JT. A. LONDON, EDITOR AND PROPBTOa TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, $1.50 PER YEAR St Icily In Advance. OLDEST AMERICAN CITY. REMARKABLE DISCOVERIES RECENT. LY MADE AT COPAN. The MyMnriou City of llonttiiraa, llio t r.lille of Muyn Civilization ltelimlni f Cir-Ht Temple nnd Palaces -A Huge Structure 800 lct lUgti. The Central American explorer, George Byron Gordon, contributes an article entitled "The Mysterious City of Honduras," to tlio Century. This gives nn account of the recent remark able discoveries made at Copan. Mr. Gordon says : Hidden away among the mountains of Honduras, in a beautiful valley which, even in that little-traveled country, w here remoteness is a char acteristic attribute of places, is unusu ally secluded, Copan is one of the Kt-entest mysteries of the ages. After the publication, in 1810, of Stephens' account of his risit to the rums, which male the n known for the first time to the world, the interest awakened by hi graphic description, and the draw ings t'.iat accompanied it from the skillful pencil of Catherwood, re lapsed, and until within the last de cade writers on the subjoct of Ameri can arcb.'cology wero dependent en tirely for information concerning Coj an upon the writings of Stephens, which were regarded by many with Hkepticism and mistrust. Not only do the recent explorations confirm the ac count given by Stephens as regards the magnitude and importance of the ruins, but the collection of relics now in the 1'eabody museum is sufficient to convince the most skeptical that here are the remains of a city, un known to history, us remarkable and as worthy of our careful consideration ns any of the ancient centres of civili sation in the Old World. Whatever the origin of its people, this old city is distinctly American the growth of American soil and environment. Tho gloomy forest, tho abode of monkeys and jaguars, which clothed the valley at the time of Stephens' visit, was in great part destroyod ubout thirty years ago by aeolony from Guatemala, who came to plant in the fertile soil of the valley tho tobacco for which, much moro than for the ruins, that valley is famous throughout Central America today. They left tho trees that grew upon tho higher structures, forming a picturesque grove, a rem nant of which still remains a few cedars and ceibns of gigantic propor tions, clustered about the ruins of the temples shrouding them in a sombre shade, and sending their huge roots into the crevices and unexplored chambers and vaults and galleries of the vast edifices. The area comprised within the limits of the old city consists of a level plain seven or eight miles long and two miles wide at the greatest. This plain in covered with the remains of stone houses, doubtless tho habitations of the wealthv. The streets, squares and courtyards were paved with stone or with w hite cement mado from lime and powdered rock, and the drainage was accomplished by menus of covered canals and underground sewers built of stone and cement. On tho slopes of the mountains, too, are found nu merous ruins, and even on the high est peaks fallen columns and ruined structures may be seen. Ou the right bank of the t'opnu liver, iu the midst of the city, eland tho principal group of structures the temples, palaces and buildings of a public character. These form part of what has been called, for want of a better name, the Main Structure o vast, irregular pile, rising from the plain in steps and terraces of masoury and terminating in several great pyra midal elevations, each topped by the remains of a temple which, before our exc.ivations begun, looked like a huge pile of fragments bound together by the roots of trees, while the slopes of the pyramids and the teriaees and pavements below are strewn with the ruins of these superb edifices. This huge structure, unlike the great pyra mids of Egypt and other works of a similar character, is not the embodi ment of a definite idea, built in accor dance with a preconceived plan and for a specific purpose, bnt is rather the complex result of a long process rede velopment, corresponding to the growth of culture and koeping pace with the expanding tastes of the peo ple or the demauds of their national life. Its sides face the four cardinal points; its greatest length from north to Fouth is about eight hundred feet, and from east to west it measured originally nearly ns much, but a part of the eastern side has been carried away by the swift current of the river which flows directly ngaiiist it. The interior of the structure is thus ex posed in the form of a cliff one hun dred and twenty feet high, presenting a complicated system of buried walls and floors down to the water's edge doubtless the remains of older build ings, occupied for a time, and aban doned to serve as foundations for more elaborate structures, but sculptured monuments