. . , 1 . 1 ' ' l mo am corn ;;-:u.v:;vi:- ISV fNV H. A.. LONDON, EDITOR AND PROPRIETO& TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, $1,50 PEB YEAR Strictly in Advance. J3 BETA'S By HELEN V. ,. -pyrigfit, by Robert Bonner's Sons .) CHAPTER XIX. PLOTTTXG. Upon arriving at the house of Nita, Monteri and his companion questioned her closely about the escape of her prisoner, and after hearing from her iwn lips all she had before written to him, they decided to lose no time in tracing the missing girl, lest she should reach her f nends and learn the fraud that had been practiced upon them by the girl -who had proven herself so treacherous. ' Monteri made inquiries of every one he met concerning the girl, but no one seemed-to have seen such aperson as he described. But it seems that at times fortune is wont to favor the wicked; for, after two days search, Carlos Monteri learned that a girl had been found in an unconscious condition, and was at that time lying ill in the gipsy camp. This he learned from a younger mem . ber of the tribe, who, upon inquiry, told all he knew of the rescue of the girl and of her personal appearance. He then found the man Jock, who related the circumstance, and told him that she was his wife, who had escaped, and that she was a hopeless lunatic, although not violent. Accordingly, the following morning, Monteri drove to the camp in company with Inez, and, as we have already learned, took the delirious girl away with him, not withstanding the protest of the gipsy that she was in no condition to be moved. And thus Breta Danton again fell into the power of her enemies, but not before she had unconsciously won the heart of one who had vowed to search for and find her, feeling within ' him that she needed a friend and protector. Monteri decided to take the girl somewhere neac Ravensmere, where he could watch over her. He did not intend to trust Nita a second time. As tha train bore them on their journey to Ravensmere, Inez, whose mind had been busy thinking, turned to her companion, who supported the sick girl, and said, in a low tone: "Ah, Carlos, I have it! You know the. old deserted house half-way be tween the station and Ravensmere?" "Yes, I remember I saw it," he re plied. "It is the very place for you to take her. No one will rent the place be cause they say it is haunted. I heard Cecil Doniphan sav so only a few days ago." "Very well. Where can I get the key?" he asked. "You do not need a key. You can easily effect an entrance from the back part of the house; besides, it would hardly do for you to waste time in hunt ing up the owner, for I don't believe he is around here at present. No one ever goes near the place, so you need have no fear of being discovered." "All right. This your plan. If it brings failure, don't blame me." "I have no fear of failure now that I have her under my thumb," she re plied in a voice filled vith triumph. "Don't be too sure," he said with a peculiar look in his beady eyes. "What do you mean?" she asked quickly. "I mean, my dear, that I have not had my revenge yet." "Still harping on that?" she ex claimed indignantly. "Ah, well, let that drop for the pres ent. As I told yoa before, as long as you obey me, I'll let you enjoy your ill-gotten fortune." She turned her face toward the win dow to conceal from him the look of malignant hatred which she could not prevent from shining from her eye3. To herself she was saying: "Threaten me as much as you please, Carlos Monteri, but my time will come ; and when it does, beware! We shall see which is the shrewder, you or I. You shall not come between me and my aspirations. I am the acknowledged granddaughter of old Gerald Danton, and as such I mean to inherit his wealth. He is old and will not live very long, and " Her musings were interrupted by Monteri, who addressed her: "She shows' signs of reviving from the drug we gaveber before starting." "I hope she,will not until we reach our destination." "I don't think she will, as wo are almost there now," returned Carlos; then added: "Of course, you must leave the car alone, while I will see, that my wife (?) is conveyed to her fature residence." "You must not hire any one to take you there. That might mean ruin," put in Inez. "Do you take me for a fool?"