in school and how gracefully they sailed on the air when the wind was not too strong? Well, that Is the principle on which the latest airship has been planned, coupled with additional ideas caught from the flight of the arrow and the sailing of racing yachts. "Arrow plane," the inventor calls it, and, as he frequently addresses the members of the Aero club on the subject dearest to their hearts and was formerly sec retary of the Aeronautical society and still an enthusiastic member of that organization, his efforts 10 solve the problem of aerial navigation are re ceiving the serious atteution of the members of both organizations. L. G. W. Schroeder is the inventor of the latest airship, which Is unlike anything else of Its kind. It consists of two planes forty feet long and wedge shaped. At the forward end the machine is only six inches wide. At the stern it is fourteen feet wide. There is a keel, seven inches deep, just like the fin keel on the English cutters that came over here to "lift the cup," says the New York Globe. The keel runs the entire length of the machine. There Is a seven foot pro peller forward, and provision is made for a larger propeller behind. These will be driven at the rate of 800 revo lutions a minute by a forty horse power, four cylinder, four cycle ex plosion engine. The engine and other machinery are fastened to the bottom of the keel and close up to the front of the Arrow plane. That idea is taken from the boats that have lead on the bottom of the fin keel to keep them from turning turtle. Mr. Schroeder contends that there is little or no difference in prin ciple between sailing on the water and in the air. By having all the weight at the bottom of the keel, he says, it will be impossible for Ills airship to turn turtle under any circumstances. Sticking up out of the forward end of the Arrowplane is the steering rud der. At the rear of the horizontal planes are what might properly be call ed the equilibrium rudders. They are a couple of squares working up and down on hinges. These regulate the rising and dropping of the airship. By means of an Invention which Mr. Schroeder Is having patented the equi librium rudders work automatically in an emergency such as resulted in the accident to Orville Wright. Mr. Schroe der is certain that under no circum stances. not excepting the breaking down of the engine, will his airship descend in any way but right side up. No heavy wind or sudden gust of wind can bother him. The inventor's reasons for this confi dence are twofold. There is nothing above the two planes, which consist of a frame of hollow steel tubing into which are set frames covered with can vas or other material strong enough l'or the purpose. These squares are worked by levers much as the ventilat ing windows in a greenhouse ;:rc ma nipulated. In a heavy blow t!:ese • juures that comprise the planes will be tilted at an angle sufficient t > " 'ill the wind" out of the planes, ju t n; is done on a sailboat when a sq'iall ones up. Then there is the fit t ir.t the Arrowplane is ilesigue 1 l • travel i-n an even keel and that both C./c-. ' lon snd height are under control. If Mue •t of rudders give s out there a • « th to do the work. The machine rests ou four automo bile wheels, two feet in diameter, which are used in starting. To rise in the air the sections of the plane, are raised sufficiently to get the great- t'Bt pressure from the nir against tliem. The propellers are started; I lie ma chlne runs forward and sails from the ground. When the desired height is reiiolied the sections of the planes are flattened and automatically locked in their places. After that the operator goes where he pleases. There are n dial and a pendulum to tell when the air ship gets off an even keel or tilts to one side or the other. It Is the pres ent purpose of the inventor to make machines that will be a success in a commercial way to the extent of build ing them to carry two or three pas sengers. Mr. Schroedcr is sure he can •do It. This latest addition to the flotilla of airships is now being assembled. The inventor is confident that he has the right idea and is enthusiastic about the future of his airship. lie sent out a lot of miniatures made of paper from the 'windows of his offices in New York city the other day. They went where he said they -would. "We naturally think our own chil dren are finer than any other children." he said, "but that is not the reason I consider my aeroplane superior to oth er airships. My objection to the Wright brothers' machine is that it is forty feet wide and only eight feet long. See how little air pressure they get in the long way of their aeroplane. My machine gets the pressure for all its u>ugth. There Is practically no dif ference between sailing In the air and in the water. If the principle of the wide aeroplane Is right, why are not boats built in the same way? Boats are constructed long and narrow. "Too many of the airships are built ■on the bird mode!, which Is what makes the trouble for them. The wings are all right until a wind comes up. A bird will make Its wings smaller, offer ing less resistance In a high wind. The wings on the airships cannot be re duced that way. "Most of the machines with which •>re are familiar do best when there is little or no air. A heavy wind will not bother us at all. We can always go up when the others would not dare to. All the models with which we have experimented have behaved lieautifully, and I have no doubt the machine will do the same. ? 