ns well. The theory of development, though it cannot be eet aside, seems inadequate to explain thio curious circumstance; and yet there is just enough difference between these art relics nnd those of later date to indicate a change in style and treatment. Whetheror not this change continues in regulur sequence lower dowu has not yet beon determined. If, as I am inclined to believe, we shall find, away down in the lower levels, tho rude beginnings from which tbe culture of the later period devel oped, we shall have pretty conclusive evidence not only that Copau is the oldest of the Maya cities, but that the Copau vn'ley it-elf, with the imniedi n'e vicinity, was the cradle of the Mara civilisation. Asphalt pavement is slippery only mhvM ' "" l:('l't dean. VOL. XX. PITTSBORO, CHATHAM SHE TURNED THE TABLES. The Uusband'. Iwuri-tnlve J.enaon for His Wife Wan Lout. It seemed to him an excellent time to impress the lesson upon her, so us ho started for his hat he said to her: "Suppose you had wanted me to spend the evening with you before wo wero married nnd I had plauned to do something else." "Suppose I had," she returned. "What of it?" "You wouldn't have sulked, would yon?" he asked. "Xo-o, I suppose not," she replied hesitatingly. "You wouldn't have got cross nud been disagreeable about it, would you?" "Probably not." "You would have been just as nice and sweet and clever as you possibly could be," he asserted. "You would have been both lovable nnd loving and would have tried to coaxmetogivo up my other places. Isn't that so?'' "Perbapa it is," she faltered, "but" "Never mind the 'huts'" ho inter rupted, feeling that ho was gaining his point. "Vhnt I am trying to im press upon you is that a woman doesn't seem to think it worth while to try tho samo arts on a husband that sho does on a lover. That's where you're both foolish and unjust. Now, you admit that before marriage" "Before marriage," sho broke in, "if you had spoken of going any where and I had pouted just tbe least little bit what would you have dune?" "I'm ah well, I suppose" "If you had noticed what seemed to be even the merest tr.ice of a tear what would have happened?'' "Why, my dear, I" "If I had merely looked at you pleadingly what would have happened to that other engagement?" "Really, you don't give me time to answer. I must confess that iu nil probability I would have" "Given it up, of course," she prompted. "Isn't it worth while to make the same sacrifices for a wife that you do for a sweetheart'" Somehow he couldn't help feeling that his little lesson was lost on her, but it is worthy of note that ho told a business associate tho next day that any iiiau who went on the theory that a woman can't reason as clearly as a man was laying up a largo store of trouble forhimself. Chicago Post. Art off limbing Mxira. One of America's leading physicians is quoted us saying that few peoplo understand the art of climbing stair ways w ithout making themselves tired before reaching the top. Says our in formant on this subject : "I'sunlly a person will trend on the ball of his foot iu taking each step. This is very tiresome and wearing on the muscles, ns it throws the entire weight of the body on the muscles of the legs nnd feet. You should, in walking r climbing stairs, seek for tho most equal distribution of tho body's weight possible. In walking upstairs your feet should be placed squarely down on the step, heel and all, and then the work should be per formed slowly and deliberately. Iu this way there is no strain upon any particular muscle, but each one is do ing its duty in a natural manner. The man who goes upstairs with a spiing you may be sure is no philosopher, or, at least, his reasoning has not been directed to that subject. Tho doctor might have gone a little further iu th? samo line, nnd protested against the habit which many persons have of bending over half double whenever they ascend a flight of stairs. In ex ertion of this kind, when the heart is naturally excited to more rapid action, it is desirable that the lungs should have full play. But tho crouching po sitiou interferes with their action, the blood is imperfectly aerated, nnd there is trouble right away. Give the lungs tt chance to do their work everywhere and at all times." r.M'n.fl Fowl In Smith All Ion. The air is brilliant, translucent, keen, and wonderfully exhilarating. Al ready nature is fully awake. Just amid that belt of bush, flinging the great grass plain yonder, ypu may bee a big troop of guinea fowl nearly a hundred of them senrchiug busily for their breakfast, delving below the dry soil for those small bulbs in which they so grently delight. Magnificent birds they are, heavier and stronger than their semi-domesticated brethren at home in England. Last night they drank as usual at a small desert pool hard by, the only water within a radius of fifty miles. Now