- he sneered, as the trairr came to a pause. CHAPTER XX. RATHEB SUSPICIOUS. As the train came to a pause, the de lirious girl hadsomewhat revived from the stupor to which ihe drug adminis tered by Monteri had reduced her. And when, leaving the car, Carlos took her arm, he had little difficulty in guid ing her steps, although she tottered from sheer weakness. . Inez preceded iim, and turned in an opposite direction from the road lead ing to the so-called haunted house, while Carlos slowly walked the victim of their plots toward the aforesaid road. The old house, which he intended to make the prison of Breta Danton, was not more than a mile and a hall from the station.; and, thinking it un- VOL. XXII. P1TTSBORO, CHATHAM JDOUBLE IS" GREYSO&t ; safe to hire a convevvncs of any kind, he determined to walk. If the girl's j strength gave out, he told himself, he could carry her. . But, to his surprise, she kept up ad mirably; but no words had left her lips through all that tiresome journey. She walked as if in a dream, and by the vacant stare of her eyes any one could tell that her mind was unsettled. They had met no one on the road, and she submissively walked by his side into the old ivy-covered s house which was to be her place of abode for some time to come. Inez took a roundabout road to reach Ravensmere, which led through a dense woodland. Her mind was busy planning what she would tell her grandfather (?) in reference to her speedy return from her visit to Brent wood Park. So absorbed was she with her thoughts that she failed . to see a man, dressed ia a gunner's costume, who was seated on a fallen limb not twenty feet from her as she passed. "Strange!" he muttered, when she had passed out of sight and hearing. "What is she doing back so soon, and why did she select this roundabout way to get home? Til see what she has to say for herself when I return. She did not see me. I am positive of that. And now, my pretty cousin, I'll see whether those red lips stray from the truth. I haven't much faith in you, with your purring, sneaky waysand if I had my way you would not be at Ravensmere." Gathering up his game-bag and shouldering his gun, hp set out for home. It was toward dusk when he lightly ran up the veranda steps, and fell back in well-feigned surprise when he ! saw his cousin seated beside his uncle. , "Why, cousin mine, what brought you home so soon? "Oh, I got homesick! I have got ten so attached to Ravensmere and dear grandpapa that I longed to re turn; so I took the train and left ray friends, 'promising to make them a longer visit at some future time." "And did you walk all the way from the station. "Yes; and I found the road very dusty, too." "Did you follow the straight road from the station to Ravensmere?" he asked nonchalantly. "Certainly. You may be sure I came by the shortest possible route, " she returned sarcastically. -"You're right My common sense should have told ma that," he said, with a laugh that was half a chuckle, while a peculiar gleam shot from his eyes. "Did you have a good day's sport, Cecil?" asked his uncle. - - "Yes, very jood, indeed. I'm glad that I took your advice and went gun ning, for T was verily getting the blues," replied he. ,' As he passed up to his room to change his clothes, a malicious chuckle, left his lips. "Aha! My pretty cousin, I was not far wrong when I thought you had an object in walking two miles out of your path! If you had not, you would not have said that you came by the direct road. Now what was your object? I intend to watch you, my dear. " That hurried journey wa3 not - taken for nothing, and as for your visiting Brentwood Park, I don't believe1 it. However, that is an easy matter to find out. If I can find out .anything about you that will turn my uncle against you, be sure I'll not spare the time nor energy that may be required to reach that end. Ravensmere is a fine estate, and I do not intend that it shall slip through my fingers without an effort on my part. I've felt-that the girl is not all that she pretends to be, and if I succeed in turning my uncle against her, I'll not have labored in vain. I must keep my eyes open, and if any more such trips are taken, I'll know your destination, or - my name's not Cecil Doniphan. In the meantime, I'll make it my special business to make inquiry relative to your last one. I dare say she has been off somewhere with that fellow she calls George Bertram. However, I mean to find out. If I am any judges and I flatter myself that I am, that fellow is a blackleg. Ha, Cecil; my boy, perhaps your cake's not all dough, after all, and those that live the longest will see the most. There goes " the dinner-bell! . Well, I feel more like eating to-night than I ' have since Gerald Danton told me that hi3 grand daughter was to inherit the larger part of his wealth. Ah! Hops is a great appetizer." ' CHAPTER XXI. riiAYIXG DETECTIVE. "I tell you, Inez, I must have money. Something has got to be done, and if you still wish to retain your position at Ravensmere, you must, furnish me with