v - iND -MADE Mc it SAVED ttc;T as rf! ias coming off ar M.nll i Pn from the ft came i' ,r" . ' the tie sauu gang tumor U6rtried to ho nher be AWhad een lem and oniy -Tid mobbing by resist. "A r 'aVv - , 1 , t 1 I 'I , J : .- hub xft"8tcmpthe came to. "'ii.in'gf, the foreman, gave him a job. , .. Early the next morning he and an other man walked down the gulch " through the sarvis bushes for half a iniile, turned abruptly to the right, climbed tho uneven length of zigzag trail, and at last halted near the - top Of a ridge. The pine, trees, slim and tall, grew out of the unevenly carpeted ground, .through which cropped irregular slioes of a red-brown,; crumbling rock. At the very crest - was a dark-gray "dike" of quart zite, standing up steep and castellted for a height of thirty feet or more. ' This was the "hanging wall" of the prospec- tiro mine. , Down through the trees were., glimpses of vast, breathless 'descents to other ridges and other pines far below. Over the dike was nothing but the blue sky. The two men had stopped within a -Uzndrod feet of the top. The old hand went over to a rongh lean-to of small trees covering a rude forge; from be neath which he drew several steel drills of various lengths and a sledge hammer, which ho carried to a scar in the face of a huge outcropping rock. After dumping these he returned and got a can of water and a long T-shaped implement of iron. The two men then set to work. ' McCann held firmly while, the other struck. After each blow !fae would half-turn the drill. When a dozen strokes had been given, he poured a little water in the hole, and thrust the drill through n bit of sacking to keep it from splashing. The other man jammed his hat down closely over his forehead and struck fiercely, altcr- natoly breathing in and grunting in ; rhythmical succession. Wheu' the hole became clogged with fine, gray mud, McCann carefully spooned it out with the T-shaped instrument, wiping the latter each time on his trousers. While he did this bis companion leaned on his sledge or threw chunks of rock, with wonderful accuracy, at the squirrels that ran continually back and forth on the ridge. As the hole grew deeper, longer drills were used, until at last the longest, of all left barely enough above tho surface of the rock to afford a hand-hold. .With that tho miner expressed himself satisfied. Ho then' brought three eylinuncal v packages wrapped in greasy paper. "What's them?" McCann inquired. The miner gruutod contemptuously. "Hercules powder," he replied. Ho proaounced the proper name in two syllables. With a sharp knifo he cut these in to lengths of about three inches eaoh, and dropped them one by one into the hole - in the rock. He then rammed them home with a hickory, ramrod, just as all oia miners win insist on doing. Because of this a largo per centage of old miners have no fore and middle fingers on their right hands. Tbe last pieco he split, inserted in the crack a bit of fuso, on tho end of which was a copper cap, dropped it in, and - then carefully chinked-in with the wet grit which had been spooned out of the hole. "Mosey for cover," he said, and touched it off. f rom behind his tree juevjann saw the sputtering fnse disappear. The next instant therock seemed to bulge, splitting in radiation as it did so, and ucu the smoke belched forth ia a canopy, filled with fragments of quart?. Following'' the miner, he found a jagged opening in the rock. Then they sharpened their drills at the forge and ywont at it again. By night they had fired two more blasts, and had made a start toward a shaft After the third, Bob, the miner, said, glancing at tho west: ' -"That'll do, rat," They cached tbe tools, canght up the water bucket, and swung-rapidly down the trail. . Bob was. ahead, slouching along with the mountain eer s peculiar gait, wmcu seems so lazy, and yet which gets over tho ground so last, in a very lew mo ments he reached tho gulch below, pluuging from the bare, rcck-strewn hill-side under tho pines to the lush - grasses and cool saplings of the canon bed, as from a desert to a garden. He looked around to say something. Mc Cann was gone. . "Well, I'm stumped!" he ejaculated, and yelled loudly, After a moment's pause, from far down the opposite slope came a faint whoop. Bob sat down on a fallen ' tree, and waited philosophically, shouting at intervals. In a little while the Irishman camo charging frantically up the gulch, tearing along through the vines and bushes at ful speed,- so tcrnned mat ne passed within ten feet of Bob without seeing him. The latter watched him surge by with an odd little twinkle in his eye. Then suddenly he shouted again. ; Fat slowed up, looked about for a mo ment vacantly, and tueu his rugged Hibernian face broke into a multitude of jolly wrinkles "Arrah, it's yerself, darlin'." he said; "Oi thought it's Pat McCann as is goin' t slape wid th mountain lines this night!" "You stick t' me," was Bob's only , ' comment. After a short climb the men reached the camp on a knoll overlooking two continent gulches. There was the ' -fiunerintcudentV office " the cook hoase tha bunk-house, the black smith's shop, the stables and the I J end set terward broken. look" and da MINER CAN The through rved Buppe was ingHaM i V sundown. sat down ling eir coats. jffinished eating. B t . their word arose rose, PQ rmallJ toe throogu -v nedit8 eyea and followed tered outside. g bunKhouse, Wbebea ter awitch. ? was kf t I , to Vl SdVKll pacing. It was . tftiung "r V -Tnor. ra ".