'Si * <■*#« Actions are the raiment of the man. MAGIC GLASS. A Curtou* Mirror That May Be Mad* Transparent. One of the most carious inventions of this aye U what is called platinized glass. A piece of giacs is coated with an exceedingly thin layer of a liquid charged with pLatiixin) and then raised to a red heat. The platinum becomes united to the glass in such a way as to form an odd kind of mirror. The glass has not really lost its transparency, and yet if one places It against a wall and looks at it he sees his Image as In an ordinary looking glass. But when light is allowed to come through the glass from the other side, as when It Is placed in a window, it appears perfectly transparent, like ordinary glass. By constructing a window of plati nized glass one could stand close be hind the panes In nn unlllumlnated room and behold clearly everything going on outside, while passersby look ing at the window would behold only a fine mirror or set of mirrors in which their own figures would be reflected, while the person inside remained in visible. In France various tricks have been contrived with the aid of this glass. In one a person, seeing what appears to be an ordinary mirror, approaches It to gaze upon himself. A sudden change In the mechanism sends light through the glass from the back, whereupon It instantly becomes trans parent. and the startled spectator finds himself confronted by some grotesque figure that had been hidden behind the magic glass. -New York Tribune. SPEED LAWS OF 1816. Coaches Going Nine Miles an Hour Frightened the English. The outcry daily growing louder in England against the excessive speed of motor cars lends interest to the fol lowing passage from the Annual Regls ter for 1810: A new coach was started In th> spring to run to Brighton, a distance irf fifty-two miles. In six hours. * * * This, however, became alarming, par ticularly In the populous neighborhood of Newlnvrton. through which it passed, and the parish officers there caused in formation to be laid against the driv ers for driving furiously on the public road so as to endanger the lives of his majesty's subjects. The result of this is to be read in Mansard's "Parliamentary Reports," June 10, 1810. The attorney general moved for leave to bring In a bill the object of which was the protection of the lives and limbs of his majesty's subjects by correcting the enormous abuses of stagecoach drivers. Within these few days it would lie hardly credible what a number of applications he had re ceived on this subject. Some accounts were enough to freeze one with horror. A gentleman of ve racity had informed him that on Tues day, May 21, at 5:30, the Trafalgar and Regulator coaches set off from Manchester and got to Liverpool at 8:20, doing this jouruay in two hours fifty minutes, at the rate of twelve miles nn hour.—New York Sun. Fiji Islanders' Sugar Cane Dance. A very curious and exceedingly clev er dance may be witnessed in Fiji call ed by the natives "the sugar cane meke." or sugar cane dance. It rep resents the growth of the sugar cane. In the first figure the dancers squat low on the ground, shake their heads, shut their eyes and murmur slowly and softly nn unintelligible sentence. Gradually they all stand up together, growing taller anil taller, and as they "grow" they wave their arms and tremble all over from ankle to head, like the tall, tasseied cane waving in the wind, and still they keep on chant ing louder and louder. The last fig ure represents a series of combats meant to symbolize the exactions < 112 tin' chiefs, who compel the "killsi." willing and unwilling, to come and cut • heir crops. London Standard. The Eyes of the Camel. One of the camels—the seven were lying just beyond the circle of fire light— rose complaining. Mustafa's Ahmed slipped away upon his duty. Presently 1 heard his guttural cawing to get the camel again to rest, but the beast would not down and must be beaten, the boy meanwhile mouthing great curses. I wondered that a being so small should without peril to him self strike n creature like this with his fist, continuing