whatever sum I demand." "Carlos, how am I to obtain it? I have takenhatever I. could get with out being found out, and all the spend-ing-money GeraldDanton gave me you now have. What am I to do?" - He leaned forward and whispered into her ear. - v "You are out of your senses!" she exclaimed. "Oh, no, not at all! I know it would be an easy task to one so ex perienced as yourself," he replied in an even tone. "How could yon suggest, such a thing, Carlos Monteri, I Tenly btf Q lievethat you would stoop to any thing." - , .;- "Hot I," he returned, with a sullen laugh. "But you, my dear Inez, eould easily' d& as I told you." ' , , "I won't! So' that's an end of it." "Very well, you know the conse quences if you don't comply with ... my wishes. This is not the fir-st time that I have told you this. Follow your own inclinations, and be exposed.- Do as I tell you and live ia wealth and af fluence. I give you two days to con sider the matter. Meet me to-morrow night at the end of the ladies' walk, and I'll tell you more f ally my plans. Here comes that fellow Doniphan. It seems that he's alwaya prowling around the grounds when we're out here." - "He has got no good blood for me, because I've cheated him' out of his place as heir to his uncle," said Inez, in a low tone. "Remember, to-morrow night at nine!" "Very well. And phase look well to yoiir prisoner, that she does not make her escape a second time. By the way, has she fully regained her senses?" - "Not quite. At time3 she wanders a little. Ta. ta!" As he moved away a murderous gleam shot from his eyes, while she watched him out of sight. "Yes, Carlos Monteri, I'll meet you to-morrow night, and I'll try my hand again. I'll admit that your plan was a good one, and I may see fit to carry it out, but not until you are first out of my path. Why will he not put that girl out of my path forever? If I could only get access to that house, I would take matters in my own hands. First let me remove Carlo3 Monteri off the face of the earth, then my way will be clear. "Does he think that I'll allow him to order me around at his will? I am getting desperate." - . As Carlos Monteri turned down the road, he wras not aware that he was being followed; but such was the case. ' Cecil Doniphan, having had his sus picions aroused in reference to the in timacy between his uncle's grand- daughter aud the man she called George Bertram, determined to keep a close watch upon them. He intend ed to find out what sort of a person the fellow was. So when he saw them talking so confidentially, he de cided to follow -him and see where ha went. , "Where is the fellow leading me, anyway? By Jove, if he isn't making straight for that old deserted house! Now, what under the sun i3 taking him to that forsaken place? Aha, Cecil, my boy, you are stumbling into a mystery, if I'm not mistaken. Ah! He has gone in and fastened the door behind him, judging from that peculiar sound, as if a bolt was being slipped into place. Ah, well, Mr. George Bertram, I'll call at some more convenient time, when you are not around, and find out what brings you to this old, dilap itated ruin; for certainly you have not taken up your abode in such a place." Waiting for about ten niinute3 to see whether or not he intended to leave the place, and deciding that he did cot contemplate doing so for some time, Doniphan again turned his face toward Ravensmere. - He was daily expecting a letter in reply to one he had written to Erio Brentwood, and on his way back he stopped at the store, which served the purpose of postoffice as well, and in quired for mail; and a gratified look crossed his face when the grocer passed him an envelope with his name on it. Hastily tearing it open, he drew the sheet of note-paper from the envelope and read the following: 'Mb. Doxiphax: "Deae Sib Breta Danton has not co:no to me since she left the park ia your com pany. I write this, iusteai of my son, bo cause, at present, he is away from home. As he gave me leave to attend to his mail, I took the liberty to road your letter; and, in reply, must say that yon are wrong in thinking that she had called on me. Why you should ask this, I eannot imagine, and hope that it is nothing more than somo argument, in reference to the matter, that prompted your inquiry. I remain, "Eespeetfully, Ciaes Ebestwood." "I was positive that I would re ceive an answer like this!" he ex claimed. "She told a falsehood in ref erence to that visit. Now it remains for meto find out what she is up to, and I'll hot rest until I succeed. This is a new departure for me the play ing of a, detective's part but I feel that I am equal to it." ' Placing the letter