-jaw ma the horses. - ftndwas '"'v - . -nrral rrin into w --?ier-ire nau i,:Vft(i - f tne ooe utrr, ' s i a v.xaerii ia w i "o f Jta BU4 HUl. there main r . wtr. the creeks all I i no B. . Wlrock. As I . nrB w::"" Jrn Are necessary onieqLWBw. . " Pftt first let V5 Vyn in tne . r Then he lost the Whorse get loose, tneu ne L a... Lvnriri, 1 tt tmni? m nun it nnt. i nn i boys fished -him ont. with some fished-mm out. witn some in- erest. do manifestly inadequate an i individual it had not been their for-1 tune to meet before, and they looked on him as a curiosity. On the spotfl adopted Pat McCann much as they would have adopted a stray 1 kitten or puppy, and doubtless in somewhat the same amused, tolerant i state of mind. . The next morning Bob and Pat cleared away the debris of the three blasts, wrenching off the broken, adhering bits with a pick, and shovel ing them out. King came up with an axe gang and built a rough, square breastwork of logs down the hill, to catch the qnartz as in a bin. They also squared a number of timbers, and ongued the ends. These were to timber the shaft. All this interested the little Irish man, lie recovered his spirits, and his Old World blarney came back to him, The clear, fresh air of the hills, the abundant food, the hard work, the sound sleep, the reaction against the taciturnity of the men, and the calm grandeur of the mountains, filled him with animal spirits. He imagined he had found his vocation at last. He wanted to do everything. . In time he learned to strike with the sledge, al though it was only after long practice on a state that ne could induce any one to "hold" for him: he sharpened drills after a fashion; he even helped in the timbering-up. The only thing lacking was the "shooting" of the charges. He had an ambition to touch the thing oft". This King roughly forbade. "That fly-away fool to risk' his neck that way?" he said; "I guess notl He don't know enough now to make his head ache. I don't want that man to have the first thing to do with the powder. Understand that!" What King said went in that camp. Besides, the men knew him to be in the right.' Pat was the unluckiest man alive, and the most awkward. He was sure to be in any trouble there was about in fact, as Jack Williams said, ho was a sort of lightning-rod for the whole camp in the way of trouble; everyone else was sure of ex emption, if there was only one man's share of difficulty dealt out. So Mc Cann pleaded in vaitr. This went to his heart: He would have given his blackthorn shillalah from Dublin to have been looked upon as a full-fledged miner. Ho used to put on all the airs of one in Sweet water when he went down there once a week, swaggering about in copper- riveted jeans, with his hat on one side, conversing learnedly though vaguely on oiow outs,' "horses, '. -"loot walls" and other technicalities, haul ing out of his pockets yellow-flecked bits ,of quartz in short, "putting on dog to an amazing extent. But as he turned past the stamp-mill of the Groat Snake, and began to scale the heart-breaking trail that led to the top of the ridge, his crest began to fall. As h$ followed the narrow, level summit for the three miles of its length, standing as it were in the vei'y blueness ot the air, his spirits began to evaporate. When he took the snorter and gentler descent to the camp; the' old conviction had returned with thickening force. He was not a miner! He had never "shot." He used all his persaasive powers in vain. For ono thing, the men were afraid to disobey King. For another, they liked Pat, and having a firm, faith in his "hoodoo,", were convinced that his "shooting" and sudden death would'bo synonymous terms. So Pat abandoned persuasion and tried craft. The old shaft jon which he and Bob had first begun work had been carried down fifty feet,' Appropriate cross cuts and drifts had been made to ex ploit the lead. It was now abandoned. Bob and Pat were put to work at an other spot in the same lead a little farther along the ridge. The place marked out for the first blast was be tween two huge bowlders, or