Cost of Running a Yacht. Mr. Aator'a JVlontlily Kill for the Nourmahal itx Summer; .rroDaniy iouta Up 25,000. ' By Rene Bache, I HE cost of running a steam yacht necessarily varies A sixty-footer may be kept in commission for $300 a . .' not -counting foo'd .supplies. For. a 150.-footer the montlu., expense would be $3,000 perhaps. But whGn it comes to a pleasure craft like Pierpont Morgan's Corsair, 304 feet on the water line, or John Jacob Astor's Nourmahal, which is even bigger, the outlay is enormously greater. It costs about $20,000 a month' to run the Corsair, and it is probable that Mr. Astor's bills for the Nourmahal in the summer time" amount tQ not less than $25,000 every thirty days. The pay roll of the officers and crew of such a vessel, which is a good-sized steamship, will touch $4,500 or possibly $5,000 a month. A first-class steam yacht carries a crew of fifty or more men. The Aphro dite, owned by Col. Oliver H. Payne, requires sixty-two. There must be three cooks, a steward, two assistant stewards and six or seven men who serve as "chambermaids" and waiters. The Nourmahal also has a couple of stew ardesses, for the convenience of lady guests on board. Thirty sailors draw pay at the rate of $30 a month: the captain gets $200 a month Howard Could pays his captain $5,000 a 3rear and two mates are employed at $75 and $50, respectively. The chief engineer draws $123, the assistant engineer $100 and an oiler $50 a month. To these must be added four firemen at $40 a month and four stokers at the same wages. Of course the chief cook is likely to be a French chef, at $400 or $500 a month. Such a boat consumes twenty tons of coal a day, and at that rato. if she is kept going five months in the year, she will burn up something like 3.000 tons, the item of fuel alone coming to $10,000 for the season. For the rest of the year she is laid up in a basin, at an expense of $200 a month, and the clean ing and painting she has to undergo cost a pretty penny. It takes two weeks and an expenditure of $1,000 to lay her up, and a couple of months and $5,000 to put her into commission again. From these figures it is easy to understand where the money goes for s eteam yacht, though it should be realized that bills for food supplies (not reck onedjn the above account) are simply huge, especially w ion much eatertaininp is done. Anybody would be interested to know what it cost Cornelius Vander biit, on his recent trip abroad, to entertain Emperor William on board hi.s yacht, and to meet on an appropriately sumptuous scale certain other social obligations which were imposed upon him by his intimacy with the great one? of the earth. Very possibly he did not get off for less than $100,000 for a few weeks' amusement. Not a few rich men nowadays prefer sailing yachts, because of the su perior accommodations which, they afford. There is more comfort to be had they assert, in a 100-foot schooner than in a 200-foot steam yacht. Such a schooner costs only about $30,000, and has a crew of twenty-five, with eighteen before the mast. Whereas a steam yacht is largely occupied by machinery an'' coal, which take up nearly the whole of the middle portion of the vessel, in a schooner the entire body of the craft is available for living purposes. Even 8 sloop, sixty or seventy feet long, and costing $18,000, perhaps, will carry s4 or eight cabin passengers very cozily. Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post HOSPITABLE PERSIA.' T Improve the Cow. Great Profit for Dairymen to be Won. by Ir tellisent Breeding. By Hark Comstoclc HE 18,000,000 milch cows of this country find their ' bduct virtually consumed at home, leaving little for exportation. Tet few dairy farmers get rich. Perhaps it is upon the principle that few in any given business get rich. " All agricultural profit in these days comes of using improved methods and machinery. The farmer' who still mowed his mnarinw land with a sevthe would be left far behind in the com petition of these days. The cow is the first item, and a most important one in dairy machinery. At the average she is a good deal what she was hlty to a liuadred years ago, as far as relates to her dairy functions. In beef producing quiity the case is entirely different. According to the statistics of the Department of Agriculture the average dairy cow of the country, gives 130 pounds of butter per year. In the dairy demonstration now progressing on the world's fair grounds at St. Louis the en-tire Jersey team of twenty-five cows has averaged more than that per head in sixty days. Admitting that better care and better feed have to do with the