in his pocket, ha continued on his way to Ravensmere, feeling veil satisfied with the success of his plan thus far, and determined to return to the haunted house at the earliest opportunity. To be continued. Don Milked tho Coir. William Jackson is a wealthy fann er living between Lawrencoville, N. J., and Princessville. He has a boy on the place of the name of Frank Bonnett and the boy has a pug pup called Jim. Frank Bennett's princi pal duty is to milk the cows. The pug pup had often sat upon the gras3 and watched him. The boy thought it would be great fun a few days ago to give the pug a feed of milk direct from the cow, and taking carefukaim, directed the stream into the dog's mouth. The pug seemed to like iji. One day it was , noticed that the cow failed to give her usual quantity of milk, and that the pug re fused to eat the most tempting inorsela 6f food, yet he was growing fat. Farmer Jackson discovered that the pug and the cow were on the very best of terms. He watched and was almost paralyzed to catch the obese pug suck ing the milk from the old cow and tha cot treating the dog as affectionately as her own calf. Thejpug is now chained up like a barracks tramp, and the cow is giving hoi. nancl nnnntitv of milk. Th 3 j 13 losing flestf. New York Sun. COUNTY, N. C, THURSDAY. DISOBMBKEM, 18-J9. . ; NO. 14. ROME'S MILITARY ROADS. BUILT TO FACILITATE- THE MOVE MENTS OF LARGE ARMIES. Why They Are In Good Condition After Two Thousand Years ot Use SljjiiiH ... cance of the European Boad Sjrstem ,JClxe Difference in Asia Minor. A military power such as Rome was could not long be content with the bridle-paths which all primitive peo ples find sufficient to subserve their commercial interests. ' For, in order to facilitate the shifting and: concen tration of their armies at strategic points, they needed a better and more comfortable means of rapid transit than was furnished by the primitive bridle path. The primary -object which the Roman international roads were intended to subserve was military in character... r" .; The width of the Roman road varied much according to its importance. Often it was one hundred and twenty feet wide, though, in the provinces it was generally sixty; sometimes forty feet wide.' In order to understand the reason for this great width and for the substantial construction that was rigidly adhered ta, wo should bear in mind the-make-up of the Ro man army, whose comfort and neces sities were continually consulted. In the first place, the Roman soldier was burdened by his heavy armor aud Ljother impedimenta in such a manner as to render him wholly unfit, to repel sudden attack successfully, as we read on nearly every page of Caesar's Com mentaries. The baggage-train was far larger" aud more unwieldy than anything we know of to-day; for the reason that this train had to transport not merely the tents, artillery, arms, munitions of war, army; chest and a host of other things necessary in the warfare of that day; not merely the effects and plunder of the legionaries, but also those of two secondary armies au army of women, wives of the legionaries, and another arm; of body servants, for each legionary had oue or more servants. When on the march, this unwieldy army maintained the line-of-battle order, theoretically at least, in order krbe ready to repel sudden and unexpected attack. Good roads, therefore, were . necessary in order to enable the immense train with which the army was handicapped to keep pace with the legionaries, aud wide roads were essential, in order, in case of sudden attack, to allow the individual legionaries to make effec tive use of their arms without inter fering with their neighbors. The Roman roads were built with more care than is expended upon the beds of our railways even. They were made as straight as possible, and nat ural obstacles were skilfully over come by the nso of cuts, fills, bridges, culverts, embankments, and even tun nels. Stiff grades were avoided, and a level, once reached, was doggedly maintained, even at the' expenso of making cuts, tills, etc. The work pre liminary to the building of any Roman road consisted in excavating all the dirt down to hardpan, and the excava tion thus made was filled in, regard less of expense, with layers of sand, stone and cement, until the requisite level, however high it might be, had beeu reached. Finally, the surface was dressed with a layer of metal and cement. The road was practically in destructible, nnd required only occa sional repairs. -That cwtinuous or even merely yearly repairs were not necessary seems ' clear from the fact that, when repairs were made, the proprajtor of the province