rather between the two rounded cheeks of one bowlder. The passage between them was perhaps rive or six feet wide. Qne end led out in a gradual descent to the broad, open park of the ridge top, the other dropped off abruptly three or four feet. to another level place. Around the corner of the first the miners kept their tools and forge; down the second they planned to drop when the blast was fired; and there they built a little fire, it being, on that particular day, in the lee of the rock. The hole had been all drilled before Bob discovered that he had forgotten to bring any powder; so he started down the passage to get some from the sheet-iron powder-house in the draw. Hardly was he out of sight before Me-' Caun, chuckling softly to himself, pulled from under a shelving bit of rook the missing powder. With this he loaded the hole; he arranged the fuse, and then dropped down the ledge to get a brand from the fire. It was nearlv.oat, so it took a few mo menta tot Norch. However, he Tras" in no hn..jr it xraa ithirtA littl a distance to the powdef-'B5jnUti Job could not possibly retui. -s-.f half an hour. At last he coaxeu t of pine into a glow, and turned to climb back. A startling sight met his eyes. .. ; -. When Bob went to" get the powder he stopped at the forge fot the water- pan. as no stooped to pi etc u up something struck him a sudden blow li that knocked bin oret e blood flowing ha said af- . "i-- thought the bone was "When he could see, he joutto find what had hit him, oveved not ten feet away the Tny body of a puma. . ?jreat ct lay watching him i'talf-shut eyes, lazily switch- back and forth. 'From thi , L depths ox r He tried tQ rifi( bnt couM 5 .'Vm lie turned over on his left ?hs f BUrtea to crftwl infall if mo d, and played with id PrtTcat lays with a mouse, man pulled himself Inch by inch the -inn!? . leaTing Am nf Jilnnfl At l-.f -witnin a m O' .... feet or tne ledge, ne tto no furtKAT... The t ar he con tio. P V At tai8 moi! nt Pat McCann, a . ne-br d in his hand, looked ied(re. Bob saw him and "m; Earned hi back. Thepuma Sum. too. Tho purring ceased, m 1nxiv . f o the skin. The game ws over. The animal was preparing to make its spring. It did not occur to the little Irish man's, fighting soul to retreat. His comical features stiffened; his little blue eyes fairly snapped. Slowly he drew himself up on the ledge, keeping his eye fixed on the puma, until he stood erect, then he shifted bis brand mechanically into his left hVnd, and drew his sheath-knife. He did not know that the fire was his best weap on, and Bobwas too weak to tell him. The brand, held point downward,;be- a" gan to blaze. The puma's great eyes shifted uneasily at this, and its mus cles relaxed. It was evidently dis composed. Pat did not await the at tack, but stepped forward, holding his knife firmly. When within a few leet of the ani mal Pat hesitated and stopped. His nerve was still unshaken, but he did not know how to begin. The puma still sniffed, uneasily at the blaze, but had recovered from its first fear, and was again gathering its powers for a spring. For a moment there was ab solute silence, and Pat heard through the still air the sharp chatter of a squirrel and the clank of the ore- team'a whkHe-trees from" the ore road far below. While he stood thus un certain, the fire from the pine, having run 'up along the torch, began to burn Pat's fingers. Without moving his head or 'shifting his eyes, he dropped it gently plumb upon the fnse he had so carefully arranged a few moments before. Then he took a step backward to avoid the smoke. There was a splutter and a flash, then a sudden roar. The man and the beast were hurled violently in oppo site directions, and a volcano of rock shot high in: the air and showered down again. Tbe axe-gang found the' puma very dead and Pat very hard to revive. He looked hazily about him in evident bewilderment until his eye caught sight of the dead animal, but then his face lighted up with eager joy. "Glory, Qi'm a miner!" he shouted. "Oi've 'shat' at last." Stewart Ed ward White, in San Francisco Argo naut. Eating Pol in Hawaii. The eating of poi by the Hawaiian seems a ceremony of profound mean ing. The kalo root is an ovate oblong, as bulky as a large beet, and it has large leaves shaped like a broad arrow, of a Biugularly bright green. The choicest kinds grow in very "wet soil. The patch is embanked and frequently inundated, and each plant grows on a small hillock of puddled earth. The cutting from which it is grown js simply the top of the plant and a little of the tuber. The root when boiled and sliced is excellent, but the prep aration of poi is an elaborate process.' The roots are baked, and are then laid on a hollow board and beaten hard. The men do this work, and find it no easy task. They 