aud ngain borne upon tho clear air you may catch the wonderfully sharp metallic note of these handsome game birds calling to one another as they feed along. They are great pe destrians; probably they will cover twenty mile) of ground in the course of a day. Occasionally in their long rambles they will roost in some clump of trees far out in the dry desert, and not return to water till tho following evening. But tho wanderer lost in these trackless aud dangerous wilds may comfort himself with the thought that sooner or later, if he follow the spoor of a troop of guinea, fowl, it will bring him to water. London Specta tor. Mrdiattval Hill nr l ine. An old chronicle preserves a bill of fare for a Council dinner iu the year 1502. For the first course there were capons, steamed beef, and old hens, black game prepared with vinegar ; second course, steamed carp served with spiced sauce, sauerkraut with mutton, and pastry; third course, roast veal, birds, fried tish, cheese, fruit, nuts, chestnuts and wafers. The wine aud game were furnished by the court; the host received fifteen furtk iiigs from each person. From ''Stuttgart," in Harper's Magazine. I GOOD ROADS NOTES, '& ; " A Farmer on Toll ltoa.l -. A veteran Michigan farmer, writing to tho ft ran (I Rapids Press, says: "Toll roa ls do not meet tho wauts of the farmer; ho wants free roads, not toll roads, aud wauts all who mo them to helo make them at a cost that will not be Lurdeusomo on tho farmer. The till roads are too costly for tho firmer. To get the products of the farm to market ho now pnys enough taxes in the way of tolls to pay for tho toll roads in live yearn at p. price they could bo built, for now. Though the tax ii paid indirectly it is paid. Farmers, it? a class, nro opposed to monopolies, and yet they grant fran chises to toll road companies which aro, on a small scale, greater monopo lies than any of the railroad corpora tions of the State. "These toll roads are not only a public nuisance, but tho owners cf them are tho worst tax dodgers of the State, railroad corporations not ex cepted. Tho farmers in many part of the county cannot get into the city without being compelled to pay a toll, or else drivo a long distance out of their vvny. Tho farmer's wife cannot get into tho city with a small basket of eggs, or p. few pounds of butter, without paying toll almost as much as sin receives for what oho has to sell. "Tho farmer is opposed to high rates of interest, nnd if ho wants to borrow money and tho lender charged him fifteen per cent, for tho use of it, he would decline the offer with indigna tion, and yet the same farmer votes frauchises to corporations which make him pay, though indirectly, but none ,tho less surely, over twenty-livo per ceur. on the money used to build toll roads for his accommodation, if the cost of tho roads was figured at what it would cost to build them at the. present time. Tho railroad:) of tho State aro required by law to pay taxes ou gross receipts, but tho loll ro.-.ds only on not recsipts. Tho toll-road lobbyist, when at Lansing, bents the railroad lob! yist two to one. You truly say that it is somewhat surpris ing that the farmers, in view of all tho facts, nro not more generally in favor of a system that will givo belter roads." FMucsllo.i in liond-Mattlng. r" Tho Rhode Island AyricuUniAl College lias made a new departure in its work of education that deserves imitation by other institutions of that character. Its faculty has established a special department for instruction in tho theory .aud practice of road making. The word curriculum is of id eologically applicable to the pro posed course of inslrnction, which covers two years, and the announce ment of tho details is interesting. Tho plan is about to bo put into op eration after consultation with fle.ii eral Roy Stone, the road expert of the LTnitod Slates Department of Agricul ture, and its advocates are enthusias tic in their predictions that it will bring intelligent industry to boar in improving tho highways nnd byways of the tidy little commonwealth. It is required that graduates from this school shall bo competent to draw specifications and contracts, to man age all the machinery used in scienlilie road-building, end to be familiar with every detail of the profession of road engineering. For instance, candidates must pass au examination which in cludes algebra and geometry .to tho extant required for admission to any college. Tho instruction includes English literature, higher geometry, trigonometry, surveying, electrical mechanics, physical geography, min eralogy, geology and steam engineer ing. But this is not nil. That thero is no "royal road to knowledge" w ill be sternly impressed upon the aspirants to the degrco of road engineer by a novel requirement. For ono month each spring the students will bo ex pected to work ten hours a day at