thought it so important au event thai he cele brated it by inscribing the fact along with his name On" the milestones. Many years ago Bergier made an examination of certain Roman roads still in use in Franco: ; One road was examined at a, point where it had been raised twenty feet above the level of the surrounding country, and a vertical section revealed a struc ture of five layers. ; First came the great fill of sixteen feet and one-half; ou the top of this fill came, first, a foot layer of flattish sloaes mixed with cement, then ;a foot layer-of flattish stones without cement, then a foot layer of firmly packed dirt, then a half-foot layer of small metal in hard cement, and lastly, a half -foot layer of large metal and cement. Other roads investigated by Bergier, while differing -in treatment, were just as substantial roads. Paved roads were rare, out tne via Appia oners a remarkable instance of a paved road The stone used in its pavement is of the kind of which - millstones are made, and they are so carefully dressed and adjusted that the road often seems to bo solid rock, and has proved so indestructible that, after two thousaud years of continuous use, it is still a superb read. In the countless inscriptions which .slate that such and such a governor under such and such an emperor repaired the roads and bridges in his province, reference is made, to the top-dressing of metal and cement. - The military road of the provinces was usually sixty feet wide, and was divided into three tracks: a raised centre and two sidetracks, each track ; being twjmty feet wide. ., . - If the old Roman roads in Italy, France and elsewhere are still'exist ent and in use, there is au epecial rea son therefor, quite apart from the ftct that these roads were . originally built for eternity. In the days of Rome's ascendency all roads led to Rome, and in Europe this has never ceased to be more or less a fact. No city of Europe ever attained such transcendent im portance as to make nec-essary a com plete change iu the geheral direction of the road system; so that, in spite of the decline of Rome and the rise of other centres, the roads of Europe still lead to Rome. ' T In Asia Minor the case was - differ- I the great emporium cf AsisMifcor was Pteria, the capital cliy of the -great Asiatic peninsula; The prehistoric, system of roads led to Pteria; one great artery was theryoad from Pteria (or later on, Tavium) to Ephesus on the seaboard; a second was the'foad from Pteria-Tavium through .the5 Ciliciau Grates to the southern seaboard, etc. Later on, when the Persians gained control over Asia Minor, Pteria had ceased to exist, but -its neighboring Tavium rose in impor tance and became the emporium of all Central A.sia Minor. Roads led to Tavium. The first artificial trade roads (leaving out of consideration tb mythical roads of Semiramis) wert!J therefore, built by the predecessor! of the Persi ans in Asia Minor. Tho first road mentioned in written his tory was the Royal Road which led from Ephesus to Sasa. Now the Royal Road was nothing in the world bat the old Hittite road (or roads) along whose immense zigzag the Persians were content to jog. for centuries, never dreaming, apparently, ' of a short eut. If the Persians had buiit the road themselves, they would never have been guilty of the incomprehensible folly of making the great detour from the Ciliciau, Gates via Tavium to Ephesus' instead of following the direck and natural trade route from the Cil ician Gates via Iconium, Autiochia, Celremb aud the Lycus Valley to Ephesu3. The Greek kings and their successors, the Romans, adopted this natural shortcut, and the Royal Road lapsed into desuetude. . Then all roads led to Ephesus, because Ephesus was the gate way to Rome. Later on, Con stantinople arose and disputed the queenship with Rome, Her rise de manded a thoroughgoing change ia the general direction of all roads iu Asia Minor. Roads no longer led to Rome that is, to Ephesus but to Constantinople. Tho Roman road system in Asia became useless for pur poses of trade, and was degraded first to neighborhood roads; .and as for fif teen hundred years the roads have continued to lead to Constantinople, the good old Roman roads were finally abandoned, lost, and forgotten. Oc casionally the traveler cau locate a section of a Roman road, though their course must generally be argned from the mile-stones. One such at Kiakhta in distant Kommagene is now a silent but eloquent reminder of Rome's solici tude for even her most distant prov inces; every stone of the magnificent old bridge on this road tells a pathetio story of the passing of human grandeur. Ncw York