all the time within reach of teeth and hoofs. "I will tell the khawnja," replied Mustafa, "a most curious and interest ing thing about this." Ahmed had mastered the camel and now came to his place. "The khawaja lias observed," Musta fa continued, "that a child may beat nnd command a camel. It is not be cause the camel is stupid nor yet be cause he is timid; it is because of a wise provision whereby God suited him to the weakness of men. The camel's eyes are like magnifying glasses and Increase the stature of his master sevcu times, wherefore he is obedient to the gigantic appearing creature." In 1 am.iseus, too, I heard this super stition. Norman Duncan In Harper's Maga. iue. The Telltale Hand. A writer In an English weekly de clares that If we want to know what the other person Is thinking we must look at his or her hands. Even un practlced lips can lie, as every one knows. Long practice In self control will enable one to keep one's voice sweetly cordial when there is nothing but Indifference or cold dislike behind it. The eyes can be made to shoot glances which are not at all a register for the emotions. But the hands, it Is asserted, are utterly beyond the con trol of those to whom they belong. Even people who hardly gesticulate at all—and to keep the hands still Is con sidered by the Anglo-Saxon a most es sential part of good breeding—even these people are, it seems, constantly revealing themselves in little move ments of the hands. The Immortal Mui vaney has put it on record that a wo man's truth or untruth can be dis cerned by the action of her hands. Of course it takes a practiced reader to Interpret what the hands are saying. It Is not a case of"he who runs may read." A LINGUISTIC ESCAPADE. Whan Henry W. Longfellow Shocked Intellectual Boston. In the original impression at I.long fellow's poem of "Hiawatha" there were found In the seventh book the three lines following: Straight Into the river Kwafrtnd Plunged aa If he were an otter. Dove as If he were a beaver. How this offending preterit, passed the proofreader without protest 1h one of those mysteries which have never been revealed. But the form certainly made Its appearance and can still be found In copies of the poem which were regularly published and Bold. Boston never received such a shock since the days when Fenimore Cooper Insisted that It was only in the middle states that the English language was spoken In its purity. But that attack came from an outsider. Here the of fender was of her own household, was, in fact, her favorite son. What means of suppression were resorted to will probably never be disclosed. A myste rious retlcettfe has always been pre serv ed in regard to this linguistic esca pade. The biographers of Longfellow appear to be silent upon the subject. Measures of some sort must, however, have been taken at once. "Dove" was expunged, and the decorous "dived" assumed its place, and the whole trans action was so completely hushed up that no public scandal was created. Let him who possesses a copy of that first impression continue to cherish it. Whatever may be its worth now, the time will come when It will reach the value of the virtuous woman of Scrip ture, and its price will be far above rubies.—Professor Thomas R. Louns bur.v In Harper's Magazine. THE PALACE WAITED. A Suggestion That Changed the Plans of a Pope. At a time when there was great suf fering among the people from lack of food and when famine in its worst form was threatened Pope Alexander VI. hail made arrangements for the erection of a magnificent palace. The best architects had been employed, and the plans had been submitted and ac cepted, and an accomplished builder had been sent for to come from Venice, a man whose work had won for him renown and who was known to be a just and upright man. The builder had arrived, and at an appointed time he waited upon his holiness to receive the plans ami make his estimates. "There is one thing yet to be done," said the pope. "There has been no proper inscription or leg end thought of to be placed over the main entrance of the palace. It should be put above the great gate. You have had experience. Do you think of an in scription that would be appropriate "If your holiness would pardon me for the liberty, I might suggest one most appropriate at this time." "You are pardoned in advance." said the pope, smiling. "Now, what shall it be?" "Sovereign pontiff, let it be thu •Command that these stones be made bread!'" The pope was visibly and deeply af fected. He paid the builder munifi cently for his expenses of coming an 1 going, and instead of building his pal ace lie fed the hungry ones of his children. Queer Furs. "This Is cat fur," said a furrier. "We use it for linings. An excellent lining cat fur makes too. I>ogs, calves, colts, coons, opossums, bats, rats