'dip their hands fre quently in a calabash of water to aid them in removing the sticky mass, which is anything bat appetizing at this period of its manufacture. When it is removed from tho board it is set aside for several days to ferment. When ready for uso it is either lilac or pink, and tastes like sour book binders' paste, but is very nutritious. Correspondence in New York Times. Made the Patient Get Well. A professional nurse at Leeds, Eng land, was remarkably, successful in the care of patients suffering from smallpox, diphtheria or pneumonia. In fact, she had never lost a patient with one of these complaints. Not long ago, however, she had a pneu monia -case which was given up by the physician, much to the nurse's chag rin. . "He can't live through the night," said the doctor. ? Sure enough, when the nurse went to give the sick man his medicine he only shook his head. The distracted nurse saw her proud record about to be broken and she urged the patient J to take his dose. "No use," he murmured. "Well, sir," said the nurse in de spair, "you've got to take it I And if you die I'll kill you!" Whereupon the patient began to laugh, took his medicine and got well. New York Bun. The Old Finland Gorernment. Finland enjoyed large powers of local government till recently. After it was taken from Sweden by Russia, Alexander I., in 1810, pledged himself to maintain inviolate its ancient con stitution, liberties and customs. The National Parliament consisted of four states, the nobles, clergy, burghers and peasants. These met every five years. About isju r.ussia . began to make a radical change in its policy toward Finland. The use of Russian money was made obligatory. Russian had to be .taught in the schools, ' and now Finland, like Russian Poland, has became practically a Russian dis trict Electric Eye. . The incandescent electric light in a duio at tne end or a flexible wire, easily moved about as it may be, is employed in various uses; a novel em ployment of it is seen in arr uptown show window, whero two lights glow, one in either eye socket of a human skull. New York Sun. mm I IMS STRUGGLE PfiH x Devices That the Next In all European armies now great attention ia being paid to the signal corps, and each nation every now and then vaunts itself over the others with the announcement of the discovery of some new method of signaling, says the New York Press. The really reliable systems of mili tary signaling are few, and none of them is exactly new. In our own army the heliograph and the "wig wag" system o: Hag signals are moss relied npon. The captive balloon at r. . 1 .. . i ...... BAtuuLgo -jas oniy a quaunea success, but it has not diminished the ardor wita which European powers are seeking to solve the balloon problem. Tho' bravery and the efficient work of the signal service men in the war with Spain received high praise from all the foreign attaches and from our own Government, but Europe seems loath to take up our system of signaling. With every nation on the Continent of Europe military signaling is a military hobby, and each rides its own especial hobby hard, and spends great amounts of money on it. All over Europe experiments are going on constantly in military signal ing. -( Every bright young officer and every crank regards the signal corps as the body which shalL make his fame and fortune by utilizing his invention. And it would sc em as if every King and Emperor and every field marshal lay awake nighis to tSink up some new. invention for that branch of the service. No matter what branch of the ser vice has to go short on funds in a Eu ropean army, the signal corps gets what-money it wants. That the sig nal service of an army is of the first importance ' is not to be denied, and our own corps will compare in ef ficiency with any in the world. But in Europe the corps is a fad. WIOW AGGERS OF THE TRENCH PIONSEBS. The . German Emperor is credited with having said the other day: "So important will be the part played by military telegraphy in. the war of the future that the army having the most efficient system of signaling will hold a trump card which may be of most decisive influence on the conduct and success of the war." Another German authority says: "Electric telegraphy, with and with out wires, is a main -branch of the service, and not only . with the 'pioneers, but with every troop, in fantry, cavalry, artillery and railroad ers.. The German army, adhering to its principle of meeting the enemy on the latter's own territory, must needs possess greater alacrity in and better facilities for building electric tele graph lines than the French and Bns sians, the Austrians and Italians, who might bo eager enough to keep war out of their own territory, but who are behind Germany in the rapidity of