Post. - l-oiiR Journey of n Due'--'. ' "I am au old reader of the Specta tort and should like to, be allowed to add one of the many interesting stories you, have collected about the traits of animals," says a writer in the London Spsctator. "Mine relates tc a para dise duck which had become domesti cated, and lived at a eheep ; station twenty-one miles from Timaru, in the provincial district of Canterbury. ""It belonged to the housekeeper, who had clipped its wings, and it spent its life between the homestead and a small pond close by. "In course of time its mistress left for the neighborhood of Christ Church, and she carried the duck with her in a basket. Her journey was by train twenty-one miles to Timaru, then by changing to another train for- ninety five miles, and finally by coach for about ten miles. By and by the duck disappeared from -its new heme, and was looked upon as lost. Then its mistress , returned to' her previous domicie some time after how long I nave not discovered ana to her in tense surprise, fouud the dqck bad revisited its old haunts and was set tled on the pond as beforo. It could not fly, and no one was known to have carried it, so that the only regaining hypothesis is that it walked . for 120 miles, threading its way by many crossroads, over bridges, and across streams, through a country which pre sents a great variety of contour ia hill, valley and river." A Helpful Little Girl." "Ah, Jack! you cannot tell what troubles a girl has who is receiving the attention of a gentleman." She' was twisting a button on his coat, and looking very demure and shy. - "Troubles, Marie? Of what nature, pray?" he asked, iu a tone of sur prise. "Well, one's little brothers "are always inaKing tun oi one, ana one s relatives are always saying, 'When is it to come off?' as if marriage was a prize fight. But that i3 not the worst. There is the inquisitivenees of one's parents. They want to know every thing, xnere 8 pa, now; he is con stantly asking such questions as, 'Marie, what are Mr. Robinson's in tentions? Why does he cail npoa yen so regularly, and stay so lata when he does call?' And he sometimes looks so mad when he asks these Questions that I actually tremble." , "And what answer do you make ta his questions, Marie, my dear?" "I can't make any answer at all, for, you see, you haven't said any thing to me, and and of course, I I- " . ? Then Mr.' Robinson whispered something ia - Marie's car, and the next time her father questions her she will .be ready with a satisfactory reply. Woman's Home Companion, Sign of an Early TVinier. It is beyond the skill of .the weathe; bureau to tell" just what it is that makes one winter set in earlier than another. The night hawks and the swallows would seem to teach that there is a steadily accumulating mass of conditions, tho presence of tho first of which makes itself known to tho birds before it dees to humans, and that this fir3i manifestation of. tb? gathering of things which, combined, will make an early winter, affects tbe insect supply. And then the hires go fkrrving southward. . UTILIZING; BY-PRODUCT& TURNING , WASTE MATERIAL INTO : MARKETABLE - ARTICLES. 6oino tVays by Which Manufacturer Ar Enabled to Add to Their Wealth Ac cidental Discovery of a Form of Min eral Wool System of ,'firl$ttetttn&;' . Jf - - ' The question of disposal of. waste material is an important -one for every manufacturer : and industrial -community. Preservation of ' water sup ply, availability of land for plant and storage, to say nothing of J the . pollu tion of the air and general health of employes, largely . depend upon the solution of this problem, and it also means much iu dollars ' and cents through the saving that incidentally may be accomplished. ' - - Coal and iron men were the first to find the accumulation of debris a seri ous matter. : Slack and slate could be put to no use. Furnacei wcro con trived that burned slack, but even then the difficulty was not .obviated, for slate and dust remained. When eoke was made, a vast amount of braize (fine , particles) ' accumulated. Riches went up in smoke until the by-product ovens came into use and ammonia, eras, tar and carbon were taken out, little being left. Gas manu facturers found a ruinous waste till they began manufacturing tarred room ing paper, and even now they arenpt satisfied with the economy , secured. Icon mill owners from early days have hot known until recently whafr to do" with-fine dust , and slag, and werkers of wood in saw and plauing mills have had quantities of dast and shavings for which there was nothing but tho furnace or torch, with danger of conflagration. " Pittsburg has been a -centre of activity aloug these manufacturing lines, and there the solution of saving devices has' first been worked out. Slag formerly was dumped out in great hot masses to be broken up later witb the sledge and taken by rail to be used for filling. One day ia Steubenville, Ohio, a workman, playing cold water through a hose uppn redhbt slag, accidentally turned the. stream against molten metal. An explosion, .resulted, and when he looked for the slag it was not there. Instead: he sav a snowy mas3 that looked and felt like asbestos.