ac tual road-making, including nil the mechanical appliances, from wieldtug tho pick and shovel to runnim the most cdaboralo machinery. While other collepiaus nro training in such athletics m rowing, running, leaping, baseball and football, those sturdy youths of Khodo Island will be bend ing their backs, strengthening their muscles and expanding their lungs in improving aud extending those high ways which aro tho bands of civiliza tion. May their ways bo ways of pleasantness and all their paths be peace. New York Mail and Express. Instruction In Knart-niiililliicr. The opportunities for instruction in building different kinds of roads af forded occasionally at fairs nnd insti tutes, t'aud by samplo sections that rro beon laid under Government auspices, have boon very valuable, ,and have aroused the people somewhat to a realization of tho importance of regular instruction on this subject. Tho Worcester (Mass.) Gazette sug gests that it would be well if the State spent a portion of tho enormous sum appropriated annually for the highway system iu holding institutes of instruc tion for highway supervisors, commis sioners, selectmen, and all others who have to do with road-building. It thinks tho trouble with tho highway builder usually is thnt ho does not consider his business a profession, and needs to learn from tho experience of others. "By establishing a school for instruction in road-building, tho State could do a greater service to the public than by using the amount such a school would cost in building mac adam roads through the country." Al.l From thn UnllTi.. In u number of States the railroads have shown a disposition to help tho canse of better highways by trans porting material for road building at Wtam COUNTY, N. C THURSDAY, FEBRUARY very low figures', It Is now reported that a railway in Indiana is hauling w ithout charge, and dumping at any designated point along its right of way, nil the crushed stone needed by the commit -doners of Green County. If one will do it. others certainly will fol-lov.-. POWES CP A METHODIST BISHOP. Eighteen Mpii Who Have Spiritual Xtule Over Many Millions, Tho Methodist Church is one of tlin most highly organized, or rather is i ho most highly organized, of ull tho Protestant denominations. But with out going into niinuto detail we rosy sny briefly that the Board of Bi.-hops is the highest Order in tho Methodist system. It consists of twenty-one persons who aro elected by the general conference to fill vacancies by death or deposition a bishop cannot resign. It is within the power of the general conference to enlargo this number if, in its opinion, the needs of the church require. The pew bishop is ordained with elaborate i - , ceremonies, nnd, Methodists clain, with truo apcslolic succession through the Wesleys. Of these twenty-one men, eighteen have supreme and well nigh arbitrary jurisdiction over world-wide Metho dism, and two of these ere practically retired, thus reducing tho active foreo to sixteen. . How this supervision shapes itself into routine may bo indi cated to show the extent and charac ter of this authority. There aro iu the Methodist Church 121 conforeneos, 10d of w hich aro in this country, while twenty-ouo aro distributed through India, China, South America, Mexico and Europe. These conferences mny be called the grand division of Metho ili iin. They are always subdivided into two or more districts, nnd repre sent front liftyto 300 or mcro "charges'" or churches. Each of these confer ences holds nn annual session, at which a bishop must preside. He has associated with him iu authority on such occasions what is known as tho "eubinot," a body composed of tho bishop nnd tho presiding elders of tho conference. Tho presiding elder, it should bo said, is the chief executive of each district conference, and is himself n person of great authority. At each conference tho bishop, in con sultation with his cabinet, decides upon, appoints and auuounces the pas loiTttcs for tho coming year, and from this decision there is no appeal. A Methodist minister must cither hike his assignment or disobey orders and practically quit the ministry. Thus, theoretically nt least, theso twenty-ouo bishops have in their nrbi trary power tho location and work of theoO.OdO ministers of tho Methodist Church a power which cannot find a parallel outside of tho Roman Catho lic Church, if indeed it be equalled there. It will be observed that the Metho dist bishops are not confined to a diocese. Roughly speaking, each bishop visits tho whole church in from twelve to lifteen years. The bishop, however, hns an episcopal residence, though he may not be much nt home. Thoso residences are fixed by tho general conference, nnd the choice is then made by the bishops themselves in tho order of their seniority. Thus it happens that a bishop ofteu officially resides at a great distance