mobilization." , . i Neither the German nor the other European armies rely exclusively upon the electrical telegraph, which may fail for various reasons, the principal one being that the ordinary com mercial lines, as well as the field lines established in their stead or for the purpose of supplementing them, may be destroyed by the enemy or. the ele ments, thus robbing the commanding general of the - means for com municating with his subordinate com manders. The Germans, like other nations, rely largely upon optical methods of signaling. The favorite device of this kind in the German army is the sema phore, which is made more efficient THE UPPEB PICTURE REPRESENTS AIN ARTILLERY. TIIE LOW EH PICTURE REPRESENTS THE BRITISH AR31Y IN INDIA USING THE HELIOGRAPH. by Redi's system of cones. The sema phore proper is quite an ' ancient de vice. It was first introduced by the French in 1791 for conveying in telligence from Paris to the armies on the frontier. As the illustration shows, tho GeiESta axay Eea&phore i War Wi!i Bring Into Use. similar to out. railway signal poles and is worked by arm. - There is also a telescope in the top which commands the mast at; the next station. The mast can be inserted at any place. As to the cone, each one represents a number, 1, 2, 3 or 4. : If 1 and 4 are down, that means 5, and similar ad ditions are made vith the other figures. Signals can also be given without the cone by moving the arms horizontally against the body, or by placing thexn in any other position agreed upon. . a night lantern slides ox various it LIME LIGHT SIGNALS colors are placed in the ends of the cones. Personally the Kaiser has more faith in the captive balloon than in any other optical means for telegraph ing. The German captive balloon is furnished with means for photograph ing, and the parties in the car com municate with those on the ground by means of the telegraph ' or tele phone. For telegraphing an instru ment similar to the Morse apparatus, arranged in compact form, is used. The system is practically that used in this country. " For the signal corps of the German army the brightest men of each bat talion and regiment are selected.. They are thoroughly drilled in all the man oeuvres connected with the transpor tation, the erection and operating of the apparatuses. Each German signal station is manned by five privates, a non-commissioned officer and a lieu tenant. . . - k In the English army a similar num ber of signal men are employed with each company, squadron of cavalry and battery. The French employ eight instead of five men; the Russians think four men of each company sufficient for the. service. ... The French army employs as opti cal telegraph flags and lanterns. The flags are worked according to the naval code and Morse alphabet. French signalers are said to be able to execute 120 movements per minute. To sig nal the dot of the Morse alphabet the French hold up one flag. Two flags represent the dash 'of the Morse al phabet. After each letter there is a short pause, after each word a longer pause, the latter, being accentnated by the flag being held over thehead of the signal man. If. the telegram is .finished the signal man repeats the last word three times. If the receiver doesn't understand the operator he raises a flag with his right hand to his head. Of course, flag signals can only be used in daytime. At night tho lantern is employed when search and flash lights are not available. . Signal lanterns are handled after the fashion of the flag?, dots being marked by opening and shutting the slide respectively. A dash is marked by exposing tho flame four times longer than in case of a dot. Thus dispatches of twenty words can be for warded in a minute. The Austrians follow the French method of signaling in all bnt the size and form of flags. To the standard colors of black, white, red, .blue and yellow they add green. Green plays also a part in the Italian flag signals. FLAG SIGNALING BY r AUSTRIAN MOUNT The English largely employ the heliograph. By means of the helio graph trained signal men can comma nicate with each other at a distance of fifty miles, whether they have a tele scope or not- General Robert once tent 120Q ttlegnss by heliograph ia V5 IMD a sis si a day. That vas ia Tjjit, where the sun is very strong. The English mode cf signaling by flags differs from the French in minor details, which -are kept secret. But this secrecy doesn't amount to , much, considering that the Britishers, like other nations, use the Morse alphabet. The Eussiansvhave adopted the French lantern system for disti&ces from one to two miles. These fat terns 1 are constructed on the lines of bicycle lamps, having a bulls-eye lens, and being fed by oil. On long distances the Bnssians nse lime light appara tuses constructed as follows: There are two tanks filled with oxygen and; hydrogen respectively. The hydrogen is lit and, the oxygen, gas mingling with it, produces a colorless flame. 