- That was the beginning of the discovery of one form -f mineral wool. .. Several iron' and steel companies have im proved upon the method, but the principle remains the same.- The wool is better than hair or tanbark as a non-conductor for protecting and filling walls and floors of dwellings. Recently it has been used there in the manufacture of safes. Packed tightly between the steel walls, it; is" im pervious to the burglar's tools. It will break any drill known. Railroad men find that fnrnace slag, well broken, is excellent ballast. It is also ground there and made into tiles, fire bricks and Portland cement. The kindT of product depends on de mand and local needs. -v" The system of "briquetting" has provided new means of economy to both mill : and mine. "Briqiretting" has been iuown in Germany, France and Wales for several years, r It was brought to the attention of Americans through consular reports. It consists in compressing in moulds, by simple aud powerful machinery, any pulver ized substance and'holdiug it by some amalgam. or "binder," such as resin, bitumen or oil. Through this system and others similar, dust and waste fragments may be used. Among the substances handled at a profit are precious .inetal ores, tunnel dust, con centrates, coal, peat, lignite, coke braize, iron ore, flue dust, manganese ore, iron sand, cement, sawdnst, cork dust, etc. The material is fed into machines and comes out in cylindrical chunks about three inches in diameter and four inches long. The "briquetting" machine men complain that times are too good for them. Manufacturing establishments In Pittsburg, Providence, Chicago and Philadelphia are too busy' for them to turn Out the orders under eight weeks, and when prices are good and profits are easily made, iron, coal and coke men are not particular about saving the ' little things. Time of reduced prices and narrow margins drive them back to the system of caring for scraps. Mesaba ore, which crumbles easily, leaves a great deal of dust. Briquetted, it ean be saved for $3.50 a ton. In the river valleys-of Western Pennsylvania" are three million or four million tons of coal .dust, more valuable than slack or lump coal when solidified, as it is clean, npt friable in moisture and pos sesses higher heat units. : Furnace flue dust is often sixty per cent, pure, and the value of a method of saving it i s obvious. Briquetted coal is spec ially adapted to naval uses. : Sawdust, compressed, becomes excellchfcjuel. Slate, . since- the beginning ; oP- coal mining, has been a source of : trouble and expense. A Monongahela River Tprker announces that it can be made iatd fireproof brick and moulds for Casting ingots and other manufactures of iron and steel. Drain "tile ated sewer pipe of superior quality also come fiom this despised stuff. "Over each bed of bituminous coal lies a layer of slate, v This the iuouldmaker grinds as it comes from the slope or shaft, and, mixing it with something of thetfsature.of cement, fires it to the propsdegree of hardiness. 'There is no known limit to the "use of .materials heretofore considered as refuse.- Manufacturers have only be gunto see the opportunities within ebclr grasp. . ' , The first Australian newspaper, tbe Sidney Gazette, was published March 51803, fifteen years after tho rise of the coldny. The delay was caused through there being no printers among the, convicts, who represented every jproXe'sion, including th9legal, : x' a BATES "; oj - , AD V E 17 T 1 0 in G One square, one insertion $1.01 Oneuare, two insertions $ 1.10 One square, one month - - For advertisements liberal con. traota will be made. THE REAL REASON, Whitby , Explain Why, He i Soch ? . Picturesque 8 loach . "I can tell you one thinsr, Wbitbr.I said Whitby's friend on the train tb other morning,' "you are about tha most picturesque slouch that com mutes on this road. Now I would be so uneasy if I had the top button off my overcoat as you have that it would be impossible for me'o contain my self, and yet you simply fasten the coat together with a 6afeEy-pin, and seem perfectly contented, f "I try-,, to be contented under all , circumstances and never to find fault," . replied Whitby, with a good-natured smile. ' "It is a fino way to be constructed,' replied Whitby's friend, "but that is, not an excuse for slouchiness. 