any animal that wears fur, in fact, is sala ble in the fur market. Bat hair is felted up with other stuff into an imi tation skin. It is also nsed, I believe, in rope plaiting. The dog, the coon and the opossum yield a fur that, prop erly treated, makes a very handsome lining, ltat skins are employed In cer tain delicate repairs, and they also serve to form the thumbs of cheap gloves. A i|iieer thing about the fur business is that the furs must be taken in the dead of winter. The trapper must work under the crudest climatic conditions. Only thus is the fur at Its best. The dresser, on the other hand, who could work best In cold weather, must do all his work in the heat of summer or otherwise he would not be able to keep up with the changing fashions."—Exchange. The Magical Mirror. An ordinary mirror of any size or shape, a piece of French chalk pointed so that it can be used to write and a silk handkerchief are the requisites. Draw upon the mirror with the chalk any design or words you choose. With the handkerchief wipe the glass light ly until it is perfectly clear and no writing or design is apparent. Having all this prepared beforehand, show to some one and request that he breathe gently on the face of the glass, when he will see a picturo of his future wife, for the design drawn will show very distinctly. This can again be wiped off. and if breathed upon the design wfll be again visible. An Odorless Disinfectant. If one objects t» the odor of carbolic acid, he may use for the plumbing an odorless disinfectant prepared as fol lows: Dissolve half a pound of per manganate of potash in four gallons of water and pour this carefully down the pipes. This solution, If allowed to stuud In bowls or basins, will stain them purple. The stains may be re moved with a weak solution of oxalic acid. The acid must be rinsed off im mediately after It has been used. A Hindrance. Suburbanite—You are half an hour late this morning. Letter Carrier—Yes, ma'nm. The sections of stovepipe 1 have to wear inside my trousers legs on account of the dogs you keep along this street hamper my movements, ma'am."—Chicago Tribune. Why She Held onto It. Mrs. Willful—My husband told me If I didn't like the brooch you'd exchange it for me. Jeweler—Certainly, mndam. I'll be only too c' id. as four different ladies of vour set wn:it It Genius. As diamond cuts diamond and one hone smooths a second, all parts of Intellect are whetstones to each other, and genius, which is bnt the result of their mutual sharpening, Is char acter too.—Alfred Tennyson. THECOMINGMARVELS Marconi Predicts Ships Will Be Run by Electricity. AIRSHIPS FOR COMMON USE. Inventor Also Sees a Better World With Fewer Children, but of Higher Quality—Operas to Be Heard and Seen From a Distance. That steamships will be run by sun shine Is the opinion of Guglielino Mar coni, who recently discussed the mar vels of the future. The inventor of wireless telegraphy has come to America to Increase Ills transatlantic service from a capacity of 5,000 words a day to 20,000. After predicting a groat future for wireless telegraphy lie said to a reporter of the New York World: "There seems to be a happy fate in the coincidence of scientific discover ies, which on first thought are quite unrelated to each other. The develop ment of the airship, as shown in the astouudiug performance of Orville Wright's machine in Washington, would seem to have nothing in com mon with the perfection of wireless communication, and yet, If one looks into the future, the great airships which are to come, sailing at incredi ble speed and at unforeseen and vary ing altitudes, could never without the wireless 'speak' each other as ships do at sea and so remain in touch with those safely at home. "And the airship is certain to come into general use, and that within the lifetime of our generation, not for freight perhaps, but for people sure ly. In fifty years Unpeople of New York will be freed of the vexing prob lem of rapid transit. There will be no need for surface cars, elevated roads, subways, tunnels and fer» es. "In fact, as I look Into the years to come I am convinced that life will be an easier problem, a more gonial func tion In the scheme of things, than it is today. "Aside from the economy of labor which follows the conquest of nature's forces, there will be fewer people among whom to divide the benefits. The birth rat'» will continue to de crease, as I believe it. should, at least for the present. With the growth of intelligence among the mass of people there will come a realization of tho folly of rearing more children than can be properly fitted to be efficient members of society. Quality, not num bers, will come to be the standard of racial excellence, and the present anomalous condition wherein the num