from tho sccno of tho work with which he is most prominently identified. Bishop Vincent's home, for example, is nt Kansas City, though he is commonly associated with Chautauqua interests. In addition to these varied aud im portant tasks within tho bounds cf our country, two or more of the twenty-one bishops are chosen to visil tho foreign conferences. These men should be carefully distinguished from what are known as missionary bishops, the only Methodist bishop corresponding to tho Anglican bishop that is, with a well-defined and per manent diocese, nnd who therefore correspond pretty closely to a presid ing elder, though ho has presiding eld-rs under him. These visiti ig bishops travel throughout tho woild and are effective everywhere. It will bo seen from this cursory sketch that tho group of Methodist bishops are vested with more power than any body of ecclesiastics in tho rrotestaut Churoh. As Bishop Fal lows of the Reformed Episcopal Church remarked: "A Methodist bishop has more power in his littlo finger than I have in my whole body." It only remains to be said that this group of men exercise their enormous powers with raro wisdom, moderation aud iidelitv. Church Economist. WIipii ftlnvr Wero Only For Ornnmri.t. It is interesting to recall the fact that gloves as a badgo of elegant drcs scorn' to antedate the use of gloves us a protection to tho hands. Tho Ro mans, Greeks and Persians wore gloves on state occasions. As early as the days of Charlemagne tho glove indus try of France was started by granting to certain monks the right to manufac ture gloves from tho skins of deer which were killod for venison. Wnter Tor Typhoid. An eminent physician states thnti typhoid fever cau be washed out of the system by water. He gives his patients what would amount to tight or ten ounces an hour of sterilized water. Iu cases of cholera, where tho system secrets a largo amount of fluid, enormous quantities of hot water are of great benefit. The Cr' Reenter. The Russian scepter is of solid gold, three feet long, end contains among its ornnmonts ilflH diamonds, 3G0 ru bies aud lifteen emeralds. A Maltese cat brought fromTopeka, Kan., to Shelby villo, Ind., walked nvtk to its old home, six hundred miles away. ILtti t MAN'S NET SERVANT. STARTLING OFFICE PGR THE IVMGNET. liron'H J nunc use I'lant fsr separa ting the MUul from the Otiurtz by Jlcans of Klci't ii-Mil t; tie lie Attrac" lion Is Now in Opi r;1 ion. IMi-ou'u T.iit est Ti'iiniiili. TliN r-.ni'lii.v 1 1 ! - produced :l itn-t of thinker. vvnoM- p-'iu'i.tnitc.di of 'iin.1-j lei !. k"cit oii-crviitinii and caref'.il rca S'litins have cliaitr'd the forces ol' iui- ; tu re and londi; lln-in ilie scrviinis ol" man. ii!' t!nc tiicre ! pr'wiily n. im mure ili s'-rv lug nt' the highest plnr, than is Tlwni.'is A. IMison. JIe liar, ni.-id" inure than n .-- oiv ol' invi-ni ions, any one of which would cii'lslo him to a inline and a place anion;.: the fore most men in tin- sch-ntiiic world, and yet he i;i)i-i on mid strives for more and greater coiiti-sls. The ma ivi-loas in veiitl-ms viili which his name N asso ciated have not been achievnl in a day, but are tin- result of patient toil. In diitnitnl'le h i. vernnco and concentra tion of purpose. .volhiui! lie has done lieretol'oiv litis required so nnu-li of his Individual attention, taxed his inven tive ingenuity so fully, or iu the agirri; Siite consumed ills vital powers inure than his latest neeoni;lishuiciit. Billions of tons of iron ore lie scat tered tln-nigli the rocks of the eastern spurs ol' the Allegheny Mountains. But the on- Is mixed with the roc!: in such line particles that it could not be mined with the ordinary methods, mid was therefore lonUi d up-ill as one of Hie wastes of nature. The l'nrnace.s in the East were compelled to look for their supply ol" hiuh-graile ore to :i few iso lated deposits and to ores Imported from foreign countries. The former being limited, and tin- cost of procur ing tin' hitter having almost reached the prohibitory poiui, the trade in high graile ore for the ltianufni ture of Bes semer steel began to shift westward to Michigan nnd Minnesota. Iron mills In the Hast were shut down nud many thousands who depend on the smelting Industry for a living were thrown out of employment. Walking along the Long Island shore IMison one day no ticed a pi!.- of bia- k sand. lie took sonic of it home for investigation. Placing an electro-magnet m-ar the mass, he was surprised to see little dark grains leave the heap and move like so litany ants toward the magnet; the ants pfov.-d to tc little grains ol' In.tt ore. On tin- ha-:-- of this find he evolved his famous oro-separtiiing ma chine. When the nliove ineu: ioned curi ous condition of tin- iron ira-le In the East was brought to Mr. Kdison's at tention right years ago he remember ed his experience with the sand, nud in order to assure himself of the exact rnndit'on of Hie iron mines in the Bast he invented a magnetic needle which would "dip" toward the earth when ever it was brought over a large de posit of iron. With this he made a tour of the mines of New Jersey. Tu his .