'Be cause a man is happy; it is no reason that he should go around with a saw .' edge on his vest-binding sticking out' like the whiskers on a cat." "Your remarks are' not without a certain force," ropliedjWhitby, with a broader smile than fvev, "and they put me in fine humor, and I am going to tell you of a few other irregularities that. may please you more to hear of than to discover. Do you know that at the present timet my suspenders are so badly out of kilter that I am wearing as a substitute a razor-strop that was formerly a suspender?"' "I would never suspect it from; your gait." "Nevertheless, it is quite true," replied Whitby; 'and I have such big sagging-holes in myshirt that I often wonder why it is that I don't thrust my head throu gh them when I dress in the a- m. "And still you are happy.' "Perfectly," said Whitby, who con tinued: 't "I have also' a button off my coat tails, and perhaps it .makes me look lop-sided, but it doesn't make any difference to me bo long as I know that I am net lop-sided. II those buttons coming off bothered me aa much as one would naturally suppose, I would get around the difficulty by wearing a sack-coat."' V. Here - Whitby's friend began to roar. - . "What's the matter now?" asked Whitby. "Why, your thumb and forefinger are sticking through your glove." -"Of course they are; and that is what enables me to fish the change out oi my vest pocket when I am on the fly, instead of groping round and fumbling for it for five minutes. And my vest pocket has such a rip in it that I have . pulled the hole up to a point and tied a piece of cord around it." - "And then," said Whitby's friend, "the bottoms of your trousers are fearfully frayed. " . "If that annoyed me," remarked Whitby, "I should certainly turn them up, like a true Londoner. But, you see, I want harmony, and that is why I like my trousers bottoms frayed like my coat-binding. I may be very slouchy, but I am all right on form. I never wear a high hat with a sack-coat or a colored shirt in fell dress." "I know you don't; but if you did, you would not have a wider reputation than, yon have .now. ; Some people think it is a wild affectation on your part that you are copying the ways of the wild poet, whose greatness is so great that he can't realize on his light and airy creations. I heard a stranger the other day speak of you as looking liko au inventor, and probably being a man starving while trying to roise -capital to put upon the market a gos stovo that can be operated without gas. And then you re not unlike a musical composer in-appearance. Per haps you are going around in this way to make people believe you are a millionaire." !No, that is not the reason I am goiug. around in this free-and-easy, unmended fashion," '-t said Whitby. "It is not to make people believe that I am artistic, or wealthy, or In different to and above the ordinary conventionalities of life." "Then there is a reason?" "If you must know, yes," replied Whitby, laughing good-naturedly, "and I know you are: aching to know it." : "lam." . . "And you won't tell any one if I inform you." ; "Not to a living soul," replied Whitby's friend; "it shall be invio late." "It is because my wife hasn't the time to sew on my buttons and do my mending." ' "Why not?" asked Whitby's friend, in astonishment. "Because all her time is completely taken up sewing for charity." B. K. Maukittrick, in Harper's Bazar. Hiring Servants in' Fern. " Servants usually go in droves in Peru, and when you hire a butler or major-domo, or master, of the house hold, he becomes a fort of general manager of the entire establishment. He hires aud dismisses, the cook, the chambermaids and other servants, and is responsible for their good be havior. Mfttiv families board with their major-domo aud arrange witb him to maintain the housenoia, pro vide the food, fuel and the servants and everything else except the fixed charges' for rent, water rates, gas bills and similar outside luxuries at a given raie per month, Thiss not only a measure of convenience but of economy, and people are thus' pro tected against dishonesty and ex travagance in their kitchens ana pantries. A cook usually feels at liberty to bring her household aaa ail hpr fhildrpn to the house where she is employed, arid lodges au.d feeds them at the expense or her employer. j.ne husband may workelsewbere. but he sleeps and takes his meals wherever his wife lives. Correspondence in Chicago Record, .. V