question, there yet remains a very wide margin that can only be credited to the functional capacity of the cows bred in their bone. When farmers began to select their bulls from thoroughbred herds possessing these great dairy values, letting the beef question and all side issues take care of themselves, they began to establish improved machinery in the shape of dairy cows. Nriv 12 000.000 cows are devoted to butter making in the United States, and the product in round numbers is 1,500,000,000- pounds of butter, worth, at IS cents a pound, $270,000,000. Suppose that each of these cows could produce a heifer calf by a high class Jersey bull, and the improvement in butter capa city for the new generation was even as little as 5 per cent., which would be an exceedingly small estimate; the increased butter output for a single year, assuming that the price was not lowered, 'would be worth $13,500,000 a net profit over present income due solely to the use of improved cow machinery. Only in recent years has the disparity in value between the product or different individual cows been brought home to the comprehension of the average farmer and dairyman. Butter fat is the most valuable constituent of milk, whether it be made into butter or used otherwise. The creameries buy milk by its test of fat, allowing nothing for the skimmed remnant. Quarts no longer "measure at the creameries and factories. They merely float the pounds of fat for which the dairy farmer is paid. The change to this plan was an eye-opener to him. He quickly found that his heaviest milker was not neces sarily his most profitable cow. A machine for quickly determining the. per centage of fat in milk is now used everywhere. The dairy farmer has found out where the money is and is beginning to look for a different cow from that which formerly excited his admiration. The great step now in the improvement of the dairy business is the dis tribution of the bulls from the thoroughbred herds of Jersey, Guernsey, Hol stein. Brown, Swiss and Ayrshire cattle throughout the dairy districts, as the beef raisers have been taking them from thoroughbred Short Horn, Hereford and Polled Angus herds to the grazing districts. New York Sun. yhere Nerves Are Unknown Happy Japanese Women are Free From Worries of Western Civilisation. By Robert Webster Jones. HE women of Japan, in contrast to their Occidental sistet M have inn? hpen noted for their perfect poise and self-possession. Their tl placidity under what would ordinarily be considered trying cir- CUmStliUCcS UaE BUHJii.icu auiciiv.au iui "ow. ""v v.-... guaranteed to cure nervousness in its many forms have little sale in Japan. The meaning of the term "nervous prostration" i unknown. .Tananese physicians are rarely rich. An explanation of this happy state of affairs has been made by a returned traveler. "To begin with," says he. "there is never any change in fashions, so the Japanese woman has no worries at all on that score. Then, house keeping is greatlv simplified, so the Japanese housekeeper is hurt by none of the jars and frets that rag the nerves and prematurely age her Western sister The Japanese house has no draperies, no dust traps in the shape of c'nprflrmK ornaments. People all put off their shoes on entering the heuse, so no mud and dirt are brought in. Japanese women have no heart-burnings over euchre prizes and 'bridge' stakes. They never have to compose club S1L some their daughters to rich foreigners. They never nave 10 give eignt-course dinners with two-course pocketbooks. They live simple, happy, peaceful, domestic ts .- .1 III-1 1 ! 1 r, r-i- 1 i m ' ' ' ' nanws oa subjects concerning wmcn uiey kuuw Huuimg. nmy utivur 11 u nl-hts planning how they might outshine their rivals in dres3 at XM,tralr- Thov do, not bother their brains with schemes for marrying While WO Should be SOrry CO St'U nmnitnu num-u iwuiu iucu iies LU the narrow inhere of the Japanese, there is no doubt that three-fourths of then- nervous worrv is caused by -trying to do too much." Simplicity is the f .itv and health, and American men as well as women may well profit by the example of the happy Japanese 1 The 22-ton bell at the Sacre Coour Church in Paris is tolled by electri city. A single choir boy can do (he Tt-fik which foiMKTiy t: five men. a 1 , 'I I'tudr mai is usua m me manufacture of ieai pencils is found in large tracts in Colombia, near the pr Venezuelan border. pl 4 1 J How That Blodern , L.nd Reratnda Ok of the Spiritual Persia. "Persia," said the Hon. Richmond. Pearson, of North Carolina, the urbane gentleman who represents the United States Government in that ancient land, to a reporter at the Wil- larcl, "Is a couutry that makes one frequently refer to the Old Testament, for the manners and customs of it people savor greatly of those ancient tribes of' whose doings the sacred chronicles tell. 