-lmaenieiit his in edle hellcated that the greater portion of the ground over which lie traveled was underlaid with Immense deposits of iron. With his magnetic needle, or, as he calls it. his "magnetic eye," lie testeil every large body of gneiss rock ex tending along the eastern coast of the I nited Stales, from Lower Canada in the great Smoky Mountain of North Carolina. lie found Immense deposits of Iron, l-'or instance, in the "..nun acres Imme diately surrounding the village of Edi son, there are over oo.iuhi.Oiiii Ions of low-graili . Iu Ihe (iilire district there are pi.oon ai ns in which the de posit Is proporiioii iti ly as large. The world's annual output of iron ore does not, tit the present lime, reach !o,ti(in, IHHl tons; so that iu the paltry I wo miles surrounding the village of L'di sou there is i n-nigh iron in the rocks to keep the Whole World supplied for one year or tin- Lulled States for three years, even with the natural Increase. In demand. S'Meru thousand acres or twctiij live siptate mile- of land con tain enough Iron ore to keep the whole world supplied for seventeen years, al lowing, of course, for till natural in crease of demand, due to the needs of II growing population. These acres would more ihun supply the Lnin-d Slates with Iron, Including necessary exports, for the n-xt seventy years; and they contain more titan has been mined heretofore in i ii is country since its discovery. Here was an opportunity for the in venter and he sot to work plan out a great industry. It has taken him eight Years to do It, but ihe n -nil ha justified nil the trouble and money which he has expended upon it. lin Ciliecrs used to large clllerprl-es of the kind have smiled inercdulou-ly . Some of tlieui have spoken of it a- Kili-on'-hobby, and others as his lolly. Some have shown him on paper thai no ina enme rotlld be eoii-l rttrted powerful enough to crush live, six and -even ton rocks, or if such a machine were con structed il would never stand the jar and strain exerted upon it. 'I his par ticular dillieulty Mr. IMison sni-nioun! ed so completely that !'- than loo horsepower is li-itllled to reduce rocks Weighing six and -even Ions to dit-t in three second- from the time liny are thrown Into tin- cru-hing machine, lit is crushing rock- and dropping the re sulting powder pa-t powerful elect ro inagncts. The sand i- not attracted by the magnetism but passes straight on. the Iron ore is attracted to one side ami falls In a heap of its own. This is t lu whole principle; yet in the actual working out it becomes one of the most Ireniellili'lls processes ill the world. Ii is, after all, no small matter to crush Ihe very vitals out of a moun tain and then extract till of the ore from Hie millions of tons of sand. Tliis is not all a theory which Mr. Edison litis evolved and left to some one el-e to put to practical use. In the tillage of IMison. N. .1.. he has estab 10, 18118. NO. 21, lished a smelting plan', em thyr1nclp!e of his invention that Is ff prnnthal demonstration of the feasibility of lii- theory. The met hods by which the ore is extracted lire nil unlike any oilier, .and all tin- the product of M inventive genius. The ore-bearing rock Is blasted into bowlders and then laid on flat ear with a steam shovel. Ii Is then ( I vi-ycd 10 the crushing plant. The cars lire pin in under each end of the cril-h-ing mill. The tray containing the roil; are lifted by the cralicJ lo the second sioty of the liiill, where the ro'-k is dumped into a large square pit. Ten I'eit beiovv the edge of tin- jilt re volve liiiDiense Iron rollers weighing li'ii tons. Tie- surface of these fuller )s stild-d'-il with teeth, and the space- Ltd ween tltoiii Is loss than a foot whir. Never theless ji six-ton i k dropped Into the pit pitsses between the roll in less than H ie" seconds. Ear down beneath tin-so rolls is ;t!ioiiioi- set of smaller size, but nearer together. Eroui tin- heavy rolls above the rock falls Into tlil lower set .-Hid is crushed still smaller. II lias now been reduced to pieces the size of ii man's list, and from the lower set of rolls drops into nil elevator or endless ronvryor which carries the pieces up to Hie top of another part of the building and dumps them into a shaft leading down to three more sets of rolls set di rectly beneath one another. As tho rock passes through these lolls the latter are found to be placed nearer and nearer together until witli the last or third set ihe two rolls composing It are set tightly against each other, so that when Ihe i-in-k ultimately pusses through il has been reduced to dust. After the crushing process it is car ried to the top of the magnet bouse and dumped Into space to ind its way through many sieves of varying mesh es and past many magnet faces of varying strength. As lr descends 1 he ore is drawn by the magnet Into a long pipe by itself while the sand falls to the ground. The vab!