ber of childreu in a family is in inverse ratio to the earning capacity of the parents will have disappeared. "The condition today Is not ouo of 'race suicide." but of social common sense. And if the present enlighten ment of the average men and women continues to its righteous turning point there will come an end of con gested cities, with their wretched and starving children of the tenements, their crimes, their killing competition and their discouragement of the gen tler aspirations of men. "In all ways science is more and more studying to perfect the practical comfort and well being of the world. Of course there will always tie ships upon the sen. The mysterious primevnl voice of the ocean will continue Its spell over the human imagination. Rut there will not always Ik> steamships. They will pass the way of their prede cessors, and ere long we shall cross the ocean in ships run by electric pow er. There will be no grime of coal smoke, no slcklsh odor of stale steam, no blazing caverns in the hold, where human beings with starting eyes and blackened faces sweat their lives away that the pulse of the engines may not stop. The storage battery will take the place of conl and fire and water. Instead of coaling the great ship will quietly and cleanly renew her batter ies at her Journey's end. nnd if coal is used it will be far from the linen and the noses of men. "Furthermore, I look for tlie time when coal will cease to bo our only source of energy. In every laud men of science ere patiently studying the problem of utilizing the energy of the sun—storing it, In fact—so that the generation of electric force may be cheapened by its use to a point where the storage battery on a large scale will be au economic as well as an aca demic possibility. The wasted energy In coal as now used may In the inter val be brought to do Its work and so bring about the monster storage bat tery sooner than we now expect. Rut sooner or later we shall enslave the sun's rays to our uses as we have the other products of his being. "Ah, yes, life Is going to he a better experience for our children than it is for most of us now. In many little ways It will be so. I)o you know that in many laboratories they are coming close to letting us see the person who is talking to us at the other end of the telephone connection? And If they can do this, if they can transmit the light waves of images at a distance—and It looks as if science Is bound to accom plish it—l am voicing no extravagance in saying that we may yet. sit iu our homes on a cold winter's night, turn a switch and not only bear, but see, the opera in progress in a faro?" building. "And, going back to my own hobby of wireless communication, I want to say that we shall not Imve to wait long for the wireless telephone. De Forest and Ills colleagues are doing freat things in that direction." An Interesting Railway. An interesting railway will be open ed In Moscow, Russia, in the near fu ture. The line forms an Irregular oval around Moscow at various dis tances from the city barriers. It in tersects all nine of the Moscow rail way lines und will be used for trans ferring goods from one line to another, thereby saving cartage and also con siderably relieving the congested state of the streets of Moscow. It will also tap a whole series of factories which have hitherto been off any line. The only serious and formidable thing In nature la will.—Emerson. A MEMORY OF THE PAST. The Unalloyed Joy That Came With the Little Red Scarf. "I was wondering the otber day what one tiling had given me the most pleasure In the world," said the village deacon. "I had togo back a long ways—clear back into the blessed San ta Claus days—but I recalled it. It was a scarf 1 found In my stocking one bright Christmas morning. I got a red one, and my brother got a blue one. X was a mighty proud boy thai morning as 1 trudged downtown with that red scarf around my neck. I wore It every day until the birds be gan to sing in the springtime and the kids were hunting up their marbles. I don't now remember who gave it to me nor what became of It, but I do know that the memory of it still clings like a benediction. "Since the days of that little red scarf I have had things of far more intrinsic value. I have worn lodge emblems of high degree; I have had a gold watch and chain; I ouce had a pair of shoes that cost $5 and a neck tie that cost twice as much as the lit tie red scarf. Nay. more, I once tackled a plug hat. Itut among these things do I recall none that gave me such genuine and unalloyed pleasure, such a swelled up feeling, as did that little red scarf way back In the days when the wolf sat out In the road and howled. 