'In Persia they are pursuing, the same tasks in the same way that has teen in vogue for centuries, and out side of the cities not a trace of modern civilization can bo seen. As a rule, life goes on very evenly over there, and hardly a ripple of excitement breaks Its monotony, except for some such incident as the killing of Dr.' Labarre, the American missionary who was assassinated by a band of fanatics last March. The sequel, to that crime the Post has told how the principal criminal, claiming to be a descendant of Mohammed, was caught after con siderable trouble and put in jail, where he now lies awaiting punishment. I may say here that I was given im mense assistance in the capture of tbia murderer by Dr. Wishard, a. former resident of Indiana, who is in charge of the American hospital at Teheran. "The Persians are the most polite people and the greatest sticklers for form and etiquette in the world. In making the journey from the seacoast to the capital, they showered atten tions and ceremonies on me that were almost ' crushing in their ' civility. Through every province I passed there was a repetition of these forms of welcoming salutes were fired in my honor, castles were put at my disposal and gifts were coming in all the time. One of these donations was a bleating lamb the disposition of which was a problem. I didn't want it as a pet; I couldn't have killed it for a good deal, and so I had to' carry it along till , the end of my journey. E-ut, all the same, Persia is an interesting country, and I am not at all sorry to return to it." Washington Post. WORDS OF WISDOM. God's presence makes a desert a garden of paradise. A swindle can not be sanctioned by calling it a church fair. A tailor made man will satisfy a trinket hearted woman. The least prayer that Teaches God's throne shakes His footstool. When angels sing they do not have to wait for cultivated cars. Fear may force a man to cast beyond, the, moon. John Hey wood. Nothing is more impractical than the neglect of the spiritual. When you find one sharp as a nee dle he is all eye and no head. Truth is the highest thing that man may keep. Geoffrey Chaucer. The old hope rises, that, this sorrow, which at this hour seems more than I can bear, may dwell with me al ways as greatness from which my life may take its tone. Ellen Watson. Tossibly want and woe will -be seen hereafter, when this world of appear ance shall have passed away, to have been, not evils, but God's blessed an gels and ministers of His most pater nal love. F. W. Robertson. Farm Lands in England. The English press mentions indica tions of great shrinkage in farm lauds of that country generally. It is said that in Lincolnshire farms have de creased in value nearly one-half, that a farm of C15 acres held at .$75,000 had been offered for $20,000; that another large farm would not bring more than 50 per cent, of its cost, and another Which sold three years ago at $110, 000 was appraised for probate at only $34,000. Just the reverse of these conditions have occurred during the , past few years in the United States. Many farms have doubled in value.. and the average advauce is CO to 40 per cent, here. Perhaps this more nearly equali zation of farm value abroad and here is largely due to the lowering of inter nal and export freights, and to the in creased invasion of the British mar kets by American farm products. It is said that English land owners are feel ing the squeeze seriously. If it re sults in the dividing up of large estates and placing the land in the hands of men of moderate means to farm, it may result in leveling up the middle classes and in great benefit to the Eng lish nation. CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT. L Makes Pets of Humming Birds. Mrs. Warren Willard of Putney, Vt., feeds humming birds daily from the time they arrive in the spring until the approaching cold drives them south. She places a syrup made of melted sugar upon the piazza and the birds come regularly from the woods to get the food. When she be gan the practice years ago there were but two birds, but the number has gradually increased to twelve. ctwr milk is thf latest remedy ior roloimng life, but no one wants to rolong it in that way. - BABY'S SAND PILE. In a grea-t hig.wooden .box, Nice and smooth, to save her frocks, 'Is the baby's sand-pile, where all day she plays; And the things she thinks she makes, Irom a house and bam to cakes,- Would keep, I think, her family ail their days. Once she said she'd make a pie Or, at least, she'd like to try So up she straightway rolled . each tiny sleeve : For her plums she used some stones, Made a fire of cedar cones .Not a real fire, you know, but make-believe. v Next she baked some buns and, bread, "For her dollies," so she said, 'Cause, you see, they like ray cookinjr best of all;" Though her flour was only sand, Dolls, she knew, would understand, And excuse her. if her batch of dough should fall.