'A lime block placed in the flame is ren dered incandescent and its light, re flected from a mirror, is sent forward. The mirror is a powerful parabolic, resembling in shape the end of an egg. - Tbe concave portion is the re- 0 J IN THE BUSEUN A.B1IY. Hector. This apparatus is so con trived that the beam light can be sent in all directions. The telegraphing is effected in the same way as the tele graphing with lanterns by the French. All the apparatuses described are, if possible, set up on natural or arti ficial elevations. The signal officers must also be careful to find a suitable background for their operations, so that the signals from the other side can be readily interpreted. There is, however, one great drawback to all these systems. As all armies nse as a SEMAPHORE APPARATUS IN USE IX THE PBUSSIAU ABUT. basis for their systems the Morse alphabet, friend and enemy alike are capable of reading the messages sent OUt. -.-' Moose and Caribou Cemeteries. The Forest and Stream contains the following contribution from a Quebeo correspondent concerning the habit moose and caribou have of going to the same place, season after season, to shed their antlers: . "The idea of the animals seeking a definite place for ' this . purpose was quite new tome, but lately the effi cient Snp erintendent of Game and Fisheries at Quebeo, L. Z. Joncas, Esq., has. told me that they do fre quent such places, and that this habit was quite well known to him. He knew, of many and mentioned several places where horns could almost cer tainly be found at any time. And not only do they go to shed their horns, but they go there to die. These places are known as cemeteries, and whole skeletons are occasionally found. This, however, would be rare, as the bones would usually be torn apart and scattered by bears, and other carnirorse. "Mr. Joncas instanced the case of a gentleman going to a certain region for geological exploration, who aeked for a permit to shoot a moose out of season in order to get a good pair of antlers. He was told that by diverg ing a little from his route he might reach a place where he would find plenty of them. He did so and se cured five excellent specimens." Kew tiame of Lawn Golf. Those who ara anxious to learn the game of golf , without all the violent exercise and immense amount of tramping up hill and down dale which the real thing calls for, will welcome the new game of lawn golf. Of course golf cranks and enthusiasts will scoff at it, but lawn golf will give beginners a very good idea of the rules of the game, and from this they may gradu ate into full fledged golfers. The most particular and cranky lawn owner cannot object to lawn golf being played on the velvet verdure of his cherished lawn. No holes need be made in the ground, and after the game is played, the clubs and cups and bunkers can be gathered np, packed in their boxes, and put away out of sight. - Lawn golf is played with a small sized golf ball and implements some thing like golf clubs. The course can be laid out on an ordinary lawn, and constantly altered at will. In place of bunkers little fences provide the necessary obstructions, and, instead of the holes of an ordinary putting green, there are saucers of tin, with boles in their centres. The saucers are turned upside down in any de sired position, and, ait might be im agined, it is no easy matter to drive a ball into them. New York Herald. The EstaUeb Uscutt in Cab. " Here is an advertisement that ap peared the other day ia a Havana paper: "This is without doubt one of the factories of first class and of the most universal credit, and we affirm that no other has this credit with more merits, by the goodnes intelli gency and care employed in tLe preparetion and perfectionment of his pro4nctioaj,"-ryew York Tribii3e. AM ELECTING FARM. i .., - .. i I. C 13earJle, of St. JoltntTllle, Sets UsMnlns io Work. Near St. Johnsville iJ a farm of S33 acres Ceardslee. belonging to G. R. On this place is a complete electric plant,' which produces the current for lighting and heating, as well as sup plying the power for other operations connected wita the farm. This electric installation is the first of its kind ever used for doing the work of farm hands. All the mechanical energy is sup plied by nature,' and the cost and maintenance of the plant is inexpen sive. It has demonstratad that, electricity used for tnaaual labor is a success. The farm land is situated on both sides of the East Canadian Creek, which is a good-sized stream contain ing two falls within the bounds of the Beardslee property. These waterfalls. one of which is sixty leet