'Tis the little red scarf days that stir the memory with 'lt might have been.' "—Osborn (Kan.) Farmer. PLAIN JOHN SMITH. How His Name Changes In Various Parts of the World. John Smith—plain John Smith—is not very high sounding; it does not sug pest aristocracy; it is not the name of any hero in die away novels, and yet it is good, strong and honest. Trans ferred to other languages, it seems to climb the ladder of respectability Thus in Ijitin it is Johannes Smithus; the Italian smooths it off into Giovan ni Rmithi; the Spaniards render it Juan Smithus; the Dutchman adopts it as Hans Schmidt; the French flatten it out into Jean Smeet, and the Rus sian sneezes and barks Jonloff Smit towski. When John Smith gets into the tea trade In Canton he becomes Jovan Shiminit; if he clambers abont Mount ilecla, the Icelanders say he Is Jahne Smithson; if he trades among the Tuscaniras he becomes Ton Q:t Smittia; in Poland he is known as Ivan Schmittlweiskl; should he wan der among the Welsh mountains they talk of .Tihon Schmidd; when he goes to Mexico he Is booked as Jontil F*Smittl; if of classic turn and he lin gers among Greek rnins he turns to lon Smlkton. and In Turkey he Is ut terly disguised as Yoe Seef.—Phreno logical Journal. Mystery of a Cookbook. Somebody mentioned cookbooks. "It takes a good deal to make tue wonder," said the publisher, "but 1 received a Jolt In the culinary line the other day that set me thinking. In looking over the manuscript of a cook book that had been submitted for our approval I was struck by this Intro duction to many of the recipes, 'Good for boarding house table.' "Now, why that discrimination': isn't anything that is good enough for a boarding bouse table good enough for any other table, and isn't anything that Is good enough for any other ta ble good enough for a boarding house table? Judging by the way those pel licular recipes read, they may result in some rather tasty dishes. Then why limit them to boarding houses?" —New York Globe. The Waist Buttoner, Oh, sing. all ye husbands and overworked maids Who button up waists In the back. No matter what may bo your ages and grades. Who button up waists in the back. For now a device there is coming to town Which will chaso from your faces the scowl and the l'rown And the shirt waisted problem do up very brown. For it buttons up waists in the back. With one sweeping touch it will ge at Its work An.l button up waists in the back. Its labor tt never will shuffle nor shirk In buttoning up waists in the back. But 'twill go at s!im damsel or corpulent dame As though It were playing a lightning skin game And have la a jiffy neat fastened the same. Their waists buttoned up in the back. No raoro shall hiatus of widening space In waists buttoned up in tho back The haste of the dresser in cruel plain ness trace When buttoning their waists In the back. And no more need stray pins a lover alarm When feeling entranced with a fair one's sweet charm He puts with misgiving an embracing arm Round the waist buttoned up 1n the back. —Josh Wink in Baltimore American. In Africa. A shadow clouds the endless sky In Africa. The jungle echoes with a sigh In Africa. The poor, benighted Hottentot No longer roams the sandy plot. But lurketh in his bamboo cot In Africa. The lion skulks with trembling tread In Africa. The tiger wishes ho were dead In Africa. And, chattering, with grinning faces, From bough to bough in each oasts. The monks no longer run the bases In Afrtca. Loud walls the hippopotamus In Africa, "Oh, why did they discover us In Africa?" The pallid boa constrictor skips Unto the gum tree's tallest tips And hisses through his whitened Hps In Africa. Within the deep depths of the Nile In Africa A pang assails the crocodile In Afrten. No more he sunneth on the sand, Unterrtfled, blase and bland. A-snapping flics to beat the band In Africa. What means, you ask, this boding hush In Africa? This ducking to the uncut bush In Africa? Quite soon upon that blighted shore. Toting hla faithful "forty-four," I.andeth the good King Theodore In Africa. ►Grantland Rice In Nashville Tennessean. Nor "The Long Green." Hicks—They say that the blind can distinguish colors by the sense of touch. Wicks—That's nothing. One doesn't hare to be blind to feel blue.