- -, Sometimes cook will miss a pan, ' Or a bowl, or snoon. or ran: But. I think she's very sure where they'll dp iouna; -For she knows it's just such things Baby uses when she brinzs All her dollies to her sand-pile on the ground. . F. C. M., in St. Nicholas. 'A FUNNEL FOUNTAIN. I never knew a boywho did .not love to fuss with water or to watch a foun tain play. Now here is a sort of foun tain and pump combined which is so simple that it would be a pity if any Jtoy should be deprived through ignor- ance of the pleasure of seeing it work. , The apparatus needed is only a com mon tin funnel, the bigger the better. you might try it in the bathroom or the laundry, if you remember that it is neither necessary nor ' desirable to force the jet quite to the ceiling, nor yet to make it shoot across the room, . " . t A TASK FOIl NIMBLE FINGERS.. Here is a bridge, and a pretty strong one, considering its material, which is mde of matches without using rivets, glue, string or any other aaten--ing except friction. It is quite a trick to put it together,, and the bridge builder must have pa tience and a steady hand, but the re sult is worth a little trouble. Jf you go about it In a haphazard, hit or miss fashion, even, with the aid of the illus tration, you will be pretty Bare to fail, and will soon vote the wbolo COMPLKTED MATCH URTDO?1. .thing, stupid and give , it vUp, but thY) task is not so very difficult if you soLl to work in the right way. Lay a match on the tabic, and upon it, near the ends, lay the heads of two other matches, the other ends of which rest on the table. ! These two matches . must ie at right angles to the one first mentioned. They are the ones which, start from the grouud at PICTURE PUZZLE At WHERE IS HER YOUNG LOVER? Brooklyn n EagleXl If is worked by plunging it, with the mouth down, in a bathtub or washtub half full of water. If you press the funnel down rapidly and forcibly the water under it, not being able to get tut of the way quickly enough, will be pressed np into the funnel, and, because of the tapering form of the latter, a jet of water will be forced out of the small end of the funnel and will rise to a height that will surprise you. With a funnel which has a wide mouth and a small tube you can make a fountain ten feet high. Of course, you understand that the fountain does not play all the time, 1 Lmmi MAEIKG THE FOUNTAIN TIAY. but that a j?t shoots up each time you force the funnel down. You see, also, that this i. not a parlor entertainment. The trick should be done out of doors if possible. If not, the near end of the bridge ia the pic ture, and the match on which theirr heads rest is the second crnsa piece. Now, across these two parallel matches lay a fourth match the first cross-piece in the picture. Next, lift up the match you laid down first, raising the others with it,, and slip two' more matches under it and over the one yotr laid down last (the first cross piece in the picture). Lay the heads of these last two matches on another (the fourth cross piece), and across them lay ''still an other (the third cross piece). Now; you have two links of the bridge done. Lift up the cross piece, slip in turn more matches under it' and lay over the third, add the next pair of cross pieces and go on in this way, link by) link, until you have five or six links, Avhich will make a strong bridge of graceful shape. More than this makes the arch too high, less ; makes it too flat. - The matches should be long, stronff and either square or quite rough, V- that they will neither roll nor slip. . jw -as in an su.cn tricks, it i3 advisable 1 to use safely matches and "to handle, them carefully. . It is still better to use burnt maichW if you can get them long enough aiM of equal length. Toothpicks or any other little sticks of uniform length and thickness may be used instead of. matches. The .Swiss Alpine Club has' within the last four years spent $24,000 in buildiug refuge huts on various moun Old Calabar, the headquarters of the Southern Nigeria Covernraenr, has just been Connected by telegraph witU England,