ana tne other 183 feet high furnished the power.. x The owner of the farm employed the Westinghouse Company to put this scheme in operation. The smaller fall was used as the operating power, and near it was built a power house in which was placed a 180-KiIowatt Westinghouse generator, connected with a horizon tal turbine operated by the water." From this central power house the current is transmitted by wires to the dwelling house and other build ings. One motor of ten-horse power runs a mowing machine, another a thresh ing machine, and a third works a forty-four-inch saw for cutting logs. - The farm house is brilliantly lighted and well heated by electricity. The kitchen is supplied with an elec trically heated cooking stove and in the laundry the flatirons are heated by the same power. In the dairy the churns and other appliances all have electric motor - attachments. The , grounds are flighted by several aro lamps, and their nse in the barns greatly facilitates the work and lessont the danger rom fixe. New York World. -- .. , Worms and Cyclones.' Q-his is the time the small white tor redo worm does business down South in the wharf piles ' of cypress wood. The first warm day of spring the whari owner looking down into the green water lapping the edge of his pier sees a swarm of floating insects about an inch long and about a yard below the surface. The next day he looks for them and they dre gone every one gone into his good piles. They will never be seen again this season; they will come the hext, and by the third, year the wharf owner will need to put in a new lot of piling. The torredo worms eat away steadily until they cut the hard logs fairly through just be low high water mark. In years past it was the custom in some of the seacoast cities of the South, to build wharves of a cribbage of logs, resting on the harbor bottom and packed In with concrete. But tho almost yearly cyclones picked up these ' contrivances and set them down bodily a quarter of a mile uptown in some quiet street. With seventy feet of mud for a bottom and heavily loaded wharves and the torredo worm work, ing persistently "into the morning," "the Lord knows," as a Charleston wharf owner said the other day, "what holds us up." New York Commercial Advertiser. ; , A Literary Question." The citizens of a small Western set tlement in which there were no school1 facilities decided on a literary clnb, or debating society, for the improvement of the mind. A ' drummer came along and gave them the first subject for debate "Who was the greater poet, Tennyson or Browning?" As a majority of the members knew nothing of either, an old inhabitant rose in meeting and said: "Seem' as we ain't got no books here to go by, I move that Tone Green an' Bill Spurliu' git out in tne raiddlo o the meetin an' see which th'ows the "other down fust. We'll give each one o' them the name o one o the gentlemen we're debatin', an' decide the question that a-way." ' Then Browning and Tennyson in the persons of Tom Green and Bill Spurlin came forward and went at it. Spurlin, who masqueraded as Browning, threw Green four times, after which the President announced Browning : was a greater poet than Tennyson, and the Secretary, was in fitructed to secure Mr. Browning's ad dress and tell him how he had come out. Atlanta Constitution, Boina Steal Answers by Scbool Children. Q. What caused Caesar's death? - A. Caesar died because hiTwaiT as sassinated. : Q. Between whom, and what war the result of the battle of Waterloo? A. The battle of Waterloo was fought between the Spanish and English, and the Russians whipped, ' Q. When and where were railroads first used? A. Railroads were used in Arabia in B. C. 402. Q. When and by whom was Ameri ca discovered? A.' America was discovered by Columbns in 1782, while lie was mak ing a voyage from Loidon to San Francisco. . . Q. What were General Wolfe's words when he heard that the French fled? A. General Wolfe said be never died so happy, Harper's Round Table. Kooks That Kesll Circulate, New Sonth Wales has a circulating library that has circulations within rirculations and is the most far-reaching institution of its kind in the world. The public library in Sydney has 10C wandering libraries, each of which is made np of from fifty to ninety vol ames. The books for this service are out up in particularly strong bindings tud. are shipped from place to place In steel-fastened oak eases.' " They are lent temporarily to 150 different little jountry libraries throughout the jolony. All transportation charges ire paid by the libraries of Sydney, shich has an annual Government ap i jropriatioa of $1509 for tbe scheme. The .field is to be increased gradually - md ISO cares of light literature and iove!s are to be- added to the stock J levoted to it. v