— Boston Transcript. UNION OF BALL PLAYERS. : Samuel Gompers Sees No Objection to Their Organizing. Ball players of the future may form b part of the American Federation of Labor. President Samuel Ootnpers ap proves it, seeing no reason why, like [ other labor, it should not organize and 1 tote union cards and work on a union j schedule. President Gompers saw the Browns j wallop the Tigers at St. Louis the J other afternoon. While he has nev- j er gained particular note ns an en thusiastic fan, he is Interested in the national game. After returning from the game Gompers was asked as to the possibility of organizing baseball play- j ers into a union. "I can see no reason why they should not organize if they wish to." he said. "Baseball playing has be come a skilled profession, and the thousands who assembled to see the game in which the Browns won the victory prove it has become a utility. As skill is required to play the game, I see no objection to those of the craft Joining for mutual advantage." If the ball players decide to form a union the fans may be furnished the delightful spectacle of a "strike" dif ferent from those common In baseball parks; also there may be "walkouts" when some south paw shows up for work without a card. The question of the future for applicants on major league teams may be "Do you belong to the union?" rather than "What is your batting average?" WAR ON JACK RABBITS. Southern California Farmers Planning a Big Drive. A great rabbit drive on Oct. 6 is being arranged by the farmers and ranches of Delano, Cal., in Kern coun ty, and it is expected that anywhere from 20,000 to 100.000 of the long eared pests will lie slain. The drive will be made a big holiday occasion. There -will be a barbecue, with all sorts of merrymaking. A great inclosure will be prepared, and the hunters will spread out so as to form a line across the country for ten miles or more, and the animals will be forced to head into the trap, where they will be slaughtered. They will then be skinned and shipped to San Francisco and Los Angeles mar kets, where they bring a few cents apiece. There ore hundreds of thousands of Jack rabbits in Kern county, and crops have suffered heavily from them. Ef- ] forts to establish vineyards this year failed because of their depredations. TO TEACH POSTAL WISDOM. School Children to Learn How to Mail Letters and Study Postal Laws. Postmaster General Meyer issued an order the other day directing all post masters to unite with their local school authorities with the view of adopting the most effective method of instruct ing school children us to the organiza tion and operations of the postal serv ice, particularly the proper address ing of letters and the importance of placing return cards 011 envelopes. Postmasters are also directed to ar range if possible to deliver personal talks to the pupils and give teachers access to the Postal Guide and the postal laws and render them every as sistance in securing necessary Infor in at lon. A STRANGE LAKE. Sulphur Island's Acid Waters Will Eat Up Boats. A strange lake exists in the center of Sulphur island, off New Zealand. It is fifty acres in extent, about twelve feet In depth and fifteen feet above the level of the sea. The most remarkable characteristic of this lake is that the water contains vast quantities of hydrochloric and sul phuric acids hissing and bubbling at a temperature of 110 degrees I'". The dark greeu colored water looks particularly uninviting. Dense clouds of sulphuric fumes constantly roll off this boiling caldron, and care hns to be exercised in approaching this lake to avoid the risk of suffocation. On the opposite side of the lake may be seen the tremendous blowholes, which when in fnll blast present an awe Inspiring sight. The roar of the steam as it rushes forth into the air is deafening, and often huge bowlders and stones are hurled out to a height of several hun dred feet by the various Internal forces of nature. A boat can be launched on the lake and If proper care be observed the very edges of the blowholes may be safely explored. Some Idea of the strength of the ncid saturated water of this lake may be gathered from the fact that a boat al most dropped to pieces after all the passengers had been landed, as the rivets had corroded under the Influence of the acids. The Ceotury Plant. The century plant, so named because of the popular idea that it blooms but once in a hundred years, in one sense makes good its name, for it blooms only once, then dies. In the genial climate of southern California it reach es maturity and blooms in fifteen or twenty yeurs, while in colder climates the period may range from forty to fifty years. There are many species of the agave family native to northern Mexico, where it is called the maguey. The plant furnishes "pulque," the na tional drink of Mexico. At the time of blooming the plant throws up a single stock of rapid growth to the height of twelve to twenty feet, from which the tassel-like flowers sprout forth. This great flower stalk draws all the sap and vigor from the body of tho plant, which soon withers and dies. Tricks of the Trade. Buyers of patent leather should look out for skins in which holes have been neatly covered with a piece of thin paper which Is varnished over, the un finished side being puttied up with a mixture of glue and leather dust.