-.- o, the sand alone is no small ronsiderat ion. It is sold to builders and emit factors at a good price, being more suitable for their purposes than any other obtain able. The pure ore is now allowed to drop downward and pass through a l m where blowers rid il of any dust that may have accompanied it on its travel. After h-aving the blower room, ii is really a stream of purr, finely-divided iron ore. which drops ptto con veyors and is carried to a storehouse, which holds .".mod tons. More It may irsi temporarily or it may pass on by means of other ronviyors to ihe mix ing house. It cannot be smelted in the form of iron dust. It must be made into briiiucitcs, and in order to do this i' must be mixed with some adhesive substance which will piv.ent ll from disintegrating when brought under tin action of the furnace. To make this substance Mr. Edisun had to perform li.iioo experiments before lie got it of such a consistency its to lie satisfactory. Thus In small plastic nuggets the ore drops into the bricking machine and comes out in small blocks which are thrown on conveyors to be carried to the great ovens to be baked. On com ing out of the ovens It is ready for shipment. Fast freight oars are nt hand lo haul it away to the furnaces. From the time the ore is blasted with its native rock out of the mountainside until it is loaded in the form of com mercially pure iron liriquriies on tin ears, il is not touched by human hands. The never-eiidiiig and never-resting stream of material constantly circulates through the various buildings, crushed by the stored momentum of gigantic rolls, hoisted skyward by steam, pulled earthward by gravity, deflected by magnetism, dried, sifted, weighed, gauged, conveyed, changed from rock into dust, and from dust into compre hensive lumps, mixed with a due pro portion of adhesive niateri: ! ; churned, baked, counted, and sent flying to the furnaces by fast freight: and not once in its course Is It arrested or jogged on ward by hitman agency. The pockets of ore from which the Edited States has drawn its chief sup ply are rapidly becoming exhausted. There Is, it must be understood, plenty of Iron lUe iu the country, but it Is not the kind of ore from which steel can be made. Steel can only lie made from ores in which the per cent, of phos phorus Is very small. IMison with his crushing process has entirely elimi-' Hated the phosphorus element from ihe ore. It therefore remains Inevita ble that lids must ultimately become the only serious method of producing ores from which steel will be made. It would seem from the prospect, that Ed-i-oii w ill become the head of ti vast in-ilu-lr.v, as great us that brought Into existence by the Invention of the in candescent light, and in a measure more imposing, as il enihracrs the production of what in ooiurjierclal cir cles is after all the most valuable i meial on earth. In spite of this, how I over, tin- man who planned it jdl does not from his demeanor appear to have been ovi r iuiprcssed wiih lis import ! iince. Until Auinu. She lluvr you really seen that ivmi. derfid set of pictures tli.it Miss Left over has had taken, one u each bin li ds y? Id- Yes; lull they're very indistinct. Yon sec. Ihe photos have faded at oue end of the list, and the subject ut thf other. - Truth. Wonderful Oriuinalit.v. Miss llasideigli - lieolgo llalllby Is very original, isn't he' Miss llapgooil-l never noticed it. What has he done that was original? Miss Iiashlclgli-IIe handed me a box of randy la-t night and didn't say, Sweets to the sweet." Work Until Wa.VH. She - IT it wasn't for the old bachelors tlirrr would be no llirts. IU If it wasn't for the flirts there would be no old ba-helors. Many mean men are meu of means. &)t hatl)au) tucorfc BATES Of ADVERTISING One sqnare, one insertion $1.00 One squsre, two insertions. ... 1.50 ii n r. a jUne square, one moniu For Jurprt r advertisements libera) ! onl rii'-ts wtd I"' rriB'lrf. POPULAR SCIENCE. A mechenica? device recently pat ented pastes paper labels on 100,00'J tins in ten hours. The city vi Santa Fe, Now Mexico, is without rats, mice and cats, s tuo air is too r.vclie.l for those, urn mil: . It is estimated that urcioVr quanti ties oi gold and silver have hcv.t f.-.ink in tho sea than are now iu ciivuluuua in the whole world. Dr. 15. Kos.-inann, of Charlotten l,cr;i, Germany, has- c:nred a patent from the f m p( rial C.ovei rm.mt covrnu:,' n rust preventing paint c.-moived or he peroxides cf cuius cf the onuu group. The tanner?!, of Newark. Iv. -T-. are said to get more i.j'.n.