— Shoe Manufacturers' Monthly. Painful Memories. Mr. Jorkins—l wish he wouldn't sing that song about "Falling Dew." Mrs. Jorkins-Why uot? Mr. Jorkins—lt re minds roe too much of the bouse rent —Baltimore American. MAXIM'S NEWESTIDEA Smokeless Powder Inventor Now Plans to Lengthen Life. TO USE CHLORINE SOLUTION. Believes He Can Force It by fclectricity i Through All Parts of Body—Death Dealing Ability Will Be Turned to Killing Disease Germs—Features oi His Device. i Hudson Maxim, inventor of the max imite smokeless powder, high explo sives atul torpedoes which ure the most powerful life destroying agents in the history of the world, has suddenly turned his line of effort from the tield of death and Is working assiduously along lines entirely opposite. liis pres ent efforts are being devoted to tho perfection of a device that will cure all disease with a solution of chlorine passed through the human body by the aid of electricity. Already drawings of the cabinet in which tho treatment is to be adminis tered have been filed in tho patent of fice at Washington, and the great in ventor expects soon to be granted his patent. All that ho is now looking for is the proper electric current—one that has a higher potential than any hereto fore used safely on human body. Tho great inventor was seen at his villa, situated picturesquely 011 tho shore of Lake Ilopatcong, Now Jersey. "I can hardly explain," he said to a ! reporter of the New York American, "how I turned from the manufacture of instruments of death to the inven tion of something that will prolong hu man life. I've seen the success of one, and perhaps I am tired of that and de sire something new. I have great faiU» in my newest idea and hope that it will become a practical part of life, and before long too. X wish to say frankly, however, that at the present time it is in embryo, but it Is none the less, to my mind, perfectly practical. "A good deal of experimenting has already been done by different medical men with high potential electric cur rents, both for the direct germicidal in fluence of the electricity itself and also for the purpose of passing remedial agents into the tissues, but no great success has yet been attained. "My idea is to use electric currents of very much higher potential than I heretofore. Of course the amperage of the current need not be great. "A well known process of making chlorate of sodium and chlorate of poN ash is by passing chlorine out of solu tion through a partition impervious to the flow of a liquid, but previous to the passage of the molecules of chlo rine under the influence of the electric current, so that the potash solution on receiving the chlorine through the im- I pervious partition is converted into chlorate of potash. "My idea is to interpose the human body as a portion of such partition and to pass chlorine, or an equivalent rem edial agent, through the human body by means of a very high potential electric current of low amperage." "Then do you claim prolonged life for mankind?" was asked. "By killing the disease germs in a man's body you naturally lengthen his. life," responded the inventor. "Rut do you claim or expect that you can prolong life indefinitely?" persist ed the interviewer. "No," quickly answered Mr. Maxim, I "because death Is as much a part of life as is birth. Life can only be pro longed In the human body to a certain point. If my device proves successful , we shall be able to do what Bob In , gersoll said lie would do If 110 was God Almighty—'make good health catch ing.' " At the request of the reporter Mr. Maxim made a diagram of his new device. It will be a cabinet of con siderable size and will be divided into , three parts. On either side will be tanks. One will hold an alkaline so . lution, while the other will contain a , solution of chlorine. In the eompart t ment between these two, wherein will , sit the patient under treatment, will be another solution, which is the se cret of the whole thing. Its uature the inventor refused to make known. In the two outer compartments are , powerful electrodes, and by the elec tricity as the agent the chemicals from the various solutions will bo passed through the body. The main idea is to interpose the human body as a part of the dia phragm. in electro osmosis, or eatapho resis, and in this way force the germ killing chemicals Into and through the human I issues lymph and blood. Unmasked. "I was Introduced to your wife to day, and she glared at me." "I can't account for that." "I can. I s'pose I'm your scapegoat, you old fraud."—Kansas City Journal. Try to be something in tho \vort£ and yoc will be something. Altu at c\- cellence and excellence will be at tained.— hoileau. sou mi! A Reliable TIN SHOP Tor all kind af Tin Roofing* Spoutlne nnd General Job Work. Stoves, Heatera. ftan«aa, Furnaces, ato- PRICES THE LOWEST! QGILITY THE BEST! JOHN HIXSON 80. IU E. FROST W.