-y out of bidn than anywhere else. Tin ce, and roaie tiines four, splits -.ve imida and fin ished. It 1 .Mti,,-.-i'..d Ilia i-lo i realized per hide and l'-.e yearly busi ness dono amoiiu' to .-"MO.illVi.liOi.-. It ha been rah-amlrd tint the hair of the beard jr-vvs at the rat- of ono and a half line a w,-el:. This will give length of r.;. in-.-ie.-in iheconrsn of a year. For a oigiity year of age lio le.s than twenty-sewn feet of beard must have fallen before the edgo of tho razor. Through the gift of Mr. Charles; Pratt, the Trn't Institute, of JJi-ook-lyn, X. y., !in r:mc into posseio:j of pw; example of tt-xliU s, rangi.'g over several rent uric of j '.'irooeaii and Oriental manufact ,iro. The collection was purchased from Sig'ior Salvador, of Florence, Italy, by whom it wc.h collected, and, it is nail, cannot bo duplicated. At Lynn, Mass., there is now in practical operation n new cot '.on gin which is attracting much iittentioii. This is a roll gin, no revolving suw.t being used which cut the fibre, tho seed being forced out by a scraping blade close to the roller. Iu a recent trial a long staple lint run through this machine was deeiui ed to bo vwrib. 15 J cents a pound against six cents n pound when run through the old sylo gin. tHMiwc-CMl nud Amliri', The main sourco of the nmbcr sup ply isthe seaeoast of the IJaKic Ocean. It is a fossil gum, originally tho ex udation nf a species of conifer now ex tinct. This grow in lti:;uriant profu sion hundreds of thousands of y.-ar.i ago ou tho marshy coasts of Northern Europe, when the climate was much warmer than it is to-day. The natural history of amber is thus explained? The immense forests of nmbcr pino underwent their natural downfall and decay. The isin of the woods ac cumulated in largo qiuiniitie.s in bojjs and ponds, an I hi the, soil of tho for ests'. Where the coa-"t vvn-i slowly sinking, the sea by ami by covered tho laud, an 1 the amber, which ha-f been gradually hardening. wa at last deposited at the ocean bottom, lint, in tho higher legions lac pin- contin ued to flourish, and so umber w.-uld still continue to bo a-dir I down to the shore and deposited in the l.der formed green sau-l, and the mil later formed stratum of li.-cnit or blown coal. The gum became I'-ssilicd by i'.s long burial under ground. ?Iei e than 200 specimens of exti-iet life, animal and ve.'-,.::'.I 1 ' '" fo-tml im bedded in amber specim-'ni, iie.'ln.ung insects, reptiles, plants, leaves, shells, fruit, etc., which ha 1 been caught in the liquid gum and entombed Hn-ro for all time. Some of these .specimen! are so curiously beautiful ns to bo nt- most priceless, nud one English col lector has a cabinet of them which is valued ut .SVIO.OOO. Ono piece em balms a lizard about ci.-jiit inches lone, n little jeweled monster, perfect in its lorm ami coloring, wi-.u-n nnsno like in iinylhing existing now. In deed, iu many iusta'ii'M science is nble solely through this medium to study details of animal life which per ished from the urih many hundred thousands of jvav a:; . Thero aro Hies preserved with wings poised ns if for flight, where, the prismatic sheen glowing through th-- yellow sepulcher is ns brilli-iul a" if they wero floating ulive iu the sunshine. i lull Cult.-. "Fruit cures," just now a fal in Continental Euiope wit't people hav ing real or imaginary dt-o.i 'c, i i by no means a new thing. In the tenth century nn investigator has discovered, many medical authorities became en thusiastic in their writings over the remarkuble curative virtues of grapes, while a certain Van Swieten of a more modern date is snid to have 'recom mended in special cases th- eating of twenty pounds of strawberries a day." The same gentleman u!s rep.iris '. case of phthisis healed by st. a w ber ries, and cites cases in which maniacs have regained their rea''.m ly the ex elusive use of cherries as fo i l. These instances rather savor of tac miracu lous, but there is no doubt that tho so-called grape cure for indigestion and other evils, is curri-' I on in many places on the Continent, a i Ith it peo ple betake themselves to Mi lan, Vo vay, Ringon, or to Italy and the South of Franco with the intention of de voting six weeks to the care, during which time they nro expected to have gradually .accomplished the feat of consuming from three to r ight pounds of grapes daily, as the case may be. Grapes nre said to exercise n salutary action on tho nervous system, nud to favor the formation of fat; thnt is to say, when fruit of good quality is em ployed; if tho grapes aro not sufficient lyripe and arc watery and sour tho pa tient may lose rather than gam , iu weight. The'valnable results obtained by a fruit diet in cases of biliousness nre duo to tho fact that noxious germs habitually present in the alimentary canal do not thrivo in fruit juices. Iceberg' Aire. Icebergs somotimes last 200 yeari before they entirely melt away.